News QUAKE page 29 Monogram presents the first 36" trimless, built-in, cabinet-friendly refrigerator Our new refrigerator can accept a 3/4" decorative panel on the door with no trim or overlapping edges. Custom door handles can be mounted on the panel for a totally integrated appearance. The shallow case makes the entire unit flush and cabinet friendly. Call the GE Answer Center® service at 800.626.2000 for a brochure. JFC's hotline number and ser- vices. Similarly, soon after the quake, when it was reported that 300 people taking refuge in a Santa Monica park were going hungry, SOVA sent over kosher meals for everyone. Since the quake, most Ange- lenos have been inundated with anecdotes, rumors and impres- sions, but lack hard, practical information. To supply the lat- ter, JFC has held four disaster relief forums, at which experts answered questions ranging from getting emergency food to the tax impact of losing a home. Mr. Fishel and Ms. Terry said they have been heartened by a string of phone calls from federation officials in other cities Jewish communal institutions suffered damage as high as $20 million. Monogram. 2800 W. Eleven Mile, Berkley Telephone: (810) 548-5656 Bath'i X•e'l‘ t, SPECIALUES Division of cManagement 8pecialties Corp SHOWROOM sa „,. THE DETROIT J EWIS H NEWS We Never Leave A Stone Unturned... 30 Four-strand cultured pearl bracelet (4.5mm pearls) with multi-colored gemstone separators in 14K gold. Citrine, amethyst, blue topaz, peridot and rhodolite stones. \, Fine Jewelers 1,fr Est. 1919 30400 Telerapti Rd. Suite 134, Riughltin F.artus • 642-5575 — particularly Oakland, San Francisco,. Miami and Des Moines — offering expertise garnered the hard way through natural disasters that have struck those communities dur- ing the past two years. Over the weekend, a delega- tion from the Council of Jewish Federations toured disaster sites and offered not only moral support but concrete financial assistance. The council, as well as B'nai B'rith International, American Jewish World Ser- vice, and the Reform, Conserv- ative and Orthodox movements have established earthquake re- lief funds Though at the moment all other considerations have been pushed aside to focus on urgent relief efforts, the problem of fi- nances is sure to confront all lo- cal Jewish institutions in the near future. The federation — which went through massive layoffs in the last couple of years and was strapped for money in a recession-plagued economy even before the quake — faces the most daunting of fundrais- ing problems. "Judging from the experi- ences of other cities, after a ma- jor disaster, campaign contributions go down by 25 percent," acknowledged Ms. Bell. The reasons are obvious. Po- tential contributors have lost jobs or businesses and many need every available dollar for home repairs and other prop- erty losses. Moreover, just about every Jewish school and uni- versity, every synagogue and community center will appeal to its congregants and support- ers for reconstruction moneys. Indeed, a few institutions awash in red ink for years, may hope that the emotional appeal for quake relief may help reduce long-standing debts. Still, the JFC and other Jew- ish institutions must continue to function and meet their pay- rolls. What's the solution? The federation and its Unit- ed Jewish Fund, for one, are reevaluating their entire cam- paign strategy. For another, said Ms. Bell, "those of us who can give, well go back to them again and again and ask for more." More realistic, considering the huge sums involved, is Mr. Fishel's remark that "we will discuss with our national and international partners the im- plications of the disaster," a diplomatic way of saying that more of the $40 million-plus the United Jewish Fund here had expected to collect before the quake will go toward local needs, and less to national or- ganizations and Israel. Aware of the large population of Israelis in Los Angeles, a television crew from Israel spent three days here last week, interviewing Israelis as hard hit by the temblor as everyone else. Two days after the quake, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin offered to dispatch the Israel Defense Forces' Disaster Reac- tion Unit, which did yeoman work during the 1988 Armen- ian earthquake. Los Angeles turned down the offer. Accompanying the nerve-jig- gling impact of daily after- shocks, a semblance of normal life is resuming. On the very day of the quake, a young Or- thodox couple celebrated their long planned marriage, for which friends and relatives from Israel, South Africa and throughout the United States had arrived. Despite the damaged hotel hall, no catering facilities and a makeshift orchestra, the wed- ding proceeded. With only one loaf of bread at hand, 70 guests shared crumbs for the tradi- tional blessing. On the night before the tem- blor, the National Leadership Conference of the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science held its farewell dinner in a large tent erected on a hilltop at Univer- sal Studios. On the tram ride to the dinner, the guide took a de- tour — despite the vociferous protests of some patrons — to treat passengers to a simulat- ed, magnitude 8 San Francisco earthquake that is one of the Universal theme park's main attractions. Six hours later, the same out-of-town visitors were awakened by the real thing. Li