$2.00 JULY 2 - 8, 2015 / 15 -21 TAMMUZ 5775 theJEWISHNEWS.com A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION ' Growing Givers Jewish Fund Teen Board makes hard decisions with $50,000 in grant money to help Detroit youth. See page 14. » Fraternity Update One SAM member pleads guilty to misdemeanor; two chapter officers charged. See page 15. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS » Summer Fun One event, four fairs, 1,000 artisans and more take over Ann Arbor. See page 37. Federation CEO Scott Kaufman talks with Teen Board members. metro business & professional I )okies + ice 1) tawny, .or.; Local same-sex couples overjoyed by Supreme Court decision. Ronelle Grier I Contributing Writer Josh Charlip of Eskimo Jacks Dessert Anyone? Local company extends its reach into Busch's markets. Ryan Fishman I Contributing Writer M ove over lox and cream cheese — ice cream sandwiches have become the perfect match for bagels, at least for 49-year-old Joshua Charlip. The combination isn't necessarily part of a balanced breakfast, but for the Farmington Hills businessman, it's the next frontier for a family enterprise that started when Charlip was just 14. CONTINUED ON PAGE 27 1 1 1 8 0880 Micki Grossman, her son, Ross, and his partner, Alan Ellias, at their commitment ceremony at Temple Israel in 2000. They married in New York in 2013. 93363 5 t was a day for rainbows, proposals and celebrations as the long-awaited Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage was announced and the history-making news quickly spread. As soon as the announcement was made on Friday morning, June 26, same-sex couples and gay rights sup- porters throughout Metro Detroit reacted with a mixture of astonishment and joy. Farmington Hills couple Ross Grossman and Alan Ellias, who had a commitment ceremony at Temple Israel 15 years ago and were married in New York in 2013, reacted with similar jubi- lation. "I'm still pretty numb:' Ellias said. "It' really about being legally recognized; spiritually we've always felt married. It was the legal piece that was missing and all that comes with it — to not have to think about those things any more is profound:' Ross' mother, Micki Grossman, also of Farmington Hills, was thrilled with the Supreme Court decision. Unlike some of the ruling's detractors, who claim it diminishes the meaning of mar riage, she believes allowing same-sex couples to marry will serve to strength- en the institution. "It's wonderful that marriage has something so important that people are willing to fight for it:' she said. Beth Greenapple and Julia Pais, who were married in Canada in 2005 and celebrated their 20-year anniversary as couple in March, are ecstatic their mar- riage is finally recognized in their home state of Michigan. "We are delighted Michigan is now required to recognize us as a married couple," Greenapple said. "I can't tell yoi. how elated I was when I heard the news so is Julia, and so are all of our friends:' She received a call from the couple's 16-year-old son, Nadav, who was attending a journalism workshop in Washington, D.C., when the announce- ment was made. "He was so excited," she said. CONTINUED ON PAGE 8