metro »
Nutritionally
Speaking
By Barbara Beznos, RD/LD/N
Integrated Nutrition, LLC
BETH SHALOM TO FETE
MEMBERS, ACTIVISTS
DEAR BARB,
Can you tell me
what actually
causes us to age,
and the role of
nutrition and
aging?
RITA
SO WHAT CAN WE CHANGE?
Inactivity - "activity" slows down aging
decline
Unhealthy diet - eating "more mindful"
Weight - achieving "perfect weight" for
you
Understanding - learn the aging process
with all it’s alterations
Using the brain - "increase memory and
brain cells"
Attitude - keep a "positive" psychological
outlook
Decision making - take "personal
control" in yours’
Quality of life - "improve" your living
situation
Our Nutrition - by "optimizing" what
you eat and "correcting" differences or
changes in normal meal patterns
Smoking - immediately "stop" smoking
Linking - staying connected to
"meaningful affairs"
Social support - surrounding yourself
with "good people"
Spirituality - looking "more inward"
Skills - learning positive "coping skills"
Behaviors - participating in "healthful"
life behaviors
Staying educated -" taking an active role"
in reducing destructive consequences of
aging
Acceptance - by change and learning
what you can do for it
BETH AHM’S APPLES, HONEY & HAYRIDES
For holiday fun, Congregation Beth
Ahm of West Bloomfield will visit
Erwin Orchards, 61475 Silver Lake
Road in South Lyon, on Sunday, Sept.
11. A pancake breakfast will be served
from 10-11 a.m. Then, a tractor will
transport people into the orchard to
pick apples for Rosh Hashanah.
Cider and donuts, fun on the play-
ground and feeding the farm animals
will finish the day.
The community is invited at a
cost of $5 per person for breakfast.
Advanced registration is required by
Sept. 6 to (248) 851-6880 or ablau@
cbahm.org. Bags for apple picking
will be available for purchase at the
orchard.
Breakfast will be in the barn, rain or
shine. The event is sponsored by Beth
Ahm’s Nadis Family Fund.
*
Keri Guten Cohen
In this modern age, we still don’t really
know what causes aging, as aging varies
within individuals. As our life span increases,
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the nutrition of older people.
These responses cause poor appetite,
deletion of important foods from the diet,
digestive issues, poor absorption of fats, slower
movement of foods through the intestines,
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problems, and more.
Robbie Terman, archivist of the Simons Jewish Community Archives, with
Judy and Bernard Cantor
ACTION STEPS
Be active in preventing disease and disorders
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the blood vessels and the brain
Evaluate the medications you take with health
care providers and check for interactions
Check your hormone levels and investigate
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Contact Barb At:
Integrated Nutrition, L.L.C.
31731 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 105 E
Farmington Hills, Mi 48334
Phone:
(248) 538-8050
E-Mail:
rds@integratednutrition.com
Web:
www.integratednutrition.com
2097250
30 September 1 • 2016
FRED M. BUTZEL PORTRAIT RESTORED
A portrait of legendary Jewish com-
munity leader Fred M. Butzel (1877-
1948), known as the “dean of Detroit
Jewry,” has been restored and placed
in the conference area that bears his
name at the Max M. Fisher Federation
Building in Bloomfield Township.
It was unveiled Aug. 24 following a
Federation/United Jewish Foundation
board meeting.
After Butzel’s death, the Jewish
Welfare Federation commissioned
Roy C. Gamble to paint a portrait of
Butzel to hang in the grand stairwell
of its then-new headquarters at 163
Madison Ave., appropriately named
the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Building.
For 40 years, Fred Butzel watched
over the people for whom he cared so
deeply. The painting had been in stor-
age since 1991.
Local historian Judy Cantor had
the idea to hang the portrait again.
Funds for restoration, accomplished
by Barbara Heller, were provided by
private donors in cooperation with the
Jewish Historical Society of Michigan.
This portrait is an honored part of the
Leonard N. Simons Jewish Community
Archives collection.
*
Congregation
Beth Shalom’s
annual
Chai Life
Celebration on
Sunday, Sept.
11, will honor
two members,
Josh and Judith Adler
Judith and
Josh Adler, and
two commu-
nity activists,
Andy and Sara
Meisner.
The celebra-
tion will start
with a pre-
glow for major
donors at 5:30
p.m., followed
by a strolling
dinner at 6:30
p.m. and the
award presen-
tation.
Andy and Sara Meisner
The Adlers,
and family
of Bloomfield
Township, will
receive the Chai Life Service Award. They
have been members of Beth Shalom since
1990 when they moved to Michigan so
Josh could accept a position on the faculty
of Wayne State University’s School of
Medicine. He is a past president of Beth
Shalom and has served on numerous
committees.
Judith Adler holds a Ph.D. in Slavic
languages and literature and a law degree,
and worked as a transactional attorney
for 32 years. She now volunteers at the
University of Detroit Mercy Law Clinic
and serves on the advisory board of the
ACLU of Michigan.
The Meisners, who live in Huntington
Woods, will receive the Chai Life
Community Award. Andy, a former state
representative is the Oakland County
treasurer. Sara is a senior vice president at
Weber Shandwick, a leading global com-
munications firm.
A portion of the proceeds from the
evening will be donated to South Oakland
Shelter, which serves homeless people.
For many years, Beth Shalom has housed
South Oakland Shelter clients for a week.
Bryan Beckerman and Nicole
Rothenberg, both of Huntington Woods,
are co-chairs of the event. Tickets for
the dinner and program are $118.
Sponsorship packages range from $1,000
to $10,000.
To make reservations, contact the syna-
gogue office at (248) 547-7970 or cbs@
congbethshalom.org.
*