Tabashnik Named on Capital Needs
Committee; List Extensive Program

Louis Tabashnick will be as-
sociate chairman of the Jewish
Welfare Federation's capital
needs committee; announces
Judge Theodore Levin, Federa-
tion president.
Sidney J. Al-
len is commit-
tee chairman.
This commit-
tee reviews re-
quests for cap-
ital expansio
o f facilities
presented by
Federation's 14
member - agen-
cies.
Capital proj- Tabashnick
ects nearing completion are the
Community Center on 10 Mile
Road, which will be used jointly
by the Jewish Community Cen-
ter and the United Hebrew
Schools, and the Shapero School
of Nursing at Sinai Hospital.
In the early stages of imple-
mentation are the Curtis-Mey-
ers Community Center, an of-
fice for the Jewish Social Serv-

Rita Grossman Named
AZC Council's Seciy -

Appointment of Miss Rita
Grossman as executive secretary
of the national finance council
of the American Zionist Com-
mittee for Public Affairs was
announced by Lawrence G. Las-
key and Josselyn M. Shore, na-
tional chairmen of the council.
The Committee for Public Af-
fairs conducts public action,
bearing upon relations with
governmental authorities, with
a view to maintaining and im-
proving friendship and good
will between the United States
and Israel. It is the only au-
thorized representative of the
Zionist movement in this work.
The national finance council is
the committee's fund - raising
arm. Joseph Holtzman is chair-
man of the Detroit sub-commit-
tee.
. Miss Grossman
"
served as as-
sistant to the Director of Infor-
mation of Israel's Delegation to
the United Nations. She previ-
ously was associated with the
Jewish Agency in a similar ca-
pacity during the UN deliber-
ations on the partition of Pales-
tine.
In 1951, she joined the staff
of the American Zionist Coun-
cil. She served as assistant to
to executive director of the
Committee for Public Affairs
since its establishment in 1954.
She was for two years news
editor of the Jewish Floridian.
She is the author of two chil-
dren's books and spent several
months in Israel. She is a cum
laude graduate of the Univer-
sity of Miami, Fla.

Remember

J

TREES ARE A SYMBOL
OF LIFE FOR THE YEAR
5 7 1 7

Greet Your
Near and Dear Ones
With a SPECIAL
NEW YEAR
CERTIFICATE For Trees
Planted in Their Honor
In the Forests of Israel

Call TOwnsend 8-7384

THE JEWISH
NATIONAL FUND
11345 Linwood Ave.

Detroit 6

ice Bureau, the Julius Berman
Lodge at Camp Tamarack and
provisions for more beds and
an out - patient department at
Sinai Hospital.

Federation Lists
2 Appointments,
2 Resignations

The Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion of Detroit has added two
Detroit area residents to its ex-
ecutive staff and accepted the
resignations of two veteran staff
members.
Mrs. Morris
J. Appelman ,
will be secre-
tary of Federa-
t i o n's health
and welfare
di vision and
Sol Drachler
will be secre-
tary of the ed-
ucation d i v i-
sion.
Drachler
Mrs. Appel-
man comes to Federation from
the United Community Services
of Detroit where she was con-
sultant to community councils.
Drachler was supervisor of the
Jewish Parents Institute of the
Jewish Center.
Samuel Cohen left Federa-
tion for the post of director of
social planning for the Greater
Miami (Fla.) Jewish Federa-
tion. He was secretary for two
of Federation's budget and plan-
ning divisions.
Ben M. Mandelkorn, secretary
to Federation's health and wel-
fare budget and planning divi-
sion, will become executive di-
rector of the Columbus, 0.,
Jewish Community Council,
Sept. 1.
Mrs. Appelman, who holds a
Master's degree in social work
from Wayne University, was
head social worker at North
End Clinic, from 1927-29. She
has been,field instructor for the
George Warren Brown School
of Social Work, St. Louis, Mo.,
for the Women's Division of the
St. Louis Jewish Welfare Fund
Campaign, and a caseworker
and case supervisor for the
Jewish Social Service Bureau
of Chicago. Her late husband,
Morris J., was executive direc-
tor of the Jewish Federation of
Southern Illinois and of the
Jewish Community Council of
Richmond, Va. Her son, Henry,
attends the University of Michi-
gan.
Drachler, a navy veteran,
also is a Wayne University
alumnus. A member of the
Adult Education Association, he
lives at 2702 W. Grand Ave.,
with his wife, Leah, and sons,
Paul and Daniel.

Bus Cooperatives Strike
for Increases in Fare

TEL AVIV, (JTA)—Interur-
ban passenger traffic in Israel
came to a virtual standstill on
Aug. 8, as bus cooperatives
called a two-hour strike.
The walkout was in protest
against the Ministry of Trans-
port which announced it had
once again postponed making
public a decision of a special
commission of inquiry on a re-
quest by the bus companies for
a fare increase.
The bus cooperatives, which
control the industry, requested
a fare hike months ago, but
had agreed not to strike while
a public inquiry commission
considered the problem. The
government now says the com-
mission's decision will be-made
known in about a week.

Israel Among 14 Nations
Rewriting Slave Treaty

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.,
(JTA) — Israel is among 14
countries to have signed up for
a four-week conference, to be
conducted by the UN beginning
this week in Geneva in an ef-
fort to draft a new convention
for the abolution of slavery
and the slave trade. Egypt has
consistently opposed the"
planned new draft.

Foreign Experts Impressed

with Israel War Maneuvers

TEL AVIV, (JTA) Foreign
military observers on Aug. 8
watched Israeli infantry, artil-
lery and air force units work
out a combined operational war
problem. The maneuver con-
sisted of storming and captur-
ing three hills.
At the conclusion of the ex-
ercise, the observers, who in-
cluded some high-ranking offi-
cers, expressed admiration for
the training and ability to co-
operate of the various army
units.

The Jewish News Deadlines

Commencement of a new year of busy community schedules
makes it necessary for The Jewish News to call the attention of
our readers and organizational publicity writers to our deadlines.

Photographs must reach us before noon on Fridays.

-

All copy must be in our hands before 3:30 p. m. on Mondays.

In all instances, copy should reach us long before the estab-
lished deadlines—several days in advance, if copy is available.

There are special deadlines during holiday weeks, and ad-
vance notice of them always is given in our cohnnns.

Our Sept. 7 issue, which will be the Annual New Year Edi-
tion, will close a week earlier than usual. Copy reaching us
after 3 -p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 30, will not appear in that issue.

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