THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 64 Friday, August 21, 1982 Leadership Mobilized for Israel Emergency Fund - AJCampaign., With Preparatory Briefings Sept. 12 1981, served as division chairman in 1982. He is a member of Federation's Culture and Education budgeting and planning division, and is on the boards of the. Detroit Service Group and the Jewish Family Service. Mrs. Harris was a 1982 co-chairman of the Profes- sional Service Division and a 1981 associate Campaign chairman. She is on the board of directors and Endowment Fund Commit- tee of United Jewish Charities. A former president of Federation's Women's Division, Mrs. Harris served for a number of years on Federation's Board of Governors and Executive Committee. The appointment of chairmen for the profes- sional and Metropolitan di- visions of the 1983 Allied Jewish Campaign and Is- rael Emergency Fund has been announced by General Chairman Joel D. Tauber. The divisions are headed over all by Earl G. Grant. The chairmen are Paul D. Borman and Shirley Harris, Professional Service; and Dr. Stephan R. Morse and Dr. Marvin D. Siegel, Pro- fessional Health. Edward Gordon is chairman of the Metropolitan Division. Grant served as chairman of the nine Campaign di- visions in 1982 and was a 1981 pre-Campaign chair- man. He was chairman of the Industrial and. Automo- tive Division in 1979 and 1980. Grant is a member of the boards of the Jewish Welfare Federation, Tamarack Hills Authority and the Detroit Service Group. He also serves on the Cash Mobilization and Col- lection Review Committees. Borman, a co-chairman of the Professional Serv- ice Division in 1980 and GRANT Dr. Morse was co- chairman of the Profes- sional Health Division in 1982 and is a former chair- man of the Osteopathic Physicians Section. He is a member of Federation's Cash Mobilization and Col- lection Review Committees, and serves on the board of United Hebrew Schools. A 1982 chairman of the Professional Health Di- vision, Dr. Siegel was a chairman of the Medical Physicians Section. He is a member of Federation's Community Services budgeting and planning di- vision. Gordon is chairman of the Metropolitan Division, which receives Campaign BORMAN HARRIS contributions from frater- nal organizations and groups, as well as from indi- viduals not represented in the other professional and trades divisions. Gordon was his division's chairman 'in 1982 and is a former asso- ciate chairman and Special Gifts section chairman. He is a board member of the De- troit Service Group. * * Workers' Rally, Briefing Sept. 12 As momentum builds for the special Israel Emer- gency Fund and 1983 Allied Jewish Campaign, plans are under way for a worker's rally and briefing session Sept. 12 at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. "you can't have the new legitimacy if the U.S. things you value on the reverses its position against recognition. cheap," said Will. More than 75 women Will described the PLO as gathered at the home of "an anarchy of competing Suzy Honigman gave a terrorist organizations. standing ovation to Will, This is what the world whose candid criticism would have Israel negotiate ranged from American with." foreign policy to television As far as Israel's value to news coverage of the war in the United States as an is- Lebanon. land of democracy in the Of Israel's tough prime Middle East: "Israel is the minister, he said that twice only place (in that area) "Begin didn't live up to the where we know tomorrow caricature of Begin." The we can land an airplane." first time was when he handed back the Sinai to More Renewal Egypt ("Sadat put it in his back pocket and said, 'Fine, Areas Targeted now what do we negotiate?') JERUSALEM (JNI) — and the second when Israel The Ministerial Committee held back from going into on Social Affairs decided to west Beirut to finish off the include 11 more areas in PLO. Project Renewal recently, "If Israel had gone into bringing the total of west Beirut, she would have targeted neighborhoods and had three days of bad press towns to 70. Ninety addi- and that's it." The delay re- tional areas slated for re- sulted in more suffering, he newal await funding. said. While the Jewish Agency Will insisted that only Is- rael's pressure — not U.S. budget for Project Renewal special envoy Philip Habib this year almost doubled to — managed to get Syrian about $73 million, match- missiles out of the Bekaa ing government allocations Valley. And if Israel had dropped in real terms. The 11 additional areas George Will is shown addressing the Allied yielded to American insis- Jewish Campaign Women's Division pre-Campaign tence, "not one PLO are sections of Holon, section. In the bottom photograph, from left, are the member would have left Dimona, Rehovot, Kiryat women who helped plan the meeting: Jane Sherman, Lebanon." He warned that Gat, Gan Yavne, Migdal Marion Handleman, Barbara Berry, Marlene