Berries 'n Bon Bons ENJOY NEW YEAR'S EVE AND JANUARY 1ST FOOTBALL WITH OUR FABULOUS CONFECTION TRAYS. I NEWS I ,r β€žro si 106$ p Cee β€” ALL OCCASION GIFT BASKETS & TRAYS β€” 21711 W. 10 Mile LOCAL & NATIONWIDE DELIVERY Suite 122 HOLIDAY ORDERS Southfield, MI 48075 NOW BEING TAKEN 351-4362 Ethiopians Continued from preceding page 181 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham, MI 48011 642-1690 SUGAR FREE & KOSHER UPON REQUEST Woolf Roofing & Maintenance Inc. A Third Generation Roofing Family in Detroit Commercial & Industrial Flat Roofs Single-Ply and Built-up Systems Member National Roofing Contractors Association Call Scott or Roy Woolf for free inspections 18161 W. 13 Mile Rd. in Southfield 646-2452 WE S HI P GIFTS IF YOU WISH WE'LL PACKAGE THEM TOO! No long lines =courteous employees and extended hours. Next day service available. We handle anything from 1 to 1,000 pounds and we ship furniture too. . Easy shipping at the Pa ckaging The shipper that does the packing, too! Birmingham Southfield W. Bloomfield 2523 W. Maple (At Cranbrook) 26087 W. 12 Mile (12 High Plaza) 6453 Farmington Rd. (At Maple Rd.) 433-3070 352-8955 855-5822 Additional Holiday Location in the Orchard Mall (Orchard Lake at Maple) 20 FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1988 E-] Relig ious News Service 5-15 Year Warranties FULLY INSURED Famine victims wait outside a relief center during the 1984 drought. Another such disaster is said to be imminent. Ethiopian Jews have migrated to the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, where there is little housing and few ways of making a living, Re- cant said. Activists have been unable to sway the Ethiopian govern- ment to consider the renewed emigration of Ethiopian Jews, even as a way of relieving the government's burden of aid. In a recent news conference in Washington, for example, Kassa Kebede, Ethiopia's am- bassador to the United Na- tions in Geneva, repeated Ethiopian government claims that Operation Moses was a "forcible abduction," and that religion is not a cause for Ethiopians to be allowed to leave. According to the Near East Report, a Washington-based newsletter that reported Kebede's comments, a meeting on the subject at the United Nations in September between Shimon Peres, Israel's foreign minister, and his Ethiopian counterpart was "unsatisfactory." Recant of AAEJ feels that the donor countries that are making up the bulk of Ethiopia's shortfall can pressure Mengistu to allow the emigration of Jews to continue. "Donor nations should bring up the fact (to the Ethiopians) that 'if you allow some people to leave it would be easier for us to continue giving aid'," said Recant. International donors have made commitments to supply 582,000 tons of relief food, ac- cording to Kassis. Earlier this month, AID pledged 115,000 additional tons of food, bring- ing the agency's total commit- ment to 272,000 tons. Meantime, private volunteer organizations such as JDC and the Boston-based American Jewish World Ser- vice are continuing to provide relief and development assistance to Ethiopia on a non-sectarian basis. During the Interfaith Hunger Appeal mission, JDC's Cooperstock met with Berhanu Jambare, chief of Ethiopia's Relief and Rehabilitation Commission, who reiterated the govern- ment's support for JDC's various agricultural and public health projects in Gondar. The fortunes of all Ethio- pians, however, may lie in the generosity of the donor com- munity. Relief officials agree that improved monitoring so far has staved off disaster and that international com- mitments should be sufficient for the first few months of 1988. Beyond that, officials are concerned that individual donors respond more quickly than they did three years ago. As the Interfaith Hunger Ap- peal's Coll explained, "We hope people will respond before they see the swollen bellies on TV."