64 Friday, October 28, 1977
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
.
Forces Mobilize or Allied Jewish Campaign
The Council of Campaign Chairmen, comprised of former
chairMen of the Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency
Fund, gathered for its third annual luncheon recently.
Shown are, from left, seated, Irwin I. Cohn, 1978 Chairman
Phillip Stollman, Council Chairman Daniel M. Honigman
and Leonard N. Simons; standing: Samuel Frankel, Dr.
Leon Fill, William M. Davidson, Merle Harris,
Green, David Handleman, Alfred L. Deutsch, Maxwell Jos-
pey, Paul Zuckermanjlarvey H. Goldman, Jewish Welfare
Federation President Martin E. Citrin, Max M. Shaye and
Arthur Howard.
1978 Campaign Co-Chairmen Are Announced
Phillip
Stollman
and
Philip T. Warren, general
chairmen of the 1978 Allied
Jewish Campaign-Israel
Emergency Fund, have
announced the appointment
of Irving R. Seligman, Mar-
vin H. Goldman and David
Handleman as Campaign
co-chairmen.
Seligman, president of
Seligman and Associates of
Southfield, served as co-
chairman during the 1977
Campaign. He was pre-
Campaign chairman for
several years and served
previously as chairman of
the Real Estate and Build-
' ing Trades Division. He is a
ership posts within that divi-
sion. Vice president of
Grant-Southern Iron and
Metal Co., he is on the
boards of the Detroit Serv-
ice Group and the Jewish
Home for Aged.
SELIGMAN
GOLDMAN
member of the boards of the
Detroit Service Group, Jew-
ish Community Center and
Jewish Home for Aged.
Goldman, an associate
HANDLEMAN
chairman in the 1977 Cam-
paign, has served as chair-
man of the Industrial and
Automotive Division and
held various other lead-
Handleman, chairman of
the board of the Handleman
Company, was a vice-chair-
man during last year's
Campaign. He is a member
of the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration's executive com-
mittee and chairman of its
capital needs committee.
He is a member of the
boards of United Jewish
Charities, HIAS and the
-United Foundation.
Federation President Citrin's Appeal to Carter
Endorsed by Acclamation at Annual Meeting
t
Shown on the recent Detroit Service Group study mission
to Israel are, left to right, top photograph, Harvey Kleiman,
Shirley Feinberg, tour chairmen D. Larence and Jane Sher-
man and Joan Koppy. The group visited Six-Day War battle
sites on the Golan. In the second photograph, at the Good
Fence, are, Max Nosanchuk, Dr. Harold Firestone, Gloria
Firestone, Barbara Goldfarb, Audrey Koloff, Harriet Ruza,
Paul Ruza and Joshua Stone. In the third photograph, Mar-
lene Borman blows up a balloon, a gift of Edythe Jackier,
center, for the children of Hatzor in Upper Galilee. In the
bottom photograph, Dr. Paul C. Feinberg, Nosanchuk, Ber-
nard Klein, Emery Klein and - Janice Schwartz talk to a
Lebanese Christian at the Good Fence.
Ruth K. Broder, chairman of the Detroit Service Group
Committee on Missions, has announced the following per-
sons will serve with her on the committee for 1977-78: Dr.
Feinberg, Lawrence S. Jackier, Emery Klein, Edie Mitten-
thal, Diane Shekter and Jane Sherman. The committee will
be planning a series of missions to Israel and other areas of
the Middle East and Europe where Jewish communities
receive aid from the Joint Distribution Committee and
other agencies supported by the local Allied Jewish Cam-
paign-Israel Emergency Fund. Some of the missions will be
in conjuction with national United Jewish Appeal programs
beginning in- January; others will be organized locally.
Among the missions being planned are several family-ori-
ented trips for parents and children, scheduled for the win-
ter vacation and for next June. Also being planned are a
mission in March and the traditional DSG study mission
scheduled for next fall.
The Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration of Detroit, at its 51st
annual meeting last week
called upon the White House
to refrain from "the imposi-
tion of outside pre-
conditions" on Israel in its
peace negotiations with the
Arab states.
Sustained
and
spon-
taneous applause for the
announcement by Feder-
ation President Martin E.
Citrin demonstrated' the
support of the following
message to President
Carter:
"Mr. President: the mem-
beship of Detroit's central
communal organization, the
Jewish Welfare Federation,
convened in our 51st annual
meeting, are deeply trou-
bled by apparent ambi-
guities in your adminis-
tration's Middle East
policies. We welcome your
definition of and insistence
on the need for true peace.
This is in keeping with
moral and historical U.S.
commitments to Israel—two
nations of the world's few
remaining and beleagured
democracies. We will con-
stantly press for implemen-
tation of the key promise
that you will never support
in any form the imposition
of outside pre-conditions on
Israel's sovereignty which
detract from her basic sur-
vival capability."
In his remarks, Ctrin
noted that the message was
being sent in advance of a
Washington meeting
involving American Jewish
leadership, this one called
by Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance.
Federation also paid trib-
ute to Golda G. Krolik, who
received the Jewish com-
munity's highest honor, the
Fred M. Butzel Memorial
Award. In maing the pre-
sentation, former Butzel
Awardee Erwin S. Simon
called Mrs. Krolik "the
original one - woman af-
firmative action program."
Tribute also was paid to
Sinai Hospital of Detroit,
which is embarking upon its
25th anniversary year. Dr.
Julien Priver, executive
vice president of Sinai, cited
some of the many areas in
which Sinai has excelled
over the years, and he out-
lined plans for further
development.
These include the Feder-
ation-United Jewish Chari-
ties Medical Endowment
Fund, which will benefit
Sinai programs, as well as
conversations under way
between Sinai and Ford
Hospital for a cooperative
venture in suburban Detroit.
At the same time, he
emphasized - Sinai's com-
mitment to the city of
Detroit.
Alfred L. Deutsch gave
the report of the nominating
committee, and Rabbi
James I. Gordon of Young
Israel Center of Oak-Woods
delivered the invocation.
In his report, Federation
Executive Director Sol
Drachler recounted the
events of 30 years ago as the
Detroit Jewish community
shared in efforts on behalf
of the about-to-be-pro-
claimed state of Israel.
Illustrating the continuity
of local leadership, "one of
our greatest strengths, -
Drachler noted that the
Federation president in 1947
was Julian H. Krolik, the
late husband of the 1977 But-
zel Awardee. Mr. Krolik
received the first Butzel
Award in 1951.
Golda G. Krolik accepts the Butzel Award citation from
former Butzel Awardee Erwin S. Simon, (right), as Jewish
Welfare Federation President Martin E. Citrin looks on.
The presentation took pace at Federation's 51st annual
meeting.