DETROIT
FREE
INSPECTION
• EXHAUST • BRAKES
•SHOCKSISTRUTS
• SUSPENSION
•FREE TIRE ROTATION
MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS
Nickels, Pennies Add Up
To Help At Passover
50% OFF*
ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM
(Balance Extra)
Offer good with coupon only at participating
Midas dealers. Expires 6-30-92
Assistant Editor
SECOND SHOCK
OR STRUT
f s
Choose from a complete line of shocks
or struts. All designed for extra-quick re-
sponse, improved handling and comfort,
reduced in-car noise. Your car will ride
better. Labor not included.
*Off regular price.
111IDASe
Strut installation extra to which discount does not
apply. Alignment and additional parts and services
are often needed at substantial extra cost.
Offer good with coupon only at participating
Midas dealers. Expires 6-30-92.
UFA
Offer good with coupon only at participating
Midas dealers. Expires 6-30-92
NObodraeatskdas
O
-
SAVE NCIW ON EXPERT Ulitf = '
pra
LOBE,
OIL, FILTER
$12 95
MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS
DIESEL CARS EXCLUDED
Service includes:
• Up to 5 qts. 10W30 Mobil 011
• New oil filter • Lube chassis fittings
Be
N°U
OetitS
MiddS
SAYE ON
EXPERT
CAR CARE
SAVE ON
MIDAS EXPERT CAR CARE
,
I
SOUTHFIELD
26939 Greenfield
559-0929
CUSTOM MIRRORS BY
GlasCrafters, Inc.
• Etched glass
• Shower
• Custom Railings enclosures
• Glass furniture • Mirrored
Walls & Doors
1042 Benstein Road / Suite 107 / Walled Lake
FOTO-ONE
Camera
Supplies
N.Y. FIRM GOES BUST!
Foto-One Camera Supplies Liquidates Inventory.
Many Items Below Dealer's Cost
Cameras
Pentax IQ ZOOM 105 ....$209.90
Olympus Superzoom 3001104199.90
129.90
Konica Mr•70 3570
$119.90
Olympus Stylus
Olympus Twin weatherproof , 139.90
129.90
Konica A.4 date mini
179.90
Sigma 50.100 Zoom
159.90
Fuji 800 3580
2.99
Color print film 36exp100130
2.59
Color print film 24exp,400150
Camcorders
Pentax EM•00 61 8mm 599.90
799.90
Olympus 16.1 Hi 8
499.90
RCA 61 zoom
599.90
GE 6-1 zoom 2 lux
Panasonic 51 zoom 2 lux 669.90
Magnavox 81 zoom 2 lux 659.90
499.90
Sony 6.1 zoom 8mm
569.90
Yashica 9.1 zoom
$519.90
Canon 51 Zoom
sorry, no rain checks
855-5887
VrILENIE' TAYLM
FASHION RESALE
AP
Y
Exclusively Women's Clothing
and Accessories
Current Fashions Sizes 2-14
1844 W. Woodward
Birmingham
I block North of 14 Mile Rd.
540-9548
We Pay Cash for Fine
Clothing and
Accessories"
HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 12-6
FUR
STORAGE
(Even If Purchased Elsewhere)
Convert your Home movies to Video. As low as 5' per foot
Highest quality in the State
33100 Grand River
Farmington
27100 Evergreen
Southfield
3249 West 12 Mile
Berkley
474-4331
569-7890
546-4550
Northwestern Hwy. at Inkster • 352-7112
22
FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1992
T
he money came in in
pennies, nickels,
dimes and quarters. In
less than two weeks, it
totalled $156.
Akiva Hebrew Day School
students, grades one
through six, recently col-
lected the money to help
needy Jews in the area with
Passover food. The project
was part of an Akiva pro-
gram called Midot, which
stresses the development of
positive character traits.
Last month's focus was
tzedakah.
The project was developed
by third-grade teacher
Chana Greenfield and
second-grade teacher Flo
Ziffer.
Students were encouraged
during a two-week period to
bring tzedakah to purchase
kosher-for-Passover food.
About $100 of the money col-
lected went directly to Yad
Ezra, the local kosher food
bank. Representatives of the
fourth-, fifth- and sixth-
grades took the remaining
funds to the grocery store,
where they bought kosher
food themselves and gave it
to Yad Ezra.
"We wanted to give them
the hands-on experience and
realize what's really in-
volved in buying food for
Pesach," Mrs. Ziffer said.
Mrs. Ziffer said the seven
classes (two second-grade <
classes participated) took the
project seriously. In addition
to giving money, some
students priced food in ad-
vance and reported to fellow
students, while others
delivered the goods to Yad
Ezra. Each class had a spe-
cial tzedakah box to collect
the funds.
Started two years ago, the
Midot unit also has focused
on shmir at halashon, guar-
ding one's speech, and bikur
cholim, visiting the sick. ❑
New Endowment Fund
Aids Immigrants
In 1940, a young Jewish
girl from ,Germany found
haven in America. Now, 52
years later, she is repaying a
debt of gratitude with an en-
dowment fund to help new
Americans.
Resettlement Service will
use income from the
Margaret Herz Demant Im-
migrant/Refugee Horizons
Fund for shelter, food,
transportation and other
needs of immigrants.
Mrs. Demant recalls how
her uncles Fred and Henry
Butzel enabled her family to
come to America and helped
her parents establish a
business in Detroit. That
business grew into Walter
Herz Interiors.
A member of the Resettle-
ment Service board, Mrs. De-
mant said that should a time
ever come when there is no
need for immigrant relief, the
fund income will support the
needs of the elderly and poor,
as well as provide day care for
preschool-age children whose
parents have financial need.
Mrs. Demant's fund was
created under the Federated
Endowment Fund of the
Jewish Federation/United
Jewish Foundation and agen-
cies' Horizons program.
Horizons allows donors to
establish funds in their
names or the names of loved
Margaret Demant
ones to support specific areas
of service. Income generated
by the program is earmarked
for communal needs based on
the donor's interests.
Funds can be created with
a minimum of $5,000 for a
variety of purposes, including
innovative projects that can-
not be supported by agencies'
annual budgets. Donors also
may wish to enhance existing
services. New contributions to
existing programs, such as
the Margaret H. Demant Im-
migrant/Refugee Fund, are
welcome.
Michael Maddin is chair-
man of the Federated Endow-
ment Fund, and Robert
Slatkin chairs the Agency
Endowment Committee.