A Day At The Fair Kids Fair '98 provided fun Super Bowl pre-game activities. LONNY GOLDSMITH StaffWriter KRISTA HUSA Photographer 1/30 1998 ore than 5,000 kids and adults came out to the Palace of Auburn Hills last Sunday — not for a Pistons basketball game, but for fun and games nonetheless. Kids Fair '98, organized by the Jewish Community Center and co-sponsored by nine other major organizations, allowed children to go to booths set up by both for-profit and not- for-profit groups, including United Way, the Detroit Zoological Park, WTVS-Channel 56 and Habitat For Humanity. "It was a fantastic event," said JCC Development Officer Nevin Kanner, who was responsible for organizing the day. "We had a constant flow of traffic coming through." The event, according to Kanner, was set up to bring the businesses, non-profit organizations and the general public together in an event where people can learn about a particu- lar service or company. Any profits go to scholarships for the JCC day camps. The fair, which included a go-kart track, a petting zoo and four moonwalks, was set up on the main floor and the con- course of the Palace. There were close to 100 volunteers, most from B'nai B'rith Youth Organization chapters. According to Kanner, the Home Depot booth where kids could build their own tool boxes was the most popular.