udg t Formula for Campaign Causes
(1111
Programs for Youth, Aged
Head Needs of Community
(Continued from Page 1)
Presiding at the budgeting
conference, as president of the
Jewish Welfare Federation,
Samuel H. Rubiner outlined the
objectives of the sessions. A
•resume of the previous years'
Allied Jewish Campaign accom-
plishments was given by William
Avrunin, assistant director of
Federation.
Speaking for the health and
recreational division, George
Stutz asked for a number of in- ,
creases to the Home for Aged,
Sinai Hospital and the Jewish
Centers "to meet the fast-grow-
ing needs in our community."
Mr. Stutz pointed to plans for
the building of an annex to
house 120 more people at the
Home for . Aged and to the tern- '
porary increases in costs. He '
also described the planned ex-
pansions, the nursing and home- I
maker services of the Jewish
Social Service Bureau, the in-
creased needs of the Resettle-
ment Service, the Center exten-
sion service and the larger num-
ber of camperships at the com-
munity's camps, and urged in-
creases 'in allocation if funds
are to be made available in the
current compaign.
Representing the education
.division, Morris Garvett re-
ported on the increases in the
number of students in the
United Hebrew Schools from
1900 in 1954 to 2300 at present
and to the expected additional
increase of 200 this year and
told of the increased needs for
local educational efforts. He
pointed out that all the local
schools are planning on bud-
gets totalling $805,000 for the
coming year and are asking
the Federation for $333,000,
the balance to come from tui- .
Lion fees and other incomes.
Milton Maddin, as head of the
community relations division of
the Federation, while urging'
larger appropriations to civic-
protective movements if the
money is available, said that his
committee does not recommend
larger allocations since there is
no basis for spending more
money, by community relations
agencies, to the detriment of
urgent other needs. He expressed
gratitude over the fact that dif-
ferences now are faced more
frankly in approaching budget-
ary requests in this division and
that budgeting Is approached on
a basis of mutual respect.
Max Zivian, speaking for the
capital needs committee, pointed
out that $6,000,000, which three
years ago was believed to be the
need for the construction of
urgently needed public buildings,
now is considered inadequate
and that $6,500,000 will be need-
ed for the expressed purposes.
He expressed satisfaction over
the •allocation of $1,665,000 by
the Metropolitan Detroit Build-
ing Fund for the addition to
the Hoine for Aged ($700,000),
the two branch buildings for the
Jewish Centers ($590,000) and
the out-patient building for
,000) .
Sinai' Hospital ($375,000)
Mr. Zivian said that the major
needs for construction purposes
involve Camp Tamarack, Sinai
Hospital, the Centers, the Home
for Aged and the United Hebrew
Schools.
- An urgent appeal for maxi-
mum income for the United
Jewish Appeal was made by
Mrs. Joseph H. Ehrlich. "Great
problems remain to be solved,"
she pointed out. "There is need
for the settlement of the
North African Jews in Israel,
the establishment of 52 new
housing units for the settlers
in Israel, extension of aid to
the 420 existing settlements,
care for 1600 immigrant chil-
dren, assistance to religious
institutions."
Mrs. Ehrlich declared that
food, clothing and shelter must
be provided for 120,000 under-
privileged in various countries
Mahler, Keil, Sklar Renamed
To Campaign Trade Chairmanships
Miltok Mahler
George Keil
George D. Keil and Milton K.
Mahler, who successfully head-
ed the trade and professional
divisions in last year's Allied
Jewish Campaign, have been
named chairmen of the divisions
in the 1955 campaign, an-
nounced John E. Lurie, Cham-
paign chairman.
Alex Sklar, a chairman of the
mercantile division in the 1954
campaign, has been named
associate chairman.
Keil, Mahler and Sklar will
co-ordinate the fund - raising
efforts of the seven individual
divisions within the trades and
professional categories which
include the mercantile, services,
mechanical trades, real estate
and building council, food serv-
ice council, professional and
arts and crafts divisions.
Keil is a member of the
boards of the Jewish Welfare
Federatio n, Detroit Servite
Group, a member of the execu-
tive committee of Federation
24 — DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, January 28, 195
Alex Sklar
and on the boards of the Jewish
Home for the Aged and United
Jewish Charities.
