THE JEWISH NEWS > UP FRONT This Week's Top Stories Infighting Local leaders repudiate a small group of rabbis condemning non-Orthodox movements. LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER Julius Spielberg Eight Over Eighty Senior citizen awardees lead active, exemplary lives. ILL DAVIDSON SKLAR STAFF WRITER / - ou'll just have to excuse Julius Spiel- "The reason these eight individuals were cho- berg for slowing his pace. sen was that they really stood above and beyond Times for the walker in training for those other nominees for their achievements in races this summer have increased - in perpetuating Jewish identity, for showing a ded- the 1,500 meters from 12.5 minutes to ication to a volunteer cause, for overcoming risks 15 minutes in the past 12 years. and challenges for the benefit of the general "I am getting older and I am losing community and for leading a few to victory over steam," the 94-year-old national r ca.. competitor explained. While he may have slowed on the track, Mr. Spielberg's volunteer ac- tivities have increased in recent Fs years. Whether it is soliciting funds r, for the Michigan Chapter of the Friends of the Israeli Defense Forces or serving as president of a group of Jewish pharmacists or delivering kosher Meals on Wheels as a vol- unteer, Mr. Spielberg spends a good portion of his time helping others. Neil Gorosh, Mr. Spielberg's grandson, said he nominated his grandfather for the Eight Over Eighty awards because he serves as an inspiration for people of all ages. "I know he is special," Mr. Gorosh said. "He is more active than many people 10, 15, even 20 years younger Julius Spielberg makes his rounds as a volunteer, delivering kosher food for Meals on Wheels. than he is." In May, Mr. Spielberg will join seven other individuals being honored by Jew- the many," he said. ish Federation Apartments (JFA), The Jewish The other awardees include Herman Canner, News, HDS Services and BDO Seidman, LLP, Mary Fink, Charles Fink, Bess Krolik, Accountants and Consultants. Marian Mann, May Nosanchuk and Milton D.J. Kucharski, development director for JFA, Rose. said five judges pored over more than 30 nom- inations to find the chosen eight. EIGHT OVER EIGHTY page 6 CL small group of right-wing rabbis, members of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis in the United States and Canada (UORUSC), announced last week that the Reform and Conservative movements with- in Judaism are not Jewish and advised Jewish individuals not to affiliate with those groups. Rabbis from across the reli- gious spectrum have come out against the divisive statement. The dispute arose as the Is- raeli Knesset considered a bill this week on whether to invali- date Reform and Conservative conversions in Israel (see relat- ed story on page 20). The statement by the rab- binical group has also been mis- construed as a judgment against individuals who affiliate as Re- form and Conservative Jews. Ralti Hirsh Ginsberg of Brooklyn, the acting chairman of the UORUSC, said the notion that Jews who follow Reform and Conservative doctrine are not Jews "is most ridiculous — any person born by a Jewish mother is a Jew. We only said that the Reform and Conserva- tive doctrines, that their Ju- daism is not Judaism, because there is only one Judaism." Rabbi Ginsberg's organization is not the well-known Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, known by many as the OU. Still, Rabbi Ginsberg claims approximately 550 mem- bers, including at least a hand- ful of rabbis in Detroit. Rabbi Chaskel Grubner is- sued a written statement for De- troit's Council of Orthodox Rabbis: "The Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit is greatly pained at the continuing slide of the Jewish people into the chasm of division and strife. It is well recorded in the history of our people that senseless ha- tred leads to our greatest peri- ods of destruction." INFIGHTING page 20 A Heavy Price A tuition hike at the JCC's Child Development Center sends longtime customers searching for other day-care options. JULIE WIENER STAFF WRITER W endy Brickner has been delighted with the quality of care and the Jewish-ori- ented programming at the Jewish Community Center's infant-toddler program. The program was expen- sive, but until recently Ms. Brickner didn't mind paying a little more. However, in the past month her feelings have changed. Like many other parents, Ms. Brickner has placed her children on wait lists at other day-care programs. With the announcement that the JCC Child Development Cen- ter will be increasing its rates to $975 a month, parents are up in arms and scrambling for alter- natives. At the current rate of $39 per day, plus a required family mem- bership that can be as high as $45 a month, the Jewish Com- munity Center's infant-toddler program is already the most ex- pensive day-care program in met- ropolitan Detroit. On March 27, each parent re- ceived a letter and packet of in- formation explaining the increase. According to the JCC's chart comparing itself to First Impressions, Children's World, KinderCare, Child Time and Great Beginnings, the JCC offers the best staff-child ratio (1 to 3, as opposed to 1 to 4) for infants, and is the only one of these pro- grams providing kosher lunch, a Jewish curriculum, full outdoor track and nature trails, a full li- brary, an indoor gym and swim- -cr ming lessons. The JCC packet also asserts that the daily equivalent of the monthly rate will be $45 for a `c child enrolled five days a week. But Ms. Brickner said the in- - HEAVY PRICE page 21 3