[This Week Day, rdinary People Our reporter and photographer make a few stops on the philanthropic route. HARRY KIRSBAUM Staff Writer KRISTA HUSA Photographer IV ith the Allied Jewish Campaign about to wrap up its nearly $30-mi1- lion drive for 1998-99, we realized we write about a lot of the big pic- ture things the Campaign supports, but not always about what differ- ence the money makes in the day-to-day lives of ordinary Detroiters. So we asked the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit to show us a day in the life of the programs the annual Campaign supports. We expected the programs to put their best foot forward, and we asked them for great photo opportunities. They set us up with eight different stops that crisscrossed the metro area. What we saw were some ordinary, some touching and some funny examples of Jewish communal life on Feb. 25 — a cold, blustery day. Car, Home And Job It's 8:30 a.m. and Lena Israetel is warming up her car in the garage of her Oak Park home. She's the New American program administrator at Jewish Apartments and Services' Teitel Building, five minutes from home. She deals with the Russian- speaking elderly who live in the building. Her 1993 Ford Escort was bought in . : : : : : it fir part with an interest-free loan from the PULP Hebrew Free Loan Association (HFLA). * *4 i: n IN 1111111111 am The $6,000 down payment for her .... wes sai6.. house came from the Neighborhood Forget the big operations. Project, a Federation program that strives to maintain a Jewish presence in Federation funds touch Oak Park and Southfield with interest- a lot of lives in quiet free loans. In 1998, $92,400 was allocated by but important ways. Federation to help 250 HFLA appli- cants. About $115,000 went to the Neighborhood Project. : 141:111111. ' ` Learning The Basics At 10:07 a.m. in the Adult Day Program on the first floor of the Jewish Vocational Service in Southfield, we saw Cindy Sherman finishing her stress management class. Sherman, 63, greeted us with a hearty "Shalom," and told us she's the rabbi of the building and can't wait to have her picture taken. She is mildly mentally disabled and lives with six other residents in a JARC agency home on Downing Street in Beverly Hills. We followed her down the spotless hallway to a room set up like a one-bed- room apartment, complete with food and clothing, where she is taught the basics. She practiced making her bed for us. 3/1. 19; Detroit Jewish News 21