Members of the Institute for Retired Professionals gather in dis- cussion groups and for special events for the purpose of con- tinued learning. Formed in 1985, the IRP began with a core membership of 30 to more than 300 members involved in more than 25 groups. It is comprised of retired and semi-retired men and women. Some members offered reflections on their experi- ences at previous JCC locations: I have many fond memories from my involvement with the JCC over the years. As a young girl around 10 or 12 years old I attended day camp at the Woodward Avenue and Holbrook Street (Aaron DeRoy Memorial Building) JCC and remember learning how to cook and going on many field trips such as one to Eastwoods Amusement Park, my very first time visit- ing an amusement park. Then, as a teenager, I still went to the Woodward Avenue and Holbrook Street JCC with my girlfriends and looked for boys. As an added perk, we learned how to bowl. As a newlywed, I took dancing lessons from Harriet Berg at the Dexter Davison JCC. Many years later I took both my sons to plays and activities at the Curtis and Meyers Building where they also attended day camp many times. Now I proudly take my twin grandchildren to many functions at both the JPM Building and the Kahn Building. Sydelle Isaacs Program Assistant Institute for Retired Professionals I have fond memories of the Jewish Community Centers in Detroit, as I was a member at both the Woodward Avenue and Holbrook Street and Curtis and Meyers JCCs. I remember the movie group at the Woodward and Holbrook JCC where unusual movies were shown and then a psychologist would lead a discussion on the movie just shown. I also was a member of the theater group at the Curtis and Meyers Building and was assigned to work the stage lights for the production of "Enemy of the People." We (my wife Ethel and I) attended the stage prOductions on a regular basis at its wonderful theater. In closing, I took a course at the Woodward Avenue and Holbrook Street JCC on cantorial music given by three local cantors which I still remember with great delight. David Silberg One of the most memorable experiences was at the Curtis and Meyers Building when my daughters were very young and they were taking swimming lessons. One was asthmatic and had very little lung capacity. The final testing day came and in order to pass the course they had to swim the length of the pool. Needless to say, there was a lot of apprehension for all of us. With great determination, they both passed and we all sighed with relief Ethel Silberg All my life..1 have loved fairs, fairs of all kinds, but my favorite is the (Annual Jewish) Book Fair each year at the Jewish Community Center. I love browsing amid the bustling crowds until I make my choices as to which books to add to our family library. The first time I came to the Annual Jewish Book Fair I noticed a Yiddish section in the corner. Before it stood a woman, Sarah Friedman, who helped people make their selections. (I later learned that Sarah Friedman was called Mrs. Yiddish by every- one.) The thought came to me that my moth- er might like a Yiddish book. With Sarah Friedman's help I picked one out. My mother was delighted, so the next year I bought a Yiddish book for her too. Indeed, it became a family tradition for me to buy a Yiddish book for my mother year after year at the Annual Jewish Book Fair. Both my mother and Sarah Friedman are gone now The tradition of buying an annual Yiddish book for cony mother is now a part of our family history, and I know that Sarah Friedman with her Yiddish corner at the Annual Jewish Book Fair is a part of the history of the JCC. Shoshana Wolok We lived a few blocks from the Curtis and Meyers Building of the JCC and the whole family took advantage of that handsome facility. Our son, Barry was a member of a teen club called The Condors in 1966. The boys held a dance and donated the $60 prof- its to Mogen Hayeled to sponsor an Israeli orphan. I had the fun of playing the Molly Picon part in "Milk and Honey" on the beautiful Aaron DeRoy Theater stage... I remember being in a very witty JPI (Jewish Parents Institute) Purimshpiel. The Jews unabashedly wore white and the Persians black. As Vashti, I had a giant rhinestone pin at my navel over my black gown. I remember with pleasure singing in the JCC Women's Chorus under the brilliant Julius Chafes. There was no upper age limit, but you couldn't get in if you had gray hair The Center Symphony Orchestra, under Mr Chajes' direction, was a community phenomenon, filling the auditori- um for every concert. In the early days of the D. Dan and Betty Kahn Building, before the professional JET Theatre, there was a production of "Tevye's Daughters," the non-musical predecessor of "Fiddler on the Roof" Our daugh- ter, Amy played Hodel. Her most impressive attribute was being able to burst into real tears on cue! Harriet Goldman