INSIDE A Look At Colonial American Jews . • 0 • 5 Arts & Entertainm Heroes Of Jewish Comedy .. . 58 Mel Gibson's 0, Controversial Film . . Passion For Pewabic Metro Detroit Jews maintain a love affair with a 100-year-old Detroit institution. CINDY FRENKEL Special to the Jewish News I rene Walt had no idea when she emigrated from South Africa in 1961 that she would help rescue a Detroit institution. Pewabic Pottery, the Midwest's only historic pottery, is celebrating its cen- tennial this year, after enduring tough times in the 1960s and '70s. Some of the pottery's most extraor- dinary tiles enliven several of the People Mover stations in Detroit. They were designed by nationally known artists who came to Pewabic to produce their designs under an ambi- tious program dreamed up by Walt and other supporters, reinvigorating the Detroit-based pottery in the late 1970s. Today, Pewabic installations grace the new McNamara Terminal at Detroit Metropolitan Airport, and the pottery's brightly colored orange and blue tiles greet fans at every entrance to Comerica Park. "Pewabic tiles are in every nook and cranny of so many historic buildings in the city," says Pewabic's executive director, Terese A. Ireland. Installations created from Pewabic tiles add grandeur and a distinctive glow to such signature buildings as the Main Branch of the Detroit Public Library, the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Guardian Building and Wayne State University's Old Main building. Their fairytale friezes enliven local schools, and traditional Pewabic tile can be found in buildings across the country. Many in Detroit's Jewish communi- ty remember living in flourishing city neighborhoods, in homes graced with a certain quality that included leaded glass, gorgeous woodwork and Pewabic tiles. Neighborhoods including Boston Boulevard, Green Acres, the PASSION on page 52 Top: Irene Walt stands in her blue-and-white Pewabic-tiled kitchen in Huntington Woods. Above: Tile detail.