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October 13, 1995 - Image 41

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-10-13

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

12 MONTH
CERTIFICATE

NOMC and Pontiac Osteopath-
ic Hospital order pizza every day.
The roughly 700 to 800 people
who come through the Laundry
Chute every day can get pizza by
the pie or slice any time, he said.
"People are usually in here be-
tween two and 3 1/2 hours. A lot
of women come in with their kids,
put them in the play area and
have a tape put on, like Forrest
Gump. That entertains for a good
hour and a half The mother puts
her clothes in the washer, goes
and gets a tan, puts the clothes
in the dryer, orders pizza for the
kids and folds the clothes. There
are other laundromats that serve
food, but we believe we're the
only ones with a kitchen," Mr.
Moses said.
"Coin-op magazines and oth-
er journals have written about it

5.75 ,

because there's nothing like this
in the country."
Mr. Moses and his wife, Car-
olyn, have three children —
Katie, 12; David, 15; and Karl,
17 — who love the new operation.
"My oldest son comes in and
makes pizzas for his friends.
They're in awe. They love the
idea," he said.
Mr. Moses opened the Laun-
dry Chute four years ago and last
year bought another laundromat
in north Pontiac, the North
Laundry Chute. His third, Get
•'n' Go, is in Hamtramck. Neither
has tanning booths, but cus-
tomers at the Hamtramck laun-
dromat can carry out from the
pizzeria next door. It is owned by
Mr. Moses' parents, Gloria and
Robert.

INTEREST RATE

5 .87%

A.F.Y./*

60 MONTH
CERTIFICATE

6.25%

INTEREST RATE

0

,

6.39,

A. P.Y./*

They're Keeping Flame
Under Your Feet

JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER

Names: Steve and
Rebecca Jasgur
Occupation:
Owners ofeke Cor-
nell Entertainment
in Farmington
Hills.
Family: Mother, Harriet; father,
Robert; brother, Ron.
Synagogue: Congregation Beth
Abraham Hillel Moses

"What we do with kids trans-
fers over to a business-type at-
mosphere, where you have to
bridge the corporate culture.
There's a lot of tension, so what
we do with the kids, the interac-
tive entertainment, really trans-
fers over wonderfully to this adult
market," Mr. Jasgur said. "We do
a lot of weddings, and when you
go to a party and see the adults
acting crazier than the kids, you
see we were probably meant for
adults from the beginning."

Their charity work — the Jas-
gurs regularly host dance parties
for JARC (Jewish Association for
Residential Care), the Muscular
Dystrophy Association and Hil-
lel Day School — has helped ex-
pose them to companies that
want to do something out of the
ordinary for their employees.
But the Jasgurs, graduates of
West Bloomfield High School,
have not veered away from the

17.0\ig iW it

Mioiots

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PearliG

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CALL (810)338-7700 or (810)352-7700

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*Annual percentage yield when compounded quarterly. Rate is accurate as of 10/13/95. Penally for early withdrawal from certificate accounts may be assessed.

777 ts,*,

104ioe cornett studios

COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN



Steve and Rebecca Jasgur do their thing.

traditions begun by Mr. Cornell
in Detroit 40 years ago. Bar mitz-
vahs are still the bread and but-
ter of their operation. They offer
dance lessons at the Farmington
Hills studio and out in the field,
and provide the sparkle at par-
ties by bringing in deejays, em-
cees, "fun food" like cotton candy,
popcorn and coney islands, and
setups for spin art, sand art and
T-shirt painting.
They also pay attention to cur-
rent dance fads, like line danc-
ing and yes, the hustle.
Mr. Cornell, who now lives in
Los Angeles, is confident the
business is in good hands.

THEY'RE KEEPING page 42

Photo by Rog e r Hu tton

W

ith a little prodding and
a quick lesson, kids at
a Joe Cornell party
dance the hustle and
the twist all night.
The new challenge is getting
older people accustomed to a
straight-jacketed workaday
world up on their feet.
Siblings Steve and Rebecca
Jasgur, who bought most of the
business from Mr. Cornell five
years ago, say
they've tapped into
a rich vein by ex-
panding Joe Cornell
Entertainment into
the adult and corpo-
rate spheres.

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Complimentary refreshments throughout the day.
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41

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