LEASE • LEASE • LEASE A 30 Month Lease Is The Way To Go! Apartments Continued from Page 1 92 Seville $59697* 9 30 month Stk. #D0666. Security Package, Leather, Day/Night Mirror, Special Seating Package, ISB Option Group. '92 Eldorado $58992* 30 month lease Stk. #D0453. This Baby's Loaded: Astro Roof, Sport Interior, Security Package, Leather. HUGE SAVINGS ON THE FEW '91's LEFT IN STOCK! '30 mo closed end lease 15.000 miles per year 10 , per mile over First payment. security deposit and 4 0 0 use tax due at inception. MSRP of Seville is 537 300. MSRP of Eldorado is S36.417 To get total payments. multiply by 30. Customer can but has no obligation to purchase vehicle at lease ena ■ Suburban Olds- HOURS: Monday & Thursday 9-9, Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 9-6 1810 Maplelawn in the Troy Motor Mall 643 0070 - OUT-OF-TOWN BUYERS — CALL COLLECT IIP ■ TACH Parents for Torah for All Children MICHIGAN CHAPTER You are cordially invited to our 11th Annual Dinner honoring RABBI LEIZER LEVIN Sunday, January 12, 1992 7:00 Dinner 6:00 Cocktails Congregation Dovid Ben Nochum 14800 W. Lincoln Dr., Oak Park, Michigan Couvert: $50.00 No solicitations 20 FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1992 RSVP Gail Perczyk Sara Shoenig 968-8072 967-4475 Zina Baum, right, visits Ida Erdstein.-- Mrs. Umansky works for JFS in the apartment five days a week. On Fridays, she prepares enough food to last the weekend. She is one of seven geriatric care workers. "JFS has maintained apartments like this since 1979," Mrs. Bayer said. "We offer an alternative to the nursing home or Home for Aged." Cost per month is $1,275. Zena Baum, the other co- manager, said group living began because not every el- derly person needs to live in a nursing home. "Some peo- ple just need day-to-day help with things like cooking, shopping and schlepping," Mrs. Baum said. "Our pro- gram lets them live like anyone else. They're not on anybody's schedule. They can come and go as they please. They have visitors; the apartment is theirs. The most important thing is they feel like part of a family and socialize." Phyllis Schwartz, director of senior services at JFS, said all residents are inter- viewed. "We look for people who want to live with people and can basically manage on their own," Mrs. Schwartz said. Extra medical care is ar- ranged when necessary. "It's not enough if you need the services of a nursing home," Mrs. Schwartz said. "Our program is a step before the nursing home or home for the aged." Residents don't have to come from Michigan. Ida Erdstein came from New York to live near her chil- dren and grandchildren. Mrs. Erdstein lives with Ethel Feldman and Toby Heisler. They each have their own bedroom, but often meet to talk, watch TV or play Scrabble in the living room. Yvette Abejen, from France, enjoys the group liv- ing program so much, she doesn't want to go back to France, despite her daughter's urging. "Everything's perfect here," Mrs. Abejen said. Mrs. Abejen, almost 80, lives with two men — by choice. "I'm like another mother," she said. "I keep them on their toes. They wouldn't dare come to the dinner table anymore wear- ing their undershirts." Sol Capitol: Saved his life. Sofia Shayman, a geriatric care worker for seven years, had to describe her feelings in Russian — chuvstva loktya— an expression for intense closeness. "I only want them to feel like real family," said Mrs. Shayman, from Minsk. "They can share their problems with us. I only hope I have a place like this when my time comes." ❑