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JGA Mar-Apr 10 - The Jewish Georgian

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Page 34 THE JEWISH GEORGIAN <strong>Mar</strong>ch-<strong>Apr</strong>il 20<strong>10</strong><br />

By Belle Klavonsky<br />

HOOPS FOR HAITI. Epstein 7th-graders<br />

Alex Platt and Ari Soran were interviewed<br />

on Fox 5 News-WAGA on the 6:00 p.m.<br />

news, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 3, and on High Five Sports<br />

about Hoops For Haiti, the 3 on 3 basketball<br />

tournament they created to raise money for<br />

earthquake victims. <strong>The</strong> students organized<br />

the tournament for their bar mitzvah project<br />

after learning that their basketball coach,<br />

Mendell Midy, lost several members of his<br />

family during the devastating natural disaster.<br />

<strong>The</strong> students raised $1,759. Pictured:<br />

(from left) Alex Platt, Coach Mendell Midy,<br />

and Ari Soran<br />

PROPS TO PRESCHOOL. Bright From<br />

<strong>The</strong> Start, the agency that licenses providers<br />

of preschool educational services, made its<br />

annual licensing visit to Epstein’s Pre-<br />

School—and once again, it passed the<br />

inspection with high honors. In addition,<br />

due to the success of the new First Steps<br />

Program, parents have expressed interest in<br />

preschool education for children as young<br />

as 18 months. <strong>The</strong>refore, beginning in the<br />

20<strong>10</strong>-2011 school year, the Sandy Springs<br />

campus will accept students 18 months of<br />

age into its toddler program. For information,<br />

contact Admissions Director Susan<br />

Berk at sberk@epsteinatlanta.org or 404-<br />

250-5607. Pictured: Kayla Steinhauser and<br />

Yarden Ellsworth<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY. At a recent<br />

<strong>Jewish</strong> Day School Conference in Teaneck,<br />

New Jersey, <strong>The</strong> Epstein School was recog-<br />

nized for having served the community for<br />

36 years. Over 500 educators and lay leaders<br />

attended the conference to discuss topics<br />

relevant to the field of <strong>Jewish</strong> day school<br />

education. <strong>The</strong> award was given at a reception<br />

for the Solomon Schechter Day School<br />

Association (SSDSA). Pictured: Stan<br />

Beiner, head of school; Elaine Cohen, education<br />

director, SSDSA; and Linda Schear,<br />

board president<br />

EVEN THE LESSON WAS RECY-<br />

CLABLE. Five Riverwood International<br />

Charter School students (four of them<br />

Epstein alumni) visited <strong>The</strong> Epstein School<br />

to introduce 2nd-graders to <strong>The</strong> Next Big<br />

Step, a non-profit they co-founded to<br />

encourage young people to make educated<br />

decisions about the environment. <strong>The</strong><br />

Riverwood students also taught a lesson<br />

about the environment that involved activities<br />

both in the classroom and outdoors;<br />

when the lesson was completed, students<br />

lined up to put all the lesson materials they<br />

used in the recycling bins. Pictured:<br />

Riverwood students (from left) Aron<br />

Lesser, Blake Engelhard, Mallory Hope,<br />

Daniel Yellin, and Gabriel Lesser<br />

A HIGH HONOR. Adina Shlomit Karpuj<br />

Bortz (pictured) an<br />

8th-grade student at<br />

<strong>The</strong> Epstein School,<br />

is one of 50 students<br />

nationwide who will<br />

be inducted into the<br />

American Hebrew<br />

Academy Honor<br />

Society. <strong>The</strong> acade-<br />

my, in Greensboro, North Carolina, is<br />

America’s premier <strong>Jewish</strong> pluralistic college-prep<br />

boarding school. All inductees<br />

are invited to the academy’s <strong>10</strong>0-acre campus<br />

for a scholars weekend in <strong>Mar</strong>ch, where<br />

they will engage in a leadership program, be<br />

acknowledged at an induction ceremony,<br />

and have the opportunity to win one of five<br />

scholarships to attend the academy.<br />

MATH MATTERS. This year, with schools<br />

throughout the Atlanta area participating,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Epstein Middle School MATH-<br />

COUNTS team (from left: Jonathan<br />

Steinberg, David Zarge, Daniel Abravanel,<br />

and Mallory Harris) took home 3rd-place<br />

honors in it division at the 20<strong>10</strong> MATH-<br />

COUNTS Atlanta-area competition. Led<br />

by mathematics educator Abby Suss, the<br />

team’s success is a direct reflection of<br />

Epstein’s strong math program. MATH-<br />

COUNTS challenges students’math skills,<br />

develops self-confidence, and rewards students<br />

for their achievements. <strong>The</strong> competition<br />

took place February 5, at Temple<br />

Emanu-El.<br />

AFRICAN ARTS. Davis Academy Lower<br />

School students experienced a day of<br />

African culture on February 16.<br />

Author/photographer Patsy Smith Roberts<br />

read from one of her books, shared stories<br />

about her African adventures, and described<br />

how she photographs the African wild.<br />

Artist Jessica Dorman showed students her<br />

unusual renditions of African animals that<br />

she creates out of clay. Finally, Manga<br />

African Dance, a fantastic dance troupe,<br />

demonstrated many different kinds of<br />

African dances. Here, 3rd-grader Noah<br />

Greenberg tries out an African drum.<br />

SCIENCE FAIR WINNERS. Davis<br />

Academy 8th-grader Joshua Bircoll (left)<br />

took 1st place at the Fulton County Science<br />

Fair, Middle School Division, in February;<br />

8th-grader Adam Suskin (right) received an<br />

honorable mention. Bircoll, whose project<br />

measured the rate of flow of various densities<br />

of fluids through a tube, now advances<br />

to the state competition, <strong>Apr</strong>il 1, in Athens.<br />

Suskin’s project demonstrated the best geometric<br />

design of parachutes.<br />

LIBERTY FOR ALL. Davis Academy<br />

Middle School music students were treated<br />

to a special clinic conducted by Liberty<br />

DeVitto (pictured), veteran drummer who<br />

played with pop star Billy Joel for 30 years.<br />

DeVitto not only demonstrated drumming<br />

and music techniques for students but also<br />

inspired them with messages about pursuing<br />

their dreams and goals.<br />

ORT KIDS. <strong>The</strong> Davis Academy Middle<br />

School hosted three 8th-grade ORT-Lipson<br />

exchange students and their teacher from<br />

Israel for a month. <strong>The</strong> Israeli students<br />

attended classes with Davis students and<br />

stayed with Davis host families, getting to<br />

know about American culture and seeing<br />

Atlanta sights. <strong>The</strong>y also shared stories with<br />

Davis students about what it is like to be a<br />

teenager in Israel. Here, 8th-grader Emily<br />

Bachner (left) and her sister, 6th-grader<br />

Jessica Bachner, say goodbye to Israeli student<br />

Dorin Matzrafi, who stayed with their<br />

family.<br />

PEOPLE IN OUR COMMUNITY. In<br />

February, Davis Academy’s youngest stu-

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