32—Friday, May 31, 1968

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Kaye Frank Heads Nathan Kaufmans to Host Reception
Circuit Court Judge and Mrs. general secretary of the Central
JWV Attacks Proposal to Eliminate Vocational Service Nathan
J. Kaufman will host a Committee of Liberated Jews in
leadership reception in their home, the U.S. Zone of Germany and
Chaplaincy, Stresses Morale Role
and Workshop
was an associate of Eleanor Roose-

WASHINGTON--A vigorous de-
fense of the military chaplaincy
as an American institution has
been voiced by Samuel Samuels,
national commander of the Jewish

Co-Chairmen of JWV
Department Convention

Jack Berman and Mrs. William
Love have been appointed co-
chairmen of the annual convention
of t h e Depart-
ment of Michigan
Jewish War Vet-
erans and its la-
dies auxiliary.
Berman is a
past department
commander and a
member of Bloch-
Rose Post; Mrs.
Love is a past de-
partment presi-
Berman
dent and member
of the Lt. Raymond Zussman
Auxiliary.
JWV's 1968 convention will take
place June 21-23 at the Pick-Fort
Shelby Hotel and will open with
an oneg Shabat June 21.
A testimonial banquet honor-
ing outgoing Department Com,
mander Louis Benton will be held
at the hotel June 22. Banquet
chairmen are Jack Schwartz and
Mrs. Jerry Dale.
Sabbath services will be cele-
brated at Bnai David Synagogue.
Pre-registration for convention
delegates is being accepted at the
JWF office, 342-8161.
* * *

Nemon Elected President
by Memorial Home Assn.

John Nemon, past commander of
the Department of Michigan and
the Lt. Roy Green Post of Jewish
War Veterans, was elected presi-
dent of the Memorial Home Asso-
ciation of Michigan JWV at its re-
cent annual meeting.
The association is seeking a site
to relocate its headquarters and
memorial rooms dedicated to the
memory of the Jewish war dead
of Michigan.
Others elected were Jack
Schwartz, Jack Kraizman and Jack
Berman, vice presidents; Mrs. Wil-
liam Love, treasurer; and Mrs.
Morton Oppenheim, Mrs. William
Greenberg, Jack Iden and Charles
Isackson, board members. Ap-
pointed to serve as secretary was
Mrs. Max Kaufman.

DAMENU

•.•

,

•

War Veterans of the U.S.A., after
a meeting of JWV's national po-
licy committee, in Boston.
The JWV responded to groups
who urged an end to military
chaplaincy.
In a statement placed before the
national policy committee by
Marshall Kaplan, chairman of
JWV's military affairs committee,
and unanimously adopted by the
national policy committee, "seri-
ous misgivings" were voiced over
the proposal to end the system of
military chaplaincy_.
The veterans group stressed
that "the chaplain may not tin-
der any condition bear arms nor
command troops. He is con-
cerned exclusively with morale.
Thus he holds religious services,
counsels individuals, visits and
comforts inmates of hospitals
and prisons, officiates at services
for fallen soldiers and serves as
a valuable contact for parents
and families of servicemen. He
wears a uniform which tradition-
ally has established his status
and facilitated his movements in
the course of performing his
duties."
Samuels asserted that the value
of military chaplains "has always
been great and will long survive
the termination of the present
war."
The organization found the sug-
gestion that civilian chaplains be
'hired to be "highly impractical."
It was pointed out that military
commitments abroad were often in
such areas as Vietnam and Korea
where no civilians are available.
Large training centers 'in the
United States are frequently in
sparsely-populated areas.
Samuels said that "we cannot
agree that the military chaplaincy
infringes on the church-state rela-
tionship." The veterans insisted
that the chaplain "is not the hand-
maiden of any government dogma"
and insisted that he is no spokes-
man for government policies nor
compelled to renounce personal
religious convictions.

JWV

BLOCH-ROSE POST and AUXI-
LIARY will hold their annual rum-
mage sale 7:30 p.m. Monday, and
8 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday at Canadian
Legion Hall, Ferndale.

111011111.011. 01,

BY HENRY LEONARD

.

