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September 04, 1999 - Image 186

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-09-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

411100

Smaller Contingent Readies For Maccabi Games
Cleveland Features Israeli Masterpieces

,
Tamarack Camps celebrate a milestone this weekend
back at a long history and forward to a new future.
looking

Honorable Menschen

West Bloomfield

So it is to your varied interests
that the Jewish News focuses. Cer-
tainly we cover the times of our lives
our births, deaths and all the im-
portant passages in between such as
bar/bat mitzvahs, weddings, hon-
ors and achievements.
Our coverage also includes the
news that impacts our lives,
whether it's here in metropolitan
Detroit, around the state, the na-
tion, Israel and the Middle East or
the world at large. It may be de-
velopments in religious life, child-
rearing or caring for our senior
citizens.
Like most of you, the Jewish
News is committed to education, es-
pecially Jewish education. Our cov-
erage and in-depth analysis of the
issues around this important aspect of

community is critical.
Yet not all is serious. The Jewish
News gladly covers life's pleasures. Trav-
el, dining, shopping, collecting, mu-
sic, arts, literature and dance are all
subjects in which we're interested.
For 57 years, the Jewish News has
been a vibrant part of your lives. And
we expect that we will continue to be
an important part of the community
for many more years to come.
We're meeting the challenges of
changing communications. Last year
we added our Web site:
www.detroitjewishnews.com . Since
73 percent of you own or use com-
puters ( and are three times as likely
as the national average to be on-
line), we urge you to visit our site
and share your comments with us.



*Source: 1998 Simmons-Jewish News Study

miss him so much," Sylvia says tearfully of her 42-year-
"If we don't
old son Nathan David who died of AIDS about six years
ago. When he was HIV-positive, she joined MJAC
educate the
(Michigan Jewish AIDS Coalition), then a fledgling organ-
community
ization that would enfold her in its compassionate arms as
her son's condition worsened.
about AIDS,
"I cannot find the words to tell the impact they had," Sylvia
we're lost."
says. "They were there for me; they're still there for me. M JAC
is magic. The words fit them perfectly."
Sylvia has been a dedicated MJAC volunteer for more than
six years, often coming in to the office more than three times a week. She's also become
an effective speaker in area public schools.
"I speak whenever I'm needed. I once spoke to 70 fifth-graders at Kennedy School
in Southfield. All I talked about was my son. Afterward, they all gave me a hug. I feel when
I speak to these kids that education is the most important tool."
She's also in a Detroit school once a week during the academic year as part of Temple
Beth El's reading program. And twice a month she visits two women at the Danto Health
Care Center.
But because of Nathan David, Sylvia's heart belongs to MJAC.
"My son would be so proud," she says. "I'm trying to save other lives. I wouldn't
want another human being to suffer as he did and for families to have to grieve.
"Whatever I do I just do from my heart. I don't need recognition. The message has to
go out and I'm one of the messengers."

Keri Guten Cohen

184

JNH

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