THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 12 Friday, January 9, 1981 Jan. 18 Super Sunday Solicitation Starts Drive for $19;150,000 Campaign efforts continue with a series of parlor meet- ings. (Continued from Page 1) demand for services and At the same time, Zeltzer serious cutbacks are feared warned, Federation's if sufficient funds cannot be member agehcies are _allocated. Israel, faced with hard-pressed to *meet the 150 percent inflation, has. Pre-Campaign Parlor Meetings *DELUXE HOTEL TOURS *EXCITING CAMPING TRIPS * COMBINATION HOTEL . AND CAMPING TOURS* U.S A.* HAWAII * CANADA * EUROPE * ISRAEL • Separate Age Groups • 2-7 Week Itineraries DAVID HANDLEMAN 6 Grace Ave., Great Neck, N.Y. 11021 CALL TOLL FREE (800) 645-6298 any day or Ulna I CALL OR WRITE FOR FREE COLOR BROCHURE \ • HOME VISITS TORONTO VAN GOGH EXHIBIT 3 Days 2 Nights, $8 A no* Lodging, Rail & Exhibit Tickets 91.0 per person I—., • HAWAII I PALM SPRINGS 14 Days Incl. Hotel and Air From 1 $199K I 8 days incl. hotel & air from $ 449 $6. 00 I WE ARE COMMERCIAL TRAVEL SPECIALISTS I I I • TRAVEL BAZAAR I I I I I I I 1 M-F 9-5:30, Sat. 9-12 I -------------------- 1 I 29563 Northwestern Highway, Southfield ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED I 356-4500 r *Per person, double occupancy. SPECIAL undergone drastic budget cuts, and the United Israel Appeal has reached the debt limit on borrowing. If Detroit is to keep its promise to Israel and Jews in need here and abroad, "special efforts must be made to reach new con- tributors and to upgrade the level of understanding and giving by those who already contribute," said Zeltzer. Toward that end, the massive telephone solicita- tion effort called Super Sunday will take place on Jan. 18„ The one-day mobilization parallels ef- forts in 100 communities across America. The Allied Jewish Campaign and Super Sunday are getting a boost on television. The 30- and 10-second public service announcements were produced by Si- mons Michelson Zieve, Inc., and are being aired in advance of the Jan. 18 Super Sunday telephone appeal. The spots were written by SMZ's John Katz and pro- duced by Todd Bendler, with direction by Tom Parasiliti of General Tele- vision Network and audio work contributed by Ron Rose Productions. Narrated by Harry Golds- tein, the public service spots remind the viewer to sup- port the Allied Jewish Campaign "For We Are One." A meeting on behalf of the 1981 Allied Jewish Cam- paign - Israel Emergency Fund for members of Jewish Welfare Federation agency boards will take place at the West Bloomfield home of JWF President George M. Zeltzer 8 p.m. Jan. 20. Also participating in the special gathering will be 1981 Campaign General Chairmen Marvin H. Goldman and David S. Mondry. Zeltzer noted that agency leaders have a special sen- sitivity to communal needs and the importance of the Campaign in meeting those needs. He added that the commitment shown that evening will help set the 1981 Campaign pace. Meanwhile, the first of a series of parlor meet- ings to benefit the 1981 Campaign is scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Bloomfield Hills home of Alan E. Schwartz. Guest speaker at the gathering will be Wolf Blitzer, chief correspondent ' TOURS TO ISRAEL, 1981 APRIL 15-21 1- PASSOVER TOUR $1445 10-25 per person 1 Per person Including the following: • • • • Air transportation from Detroit to Israel Hotel accommodation in superior First Class Hotels Daily Israel Breakfasts Sightseeing - Hotel Taxes - Transfers RESERVE EARLY — SEATS ARE LIMITED CALL (313) 559-2770 GOLDSTEIN TRAVEL 21080 Evergreen Rd. at 11 Mile Rd., Lathrup Landing Plaza - 111K___LL_PQS..70- 00000 CC 2000 Accountants Have Israeli Guest Israel Amitai, a mass communications specialist, will be guest speaker at the 1981 Allied Jewish Cam- paign - Israel Emergency Fund Accountants Section Breakfast Caucus, to be held 9:45 a.m. Sunday at the main Jewish Community Center. IRVING SELIGMAN This weekend, Detroit's religious leaders will urge their congregants to re- spond to the telephone ap- peal with increased contri- butions to the Campaign. Hebrew and religious school children also will be told about the importance of the