Why Flip A Coin When It Comes To Choosing Care For Your Parents? Make the choice that leaves nothing to chance. Bortz Health Care. Call 363-4121 for our limousine to pick you up for a personal tour of our facility. Ott .‘t H4. „..., 44 , 1 fACV)./ Bortz Health Care Family owned and operated for over 33 years. Medicare approved. 6470 Alden Drive, Orchard Lake (Less than 20 minutes from Maple & Orchard Lake Roads) Call: Harriet Sarnoff Schiff DR. ALAN j. SCHRAM AND DR. LEE M. HOFFMAN ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF . NORTHWEST PODIATRY P.C. Specializing in Medical and Surgical Treatment of the Foot and Ankle 5755 W. MAPLE ROAD, SUITE 111 WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322 (313) 626-7180 DR. SCHRAM ALLEN PARK OFFICE (313) 386-7920 DR. HOFFMAN BERKLEY OFFICE (313) 546-4401 FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION WITH THIS AD Expires December 1, 1992 Refugees In Somalia Get Israel Relief New York (JTA) — Gen. Mohamed Farah Aideed, chairman of the Somali Na- tional Alliance, has accepted an offer of aid for starving and homeless refugees from Israeli philanthropist Abie Nathan and said he welcomes humanitarian aid from Israel and its non- governmental organizations. Aideed also invited Mr. Nathan and representatives of his Voice of Peace organ- ization to visit Somalia to discuss the establishment of refugee camps there. Responding to a letter from Mr. Nathan, Osman Hassan Ali, adviser to the general, wrote that the "Somali National Alliance has requested (the) interna- tional community for help to contain and rehabilitate the displaced people in Somalia, and Israel and their non- governmental organizations are indeed equally wholeheartedly invited to participate in this vital pro- ject.” The acceptance seems to mark a reversal for Somalia, a Moslem nation which had recently rejected any aid from Israel that was iden- tified by an Israeli emblem, according to a spokesman at the Israeli Consulate in New York. Somalia, a member of the Arab League, has had a his- tory of hostility to the Jew- ish state. The Israeli spokesman could not say who in Somalia had rejected the aid. Mr. Aideed is one of several warring leaders in Somalia, where he controls a part of the southern region that includes the airport and port. International relief agencies have been dealing with Mr. Aideed. Somalia's longtime leader, Mohamed Siad Barre, fled the country in January 1991 and the country has since descended into a warring patchwork of feuding fief- doms. The invitation to Mr. Nathan was announced by the Union of American Heb- rew Congregations, which has been coordinating his efforts to get the organized Jewish community to con- tribute $1 million for a tent city for Somali refugees in neighboring Kenya. Fourteen Jewish groups calling themselves the Jew- ish Coalition for Somali Refugee Relief are sponsor- ing an advertisement in the New York Times seeking money for that project. The Somali invitation will not interfere with the plans for the Kenyan tent city, said Rabbi Eric Yoffie, vice president of the UAHC. Rabbi Yoffie welcomed the acceptance of Israeli and Jewish help by ruling par- ties in Somalia. "To the ex- tent that the Somalian au- thorities are going to be positive and authoritative, that is good. It will make Abie's job easier," said Rabbi Yoffie. He said Mr. Nathan had been distressed over published reports of hostility by the Somalis to Israel. "He has no desire to offend them," Rabbi Yoffie said. "He apprised us of the fact that there have been some changes there which appear to indicate a new attitude toward his endeavor." But the country's in- stability remains a major issue. The U.S. government warned Somalia's sparring warriors that Washington will not help that country rebuild unless it accepts a U.N. peacekeeping force. Deployment of some 3,500 U.N. troops has been delayed because of objections by the various Somali fac- tions, who fear losing control of their respective turfs. Writer's Kin At Benefit Moscow (JTA) — Bel Kaufman, granddaughter of writer Sholom Aleichem and an author in her own right, made her Moscow debut nar- rating a Jewish oratorio about the Holocaust. The event was a fund- raiser for a Jewish charity, moving Moscow even more firmly into the orbit of the world Jewish community. Ms. Kaufman, author of the 1960s novel Up the Down Staircase, told the story of a Czechoslovak concentration camp as rendered by British composer Ronald Senator in Holocaust Requiem: Kaddish for Theresienstadt. The presentation of the liturgical oratorio was ac- companied by drawings and poems by children of the Nazi concentration camp, which were collected into a book, I Never Saw Another Butterfly.