j v\cy fla Scene coming >/aat• Le fillacl AWAY from page 164 keelk and n kappine5 arvi peo p.aerly foe ,n11 farrtil>) antic feiand7. c: 76,717V ew ear= Claire and Mani Tamaroff Olivia Ambrogio of Grosse Pointe majors in biology and creative writing at Oberlin College in Ohio. Metro Detroit's Finest Heating and Cooling Specialists High Efficiency Furnaces Energy Saving Central Air Power Humidifiers Space-Gard Air Cleaner Total Comfort Package 3524656 . their holiday traditions born out of necessity. Brooke Lipman, 19, also of West Bloomfield and a sophomore at Indiana University in Bloomington, says she's upser she can go home only for Yom Kippur this year. "Academically, it's hard for me to go home,” she says. "But religiously it's hard for me not to." Reflection And Memories FREE ESTIMATES FINANCING AVAILABLE (248) 352-4656 www.SMHEATING.com 23262 Telegraph Rd. • Southfield, Ml 48034 From All Your Friends at SUNDANCE A Healthy, Happy „„„„ , 40 9/14 2001 166 New Year 737-9059 The Boardwalk Still other students find the holidays a time of reflection, both pulling apart and a coming together, of their sense of being Jewish. Olivia Ambrogio, 20, of Grosse Pointe, a senior at Oberlin College in Ohio, is candid about her ambiva- lence toward the holidays and her reli- gion. "I don't know yet if I'm celebrating the holidays this year," Ambrogio says. Hillel services are not an option, she adds, because "I'm not interested in starting the religious option I never had at home." Her mother, not her father, is Jewish. Her mother's mother is a Holocaust survivor. Ambrogio says she has fond memo- ries of the holidays at home, especially as a time when her parents' close friends, Jewish and non-Jewish, gath- ered. Last year, Ambrogio had a big take- home exam over the Rosh Hashanah weekend. "I finished it before sun- down," she says, "and shared apples and honey, for sweetness in the new year, with secular friends." A recent graduate of the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, Erica Botner, 23, says she discovered the meaning of a Jewish community since leaving home and coming to work in the Detroit area. Botner, who grew up in a small Jewish community, has been a facilita- tor in the challenge program at Camp Tamarack in Ortonville. She is celebrating the holiday this year with a good friend and his family in Farmington Hills. "It's very special to be part of a religion and have a shared history, and so much in com- mon," Botner says. "That's what's important." "The holidays away from home are a little sad and exciting," concludes Stacey Gross, "because we're starting something new with our friends." Li Because it is a commuter campus, Wayne State University's Hillel does not hold services. However, the University of Michigan Hillel holds Reform, Conservative, Orthodox and Humanistic Judaism services during the holidays. Hillel Executive Director Michael Brooks says that they serve 3,000-4,000 students. A student with a U-M or Eastern Michigan University student ID card can pick up free tickets in advance at Hillel. For information, call Hillel, (734) 769-0500.