NEWS
Warehouse •
• Ilulk Food
ORCHARD 12 PLAZA
27885 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 12 MILE
553-2165
Coupon
HONKY
DOREY
2.69.
Exp. 2/1/91
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JOLLY
RANCHERS
99c
Coupon
WHEAT
BRAN
GAROTO CHOCOLATES
29 4
Reg.
$3 . 90
7 lb. $4.99 ea,
Exp. 2/1/91
lb.
Exp. 2/1/91
lb.
2• • 99
Exp. 2/1/91
TURKISH DRIED RAISINS & PEANUTS
APRICOTS
$ 1.29 lb.
$
Save 70 4 lb.
1.49 lb.
Exp. 2/1/91
—
2 lb. limit
Exp. 2/1/91
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$
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YOGURT
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ALL
PRETZELS
99
Deluxe
MIXED NUTS
FROM BRAZIL
lb.
Exp. 2/1/91
lb.
Exp. 2/1/91
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Mon.-Sot.
9-9
Sun.
12-5
WE HONOR
ALL OTHER COMPETITOR
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CASHEW PIECES HIGH GLUTEN FLOUR BUTTER TOFFEE
salt & No Salt
PEANUTS SNACK MIX
For Baking Dread
1.49,b. 1.99,b.
19c lb.
1. 99 lb.
Eagle Brand
C
0
U
P
0
N
10
O
Exp. 2/1/91
Exp. 2/1/91
Exp. 2/1/91
C
OFF 9, v
ON ANY PURCHASE
Excluding Sale Items
Expires 2/1/91
P
o
N
NACHO CHIPS
Salt & No Salt
Exp. 2/1/91
WINTER SPECIALS
SUNDAY, JAN. 27th THROUGH THURSDAY, JAN. 31st
. .$2.59 pkg.
CO RNISH HENS ............$1.491b.
TURKEY BURGERS .
.1 .99 pkg.
Only at your participating member markets listed below
Cash & Carry — Limited Supply
NEW ORLEANS
KOSHER MEAT MARKET
15600 W. 10 MILE RD.
at Greenfield
New Orleans Mall
Southfield 569.1323
Michael Cohen
Food Stamps gladly accepted
COCONUT
Sweetened &
Unsweetened
12 oz. bog
Look for this emblem and
be a name not a number by
shopping at a member market
of the Detroit area Retail Kosher
Meat Dealers Association
TURKEY NUGGETS .
Coupon
Coupon
99
Exp. 2/1/91
99 4
lb.
Exp. 2/1/91
We're the "New Kids"
On the Block
"MITZVAH" Chapter
of B'nai B'rith Women
present
'11°
AN
EVENING1
OF
FASHION
• Nuance • Cocktails
• Jeans of Bloomfield
• Children's Crossing
(of Crosswinds Mall)
Thursday, January 31
— 7:30 p.m. —
BERNARD & SONS
KOSHER MEATS
Congregation Beth Shalom
14601 W Lincoln, Oak Park
29214 ORCHARD LAKE RD.
Farmington Hills
851.2788
Bernard Rayber
OUR MEMBER MARKETS FEATURE THE FINEST OF EMPIRE
AND ADAS KOSHER POULTRY, BROUGHT IN FRESH DAILY.
ALSO PLEASE NOTE THAT OUR MEMBER MARKETS DO NOT
A PRE-PACKAGE OUR MEATS AND POULTRY BECAUSE YOU.
THE CONSUMING PUBLIC, HAVE THE RIGHT TO SELECT
YOUR MEAT AND POULTRY FROM A DISPLAY COUNTER
4
.
Non-Members
Members
$5.00
$3.00
— Payable at Door —
Pleose RSVP by 1/21/91
Michelle Martin 355-5441
Jan Schaefer 258-3274
Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results
Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060
84
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1991
N. American Jews Rally
Behind Attacked Israel
New York (JTA) — Jews
across the spectrum of polit-
ical and religious affiliation
have gathered in rallies,
meetings, prayer vigils and
demonstrations across North
America to show solidarity
with Israel, President
Bush's Persian Gulf policy
and the troops serving in
that region.
