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February 01, 1974 - Image 35

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-02-01

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

Two Detroiters Head Young Leadership Unit

Two local men, Joel D.
Tauber and Allan Nachman,
are members of the execu-
tive committee of the United
Jewish Appeal Young Leader-
ship Cabinet for 1974, it was
announced by Dr. Allen Pol-
lack, chairman of the Young
Leadership Cabinet and pro-
fessor of Russian history at
Yeshiva University.
Dr. Pollack also announced
that five men of the area,
Stanley D. Frankel, Dr. Con-
rad L. Giles, Thomas I.
Klein, Mitchel W. Maddin and
Robert G. Slatkin, are serv-
ing as cabinet members.

1

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( Prescription

Tauber is the 1974 national Allied Jewish Campaign-
UJA vice chairman of the Israel Emergency Fund.
Midwest area. He is an asso-
A member of the Jewish
ciate chairman of the ma- Welfare Federation's corn-
chinery and manufacturing munity relations budget and
section, industrial and auto- planning division and a board
motive division of the 1974 member of the Jewish Fam-
ily and * Children's Service,
Tauber was the 1970 recip-
ient of the Federation's Frank
A. Wetsman Young Leader-
ship Award and has been
president of Federation's
junior division.
UJA regional chairman for
a second consecutive year,
Nachman is a director of
Federation's Detroit Service
Group and a member of the
community relations budget
and planning division. He also
is on the board of the Fresh
Air Society.
Nachman, vice-chairman of
the real estate and building
division of the 1974 AJC-IEF,
is a former junior division
Young Leadership Cabinet president. He received the
Chairman Allen Pollack, left, William H. Boesky Junior
congratulates Detroiter Joel Leadership Award in 1969
Tauber on his election to the and the Wetsman Award in
YLC's executive committee. 1972.

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U-M Jewish Students Launch
Campuswide Drive for Israel

The United Jewish Student
Appeal of the Bnai B'rith
Hillel Foundation at the Uni-
versity of Michigan has an-
nounced the beginning of its
campuswide student appeal on
behalf of Israel.
This marks the first time
that the UJSA will conduct

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the same academic year.
During the recent Israeli
crisis, the UJSA raised
$28,000 from students alone.
Because response w a s so
overwhelming, it was decided
by the UJSA student cabinet
to once again approach the
students for funds. The cam-
paign began Sunday at a
solicitors' brunch attended by
75 student workers.
Harriet Brietbart, chairman
of the student campaign, said
that "the very existence of
this second student campaign
displays a fundamental
change in attitude on the part
of the students. Students no
longer feel that their rela-
tively small contributions are
tokens, but that they can
contribute in like proportion
to that of the adult com-
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, February 1, 1974-35

Young Adults Double Pledges

Pledges totaling more than double those of last year's
section meeting were announced at the 1974 Allied Jewish
Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund junior division men's
section meeting at Northland Inn. Shown are, from left,
section vice chairman John M. Frank; speaker Yaakov
Morris; division president Burton D. Farbman; and section
chairman Richard J. Maddin. Morris is press officer of
Israel's permanent mission to the United Nations.

Kibutzim Appeal for Volunteeers

The war isn't over as far
as kibutz manpower needs
are concerned, a local sha-
liakh warned this week.
Tzvika Zidner, adviser to
the Habonim youth move-
ment and representative of
the Kibutz Aliya Desk, said
young Americans are under
the mistaken impression that
the need for volunteers is
over.
In fact, most army-eligible
kibutz members are still

Cocktails for Singles

Swinging Singles, 25 and
up, will have a cocktail party
with dancing 9 p.m. Feb. 8 at
Kings Arms Restaurant. For
information, call Henrietta
Lewis, 546-0903.

g sricit g3rith.
ACtivities

mobilized, and it will be a
long time until their release,
Zidner said. Meanwhile, cit-
rus must be picked, factories
must be manned, and other
kibutz jobs must be per-
formed.
Zidner said that even in
peacetime, volunteer work-
ers are used to help harvest
crops. Now that the war
crisis appears to have sub-
sided, economic survival still
may be dependent on young
workers who are willing to
give up a semester of school,
or work, to help Israeli kibut-
zim.
Young people age 18-35
who are ready to spend at
least one month working on
a kibutz may call Zidner or
Paul Lupu, Hashomer Hat-
zair shaliakh, at the Israel
Aliya Center, 559-6755.

Grossman-Granat
Troth Announced

MISS GAYLE GROSSMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J.
Grossman of Hilton Ave.,
Southfield, announce the en-
gagement of their daughter
Gayle Marlene to Gary Ste-
phen Granat, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Morton J. Granat of
Murray Hill Ave.
Miss Grossman_ attend-
ed Eastern Michigan Univer-
sity. Her fiance was gradu-
ated from Wayne State Uni-
versity and attends its phar-
macy school.
A June wedding is planned.

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CLEARANCE SALE

BROTHERHOOD LODGE
will join the Livonia Masons
and Fr. Lord Council, Knights
of Columbus for the annual
Brotherhood Dinner 6:30
p.m. Feb. 21 at Roma Hall.
For reservations, call Mark
Klinger, 476-4580. Joe Weav-
er, of WJBK-TV will be guest
speaker.

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Paper Shows Bigotry

CONCORD, N. H. — The
ultra-conservative Manches-
ter Union Leader, published
by the powerful William
Loeb, recently featured a
front-page editorial head-
lined "Kissinger the Kike?"
The paper has had other edi-
torials denonuncing Negroes,
Jews and the Kennedys.

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a••• ■■ ••••••p to •• ■■•■■••■1 •

Social for Singles

"Traveling for Singles" will
be discussed at a function for
Jewish college graduates 8
DEBORAH CHAPTER will p.m. Thursday at the United
have an art auction 8:30 p.m. Hebrew Schools building. For
Feb. 16 at the Park West reservations, call Gordon
Galleries. A free champagne Silverman, 341-4200.
preview will precede the
UI
auction at 7:30. There will be
NASSAU? WEEK OR LONG WEEKEND
lithographs, etchings, wood-
CALL ME AT
I
HAMILTON, MILLER,
cuts and watercolors for sale.
HUDSON & PAYNE TRAVEL CORP.
Proceeds will aid Jewish I
philanthropies. For tickets
31:211 n 12 I
and information, call Marilyn
Light, 353-8623, or JoAnn
557-5145
Perlin, 355-2171.
* e:
HARRY B. KEIDAN
"Let Us Entertain Yoti -
LODGE will meet 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the North Park
The
Square Apts. club house.
Rabbi Max Kapustin, Daniel
Sheldon Rott
Simkovitz and Michael
Orchestra
Feigelman will speak on
and
"Hillel at 50." Refreshments
Vickie Carrol
will be served, and wives are
invited. Members are re-
255-1540
543-7226
quested to bring cans of food
and paper goods for the WAC
(We Are Concerned) project.


a •
4 .

(next to the Honeywell Bldg.)

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