GO? O Give Cancer Fatigue The Old One-Two. 2 Fi g htin g cancer can really take you out of the swing of things! But now, instead of feeling tired, listless and just plain pooped, you can feel focused, alert and ready to go. At our next FREE Cancer AnswerNight, we'll lay out all the latest, easy-to-follow steps: 0 Hear from our panel of cancer survivors and their care-givers on how they've been able to bounce back into life. 0 Talk one-on-one with nutritionists, exercise specialists, pharmacists and nurses about how to get back in the groove. 0 Get news you can use to feel better fast. 0 Join us for refreshments and take home a free "power pack" gift. Don't be a wall flower. Come and learn how to feel better! Cancer AnswerNight Wednesday, April 21 7 to 9 p.m. Livonia Holiday Inn (1-275 and 6 Mile Road) Registration is encouraged. Please call 1-800-742-2300 and enter category 7870, Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Michigan or visit our website at www.cancer.med.umich.edu Health System voimmt There are Many Ways to Pick U p the Now available @ these ANN ARBOR LOCATIONS: Our My Window on the World" and.. Once Upon A Time" programs help preschoolers get a leg up. _4/16 1999 We provide them with activities in math, reading, science and music. And since young children learn best through hands-on-experience, its a good idea to involve their lee.t. too. Farmington Hills Farmington West Bloomfield 6615 Middlebelt Road 38325 West 14 Mile Road 25005 Middlebelt Road KinderCare (248) 477-4040 (248) 855-1963 (248) 661-5850 32 Detroit Jewish News • Borders Books • Barnes & Noble • Hillel House • Mainstreet Books • Michigan Union Bookstore • Nicola's Books, (A Little Professor Books Co.) Education Panel Ends First Stage A community panel charged with developing a mega-plan for Jewish education has completed its first stage. The 40-person Alliance for Jewish Education of Metropolitan Detroit wrapped up a series of lectures and discussions this week with a visit from Dr. Ron Wolfson, one of the archi tects of a national pilot project to make synagogues more welcoming and spiritually nourishing. Since November, the Alliance, a Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit committee composed of Federation representatives, Jewish Community Center leaders, rabbis and stakeholders in various educational insti- tutions, has met on seven occasions to be briefed on the issues and be inspired by successful Jewish education initiatives in other communities. The meetings to this point have been closed to the press. Harlene Appelman, the director of the Alliance, said she has been "protective" of the process in order to provide a "safe space, where we can openly discuss issues in the community, with warts and all." Nov the Alliance will split into five workgroups focusing not on specific institutions or constituencies, but on educational services for different age groups, such as small children and teens. Each group will issue recommendations to the Alliance in the fall. These recom- mendations are expected to be the basis of a larger plan on how to strengthen and support Jewish education in Detroit. Individual Alliance members said they were pleased with the process so far. "It's been absolutely inspiring," said Rabbi Avraham Cohen, a Yeshiva Beth Yehudah teacher who also coordinates an adult learning program called Partners In Torah: Paul Magy, a board member at Adat Shalom, said, "I've been on a lot of com- mittees, and they're usually more rubber stamp oriented, which can be frustrating. That definitely isn't the case here." The idea for the Alliance came last summer, after an outside evaluation of the Agency for Jewish Education criti- cized Detroit for its "fuzziness" in over- all planning on education. Chairing the Alliance are Federation Immediate Past President Robert Naftaly and Agency for Jewish Education President Dr. Lynda Gilts. — Julie Wiener