News Jewish Institutions Hit By L.A. Quake Everything must go! We are making room for our `94 Patio Furniture. • Save 40% on all in-stock Ficks Reed • Save up to 50% an all South Seas Rattan Save over 50% on select 0 Asian Rattan • All Venture and Henry Link at least 30% off NOVI - Between Beck & Wixom Rd.- 48700 Grand River - 348-0090 LIVONIA - Just West of Middlebelt 29500 W. 6 Mile Rd. - 522-9200 BIRMINGHAM - Across from 555 Building 690 S. Woodward - 644-1919 PLEASE CALL FOR STORE HOURS Completely Casual for Over 48 Years! patagonia Clothing For An Active Life Style. CAPILENE® UNDERWEAR THE DE TROI T J EW IS H NEWS Sweat happens. Skiers, sailors, paddlers, fishermen and climbers are all the same when you get down to it. Capilene® Underwear, available in four weights, is uniquely effective at wicking moisture from the shin and dispersing it. You sweat, it works. 30 the yachtsman Michigan's largest selection of Patagonia apparel. 4316 N. Woodward Ave * South of 14 Mile Road (313) 549-5070 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 Los Angeles (JTA) — The University of Judaism, several prominent syn- agogues and Jewish com- munal facilities suffered se- vere damage as the Jewish community, along with the rest of Los Angeles, tried to reorder its life after the dev- astating earthquake. The epicenter of the quake was in the San Fernando Valley, abutting Los Angeles in the northwest. Although the quake affected homes, buildings and freeways throughout the metropolitan area, the se- verest damage was in the Valley, home to 240,000 Jews. While engineers were still assessing the structural damage of the region's buildings, severe damage was reported by the Univer- sity of Judaism and the adja- cent Stephen S. Wise Tem- ple, which closed for the week. Also hit were the Brandeis-Bardin Institute in the Simi Valley, which ap- parently lost its main and adjoining buildings, and Valley Beth Shalom, whose rabbi, Harold Schulweis, had planned to give a ser- mon on "An Act of God?" The 6-year old Bernard Milken Community Cam- pus, housing the main Jew- ish agencies for the western San Fernando Valley, which was already being closed down temporarily to correct major construction deficien- cies, suffered major water damage. Water from burst pipes also damaged the Freda Mohr Center of the Jewish Family Service, while the agency's western office was badly damaged. Possible structural damage to the Jewish Com- munity Building in West- Central Los Angeles was still being assessed. As in homes and offices throughout the area, floors were littered with papers, crockery, photographs and computers. The Jewish Federation Council and its agencies reactivated the emergency program put in place during the devastating Los Angeles firestorms of early November, including an emergency hot line and pro- visions for providing food and shelter for the homeless. , Marlene Adler Marks of the Jewish Journal, who had barely escaped the fire and was shaken by the quake, recalled the biblical plagues and asked rhetorically, "What's next? Locusts?" Contributions can be sent to the CJF Earthquake Emergency Fund, 730 Broadway, New York, NY 10003. B'nai B'rith International also announced that con- tributions could be sent to the B'nai B'rith Disaster Relief Fund at 1640 Rhode Island Ave., N.W., Washing- ton, D.C. 20036. The Union of American Hebrew Congregations has also established a disaster relief fund. ❑ Georgia Raises Exit Fees New York (JTA) — The government of the former Soviet republic of Georgia has backtracked on an effort to tax Jews leaving the country. Early this month, the Georgian government an- nounced that passports, previously issued for a nom- inal charge, would cost $300, which is equivalent to several years' salary in Georgian currency. The Jewish Agency for Israel, which maintains an office in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, attributed the measure to a desire for for- eign currency, on the assumption that the world Jewish community would pay for the passports. Estimates of the numbers of Jews in Georgia range between 15,000 and 30,000. President Eduard Shevardnadze said that he had not known of the mea- sure in advance and told the Jewish Agency that he would cancel it. Jewish groups have long seen exit fees as an obstacle to the right of free emigra- tion. "It must be made clear at the first sign of any deteri- oration of this right that world Jewry will not be a source of income," Baruch Gur, director of the Jewish Agency's unit for the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, said in a state- ment. ❑