A Real Alternative to Caffeine, It's like no other tea you ever tasted. Now at: Nino Salvaggio Middlebelt & 14 Mile T H E TACK STOP Grand Opening Oct. 27&28! SADDLERY Our goal is to be the first place you turn for all your "horsey" needs. We can help you with brand names such as... • Van Teal • Absorbine • Mountain Horse • Vetrolin • Pessoa • Ariat • Vita-Flex Nutrition • Pytchley • Breyer • Vogel • Rambo • Crosby • Tailored Sportsman • Walsh • Dehner • Wilker's • Tory • Farnam MOP We're having a contest to name the display horse in our store! If your suggestion is chosen, you'll win a $100 gift certificate! Gift Certificate Y C Z,L A Atlas Plaza Norrh Marilynn Kushner • Susan Perks Highland Rd . Store Hours Closed Mon. Tue-Fri. 11:00 — 7:00 10:00 — 5:00 Sot. [ Sun. 12:00 — 5:00 8 7088 Highland Road • Waterford, MI 48327 (248) 886-0105 voice • (248) 886-0170 fax infoOtackstopsaddlery.com www.tackstopsaddlery.com A ART HOUSE STUDIOS Personalized Gift Gallery GRAND OPENING 01 (1 Off WI a d For Births to Retirements and everything in between 28849A Orchard Lake 10/26 2001 94 Early Efforts We'll help you get all your ducks in a row... Double your usable clos- et space. Always Quality. Hand. Painted Gifts Bet. 12 & 13 Mi. 1 1 1 ( 2 4 8 ) 3 2 4 - agreed on their mission -- to dedicate their efforts solely to funding iung can- cer research — and Zagon drafted the articles of incorporation and by-laws with pro-bono help from attorneys with whom she used to work. On March 13, they filed for incorporation in Illinois, and on Aug. 27, LUNGevity was grant- ed tax-exempt status. LUNGevity's funds will be disbursed through the American College of Chest Physicians, which will review proposals and announce an award at its annual meeting in November 2002. `We're not ready to make funding decisions on our own yet," said Zagon. "Eventually, we want to have a medical advisory board and accept research pro- posals." She also hopes the organization will expand beyond the Chicago area to become as well known, and have as big an impact, as Y-ME, the group coordi- nating the fight against breast cancer. Eddie Lumberg says he's nor surprised by his daughter's efforts, since she's always been interested in helping others. It's something she grew up with. Her parents have long been active in the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. Lumberg is a past president of Junior Division (now Young Adult Division) and the Fresh Air Society, and Sherri Lumberg is a former Women's Division vice president. As a teenager, Zagon was active in the youth group at Temple Israel and worked as a counselor at Tamarack Camps. The 1985 Southfield-Lathrup High School graduate earned a degree in economics at the University of Michigan and a law degree at Harvard before mov- ing to Chicago. During her college years, she worked as an intern with the Jewish Federation's Project JOIN. Designing and Installation services. In its first few months, LUNGevity has raised more than $60,000, including S30,000 in corporate sponsorships for the Oct. 28 dinner. Thirty volunteers are working on the event, said Zagon, including the mother of Gayle Levy, who died in August at age 41. Two other LUNGevity founders have also died. Zagon says the dinner crowd, which she hopes will be at least 300-strong, will include at least a dozen Detroiters. Her parents will be there, as will her brother, Dr. Michael Lumberg of West Bloomfield, two of Zagon's college roommates, and other friends and rela- tives. Many of those who can't attend have sent contributions. "We're very proud of Missy and hope she can continue fighting her battles for years and years to come," said Eddie Lumberg. For dinner information or to make a donation, contact the LUNGevity Foundation, (847) 607-0900 or wwvv.lungevity.org Ge- vity LUNT FOUNDATION FACTS About Lung Cancer • Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States. • Lung -cancer kills more Americans each year than breast, prostate and colorectal cancer combined. Lung can- cer kills more women than breast cancer, and more men than prostate cancer. • Nearly 14 percent of those newly diagnosed with lung cancer have never smoked. • In 2001, an estimated 170,000 people will be newly diagnosed with lung cancer ancr an estimated 157,000 will die of the disease: 90,000 men and 67,000 women. • Only 14 percent of those newly diagnosed with lung cancer will live for five years. The five-year survival rate could reach 80 percent in cases detected when the can- cer is localized in the lung, but only 15 percent of lung cancers are detected before they have spread. • In 2000, the National Cancer Institute spent approximately $950 on research per lung cancer death, compared to $34,000 per AIDS death, $8,860 per breast cancer death, $3,667 per prostate cancer death, and $3,192 per colorectal cancer death.