"It's true our initiation fee is $25,000 ... but
then we don't discriminate against anyone."

At the annual meeting of the
Jewish Vocational Service and
Community Workshop Monday at
the Detroit Standard-City Club,
Kaye G. Frank
was elected pres-
ident.
Other officers
elected were:
William M. Dav-
idson, Melvin
Kolbert and Ar-
thur J. Rubiner,
vice presidents;
Robert M. Zell,
secretary; a n d
Julian H. Scott,
treasurer.
Frank
Newly elected trustees for a first
term of three years were Mrs. Al-
fred Deutsch, Marvin Frenkel and
Joseph H. Pearlman. Newly elec-
ted for an interim term of one
year was Stanley T. Burkoff.
Re-elected were Merle Harris,
Harold S. Norman, Walter J. Rub-
iner, Robert A. Steinberg, Philip
T. Warren, William M. Davidson,
Louis M. Hinderstein, Melvin Kol-
bert, Julian H. Scott and Robert
M. Zell.
The constitution and by-laws
of the agency were revised to
make members of the executive
committee eligible for third terms
on the board of trustees.
A special feature' of the meeting
was the recognition given to the
Detroit Section of the National
Council of Jewish Women for its
65 years of scholarship activity.
As a member of the Committee on
Jewish Scholarship Service, the
National Council of Jewish Women
has .become a major source of
scholarship assistance to Jewish
youth. The chairmen of the schol
arship committee of the NCJW
have been Mrs. Herbert Robinson,
Mrs. Ben Wilk and Mrs. Stanley
Fleischaker. The current chairman
is Mrs. Sol Grossman.

Men's Clubs

Bnai Moshe Men's Club re-elec-
ted Ken Kahn president at the
recent annual meeting. Also elect-
ed were Albert
Dan, Michael
Grand and Jack
Kutnick, vice-
presidents; Zolt-
an Rubin, treas-
urer; Sidney
Ferst, Joseph
Goldschmid, and
Schwartz, ser-
geant at arms.
Seymour Tur-
eff, and Harry
KAHN
Newly elected to the board were
Henry Baumgarten, David Bern-
stein, Irving Bernstein, Izrael
Besser, Leonard Greenbaum, Max
Krueger. Dr. Jerome Lechner,
Herman Roth, Irving Tennenhouse,
Marcel Thriman, Leonard Wein-
berger, Sanford Rosenthal. Isadore
Sabbota and Elliott Shepard.
Nathan Welch was elected honor-
argy board member. The new of-
ficers and board members will be
installed by Rabbi Moses Lehrman
at morning services the first day
of Shavuot, Sunday.
* * *
BETH MOSES MEN'S CLUB will
install officers 8:30 p.m. Wednes-
day in the social h a 11. Violinist
Rochelle Abramson will perform.

The appointment of a new super-
visor for the Detroit Rumor Con-
trol Center and Field Investigation
Division of the Detroit Commission
on Community Relations has been
announced by Richard V. Marks,
CCR secretary director. LONNIE
SAUNDERS was named to the new
position after serving as a con-
tract compliance investigator in
the CCR employment division for
one and one-half years.

17533 Freeland, 8:30 p.m. June 11
in advance of the Beth Abraham
Testimonial Dinner honoring Henry
Thumin, president of the congre-
gation.
Dr. Aryeh Nesher, coordinator
of "Sherut La'Am," the Israel
Peace Corps, will be guest speaker.
Born in Romania, Dr. Nesher was
a lieutenant in Israel's War of
Liberation. One of Israel's fore-
most social scientists, he is a con-
sultant in human relations to the
Israel government and the Jewish
Agency, is a member of the staff
of the Afro-Asian Institute, has
served as a consultant to the gov-
ernment of Tanganyika, and in
the Israel Ministry of Labor and
has lectured at the Tel Aviv School
of Law and Economics. He was the

velt on refugee problems.

WILLIAM MAZER, president of
Hudson Pulp and Paper Corp., and
his company, will be honored at
the annual dinner - dance of the
American-Israel Chamber of Com-
merce and Industry Thursday at
the New York Hilton, New York.

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