A Community-Wide Celebration Purim Partners:41iSSSSjj DETROIT JEWISH NEWS JN `7N1W' 111Y Questions? tnering congregations Community Megillah Reading hosted at Beth Ahm Activities for kids & dinner available for purchase 5:30 pm Minchah 6 pm Megillah Reading & Festive Oneg 7 pm egillah reakfast 7 am - hosted at na srae Megillah Mania H am hosted at Adat Shalo a crazy-fun. kid-friendly Purim-tastic performance by hazer Lloyd "Israel's King of the Blues" • • ( I I • oon with a Joe Cornell Dance Party Lunch available for purchase C ijareekt,-5ara4 M9444g1.C.karb Make ti? Artist Rat tuAd, Colar grcidibt A Professional, Artful and Salon Edge is so excited to Experienced Makeup Artist! have Noreen join our team! For All Occasions Expert in Liquid Keratin Treatments ENE 20 February 19 • 2015 Your wedding will last a day, but the photos will last a lifetime! Look Beautiful! Call for an Appointment 248-932-3343 (EDGE) 6595 Orchard Lake Road I West Bloomfield JN Damage to a room at Treetops Resort in Gaylord Investigation continues into destruction wrought by U-M fraternity and sorority members. Ronelle Grier Contributing Writer A new Student Honor Code is being developed at the University of Michigan as a result of the destruction allegedly per- petrated by members of six fraternities and sororities at two northern Michigan resorts during a recent ski weekend. Michigan State Police officers are in the process of interviewing more than 250 students on the U-M campus to determine who was responsible for the devastation of more than 40 rooms at Treetops Resort in Gaylord during a Jan. 16-18 ski trip attended by 270 fra- ternity and sorority U-M members. Described as "mindblowing" wreck- age by Treetops General Manager Barry Owens, the students allegedly dam- aged furniture, ripped cupboard doors off their hinges, ruined rooms full of carpeting and destroyed a number of ceiling tiles, leaving hallways filled with debris. The damage, which has been fully repaired, is now estimated at "north of $150,000," according to Owens. During the same weekend, students from four other U-M sororities and fraternities allegedly vandalized 12 pri- vately owned condominium residences at the Boyne Highlands ski resort in Harbor Springs, causing more than $50,000 in damages. The vandalism was reported to the Michigan State Police, but to date no charges have been filed for either incident. Six fraternities and sororities were involved: Jewish Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity and Jewish Sigma Delta Tau sorority were at the Treetops resort; while Pi Kappa Alpha and Chi Psi fraternities and Alpha Phi and Delta Gamma sororities were at Boyne Highlands. All six Greek organizations have been placed on varying degrees of suspen- sion by their national offices, ranging from social probation for Sigma Delta Tau to complete suspension from all activities for Sigma Alpha Mu. The new Student Honor Code will be created by an executive task force created by Central Student Government President Bobby Dishell, with the assis- tance of his executive team. Following the discovery of the vandalism, an open letter of apology was written and co-signed by Dishell, along with Interfraternity Council President Alex Krupiak and Panhellenic Association President Maddy Walsh. "The aim of the task force, and eventually the honor code, will be to encourage and motivate students to hold ourselves to a higher standard:' Dishell said. In a previous statement, Sigma Alpha Mu President Joshua Kaplan said the fraternity is "embarrassed and ashamed of the behavior" of some of its mem- bers and that the chapter "accepts full responsibility" for the damages and will work with the resort management to make restitution. A Treetops management represen- tative said the resort has received an initial payment, but did not disclose specifics about the amount or who made the payment. According to Lt. Derrick Carroll of the Michigan State Police, the results of the investigation, which is expected to take "a while" because of the number of students involved, will be turned over to the Otsego County Prosecutor to determine whether criminal charges will be filed. The incident in northern Michigan struck a chord with Julie Harris Buckner, whose son, former U-M stu- dent Josh Levine, died last summer as a result of mixing alcohol with the pre- scription stimulant drug Adderall. Since her son's death, Buckner has become a passionate advocate about the dangers of binge drinking and drug use. "The vandalism is a prime example of the negative repercussions of binge drinking. There is no way those kids would have behaved that way sober unless they were raised by wolves:' said Buckner, who will be speaking during U-M Greek Week at Rackham Auditorium on Tuesday evening, March 24. "These kids need to wake up:' ❑