A fresh look at some recent stories in the headlines. Candyman Goes South ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSISTANT EDITOR 1 ruing Small is going, and he's taking his candy with him. For generations, Mr. Small ADL Leaders Voice Support ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSISTANT EDITOR has been passing out candy to everyone from children he meets in the neighborhood to rabbis at his congregation, Tem- ple Israel. Just about everyone knows him as "The Candy Man." Now, life in metro Detroit is going to be just a little less sweet. Last month, Mr. Small and his wife packed up their bags (filled, naturally, with candy) and moved to West Palm Beach, Fla. "Of course I'll be distributing candy there, too," he said. But T he Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith re- mains one of the few na- tional Jewish organizations that hasn't called on the United States to commute the sentence of Jonathan Pollard. But just before Rosh Hashanah, two of the group's leaders made personal pleas for the convicted spy. "I believe the time has come for you to grant clemen- cy to Jonathan Pollard and commute his sentence to the time already served, and I urge you to do so," ADL Na- tional Director Abraham Fox- his work in Michigan will have to come to an end. "I can't send all the candy back here!" he gasped. Mr. Small, of Southfield, be- gan passing out candy when his grandchildren were growing up. Every Sunday, Mr. Small and his wife, Lina, took their grandchildren to Milton's Drug Store at Six Mile and Hamilton, where each child was given several dollars to get whatever he wanted. "That," Mrs. Small said, "was when you could get a whole bag of penny candy for $1 and still have mon- ey left over." Then Mr. Small gave some candy to assistants at the North Park Towers, where for years the couple resided. Soon resi- dents got word of the free pep- permints and lollipops and everyone was at the Smalls' door. Both Mr. and Mrs. Small are longtime Michigan residents. Mrs. Small was raised in Owosso; Mr. Small was born in Philadelphia and moved, when he was 9 months old, to Detroit. man wrote in a letter to Pres- ident Bill Clinton. "There is no question that what Pollard did was wrong and cannot be justified. How- ever, he has acknowledged his transgressions, and he has paid a steep price for them. Pollard, too, deserves forgiveness and a chance to turn the page and begin a new chapter in his life." ADL National Chairman Melvin Salberg also wrote to the president: "As serious as his crime was, Jonathan Pol- lard has paid his debt to so- ciety." The ADL opted not to be- come involved in the Pollard case because, Mr. Salberg said, "it found no probative evidence of anti-Semitism in his sentencing." Mr. Pollard was convicted of spying for Israel and sen- tenced to life in prison. Other leaders who have spoken out in recent months on behalf of Mr. Pollard in- clude former NAACP Exec- utive Director the Rev. Benjamin Hooks, Sen. Carol Moseley Braun and Evangel- ical Christian leader the Rev. Thomas Steele. Abraham Foxman JPM Center Continues To Grow LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER 2nd Forum Addresses Multi Mix KIMBERLY LIPTON STAFF WRITER I he Rev. James Lyons, di- rector of the Ecumenical Institute for Jewish- Christian Studies, will be the 0 n Sept. 8, the newly ren- ovated Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Commu- nity Center re-opened its doors. A project that was only a dream for many became a major fund-raising event to beef up Jewish neighbor- hoods. Now a reality, the JPM JCC is attracting the Jews of Southfield, Oak Park and Huntington Woods. As of Sept. 22, 230 mem- berships had been purchased — 44 of them belonging to the health club. Class registration and in- terest are up. Leslie Bash, JPM director, is pleased with the progress, but looking forward to those numbers — especially at the health club — increasing. "We've had a lot of calls and interest in the luxury membership. We're just com- pleting the last-minute tasks — hair dryers, locker dividers — and we'll be ready to open on Oct. 3," Ms. Bash said. "When all the fa- cilities are avail- able and people can actually use the health club completely, memberships will jump." keynote speaker for the sec- ond Southfield-Lathrup Mul- ticultural Coalition, to be held on Oct. 14. Called "Living in South- field-Lathrup — Changes, Choices, Challenges Part II," the forum begins at 7 p.m. at Southfield-Lathrup High School. The forum is a response to an April program, when 250 area residents gathered at S- L to discuss cultural diversi- ty in the community as it relates to education, govern- ment, neighborhoods and business. The coalition is a grass- roots organization of repre- sentatives from synagogues, churches, government, ethnic groups and schools. Its goal is to empower citizens to take an active role in the commu- nity. The coalition was spear- headed in 1991 by the Jewish Community Council and the Neighborhood Project, which provides interest-free loans to first-time Jewish home buyers in parts of Oak Park and Southfield. More than 20 area organi- zations have since joined the coalition. Among them: cities of Southfield and Lathrup Village, Southfield Public Schools, Congregation Beth Achim, Congregation Shaarey Zedek, St. Bede Catholic Church, Oakland County Center for Open Housing, the Chaldean As- syrian Foundation, the Amer- ican-Arab Anti-Discrim- ination Committee and the NAACP South Oakland Branch. For more information, con- tact Beverly Phillips at the Jewish Community Council, 642-5393. Ken Williams, Nedja Williams and son Basil look at the plans for the JPM. The Rev. James Lyons