Jewish Federation Apartments residents treasure their community within a community. LONNY GOLDSMITH Staff Writer KRISTA HUSA Photographer puter room. While there are groups that meet to talk about current events and books, this is the only for- mal class that Hechtman offers. With the group in place, Sklar sits back and watches. Doris Roby and Bertha Son- shine help Dorothy Aaron learn her way around the computer. "It helps if you have a topic of interest that you can search for on the Internet," says Roby, showing off the array of Monet pictures she found. Aaron's assignment for the next class is to bring in her son's e-mail address. "I love this because it's so fascinating," Aaron says. "It encompasses the whole world." The participants in the class have set up their own e- mail accounts, which allow them to communicate regu- larly with friends and rela- tives online. "I didn't think they'd be so excited," Sklar says of her students. "I had to start from square one since many have never used a computer before, or even typed." Friday, Feb. 27 Dancercise, Teitel, 10:50 a.m. Joan Williams and Mary Weis lead the class of 10 women, who have not gath- ered for three weeks. The ses- sion, therefore, reviews dances already learned. The first is from Greece — called "Miserlou." Williams arranges her students as if they are about to be photographed: The shorter ones are in front; their taller counterparts are in back. They move in a circle, clap- ping their hands and shuffling their feet to the music. As the teacher, Williams breezes through the dance, but it takes a while for the partici- pants to figure out when they should be using their left foot or their right, and when to clap. The second dance is Israeli: "Zemer Atik." Rose Schwartz and Selma Racklin take a seat in the chairs that line the dance floor. Both are dizzy from running circles and they give up for the day. Finally, a familiar dance: the Hora. "This began as an exercise class, but we started dancing recently," says Williams. The students still do stretching for exercise, which is fine with Schwartz, who doesn't consid- er dancing exercise. Tsilya Gimelshteyn and Anna Kausman serve Rachel Thomas at Teitel's Beitel. Teiters Beitel, Teitel, 11:45 a.m. As the clock approaches noon, Tsilya Gimelshteyn and Anna Kaus- man smile. The lunch-time frenzy is coming to an end. Teitel's Beitel, the resident-run store at the Oak Park building, has been open for a couple of years and \;--) Dorothy Aaron and Bertha Sonshine work on the Internet at Hechtman's computer lab. Gimelshteyn's been there from the beginning. "I like to help the residents," says the Ukraine native, through translator Larisa Kleschik. "I also try to make conversation with them." The store sells lunch goods such as tuna, egg salad, cheese and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and bagels and cream cheese, as well as grocery items like milk, cottage cheese, orange juice and eggs. Gimelshteyn has the responsibility of training Kausman, who's in her fourth day of working at the store. Internet Class, Hechtman I, 2:35 p. m. Hechtman I and II residents are entering the computer age. Laura Sklar, a social work student at Wayne State University, teaches class in Hechtman's small three-corn- A Break In The Day, Hechtman I, 3 p. m. Pearl Gittelman takes advantage of a wet and dreary Friday afternoon to do some- thing for others. With crochet needles in hand, Gittelman works on lap robes for patients at Veterans and Children's hospitals. "I get yarn and material from the veterans, and we make them," she says. "But yarn is in short supply." For the past two years, Gittelman and a group she organized — including Sarah Litvin, Dorothy Aaron, Ellen Moss, Mercia Hoffman, Esther Caplan, 3/27 1998 81