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March 07, 1997 - Image 80

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-03-07

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



ovVel'a

os'"a

„ea,

\es-

to

,e50 '

Jewish
Life
in
Polan
Today

With guest speaker

Power yoga will be taught for
seven weeks, 7-8 p.m. Wednes-
days, starting March 12, at the
West Bloomfield Parks and
Recreation Center. To register,
call (810) 738-2500.

Rabbi Michael

S chudrich

Temple Israel will host a
prostate cancer support
group 7:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday,
March 13, at the temple. To re-
spond, call (810) 661-5700.

Executive Director,

The Psychiatric Services Depart-
ment of Henry Ford Cottage Hos-
pital will host a program on
understanding Attention
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disor-
der 9 am-noon Friday, March 14,
at the Grosse Pointe War Memo-
rial. To register, call (313) 640-
2244.

J

Ronald S. Lauder

Foundation, Poland

oin us in welcoming Rabbi Michael Schudrich,

Director of the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation in Poland. Rabbi Schudrich, an American

rabbi who was formerly the Rabbi of the Tokyo, Japan Jewish community, is intimately

involved in the effort to rebuild Jewish life in Poland. Savaged b y genocide and continuing

repression, the Jewish communit y of Poland only barely survived to see the changes of toda y.

Making Hospital
Stays Pleasant

But it survived. And now a small miracle is appearing before us: the rebirth of Jewish life in

Poland. Today it is estimated that there may be up to 40,000 Jews living across Poland.

The

Lauder Foundation has established a Jewish school, four youth clubs and a summer

TONY CAPPASSO
SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

camp ; supports a Jewish newspaper; helps repair Jewish s ynagogues throughout the countr y;

and has launched the Geneolog y Project at the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw.

Free program open to the public

414 40tef‘d1

Monday, March 24, 1997, 8:00 p.m at Congregation B'nai David, 5642 W. Maple Rd., W. Bloomfield

Please call Naomi Blumenberg at (810) 354 1050 for reservations

•11

NOW OPEN

New Location

(with ad)

DUTAMIE

THE AREA'S LARGEST
IN STOCK SELECTION
WITH GUARANTEED
BEST PRICE!

THE DETRO

GLIDERSFRoms168.00
ROCKERS FROM $98.00

80

'We Ship
Anywhere”

21325 Telegraph

excluding kids
and cushions

ECIAOS

3337 Auburn Rd.

(Between 8 & 9 Mile) 36539 Gratiot Ave. (Between Adams & Squirrel)
Southfield
(South of 16 Mile)
Auburn Hills
948-1060
Mt. Clemens 790-3065
853-7440

...Shirts & A Whole Lot More!

32500 Northwestern Hwy. • Farmington Hills, MI
Between Middlebelt and 14 Mile

Monday-Saturday 9:30-6
Thursday 9:30-7:00

(810) 851-6770

For a sick child, a stay in a hos-
pital is no day at the beach.
Officials at the new Ronald
McDonald Children's Hospital at
Loyola University in Chicago,
though, have settled on a child-
friendly decor that resembles just
that - a day at the beach.
Doctors, nurses, parents, ar-
chitects and designers have done
their best to make a child's time
spent at Loyola as painless as
possible, both physically and psy-
chologicnlly.
The hospital's newly complet-
ed pediatric intensive care unit
(PICU) was built from scratch
with the idea of making it a less
alien and forbidding place for
kids and their parents.
Walk through the automatic
door of the unit and step onto 'the
beach."
"The carpet starts out like
sand," says nurse Elizabeth
Freeze. "The unit faces east, so it
looks as if you're walking right
into Lake Michigan."
The watery motif is evident
everywhere you look.
Directly in front of the nurses'
station, at the center of the unit,
is a special kind offish tank. De-
signed by an artist, the tank is
filled with plastic aquatic crea-
tures, all painted in outrageous
Day-Glo colors.
The tank is about 2 feet high,
perfect for toddlers, explains Dr.
Gilbert Goldman, PICU medical
director. 0

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