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Southfield, MI 48076
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MICHIGAN JEWISH AIDS COALITION
WELCOMES THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY
ak
JAC
MICHIGAti AMISH MIS COAITRfIN
0
Ce,
NOVEMBER 30, 1998 %
7:30 PM
Janice Charach Epstein Museum Gallery
Jewish Community Center D. Dan and Betty Kahn Building
6600 West Maple Road • West Bloomfield
WE WILL HONOR THE CHERISHED MEMORIES
OF THOSE WHO HAVE PASSED AWAY BECAUSE
OF HIV/AIDS AND PRAY FOR THOSE WHO
ARE LIVING WITH THE VIRUS TODAY
This evening will also include MJAC's 3rd Annual Raffle Drawing.
Final tickets may be purchased prior to drawing (provided there are unsold tickets)
horn of
plenty
(248) 583-1300
tax: (248) 583-1305
31051 stephenson hvw
madison heights, mi 48071
under new ownership
11/27
1998
EdItoR's NoTe
The Gerbie
y 21-month-old daughter,
Talya, has begun uttering
a number of two-syllable
; words, and it's exciting.
She says "apple" and "Mama"
i and "baby" and pronounces pickle
peekuhl, with an emphasis on the
first syllable.
"Say it again!" I
scream with glee
whenever Talya
calls, peekuhl. I've
even indulged in
that awful parental
. act of putting my
young child on the
phone so she can
say peekuhl — but
only with close rela-
tives.
Another of Talya's
new words is
"power," which has
nothing to do with
the amount of authority she exercis-
es over our lives (which is com-
plete, of course), but rather the
name of a favorite video series,
"Preschool Power." These show little
children doing all kinds of things,
from brushing their teeth to making
a fruit salad, so as to teach other
little children how to do them as
well. I, for one, find these videos
maddening. The lyrics are absolute-
ly insufferable — if only I could
begin to describe how awful they
are — especially to a song about
cleaning out a gerbil's cage. In
what can only be called an affront
to the entire family of music, the
song tries to sound like jazz, while
the lyrics go, "Cleanin out the ger-
bie...[that's right, gerbie] Time to
change the gerbie...I'm cleanin' out
my gerbie's cage!" Oh, I hate it.
But there are times, I admit, when
I am so grateful for "Preschool
Power" that I could sing the gerbie
song myself. That's because Talya
M
loves it so, and will sit quietly and
watch, giving me a good 25 min-
utes to fix dinner, put away laun-
dry, or just rest. For my older chil-
dren, "Rugrats" has the same effect.,
It's breathtaking.
I hear a lot of "child experts" talk-
ing about the detrimental aspects of
television, and I
don't take issue
when it's families
who let children
spend six hours
day in front of the
But this simply
is not true of the
typical family.
Most moms and
dads I know turn
on the television ,
after they have
given a full day
of fun to their chil-
dren — played
with them, entertained them, read
them books — and they need a
break.
So long as TV viewing is limited,
and parents monitor what their chil-
dren watch, television is not the ulti-
mate evil. And I'm getting tired of
"experts" who tell me I'm a rotten
mother because I let my children
watch it, and of-other parents who
hint that they're just a little bit better
because their children never sit in
front of the dreaded TV.
Let's be honest: We all grew up
on television (I actually watched
hours and hours and hours of "Gill'
gan's Island"), and we turned out
normal enough, didn't we
Well, maybe not whoever wroth-.,
that "gerbie song," but most of us
Elizabeth Applebaum
AppleTree Editor