Mazel Toy! CARL WALD MAN Special to The Jewish News he works in the tiny kitchen of her Country Court apart- ment in Southfield, making homemade chicken soup. She cooks shoulder veal chops she picked out at Dexter-Davison Market. She bakes pies for her grandchildren and does her own apartment cleaning. Mabel Rose Alvin and her cat Missy Kitty live independently. Mabel simply doesn't want to be a burden on her children. "I'm not ready for a nursing home," says Mabel. "Those old peo- ple wouldn't even know what I was talking about," says the "young" woman who turns 100 this month. "And besides, the food isn't too good either." Born in Utica, N.Y., April 16, 1899, Mabel has seen much during her astonishing lifetime. After corn- ing to Detroit in 1923 to be with her sister Ethel, Mabel went on a blind date with Robert Alvin of Pontiac, a shoe buyer at Chase's Department Store. "It wasn't love at first sight," Mabel giggles. But as a woman who always knew what she wanted, she told Robert on New Year's Eve 1928, " If there's enough for one, there's enough for two." Just a month before the stock market crash they were married at Temple Jerico on Joy Road in September 1929. Robert opened a men's store in S mother I always remember," says Jerry, "still reminding me each week to bring her the TV guide and the crossword puzzle. She amazes me when she lets me know when I've forgotten to return her pie plate." Grandchildren Bill, Judy, Matt, Lori and Rob listen in amazement when Mabel tells stories. "Those were the days of sitting on the caned seats of the streetcar in my green velvet coat in the 1920s, heading to Washington Boulevard for lunch and a stroll to Siegel's Department Store, Fyfe's, and downtown Hudson's." Great-grandchildren Michael, 8, and Jessica, 4, love the humorous stories, as well as eating her home- made pies. Mabel started to write poetry at and has been able to capture 80, age Daughter-in-law Mitzi and great-grandchildren Jessica and Michael visit with and share her memories dating back Mabel Alvin. to 1908. Mabel's published words of the 1950s for Jewish organizations at Pontiac, where Mabel helped as his wisdom include, "It's better to tell Congregation B'nai Moshe on No. 1 sales girl. A few years later, the truth than lose a good night's Dexter. At the time, she made her the Depression forced them to close sleep" and "A constant complainer is own costumes and played parts such the store. They moved back to " as Gracie Fields and Uncle Sam. always in misery Detroit, where Robert went to work Although she never learned to a She calls those years her "Show for Detroit Edison in the architec- drive a car, Mabel is truly a woman Biz days." tural division. Robert died in 1965, of the '90s. She doesn't know the She was an active member of and Mabel has lived alone for 34 secret to long life, but she's sure it B'nai Brith, Women's Bicur Cholim years. isn't oatmeal. and Hadassah. According to her friends, Doris As for the future? "I'm working Her only son, Jerry, now 67, is a and Harold Patrick, "Her nothing- on 101," Mabel says. retired accounting professor from is-too-difficult attitude towards life As a gift from her children, she Wayne State University. He and his keeps us in constant admiration and will go shopping with Mitzi to buy a wife Mitzi, of Franklin, share in awe of Mabel's abilities." special outfit for her birthday party Mabel's "simple, everday pleasures," Today, with her photographic in May. Seventy-five friends and including taking her grocery shop- memory and instant recall of lyrics family members will celebrate with ping. and dates, Mabel's eyes light up as "She is the vivacious Jewish ❑ her. she sings the songs she performed in 4/9 19T Detroit Jewish News