4 • Are you battling with your child over food? • Is your child sneaking food? • Is your child gaining too much weight? • Do weight problems run in your family? CCWM Sports Let the professional staff of The (enter for Childhood Weight Management help you and your child. For more information about classes and locations, call: Center for Childhood Weight Management D&M FUR_NITURE WAREHOUSE 22183 Telegraph Rd. Between S & 9 Mile Southfield NI(m.-Sat. 111-6 . 248-353-43(M) sun. i 2-5 SALE on Quality Commercial Grade Mattresses 10 Year Warranty . 1 FREE & get additional 10% OFF if you upgrade I WAS SALE WAS SALE : Twin-Set $290 $129 and uP I Queen-Set $400 $189 and up i Full-Set $360 $169 mu' up King-Set $999 $450 and up "We Sell All Types of FURNITURE" Contact RICK ZERNER for Exceptional Personal Service & the Area's Best Selection of Fine Automobiles. THINK OF FEDERATION'S TRIBUTE PROGRAM No Gift Touches More Lives (248) 203-1498 VIN D Your Tri-State Source Since 1956 4121 11/9 2001 104 VIN DEVERS MERCEDES-BENZ • AUDI 5570 MONROE • SYLVANIA, OH 419/885-5111 www.vindevers.com tributes@jfmd.org or www.thisisfederation.org JR DMIWIT MI/ Classifieds GET Results! (248) 354-5959 JARC client Jonathan Arens takes a shot. fives and joking with each other. They exhibit a warmth that is often difficult to reach in a community service proj- ect setting." The JARC men consider this activity a highlight of their week, she said. Sarah Aasheim, community relations coordinator for JARC, said the pro- gram gives the residents an opportuni- ty for recreation they wouldn't other- wise, have, as well as an opportunity to make meaningful connections in the community. When the program broke for the summer, the residents kept ask- ing when it would start again. Greenberg AZA received two awards for the program, one from the Michigan Region of BBYO and the other from BBYO International, where they were the only chapter so honored. The program helped Greenberg AZA members learn what community service is all about said Perry Teicher, 16, of West Bloomfield, last year's chapter president. "Volunteering is more than making phone calls to get people to come to an event. We learned that by helping others we helped ourselves. We would see the smiles on the JARC residents' faces, and then we would look in the mirror and see the smiles on our own faces." Jay Bassin of Oak Park, who has advised the Greenberg chapter for five years, beams with pride when he talks about the program. "My boys have always been athletic, and basketball is one of their fortes," he said. "It's a rich reward for them to be able to do something they love and help other folks at the same time. I think they like the 'feel good' feeling they get." Some of the AZA members admit they weren't very enthusiastic about the program in the beginning. Danny Samet, 18, of Farmington Hills gradu- ated from high school – and from AZA – last spring, but came to the JCC recently to play basketball with his AZA and JARC buddies. He says the basketball league changed his life. "I never was one who liked helping out in the community, and I definitely was not a person who wanted to go help out people with mental or physi- cal handicaps," said the Oakland Community College freshman. "I real- ly felt uncomfortable around people who were 'different.'" A Few Converts Samet didn't participate in the first few basketball sessions, but decided to check it out after his friends told him how much fun they were having. He was gratified when he helped some of the JARC residents make baskets. "When they did, their faces bright- ened like the sun. We felt good about ourselves for making other peoples' day," he said. Samet started looking forward to the basketball games and began to regard the JARC residents as his friends. He decided he liked helping others so much he would make it his life's goal — he's studying to become a social worker. Mikey Noveck, 16, of Birmingham also admits he wasn't very happy when the chapter decided to do its service project with JARC. But the program helped him realize how special the feeling of companionship can be. The realization came during spring break last year, when he was at a bowl- ing alley with friends. A JARC resi- dent, who was there with his house- mates, called him by name. His friends were bewildered, but Mikey says he "felt more special than embar- rassed" when he saw how happy the -- JARC resident was to see him. "It's impossible to understand how special a friend is to them until you become one," he said. "To the world; you may be a single person. To a per- son, however, your friendship may mean the world." ❑