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February 10, 1967 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-02-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

20—Friday, February 10, 1967

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

LeilayInnBergEngaged William Avrunin Emphasizes
Inter-CongregationalMen'sClubDinner to Gerald H. Stollman Need for Endowments to Federations

to Be Hosted by Cong. Beth Abraham

The Men's Club of Cong. Beth
Abraham will host the annual
Inter-Congregational Men's Club
Dinner Feb. 21. After 6 p.m.
cocktails the dinner and program
will take place in the social hall.
Dr. Norman Lamm, associate
rabbi of the Jewish Center of New
York City, will discuss "The Fer-
ment on the College Campus of
America Today."
Rabbi Lamm, professor of
Jewish philosophy at Yeshiva Uni-
versity, is a faculty member of
Bnai Brith's national program of
adult Jewish studies. He is a
founding member of the National
Association of Orthodox Scientists
and of the national executive,
Rabbinical Council of America,
whose journal "Tradition" he
served as editor-in-chief.
Rabbi Israel Halpern, Beth
Abraham will introduce the
speaker.
The Inter-Congregational dinner
is another in the series of 75th
anniversary celebrations for Beth
Abraham.

J WV 5th Region
to Meet in Detroit

:

Commander Jack Berman of the
Department of Michigan Jewish
War Veterans announced that his
department will host a meeting of
the Jewish War Veterans fifth
region March 10 - 12 at the Statler
Hilton Hotel.
JWV's fifth region is made up
of 14 midwest states. Commander
of the region is
Lawrence Gubow,
U.S. district at-
torney for East-
ern Michigan,
who is past Michi-
gan commander
sand national
executive com-
mitteeman f o r
JWV.
Berman also
announced t h e
appointment of
Irving S. Cane,
past Michigan
commander a s
Gubow
chairman of the
regional conference.
Cooperating with the department
will be the Department of Michigan
Ladies Auxiliary, whose president
is Mrs. William Love.
JWVA's national president, Mrs.
David Kozlow of Milwaukee, a
member of the fifth region, will
be present at the conference and
will make her official visit to the
Michigan Auxiliary the Monday
following the conference.

[MEM

Sam Sweet and Irving Michaels
are co-chairmen of arrangements.
Other members of the committee
are Bernard Lichtenstein, Fred
Grossman, Dr. Harry Newman,
Joseph Viedrah, Ted Scholnick and
Irving Goldfarb.

Clubs

Men's

BETH ABRAHAM MEN'S CLUB
will hear a talk on "Ecumenism:
Utopia or Reality?" by Mrs. Frances
Solovich 10 a.m. Sunday at Cong.
Beth Abraham. Fourth in a Sunday
breakfast series, the event is one
of a number scheduled as part of
the congregation's diamond .(75th)
jubilee celebration. Past president
of the International Bnai Brith
Women and o! the Michigan Re-
gional Advisory Board of the Anti-
Defamation League, Bnai Brith,
Mrs. Solovich had the distinction
of being the youngest woman grad-
uate of the University of Detroit
college of law, when she received
her degree there before age 21.
For information. call the synagogue
office, UN 1-6696. Tickets are avail-
able in advance or at the door.
* *
MOSAIC LODGE, F. and A.
M., will hold a dinner 6:30
p.m. Feb. 22 at the Masonic Tem-
ple. Alan Adelson and Paul Nida,
senior and junior deacons, will
be honored. 'Ron Bauer will de-
liver an expose of gambling prac-
tices. Friends are invited. For
reservations, call Herman B.
Streit, 756-4242 or 864-4119.

#111:1611111.

Oak Park Druggist
Gives 'Pep Pill' to
Cause of Education

ROBERT J. RAFELSON POST
AUXILIARY will hold a dinner
meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Iden,
10005 Elgin, Huntington Woods.
For reservations call Mrs. Sam
Solomon, 342 - 2944, or Mrs. Al Stern,
547-2783.

Dr. Stuart Pernick Heads
Children's Dental Week

Dr. Stuart Pernick is co-chair-
man of Children's Dental Health
Week in Detroit. Activities for
this week have included a lecture
for area school teachers on "Teach-
ing Dental Health," local dentists
speaking to elementary school
children and an all-day class for
dentists in new ideas in children's
dentistry.

