8.11 ■ 0.111 ■ 0 ••• ■• •■••■ • ON•111.0 4•11•1111•111 ■ 0411.1.1.•0 ∎ 14111•111111.1.4 ■ 1•• ■ .1•11,1.1. i=111•1.1•••• Ili 0 JsM ■ 11•111 ■ 11•111•1.1 ■ 41 41•12.111 Boris Smolar's 'Between You . . and Me' Detroirs Memorial to Sharett August 23 A Detroit community memorial in tribute to Moshe Sharett was announced this week by the Joint Committee of the Jewish Commun- ity Council and the Zionist Coun- (Copyright, 1965, Jewish cil of Detroit, to be held at the Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) Labor Zionist Institute 8:15 p.m. MEDICARE IMPACT: Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds Aug. 23. which are financing Jewish hospitals, homes for the aged, and other The event parallels similar health institutions will now have to take a new look at their alloca- memorials being held in other Jew- tions for these institutions . . . It is anticipated that the now-passed ish communities throughout the country in memory of the distin- medicare law will have a strong impact on the income of such insti- guished leader whose death on July tutions, since their services for people of over 65 will be substantial- 7 brought expressions of condo- ly covered from medicare funds .. . In this changed financial picture, lence from all parts of the world. and in the light of trends of city-wide and regional planning of hos- Dr. Samuel Krohn, Community pital facilities and services, the question will arise as to what the Council president, and Morris Lie- criteria for Federation support for Jewish hospitals should be . . . berman, Zionist Council chairman, Should this support find its way through deficit financing, grant co-chairmen of the occasion, stated for specific purposes, or any other form? . . . Jewish hospitals that an invitation to organizational today generally obtain 90 per cent or more of their income from leaders and members will be com- sources other than Federations . . . But the 10 per cent or less which pleted this week, and urged full they still get from Federations constitutes the largest single alloca- community participation in the tri- tion made by the Federations . . . In 132 communities, excluding bute. New York City, the allocations for health institutions by local Jewish Citing the Knesset resolution Federations and Chests exceeded 20 per cent of their funds distri- buted in 1963; no figures are available as yet for 1964 . . . In cities which depicted the one-time Prime with over 15,000 Jewish population, local allocations for Jewish hos- Minister as "a man of true nobility pital and health services average about 30 per cent of the total local in the House of Israel—", Krohn allocations . . . In New York, the Jewish Federation spent in 1963 and Lieberman stated: "The Detroit about $5,500,000 in allocations for such services . . . Today, there gathering is our community's rec- are about 80 Jewish hospitals and other specialized health institu- ognition and expression of the tions in the United States, as well as 55 clinics under Jewish auspices esteem in which Mr. Sharett was . . 'There are also more than 85 known Jewish homes for aged held by all those who were touched which receive community support . . . While income from medi- by his vision of a free and secure care will probably change the role of Federations with regard to Israel, living at peace with its financing Jewish hospitals, it is obvious that the Federations will neighbors and contributing its own have to assume greater obligations in building more homes for Jew- historic insights and values to the ish aged . . . The problem of Jewish aged is now becoming the common concerns of the family "Number One Problem" in some Jewish communities where there of nations." is a shortage of facilities to house them . . . Medicare aid for the elderly is expected to stimulate the building of more homes for JWB asketball Winners Jewish aged with grants from local Federations. Educational Alliance of N.Y. won the National Jewish Welfare VERBAL DUEL: The criticism voiced by Dr. Nahum Goldmann Board fourteenth annual basket- against the American Jewish Committee at the conference of the ball ohampionship by defeating World Jewish Congress in Strasbourg last month will have rever- Reading, Pa., J.C.C. in the title berations in this country . . . The American Jewish Committee has game. Eight teams competed in prepared a statement taking sharp issue with Dr. Goldmann's view, the final round of the largest without however mentioning his name . . The statement will be amateur basketball tournament distributed in thousands of copies in numerous- communities through- under Jewish auspices played on out the country, and will be signed by Morris B. Abram, president the courts of the Canton J.C.C. of the American Jewish Committee, and Dr. John Slawson, AJC executive vice president . . . The issue revolves around the que: Friday, August 13, 1965-9 tion whether the Jews need a single body which would speak and act THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS on their behalf the world over . . . Dr. Goldmann has accused the American Jewish Committee of "acting on its own" in domestic and overseas programs . . . The American Jewish Committee leaders take the attitude in their statement that no single organization can presume to represent all the Jews of the United States, let alone all the Jews of the world ... In their opinion, any organization which claims such representation, however composed, "deludes itself and misleads those to whom such claims are addressed" . . . These leaders believe that the Jews in the United States, and in other countries, while sharing a common bond of religion an dtradition, differ on social, economic and political issues, both domestic and international . . . They therefore are of the opinion that a unified voice would stifle this diversity of outlook and interest, and could result in a "disservice" to Jewry . . . They point to the fact that the American Jewish Committee has cooperated closely on specific projects with other Jewish organizations in the effective pursuit of common goals . . . And they cite as example the cooperative efforts to liberalize the U.S. immigration laws, the work in the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, in the American Jew- ish Conference on Soviet Jewry, and in the approach to the problem of the Arab boycott against American firms doing business with Is- rael . . . However, they stress again and again that the American Jewish Committee will continue to oppose any move to establish "an all-purpose umbrella organization" designed to speak with one voice for all Jews in the United States or throughout the world, because it considers such moves as "ill-advised or ill-disguised efforts of power aggrandizement." Participants in the program will include Movsas Goldoftas, Cantor Harold Orbach and Philip Slom- ovitz. Services for Sharett Arranged Throughout U.S. on `Shloshim' NEW YORK (JTA)-1,000 lead- ers from all walks of American Jewish life attended memorial services here for the late Moshe Sharett at the Park Avenue Syna- gogue, Monday evening, under joint auspices of the American Zionist Council and the American Section of the Jewish Agency for Israel. The memorial marks the end of the traditional "Shloshim," the 30-day mourning period. Simi- lar memorial services will be held throughout the country. Meetings have been scheduled throughout the country by the American Zionist Council and its local affiliates in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Chicago and other communities. IF YOU TURN THE UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T FIND A FINER WINE THAN Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich.. HEAVY NYLON PLUSH 18 Decorator Colors 88 Sq. $3 Yd. ACRILAN Heavy textured quality. Decorator Colors. REMNANTS, ROLL-ENDS DRASTICALLY REDUCED! — N L11.4p %avler csr41°) • Home Estimates • Custom Installation • Convenient Terms 7324 WEST 7 MILE Near Livernois UN. 1-7980 Conqratulations Jo DAVID B. HERMELIN For An Outstanding Achievement In New Moroccan Home for Aged By virtue of having produced insurance in excess of 2 MILLION DOLLARS during the period of June 16, 1964 through June 15, 1965, David B. Hermelin, of the Hermelin Agency, located at 13625 W. 8 Mile Road, was elected by the officers, directors and agency force of the Crown Life Insurance Company to the post of regional vice-president for the United States of the Crown Leaders Club—the outstanding production club of the Crown Life Insurance Company. An aged couple relaxes in newly-established home for the aged in El Jadida, Morocco. The home, opened by a group of local volunteers, receives help from the Joint Distribution Committee with funds provided by the United Jewish Appeal. CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO. 1172 FIRST NATIONAL BUILDING