Sklar is a member of the
boards of the Detroit Service
Group and Jewish Home for the
Aged.
where Jews live in insecurity;i end Jewish homelessness and the outpouring of gifts "a re-
and to the 6,000 refugees whol uprootedness and it needs one markable tribute to Mr. War-
are expected to be settled in the ' more great effort to fulfill our burg's decade and a half of
humanitarian service and a
United States this year. - aims."
Paying tribute to Mr. War- towering endorsement of the
The formula adpoted by the
conference, Isidore Sobeloff, burg, Dr. Schwartz encouraged United Jewish Appeal's con-
executive director of the Fed- the effort made. by Detroiters tinuing effort to save lives
eration, pointed out, represents that night to secure large ad- and to strengthen democracy."
Mr. Rosenwald announced
the interest of Detroit Jewry— vance gifts to the UJA for 1955
to raise the largest amount of in the national leader's honor. It at the same time the opening
money to meet the tremen- is the only way in which the of a month-long advance gifts
dous needs of Jewry, locally, generous American communities drive which would culminate
can show their appreciation to at the formal launching of
nationally and overseas.
Judge Theodore Levin was this distinguished leader, he the UJA campaign Feb. 25, 26
and 27, at a national inaugu-
chairman of the steering com- stated.
ral conference in Miami Beach,
mittee whose proposed cam-
Fla.
paign formula was adopted by $10,150,000 Contributed
The 1,000 guests in attendance
the conference. (The complete To UJA in Warburg's Honor
at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel
steering committee is listed on
NEW YORK—A total of $10,- heard
also from Senator Herbert
Page 1 of this issue).
150,000 was contributed here
A luncheon was served to Saturday evening in honor of H. Lehman, toastmaster; Louis
those participating in the con- Edward M. M. Warburg,
presi- Broido, chairman of the advisory
.
ference by the teen-age girls' d ent o f
Ap- board of Gimbel Brothers and
groups of the Jewish Center.
peal, at the testimonial dinner Vice-chairman of the board of
Dr. Schwartz's Address
hailing his 16-year leadership of the UJA of Greater New York;
An inspiring address by Dr. the UJA. This action, by 1,000 Mrs. David M. Levy, an honorary
Joseph J. Schwartz, executive communal leaders from all parts chairman of the UJA's National
vice-president of the UJA, mark- of the country, was studded with Women's Division, and Jack D.
ed the meeting of the big gifts hundreds of heavily increased Weiler, a national campaign
division at the Sucher home. contributions and gave the UJA chairman of the UJA and chair-
Max Fisher, pre-campaign chair- one of the greatest advance man of the dinner • committee,
man, presided, after welcoming starts on an annual campaign who presided.
The testimonial to Mr. War-
remarks by Mr. Sucher, and since its establishment in 1939.
burg brought statements of praise
contributions were announced
Paul G. Hoffman, former ad- from the speakers, cabled tri-
under the chairmanship of John ministrator of Marshall Plan
Lurie, general chairman of the aid and now chairman of the butes from the leaders of the
Allied Jewish Campaign for 1955. board of the Studebaker-Packard Israel government, and two un-
Dr. Schwartz described 1954 as Corporation, told the 1,000 din- usual gifts from his UJA asso-
a year of progress in Israel. He ner guests that in its work ciates. The presentation of the
told how exports from Israel had abroad, the United Jewish Ap- first of these gifts, an English
increased in 1954 to $90,000,000, peal "carries a message to those antique silver tray, was made by
from $40,000,000 in 1951. He re- hundreds of millions of people in Senator Lehman.
The second presentation • by
ported that the comparative de- Asia and Africa who are today
cline in imports in these years making up their minds between the Senator was made on behalf
of Joseph J. Schwartz, executive
was from $390,000,000 to $285,- democracy and communism."
vice-chairman of the UJA and
000,000, resulting from Israel's
"What you are doing in your members of the Appeal's staff,
ability to produce its own food great work," Mr. Hoffman told
who gave Mr. Warburg a 4,000-
and clothing.
the UJA leaders and contribu-
Israel, he also reported, has tors, "is to perpetuate and to year-old bronze drinking cup
increased acreage under irriga- project the democratic ideal of , which had been- recovered from
tion from 50,000 to 250,000 acres, free men and women banded to- ancient ruins in the Middle East.
