CADILLAC® CHANGING THE WAY YOU THINK Elderly Seek Meal Subsidies RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER 1993 SEDAN DEVILLE 24 MOM' $ LEASE r MONTH PLUS TAX Stk. #809509 A GMAC Smart Lease IIIMIE 111•11•1 MI= 111=1 - THINK SPRING SPECIAL LIMITED TIME OFFER! I I POWER ASTRO ROOF I 644 $ 2 Rinke Cadillac will install a Power As- tro Roof for only $2.00 per month when you GMAC SmartLease a NEW Cadillac during the month of Febru- ary. Per month *GMAC SMARTLEASE 24 Months. First pymt. plus $475 ref. sec. dep., $1500.00 down and plate or transfer due on delivery. 4% sales tax additional. 12,000 miles per year. 150 per mile excess charge over limitation. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end. To get total pymts. multiply pymt. by 36 months. Rinke Cadillac New addrtion c'454" 696 A ,ate P. - N R s i 12 gl it g h% E %. 3 1 i 2 1 4t1 i II II ' % 6' •■11 INKE CADILLAC I- 696 AT VAN DYKE i3 „2 I I I 8 r C? Z eneral otors 1 9 1 T. 7 5 8 -7 1 80 0 If traveling west on 1-696, exit Hoover, follow Service Drive to RINKE. If traveling east on 1-696, exit Van Dyke; take second bridge past Van Dyke over expressway to RINKE. C.0 C/) DEDICATELN TO EXCELLENCE YOUR CLEANERS SHIRTS 4 Shirts For Only $3.97 Quality Refinishing • No Dip Tanks Expert Reupholstery • AU Work _Done By Hand Antique Restoration Regluing & Repairs In-Home Touch-Ups. Large Fabric Selection w MASTER DEALER References Upon Request Pick-Up and Deliver), Service Fully Insured Reg. $5.00 w Coupon Feb. 2, 3, 4 and 5 CC w CIREAT LAkES fiNishiNci SERVICES, INC, (.1 The Furniture Care Specialists 30 871-6641 Serving the Community for 10 Years 851-7172 Mon.-Fri. 7 A.M.-7 P.M. Sat. 8-5 29571 Orchard Lake Rd. at 13 Mile Rd. fter they pay for rent, medical treatment and other day-to-day expenses, 43 of the elderly residents of the Jewish Federation Apart- ments (JFA) have little money for decent meals. The 43 await subsidies, which discount the cost of food. The subsidies are pro- cured from interest on the Helen Naimark Assisted Meal Fund, founded by Mrs. Naimark, former executive director of the JFA. Some $9,200 from the endowment and $25,000 from the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit subsi- dizes the mandatory meal program. To facilitate a feeling of community among those who live in the apartments, the JFA's mandatory meal program requires residents to dine with their neighbors five times a week. JFA pro- vides the meals. "We decided we didn't want to make food an option," said Neil Satovsky, president of JFA. "We also feel it's in the residents' best interest to get out of their apartments and socialize. It improves their quality of life." JFA administrators and board members are hoping to secure more funding for meal subsidies. Mr. Satov- sky said a $2 million en- dowment is needed to pro- vide 100 percent meal subsi- dies for 155 people. This number includes people already receiving help, as well as the 43 on the wait- ing list. "The amount of money required — it can be almost a bottomless pit," he said. The meals cost between $85 and $95 each month. Those who qualify for subsi- dies receive a $25 monthly discount. The JFA deter- mines who qualifies on the basis of residents' income, assets and medical expens- es. But even residents who receive subsidies must come up with $60 or more each month. That can be next to impossible for some who live below the poverty line. Though residents can pay for their mandatory meals with food stamps, many have been cut from entitle- ment programs in recent years. Mr. Satovsky and Pat Milner, administrator of the Harriett and Ben Teitel Federation Apartments, say that many residents cut cor- ners. For example, they pur- chase peanut butter instead of meat. Some residents use Yad Ezra, the kosher food pantry in Oak Park. The JFA works with the Oakland- Livingston Human Services Agency, which coordinates a government commodities emergency food program. Other JFA residents rely on money and food from rela- tives. "My concern is, are they eating on the weekends?" said Iris Mickel, administra- Even residents who receive subsidies must come up with $60 or more each month. for at Anna and Meyer Prentis Federation Apart- ments I and II. "We're mak- ing many resources avail- able to them so they have access to food programs available in the communi- (- ty...(But) there are people who just feel as if they've been given a lot and they don't want to take any- more." ❑ Bone Marrow Testing At WSU Wayne State University is sponsoring a blood screen- ing next week to find bone marrow donors for minori- ty groups. One of the patients seeking a donor through the screening is Dr. Mau- rice Herschfus, a 30-year- old dentist from Oak Park who has aplastic anemia. Blood testing will be done 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Feb. 3 at the Wayne State University Student Center Building.