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June 17, 1983 - Image 69

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1983-06-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Howard to Help Fleischman Drive

The community fund-
raising drive for the Edward
I. and Freda Fleischman
Residence and the Louis C.
and Edith B. Blumberg
Plaza in West Bloomfield is
accelerating this summer
under the direction of
chairman Paul Borman and
Co-chairmen Joseph H.
Jackier and Julie Levy.
Borman has announced
the appointment of Arthur
Howard to associate chair-
man of the drive. Benjamin
Frank and Myron Milgrom
will serve with him as asso-
ciate co-chairmen.
Howard has been active
in communal affairs for
many years, having served
as general chairman of the
Allied Jewish Campaign

*

ARTHUR HOWARD

and as president of the De-
troit Service Group. He has
been a member of the
Jewish Welfare Federa-
* *

Shown under construction at the Maple-Drake
site in West Bloomfield is the Jewish Home for Aged's
r--Fleischman Residence, at left, and the Hechtman
Federation Apartments , at right. The two will be con-
nected by the Blumberg Plaza social and service cen-
ter.
1

To: The Jewish News

-

17515 W. 9 Mile Rd.

Suite 865

Southfield, Mich. 48075

ViElf JUST

from

Paste in old label

tion's Board of Governors
and Executive Committee,
as well as a board member of
United Jewish Charities-
and of Fresh Air Society.
Howard currently serves on
the board of the Jewish
Home for Aged, under
whose aegis the residence
is being built.
With construction at
the Maple-Drake site
moving ahead and occu-
pancy set for February
1984, the fund drive has
already raised $3.6 mil-
lion toward its $5 million
goal. Several • major gifts
have been made in addi-
tion to those of the Fleis-
chman and Blumberg
families. Max M. Fisher,
Gus D. Newman and
Leonard N. Simons are
honorary chairmen.
According to Borman, the
community is responding
enthusiastically to the new
facility, another link in this
community's "continuum of
care" for the elderly. He
added that contributions to
the project "are a wonderful
way to make a commitment,
not just to our elderly, but to
the future of the commu-
nity."
Borman said that donors
may designate specific
rooms or areas and will be
recognized with a plaque in
that area, as well as on the
donor wall in the lobby.
Contributions are payable
over a five-year period.
Other members of the
committee include Herbert
A. Aronsson, Milton Bar-
nett, Louis Berry, Marlene
Borman, Daniel Clark,
Irwin I. Cohn, Sol R. Colton,
Marvin Danto, Burton
Farbman, Sidney I.
Feldman, Marvin H. Fleis-
chman and Kaye G. Frank.
Also, Nathan I. Goldin,
Irving Goldman, Marvin
Goldman, Irwin Green,
David B. Hermelin, Michael
Karbal, Dr. Richard
Krugel, Irving Laker,
David M. Miro, Harry Mod-
ell, Alan Must, Irving Nus-
baum and Graham Orley.
Also, Bernard Portnoy,
Dale Rands, Herber Re-
chter, • Gerald
Rosenbloom, Florine
Mark Ross, Irving Rubin,
Jack Schon, I. William
Sherr, Shelby Tauber
and Barry Yaker. Robert
A. Steinberg, president of
the Home, also is serving
on the committee.
For information on the
campaign or the residence,
call Fleischman Residence,
661-2999.

Soviet Threat

NAME

Effective Date

J

BEIRUT (ZINS) — The
Soviet ambassador to Leba-
non, Alexander Soldatov,
told a radio interviewer that
the Soviet Union would
intervene militarily on be-
half of Syria in any new war
between Syria and Leba-
non.
The two SAM-5 missile
sites in Syria are completely
controlled by 1,600 Soviet
technicians, according to
Newsweek magazine, and
are linked by satellite to
command control com-
puters in Moscow.

Simons
ons to Speak at Meeting
i
to Hel
N A ge
d F ac
lilt y
p ew



Leonard N. Simons will
be the guest speaker at a
major fund-raiding meeting
for Fleischman Residence
and Blumberg Plaza June
27 at the home of Irwin and
Bethea Green in Franklin.
. The 8 p.m. meeting and
reception is open to major
contributors to the Jewish
Home for Aged's new
facility, under construction
at Maple-Drake in West
Bloomfield.
Simons, whose long-
standing leadership has
touched nearly every seg-
ment of the community, is
an honorary fund-raising
chairman for the project. A
board member of the Home
for many years, Simons was
instrumental in the estab-
lishment of the Borman
Hall and Prentis. Manor
facilities.
Serving with Simons as
honorary chairmen are
Max M. Fisher and Gus D.
Newman. The fund drive
is chaired by Paul Bor-
man, with co-chairmen
Joseph H. Jackier and
Julie Levy. Arthur How-
ard is associate chair-
man, and Benjamin
Frank' and Myron Mil-
grom are associate co-
chairmen.
The June 27 meeting will

Aliya Up

NEW YORK (JTA) —
The number of people who
made aliya from North
America during May was
182, as compared to 131 in
May 1982.

LEONARD SIMONS

help move the drive toward
its Aug. 31 target date for
completion of major gifts.
For information, call the
Jewish Home for Aged,
532-7112.

Hineni Program
Aids Former
Cult Members

MIAMI — Hineni of
Florida has opened a half-
way house for people at-
tempting to leave cults or
missionary groups.
The Marcie-Dawson Hi-
neni House will accept those
who voluntarily wish to
give up their affiliation
with groups such as Jews for
Jesus or the Church of Rev.
Sun Myung Moon
(Moonies).
For information on the
program, contact Hineni of
Florida, P.O. Box 630763,
Miami, Fla. 33163.

Friday, lune 17, 1983 69

AJC Explores
Ethnicity, Mental
Health Link

NEW YORK — Mental-
health organizations in De-
troit and other cities are
using the American Jewish
Committee's programs on
the relationship between
ethnicity and mental
health, according to the
AJCommittee's Institute on
Pluralism and Group Iden-
tity, the developer of the
programs.
Some of the programs
focus on "Ethnotherapy
with Jews," a 42-minute
videotape. Ethnotherapy is
a recently developed
therapy aimed at treating
problems that stem directly
from patients' feelings
about their own racial, reli-
gious and ethnic back-
grounds.
Among the organizations
that have used the pro-
grams are the American
Group Psychotherapy Asso-
ciation, the American Or-
thopsychiatric Association
and Jewish Family Service
organizations in several
cities. -

BB Israel
Tour for Seniors

WASHINGTON — Bnai
Brith International has in-
troduced a new, four-month
work/study program in Is-
rael, called ARI (Active Re-
tirees in Israel).
The program is intended
for members of Bnai Brith
and Bnai Brith Women be-
tween the ages of 50 and 68
and will begin Nov. 29 and
continue through April 1.

So you tried a

few different ways
to spend your advertising
money and now your sales curve
has dropped completely off the chart.

ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME YOU STARTED
USING THE MOST EFFECTIVE ONE .
THE JEWISH NEWS?

III

There are a lot of ways you
can spend your hard-earned
advertising dollars and some
of them can be very glamor-
ous and quite exotic. But
that's not what your business
needs! You need results .. .
and The Jewish News can

still deliver the customers and
lots of them for a lot less than
most of the others. Newspaper
advertising still provides the
kind of good, basic selling that
really gets the job done. Go
with the winner ...newspaper
advertising!

Call 4244833
THE JEWISH NEWS



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