Clockwise from top left.• Lenna Israetel p ulls out of her driveway. Elizabeth Kirshner, in the JPM pool. Dee Solomon and attentive listeners At JVS, Gil Golden prepares for the day. Cindy Sherman practices making a bed at JVS. About 200 other "consumers" learn cooking, housekeeping and social skills from 75 staff members. The Federation allocated $954,228 to the JVS in 1998. At 11:47 a.m. in the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building of the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit in Oak Park, Elizabeth Kirshner, 4, has just spent a half hour in reading class, where librarian Dee Solomon read children's books to a captivated Kirshner and nine others. Fifteen minutes later, after a quick change into a bathing suit, we spot Kirshner happily splashing in the JPM pool, near Zachary Neistein, 4, whose mother, Amy, works in the Federation's Neighborhood Project, headquartered at the JPM Building. His father, Howard, is the Federation's director of planning. Parents send 21 children from infants to preschoolers to the JPM Building and 3/12 999 22 Detroit Jewish News 145 children to the JCC's D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building in West Bloomfield in half-day, extended-hours and full-day daycare programs. In 1998, the Federation allocated $1,549,400 to the JCC. Iwtms - tiefti:t At 2 p.m., our next appointment is at the Max M. Fisher Federation Building in Bloomfield Township, the center of Jewish communal Detroit. We lumber up the stairs to a second- floor office where, in a sparse cubicle, three interns answer phones, earning college credits.' Sharri Umansky, 24, is preparing an educational packet for this year's Federation-sponsored Women's Seder on March 24 at Adat Shalom Synagogue. She's doing the advance work as part of Project STaR (Service, Training and Research in Jewish Communal Development), a two-year graduate program at the University of Michigan's School of Social Work. Commuting about three days a week from Ann Arbor to the Federation, she spends the rest of her week taking classes at U-M. Since the program started 10 years ago, 39 stu- dents have completed Project STaR; seven more will graduate in May. Everywhere we look, Federation employees greet us with smiles, and praise for the people they work with and for the "generosity of the Jewish people of Detroit." We know they mean what they say, and d we know, by looking at the numbers, it's probably true, but they say it so often it comes off like a sales pitch. tirr CW On the way to Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit in Farmington Hills, we are running late. The roads are still slick and the traffic is, as always, congested. We get the feeling that if the Federation was in charge of the roads, with the backing and generos- ity of the Jewish people of Detroit, there would be no slick roads, no traffic and no potholes. And it would be sunny and 70 degrees. Always. kti A L tNiR It's 3:10 p.m., and with a little more than three weeks to go, Bryan Robbins, a 14-year-old Hillel eighth grader, has just left Torah class and is now practicing lines from Annie Get Your Gun with classmate Monica Woll, 14, of West Bloomfield, in the music room. They have been students together since kindergarten. Monica has an older sister who's a recent Hillel graduate; Bryan has a younger sister going to Hillel. Bryan tells us the school offers a good base of Jewish knowledge and values that he will take with him to high school.