32 Friday, February 7, 1986
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
LOCAL NEWS
Super Sunday
Continued from Page 1
DOUBLE SALE
Friday, Saturday, Monday 10-5:30
All Winter
•
•
•
•
$20
Skirts
Slacks
Blouses
Blazers
values to
$380
Jackets $ 69
Sweaters $39
6692 Orchard Lk. Rd., West Bloomfield
In The WEST BLOOMFIELD PLAZA
851-4410
01 ) 1
DETROIT BAGEL FACTORY
SUPER FISH SALE
AVAILABLE AT OUR DELI LOCATIONS*
* 6 MILE & NEWBURG, Livonia
* 1 MILE & MIDDLEBELT, Livonia
* 14 MILE & ORCHARD LAKE RD., Farm. Hills
* SQ. LAKE RD. & WOODWARD, Blmf. Hills
* HELLO DELI, Southfield Plaza, Slid.
RESTAURANT cur
NOVA LOX
1 lb. Packages
$2.99 lb.
OUR OTHER LOCATIONS
10 MILE & COOLIDGE, Oak Park
12 MILE & NORTHWESTERN, Sfld.
16 MILE & GROESBECK, Mt. Clemens
2055 ROCHESTER RD., Rochester
SABLE
$5.99
lb.
Expires Feb. 17, 1986
Expires Feb. 17, 1986
REGULAR
NOVA LOX
$7.99
lb.
CHUBS
$4 ■ 99
lb.
Expires Feb. 17, 1986
Expires Feb. 17, 1986
BAGEL NIGHTS
FANCY
NOVA LOX
$9.99
lb.
44 )
-
Expires Feb. 17, 1986
NO COUPONS
TOES. & THURS. 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
$11 • 65
Doz.
Plain, Salt, Egg or Onion
Reg. $3.00
MAIN OFFICE: 641-9188
At the other end of the age
spectrum, Michael Podlesny, 88,
and Samuel Lipson, 82, shared a
table with young Bernard
Luchtan, 76. The three have
been faithful Campaign volun-
teers for years. Another regular
was Jenny Shiffman, who re-
called campaigning door to door
25 years ago, when the Jewish
neighborhood was smaller "and
life was simpler."
Still, the feeling of closeness
was there. When volunteer
Mirle Perlstein contacted Pepi
Mermelstein, a resident of
Jewish Federation Apartments,
Mermelstein had cash ready in
hand. But she was afraid to put
it in the mail, so the volunteer
drove over to pick it up and was
treated to a cup of tea.
One volunteer proved you
don't have to be Jewish to feel
good on Super Sunday.
Elizabeth Oakley, who admits to
being 77 and an Allied Jewish
Campaign contributor for 22
years,' got a ride to the United
Hebrew Schools so she could
make phone calls on behalf of
the Campaign. And she'll be
back on the phone in a few
weeks for the Women's Division.
"I know every penny goes to
people who need it," she said. "It
makes me feel good to know I'm
helping."
First-time volunteers and vet-
erans alike were required to
attend a half-hour briefing on
the needs of the Campaign and
the appropriate way to solicit a
pledge. Said briefer Dan Guyer,
"One important aspect of what
we do is establishing our own
credibility. Today we represent
the Allied Jewish Campaign of
the Jewish Welfare Federation.
We can take pride in what we're
doing for our community."
Spurred to action by the
"Super Sunday Super Stars"
show by a quartet of would-be
quarterbacks, the workers took
their task seriously. Briefer
Susan Citrin urged them to be
sensitive to the needs of those
on the other end of the line. It
happened more than once
throughout the day: volunteers
offering their prospects a
suggestion where they could go
for help with a problem.
Campaign Sets
Cash Record
Marvin Goldman
With a $2.2 million increase
in cash collections over 1984,
Detroit's Allied Jewish Cam-
paign helped the United Jewish
Appeal collect $400.8 million in
1985, the largest cash collection
of any peacetime year in UJA
history.
Detroit also had a record year
in '85 with cash collections to-
taling close to $23 million, more
cash per capita than any other
Jewish community.
Campaign Chairman Stanley
D. Frankel attributed the suc-
cess to the generosity of the De-
troit Jewish community and the
hard work of Cash Chairman
Marvin H. Goldman. According
to Frankel, "Thanks to Marvin,
we now have the finest cash
program in America."
Jordan Army Deserter
Named In Israel Ambush
Tel Aviv (JTA) — The infil-
trator who killed two Israeli
soldiers and wounded two
others in a Jordan Valley am-
bush in the West Bank was a
deserter from the Jordanian ar-
my, Israel Defense Force
sources said last week.
The infiltrator, himself
gunned down by Israeli rein-
forcements, was indentified by
documents on his body as
Nasser Ibrahim Abdel Aziz,
20. The IDF disclosed that two
other Jordan army deserters
were arrested in the West
Bank recently after they cross-
ed the Jordan River to seek
sanctuary in the Israeli-held
territory.
Both were arrested in
Nablus. One, a West Bank resi-
dent, allegedly was involved in
stabbing ,of
, fsraeli
.;*.
about six months ago. He fled
to Jordan, joined the army
there but subsequently
deserted and returned home. It
remains unclear whether the
deserter in the latest clash was
escaping from the Jordanian
army and engaged in a fire-
fight with an Israeli patrol
near Mehola to avoid detection
or whether his intention was to
attack IDF units.
Israeli military sources
strongly discount the possibil-
ity that the deserter was aid-
ed or abetted by Jordanian
authorities or that he in-
filtrated the West Bank with
their knowledge. The sources
stressed that for years Jordan
has tried to block terrorist in-
filtration from Jordanian soil
in order to.avoid friction with
Israel
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