United Jewish Charities Re-Elects Simon and Allocates
$62,700 for Education, Camp, Project Equality'

Officers were elected and grants
totaling $62,700 for local projects
were approved at a board meeting
> last week of the United Jewish
Charities. Re-elected to the presi-
dency was Erwin S. Simon. Louis
Tabashnik was elected vice-presi-
dent and Paul Zuckerman, treas-
urer. William Avrunin will serve
again as secretary. Mrs. Joseph H.
Ehrlich was made a lifetime direc-
tor of the board.
Tabashnik, chairman of the Jew-
'? Welfare Fed-
ation capital
seeds commit-
tee, was former-
ly treasurer of
the UJC. Zucker-
man, a former
Allied Jewish
Campaign chair-
man, is a vice-
president of Fed-
eration. Selec-
tions were made
by the nominat-
i n g committee
under the chair-
manship
of
Judge Theodore
Levin. Hyman
Safran and
George M. Stutz,
Simon
served on the committee.
N
The UJC board acted on recom-
mendations for grants by the Jew-
ish Community Foundation Com-
mittee in regard to special proj-
ects that will strengthen programs
and services available to the Jew-
ish community. Max J. Zivian,
former UJC president, is chairman
of the committee.
Approved for a one year re-
newal of grants were projects
submitted by the Fresh Air So-
ciety, United Hebrew Schools
and Jewish Population Study by
Dr. Albert J. Mayer. Grants
were approved for new projects
under the auspices of the He-
brew Schools, Jewish Commun-
ity Council and Sinai Hospital.
A new grant was made to the
United Hebrew Schools in connec-
tion with an experimental program

•v•gz•ri

IF YOU TURN THE

I
UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T
FIND A FINER WINE THAN

Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich.

set up in Ann Arbor at the request
of an organized group of Univer-
sity of Michigan faculty and staff
members to provide a Jewish edu-
cation program for their children.
The idea for the school was
self-motivated by faculty parents
who were concerned with having
their children and themselves
achieve a greater identification
with Jewish life, and to provide
them with a Jewish education.
These faculty parents created a
special school program suited to
their own needs and ideas. They
have recruited a staff of teachers,
rented space and collected enough
tuition from 50 interested families
to begin operation. The $1,500
grant will enable them to continue
in operation through the spring
semester as an experimental pro-
gram .
The United Hebrew Schools, in
an advisory capacity, will be ac-
countable and responsible for the
program, and will continue to act
in a consultative capacity. Other
assistance in program develop-
ment was given by the Detroit
Jewish Community Center.
In his letter of request to the
foundation, George M. Zeltzer,
president of the United Hebrew
Schools, pointed out that the
number of Jewish intellectuals
associated with universities and
colleges is increasing and that
many have been alienated from
Jewish life in the past. He ex-
pressed his approval of encour-
aging people in the academic
world to identify more strongly
with Jewish life. He pointed out
that this was the first such ex-
periment on a college campus in
the United States.
Other grants to the Hebrew
Schools will permit ongoing pro-
grams in teacher training and
textbook development to continue
for another year.
The second year of a counselor
preparation training program will
continue at the Fresh Air Society
with the help of a $6,850 grant.
The program will allow the first
year's group of counselors to com-
plete a second year, and a similar
group to begin a first-year train-
ing course.
An in-service training program
for experienced counselors and su-
pervisors will be extended for an-
other year at a cost of $1,600.
The Jewish Population Study
begun by Dr. Mayer two years
ago is expected to reach comple-
tion in 1966. A total of $15,000 had

NOAH'S ARK—by EPHRAIM KISHON

Reg. $4.50

MR. SEIDMAN AND THE GEISHA—

by ELICK MOLL—Reg. $3.75

THE DEED—by GEROLD FRANK
Reg. $4.95
MY MEMOIRS—by ISAAC LEIB PERETZ

ONLY 99

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ONLY 99

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ONLY 99

Reg. $3.50
ONLY $1 99
MARRIAGE AND FAMILY LIFE, A JEWISH VIEW

Edited by ABRAHAM B. SHOULSON
Reg. $4.95

ONLY $295
GIANTS OF FAITHS, GREAT AMERICAN RABBIS
by RABBI ALEX J. GOLDMAN,
$0395
Reg. $6.95
ONLY *,

PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ISRAEL

by JACOB A. RUBIN and MEYER BARKAI
Reg.
$7.50
NOW ONLY $

MORE THAN 140 OTHER TITLES TO CHOOSE FROM
AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES!

BORENSTEIN'S

BOOK and MUSIC STORE

13535 W. 7 MILE at SCHAEFER
DI 1-0569
DI 1-3268

By IRVING I. KATZ
Executive Secretary,
Temple Beth El
• 75th anniversary of Young Men's
Hebrew Association. Organized in
1891, the YMHA was Detroit's
earliest forerunner of the present
Jewish Community Center.
• 50th anniversary of Yeshivath
Beth Yedudah. Opened in 1916
as "The Yeshivah" by the late
Rabbi Yehudah L. Levin in the
school building of the Mogen Ab-
raham Synagogue on Farnsworth
Street. Named in memory of Rabbi
Levin after his passing in 1926.
• 50th anniversary of Hebrew Be-
nevolent Society (Chesed Shel
Emes). Organized in 1916 as the
Jewish Free Burial Association to
provide funerals a n d burials to
needy persons, according to Jew-
ish tradition and custom, either
totally free of charge or for a
nominal contribution.
• 40th anniversary of Jewish Wel-
fare Federation. Incorporating
agencies in 1926 were: United
Jewish Charities, Fresh Air So-
ciety, Jewish Centers Association,
Jewish Social Service Bureau,
North End Clinic, United Hebrew

