A permanent place in education; golfing for dollars; Kol Ami thinks ahead. No longer floating in "interim" limbo, Judah Isaacs is now the official execu- tive director of the Agency for Jewish Education. Isaacs, a former planner for the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, joined the AJE last summer, shortly after a Jewish Education Service of North America evaluation reported widespread dissatisfaction with most of AJE's programs and a "fuzziness" in over- all community planning for education. Since taking the agency's helm, Isaacs has played a key role in the newly formed Alliance for Jewish Education, a Federation committee charged with developing a mega-plan for education. Isaacs, who replaced Howard Gelberd, has also tried to address some of the concerns raised in the JESNA report, mainly strengthen- ing communication with program stakeholders like congregational edu- cators and youth,group advisers. "We knew as soon as Judah started that this was just the right thing, because of his skills in terms of deal- ing with people, his awareness of the system and his own educational back- ground," said AJE President and Alliance Co-Chair Dr. Lynda Giles. She said Isaacs initially had been hired on an interim basis simply because he was not sure whether he wanted to stay in Detroit or move back to his hometown of New York City. The first ball won't be teed up until June, but the Jewish Community Center Golf Classic already has col- lected over $37,000. Money from the June 7 outing at Tam 0' Shanter Country Club in West Bloomfield will help children go to camp and enable low-income fami- lies to become JCC members. Golfing or hole sponsorships cost $300 each. Raffle tickets, at $100 each, bring the chance to win a two- year lease on a new car. JCC Executive Vice President Mort Plotnick, who is organizing the outing, seeks additional sponsors. The day will include lunch, dinner and a cocktail party. Temple Kol Ami expects to move, but it's not sure when it will actually out- grow its current location in West Bloomfield. "There is nothing on the books immediately," said Lee Schottenfels, first vice president of the Reform congregation. The building on Walnut Lake Road is too small to fit everyone comfort- ably during the high holidays. The space crunch means students have to take supplementary Hebrew classes at nearby Ealy Elementary, a West Bloomfield public school. Schottenfels, who chairs a commit- tee on location plans, said the congre- gation is looking into various possibil- ities, including buying an existing building and renovating it, adding 5,000 to 10,000 feet of space to the current structure or purchasing prop- erty and building a new facility. A firm commitment is five to 10 years down the road, he said. With a constitutional restriction of 500 families, Kol Ami is just 50 above the current membership. Schottenfels said the limit was upped from 350 a few years ago and may surge to 600 over the next several years. But the temple will never grow larger, he maintained. "We are a small heimish place and that is the way we want to be. We aren't looking to have 1,000 families or more," he said. Which leaves unexplained why the congregation recently dismissed its executive director, Joe Tarica, saying that membership hadn't grown as much as expected when he was hired three years ago. Marking 100 Tears Of Detroit Jewry This 1930s photo shows children giving their donations to build a new Jewish Center in Detroit. Photo courtesy of the Leonard N. Simons Jewish Community Archives/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. If you have information about this photograph, please call Heidi Christein, Jewish community archivist: (248) 642-4260. 4/30 1999 28 Remember When .11 • From the pages of The Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 1989 The attorney general of Sweden filed charges against an Islamic radio station for stirring up anti- Semitic feelings with its broadcasts. Britain was seen as moving toward accepting the concept of an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. 1979 Shalom Mellul, a 12-year-old Israeli schoolboy, spotted a bomb under the seat of a Jerusalem bus and warned other passengers to flee. As a reward, B'nai B'rith said it would pay his educational expenses and he will ride buses for free. Sylvia Ross was installed as presi- dent of the B'nai B'rith Women's Council of Metropolitan Detroit. 1969 Dennis M. Aaron, county supervi- sor for Oak Park-Huntington Woods, has been named to head the Oakland County Law Enforcement Committee. Egypt added its name to the list of Arab countries that have quietly lifted the ban on tourists with Israeli visas stamped on their pass- ports. 1959 Young Israel Center of Oak Woods, the first South Oakland County congregation to establish its own synagogue, planned the celebration of its fifth anniversary. Plans were made for the first underwater exploration of biblical archeology to be conducted off the Israeli coast in the Mediterranean. Irwin I. Cohen, Detroit attorney, was appointed by the city's mayor to be a member of the board of commissioners of the Detroit House of Corrections. Julius Chajes, director of music at the Jewish Community Center, presented a piano recital featuring Roslyn Clayman, Reva Kowalsky, Joan Machin, Judith Patterson and Robert Shulman.