Bor- while the PLO may have Ha'emek, Nez Ziona, Lod man, Suzy Honigman, Dolores Farber and Diane F. been wiped out militarily, a Bnei Brak and the set- "sanitized" PLO may gain tlements' of Shlomi and Klein. Kfar Yona. They must be approved by the Jewish Agency's board of gover- nors, a process that could take several months. The committee also voted to expand renewal activities in Kiryat Shmona, Beit Shemesh, Tirat Hacarmel, Tel Aviv, Ashkelon and Rishon Lezion. . Women's Division pre- Campaign sections, brought together because of the spe- cial emergency fundraising. The 1983 Campaign - Israel Emergency Fund will help Israel meet its humanita- rian needs in the wake of the war in Lebanon. The great price that Is- rael has had to pay for peace and security, the loss of its young men in five wars since the state was established 34 years ago — these must impress upon Americans that An in-depth session on Monday provided briefing for division chairmen and worker trainers. DR. SIEGEL Will Says Israel May Have Saved the U.S. Declaring his support for Israel "because it is con- gruent with American interests," journalist George Will told the Women's Division of the Al- lied Jewish Campaign: "The issue isn't whether it is possible for the United States to save Israel but will Israel save the United States by demonstrating the costs of freedom." Will, respected television commentator and columnist for Newsweek magazine, addressed a meeting of two The event, to be held from 8:30 a.m. through noon, will bring together hundreds of Campaign division volun- teers in preparation for community-wide _solicita- tion. Rabbi Herbert A. Friedman, former executive vice chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, will be guest speaker. Following his presentation, division chairmen and members of the Worker Training Com- mittee will meet with di- vision worker groups to provide details on the spe- cial needs of the 1983 Cam- paign. Ruth Broder and Michael Feldman are chairmen of the Worker Training Committee. Committee members in- clude Peter Alter, David Aronow, Susan Citrin, Jeffrey Cole, James Deutchman, Marcy Feldman, Stanley Frankel, Joel Gershen- son, Dr. Darryl Goldberg, Earl Grant, Dr. Dan Guyer, Dr. David Harol/ Shirley Harris, Dr. Ma_ tin Hart and Mark Hauser. Also included are Lawr- ence Jackier, Jonathan Jaffa, Dennis Kayes, Mic- key Kole, Dr. Richard Krugel, Sally Krugel, Ellen Labes, Linda Lee, Janet Levine, Michael Maddin, Spencer Minns, Ronald Mitnick, Edie Mittenthal and Robert Naftaly. Also, Norman Pappas, Michael Perlman, Harold Provizer, Ronald Riback, Dulcie Rosenfeld, James Safran, Kenneth Safran, Neil Satovsky, Robert Shapiro, Jane Sherman, Robert Steinberg and How- ard Tapper. Journalist Kalb to Speak at Two Campaign Meetings Broadcast journalist Marvin Kalb will address two major meetings on be- half of the 1983 Allied Jewish Campaign and spe- cial Israel Emergency Fund on Wednesday. Campaign contributors of $5,000 and more will gather at 7:45 p.m. at Adat Shalom Synagogue. At 12:30 p.m. that day, Kalb also will speak at the Franklin home of Helen Zuckerman to con- tributors of $1,500 through Lebanon Tourism Seen Gaining After Invasion NEW YORK (JTA) — Abraham Sharir, Israel's Minister of Tourism, • has predicted that once the Lebanese crisis is over, American tourists will be able to go on "package tours to Egypt, Israel and Leba- non." Addressing some 120 travel agents from the New York area at a reception at the Regency Hotel last week, the Israeli Minister said that in recent weeks the Lebanese - Israeli bor-, der has been open for tourists from both coun- tries. He said that Ameri- can tourists can come now and "visit the pyramids in Egypt then come to visit the Holy Places in Israel and from there continue to enjoy the casinos of Lebanon." Sharir said, however, that the war in Lebanon, which started June 6, has reduced the number of American tourists to Israel by about five percent this summer compared with the same period last year. the campaign Women's Di- vision. An authority on U.S. foreign policy, Kalb reports regularly for CBS network television and radio news. In nearly 30 years, he has covered such major events as the war in Vietnam and the Cuban missile crisis and has studied the administra- tions of six presidents. His reporting has involved ac- companying several U.S. presidents and State De- partment officials overseas for summit meetings. Author of a number of books and newspaper arti- cles, Kalb has received sev- eral awards for foreign news interpretation. He has lec- tured throughout the U.S., Europe, Japan and the Mid- dle East on this country's role in the Egyptian - Israeli peace process, the U.S. role in the Middle East under different administrations, and other areas of foreign policy. For information on the meetings,. contact Cam- paign Director Michael Berke at the Jewish Wel- fare Federation, 965-3939.