Front Lines NOTEBOOK JNenline Cycling For A Cause This Week www.JNOnline.us Ann Arbor R obert Levine plans to pedal for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society in honor of his mother, Evelyn, who died of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 2003. As a volunteer in the Team in Training program, Levine, 40, is committed to raising at least $5,000 toward the fight against leukemia, lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease and myeloma as well as improving the quality of care and life for patients and their Robert families. Since 1998, Team volunteers have raised $600 million by competing in sports events across America. "Riding in my mother's memory has given real meaning to my training, fundraising and this cause," said Levine, a member of Ann Arbor's Beth Israel Congregation. "It has helped me to heal and has been a remarkable motivate Last year, Levine completed the ride with his wife, Jennifer. He crossed the line with a picture of him and his mother pinned to the back of his jersey. "It was such a tri- umph," he said. "It was my Stanley Cup." Another inspiration for Levine is brother-in-law David Michael, who is fighting leukemia, and mother-in-law Mary Michael, who has ovarian cancer. "Training is difficult, but if they can handle chemo, I can handle the pain of 100 Levine miles," Levine said. "I really value the time and relation- ships that I have with my family and friends more now." To donate to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society via Robert Levine, go to his Web site: www.active.com/donate/tntmi/RLevine07 Latest From Israel Want the most current news from Israel? Check our stream- ing news from Ynetnews.com for continuous updates and longer news, opinion and fea- ture stories. Just visit JNonline.us and click on a scrolling story on the left. - Robert A. Sklar, editor E-Newsletter Golden Circle Gala Learning Circle Academy started three years ago with seven students and now has 22. It remains the only school in southeast Michigan providing services to children in grades 4-12 with complex learning disabilities often accompanied by difficulties with language process- ing, sensory integration and social skills. The school, which operates at the Laker Center in West Bloomfield, owned by Congregation Shaarey Zedek, has a three to one student-to- teacher ratio and often students do one-on-one learning. Tuition runs $17,000 this year, but the actual cost per student is up to $25,000, says Bonnie McDonald, director and a founder of the non-profit school. She's strictly a volunteer. Hoping to raise money for scholarships and to open classes for grades 1-3 where demand is high, the school will hold its Golden Circle Gala Night of Stars beginning with a silent auction at 6 p.m. Saturday, April 28, at the Townsend Hotel in Birmingham. The event includes hors d'oeuvres, dinner and entertainment. Tickets are $100 per person. To learn more about the school, go to www.learning circleacademy.org . To purchase gala tickets, call (248) 538-0115. Lisa Smith and Karen Barnhart are co-chairs. Holocaust Documentary Handleman Filmworks' Emmy-winning documentary, Remembering the Holocaust, will be re-broadcast at 10:30 p.m. Saturday, April 14, on Detroit Public Television/WTVS (Channel 56) in conjunction with Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), which falls on April 15. The documentary originally was shown across America in the late 1980s in answer to Holocaust deniers. "It is unfortunate that the same false claims are being voiced today, not only by fringe elements but by a head of state, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad," said the film's producer, Philip Handleman of Birmingham. "To leave these claims unanswered would be to allow grave untruths to settle into the world's collective consciousness and to open the way for a recurrence of one of history's most horrific events." The documentary features interviews with Deroit-area Holocaust survivors and was made in cooperation with the now-Zekelman Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. In 1989, Handleman earned an Emmy for best documentary from the Michigan Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. - Ken Guten Cohen, story development editor - Keri Guten Cohen, story development editor Shoah Tapes Online A remarkable set of interviews with Holocaust survivors, recorded in 1946, is being placed on the Internet by the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. Dr. David Broder, a psychologist at ITT's forerunner, Lewis Institute, went to Europe after Gen. Dwight Eisenhower asked journalists to record what happened in the Holocaust. Dr. Broder took along bulky wire-recording equipment, a forerunner of tape recorders, invented by a Lewis engineer. He conducted 109 interviews totaling 120 hours on spools of car- bon steel wire. He met with displaced persons, mostly Jews, in camps in France, Italy, Germany and Switzerland. Most of the interviews are in Yiddish, German, Russian and Polish. In 1998, an ITT psychologist and the library staff uncovered a 16- volume set of typescripts of the interviews, including 70 that had been transcribed into English. The collection is now being placed on the Internet, and can be heard at hap://voices.iit.edu . In 1949, Dr. Broder published eight of the interviews in I Did Not Interview the Dead (University of Illinois Press). For health reasons, Dr. Broder retired from ITT in 1952 and finished his career on the fac- ulty at the University of California — Los Angeles. - Alan Hitsky, associate editor Circumcision In AIDS Fight Late last month, the World Health Organization ended a years-long debate by recommending circumcision as a way to prevent hetero- sexual transmission of the AIDS virus. The recommendation allows donor agencies to pay for the opera- tion and came after three clinical trials in Africa found that male cir- cumcision reduced the risk of infection in men by 60 percent. WHO officials said men must be taught they can still catch the virus after the operation. WHO recommends abstinence or sex with fewer partners, plus the use of condoms. After several small trials in Africa, AIDS researcher Daniel Haplerin of the Harvard School of Public Health argued in a 1999 Lancet arti- cle that circumcision reduces the risk of AIDS infection. - Alan Hitsky, associate editor Deadline In 2 Weeks! The deadline for Cap & Gown editorial submissions is May 1. Any Jewish high school senior in Michigan with a 3.50 or higher grade point average can receive a free listing in the May 24 Cap & Gown section. For informa- tion, go to JNonline.us and click on the Cap & Gown button in the right-hand column of the home page. Desire notification when sto- ries that interest you in partic- ular are posted on JNonline? It's easy to designate the kinds of stories you like when you sign up for your personalized e-newsletter. Only at JNonline.us. Just click on Newsletter on the menu near the top of the page. JBlog Arnie Goldman shares his thoughts about Borat, the Iraq war, little mitzvahs and more. Jeff Klein offers his Metro Perspectives on everything from dating to friendship. Follow the amusing adventures of Laurie Freeman's China Punim, 4-year-old Amanda. Only at JNonline.us. Just click on JBlog on the menu on the left. Results from last week's poll: Do you agree with President Bush's aggressive approach to containing Iran's nuclear capa- bility? Yes 51% No 49% This week's poll question: Is Israel wise to negotiate prisoner swaps — few for many? Visit the JNonline.us homepage to cast your vote. April 12 d 2007 9