ANKARA (ZINS) — The forth-
coming summer season will be ex-
tremely hot for the Middle East,
fraught with the danger of a
serious Israel-Arab clash as a re-
sult of Arab plans to divert the
Jordan waters.
This warning was sounded by
the Lebanese daily "El-Ahad"
published in Beirut. "Since this
conflict is inevitable, it is better
for the Arabs that it should break
out sooner than later," the news-
paper adds.
In the interim, Abdul Nasser
told journalists in Cairo that in
the event Egypt will become con-
vinced that Israel is about to pro-
duce atomic weapons, the Arabs
will launch a preventive war and
bombard all its atomic installa-
tions.
Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, Col.
Moshe Kashti, director-general of
the Israel Defense Ministry, said
that Israel was currently in "an
unprecedented process of strength-
ening itself and buying arms."
He reported also that Israel had
exported 300,000 of its famous
Uzzi submachineguns, and 150,000-
000 pounds ($50,000,000) worth of
mortars. He said that 80 per cent
of the weapons used by Israel de-
fense forces were imported and
paid for with foreign currency.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, March 4, 1966-7

Schools, Hebrew Free Loan As-
sociation, United Jewish Campaign
and Detroit Service Group.
• 25th anniversary of Temple Is-
rael, Detroit's second Reform Tem-
ple, founded in 1941.

Child Care in Latin America
The Conference on Jewish Mate-
rial Claims Against Germany last
year allocated a total of more than
half a million dollrs for child care,
and youth aid programs in Eur-
opean and Latin American coun-
tries.

ISRAEL-15 DAYS

Complete from Detroit

$799

Call

BOOK - COLIZENS

BR 2-2400

NOBODY UNDERSELLS

WOODY PONTIAC

"AND DON'T EVER FORGET IT!"

COME ON OVER—WILL YOU?
WE WANT TO SELL YOU A NEW PONTIAC!

TWINBROOK 1-1600
JOS. CAMPAU at CARPENTER

Half Mile South of Davison

Savings Received

By March 10th

Will Earn From

March 1st

NEW HIGHER
INSURED EARNINGS
ON ALL SAVINGS

Dangerous Summer
Ahead in ME ? Israel
Strengthening Itself

BOOK CLEARANCE SALE

AT BORENSTEIN'S

been granted for the study; and
$9,5Q0 distributed. The remaining
$5,500 will be used by the study
this 'year.
Steps to strengthen in depth the
Jewish-Hebraic content throughout
the Jewish Community Center will
be fostered by a $9,000 grant that
will make possible the employ-
ment for a two year period of an
Israeli professional group worker,
through a national exchange pro-
gram of the Jewish Welfare Board
and the Jewish Agency. Favorable
experience by the Center with its
present exchange worker was in-
strumental in influencing the deci-
sion to enlarge the program.
An inter-faith program, "Proj-
ect Equality", was g r anted
$4,000 on a one-time basis by the
UJC to aid the project's program
of utilizing the economic influ-
ence of religious communities
with respect to problems of
equal opportunity in employ-
ment. The program was initiated
by the Archdiocese of Detroit.
A request from Sinai Hospital
for a research grant on the possi-
bilities of structuring relatives of
patients into the regular nursing
routine of the hospital was con-
sidered favorably and $9,950 was
granted the hospital for this pur-
pose.
The board approved grants of
$500 and $6,000 for projects of the
National Conference of Jewish
Communal Service —the smaller
to help defray part of the cost of
publication of a 60-year history of
the conference, the larger to make
possible the attendance of 10 staff
members of appropriate agencies
at an international conference of
Jewish communal service in Jeru-
salem in August, 1967.
The Jewish Community Founda-
tion, a pioneering venture, was
established in 1964 by the UJC
board of directors as a resource
for demonstration and experi-
mental extra-budgetary programs
related to the general health, wel-
fare, education, cultural, group
identification and comumnity rela-
tions objectives of the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation.
Funds for these projects are set
aside in amounts up to 50 per cent
from the unrestricted earnings
from gifts, legacies, trusts and
other assets of the United Jewish
Charities.
The UJC is the property holding
and fiscal management arm of
Federation.

Detroit Anniversaries in 1966

CURRENT RATE

PER ANNUM

(Compounded and Paid Quarterly)

1%

Earnings Paid
per Annum

•
•
•
•

.3185

tunings
Compounded

4 times a year

No Time Savings
No Certificates
No Minimum
No Maximum

Total Earnings

on an annual basis

Now at Guardian Savings the highest
earnings on insured savings in ths
Detroit area, compounded and paid
quarterly. Your savings are insured up
to $10,000 by an agency of the U.S.
Government.

SAYE BY MAIL

If you can't come In, we
ore as near as your mail

box. We pay postage both
Ways.

Downtown: CADILLAC SQUARE Corner RANDOLPH
Northwest: 13646 WEST 7 MILE Corner TRACEY

to 5 p.m., Monday thru Friday
office open Thursday Night till 9
Downtown, Friday till 6

Both offices open 10 a.m.

Northwest

