THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6 Friday, February 2, 1919 500 Russian Jewish Immigrants Are Projected for Detroit in 1979 dinates the absorption pro- agency which cares for re- cess. HIAS, the interna- fugees until their relocation tional Jewish migration in local communities, is also a Federation beneficiary. High on the list of priorities for action in FAST their behalf will be find- DELIVERY ing suitable housing in GOOD neighborhoods accessi- ble to Jewish communal SERVICE services. The latter in- clude the Jewish Voca- tional Service, which will help in job location; the Jewish Community Center, - which holds En- 14500 West 7 Mile . . . Block West of James Couzens glish language classes; Sinai Hospital and Shiffman Clinic, for med- ical and dental care. The United Hebrew Schools, Hebrew Free Loan MOST POWERFUL Association, Fresh Air,Soci- ety and several day schools UPRIGHT VACUUM have also assisted the new- WITH AUTOMATIC comers. In other board action, Zeltzer announced the ap- pointment .of new leader- ship to the budgeting and planning divisions: They are . David K. Page, chair- man of the Committee on Capital Needs, with Hugh W. Greenberg and Herbert P. Sillman, associate chairmen; Bruce E. Thal, chairman, Edythe Jackier and Dr.' Mark L. Kahn, as- sociate chairmen., Commun- ity Services Division; Stan- ley D. Frankel, chairman and Joseph B. Colten and Milton Lucow, associate chairmen, Culture and Education Division; Robert ONLY $ 11995 H. Naftaly, chairman, and Compare to $219.95 Dr. Paul C. Feinberg, as- sociate chairman, National SOUTHFIELD 4;7 Agencies and CoMmunity \s/c.., 27065 065 Greenfield Rd. Relations Division. 559-5370 1 1 1 SHOWROOM HOURS: Dr. Conrad L. Giles is DAILY & SATURDAY chairman of the coordina- 9:30 am-9:30 pm Sunday 11 am to 6 pm tive Divisional Chairmen's (Continued from Page 1) Service, a Federation agency, initiates and coor- HOOVER's POWER DRIVE Conference, which consid- ers issues and problems re- lating to Federation's agen- cies and the community in general. Other newly appointed chairmen are Toby Citrin, Finance Committee; and Stanley J.\ Winkelman, Jewish Community Found- ation. Special tribute was paid to outgoing budget- ing and planning chair- men Tillie Brandwine, Culture and Education; Avern L. Cohn, National Agencies; Dr. Giles, Community Services; and David Handleman, Capital Needs. The United _ Jewish Charities meeting, at which President Milton J. Miller gave the 79th annual re- port, was marked by the election -to the board of di- rectors of Alfred L. Deutsch and David Handleman to three-year terms and Mil- ford Nemer to a one-year term; and the re-election of Richard Sloan and Joseph H. Jackier to three year terms. In his report, Miller noted that the past year saw sig- nificant growth in the prog- rams and functions of Un- ited Jewish Charities, Fed- eration's senior member agency which maintains re- Sponsibility for communal properties and for the man- agement of endowment funds. Among the developments described was a $150,000 grant to help reduce the cap- ital debt of the three Detroit day schools funded by Fed- eration. Great on Shags! . au w . 0,4k, FoPe, Bernard Edelman's Poetry Books EgSos IMM EN ISk t • Catherine Rochelle was honored at the Jan. 23 meeting of the Jewish Welfare Federation's Board of .Governors as she celebrated the 30th anniversary of her employment with Federation. With Mrs. Rochelle, a member of the staff of the data processing depart- ment, are, from left, United Jewish Charities Presi- dent Milton J. Miller, Federation Executive Secretary Sol Drachler, Federation President George M. Zeltzer and Federation Executive Committee Chairman Mar- tin E. Citrin. In the bottom photograph, Zeltzer and Citrin present Dr. Conrad Giles and Mrs. Tillie Brandwine resolutions in honor of their service as chairmen of two of Federation's budget and planning divisions. Miller said that this one-time grant "could help each of the day schools — Akiva Hebrew Day School, Hillel Day School and Yeshivat Beth Yehudah -- deal more ef- fectively with operating budgets by lessening cap- orl ital debt burdens." He commended Deutsch has chairman of the Endow- ment Committee, which distributed donors' funds to approved Charities in the amount of $1.6 million. Of that sum, $1.3 million went to the Allied Jew Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund. Miller said that the newly created Medical Endow- ment Fund, working ac- tively on behalf of Sinai Hospital and medical ser- vices for Federation agen- cies, already has commit- ments indicating that 25 percent of a $20 million goal will be attained in the first -41 yeaf of operation. He also made special note of the commitment of assets by Benard L. Maas which ultimately will aggregate $1 million for the designa- tion of the Benard L. and Rosalyn J. Maas Recreation Area at Camp Tamarack- Ortonville and to benefit the Fresh Air Society. Other developments dur- ing the past year were the advancement of $110,000 in seed money to begin con- struction of a second resi- dence at Jewish Federation Apartments; provision of a $25,000 interest-free loan toward the purchase of an East Lansing building for Michigan State Universi- ty's _Hillel Foundation; and the awarding of 172 student Scholarship loans — valued at $24,020 — by the Jewish Scholarship Service, ad- ministered by the Jewish Vocational Service. Government, Jewish Agency Settle Project Renewal Dispute JERUSALEM (JTA) — The government and the Jewish Agency have agreed that a joint committee should be formed to work out the means for imple- menting Project Renewal, the long-range plan- for re- habilitating 160 slum areas around the country. The Cabinet formally ap- proved this agreement Spn- day by ratifying the policy document on Project Re- newal drawn up by Deputy Premier Yigael Yadin and Jerold Hoffberger, chair- man of the United Israel Appeal, the organization which appropriates funds received from the United Jewish Appeal for specific programs in Israel. Officials now hope that the organizational difficul- ties holding up Project Re- newal will be ironed out and that projects can now start on the first slum areas 'slated for improvement. The difficulties had arisen over a demand by Absorption Minister David Levy, who was re- cently given the added portfolio of the Housing and Construction Minis- try, that the Housing Ministry handle the en- tire Project Renewal and that the Jewish Agency and the fund-raising or- ganizations abroad con- fine themselves to gather- ing half of the money needed for Project Re- newal. But the UJA and the Jewish Agency had insisted that the Agency participate in the implementation of the program, including the use of foreign Jewish ex- perts. Yadin, in outlining the project to Diaspora Jews, had stressed that he wanted their knowledge and participation, not just money. The Cabinet decision fol- lowed a meeting Friday be- tween the government, the Jewish Agency and UJA representatives at Premier Menahem Begin's office, at Yadin- the which Hoffberger document was approved. According to reports last Friday, it was agreed that the Housing Ministry would be confined to building new homes in the rehabilitated areas while the Agency would build such commun- ity institutions as schools and synagogues as well supply the social work needed to help the 45, families living in the areas slated for renewal. Irving Bernstein, execu- tive vice chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, said after the Cabinet decision that he was now more confi- dent of the success of Project Renewal. Max Fisher, chairman of the Jewish Agency Board of Governors, issued a statement lauding the decision. It is with life as with a play - it matters not how long the action is spun out, but how good the acting is. ° — Seneca