Doing The Town
ATID students experience
Jewish New York.
GREAT LAI - 1-ES
bring your wird to
Now scheduling for Spring 2012
LANDSCAP.E
DESIGN.
Ivan Katz, Owner
.
248-543-6320
greatlakeslandscapedesign.com
First row: Max Dubrinsky, Huntington Woods, Tobye Bello, ATID experiential
Serving Southeast Michigan
coordinator, Hershel Dorman, West Bloomfield, Seth Shostak, Huntington
1739160
Woods, Pearl Dorman, West Bloomfield, Marissa Goldston, Farmington Hills,
Rachel Morof, West Bloomfield, Katelyn Eisenshtadt, Bloomfield Hills, and
teacher Jodi Gross, West Bloomfield. Second row: Zachary Jirik, Noah Hersh
and Sean Dickstein, all of West Bloomfield, Ellie Ginis, Farmington Hills,
Natalie Langnas, Bloomfield Hills, and Dana Goldberg, West Bloomfield.
JICILIP Communal Conversation 201 2.
The Jewish Communal Leadership Program at the University of Michigan
invites you to a day of interactive learning and dialogue focused on the
Past, present, and future of the Jewish community's relationship
to the City of Detroit.
Sunday, April 1, 2012 - 9 All to 4 Prosi
Educational Conference Center, Room 1840
The ATID group spent time discovering Jewish New York.
S
tudents from ATID (Alliance
for Teens in Detroit), a Monday
night Conservative religious
school program, traveled to New York
City for an unforgettable weekend last
month.
The students, who are members of
Adat Shalom Synagogue, Congregation
Beth Ahm and Congregation Shaarey
Zedek, began their experience with a
tour of the Lower East Side. The teens
got a firsthand look at landmarks key to
the immigrant experience, and enjoyed
eating pickles at the Pickle Guys store
and lunch at Noah's Ark Deli. The
afternoon was spent visiting the 9-11
Memorial Site.
The trip included a wonderful New
York Shabbat experience. Shabbat
was ushered in with services at B'nai
Jeshurun Synagogue, where the group
experienced a lively Kabbalat Shabbat
service followed by a traditional
Shabbat dinner. On Shabbat morn-
Soda l Work 10$0 S. Univo.r§ Av*:, Ann Arbor
Univew.sity of Michigim Schopl
This event is free and open to the public.
ing, they were hosted by Congregation
Habonim for services and lunch.
Saturday afternoon was enjoyed in
Central Park and at local museums, fol-
lowed by a Havdalah service.
Saturday night was spent exploring
Times Square and seeing Sister Act on
Broadway.
Sunday morning was packed with a
tour of the Jewish Heritage Museum,
whose mission is to educate about the
broad tapestry of Jewish life in the
20th and 21st centuries — before, dur-
ing and after the Holocaust. The trip
ended with a visit to Rockefeller Center,
including a trip to the "Top of the Rock"
observation desk, and time to window
shop on Fifth Avenue.
To learn more about ATID, includ-
ing the high school student travel
programs, contact Rabbi Aaron Starr,
director, at atidh@gmail.com or (248)
357-5544. 7
RSVP required and registration is lit-rifted!
The first 30 registrants will receive a free
"What is Jewish DetroitZ— t-shirt on the day of the event.
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Stack up the cool factor...
AND the fun... with Eskimo Jacks
made-to-order ice cream sandwiches
6 cookie flavors + 6 ice cream flavors + your imagination = WAY (Oft flIN!
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March
22 2012
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