I PEOPLE

OTHER PL

Gotfryd

Continued from preceding page

At 11 1/2 and Woodward in Royal Oak.

Save 30% on Lamps and Accessories.
ry
H ow •
What • •

A huge assortment of lamps
and accessories for your home
or holiday gift-giving. Choose from a variety of
contemporary pieces such as clocks, picture
frames and Halogen lighting.

By taking immediate delivery
on overstocked merchandise
from our suppliers, we were able to negotiate
substantial discounts. Now, we're passing the
savings on to you.

Shown are only a few of the many items available at these savings.

Halogen Torchiere
Reg.$85

Our Price $59

V

Desk Clock
Reg.$25

Our Price $17

Desk Clock
Reg.$31

Our Price $21

Halogen Desk Lamp A
Reg. $125

Our Price $85

Picture Frame
Reg.$51

Our Price $35

Halogen Torchiere A
Reg. $160

Picture Frame
Reg. $42

Halogen Floor Lamp A
Reg. $185

Our Price $110

Our Price $29

Our Price $129

See what's new at Englander's OTHER PLACE. This week, lamps and accessories. Next week, who knows?

► Never Wait For A Sale
Remarkable savings every day of the week.
► Never Worry About Quality
Only merchandise from the world's finest makers.

► Never Wait For Delivery
Everything is in-stock and...
► Never Ever Wait To Buy
It may be gone tomorrow.

A PL ACE LIKE NO OTHER

818 North Woodward in Royal Oak. Open Mon.-Fri. Noon to 9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Sun. Noon to 5 p.m.

[

VALEIL TAYLO7

FASHION RESALE

Exclusively Women's Clothing
and Accessories
Current Fashions Sizes 2 - 14

1844 S. Woodward
Birmingham

111111
1 block North of 14 Mile Rd.

540-9548

We Pay Cash for Fine
Clothing and
Accessories"

Mon-Fri 12 noon-6 pm
Sat 11 am-6 pm
Closed Sunday

Find Everything On Your List

Fun Fall

Elaine B's • Kidz Kloz
C.D. Warehouse • Colony Interiors
Best Bakery • Gildy's
Capelli Hair Colour Studio
Weisman Cleaners • Footloose
Raphael Salon • Cruises Only! LTD
The Time Shop • T.C.B.Y. Yogurt
Carmen's Men's Clothing
Elkin Travel, Inc. • Travelers World
Open Soon: Bubba's Place

HOLIDAY HOURS: Sundays - Noon - 5 p.m.
Weekdays - Dec. 13 - 21 - 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.

Contemporary
Women's Fashions

F ashions

G--41

Sun. 2-5 p.m. 855 4464
Hunters Square • Farmington Hills

-

Orchard Lake Road
1st Light North of Maple
West Bloomfield

AMER AN

CANCER
SOCIETY'

Help us keep winning.

52

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1990

He had so much informa-
tion."
Mr. Gotfryd said he scrib-
bled notes for his stories "at
every opportunity I had.
Sometimes, I would be at
lunch and I would suddenly
remember something, so I
would write it down. The
book was practically written
in my lap — not in one place,
but wherever I thought of
it."
One of Mr. Gotfryd's most
ardent supporters was the
late author Primo Levi.
"Bernardo! You must
write!" he repeatedly told
his friend.
Later, Mr. Gotfryd sent a
collection of his stories to
Mr. Levi, who in turn wrote
a glowing review: "Bernard
Gotfryd has in these tales
revealed that he is superior
to many men of letters. We
are grateful to him for this
book because it makes us
think."
Mr. Levi also told the au-

thor, "One day you'll write a
book, and I want you to use
this (review) as an endorse-
ment." Today, Mr. Levi's
words appear on the back of
Anton the Dove Fancier.
Mr. Gotfryd said he is con-
tinually surprised by the
success of his book. "I simply
wanted to tell my story," he
said.
As he travels around the
country to promote Anton
the Dove Fancier, he often
reads a story from the collec-
tion. At the JCC Book Fair he
read "The Last Morning," in
which he tells of the last
time he saw his mother, of
her crying under the lilac
tree and the hot potato pan-
cakes with onions on top.

It is difficult, he said, to do
such readings, filled as they
are with the pain of the past.
"But I guess I always hope
that in some far-fetched way,
somebody might learn some-
thing from it," he said.

❑

I

NEWS

British Rally For Israel
navel And Absorption

London (JTA) — British
Jewry is mobilizing to
counter the near-collapse of
Israel's once lucrative
tourist industry and to pro-
vide urgently needed funds
to absorb the massive influx
of Soviet immigrants in
Israel.
Communal bodies are or-
ganizing missions to Israel
and are urging their mem-
bers to visit the Jewish state
now. October was the most
disastrous month for Israeli
tourism since the 1973 Yom
Kippur War.
The Joint Israel Appeal,
Anglo-Jewry's largest fund-
raising organization for
Israel, announced mean-
while a record peacetime
target of $78.4 million.
That would come to over
$200 for every Jewish man,
woman and child in the
United Kingdom, where
recession has already af-
fected donations, according
to a senior community
leader.
The Joint Appeal normally
raises about $29.4 million a
year for Israel. Last year it
"almost reached" its $49
million goal.
According to Joint Appeal
Director Alan Fox, "By the
end of this year, Israel will
have taken in 200,000 Soviet
immigrants. Next year, the
figure will be 400,000 to
500,000.
"They have shown that we

are our brother's keeper,"
Mr. Fox said. "Fund raising
is not easy but we must show
our fellow Jews in Israel
that we will meet our
responsibility."
The Jewish National
Fund, which raised $5.4
million in the year ended
June 30, 1990, will try to
double that figure in the
present fiscal year.
Last month, only 49,000
tourists visited Israel corn-
pared with 95,000 in October
1989.
A major Israeli trade fair,
Food Week, was canceled for
lack of participants from
abroad.
The Joint Israel Appeal is
organizing a four-day soli-
darity mission to Israel at
the end of January, and is
hoping to attract 1,000 peo-
ple.
The Board of Deputies of
British Jews is also organi-
zing a mission intended "to
encourage Jews by example
to visit Israel," according to
Board President Lionel
Kopelowitz.
A third mission is being
arranged by the Zionist Fed-
eration for next month.
Meanwhile, pupils from a
comprehensive school in
London, who were to stay at
an educational center near
Ashdod in Israel until
January, will return home
this Sunday because of fear
of a Middle East war.

