THE •DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 19, 1971-27 Donna Grant Engaged to Harold A. Rosenblit MISS DONNA GRANT Dr. and Mrs. Abraham H. Grant of Chatsford Circuit, Southfield, announce the engagement of their daughter Donna Beth to Harold Allen Rosenblit, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Rosenblit of Highland Park, Ill. Miss Grant is a senior at the University of Michigan. Her fiance received a BS degree in electrical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he was affiliated with Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity. He is currently doing graduate work in computer science at the University of Michigan. An August wedding is planned. Knight Studios Win 14 Ribbon Awards Competing against nearly 200 photographers in the state, the entries from Leo Knight Studios in Southfield received 14 ribbon awards out of - a possible 17 en- .tered. These award winners were exhibited recently at the 30th annual Professional Photo- graphers of Michigan Convention at the Detroit Hilton Hotel. Dis- cussing the entries are Knight (left) and staff members Gene Butler, Betty Tilwick and Miss Lzan. Men's Clubs BETH SHALOM MEN'S CLUB will hold an auction of all-new merchandise 8:30 p.m. March 27 at the synagogue. Proceeds will help support club activities in the synagogue. Refreshments will be served. Friends are invited. Any- one who wishes to donate items may call Jack Lovinger, 544-3444. BNAI DAVID MEN'S CLUB will hold its annual night of games "pre-Passover" party 8:30 p.m. April 1 in the synagogue social hall. Gifts of turkeys and Passover food baskets will be awarded. The public is welcome. There will be an admission charge. FOR AIVIERICA: ,. AND FOR YOU \•,• • • \*. • Sign up for U. S Savings Bonds. New Freedom Shares Independence Hall Plight Calls Attention to Need for Hike in Social Security Benefits By CHARLOTTE DUBIN Managing an apartment building for lower-income senior adults is pretty much like managing any apartment, Schostak Brothers is finding out. With a few exceptions. In most apartments, when the rent is raised, a tenant can take it or leave it. Pay up or move out. But when rising costs forced Schostak to hike the rent on a group of units in Independence Hall, it started a ruckus among tenants that, for all the heat, re- sembled a campus demonstration. Independence Hall is the high- rise apartment building for senior adults constructed by Young Israel with the aid of the federal govern- ment. Although it is a private ven- ture, Independence Hall, under government regulations, cannot yield a profit for its owners, In- dependence Hall Inc. Rents can- not be raised without the ap- proval of the Department of Housing and Urban Develop. ment, better known as HUD. Michael Holzman represented Schostak Brothers at a meeting last week sought by the tenants. Also present was Daniel Fenner of the HUD mortgage servicing de- partment, who backed Schostak in his explanation that some rents were raised to meet expenses and taxes. (Thirty-two units were involved. Those tenants who had moved in prior to March 1970, were paying $100—$10 less than the others in similar units, and now Schostak was seeking to bring them up to par. Parking lot fees also were raised $2.50.) Aside from the personality clash between one of the more vocal tenants and the apartment man- ager; apart from the demands for services that aren't affordable on a low-rent, nonprofit project, the tragedy of the dispute lies in the fact that senior adults on a fixed income cannot cope with a highly inflationary economy. It brought home all too clearly the need for increased Social Security benefits, approved this week by Congress and signed Wednesday night by the President. If your income is $160 amonth and you've laid aside $100 for housing, what happens when your rent goes up $10 a month? Cut DISCOUNT PRICES down on an already meager food this place, and I don't want to budget? Or move out? And if the leave my friends. But what hap- One of A Kind latter, where? pens when I can't afford to live Collection of Diamonds here any more?" Rabbi Samuel Prero spent years and Fine Jewelry negotiating with the federal gov- ENTERTAINMENT ernment and waiting for approval • • • -It to build Independence Hall. Several CARICATURES, COMEDIANS, 4K Young Israel leaders donated Piano-Accordion-Big Sand * Mori Little Orchestra * money out of their own pockets to SEYMOUR SCHWARTZ AGENCY * assure some of the comforts for 356-8525 * its tenants. Available .4 ( But now, humanitarian spirit Satin and Velour lc Claire Schwartz having resulted in a much- . * • Sylvia Schneider needed project, many of those (invi tations: 17520 W. TWELVE MILE for whom they labored are being * (1 Wk. E. of Southfield) priced out of the place through Fountanside Office Center * no one's fault but the spiraling Suite 109 HATTIE K Mon.