BY HENRY LEONARD

RR

DAB eli4G

1%,

William Weinstein
Brigadier General in
U.S. Marine Corps

At its 28th anniversary dinner,
the Mogilever Progressive Aid So-
ciety elected Charles Rubin, presi-
dent; Sam Friedman, vice presi-
dent; Sam Wohl and Harry Got-
lieb, secretaries; Harry Charsof-
sky, treasurer; and Mr. and Mrs.
George Lelichook, hospitalers.

wants a full house this Friday night!"

r A r •a

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C. Rubin Heads Mogilever

"We're shrinking the Temple. The Rabbi

Anniversaries
Hospital • New Babies
Bon Voyage • Birthdays • Sympathy

JACK BARNES
Y

Detroit attorney William J.
Weinstein has become the second
member of the Jewish faith to be
promoted to brigadier general in
the U. S. Marine Corps Reserve.
The Marine Corps commandant
in Washington announced the pro-
motion, which makes Weinstein
the first Michigan native to earn
one-star rank in the Marine Corps
Reserve.
A member of Cong. Bnai
David, Weinstein is a director of
the Detroit Bar Association and
a fellow in both the Interna-
tional Academy and American
College of Trial Lawyers.
A pre - Pearl Harbor enlistee,
Weinstein served as a rifle com-
pany commander in Marine Corps
campaigns in the South Pacific
during World War II.
He and his wife Evelyn live at
5501 W. Outer Dr. and have two
children.

II(

gencies, and to make possible
in the future—through support of
special 'projects, studies, research
activities and one-time capital
needs. In some cities, they are
used to assist in meeting current
operating costs. Each city is
adapting the use of its endowment
fund to its special needs and cir-
cumstances—taking account also of
changes in the amounts of the
funds, and in needs and opportuni-
ties.
William Avrunin, executive di-
rector if the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration of Detroit, declared that
Federations interested in building
an endowment fund cannot handle
it like a supplementary function.
rather, it must be a major effort.
To build up an effective endow-
ment fund, top leadership and top-
level professional staff time must
be involved, the meeting empha-
sized. Laymen who head endow-
ment fund programs should be
"the top members of the Federa-
tion family," Avrunin commented.
The Detroit executive stated that
the endowment fund of a Federa-
tion must be a truly central fund
in its functioning. Such a central
fund must have clear-cut objectives
which include the broad programs
of its constituent organizations and
others.

WOW

SAM EM ER

I

\i

NEW YORK — A national meet-
ing on Jewish Federation endow-
ment fund development—the first
of its kind—bringing together 30
top lay and professional leaders
from 16 large Jewish communities,
was held here under auspices of
the Council of Jewish Federations
and Welfare Funds.
Although the book value of
Jewish Federation endowment
funds has increased from $12,000,-
000 in 1948 to nearly $80,000,000
this year in the 12 largest Jewish
communities, there is still a tre-
mendous untapped potential for
future growth, emphasized Louis
J. Fox of Baltimore, CJFWF pres-
ident.
Federations are developing en-
MISS LEILA BERG
dowment funds as a community in-
Mr. and Mrs. Murray H. Berg surance policy against emer-
of W. Ten Mile Rd., Huntington
Woods, announce the engagement
of their daughter Leila Ann to Stamp Club to Meet
Gerald Herschel Stollman, son of
The Society of Israel Philatelists
Mr. Phillip Stollman of Wildwood — Detroit-Oak Park Stamp Club
Ave., Oak Park.
will meet 8 p.m, Tuesday in the
The bride-elect attended Wayne Oak Park Community Center.
State University, Her fiance, for-
A special feature will be a film,
merly on the faculty of Oakland
Community College, is working "Wilderness of Zin," showing some
toward his doctorate in political significant archaeological discov-
science at New York University. eries tracing the ancient life in
The couple plans to marry March Israel's Negev.
28.
A donation philatelic auction
will be held for the George Cohen
Memorial Fund, as part of the
society's educational fund. There
will be prizes, gifts and refresh-
ments. All interested persons are
invited. For information, call Iry
Girer, UN 4-1278.
Druggist Julius Passerman got greater innovation and flexibility
his Depression schooling with a
helping hand from the federal gov-
THE BEST 94
FOR THE
ernment. And he hasn't forgotten.
MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT
Today, Passerman, who owns Lin-
coln Drugs at Lincoln and Coolidge
in Oak Park, is a veteran Oak Park
school board trustee (he served as
And His Orchestra
vice president and president, too)
DI 1-1609
and has established scholarships
in five local schools.
The latest hi a series of "re-
payments" of an old debt to edu-
cation is a series of basic car-
care slide films he has donated
to Berkley High School for use
in its vocational training and
driver education classes.
COOLIDGE AT 9 MI.
Passerman, who opened the Oak
LI 7-4470
Park drug store 11 years ago, has
helped 30 students through col-
lege scholarships.
Although Jewish, he has recog-
nized no religious barrier in the
schools he has chosen for these
scholarships: Berkley High, Our
Lady of LaSalette, Oak Park High,
Our Lady of Fatima and the re-
ligious school of Beth Shalom Syna-
gogue.

From LONDON, ENGLAND

and His ORCHESTRA

"Distinctive Styling in Music
to your Individual Taste"

Call UN. 1-3065

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Thursdays to 9 p.m.

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