The $10,150,000 in advance
and is now producing, for export gether in support of those mil-
as well as for local consumption, lions elsewhere in the world who gifts included these sums from
cotton, sugar and peanuts, in would remain free," adding that donors in various cities, through-
addition to' the growing citrus "I am convinced you and others out the country; New York, more
than $3,000,000; Detroit, $802,000;
products.
like you are holding out new
Dr. Schwartz warned, how- hope to the millions in the shad- Miami, $705,000; Cleveland,
$600,000; Philadelphia, $500,000;
ever, that Israel continues to ows who would be free."
San Francisco, $310,000; Balti-
face problems of security and
William Rosenwald, general more, $350,000; Washington, D.C.,
safety and "must look to its own
chairman
of the UJA, termed $350,000; Chicago, $300,000.
defenses and must stand its
ground or be swept into the
Mediterranean." While the UJA
monies do not go for defense
purposes, and American Jewry's
contributions are entirely ear-
WASHINGTON, (JTA) —There ship were contained in editorials
marked for philanthropies, he is a difference between the in a number of influential Alt-
stated, Israel depends on this in- views of the United States and ish newspapers.
come in caring for new settlers. those of Israel on how the pend-
In a front-page editorial, the
To fulfill both obligations, phil- ing Iraqi-Turkish pact will affect independent "Milliyet" insisted
anthropy and defense, he point- the Jewish State.
that Turkish-Arab rapproche-
ed out, would be an impossibility.
The State Department des- ment will guarantee Israel
In view of these facts, Dr. cribes the pact as a good omen against any attack by the Arab
Schwartz said, "We can not for Israel. Israel diplomats con- states. Nihat Erim, a leader of
afford to be complacent." He sider such optimism illusory, and the. Republican Party, currently
warned that the Jews of continue to express opposition in the oppOsition, wrote in "Hai-
America must now come to to United States arms shipments kci" that the government's pol-
the aid of the Jews of Tunis, to Iraq.
icy is the same as the Republi-
Algeria and Morocco, most of
American officials maintain can Party's policy when it was
whom will have to be evacu-
in power, and that "Israel's fear
ated and settled in Israel. that as Iraq comes 'closer to a is without foundation."
Western
defensive
alliance,
it
There is recognition in Israel,
he stated, that the Jewish will lessen its hostility toward
State's - gates must be opened Israel. But diplomatic sources First German Vessel
for these communities, whose cite the case of Pakistan which Arrives in Israel
safety is constantly being entered into such accord with
the West but has emerged more , HAIFA, (JTA)—The S. S. Per-
threatened.
, gamon, first German vessel to
- "As long as there is time, we anti-Israel than ever.
It was Pakistan which took a arrive at an Israel port since
must rescue them," Dr. Schwartz
declared. "They are our concern leading role in preventing Israel the Jewish State was established,
and it is the duty of Jews of from receiving an invitation to anchored off Haifa. The vessel's
, the forthcoming conference of company agent 'told newsmen
America to save their lives."
that the Pergamon's voyage
"In a sense," Dr. Schwartz Asian nations in Indonesia.
Assurances that Turkish-Arab marks the beginning of a regu-
said, "ours is a great generation
of state-builders. Our work is alliances will not mean any dis- lar service from_ Germany to
an effort once and for all to ruption of Turkish-Israel friend- _ Israel.
U.S., Turkey Dispel Fears of Arab Pact
21. Lincoln's Jewish Friends
THE TERCENTENARY STORY
Text by DANIEL ELAZAR
Copyright, 1954, by American Jewish Press
Illustrations by MAURICE del BOURGO
/
..se""ibbs
ABRAI/A,41 L/A/coIN AA/12 THE
AMER/C,4A/ Jaw, „jas- 6P1/ Jaws,
!HERE 6000 FR/ENDS PR/OR
To THE OUTBREAK OF THE
C/1//L WAR —Stir THE WAR
BETWEEN THE STATh- 5P0.1/A 40
MOST OF JONA S • A -/N
601/7WERN PART/SANS,
AND MANY OF THE
MENFOLK/A/ 76/4-- CON
PEDER4rE ARMY/
•
WHEN ✓oNAS' SON WAS ckoraRzy,
gY UN/ON FORCES 4N0 /MPR/SoNE0,
H/S FATHER, AS NE LAY PY/Nai
MADE A zAirr R419assr 75 SEE OS SON.
THE DYING MAN'S WSW WAS CONVEYED
To LiNcOLN, WHO QUICKLY SRANTAVP
✓ON46'80y TWEREviimwo oseRry,