-Fri. 11-4. CLOSED SAT. cost of living. K 352-7238 SCHWARTZ K Holzman estimates that half of the residents of Independence Hall K 356-8563 earn what he considers the bare minimum to get by: $160 a month. This would cover one month's rent and $10 a week for food. "We en- courage them to move in only if The Best Meat at The Best Prices they can manage on their income," Pullets 38c lb.- Springer 33c lb. (fresh daily) said Holzman. "Some say they get Rib Steaks $1.09 Side of Beef (Freezer Packed 65c lb.) help from their children, and they 255-3777 Free Delivery 20215 W. 7 Mile do. But in some cases, when we check with the children, it turns out they could care less." Professional Entertainment Not all the tenants are finan- cially hard-pressed. A few are still working; some have investments. Only 5 per cent are on some kind of assistance program other than Social Security, Holzman esti- mates. Featuring Television Personality, Singer Vicki Carroll He said the only government re- quirements are that the residents 352-0937 255-1540 be at least age 62 and that they carry proof of a physician that they are physically able to care for themselves. HUD also requires that there be no discrimination GREEN-8 11° 111 411/ GREEN-8 as to race. Of course, what ,Holzman couldn't ONLY ONLY j screen out was the small group who have made life difficult for SUBURBAN the manager—and for Holzman. Manager John Jones and his wife Helen once lived on the premises. When their eight-hour job became a 24-hour answering service, they moved out. But the night phone calls didn't stop; it was a 23-mile drive to let in the tenants who had locked themselves out of their apartments. It was agreed that the Joneses would move back to an apart- ment on the premises. They've moved out again. For the same reason they moved out in the first place. To handle the problems of the tenants on a 24-hour basis, Schos- tak has hired an assistant man- ager. Live-in. When the tenants appealed for a fence to help curb vandalism in reg. $66 the parking lot, a $5,000 chain-link structure was put up, Holzman Now $33- said. At the meeting, one tenant complained that the fence is an insult to the residents, that it is ineffective and that only "the weeds" should have been removed. In response to another resident, Holzman assured her that tenants who cannot pay their rent on time because of late-arriving Social Se- curity checks will not be penalized. Schostak's agent, who is half the age - of the tenants, makes no at- tempt to hide his annoyance at Three piece pant dress in their complaints, which he says 100 % polyester in black and are without end and without foun- white. Tunic jacket covers a dation. black and white floral print He listed improvements that blouse. Sizes 6 to 14. HURRY, Schostak Brothers has made in MISS KAREN MOSS LIMITED QUANTITIES! Mr. and Mrs. J. Harmon Moss the building (extended parking lot area and lighting and a night- of James Ave., Oak Park, announce Shop All Departments the engagement of their daughter time security guard), which he Karen (Kiki) to Bruce James said were made without raising Sunday for SUPER Rogovin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Law- the rents. SAVINGS AND And he said they would like to rence Rogvin of Cincinnati. SURPRISE SAVINGS! do more—get a jitney for trips to the grocery store, arrange for Cantors' Concert Planned park benches and get the windows NEW YORK — The American OPEN SUNDAY washed twice a year.- Conference of Cantors will hold its "But we can't do these things 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. first public performance on April unless we have income," he said, 4 in Alice Tully Hall at 3 P.M. "and our only income is rent. Featuring chorus, chamber or- chestra, cantorial and guest solo- How do we pay our bills?" CHARGE IT ! The heat generated at the meet- ists, the event will mark the 18th Security, Juliet, GREEN-8 CENTER or "Life" anniversary of that or- ing did subside later ; but the Bank- Greenfleld/8 Mile Roads ganization and will benefit the as- issue remains one of income—for Americard sociation's apprentice training pro- both sides. "We're really happy here," said one woman. "I love gram. Karen Moss Engaged to Mr. Bruce Rogovin DE COR EWELR Gonik's Kosher Meat, Fish & Poultry THE SHELDON- ROTT ORCHESTRA u le OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 3-PIECE PANT DRESS SUNDAY '26 Juliet