100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 15, 1997 - Image 106

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-08-15

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

STEP OUT WITH THE JEWISH NEWS

On The Road
To Success

MARK RYAN SPECIAL TO APPLETREE

CURE DIABETES

WALK

Every year, millions of Jewish children around the world suffer from

diabetes and its complications. Diabetes is a leading cause of blindness,

kidney failure, heart disease, and amputations. Insulin is not a cure. Won't

you help find one? That's the goal of the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation.

As a reader of The Jewish News, there are many ways in which you can give

SUBSCRIBE

to The Juvenile Diabetes Foundation. By subscribing, or giving a gift

subscription to The Jewish News using the coupon below, we will

donate $10 of your paid subscription to The Juvenile Diabetes Foundation.

In addition, on September 21, you can help by joining over one million

PLEDGE

Americans, and over one million Israelis, who are putting both feet

forward in the Walk to Cure Diabetes. The Jewish News is proud to

sponsor a Walk team, and we want you to walk with us! Please join The

Jewish News along with the entire Detroit community to raise the much-

needed funds to continue the battle against this disease. For more

information on joining The Jewish News in the Walk to Cure Diabetes or

to pledge a Jewish News walker, please call (248) 354-6060 ext. 229.

Call today and start taking steps to find the cure for diabetes.

gaRkWrMn.

SM:43

4

AX"'W,C4 14*.



YES! Please send me 52 issues of The Jewish News plus five issues of (11
Style Magazine for only $46 ($63 out-of-state).



❑ Please Bill Me.
Charge my: ❑ VISA

Card #

❑ Payment Enclosed.

❑ MasterCard

Exp. Date

❑ I cannot walk but I have
enclosed a pledge for the
Jewish News walk team.

My Name

THE APPL ETREE

My Address

28

❑ I would also like to walk with
the Jewish News on Sept. 21

State

Zip

Phone,

New subscribers on

DJDE

THE JEWISH NEWS

Please send all payments with this coupon to:

The Jewish News *P.O. Box 2267 *Southfield, MI 48037-2267
Or us of (810) 354-1210 *Allow 2-3 weeks fog' deNve

fo .W.S.

\‘'t:cKs

bt...Nua sU i&

Dear Dr. Ryan: You have
written about the impor-
tance of students getting on
the information highway.
You can't turn on the radio
or watch TV without being
told about the wonders of
the computer age. Every
restaurant,
depart-
ment
store, or
gas station
has at least
one corn-
* puter up
and run-
ning.
My question is, if this
information highway is so
important, why don't the
schools get on with the job
and make sure every John
and Jane has a computer?
— Concerned Parent

34.6 percent of buildings did
not have enough power to sup-
port the new technology; 46
percent had inferior wiring.
More than half the schools
(60.6 percent) did not have ad-
equate conduits for network
cables.
At some
point ma-
jor invest-
ment in the
new learn-
ing technol-
ogy
infrastruc-
ture is essen
tial. With
that investment, the
school's capabilities to provide
learners with an educational
experience, via the information
highway, can occur. At that
point we can, as you put it, get
on with the job.

Dear Concerned Parent: It
has been stated, and I believe
quite correctly, that the infor-
mation highway is a toll road.
The challenge facing schools is
more than just buying new
computers.
Many schools were con-
structed forty or fifty years ago
at a time went "high tech"
meant the installation of a
school intercom. Therefore,
besides the capital outlay for
the computers and software,
many older schools need to un-
dergo physical changes.
A 1995 Government Ac-
Counting Office survey of
10,000 schools found that

Dear Dr. Ryan: I have a 5-
year-old. He seems so
alert and active. When he
starts school next year I am
sure he'll have a lot of new
things to do. He seems very
happy and very bright I
read stories to him. We
also talk and act out his fa-
vorite fairy tales.
Of course, as a mother I
think he is going to be won-
derful at anything he gets
into. But, I was thinking,
maybe there is a list of
things he should be doing
each day to make him even
more ready for school.
I was wondering what

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan