New Time For Dream Job
The Shul in West Bloomfield at night.
It's six down and six to
other, and once he got to
go for contestants on
be taller and stronger
the ESPN reality televi-
than me, he started to
sion series, Dream Job.
excel in certain areas."
And friends and fami-
Even the video games
ly of Jason Horowitz of
the brothers played were
West Bloomfield are
sports related. "When we
staying up late to watch
played, he would always
at its new time — mid-
pretend he was doing
night on Tuesdays.
play-by-play out loud,"
Horowitz has been
Todd said. "I used to
consistently out in
find that extremely irri-
front, with impressive
tating, but I'm incredibly
performances and strong Jason Horowitz at the
proud that he may one
ESPN microphone.
comments from the
day turn that into a pro-
show's judges. A sports
fession."
enthusiast from an early age, Jason,
Not a shy guy, Jason even per-
son of Sharon and David Horowitz,
formed in a few high school musical
took his interest and talent to New
productions.
York, where he is a senior completing
"It doesn't surprise me that he
a degree in broadcast journalism at
would want to go on TV," Todd said.
Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse
The weekly show pits contestants
School of Public Communications.
against one another in on-air tasks
Not surprised at his brother's suc-
including anchoring, play-by-play
cess, Todd Horowitz, 25, a student at commentary and one-on-one inter-
the University of Illinois at Urbana-
views. The show's winner, to be
Champaign College of Veterinary
determined Nov. 16, will receive a
Medicine, remembers a lifetime of
one-year contract as an ESPN
playing competitive sports with
SportsCenter anchor.
Jason. "We played on the driveway
and in the back yard," Todd said.
— Shelli Liebman Dorfman,
"We always strived to beat each
staff writer
From "Synagogue Architecture in America"
Synagogue Design Touted
Three Michigan synagogues are
included in the recently published cof-
fee table book, Synagogue Architecture
in America: Faith, Spirit 6 Identity, by
Henry and Daniel Stolzman (Images
Publishing).
Among the 40 images with accom-
panying histories is Congregation
Shaarey Zedek in Southfield designed
by Percival Goodman in 1963, Temple
Beth El in Bloomfield Township
designed by Minoru Yamasaki in
1974, and the Shul in West
Don't Know
Bloomfield designed by Robert L.
Ziegelman in 2003.
The Shul also received the AIA
Detroit Design Award this year, and
its image will be part of "Places of
Prayer," an exhibition at the Angel
Orensanz Foundation Center for the
Arts in New York through Nov. 19.
The exhibition features a photographic
tribute to synagogue architecture by
Detroiter Laszlo Regos.
Hearing Postponed
— Keri Guten Cohen,
story development editor
2004
Can you name a kosher fish that supposedly tastes
like pork and a kosher meat that tastes like cheese?
A hearing in the Jewish Academy of
Metropolitan Detroit's court case
against the Michigan High School
Athletic Association was postponed
last week in Oakland County Circuit
Court.
Because of the death of the father of
the JAMD's attorney, Steven Z.
Cohen, the hearing was postponed
until Wednesday, Oct. 20.
Do You Remember?
The World Court decided to state
Its verdict on Israel's fate:
Security fences
Aren't legal defenses.
The ruling's meshugeh ahf tate.*
October 1974
— Martha Jo Fleischmann
* insane (literally, dead crazy)
10/15
2004
12
— Alan Hitsky, associate editor
Yiddish Limericks
— Goldfein
an-asaaqo aqa s! .13ppn moo :tisu al!!-)pod
alp sE slxaa lisyykaf ur pIsjIlilDpI sr mnqtqs :daln.s-uv
The MHSAA has denied JAMD's
membership application for 2004-
2005 because JAMD asked for excep-
tions to the association's requirement
for total acceptance of scheduling.
The MHSAA schedules state tourna-
ments on Saturdays and Jewish holi-
days, among other dates.
Shneur Zalman Shazar, Israel's third president,
was buried in the presidential cemetery on
Mount Herzl.
There were no eulogies at graveside, in accor-
dance with the wish expressed by the late states-
man and because it is customary not to deliver
eulogies during the Sukkot season.
— Sy Manello, editorial assistant