Affording the best is not the questionwfinding the best is. A first ... Apartment living in a Skilled Nursing Facility For the discriminating person requiring an elegant environment Family owned and operated for over 33 years Medicare approved For our limousine to pick you up for a personal tour of our facility. 6470 Alden Drive, Orchard Lake ALL ABOUT FLOWERS 26062 W. Ikvelve Mile Road Southfield, Michigan 48034 Diamond Plaza east of Northwestern Hwy. (313) 350-0120 26 FRIDAY AUGUST an 1c191 A full service florist creating floral designs for all occasions. • Rosh Hashanah Remembrances: • • • • dining table centerpieces fresh cut flower bouquets flowering & foliage plants other gift ideas • Wishing our family, friends and customers a happy & healthy New Year • We Will Be Open Sunday, Sept. 8th I LOCAL NEWS 1 JPM Campaign Continued from Pagel fears and solidified the community." Robert Aronson, Federa- tion executive vice presi- dent, said commitments al- ready are in place for $1.25 million. In addition, officials said, Federation has applied for a $500,000 Kresge Foun- dation challenge grant that would provide matching funds for the building's bricks and mortar. Federation and JCC offi- cials have discussed corn- munity concerns about the trying economic times that have forced agencies to hold the line on spending. JCC President Linda Lee said the expansion should not burden the community, which has been inundated with requests for additional funds for Operation Exodus, the international campaign to resettle Soviet Jews. "There is a concern be- cause of the commitment to Exodus and the Campaign," Mr. Aronson said. "But the community has said JPM is the No. 1 priority in terms of capital development in Detroit. We can not diminish the quality of Jewish life in Detroit. "We raise the funds carefully, but it is a judg- ment call as to how it will af- fect the Campaign," Mr. Aronson said. "We can cer- tainly minimize the effect (on the Allied Jewish Cam- paign) as long as it is done in a centralized and controlled way. The Federation will be responsible for raising money for JPM and the Campaign. So it will be co- ordinated." Hugh Greenberg, chair- man of the 10 Mile Campus Planning Committee and the Neighborhood Project, said the expansion is "the culmination of a dream." Mr. Greenberg, who pre- sented the plan to the Fed- eration Board of Governors, said the combination of the freeway expansion and the success of the Neighborhood Project and Rothstein Park (built over the freeway) pro- ve the community surroun- ding JPM is vibrant and ready for its expansion. "It's a done deal. The community has approved it. It was a community deci- sion," Mr. Greenberg said. The major gifts campaign, called "JPM: At the Center of Things," is expected to last about five months. A community-wide appeal for funds is planned for next spring. A feasibility study showed that JPM expansion was ap- pealing to the estimated 25,000 Jews living within five miles of the 10 Mile Road facility. Federation studies also indicate that 60 percent of the Jewish com- munity lives within 15 minutes of the JPM branch. Currently, the JPM JCC is regularly used by senior adults and neighborhood children, JCC and Federa- tion officials said. For Mrs. Levine and others, however, something has been missing. She wishes her children, now in their late 20s, could have $3.5 million is needed for a pool, facilities and programming. experienced a local JCC in- stead of the Y. "The tragedy is that many of us haven't been able to teach our children to swim there," she said. Now Mrs. Levine hopes to write the first membership, check for the JPM recrea- tional facility. Reciprocal membership plans will be provided for both Maple-Drake and JPM facilities, JCC officials said. Additionally, aggressive outreach plans are under way for members of the Or- thodox community. For ex- ample, Federation officials said special hours at the pool will be arranged for obser- vant Jews, who will not swim with members of the opposite sex. ❑ Community Plans Emigre Weddings Preparations are reaching a climax for Detroit's first tradi- tional communal wedding for 10 couples from the Soviet Union. The wedding will take place 4 p.m. Sept. 1 at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Community Center. Business establishments as well as individuals have of- fered their services to Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe (F.R.E.E.). Volunteers have addressed 1,700 invitations and made hundreds of phone calls; they're assembling 10 chup- pahs from white lace mounted on poles and gift wrapping 10 tallitot and 10 candlesticks, F.R.E.E.'s gift to the couples. The marriage ceremony will be performed by rabbis of the community. The ceremony will be followed by dancing and refreshments. Dinner by reservation only will be at 6 p.m. For information on being a chuppah sponsor or for reservations, call 967-4113.