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Bloomfield 855-3430 DIET CENTER® LITE YEARS AHEAD,. t /1 - 11 & *70 • ?AZ, NEWS We Are One The Jewish Welfare Feder- ation has launched its 1987 Allied Jewish Campaign, with the goal of reaching every member of the Jewish com- munity. The following profile is the first in a series showing people of all ages who benefit from the agencies and services funded by the Campaign. Sally Fields, age 86. She was a strong, independent woman long before it was considered the norm. A jour- nalist with her own nation- ally syndicated newspaper column, Mrs. Fields was a single parent who raised four children in the 1940s and '50s. She was also active in several Jewish organiza- tions, raising funds for Israel during the Six-Day War, and even driving a truckload of supplies to New York City for shipment to Israel. But a year-and-a-half ago, Mrs. Fields and her children found that she was no longer able to continue her indepen- dent lifestyle. And the Jewish Home for Aged's Borman Hall on Detroit's west side was there for her. Today, Mrs. Fields — still quite a storytel- ler and spirited lady — enjoys participating in Borman Hall's weekly lectures on Jewish history and issues. She also does some gardening in the greenhouse, plays bingo and lights Sabbath candles. But she says it is the people that she likes most at the residence. The agency. A place where the volunteers make the difference in creating a "family feeling." According to program director Denise Woods, Borman Hall is one of three facilities under the Jewish Home for Aged's do- main. Also offering nursing care, social work services and physical therapy is Prentis Manor in Southfield. The newest JHA facility, Fleis- chman Residence in West Bloomfield provides semi- independent living and var- ious support services for the well elderly. Together, the three facilities serve more than 425 older adults, and there is also an adult day care program at Borman Hall. The Jewish Home for Aged receives funding from the Jewish Welfare Federation, through its Allied Jewish Campaign. Beverly Wolkind Spain Looks Ahead To Expulsion Anniversary When you're looking for cereals that provide your family with great taste and good nutrition, POST® is the natural choice. POST® Grape- Nuts® cereal, Grape-Nuts ® Flakes, Natural Bran Flakes and Natural Raisin Bran give you all the goodness nature intended. No artificial 46 Friday, January 16, 1987 colors, artificial flavors or preservatives are ever added. All four cereals are fortified with at least eight essential vitamins and they're absolutely Kosher. So look for POST,® the natural choice. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Madrid (JTA) — An historic act of redemption will take place in 1992 in Spain when the Jewish people will symbol- ically return to the land from which they had been banished 500 years earlier by its sover- eign rulers, the despots King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. Their decree of expulsion was issued on March 31, 1492, and the Jews of Spain were given just three months to leave their homeland. Although it may seem a long way off, historians and Jewish leaders in Madrid, Barcelona and Cordoba are beginning discussions on an agenda for the nationwide observances in 1992, half a millennium later, of that year of infamy in Jewish history. It is expected that delegations from Israel and the diaspora will convene in Spain five years from now at the invitation of the national Jewish community and the government. There already have been ap- proaches to the World Jewish Congress and other bodies, but as yet there is no authoritative group within the country to plan and coordinate the his- toric event. The government may be asked to appoint a commission of prominent Jews and non-Jews early in 1987. The aim of the body would be to devise a program of obser- vances to take place during the week of March 31, 1992, in former great centers of Jewish life: Toledo, Cordoba, Bar- celona, Girona, Zaragossa and others. A corollary objective would be the invitation and coordina- tion of Jewish groups and dele- gations from Israel and nations around the globe, to convene in Spain at the end of March 1992. It is assumed that heads of state and other world Jewish leaders will be on hand to par- ticipate in what is viewed by many Spanish Jews as an act of "justice and absolution." Some even expect that there may also take place a symbolic an- nulment of the expulsion de- cree. The year 1992 will indeed be a turbulent one for Spaniards, with two other major events