PEOPLE Daneka Anthony takes time out from her clerical job to talk with an elderly resident. Daneka Anthony takes her new friend for a walk while her supervisor, Michelle Thompkins, looks on. TXXER CITYLNTERNS Students from Have A Dream Foundation learn about the working world at the Jewish Home For Aged. Text by Kimberly Lifton Photos by Glenn Nest F gram's support system, working summers through a federally funded project. This year, 10 students, now in the 10th grade, worked at the Jewish Home For Aged's Borman Hall. Na—ki—la?". "Not bad. It is Hava Negila," said Warren Coville, a retired philanthropist and former Jewish Home For Ag- ed board member. The students filed papers, manned the phones and distributed supplies. They helped residents with recreational therapy and did laundry. They even cut hair and did manicures. For most of them it was the first time they learned Heb- rew words, Yiddish sayings and a little history of Jewish immigration to Detroit. ifteen-year-old Nakila Woods was struggling a bit, try- ing to remember the few Hebrew words she learned this summer while working at Borman Hall in Detroit. She shrugged her shoulders. "Is it Hava Because of efforts of Mr. Coville and his wife, Margot, Nakila Woods and her 77 former classmates from the fifth grade of Roosevelt Elementary have been given new opportunities. Those students who graduate high school and are accepted to college will receive scholarships from the Covilles' "I Have A Dream Foundation." For now, the students are taking advantage of the pro- Tanica Williams learned how to be a beautician this summer. But after working and getting to know the residents, she has decided she might be better suited to the nursing field. Daneka Anthony learned clerical skills. Some days, she filed memos. Other days, she answered phones. Most important to her, she got a 4