THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
40—Friday, Dec. 14, 1973
5 Women on Bond Mission
Men's Clubs
BNAI MOSHE MEN'S
CLUB will hold its annual
New Year's Eve party 9 p.m.
Dec. 31, at the synagogue.
The evening will feature din-
ner, a sweet table favors
and breakfast. Music will be
provided by Hal Gordon and
his Orchestra. For reserva-
tions, call the synagogue of-
fice, LI 8-9000.
ADAT SHALOM MEN'S
CLUB will host Lewis Shul-
man. assistant superintend-
ent of secondary education of
the Farmington Hills School
System, 11 a.m. Sunday at
the synagogue. His topic will
be "Teacher and Student."
A continental breakfast will
be served. The community is
invited at no charge.
* *
*
TEMPLE BETH EL
MEN'S CLUB will present
Irving I. Katz, executive sec-
retary, in his second "History
of the Jews in Michigan" il-
lustrated lecture 10 a.m.
Sunday at the temple. He
will speak on "Founding of
the Jewish Community of
Detroit in 1850 and the First
Six Decades of its Develop-
ment" to the breakfast club
and discussion group.
Bar Mitzvos, Weddings
and special occasions
Carson Zeitzer
Photography
545-3646 or 354-2120
Detroit women will join a delegation of 35 from
the women's division of Israel Bonds from the United States
and Canada who will leave from New York for Israel
Saturday evening, to attend an emergency conference on
the country's urgent economic needs and to discuss the
role of women in helping to meet them. They are, from
left, Mesdames Allen Charlunski, David Pollack, and Henry
Dorfman. Not pictured are Mrs. Felix Rosenzweig and
Mrs. Julius Schaumberg.
•
• • •
•
Louis Levitan Leaves Bond Post
in Detroit for Pacific Region
Louis E. Levitan, for 16
years manager of the Detroit
Israel Bond office, has been
transferred to the West Coast
and Pacific Region, with
headquarters in Los Angeles.
He will leave the Detroit post
in January. He will continue
for a time as consultant for
the Detroit Israel Bond Com-
mittee.
Levitan has held many
positions in the field of pub-
lice and private welfare, in-
cluding area directorship for
the Jewish Welfare Board-
U.S.O. in Los Angeles. His
long experience in California,
in handling unemployment
Eugene Hollander Runs Bar-Ilan Board
Special to The Jewish News
NEW YORK—Bar-Ilan Uni-
versity's board of overseers,
at a special meeting at
American headquarters, Dec.
6. elected Eugene Hollander,
New York Jewish leader and
philanthropist, as its chair-
man for the coming year.
Phillip Stollman of Detroit,
co-chairman of the Bar-Ilan
Board of Governors, reported
on his latest visit at the uni-
versity last month and on
preparations for resumption
of school activities.
Faculty and students were
with their units during the
Yom Kippur War, he stated;
and there were many casual-
ties and many acts of hero-
ism.
University Rector Prof.
Menahem Zevi Kaddari, who
was in the U. S. for the
Memorial Foundation Claims
Conference, addressed the
meeting and reported that all
Israeli universities are sched-
uled to reopen on Dec. 23,
with expectations that the
emergencies will have sub-
sided by that time.
Prof. Kaddari told of the
tensions that have resulted
from the crisis created by the
Yom Kippur War. He told of
the Bar-Ilan Psychological
Units formed to assist many
who needed comfort and en-
couragement, as well as
guidance, during the critical
period of the war.
Elie Wiesel, a member of
ifiartitt- Avid
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Social Conscience
It is to the glory of the
righteous that, even when
they are on the point of
death, they do not think of
their own affairs, but con-
cern themselves with the
needs of the community.
Thus when God told Moses
that he must die, the latter's
first concern was that God
should appoint a leader in
his place. — Midrash Sifre
Bamidbar.
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and migratory labor prob-
lems before the war, made
him particularly suited to
assume positions of respon-
sibility which he held in Eu-
rope following his service in
the U. S. armed forces —
military government — Eu-
ropean theater.
He served in Germany as
chief of the bureau of docu-
ments and tracing for
UNRRA and later as a divi-
sion chief of the International
Refugee Organization (IRO).
With IRO he was head of
all the Jewish DP camps in
the central section of the
U. S. Zone in Germany.
Levitan also served as IRO
director of Welfare for Italy
and as regional director for
the American Joint Distribu-
tion Committee in Milan,
Italy, in post-war Europe.
He served as field repre-
sentative and regional direc-
tor of the UJA speakers
bureau for the Western
United States and was head
of the Israel Bond offices in
Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Minneapolis and Winnipeg
since the inception of the
Israel Bond program in Jan-
uary, 1951. He has been di-
rector of the Detroit Israel
Bond office since March,
1958. During this period Is-
rael Bond sales in Detroit
increased from about $800,-
000 in 1958 to $5,600,000 in
1972. Sales in 1973, prior to
the Yom Kippur War,
amounted to $5,200,000 and
the cash figure to date stands
at $12,000,000.
Levitan will assume his
new position as regional
director for the Western
United States with offices in
Los Angeles some time in
January. His area will ex-
tend to the Mississippi and
for a limited time he will act
as a consultant for the De-
troit Israel Bond Campaign.
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LOUIS E. LEVITAN
e
the board of overseers, and
Prof. Saul Lieberman of the
Jewish Theological Seminary,
a member of the Bar-Ilan
board of govefnors, address-
ed the meeting.
Plans are being formulated
for a lecture program by
Bar-Ilan scholars in leading,
American Jewish communi-
ties.
Value and Need of Home
We must become aware of
the fact that until a great
humanistic idea unites all
the families of the earth.
thousands of years may still
go by and until that time
comes, a people whose home
is everywhere and for whom
no place is a home, will be
regarded everywhere as a
strange body in the human
organism. — Y. L. Pinsker,
"Auto-Emancipation," 1882.
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