MAT „ 11111:1E FOOT! CORNELIA'S SCHOO 3080 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor 248.681.5376 BALLET, POINTE, JAZZ, TAP, LYRICAL, HIP-HOP, BREAK DANCING, BALLROOM, PRIVATE COACHING Child & Adult classes multiple class discounts day & evening classes PRE-BALLET, CREATIVE MOVEMENT, TAP PRE-JAZZ - FOR THE 2,4/2 TO 6 VII OW HOME OF Michigan Ballet Theatre/ Award Winning Competition Teams, Grade Dance Ensemble Science On Hold REGISTER NOW Technion student talks of how the war halted some research. Call for a Free Brochure an THE ROCHESTER SCHOOL 0 1800 S. Livernois, Rochester 248.652.3117 www.rochest r choolofdance.com Unable to eat what you want? Tired of the taste and feel of messy denture adhesives? Trouble speaking clearly? Call for FREE consultation or Second Opinion New Dental Mini Implants John Kazanowski, D.D.S. 31700 Telegraph Rd. Suite 100 Bingham Farms 248-433-6000 www.drkazdds.com Do you know teens who: * Love Jewish summer camp? * Participate in a Jewish youth group? *Want to be a teacher's aide? * Had a great experience in Israel? Jells Online courses will help them... *Enrich their Jewish knowledge *Enhance their college applications * Interact online with Jewish teens nationwide Fall semester begins September 18, 2006 THE KENNETH I. ROT BART DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAM FOR TEENS A Division of the Jewish Community High School of Gratz College Call 800-475-4635 ext. 113, email rothbart@gratz.edu , or go to our website: www.gratz.edu/rothbart 18 Matt Engelbert of Ann Arbor with Technion student Yitzchak Garaway of Haifa and Barbara Moehiman of Farmington Hills August 24 a 2006 1143560 Don Cohen Special to the Jewish News y itzhak Garaway, 30, is pursu- ing his doctorate in cryo- genics from Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa. He also is pursuing an understanding of what has affected his family, his friends, his university and his country over the past month. • "Over the last three weeks, I real- ized that life is becoming a fragile thing:' Garaway said Aug. 14 over lunch at Yossi's Israeli Cuisine in West Bloomfield with about 18 local Technion supporters. "Life has changed abruptly in the last couple weeks." Garaway explained how his fam- ily instituted something called "siren time," when his two young children, ages 1 .1/2 and 3 1/2, excitedly scurry into the bomb shelter for cookies, singing whenever the sirens in Haifa sound. He smiles as he tells how his youngest daughter, bound in an over- sized diaper, waddles into the bomb shelter. The previous day, his wife, six months pregnant, told him they were in and out of the shelter 12 times. He told how he was in his bathing suit, running through the sprinkler with his kids, when he got a call to report immediately to the reserves, which needed him for his expertise on disarming bombs on the Lebanese border. Later he was transferred to the center of the country, where he spent long hours in a damage control center. He told how on July 16, Technion students had just sat down at 9 a.m. for final exams, when at 9:15 rockets hit Haifa. "They emptied the classrooms and told people to leave campus," he says. "Cars weren't allowed to leave campus unless they were filled with five or six people. Many were already, that after- noon, on the Northern border." Born in California, Garaway's par- ents moved the family to Israel when he was a young boy. He spent four years in the "bomb squad" during his military service, before earn- ing a master's degree in mechanical engineering at the Technion Energy Department. "Let this be finished; and, in 10 months, I can be done he said of obtaining his doctorate. While Garaway's lab is in a strong cement building allowing him to con- tinue his work, most of the research on campus was halted. Tanks contain- ing highly flammable liquid hydrogen were buried underground; tanks of compressed gas for use in Technion's state-of-the-art wind tunnels were emptied, and the chemistry labs were cleared of combustibles. Nonetheless, the campus of 16,000 was reopened before the ceasefire was declared; and research resumed as much as possible. The university has established a Student Emergency Fund to help stu- dents meet their tuition and housing costs because their work, schooling and lives have been disrupted by the war. Barb Moehiman of Farmington Hills has been involved as a local supporter of the Technion for six years, and had met Yitzhak before. - "My heart and soul and blessings are with Israel;' Moehiman said. "They need not only our prayers and support, they need our money to help support Technion and the soldiers who have left to fight, and, God willing, swill come back." "If Israel won't survive, I'm afraid the world won't survive she added. 1 For more information on the Technion, or to contribute to the Student Emergency Fund, call (248) 737-1990.