AUGUST 12 • 2021 | 53

SPOTLIGHT

Kadima Benefit Showcases Art
Kadima’s 2021 Frame of Mind Benefit and Arts 
Showcase will be held 2-6 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 
19, at the Michigan Opera Theatre.
The event will feature a year’s worth of visual 
art Kadima members have created through 
the Creative Expressions Program. There 
will be several live performances including a 
drum circle and original songs performed by 
Kadima members alongside Detroit Symphony 
Orchestra musicians.
For information, visit kadimacenter.org/
events/frame-of-mind. 

The Jewish Education Project of New York City 
launched the Generate Fellowship, a free, yearlong 
professional development program, open to early 
career educators from across the country who 
work with teens in youth groups, synagogues, 
camps, JCCs and any other educational setting.

Fellows will learn about challenges teens are fac-
ing, explore tensions that arise in their roles as teen 
educators, while connecting with peers from across 
the country. They will receive ongoing mentorship 
from an experienced educator and study with lead-
ing thinkers in the field of teen education. 
Additionally, fellows will be eligible to apply 
for grant funding toward a project that enhanc-
es teen engagement in their local communities. 
The Generate Fellowship is supported by the 
Jim Joseph Foundation. Applications are due by 
Aug. 30. 
For more information and an application, con-
tact the Jewish Education Project’s Jodie Goldberg, 
director of the generate fellowship, at jgoldberg@
JewishEdProject.org. 

Albert Kahn Postage 
Stamp Is Proposed
T

he Albert Kahn Legacy 
Foundation, a nonprofit based 
in Detroit, has submitted a 
proposal to the U.S. Postal Service 
to create a stamp in his honor to cel-
ebrate the 100th anniversary of the 
Ford Rouge Glass Plant, widely rec-
ognized as one of the most superbly 
designed industrial structures of the 
20th century.
Kahn was tapped by Henry Ford 
to design his massive Highland Park 
factory where the moving assembly 
line was introduced to manufacture 
the Model T. 
Then, Kahn was tapped to design 
Ford’s River Rouge factory complex, 
the largest manufacturing facility in 
the world. Kahn’s streamlined fac-

tories featuring open, column-less 
spaces, glass walls and operable 
skylights not only revolutionized 
industrial design but also served as 
seminal inspirations for the Bauhaus 
modernist movement.
Kahn is commonly referred to as 
the “Father of Modern Industrial 
Design.” His designs and techniques 
were used by architects and engi-
neers globally.
Kahn was born in Germany into 
a Jewish family in 1869. He immi-
grated to the U.S. in 1881 and died 
in 1942.
The foundation suggests that the 
stamp could be part of a series on 
great architects, successful immi-
grants or innovators. 

Ford Rouge Glass Plant

Our State. Our T
own.

Our Hospie.
Caring for Detroit's Jewish 
community since 1980

888-247-5701
www.hom.org

The sooner you call, 
the more we can help.

PROUD TO PARTNER WITH THE JEWISH HOSPICE & CHAPLAINCY NETWORK

Fellowship Offered for 
Educators of Jewish Teens

ANTONE, CASAGRANDE & ADWERS, P.C.

www.antone.com or email at law@antone.com

Representation in 

all areas of family 

and business 

immigration law.

JUSTIN D.
CASAGRANDE

N. PETER
ANTONE

31555 W. 14 Mile Rd., Ste 100 • Farmington Hills, MI 48334
Ph: 248-406-4100 Fax: 248-406-4101

IMMIGRATION LAW FIRM

