Irwin Green Heads United Jewish Charities
Irwin Green, former chairman
of the Allied Jewish Campaign,
has been elected president ot
United Jewish Charities.
Elected to office with him were
Alfred L. Deutsch and Milton J.
Miller, vice presidents; Richard
Sloan, treasurer;
and William Av-
runin, secretary.
Re - elected to
the board of di-
rectors for three-
year terms were
Deutsch, Paul M.
Handlernan, Max
J. Zivian, Ed-
. ward C. Levy,
. Abe Shiffman and
Jack 0. Lefton.
Green Green served
as chairman of the Allied Jewish
Campaign in 1965 and 1966. He is
a member of its advisory council,
the executive committee of the
Jewish Welfare Federation and
the Detroit Service Group and
Sinai Hospital boards of directors.
Paul Zuckerman, outgoing United
Jewish Charities president, de-
scribed in his annual report some
of the administrative and fiscal
roles assumed by UJC during the
past year.
Among its programs are the
endowment program, chaired by
Milton J. Miller, which encour-
ages foundation and trust funds
and administers the income from
them. The scholarship funds,
whose present chairman is John
L. Greenberg, during the last
two years made 196 student loans
totalling $26,260.
Through the Jewish Community
Foundation, under Louis Tabash-
nik, chairman, projects which are
exploratory in nature and outside
the regular agency budgets are
encouraged and supported.
The current grants include pro-
grams to develop standardized
achievement for Jewish grade
schools, to strengthen camper
identification with Jewish tradition
11
at Camp Tamarack, to train black
high school and college-age youth
as recreation and outdoor camping
leaders, a project to bring local
college youth closer to Jewish
community and an interfaith action
Lord Janner Invested
With Queen's Order
for Anglo-Dutch Work
endowment committee.
LORD JANNER
LONDON (JTA)—Lord Janner,
the former Sir Barnett Janner,
was invested Nov. 24 with the
Order of Orange Nassau on behalf
of Queen Juliana of the Nether
lands.
The brief ceremony at the Dutch
Embassy was conducted by the
Dutch ambassador, Dr. J. H.
Roijen, who summarized Lord
Janner's career and emphasized
his long efforts to foster good
Dutch-English relations.
Lord Janner, who has served as
secretary, vice chairman and
chairman of the Anglo-Dutch par-
liamentary group, noted in his
reply Holland's friendship for Is-
rael since 1948 and for Jews since
the Spanish Inquisition.
fi-ae 4
0406411
program to interpret urban prob-
lems to suburban communities.
There are seven other current
projects.
The real estate and land commit-
tee, under the leadership of Rich-
ard Sloan, searches for appropriate
acquisitions for the land bank.
assists agencies of Federation with
their real estate problems and
helps dispose of communal build-
ings and gifts of properties.
Through the finance committee,
whose chairman is Erwin S.
Simon, UJC assists the agencies
of the organized Jewish commu
nity with their building programs
by administering loans toward
capital gifts. Important building
projects now under way are the
Federation Apartments in Oak
Park, the Henry M. Butzel Senior
Adults Village and Conference
Center at Camp Tamarack, the
Jewish Vocational Service and
Arnold E. Frank Community
Workshop in Detroit and the Max
M. and Marjorie Fisher Wing of
Sinai Hospital.
In his report on the endowment
program, chairman Milton J. Mil-
ler mentioned the appointment of
Ken Sarason as secretary of the
v
heov
s
64eLt
,,
Tkraei
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, Demob* 4, 1170-111 i
Jewish Museum Wins N.Y. Grant
ALBANY (JTA)—Six Jewish cul-
tural and arts organizations in New
York State have been awarded a
total of $76,200 in grants by the
State Council on the Arts, it was
announced by Governor Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
These grants are part of a pro-
gram adopted at the governor's
request by the 1970 legislature.
The largest single grant, $62,000,
was awarded to the Jewish Mus-
eum in New York City for organiz-
ing and re-installing its permanent
exhibit, the Judaica Exhibition.
The 92nd St. Young Men's and
Young Women's Hebrew Associa-
tion, also of New York City, re-
ceived $1,300 to aid the public per-
formances of the Y's Folk Music
Project.
In Albany, the Jewish Commu-
nity Center received $5,000 to aid
professional performers, theater
workshops and children's thea-
ter. The Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Binghamton was awarded
$4,800 for theatrical productions,
a special guest artist program
and a children's creative theater
project.
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