8
Friday, October 26, 1984
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
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LOCAL NEWS
A Federation salute for Frankel
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Community Service at the 58th
annual meeting of the Jewish
Welfare Federation, held at Adat
,Shalom Synagogue.
Close friend and past recipient
George Stutz presented the
award. Stutz told the meeting how
Fred M. Butzel was concerned in
the 1940s about replacing the
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Three hundred and fifty Jewish
communal leaders threw a party
for Samuel Frankel on Monday,
expressing thanks for 40 years of
dedicated effort on behqlf of the
Jewish community of metropoli-
tan Detroit.
Frankel was presented the But-
zel Award for Distinguihed
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News Editor
Mile & Coolidge
547-9669
Daily 9:00-6:00
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HOUSE of SHUTTE
Samuel Frankel listens as George Stutz reads Frankel's Butzel Award
citation. Federation President Joel Tauber is seated at right.
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aging volunteer leadership of the
Federation. "But it was at that
time — the beginning of our $1
million (Allied Jewish) Cam-
paigns — that Samuel Frankel
and other new leaders were
emerging."
Stutz listed Frankel's many ac-
complishments and service with
the Jewish Welfare Federatior
and its agencies. Frankel re-
sponded by calling his involve-
ment with the Detroit Jewish
community "a real romance."
He included among the major
communal milestones the open-
ing of Sinai -Hospital in 1952, the
construction of the Jewish Com-
munity Center at Meyers and
Curtis and construction of the
Jewish Center in West Bloom-
field.
He said a 1950s population
study had predicted that the
Jowiah community would be_cen-
tered at Seven Mile and Green-
field in 1970. "How wrong we
were," Frankel commented, not-
ing that the community had to
build two main centers within 17
years.
Frankel called working with
his son, Stanley, one of his
greatest thrills in communal serv-
ice. Frankel served as chairman of
the Allied Jewish Campaign in
1972-1973 and Stanley Frankel is
co-chairng the 1985 Campaign.
Frankel also lauded the other
members of his family, especially
wife Jean, for their support dur-
ing his four decades of service.
In the brief business portion o
the annual meeting, the Federa-
tion conducted elections. Re-
elected officers included Joel D.
Tauber, president; Ruth Broder,
Dr. Conrad Giles, Thomas I.
Klein, David K. Page and Jack A.
Robinson, vice presidents; and
Wayne L. Feinstein, secretary.
Mark E. Schlussel was elected
treasurer.
Re-elected to one-year terms on
the executive committee were
Dulcie Rosenfeld, Alan E.
Schwartz, Jane Sherman, Fried
Stollman and Bruce E. Thal.
Maxwell Jospey, Louis Berry and
Carolyn Greenberg were elected
to at-large vacancies.
Re-elected to the board of gov-
ernors were Dr. Leon Fill and
Schlussel. Elected to three-year
terms were Peter Alter, David
Hermelin, Janet Levine, Rabbi M.
Robert Syme, Marvin H.
Goldman, Benjamin H. Frank and
Page.
To conclude his first term as
president of Federation, Tauber
gave a novel annual report —
multi-media slide presentation
entitled Partners for Life. Mem-
bers of the Detroit community de-
scribed life at the Hechtman Fed-
eration Apartments, a summer
teen trip to Ramle, Israel, the dis-
placed homemakers' program and
a mission to Czechoslovakia,
Ethiopia and Russia.
Tauber said Partners for Life
illustrated the theme and philos-
ophy of Federation, aiming to
"bring the whole community to-
gether, to carry that to our people
throughout the world, to involve
everyone in the community."
,441Nmeglitittiw it.411