EV A fresh look at recent stories in The Jewish News. JPM Pool In Hiding efore last Sunday's snowstorm, contrac- tors were making good progress on the additions and renovation at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Com- munity Center. "The underground work has been moving right along," said Irving Protetch, property man- ager for United Jewish Foundation, which owns the building and land for the Jewish community. Some of the concrete block walls are up around the area of the new swimming pool being constructed on the east side of JPM. Mr. Protetch said the con- tractor, Schiller Con- struction, hopes to enclose the area "to get it under cover" and then do the pool excavating. The two-story addition will include a 25-yard pool and health clubs for men and women. New offices and a new main entrance to JPM will be added in the spring. Contractors are hoping to complete the $3.5 mil- lion project by the end of August or the beginning of September. son, Ms. Rosenfeld decid- ed to fix that. Last summer, she started the Detroit Stars of David, holding the first gathering, a picnic, at Temple Israel. Today, about 25 families belong to the local chapter of Stars. Among the group's pro- jects last month was a Chanukah party that included a sing-along and a rousing game of musical chairs. Even Ms. Rosenfeld was impressed by the size of the crowd; she termed the party "very successful. We all had a great time." The Stars also host regular parent coffees where various aspects of adoption are discussed. One recent program cov- ered "Adoption in Child- ren's Literature." Ms. Rosenfeld said rep- resentatives of Stars of David are ready to dis- cuss any aspect of adop- tion, including interna- tional and private adop- tions, adopting from other states, networking and information about conversion. For information, con- tact Ms. Rosenfeld at 737-3874. eace activist Abie Nathan has raised more than $300,000 — including $58,000 from Israelis — to aid victims of the famine in Somalia. The money will be used to establish a tent city, to be located in Kenya near the Somalian border, which organizers hope will house and feed 20,000 refugees. When he began the project sev- eral months ago, Mr. Nathan estimated he needed about $1 million p for the tent city. Initially, Somali lead- ers rejected any assis- tance from Israel or Israelis. Later, Gen. Mohammed Farah Aideed, leader of the Somali National Al- liance, said he would accept aid from Mr. Nathan and any other nongovernmental Israeli group. Thirty-six Knesset members, representing a variety of political par- ties, have endorsed Mr. Nathan's project. Once the tent city is completed and fully oper- ational, it will be turned over to the United Nations High Commis- sion on Refugees, which will be responsible for its operation and adminis- tration. Meanwhile, another drive, conducted by Mag- en David Adorn in Israel, has brought in another $23,000 for Somali relief, according to a report in the Jerusalem Post. tion last year handled 125 graveside services — up from 100 the year before. "We are doing better than expected," Mr. Dorfman said, adding the business has handled sev- eral pre-arranged ser- vices. Meanwhile, Mr. Dorf- man's son, Jonathan Dorfman, recently joined the business after gradu- ating from Wayne State University's school of mortuary science. The duo has no imme- diate plans to expand. Alan Dorfman said he hopes to keep overhead costs low to pass savings on to the families. He recently purchased a heating system for tents for graveside services held during the winter months. Before Dorfman Fun- eral Direction opened, Ira Kaufman and Hebrew Memorial were the only Jewish funeral parlors serving metropolitan Detroit. The three cha- pels handle about 1,200 funerals each year.L1 ALAN HITSKY ASSOCIATE EDITOR B Closing in the swimming pool. Stars Help Adoptive Families — .._ ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM k ASSISTANT EDITOR _ gri ne of Elissa Rosen- IV -- feld's first projects when she settled in West Bloomfield in 1990 was looking for Stars of David. The Stars of David, founded in Massachu- setts in 1984, is an infor- mation and support group for adoptive Jew- ish parents and Jewish couples hoping to adopt: It had chapters through- out the country, but none in Detroit. The new mother of an adopted Tent City Raises $300,000 For Somalia ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSISTANT EDITOR Able Nathan Funeral Business Prospering KIMBERLY LIFTON STAFF WRITER orfman's Funeral Direction, a two- year-old funeral busi- ness specializing in low- cost graveside services, has grown by 30 percent in the past year, owner Alan Dorfman said. Mr. Dorfman, who opened in Berkley the Jewish community's third funeral venture, said Dorfman Funeral Direc- D