Metro SALE • • fb • • •• • • • SESAME STREET LIVE • 40 PI • • 411 r4 I Ar41 Ewa anovis WHEN lb • lip 41r1r4r0 A VEE CORPORATION PRODUCTION Al l Rig hts Rese rved. 38801 12/08 JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 15 Enduring Benefit Local law firms and JFS help Holocaust survivors receive new reparations. Special Family Night Performances 1928 2008 ST 11 1: (Alin:ling 84 Ye., T It t: • :Atagicarni.3terioria (1/30, 2/4 & 2/12) All Seats $10 (excl. Premium) Regular Prices: $12, $17, $22 & $32 (Premium) 3 Additional fees may apply. Groups 15+ Save! Call (313) 471-3099 Tickets: *- OlympiaEntertainment.com Box Office • ticketmaster 248-433-1515 Detroit Public TV Benefit Performance on Friday, February 6 at 7:00 p.m. k. For more information, call 248-305-3900 or log onto dptv.org . Join our NEW Favorite Friend community at sesamestreetlive.com! 7111virswaft,. Attorney Josh Moss of Barris, Sott, Denn and Driker helps a Holocaust survivor apply for reparations. A These beautiful Ntezzuzahs make wonderful home and heart-warming c. ift s. Shop 3henvooa... its lvortfi o studios A24 January 15 • 2009 Fine Furniture • Stunning Accessories Unique & Unusual Gifts always 30% off most mfrs 6644 Orchard Lake Rd just S of Maple West Bloomfield • 248 855.1600 Mon-Tue-Wed-Fri-Sat 10-6 Thur 10-9 Sun 12-5 COMPLIMENTARY GIFT WRAPPING iN fter more than 60 years, Holocaust survivors who worked in German-con- trolled ghettos may be eligible to receive new reparations from the German government. During World War II, Germany established hundreds of ghettos throughout Europe to confine and isolate Jews and later as a mechanism for deporting millions of Jews to con- centration and death camps as part of Hitler's Final Solution. In order to survive, many Jews worked in deplorable conditions in return for the basic necessities of life. Some cared for children and the infirm; others cleaned streets and buildings and still others performed arduous manual labor. Survivors who performed work in these ghettos are now eligible for reparations under a program estab- lished by the German government in late 2007 — the German Ghetto Work Payment Program. To quality for these reparations (totaling 2,000 Euros, or approximately $3,000), survivors only need to have "voluntarily" worked in one of the many German-controlled ghettos. Survivors do not have to have been paid for the work and repara- tions will be paid even if the survivor only worked in a ghetto for a few days. Joining Forces Because the applications are complex and can be hard to understand, two local law firms — Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP and Barris, Sott, Denn and Driker PLLC — have joined with Jewish Family Service of Metropolitan Detroit to help survivors complete the reparations applications. According to Douglas Salzenstein, a partner at Honigman, "JFS was a natural partner, given their long his- tory of helping Holocaust survivors in the community. Together, we have established a plan to locate survivors in the community and then set up clinics, staffed by local attorneys free of charge, to assist survivors with their applications." Recruiting volunteers has not been difficult. "We have so many people who want to participate," said Todd Mendel, a partner with Barris, Sott. Attorneys from several other law firms, including Steinhardt, Pesick