Introducing the NEW homes at Fox Run.
Media To Study
Detroit Recovery
Twin Pines
T
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Named for the old Detroit creamery,
Twin Pines allows you to travel back to
simpler times. Here, you’ll experience
the warmth and security that comes from
living in Novi’s most acclaimed retirement community.
Twin Pines will feature 116 maintenance-free apartment homes,
all graciously appointed with gorgeous fi nishes like granite
countertops and stainless steel appliances.
Here is one of the exciting home designs available in Twin Pines.
The McKinley
Extra large two bedroom, - &!"#!%!&"$(!!!!$
two bath
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A
Fox Run
Favorite!
Master Bedroom
11’5” x 13’4”
Bedroom
11’8” x 15’4”
Living/Dining Area
12’5” x 20’5”
Walk-In
Closet
Walk-In
Closet
Closet
Linen
HVAC
DW
Bath
Bath
Kitchen
13’0” x 5’11”
Laundry
W
D
Pantry
After each dish is prepared, the
volunteer places a star (no writing on
Shabbat) on a prepared checklist on
the refrigerator. After the meal, the
same crew will clear the buffet line,
wash dishes and pack up leftovers for
the Sunday morning minyan.
Newhouse said the friendship and
camaraderie that blossom over all
this chopping and mixing and then
coming together after services to eat
a meal are what make her synagogue
so special to her.
“As a congregation, this is who we
are,” she said. “It is a wonderful thing
to sit down, to talk and socialize and
have a meal.”
Newhouse said sometimes the
volunteer crew is a bit thin. For
example, last summer, several
women went for a getaway weekend
Up North. But, in the true egalitarian
fashion of the congregation, the hus-
bands offered to help in the kitchen.
While some congregations come
together to prepare entire meals,
others like Congregation T’chiyah of
Oak Park go the pot-luck route. At
the 35-year-old Reconstructionist
synagogue, services alternate at
T’chiyah between Friday nights
and Saturday mornings. It is the
responsibility of members to provide
food — sometimes just a small nosh,
other times a full vegetarian meal —
on a rotating basis
Peter Cooper, 63, of Oak Park, a
member of the congregation for 15
years, said his matzah ball soup has
been a mainstay at Passover gather-
ings. Other congregants have cooked
up a vegetarian collard greens dish
that has been popular.
“No matter your level of obser-
vance, for Jews, food is the thing that
unites us.”
Th ere’s a new way to retire in Novi! Fox Run’s
newest residence building opens in the fall of 2016.
Linen
Brian and Roxane Newhouse
are mainstays in the B’nai Israel
kitchen.
he Corporation for Public
Broadcasting has awarded
more than $659,000 to pub-
lic media organizations in Michigan
to fund the Detroit Journalism
Cooperative, an initiative focused on
community life and the city’s future after
bankruptcy.
The two-year grant will support col-
laborative, people-focused storytelling
by Detroit Public Television, WDET
Radio, Michigan Radio, New Michigan
Media network of ethnic publications
and Bridge magazine, a nonprofit online
publication. The Detroit Jewish News is
included in the grant via New Michigan
Media.
“CPB is pleased to support this jour-
nalism partnership, which unites Detroit
and regional public media stations,
along with online and ethnic media
organizations to provide quality report-
ing during these historic times for Motor
City,” said Bruce Theriault, Corporation
for Public Broadcasting senior vice
president of journalism and radio.
“By working together, these stations
and publications can share across their
media platforms voices that might
not otherwise be heard. The Detroit
Journalism Cooperative ensures that
important stories from Detroit are told
locally, regionally — and nationally.”
“The Jewish News is pleased to be
a partner in the Detroit Journalism
Cooperative and, with our ethnic media
colleagues at the Latino Press, Arab
American News, the Michigan Chronicle
and the Michigan Korean Weekly, to
assure that the individual and collective
voices of our communities are heard
in the telling of Detroit’s unique story,”
said JN Publisher and Executive Editor
Arthur Horwitz.
Rich Homberg, president and CEO
of Detroit Public Television, the lead
station on the grant, said, “We want
to tell stories of the people of Detroit,
past, present and future. This grant will
allow us the opportunity to continue
and expand our coverage of the city in
partnership with the Detroit Journalism
Cooperative, so we can showcase
Detroit’s emergence to the rest of the
nation.”
The Corporation for Public
Broadcasting — a private, nonprofit
corporation created by Congress — is
the largest single source of funding
for research, technology and program
development for public radio, television
and related online services.
Don’t wait to
learn more!
*
Ref.
Call 1-800-917-8169 for your FREE
Fox Run brochure or to schedule a campus visit.
Novi
EricksonLiving.com
11301155
2061630
February 4 • 2016
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