N EWS
FREE
INSPECTION
JPM Expansions
•EXHAUST • BRAKES
•SHOCKSISTRUTS
•SUSPENSION
•FREE TIRE ROTATION
Continued from Page 1
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a
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SECOND SHOCK
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*Off regular price.
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od yeeat tifi v e s
SAVE SOWN UPI:RICAN
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26939 Greenfield
559-0929
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11 MILE
Mobil
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allAN33E10
MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS
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1 N
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400 N. Main
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Royal Oak, MI
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20
FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1992
1393 S. WOODWARD AVE.,
BIRMIA1011AM. MI 48009
(3 1 3) 644-8565
Monday to Saturday. 9 am to 6 pm
Metro Dealer for Over 35 Years
d
JCC Executive Director
Mort Plotnick said the JPM's
new look is expected to more
than double the number of dai-
ly users to 700.
Supporters of the project be-
lieve the new facility will en-
hance the entire 10 Mile Road
Corridor and act like a mag-
net.
"This is a real neighborhood
center," Mr. Aronson said. "It's
going to be a place where you
can go with your family and
spend a day, you can use the
pool, you can use the health
club, you can sit and visit with
people."
"It's the greatest thing. I'm
so excited about this," said
Adrienne Stamell of
Huntington Woods, who at-
tended the parlor meeting at
the Feldman home.
"It's quite a schlep to Maple-
Drake (the Jewish Com-
munity Center in West
Bloomfield)," said Brenda
Friedman, who lives in
Huntington Woods. "I'm look-
ing forward to the expansion
here."
To some, the culmination of
the campaign to upgrade the
10 Mile facility comes as a
complete surprise.
People have been hearing
about this for 13 years, but for
several reasons it never got the
full attention of the communi-
ty until about three years ago,
Mr. Aronson said.
For one, the sprawling 17-
year-old Maple-Drake JCC
took energy, money and focus
away from the JPM propos-
al. The project also took a back
seat to Operation Exodus and
Passage to Freedom cam-
paigns, which required a con-
centrated effort by the
Federation to deal with the
massive immigration of Soviet
Jews.
Neighborhood activists are
quick to point to a significant
revival in the area, thanks in
part to the masses of new
Soviet arrivals. Two thousand
new Americans already have
moved into Oak Park and
Southfield in the past sever-
al years, Ms. Feldman said.
"It's going through a resur-
gence because while everybody
else was moving and schmooz-
ing and running around, that
neighborhood has been re-
vived by the Jewish commu-
nity itself," Mr. Aronson said.
He cited the Neighborhood
Project, which offers interest-
free loans to Jewish home buy-
ers in the area, the Yeshiva
Beth Yehudah and Yeshiva
Gedolah, as well and numer-
ous synagogues and temples.
Two other elements which
refocused interest in the JPM
were the opening of I-696 and
the Federation's purchase of
the former B'nai Moshe at 10
Mile Road and Church.
Yeshiva Beth Yehudah took:,
over the property, which is
now occupied by its Sally Allan
Alexander Beth Jacob School
for Girls.
Then came the construction'
in 1989 of the Teitel apart-
ments, the last of three feder-
ally subsidized apartment
buildings in the immediate I
area. Following that, in 1990;'
the roadways to the JPM were
upgraded, the parking lot ex-
panded, and air conditioning
was installed in the JPM gym.
Fund-raisers on the JPM
project got a jump start inc, I
December when the Kresge
Foundation of Troy approved
a $400,000 matching grant.
Plans for the new Center also
were boosted by 52 donors who
contributed $10,000 each, and
five supporters who con-''
tributed donations of $50 000
each.
But even while these large
donations make up a majori- ,
ty of the money raised, Mr. H
Aronson was quick to charac-
terize the campaign as grass-
roots.
"It really emerged from the
people in the neighborhoods,'
he said. "We don't do that very
well in Detroit or anyplace be- 11
cause we've become too reliant
on the major gift. We don't get
out into the homes. This cam-
paign includes new names and:-
new money." ❑
,
,
Oz Gets
Writer's Prize
Bonn (JTA) —
1
internationally famous au-
thor and peace activist Amos
Oz has been named recipient
of the 1992 Peace Prize
awarded by the German
Association of Book
Distributors.
The association said that
the prestigious award was in
recognition of his literary
contributions and his <
struggle for peace between
Israelis and Palestinians.
The presentation of the
prize, worth some $16,000,
will take place Oct. 4 at St.
Paul's Church in Frankfurt,
during the city's giant „,
International Book Fair.
According to the associ-
ation, Mr. Oz has been at the
forefront of political efforts
to resolve the Israeli-
Palestinian dispute.