At the same time, two na-
tional emergency campaigns
to raise cash for the embattl-
ed State of Israel were in-
itiated.
State of Israel Bonds an-
nounced an effort to secure
$100 million in capital
within two weeks.
Ambassador Meir
Rosenne, president and chief
executive officer of the
worldwide Israel Bonds
Organization, noted the
tremendous financial toll
that round-the-clock vig-
ilance against Iraqi
warheads and the absorption
of tens of thousands of Soviet
immigrants has taken on
Israel, at a time when the
country's No. 1 industry,
tourism, has all but collaps-
ed.
Israel Bonds national
headquarters in New York
will be open seven days a
week, 24 hours a day, for
bonds purchases, until fur-
ther notice.
And all 40 Israel Bonds of-
fices in the United States
and Canada were open Sun-
day to kick off the campaign.
Within the first four hours of
the drive, $12 million of
bonds had been sold.
In Canada, United Israel
Appeal President Julia
Koschitzky asked people to
"contribute as much cash as
they can" to an emergency
cash drive coordinated by
the United Jewish Appeal,
Combined Jewish Appeal
and the United Israel Ap-
peal of Canada.
Walter Hess, UIA Canada
executive vice president,
received a call from Mendel
Kaplan, chairman of the
Board of Governors of the
Jewish Agency for Israel in
Jerusalem.
Mr. Kaplan said that
Keren. Hayesod has called on
its campaigns around the
world to provide $100 mill-
ion in cash within the next
three months.
The UJA-Federation of
Jewish Philanthropies of
New York initiated a two-
day emergency telephone
appeal and raised some
$628,000 in the first two
hours of the effort.
In New York, about 40,000
people attended the largest
of the solidarity rallies in
the United States, according
to organizers, though police
estimated the crowd at
10,000.
The scene was repeated
across North America on a
smaller, but no less
remarkable, scale.
In the largest show of soli- <
darity with Israel in Mon-
treal since the Six-Day War,
4,200 people attended a rally
at Congregation Shaar
Hashomayim, sponsored by
the Quebec region of the
Canada-Israel Committee.
The Israeli consul general
in Montreal, Yitzchak
Levanon, pleaded for a cash
mobilization drive, and the
Montreal Combined Jewish
Appeal plans to begin a
major mail and phone cam-
paign this week.
In Toronto, more than
5,000 people lined up around
the block to get into Beth
Tzedec synagogue for a rally
sponsored by B'nai Brith
Canada, the Canadian Jew-
ish Congress, Canadian
Zionist Federation, Toronto
Jewish Congress, United
Jewish Appeal and United
Israel Appeal.
In Indianapolis, more than
800 people "from every ele-
ment of the Jewish commun-
ity" turned out for a rally at
Congregation Beth-El Zed-
eck sponsored by the Jewish
Community Relations Coun-
cil, according to Dr. Marcia
Goldstone, its executive di-
rector.
In Newton, Mass., some
2,000 people gathered in the
Jewish Community Center
for a rally organized by the
Jewish Community Rela-
tions Council and the Corn-
bined Jewish Philanthropies
of Greater Boston.
In Los Angeles, rallies
were held at various loca-
tions throughout the after-
noon and evening. Some
2,000 supporters of Israel,
including members of youth
groups, gathered outside the
Israeli Consulate and listen-
ed to remarks by Consul
General Ran Ronen.
Another rally was held in
the afternoon in front of the
Jewish Community
Building. The Jewish Fed-
eration Council sponsored
two "solidarity prayer
gatherings" at congrega-
tions in West Los Angeles
and the San Fernando
Valley. A third synagogue
planned an evening rally.