STOREWIDE SALE SAVE 30% Mark-Downs In very Department! E SAVE SAVE Robert GA/limn ...a woman's clothing boutique 248-855-9545 Back In Time Families of WSU's Jewish benefactors celebrate opening of exhibition. % All sales final. Not valid on prior purchases or special orders. Metro Telegraph at Maple In Bloomfield Plaza Bricks, a Way 0 /0 and More: unity of ersity In thc UK 2 - vtour,, Ihmaztg FFi TO(4i After 25+ years of Service within our Community Jewish historian Judy Levin Cantor, Reuther Library Director Mike Smith Harry Siegel, CPA and Joel Jacob, whose great-grandfather's house on the WSU campus now is home to the university president PRINCIPAL Is Pleased to Announce his Affiliation with M P R SP- CPAS o. G Group ADVISORS Contact Harry Today (248) 415-4420 hsiegel@mrpr.com Need more information on how to choose the firm that's right for you? Download "The Insiders' Guide to Choosing a CPA" at www.mrptcom/jewishnews 28411 Northwestern Highway, Suite 800 Southfield, MI 48034 www.mrpr.com SALON Men's and Women's haircut and style Hair Color Highlights Conditioning NOW OPEN Re•texturizing (consultation required) Manicures/Pedicures Facials & Chemical Peels Full Body Waxing Present this ad and receive 50% off* one of the services listed. *new clients only. not available on re-texturizing 32413 Northwestern Highway Farmington Hills, MI • 248.539.3500 Web address: www.salonpavlina.com 1454520 A20 November 27 • 2008 iven the high esteem in which Jewish culture holds higher education, it may be difficult to imagine the exhilaration of seeing the name of a parent, grand- parent or even great-grandparent prominently displayed on the campus of a major urban research university. Many who know firsthand attended the Oct. 30 opening of "Bricks, Mortar and More: The Jewish Community and the Growth of Wayne State University" at Wayne State's Walter P. Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs in Detroit. "Our family is very proud to be an important part of Wayne State University and have our great- grandfather's name continue to be a landmark on campus and serve as the president's home said Joel Jacob, president and CEO of the Bottle Crew. "For a community that started in this area of Detroit and continued to move north and west, it's not often that a family can go back and see the home their great-grandparents lived in." The Max Jacob House, a restored home originally built in 1915, is the oldest of the structures highlighted in the exhibit and home to current Wayne State University President Jay Noren. Other featured build- ings include the Helen L. DeRoy Auditorium, the Leonard M. Simons Building (home to Wayne State University Press) and the soon- to-be dedicated Marvin I. Danto Engineering Development Center, a state-of-the art, high-tech research center. Jacob believes it is rare for the home of a university president to be named after a Jewish community leader, given the symbolism of the office. Calling it a "privilege" to be able to come back to Wayne State with his children, he added, "This exhibition highlights the vitality of the Jewish community and the entrepreneurship that it dem- onstrated during both good and bad economic times. It is a legacy we hope will continue in the future' A crowd of more than 135 assem- bled at the Reuther Library to learn about the honored benefactors and understand the history and signifi- cance of the buildings for which they are named. Remarks were given by Noren; Mike Smith, Reuther Library director; Robert Kaplow, Jewish Archives director; and Eugene Driker, chair of WSU's board of governors. Smith noted that the Reuther Library has housed the Detroit Jewish com- munity's archives for 17 years. Aimee Argus, director of the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, said, "The fact that the Jewish Community Archives is here at the Reuther at Wayne State is really important. The community began in Detroit and has grown from here. These buildings are an important part of who we are and where we came from." ❑