$2.00 OCT. 18-24 2012 / 2-8 CHESHVAN 5773 theJEWISHNEWS.com A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION » Polarized JTA journalists discuss the Jewish vote in the U.S. presidential election. See page 32. » OverTheFly Boys Teen entrepreneurs create a new trend with their fashionable Astro Belts. See page 39. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS metro » The Matchmaker Israeli film steers clear of the pitfalls of a popular film genre. See page 51. Andrew Jacob and Andre Najmolhoda » cover story American Dreams ai Jewish-Russian immigrants have an entrepreneurial spirit in common. Jackie Headapohl I Managing Editor V WSU's new veggie cafe has both the bulgur and the blessing. Esther Allweiss Ingber I Contributing Writer osher dining has come to Wayne State University's Midtown Detroit campus with the creation of Gold 'n' Greens Urban Fresh Cuisine. Certified as kosher dairy, the cheerful-looking dining hall has its own ground-floor entrance at the Yousif B. Ghafari Residence on Anthony Wayne Drive (Third Avenue) at Williams Mall, near West Warren. The vegetarian cuisine served here is not only healthy and delicious, it's affordable, too. For those without a campus meal plan, one price covers the cost of an all-you-can-eat meal at breakfast, lunch and dinner — for $5.50, $6.60 and $8, respectively. The Southfield-based Council of Orthodox Rabbis (Vaad Harabonim) provides strict kosher supervision at Gold 'n Greens. Rabbi Joseph Krupnik, the Vaad administrator, visits twice a week and always has a mashgiach or supervisor ladimir Gendelman, Erik Raykinstein, Steven Smolkin, Alex Kheynson, Yuliy Osipov and Mike Starobinsky all share some common bonds: They were born in the former Soviet Union, immigrated to the Detroit area — most to Northgate Apartments in Oak Park — and today are all proud business owners. From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, thousands of Russian Jews came to the United States, many to the Metro Detroit area, where the Federation offered help finding homes and jobs, and interest-free loans were available through Hebrew Free Loan. Gendelman left his home in Kharkov, Ukraine, when he was 15 in 1989. Like many Russian Jews, his first stop was Austria, followed by Italy, where the young Russian Jew first practiced his entrepreneurial skills. "You weren't allowed to take any money out of Russia," Gendelman said, "so people would buy things they could sell — everything from condoms and candy to watches and clocks." Many of the emigres were professionals, doctors and law- yers, and they were uncomfortable hawking wares on the street. That's where young Vlad came in. He would sell the items on consignment from those people on the streets of Italy at a profit. "I remember walking the streets with a strip of condoms flung over my shoulder like machine gun ammo, shouting `anti-bambino," recalls Gendelman, who also sold Russian CONTINUED ON PAGE 10 ,:1757.:t7•7* CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 1942 - 2012 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Every Week 1 8 08805 • Longtime friends Mike Starobinsky, Steven Smolkin, Erik Raykinstein, Yuliy Osipov and Vladimir Gendelman 93363 5