(DETROIT What to expect from Sherwood Studios... Fine designer furniture - the latest looks, lines and colors Professional interior design service Elegant accessories for every taste Unique and unusual gifts for all occasions Courteous service always Complimentary gift wrapping Visit Sherwood...it's worth it! ALWAYS 20",, OFF MFR SU ► G RETAIL SOUTHFIELD TEL-TWELVE MALL • 12 MILE & TELEGRAPH DAILY 10-9 • MA: 12-i • 354-9060 " audios WEST BLOOMFIELD 6644 ORCHARD LAKE AT MAPLE ROAD 10-9 • Tu-w-sAT 10-6 • St'N 12-5 • 855-1600 BEAD2 VORKS, inc. ANNUAL SUMMER SALE AUGUST 18.25 20%-50% OFF All Merchandise Semiprecious stones, crystal, rhinestones, African beads 32751 Franklin Rd, Just south of 14 Mile 14 FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1990 855-5230 Tues.-Sat. 10:00.5:00 p.m. Marrow Donors Continued from Page 1 Senator Carl Levin's office located Mr. Cohen's biological mother after fin- ding her social security number. The mother was told of her son's medical condition in a letter, but she has not responded. In the meantime, doctors at Harper Hospital are sear- ching the National Bone Marrow Registry, which holds the records of more than 100,000 potential bone marrow donors. The chances of finding an unrelated do- nor are one in 20,000. Seventy people in the na- tional registry match four out of six of Mr. Cohen's tissue type factors. A perfect donor would match all six factors. The long process of testing those 70 potential donors to see if they match the fifth and sixth tissue type factor has begun, Ehrlich said. A donor could be found any day, Ms. Ehrlich said, or it could take months and lots of money. Each test costs $300 and the Ehrlichs have paid Harper Hospital $5,000 to test the first 16 donors. Tests of all 70 will total $21,000. There is no guar- antee that a match will be found in this group. While insurance costs pay Mr. Cohen's medical bills, it will not • pay for the donor search. To help defray the cost, Ms. Ehrlich's friends have held several fund- raisers including candy sales, rummage sales, and a reception at the Southfield Sheraton Hotel in early June. The latest fund-raiser is a car wash which will be held at 11 a.m. Aug. 19 at Southfield-Lathrup High School. Love Inc., a group of young people who are devel- opmentally disabled, will wash cars for $3 and vans for $5. The family has also receiv- ed help from Allison Atlas, the 21-year-old Jewish Maryland woman with leukemia whose search for a donor attracted world-wide attention, Ms. Ehrlich said. The Atlas family had agreed to pay for a bone marrow drive to find a compatible donor for Mr. Cohen, but canceled a week before the event when the money ran out. A discretionary fund in Mr. Cohen's name has been established by Rabbi Martin Berman of Congregation Beth Achim. So far, $18,000 has been raised for Mr. Cohen. Now that he is in remis- sion, Mr. Cohen is feeling better, Ms. Ehrlich said. "He goes out with friends a few nights a week, and is starting to play his guitar," Ms. Ehrlich said. "He's become an expert on Nintendo and has started to write poetry." While he has his ups and downs, "the busier he is with friends calling and going out, the happier he is." ❑ Allison Atlas Receives Bone Marrow Transplant TZVI DOLE Special to The Jewish News A llison Atlas, a 21-year old Jewish leukemia patient who has made a desperate worldwide sear- ch for a compatible bone marrow donor, received a transplant from her mother on August 9. The intravenous transplant at the Fred Hut- chinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Wash., came eight days after Miss Atlas began chemotherapy treatment to destroy the cancerous tissue. Miss Atlas' immediate family, from Bethesda, Md., is with her in Seattle. More than 50,000 people in the United States, Canada, Israel, and South Africa have had their blood tested. Tzvi Dole is a staff reporter at our sister newspaper, the Baltimore Jewish Times. Allison Atlas is recovering from a bone marrow transplant. Because Miss Atlas' condi- tion was worsening, the doc- tors urged the family to use bone marrow from Arlene Atlas, Allison's mother. Although the tissue of the mother and daughter is not identical — only four of the six antigens match — doc- tors thought a transplant might work. ❑