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September 02, 1994 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-09-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Why Flip A Coin
When It Comes To
Choosing Nursing
Home Care For
Your Parents?

`Jewish' Homes
Featured In Tour

REBECCA WALDMAN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

Make the choice
that leaves nothing
to chance.
Bortz Health Care.
24 Hour Nursing Care

Jacob Siegel's 1917 home on Boston.

H

Call 363-4121 for our

limousine to pick
you up for a personal
tour of the mansion.

WILLOW RD

SD; ARE L

.7\

LONG LAKE RD

COMMERCE RD

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B
v.:.\ ara-6,/

/4- ,

Bortz
Health Care
Of Green Lake

Family owned and operated for over 33 years. Medicare approved.

6470 Alden Drive, Orchard Lake

(Less than 20 minutes from Maple & Orchard Lake Roads)

(JD

LU

Cf)

4

Rita Jerome and Staff

Extend Best Wishes For A

LU

Joyous and Healthy New Year

CC

U-1

LU

F-

14

arriet Siden remembers
the first time she visited
the home of Detroit cloth-
ing store magnate Ben-
jamin Siegel.
"I just loved the older house
with the beautiful woods," Ms.
Siden recalled. "The layouts are
so different from what we're used
to. Suburban homes are very dif-
ferent, with open spaces and new-
er designs. That house brought
back a lot of memories of homes
I grew up with."
Ms. Siden, a board member of
the Jewish Historical Society,
liked the stately Boston-Edison
area homes of prominent Detroit
Jewish families so much, she or-
ganized a five-house tour, pri-
vately guided by members of the
Boston-Edison Association.
The tour takes place 12:30-4:30
p.m. Sunday, Sept. 25.
The five homes richly reflect
local Jewish history. One elegant
1911 building on Edison belonged
to Leo Franklin, rabbi of Temple
Beth El from 1899 to 1941. An-
other was the Chicago Boulevard
residence of Meyer Prentis, Gen-
eral Motors comptroller for 32

25270 Greenfield, Oak Park 967 1161

-

years. He built the house in 1925.
Architect Albert Kahn designed
mid-1910s homes for both Ben-
jamin Siegel and his brother Ja-
cob, who owned American Lady
Corset Company. The fifth man-
sion was once owned by the Co-
hen family, and later the Slomans.
New owners who have kept
track of the houses' histories and
local importance are now their oc-
cupants.
The Boston-Edison Associa-
tion, whose members will conduct
the tours, buys derelict houses
and fixes them up. Part of the $15
fee for the tour goes to that effort.
Although the Boston-Edison
Association has conducted tours
of private homes for about 20
years, this is the first year of a joint
project focusing on Jewish homes
with JHS.



ire
41"w.k,

11,

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^t§ §

Rabbis Distribute
Sourcebook On Peace

REBECCA WALDMAN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

local rabbi is helping coor- joined Israel's Prime Minister
dinate a nation-wide High Yitzhak Rabin and a coalition of
Holy Days campaign to 11 rabbis spanning Judaism's
garner support from all four major branches — Orthodox,
North American rabbis for the Is- Conservative, Reform and Re-
constructionist — to compile a re-
raeli peace agreement.
Rabbi Daniel Polish, of Tem- source guide on the Middle East
ple Beth El in Bloomfield Hills, peace process.

A

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