I ON CAMPUS I I MSU Students Prepare For Record Fundraising RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer A 4 . ‘"Ws"•''`W\ • AVAILABLE IN 12 LEATHER C°L°RS1 Before they're totally gone! SPECIAL PURCHASE. We negotiated with our leading leather manufacturer a terrific price on this exquisitely tailored group! Features include plush styling with sophisticated double stitching detail, and a full 82" long sofa. Limited quantities available for immediate delivery in your choice of BLACK or LIGHT PEACH LEATHER (absolutely NO VINYL anywhere!) Shop early for best selection. $697 SOFA Reg s1695 $647 LOVESEATReg 1595 $547 CHAIR Reg 1295 $147 OTTOMAN Reg '495 HOURS: MON, THUR, FRI 10-9 & TUES, WED, SAT 10-6 * FREE DELIVERY! Within our local area and with minimum purchase * Visa/Mastercard/Discover Card/Financing available * 75 pieces available ORCHARD MALL Maple at Orchard Lk. Rd. 855-4065 READY FOR THE. `90S? PROFILE AIR-STEPPER only $399 • Custom Weight Lifting Equipment • Bars, Plate, Accessories • Bikes, Rowers, Treadmills • Saunas, Tanning Units & Supplements • Discount Prices On Gym & Streetwear WEIGHT 3480 Rochester Road Troy, MI 48083 689.5480 56 FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1990 tV WORLD WEIGHT WORLD EXERCISE EQUIPMENT LTD. Newberry Plaza 14 Mile & Haggerty Road 669-7060 group of Michigan State University students are hoping a phonathon and raffle party will help them raise a cam- pus-record $8,000 in behalf of the United Jewish Appeal Student Campaign. The MSU campaign's ex- ecutive committee, co- chaired by Jeff Block of West Bloomfield and Jodi Leavitt of East Brunswick, N.J., is planning the campus phonathon Feb. 5-6-7 follow- ed by a Feb. 15 post- campaign raffle party, at which the organizers hope to award a semester's tuition and books as grand prize. Last year's campaign phonathon raised $2,000 in pledges, which is believed to be the campus record, accor- ding to Eric Gilbert, MSU Hillel's program director. Hillel works with the Detroit Jewish Welfare Fed- eration and Chicago UJA of- fices in coordinating the MSU campaign. The 1988-89 phonathon was quite successful despite being a last-minute event, said Gilbert. In contrast, this year's MSU executive corn- mittee "is very well organiz- ed and the members work well together. The Chicago office is very impressed with them. "They've been laying the groundwork since September, working out the details of the phonathon and raffle. They've gotten some pretty rude turndowns from a number of corporations they've asked to be sponsors, but they're not discourag- ed," said Gilbert. "We've sent out 15 letters to corporations and con- ' tacted over 25" in attemp- ting to find prize donors for the raffle, said Block, a ju- nior majoring in finance whose first UJA student campaign was last year's. Although no firm has yet agreed to provide the grand prize, AT&T has promised long-distance gift cer- tificates and a hotel chain has agreed to a weekend ho- tel package. Round-trip airline tickets also are being sought for the raffle. Block is optimistic about the $8,000 goal because the Jewish student population at MSU is believed to be 1,500-2,000. Some 1,000 names are on the Hillel-UJA mailing list, and committee members have been vigor- ously cross-checking it against names of those at- tending Hillel-UJA func- tions, he said. He was pleased with tur- nouts at two events co- sponsored by Hillel and UJA: a pre-Thanksgiving Sunday pizza dinner which drew 65 students and a Chanukah party that drew 40. The UJA campus program is more educational than fundraising, Gilbert said. "Its purpose is to raise awareness of Jewish issues at the student level so that when the students become full-fledged members of the Jewish community, they have a working knowledge of these issues," he said. Block, who attended Hillel Day School and was active in Kadima USY and B'nai B'rith AZA as a teenager, received training at a UJA university-level conference along with fellow executive committee member Beth Davidow of Oak Park, who is in charge of MSU UJA bill- ings and collections. Rounding out the exec- utive committee are Craig Ostroff of Louisville, Ky., publicity; Cathy Mann of Southfield, education; and Lori Wolok, Novi, and Cheryl Gofstein, Oak Park, fundraising. Ostroff, a transfer student from Boston University who helped with that school's $10,000 stu- dent campaign, and Mann attended a UJA student mission to Israel. "1 LOCAL NEWS 11' Actress Presents Theater Night Actress-singer Joy Dreifuss will present impressions of "The Women in Shakespeare" 7:30 p.m. Jan. 28 at the Oak Park Library. The performance will in- clude monologues, songs and notes on Elizabethan staging. There is no charge. Temple Israel Sets Theater Evening Temple Israel Sisterhood will hold an evening at the Attic Theatre 7 p.m. Feb. 11 to see Shayna Maidel. There is a charge. Reserva- tions must be made by Feb. 5. For information, call the tem- ple, 661-5700. (