Notables Address Various Sections of Campaign; Include UJA Officers iiY is Getting ready for the job of telephoning 10,000 women in the Detroit area during the PhonoGift Days of the Women's Division, 1967 Allied Jewish Campaign, are the chairmen who will direct the more than 600 telephone volunteers. Mrs. Gerald Gerger and Mrs. Miles Jaffe are co-chairmen of the motor corns workers for PhonoGift. Seated are (from left) Mesdames Sidney S. Hertz and Harry Frank, executive vice-chairman; standing, Mesdames Ben Mossman, chairman of PhonoGift; Arthur H. Rice, chairman of the Women's Division; and Milton A. Weiss, executive vice chairman. PhonoGift will open its headquarters at the Zionist Cultural Center, Wednesday and will continue work through March 22. Rabbi Herbert A. Friedman, executive vice chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, will speak at the Allied Jewish Campaign mercantile division's • Pace-Setters cocktail and buffet dinner 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Great Lakes Club. David S. Mondry is chairman of the division, with Benjamin Frank and Warren D. Green- stone as co-chairmen. Hosts for the evening are Ber- nard E. and Max J. Pincus, Jack J. Wainger, Harold L. Kaplan and Isadore and Stanley J. Winkelman. Rabbi Friedman Swig The real estate and building trades division will hear Benjamin Swig of San Francisco, honorary chairman of United Jewish Appeal, during its PaceSetters evening Tuesday at Howard Johnson's mo- tor lodge, W. Grand Blvd. and Third Ave. Swig is owner of San Francisco's Fairmont Hotel and a real estate developer. Communities to Launch Youth Training Program NEW YORK (JTA)—An experi- mental program for graduates of regular young leadership programs sponsored by Jewish federations who wish to go beyond the "what" and "how" into the "why" of Jew- ish communal life will be launched this year, it was announced here- by the Council of Jewish Federa- tions and Welfare Funds. The program, developed by the National Committee on Leader- ship Development of the CJFWF, will be used initially in Boston, Columbus, Essex County, N.J. and Montreal. The new "training in depth programs" will delve into the underlying motives, meaning and purpose of what Jewish federa- tions do. CASH FOR ISRAEL BONDS 341-7998 Louis and Harold Berry have invited division members for a 4 p.m. swim and sauna prior to the meeting. Cocktails will be at 6 and supper at 7. Heading the division are Harold Berry, chairman, and George M. Zeltzer, co-chairman. Associate chairmen are A. Arnold Agree, N. Brewster Broder, Morris H. Brown and Leslie Rose. Pre-campaign chairmen are Aubrey H. Etten- heimer, Meyer Fishman, Samuel Hechtman, Milton Howard and Irving Rose. Zvi Kolitz, author-journalist, mo- tion picture and theatrical p r o - ducer, will be guest speaker at the pharmacists and pharmaceuti- cal suppliers sec- tion dinner on Wednesday at the Raleigh House. Jack A. Robin- s o n, chairman, h a s announced cocktails will be at 7 with dinner at 8. Kolitz enter- Kolitz ed the naval academy in Italy and earned the title of captain in the merchant marine. He is putting together a stage production, "King Solo- mon and the Cobbler," which will be the first biblical musical comedy on Broadway. Kolitz was co-producer of the contro- versial play, "The Deputy." Co-chairmen of the pharmacists section are Sidney Bluestone, Rob- ert S. Dunsky, Arnold Faudman and Gerald Gerger. Advisers are David Dunsky, David Handleman and Morris Karbal. Kolitz will also address the men's special gifts section of the junior division at a cocktail party 8 p.m. Thursday at the Sheraton- Cadillac Hotel. Thomas I. Klein is chairman of the group and Paul D. Borman, co-chairman. Rounding out the section leaders hip are associated chairmen Leonard S. Borman, Ira I. Jaffee, Michael Scheinker and Lawrence K. Snider. Members of the mechanical trades division will hear Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh at the annual dinner 6 p.m. March 13 at the Standard City Club, ShtzOaton-Cadillac Hotel. Kaye G. Frank and Merle Harris are co-chairmen of the division with Malcolm S. Lowenstein as pre-campaign. chairman. Martin E. Citrin is chairman of the dinner.' - Dr. Morton I. Teicher, dean of the Wurzweiler School of Social Work, Yeshiva University, will de- liver the keynote address at the all-day 18th Professional Staff In- stitute Wednesday at the Jewish Center. Dr. Teicher joined Yeshiva Uni- versity in 1956 to k set up a program for the education o f professional personnel in Jew- ish social work. In 1965, he was invited to Bar- I 1 a n University in Israel to set up a similar pro- gram. Dr. Teicher Prior to joining Yeshiva Uni- versity, he was on the medical and social work faculties of the Uni- versity of Toronto and was chief psychiatric social worker at the Toronto Psychiatric Hospital. Chairman of the in is Albert Elazar, superintendent of United Hebrew Schools. William Avrunin, executive director of the Jewish Welfare Federation, will speak at the morning session on the federation and its mem- ber agencies. Attending will be members of the staffs of social service and educational agen- cies in the Detroit area. Theme of the institute is "How Should Jewish Communal Agencies Relate to the Jewish Family, Now and in the Future?" Serving on the planning commit. tee are Mrs. Becheck, Jewish Family and Children's Service; Marvin Berman, Fresh Air Society; Samuel Goldstein, Jewish Voca- tional Service-Community Work- shop; Alvin Kushner, Jewish Com- munity Council; Dr. Morton Plot- nik, Jewish Center; and Mrs. Eva Sonnenblick, Jewish Home for Aged. Milton Weiner, Jewish Wel- fare Federation, is secretary. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6—Friday, March 3, 1967 Tunisian Govt. OKs Pact With JDC on Relief Work NEW YORK (JTA) — An accord has been reached by the Tunisian government and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Commit- tee formalizing the status of JDC's welfare work in Tunisia, it was an- nounced by Charles H. Jordan, JDC executive vice-chairman. Jordan pointed out that JDC has been cooperating for nearly a dec- ade with the U. S. Department of Agriculture in its Food for Peace program in Tunisia. As of 1966 it made available USDA foodstuffs totaling 7, 244,874 pounds, mainly milk, oil, flour and wheat, to some 70,000 beneficiaries in the south- ern part of the country. JDC also distributed nearly 1,- 000,000 pounds of USDA supplies to Tunisian Jews last year, in addi- tion to supporting programs of re- lief, education, medical care, school feeding and care of the aged.. These serve over 8.000 or more than one in three of the esti- mated 23,000 Jews in Tunisia. 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ISRAEL KIBBUTZ CAMP — FOR BOYS & GIRLS 13 to 15 (MEMBER OF THE HABONI M CAMPING ASSOCIATION) Gesher Haziv • On the shores of the Mediterranean in northern Israel • Excitement, adventure and broadening experience of Kibbutz life • Field trips,- hikes and seminars to Jerusalem, Dead Sea, Negev, Tel Aviv, Haifa, Sea of Galilee • Working in banana and orange groves, turkey-houses with Kibbutz youth • "Adoption" for the summer by Israeli families. Total Cost (including round trip transportation via El Al) Only $850. 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