From The Gut Forgotten Harvest continues to reap success providing food to Detroit's hungry. Patricia Harker feeds her son, Robert, at Baldwin Shelter In Pontiac. c.) Lil 0 w 88 RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER GLENN TRIEST PHOTOGRAPHER here's nothing funny about hunger in Detroit. But there's little better than a night of comedy to help eliminate it. Just ask king-of-wit Tim Allen, star of ABC's "Home Improvement," or Nancy Fishman, a member of Temple Israel and founder of Forgotten Harvest. Forgotten Harvest is a nonprofit hunger-relief organization that began three years ago as part of Mazon, the Los Angeles- based Jewish agency that raises money to battle star- vation worldwide. The local Mazon chapter, comprised of Jews from about 12 con- gregations, decided to form a committee to target hunger closer to home. The committee grew quickly. It broke off from Mazon and now includes gentiles on its largely Jewish volunteer board. With two paid staff, Forgotten Harvest collects perishable surplus food from grocers, restaurants and other sources approved by Oakland and Wayne County health departments. The food is delivered directly to soup kitchens, pantries and shelters in metropolitan Detroit. "All companies producing and supplying food have surpluses. If it were not for Forgotten Harvest, the sur- plus would be thrown away," Ms. Fishman said. "Forgotten Harvest picks up the surplus food before it hits the garbage." Forgotten Harvest trans- ports about 15 tons of food each month to metropolitan Detroit programs, which provide more than 25,000 meals a week. "The greatest gift about it is they bring the food to us," said Kim Sinclair, kitchen coordinator for the Pontiac Rescue Mission, which pro- vides shelter, counseling and meals for victims of abuse and drug addiction, as well as the homeless. "Forgotten Harvest has been a blessing." Two Saturdays ago at the Fisher Theater, Forgotten Harvest sponsored Comedy K