62 Friday, February 8, 1980 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Campaign Workers Planning Meetings, Phone-A-Thon Sociologist B.Z. Sobel, dean of the faculty of social sciences at Haifa Univer- sity, will speak at the last in a series of parlor meetings to benefit the 1980 Allied Jewish Campaign - Israel Emergency Fund. The Wednesday meeting, for contributors of $2,500 and more, will begin at 8 p.m. at the Farmington Hills home of Irving R. Seligman, general chair- man with David Handle- _man of the 1980 Campaign. • • • Women to Do Israeli Shopping The Kadima Section of the Allied Jewish Cam- paign - Israel Emergency Fund Women's Division will experience the budget- ing problems of an Israeli homemaker at its meeting Thursday. The meeting be- gins at 9:30 a.m. at the Jewish Community Center. con- Participants, tributors of $300 or more, will assume the identity of an Israeli woman from one of several economic strata and will plan a menu for the woman's family. They will then have the opportunity to "shop" for food items. The meeting room will be deco- rated like a "Supersol," an A number of events have been held on behalf of the Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund in recent weeks. Shown in the top photograph, at an Industrial and Automotive Division parlor meeting, are from left, Earl G. Grant, host Marvin H. Goldman, Melvin Wallace, Mrs. Goldman, Philip Minkin and guest speaker Moshe Arens. In the second photo- graph, at a Junior Division Women's Pre-Campaign brunch, are Louise Spector, Susan Citrin, Kenneth J. Safran and Marcy Feldman. The bottom photograph shows a Women's Division Kadima Section meeting with Marilyn Katz, Bobbie Blitz, Rissa Winkelman, Donna Maddin, Margie Federman, Sally Krugel, Sue Marwil and Jan Hauser. Dick Shawn Will Entertain at Hillel Day School Benefit Actor-comedian Dick Shawn will headline the entertainment at Hillel Day School's 11th annual bene- fit concert 8 p.m. March 23 at Ford Auditorium. Shawn writes, choreog- raphs, stages and directs his own performances. He began his career on televi- sion and quickly graduated to the night club circuit. Subsequently he turned to legitimate theater where he starred in "The Egg," with Joan Hackett; "Fade Out-Fade-In," opposite Carol Burnett; "I'm Sol- omon" and "A Musical Jub- liee." He later replaced Zero Mostel on Broadway in the starring role in "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum." Shawn has appeared in several motion pictures including, "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World," _ . . . DICK SHAWN "Wake Me When It's Over," "Penelope," "What Did You Do in the War Daddy?" and "The Producers." For information about the concert or reservations, call the concert office, 851-2398; or Hillel Day School, 851- 2394. . . _ Israeli supermarket. Coffee and Israeli snacks will be served. Janet Levine, the di- vision's vice president for education, will speak. •1 • Young Leadership to Hear Rosenbaum Aaron D. Rosenbaum, di- rector of research for the American Israeli Public Af- fairs Committee (AIPAC), will speak at a public meet- ing sponsored by the Detroit area United Jewish Appeal Young Leadership Cabinet, 8 p.m. Feb. 16, at Adat Shalom Synagogue. The meeting is the second in a series of three designed to promote understanding of current issues in the Mid- dle East. Rosenbaum will present the historical basis for Israel's position. A graduate of the Uni- versity of Michigan, Rosenbaum has written extensively on the Arab- Israel conflict, oil, arms and the Palestinians. He helped prepare two major books on the Mid- dle East and edited a third. He is a contribut- ing editor of Near East Report, and co-authored a Near East Report spe- cial survey, "Myths and Facts," which has sold more than 300,000 copies. The meeting is being sponsored by United Jewish Charities through the Isi- dore Sobeloff Community Service Fund. For information, call Michael Berke at the Jewish Welfare Federation, 965-3939. • • Junior Division Phone-A-Thon The Allied Jewish Cam- paign - Israel Emergency Fund Junior Division will hold an orientation for Phone-A-Thon workers, 10 a.m. Feb. 17, in LaMed Au- ditorium of United Hebrew Schools. Guest speakers will be Joel Gershenson and Dr. Richard Krugel. Gershen- son, a regional chairman of the United Jewish Appeal's Young Leadership Cabinet, is a member of the boards of the Fresh Air Society and Jewish Federation Apart- ments and is a member of the executive committee of Adat Shalom Synagogue. Dr. Krugel, Detroit area chairman for the UJA Young Leadership Cabinet, recently led a seven-day mission to Is- Isaac Goodman, Carpenter, 101 Mark R. Hauser and rael as part of a new lead- ership training program Henry P. Lee are chairmen for the Jewish Welfare of the Attorneys Section. Federation. He is co- Edward D. Gold is co- chairman of the Allied chairman. David K. Page Jewish Campaign Medi- and Harry L. Silverman cal Physicians Section chair the Professional Serv- and a member of the ice Division. •• • board of the Fresh Air Society. Women Plan The Junior