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By grants ranging as high as $5 million and in hours of community service (as a volunteer math teacher at a local Jewish day school, for example) Mr. Milken has made a deep impression on Jewish Los Angeles, nowhere more than in its media which have treated him with kid gloves. While the Los Angeles Times has had no compunc- tion about running as many as five stories a day whenever Mr. Milken's fortunes were in the news, Jewish Los Angeles has held its breath and re- mained quiet, partly out of compassion for a local boy in trouble and partly because there has been a fear that the charitable spigot might be turned off. There is scarcely a Jewish charity in Los Angeles, local or Israeli, that has not re- ceived funding from one of the three Milken foundations. The total of Jewish recipients is more than 100. The $5 million grant went to the Jewish Federation- Council to complete the con- struction of its giant Jewish Community Center in the west San Fernando Valley which is named after Mr. Milken's father, Bernard. Un- til the money was offered, the Federation was in serious trouble with its plans and there was a good possibility that its steel structure would stand naked on the site, a memorial to overambitious planning. But a private ap- peal to Mr. Milken from a small number of Jewish lead- ers resulted in the grant which has given direction to a new and rapidly growing Jewish area in the city. While up to date figures by the three foundations (Mi- chael Milken Foundation, M(ichael) and L(owell) Foun- dation and the Corporate Fund Foundation) are not available, it is now known that disbursements to 1988 included more than $2 Yehuda Lev is a writer who lives in Los Angeles. million to Stephen S. Wise Temple, the largest Reform synagogue on the West Coast; more than $1.5 million to the Jewish Federation Council (the $5 million already men- tioned came later); and almost $1.3 million to the United Jewish Fund, the Los Angeles equivalent of the United Jewish Appeal. Since then the list of Mr. Milken's beneficiaries has lengthened and includes day schools, synagogues and almost every Israeli institu- tion that has held a fund rais- ing event in Los Angeles. To Ariel, a Jewish settlement on the West Bank, Mr. Milken Jewish Los Angeles has held its breath and remained quiet, partly out of compassion for a local boy in trouble and partly because there has been a fear that the charitable spigot might be turned off. contributed $1 million to help fund three schools. Whereas Mr. Milken was once an unobtrusive, almost reticent personality rarely seen at a Jewish function, even those he helped to fund, in recent years, first under suspicion and then, having pleaded guilty, awaiting sen- tencing, he has sought publi- city for his charitable giving and also for his personal in- terest in education and children. His has become a familiar face on the dias at major Jewish community fund raising dinners and his name began to appear in the general press in connection with his taking deprived or disabled children to ball ga-mes and other events. One of the most publicized of his donations was of $165,000 to the Simon Wies- enthal Center for the pur- chase of letters written by Anne Frank to her friends before she was forced to live in an attic. His interest in education also grew to the point where the Los Angeles Times estimated that 40 per- cent of his giving was for ed- ucational programs and schools, both Jewish and general. But there has also been a