NOTEBOOK BRIDGES from page Gene Meadows SCIENTISTS. ARTISTS. ENGINEERS. ATHLETES. Every profession and every vocation begins with education. And every education initiates the discovery of who we are. Cranbrook Schools offers an education that goes beyond book learning and test taking — an education that becomes a part of who your child is — and will become. BROOKSIDE: Offers an outstanding core curriculum for pre-kindergarten through 5th grade • Hands-on instruction in computers, science, and music • Outstanding new multi-media lab • Excellent student/teacher ratio • Spanish instruction beginning at four years of age CRANBROOK KINGSWOOD MIDDLE SCHOOL: Concentrates on gender-specific student needs, grades 6 through 8 • Gender-separate programs emphasize the development of self-confidence, competence and creativity • Average 6 to 1 student-faculty ratio • State- of-the-art computer facilities CRANBIZOOK KINGSWOOD UPPER SCHOOL: Provides a co-educational day and boarding environment, grades 9 . through 12 • Recognized as exemplary school by the U.S. Department of Education • Exceptional record of college placement at Ivy League schools and other outstanding colleges and universities CRANBIZOOK SCHOOLS OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1ST UPPER SCHOOL PROGRAM 1 P.M. LOWER AND MIDDLE SCHOOL OPEN 1 -3 P.M. SCHOOLS 1 221 N. WOODWARD AVE., PO Box 801 , BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MI, 48303.0801 248 645.3610 Clk A NBR.00K@CC.CRANCROOK . EDI. I 1OR 6 1998 Cranbrook subscribes to a policy of pool opportunity with respect to employment, portnipotion m ovailohlo pogroms end access. 33 winning youth drama, "Nothing Is Simple," about interracial dating. While in Chicago, Soble earned 16 major television awards for her work on behalf of superstation WGN and local network outlets of ABC, NBC and CBS. Her children's holiday series, "Shalom Playhouse" on WGN, earned two Emmys; her children's series, "The Magic Door Television Theatre" on CBS, earned six. Many of the other awards also were for Jewish content pro- gramming. Soble came back to Detroit in 1996 in hopes of developing local TV pro- gramming. Currently, she's co-producing the MediaOne cable TV show, "Every- thing's Kosher" — a kosher cooking show co-sponsored by The Jewish News and slated to be on the air by January. She's working with PBS to develop "The Chef's Table," a French cooking show to air on WTVS-Channel 56. Soble also has teamed with the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. The teamwork has produced three live stage shows — featuring pianist Michael Feinstein, comedian Alan King and the Detroit Symphony. For 18 months, until this past June, Soble produced the JCC's lecture series, "Jewish Secrets to Self Improvement." She patterned the series after her Chica- go TV show, "Sanctuary," which had rabbis teaching self improvement through Torah study. "The intent, in each case, was to reach out to everybody in all branches of Judaism equally, to be all inclusive — to invite and to appeal to everyone. That's been a recurrent theme in everything I've done," said Soble, as relaxed at Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek and Temple Israel as she is at Bais Chabad. TV production is her career. But Children of Chernobyl is her passion. As she put it: "It's something I can get my arms around. As the airlift numbers climb, and more children are transported, I get a sense that this cross-denominational effort is working and that there's an end point in sight. There's quite a ways to go, but as each child is transported, and each family is reunited in Israel, the program becomes very measurable — and very heartrending." 0 To leave a voice mail message for Robert Sklar, please call (248) 354- 6060, ext. 258. 4 111.• - LETTERS LETTERS from page 33 dangerously undermined and dimin- ished by the currently invoked processes of political and unconstitu- tional impeachment. The investigation and prosecution by Kenneth Starr, using methods short of due process, has undermined the credi- bility of the fact-finding process itself. The president of the United States should be as protected by the Bill of Rights as any person or faith and confi- dence in our law will be seriously dam- aged. The 34-year veteran member of Congress, John Conyers of Michigan, put the question before Congress and the country, "The issue is not Mr. Clinton. The issue is to preserve, pro- tect and defend the rule of law and the integrity of the Constitution. Without law, there is tyranny and anarchy." Cherish your right as an American citizen to preserve this democracy. Your vote is the power you have to maintain your freedom as the way you live your life. Ann Barnett Southfield Local Program Aids Survivors Your recent opinion piece by Israeli Holocaust survivor Menno Ratzker (Holocaust Survivors Need Our Atten- tion, Oct. 9) correctly identified many of the important psychological issues of Holocaust survivors. Mr. Ratzker discussed how the emo- tional trauma of the Holocaust has con- 4 tinued to affect survivors to this day. He calls upon communities to develop pro- grams for survivors and to be sensitive to their special needs. Since 1993, DMC/Sinai Hospital's Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families has had a special service to aid survivors. The service offers a weekly support group for survivors, individual s and family counseling, community liaisons, a Yiddish film series in Oak Park and West Bloomfield and Cafe Europa, a monthly social program of frailich Jewish music for the survivor community. Dr. Charles Silow " Director, DMC/Sinai Program for Holocaust Survivors and Farniliev