for every occasion and always 30% off (most irs) Unique. Unusual. Great Selection, Complimentary Gift wrapping. 66 _ _ Orchard Lake Road at Maple Road • west Bloomfield I 248 8551600 Moll Thur10 9 Tile Wed Fri Sail0 fi Sun 12 S 95 per month* FREE Nights and Weekends FREE Motorola Profile 300* • Select Communications Your Wireless Connection 248 745-8800 169 South Telegraph Road • Pontiac Atrthorizod Collular D4saler *Some restrictions apply. 2 or 3 year agreement required. Must be activated by Select Communications. While supplies last Offer ends 9/29/99. S5 access discount and free nights and weekends valid until 1/1/2000. 5 ,/ tipc/ DErstarr =WISE NEWS 8/20 1999 112 Detroit Jewish News 4111N. Get Results... Advertise in our Entertainment Section! Call The Sales Department (248) 354-7123 Ext. 209 Health Information Aids Kids After Attack NECHEMIA MEYERS Special to the Jewish News A program designed to help children in the Galilee cope with the psychological stress caused by terrorist bombard- ments is now aiding boys and girls in a half dozen other places to deal with the consequences of violence. The program was initially developed in the 1980s by Dr. Mooli Lahad and his team from the Community Stress Prevention Center in Kiryat Shemona, probably the most often-shelled town in Israel. It is based on the assumption, which has been sustained by years of experience, that prior drills and discus- sions significantly reduce the rate of psy- chological distress when teachers and pupils are forced to descend into air raid shelters. With the passage of time, the CSPC also began to deal with prob- lems outside the school system, such as preparing broadcasters in local TV and radio stations for keeping the population well informed and reason- ably calm when the city is under attack. In addition, the organization started teaching preparation and cop- ing skills in regard to suicides, serious accidents and violence. Nowhere in this country is the situ- ation more volatile than in the Gaza Strip, where the residents of a dozen Jewish settlements live in a predomi- nantly hostile area. It was only natural, therefore, that,they should turn for assistance to Dr. Lahad, whose-pro- grams have helped them cope with a series of violent attacks over the past decade. Community leaders and staff in the area, from the chairman of the region- al council on down, were invited to a two-day educational program under the direction of Dr. Lahad. It contin ued with refresher courses from time to time. The effectiveness of the prepara- tion, and the inner strength of the local population, was evident when people there had to deal with the aftermath of a nearly successful attempt last year by a suicide bomber to blow up a packed school bus. "The first thing we did," recalls Drora Gordon, director of social services in the area, "was to send two social workers to the bus. They were there, talking to the children, within five ruin-