FacT-A-DaY * Professional instructions * Classes for all skill levels - beginner to expert * Special program for the younger skiers (ages 6-9) * Small classes • Adult classes too! * Charter buses Saturday & Sunday (248) 855- 1 0 7 5 Teaching Kids to Ski is Our Business Celebrating our 25th Season! Tamarack Camps Presents I t Fall fun Day it Sunday, October 24, 1999 1pm to 4pm Camp Maas, Ortonville Enjoy Pumpkin Picking, Flayride, Cider, Donuts, a etting Zoo and More she volunteered to serve with mem- bers of the Hagana, Israel's fledg- ling army, who were being -trained by the British to fight the Nazis. In 1944, Senesh parachuted into Yugoslavia, then entered Hungary where she was captured and tor- tured — yet she never revealed a word of her mission. She was killed by a firing squad. In 1950, Senesh was reburied in Israel. 25. EMANUEL RINGELBLUM (1900-1944) saw what was com- ing and made certain to write it down. Before serving as historian of the Warsaw Ghetto, Ringelblum helped Jews whose lives had been destroyed by the Nazis. Later,, he began writing the details of every- day life inside the ghetto walls. He called his work, ironically, Oneg Shabbat (Shabbat enjoyment). Ringelblum and his family were mur- dered by the Nazis, but his materi- al (buried underground inside the Warsaw Ghetto and discovered after the war) survived. 26. KIVIE-KAP_AN (1940-1975), a longtime civil rights activist, was president of the NAACP from -1966-1975. 14, $5 per car load Any Questions? call 248-661-0600 Take I-75 North to Exit 101-Grange Hall Road. Turn right on Grange Hall Road (East). Take Grange Hall Road until it dead ends. Turn right at dead end. This is still Grange Hall road. Travel a mile to Barron Road. Turn left on Barron Road. Travel 1-1/2 miles to second Perryville road. Turn right on Perryville Road. Camp entrance is 1/8 mile on the right side. SCHOOLS welcomes alumna Natalie Zemon Davis "The movie was great, but Natalie Davis's book is even greater." author of THE RETURN OF MARTIN GUERRE for a lively discussion of film, history and. literature Thursday, October 28, 1999 at 7 p.m. ADMISSION IS FREE. Cranbrook Schools' Lerchen Hall 550 Lone Pine Road, Bloomfield Hills Part of the annual Sirchio Distinguished Lecture Series. 10/22 1999 The New York Review of Books • For more information, please call 248 645.3000. eatch the best Music Reviews in JN Entertainment 27. EDGAR BRONFMAN (1929- ), heir to the Seagram's fortune, is a leading spokesman and activist on behalf of numerous Jewish causes. Formerly head of the World Jewish Congress, Bronfman helped spear- head the campaign to investigate what happened to millions of dollars' worth of gold that the Nazis stole from Jews during World War II. Thanks largely to his efforts, England and the United States agreed in 1997 to compensate Holocaust sur- vivors whose monetary funds were looted by the Nazis. 28. URIAH P. LEVY (1792-1862) began his career at age 10, when he ran away to sea. By the time he was 20, Levy was both a captain and part owner of a ship. Levy made his fortune in real estate. He purchased, restored and lived at Monticello, which was the home and burial grounds of President Thomas Jefferson. Levy made two important contribu- tions in his lifetime: First, after being dismissed from the navy in 1855 he successfully fought the decision, insisting it was anti- Semitism. Second, Levy is the man responsible for ending corpo- ral punishment in the navy, an accomplishment noted on the stat- ue above his.grave in Brooklyn. 29. ELI COHEN (1924-1965), born in Egypt, came in 1957 to Israel. He entered Mossad, Israel's intelli- gence agency and was given the name Camile Amin Thabbet. Sent to Syria, he gained the confidence of many Arab leaders. In 1965, Cohen was arrested, quickly found guilty of espionage and sentenced to death. Though Israel offered all its Syrian prisoners in exchange for Cohen, the request was denied. Cohen was publicly hanged in Dam- ascus, and his body buried in the Damascus Jewish cemetery. 30, ANNE FRANK (1929-1945) was 13 when she began her now famous diary about hiding with her family and neighbors in the secret annex in the Netherlands during World War II. Even in the heart of despair she remained hopeful, full of life, and convinced that human beings are basically good. 31. ARTHUR GARFIELD HAYES (1881-1954), born in Rochester, N.Y., was the leading civil rights activist of his day. He served for many years as general counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union. Hays was on the defense team for Sacco and Vanzetti, the Scottsboro Boys, and worked with Clarence Darrow on the Scopes "Monkey Trial." El