Friday, Saturday & Sunday Only 50% 50% OFF ALWAYS Take An Additional OFF ALWAYS 5% OFF With This Ad SUCH A DEALI OUTLET • BIRMINGHAM SOUTHFIELD CLAWSON LIVONIA The Corners 13 Mile & Southfield Rd. 645-0065 Lincoln Square Plaza 26135 Greenfield & 10% Mi. 557-1022 Bywood Plaza 560 14 Mile, E. of Crooks 280-4900 Livonia Plaza Opening Soon LINCOLN PARK ST. CLAIR SHORES ANN ARBOR/ Lincoln Pork Shopping Center Opening Soon The Shores Opening Soon SHELBY TOWNSHIP WESTGATE Opening Soon Lakeside Hall Road Crossings Opening Soon Joel H. Goodman Discount Foreign Car Broker Save now! Buy or lease the following new imported cars: Mercedes Benz • BMW • Infinity • Lexus Jaguar • Porsche • Ferrari • Others Call 313-399-9075 Global Gallery Inc. Pamper Your MOM With a gift certificate from SALON 352-4884 FRANKLIN RACQUET CLUB Open Monday-Saturday 28 FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1991 AL HARRIS WANTS YOUR BUSINESS! Telegraph & 12 Mile 353-1300 Jewish Groups Raising Funds For Kurds New York (JTA) — In the wake of the mass flight of at least one million Kurds from war-torn northern Iraq, American Jewish organiza- tions are finding that their relief efforts to aid the refu- gees are being met by ge- nerous support from the Jewish community and others. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Com- mittee, which aids Jewish communities throughout the world, has collected over $145,000 and 20,000 blankets for the Kurdish refugees. "There's been a massive, rapid response from Jews and others," said Amir Shaviv, a Joint official, who added that people could not avert their eyes from such a tragic exodus. The Joint started soliciting donations last week through what officials call an "open mailbox" program, whereby administrative and overhead costs come out of the Joint's regular budget and not out of donations. Aryeh Cooperstock, direc- tor of the agency's interna- tional development pro- gram, will go to the border area soon to assess the situa- tion and determine what the refugees need, officials said. "We will try and find the niche where the impact of our assistance will be max- imized," said Michael Schneider, JDC executive vice president. The Joint, whose programs tend to focus on Jews in precarious situations — such as the Jewish communities of Ethiopia and Albania, whose transportation to Israel was facilitated by the Joint — has often turned its attention to others in distress. "We know the pain of be- ing abandoned by many elements in the world com- munity and we are deter- mined not to see such indif- ference inflicted on these hapless victims of (Iraqi President) Saddam Hus- sein's aggression," said An- drew Griffel, executive di- rector of the American Jew- ish World Service, which has so far raised about $50,000 for the Kurds. The AJWS, founded in 1985 as a way for Jews to aid non-Jews in lesser developed countries, is already sending medical packages to refu- gees on the Iran-Iraq border. Working with the Interna- tional Rescue Committee, another private relief group, AJWS will be sending a medical team to the Turkish- Iraqi border, where refugees are suffering from hunger and a variety of medical ailments. "We call on all elements of the Jewish community to join us with other voluntary relief groups to seek to save lives and to contain the pain and suffering that is now so evident before the world's consciousness," said Mr. Griffel. Meanwhile Mazon, a Jew- ish group that works to corn- bat hunger all over the world, has promised a $100,000 emergency grant for Kurdish refugee aid and has appealed to its 600 syn- agogue supporters to help finance this aid. The money will go toward the purchase of vitamins, food supplements and an- tibiotics, said Lee Javitch, "We know the pain of being abandoned by many elements in the world community and we are determined not to see such indifference inflicted on these hapless victims of Saddam Hussein's aggression." — Andrew Griffel chairman of Mazon. The distribution effort will be co- ordinated by Operation USA and the U.N. Disaster Relief Agency. The supplies will be distributed to Kurdish refu- gees in clinics and encamp- ments now under construc- tion near the Turkish border, Mazon officials said. Mazon, which takes its name from the Hebrew word for sustenance, was founded five years ago and its alloca- tions to local and interna- tional hunger-fighting agen- cies have grown from $20,000 in 1986 to over $1 million in 1990. "Many tragedies leave us feeling helpless to do anything but grieve," said Sholom Comay, president of the American Jewish Com- mittee, which has also laun- ched a relief fund. "But this time, we have the power to save lives."