AJC-IEF in building a strong community. Throughout next week, potential contributors will receive Campaign litera- ture in the mail. pre- Meanwhile, ISRAEL AMITAI Presently, Amitai is engaged in the field of tele- vision production and has more than 1,000 public af- fairs and cultural programs to his credit. A native-born Israeli, his career in journalism began in Armed Forces Radio and led to editing the daily newspaper Davar and authoring magazine arti- cles, theater plays, radio scripts and other works. Fluent in six languages, he is an experienced lec- turer on Israel in com- munities throughout the world. For reservations, contact WOLF BLITZER division director Allan Gel- for the Jerusalem Post's -- fond, 965-3939. Washington, D.C. bureau, credited with starting the Wolfe to Speak train of thought that led. to Metro. Unit Egypt's President Anwar Charles S. Wolfe, execu- Sadat to his precedent- shattering decision to go to tive director of Jewish Home for Aged, will be Jerusalem in 1977. * * * guest speaker at a Met- ropolitan Division Special Women's Unit to Hear Rabin - 2- WORLD GATHERING OF JEWISH HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS - June Federman, Gloria Fires- tone, Jan Hauser, Agnes Klein, Marjorie Krasnick' and Sally Levy are vice chairmen. Jane Sherman is Cam- paign chairman;? division president is Shelby Tauber. * * * The Women's Division of the 1981 Allied Jewish Campaign - Israel Emer- gency Fund will hold a' gathering for contributors of $300 and over 12:30 p.m. Jan. 16 at the Franklin home of Dolores Gordon. Guest speaker will be Yitzhak Rabin, former prime minister of Israel. Rabin, presently a member of the Knesset, has served as his country's ambassador to Washington and _in the supreme rank of chief of the general staff and comman- der of the Israel Defense Forces during the 1967 Six-Day War. Diane J. Klein is Kadima section chairman. Associate chairman is Donna Slatkin; briefing leader Bobbie Blitz. Adviser is Diane F. Klein. Penny Blumenstein, Harriet Brent, Marjorie CHARLES WOLFE Gifts Section kickoff meeting 9:45 a.m. Sunday at United Hebrew Schools. Wolfe, recently elected executive vice president of the agency, has adminis- tered both Borman Hall and Prentis Manor for several years. He holds several ad- vanced degrees in guidance and counseling and serves as an instructor in social gerontology at Madonna College. Elected treasurer of the National Association of Jewish Homes for Aged in 1979, he also is a member of the Michigan Non-Profit Nursing Home Association and the National Geriatric Society. Jeffrey R. Kravitz is Special Gifts chairman. Serving with him are Morris Asher, Louis E. Barden, Leo Baron, Herbert Be- nson, Karl C. Berg, Kenneth Be- rtin, George Blostein, Helen Boxer, Jack Boxer, Jacob Bras- law, Abraham Burnstein, Morris Elken, Phil M. Elkus, Fred Er- lebacher, Gert W. Freund, Mor- ris Friedman, Saul H. Glosser and Arthur S. Goldberg. Also David B. Goldis, Harold W. Goodman, David Goodstein, William Graham, James Grey, Jerome B. Greenbaum, William Greenberg, Sam Gross, William Gross, Albert Gutman, Daniel Hoffer, Robert Israel, Joseph Jacobson, David A. Jaffa and Harold S. Jaffa. Also Jonathan Jaffa, Seymour Kahan, Meyer King, Louis Konick, Sol Lieder, Jeffrey Laderman, Carl R. Lichtenstein, Steven Meyers, Norman Michlin, Rabbi Bernard Moskowitz, Alan Nathan, John Nemon, David Re- disch, Nathan Rubenstein, Samuel Rudofsky, Albert Ryder, Bernard Schlussel, Edward I. Schlussel, Isadore Shrodeck, Donald R. Simon, Herman Strassburger, David Waldshan and Samuel Weiner. David Levine is Metropolitan Division chairman; associate chairman is Edward Gordon. * * Shown at the Dec. 17 Allied Jewish Campaign luncheon for women contributo'rs of $600 and over are, from left, Jane Sherman, Edie Mittenthal, guest speaker Zeev Shaham of the Jewish Agency's Insti- tute for Leadership Development, Joan Goldrath, Beth Feldman and Shelby Tauber. Books are not absolutely are; they preserve, as in a dead things, but do contain vial, the purest efficacy and a certain potency of life in extraction of the living in- them, to be as active as they tellect that bred them. —Milton should whose progeny they