jews d in the continued from page 20 MID CENTURY MODERN-RETRO FURNITURE 31505 GRAND RIVER AVE. AT CORNER OF ORCHARD LAKE FARMINGTON 48336 In the Historical Winery Building BY APPOINTMENT ONLY We Carry )&3."/.*--&3t"%3*"/1&"34"--t,/0--t8*%%*$0.#t%6/#"3 +&3&t%"/*4)U.0%&3/t1"6-&7"/4t.*-0#"6()."/ mad4mod.space vette028@aol.com 248-514-5858 8F#VZ4FMM5SBEF‰$BMMGPS"QQPJOUNFOU IMMIGRATION LAW FIRM ANTONE, CASAGRANDE & ADWERS, P.C. to California to be closer to our young grandchildren, but we always come back to the fact that this is our home, our memories, our friends, our com- munity,” she said. She has fond memories of reading the Jewish News every week — from back to front! H. James “Jimmy” Zack of Franklin, a certified public accoun- tant, graduated from Mumford and went off to Ferris State College. A highlight of his life was serving as president of JARC. He says he has wonderful memories of Detroit from his youth and stays here because “this is my home.” Zack says the Jewish News has great value in keeping readers up to date with what’s happening in the com- munity. Barbara Hillman Eisenberg of Bingham Farms graduated from Oak Park High School before earning an art education degree from University of Michigan and a master’s in social work from Wayne State. She is a retired clinical social worker. Family was very important to her while growing up. “I can easily visual- ize my maternal grandfather reclining in his chair at the head of the Passover table,” she said. She appreciates the education she received in Michigan and in retirement is returning to art. Dealing with loss and change can be depressing, but her four grand- children “challenge our aging with their vitality.” Eisenberg says she has developed a very satisfying sense of patience over the years, which affects how she is seen and how she views life. She never considered leaving Detroit, and says her husband, Gary, feels the same way. “The Jewish com- munity of Metropolitan Detroit is an organizing force in our social and family life,” she said. Eisenberg says she can’t remember when the JN wasn’t part of the “begin- ning of the weekend” at home. They now have it delivered to their winter home in Florida. “I am always happy to see the JN on newsstands around town,” she said. “Its presence makes a loud statement of ‘Here I am!’” Stan Dorfman moved to Oak Park with his family in 1956 and graduated from Oak Park High School. He went on to Wayne State for undergraduate and medical school, and after two years in the U.S. Air Force, joined the staff at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Pontiac as an ob/gyn. He retired from private practice in 2009 but continues to serve as director of the hospital’s medical school program. There were so many kids on his Detroit block that there was always someone to play with, Dorfman recalled. “We were always outside, both day and evening. Our neighbor- hoods were safe; our house doors were open and our mothers did not ever worry where we were as long as we were home for dinner,” he said. In the late 1940s, his father brought home the first television on the block: an 8-inch, black-and-white Admiral. “I became the king of the block and everyone used to come over to watch The Lone Ranger,” he said. Television made quite a different impact in the late 1950s and 1960s, as he watched coverage of the civil rights struggles in the South. He says the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy, the war in Vietnam, the Detroit riots of 1968 and other events spelled the end of the simple and happy years of his childhood. Dorfman remembers his mother reading the Jewish News every week. Echoing Jackier, he says the paper is the “glue” that keeps the community together. “The Jewish News crosses all of the different levels of Judaism, from the ultra-Orthodox to those with no affili- ation who still consider themselves Jewish either by birth or tradition,” he said. • At the JN Legacy Gala May 3 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek marking the paper’s 75th anni- versary, Class of 1960 graduates will be rec- ognized. The event features a strolling dinner, program and a performance by the Grammy Award-winning Klezmatics. For tickets, go to djnfoundation.org or contact Tessa Goldberg at (248) 351-5108 or tgoldberg@djnfoundation. org. Representation in all areas of family and business immigration law. N. PETER ANTONE JEFFREY S. PITT www.antone.com or email at law@antone.com 8.JMF3E 4UFt'BSNJOHUPO)JMMT .* Ph: 248-406-4100 Fax: 248-406-4101 Stan Dorfman 22 April 12 • 2018 jn Barbara Hillman Eisenberg