Division's Israel Mission Phone-A-Thon will con- The United Jewish Ap- tinue through Feb. 19. peal Young Women's Lead- Caryl L. Scheuer is ership Cabinet is planning a chairman of the Phone-A- mission to Israel for busi- Thon Section. ness and career women • • • March 9-19. Attorneys Section The mission itinerary Luncheon Feb. 18 The Attorneys Section of will be geared to the inter- ests of working women and the Campaign will hold its will include a visit to a annual luncheon meeting army base, inter- women's Feb. 18 at Cong. Shaarey views with women members Zedek. The 12:15 p.m. of the Knesset and seminars luncheon will follow with Israeli business and cocktails at 11:45 a.m. career women. Guest speaker will be Shalmi Barmore, director of For information, call the the Yad Vashem Remembr- Women's Division at the ance Authority in Jewish Welfare Federation, Jerusalem. 965-3939. Actress Hanna Rovina Dies ISAAC GOODMAN Isaac J. Goodman, a mas- ter craftsman who retired at age 78, died Feb. 2 at age 101. Born in Russia, Mr. Goodman lived 75 years in Detroit. He was a founder of the Detroit carpenters' local of the American Federation of Labor. He made many of the hand-crafted wood mould- ings that went into luxury cars in the early years of De- troit's automobile industry. He resided at 19192 Meyers, Detroit. Mr. Goodman is survived by a son, Harry; two daugh- ters, Mrs. William (Hilda) Nash and Mrs. Theodore (Lillian) Gersten of Scottsdale, Ariz.; six grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. William Stein, Nobelist Dies 7 Nazis Protest Ferndale Decision Seven persons dressed as Nazi stormtroopers briefly demonstrated and distrib- uted literature in downtown Ferndale Saturday after- noon before police ordered them to leave because they did not have city permits. The members of the SS DR. WILLIAM STEIN Action Party, based in NEW YORK — Dr. Westland, were protesting the U.S. Court of Appeals William H. Stein, the Roc- order that the Ferndale kefeller University School District desegregate biochemist who shared the Grant Elementary in Royal 1972 Nobel Prize in chemis- try for his studies on the Oak Township. A police officer said, "One chemical structure of a pan- guy walked up to them and creatic enzyme, died Feb. 2 said, Tm Jewish. What are at age 68. Dr. Stein was a trustee of you going to do about it?' Another man threatened to Montefiore Hospital and a call up his fellow VFW member of the medical (Veterans of Foreign Wars) advisory board of the He- members and have them brew University-Hadassah Medical School in Israel. 'take care of the Nazis." TEL AVIV (JTA) — Hanna Rovina, the first lady of the Hebrew theater, died Feb. 2 at age 90. Miss Rovina was one of the founders of the Habima Theater in Moscow in 1917 and then came to Tel Aviv with the Habima in 1928. She continued to be one of its leading actors until suf- fering a stroke last year. Her most memorable role was that of Lea in "The Dybbuk," which she created in 1923 and continued to play until 1963. Hanna Rovina as Lea in the 1922 Moscow Habima production of "The Dybbuk." Saratov before moving to Moscow in 1916 to study Born in Minsk in October acting with Stanislaysky. 1889, she started out to be a Miss Rovina received many kindergarten teacher. She honors and decorations dur- was supervisor of an insti- tute for refugee children in ing her long career in Israel. Spektor, Zionist Pioneer, an Histadrut Founder 71 , Naim Spektor, who was one of the founders of the Histadrut Labor Zionist movement, died in Tel Aviv Wednesday. Funeral serv- ices were held there Thurs- day. He was 71. Surviving are his wife, Dvora; two sons, Ami Spek- tor, manager of-the Detroit office of the El Al Israel Air- lines, and Aviva Spektor; six grandchildren and two brothers. Born in Russia, Mr. Spektor came to the Jewish National Home in Palestine at age 15. In his continuous 56-year resi- dence in Tel Aviv he was among the pioneer Labor Zionists who founded Histadrut and he was active in halutziut, pioneering in the integra- tion of settlers in the Jewish homeland. He was the organizer and plant director of Haargaz wooden box manufacturing company until his recent re- tirement. Yona Yagol Dies, Israeli Journalist TEL AVIV (JTA) — Yona Yagol, the well-known journalist and author, and an ardent Labor Zionist spokesman who founded in Poland the Gordonia movement named after A.D. Gordon, has died here at age 68. A close associate of the late Pinhas Lavon, Mr. Yagol left Mapai when Lavon left the Labor gov- ernment in 1955 over charges that he was in- volved in an Israeli spy ring in Egypt. But Mr. Yagol re- turned to the Labor Party in which he subsequently held various key positions. He was also the representative of Histadrut in the Euro- pean Trade Union Council. After the Likud victory in 1978, Mr. Yagol wrote two books, both controversial. One, "The End of the Hegemony," analyzed the reason for Labor's defeat, and the other, a fictional story, dealt with the possi- bility of a takeover of the Temple Mount by Jewish militants resembling the Jewish Defense League.