This Week Service To Southfield en Muriel Zweigel's two children WI were young, she founded a Girl Scout troop at their Southfield school, served on the board of the Parent- Teacher Association and frequently vol- unteered as room mother. The 38-year Southfield resident went on to volunteer with the city's Mobile Watch program, the Citizens' Advisory Committee for the local U.S. Post Office, the neighborhood association and the Goodfellows. She serves on the legislative commit- tee of the Southfield Chamber of Commerce, as a board member and treasurer of the city's Cornerstone Development Authority, and reg- ularly attends city Zweigel council meetings. In recognition of her years of service, Zweigel received Southfield's Greg Kennedy Community Service Award at the Sept. 15 meeting of the Southfield City Council. Known as Muriel Bensman when she graduated from Detroit's Central High School, Zweigel is a member of Temple Emanu-El in Oak Park. She is the third annual winner of the Community Service Award, which hon- ors the memory of Greg Ke-imedy, a long-time Southfield resident who died in 1998. — Diana Lieberman New Drug Cocktails o cutting-edge drugs being devel- oped in Israel may be another advance in the fight against neurode- generative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, said a professor at Haifa's Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, during a stop in Detroit. Dr. Moussa Youdin, a Technion's medical school professor, led researchers to develop the anti-Parkinson's drug Rasagiline, and a derivative anti- Alzheimer's drug currently designated TV 3326. Although more models and drugs have been developed for Parkinson's, nothing developed so far can halt the progression of either disease, said Dr. Youdim, during a lunch of dim sum in West Bloomfield. "At best, we treat the symptoms, which is not the most ideal. It's like taking aspirin for a toothache." Dr. Youdim spent Sept. 9-10 Something Extra fundraising on behalf of the American Technion Society. Rasagiline, an anti-Parkinson's drug recently submitted for approval from the FDA, will hopefully be marketed in 2004, and the anti- Alzheimer deriva- tive drug TV 3326 is now going through clinical 'studies, he said. A drug cocktail of TV 3326, Rasagiline and other anti- Parkinson's drugs may have "neuroprotective activity, that it can prevent the death of neurons at least in animal and laboratory studies. We have to study it more closely in clinical trials, and that's sometime away, because it's somewhat expensive," he said. "We hope to speed up the process, because it's rather urgent to have these compounds." "We know we're in trouble," he said. "By the year 2020, there will be maybe 24 million Alzheimer patients, and the cost to look after them will be $370 bil- lion a year." — Harry Kirsbaum Beating The Chill D on Surath is back in town this weekend for the Detroit Mumford High School Class of 1963 40th-year reunion. But in case you can't catch up with the California resident at the Mumford festivities, check him out at Barnes & Noble on Main Street in Royal Oak at 6 p.m. Sunday. He'll be doing a book signing for his new book, Conquering Cold Calling Fear. "This book is not about teach- ing anything to the folks who call at dinner time," says Surath. "It is designed for busi- ness-to-business sales people, job seekers who can't get potential employers to call them back and anyone who has to contact strangers in the course of their day." Surath earned degrees at the Universi- ty of Michigan and at Wayne State University before heading to the San Francisco media market, where he sold radio and TV advertising, trained sales staffs, announced football and basket- ball on radio and hosted a talk show. — Alan Hitsky TEAM Kicks Off achers at Jewish supplementary ?scho ols teach the same students, with the same educational, societal and developmental problems, as teachers in public schools - -for a fraction of the salary. In addition, they see their students at a time when young people would much rather be watching television or playing soccer than sitting in a class- room. But, according to Rabbi Elliott Kleinman, with the right training, tools and attitude, teachers have the power to make religious school an exciting and stimulating experience. "When someone asks you what you do, don't say 'I teach Sunday school,"' he advised. "Instead, you should be saying, 'Every Sunday, I take kids on a field trip to Mt. Sinai.'" Rabbi Kleinman, program director for the Union of Hebrew Congregations, spoke to 90 teachers Sept. 11 at the Franklin home of Doreen Hermelin. The occasion was the kick-off to the second year of the TEAM (Teacher Education Advancement Model) program, which g ives extra education in Judaica to teachers in Detroit-area supplementary schools. TEAM began last year with programs for teachers of - kindergarten through second- grade students. This year, teach- ers of third- Kleinman through fifth- grade students will attend classes the second Sunday of every month, along with other learning opportunities dur- ing the week. - Teachers receive a stipend for partici- pation and, at the end of the two-year program, will be eligible for a TEAM trip to Israel at the discount rate of $500. The program is run by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Alliance for Jewish Education in part- nership with the Hermelin-Davidson Center for Congregation Excellence and the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education, Jewish Theological Seminary of America. — Diana Lieberman Wearable Hope ilombining her Ilhayears of expe- rience as a fash- ion executive and designer with her passionate advo- Rosenberg cacy for peace, Brenda Naomi Rosenberg has creat- ed Wings for Peace jewelry "I know how important a symbol Wings for Peace charm - can be to create awareness and funding for a cause," said Rosenberg of Bloomfield Hills. "I have created a symbol that represents a personal commitment to peace. "Wings for Peace features wings as the unifying motif that connect to symbols of faith," she said of the peace sign, Star of David, cross, ohm and sign of Allah. Her designs — which include neck- laces, key chains, lapel pins and belts — vary in size and price, from small silver birds with hanging symbols to an 18- carat white-gold and diamond necklace and a silver and diamond peace buckle on an alligator belt. A long-time organizer of prayer serv- ices, workshops and dialogues between diverse populations ; - Rosenberg saw the jewelry as an opportunity to raise the level of awareness for the need for peace. She will donate profits to pro- grams and organizations that work to pursue peace. For information or to purchase Wings for Peace jewelry, call Brenda Naomi Rosenberg at (248) 594-1545 or send an e-mail to: wings4peacejewelry@comcast.net II — Shelli Liebman Dorfman Corrections • In "And All That Schmaltz" (Sept. 12, page 76), the photo cap- tions should have identified the clarinet player as Shel Belenson. • In "Controversial Vigil" (Sept. 12, page 22), the initial reference to the synagogue should have been Beth Israel Congregation. 9/19 2 003 13