This Chanukah,
giving a Jewish News
gift subscription
will bring comfort
to your tummy.

Order a new Jewish News
subscription today and receive

EAT! ENJOY!

This is a cookbook that you'll love.

Filled with 101 treasured, irresistible, winning recipes from a nation-
wide contest. EAT! ENJOY! is a collection that will please everyone
that grew up with a Jewish grandmother's homecooking. And, a
Jewish News subscription makes a great gift too for
DETROIT
your friends or relatives. It's a year-long gift that offers SEM= NEWS
weekly surprises of exclusive features, news and in-
depth stories, recipes, lifecycle events, arts and
entertainment coverage and much, much more!

This Chanukah, figuring out what
to give is as easy as ordering a
Jewish News subscription.

Order a Jewish News subscription for the low one-year rate of I
$48 and receive EAT! ENJOY! The 101 BEST Jewish recipes in I
I America — FREE. Call (248) 354-6620 or return the coupon below.

I

I

Receive 52 issues of the JN for only $48

I

❑ Please bill me

($65 out-of-state).

❑ Payment enclosed ❑ Charge to my: [:1 MasterCard

Card #

[jVisa

Exp.

Signature (required)

Id like to send a subscription as a gift to:

My Name

My Address

City

Address

State

Zip

City

Phone

State

Zip

Phone

Gift Card Message

Send cookbook to:

I

Me

Recipient

New Subscribers Only.

Please send all payments along with this coupon to:
CEE00
The Jewish News, P.O. Box 267, Southfield, MI 4.8037-2267. Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. a
www.detroitjewishnews.com

Program helps parents
learn about
communicating with
teens on issues of
diversity.

SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN

StaffWriter

or Pam Hazlett, the pro-
gram on teens and diversi-
ty hit home during a dis-
cussion of sensitivity to
those who are gay.
"Our 19-year-old son is gay People
don't understand the torture that can be
felt by kids who are gay, lesbian or bisex-
ual," said Hazlett, a guest at Temple
Israel's "Valuing Diversity From a Jewish
Perspective: Thoughtful Parents Raising
Thoughtful Kids" lecture and panel dis-
cussion on Nov. 14.
She and her husband, Mike, of
Rochester Hills hoped to take infor-
mation back to their Detroit chapter
of Parents, Families and Friends of
Lesbians and Gays. PFLAG is a
national organization.
Hazlett's concern focuses on teen vic-
tims of verbal abuse and physical assault
because of their sexual preference or
those who attempt suicide rather than
"come out" to family and friends. A way
to help, she said, is through education.
"Parents are often in denial. We need
to educate on diversity and HIV/AIDS;

parents need to know what their chil-
dren are going through," said Dr.
Burton Fogelman, president of
Michigan Jewish AIDS Coalition in
Southfield. MJAC's Educating our
Community about Homosexuality
through Outreach program co-spon-
sored the event, along with Temple
Israel's Kulanu Committee, named for
the Hebrew word meaning "all of us.
The event began with a talk on HIV
and AIDS by Rabbi Ben Kamin of
Cleveland, the keynote speaker. Earlier in
the week, he addressed the synagogue's
confirmation class and held a lunch-and-
learn session, co-sponsored by Temple
Israel and the Jewish Community Center
of Metropolitan Detroit.
The 70 guests of the "Valuing
Diversity" program also listened to a
panel discussion on improving commu-
nication with children on gay and les-
bian issues and about individuals with
developmental, physical and psychiatric
challenges and economic differences.
Moderated by Temple Israel Rabbi

"

