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NEWS Agencies' Increase Continued from Page 8 elude the Fresh Air Society, United Hebrew Schools- Midrasha, Detroit's three Jewish day schools and the Jewish Community Center. Local agencies in the commu- nity services category will re- ceive $2,188,182, an increase of $176,844. This sum will help meet the needs of elderly and dis- advantaged, as well as those re- quiring counseling and voca- tional assistance. Of particular concern are developments at the Jewish Home for Aged, whose residents are older, more frail and less able to pay for services than in the past. Federation's in- creased subvention to the Home (up $100,000) reflects the declin- ing number of non-Medicaid clients, as well as mounting nurs- ing costs. The Federation board approved an allocation of $202,624 for Rus- sian resettlement services (up $4,000 over 1984) and $387,000 to the Jewish Community Coun- cil (up $37,000). A total of $578,659 went to cap- ital funds (up $177,251) to help Federation and its agencies plan for substantial building needs in the coming five years. Detroit is one of the few communities in the country with a capital reserve fund. Twenty national agencies re- ceived $598,280 (up $28,460) for the coming year. They include two new beneficiaries, the Na- tional Jewish Resource Center, headed by Rabbi Irving Green- berg and dealing with educa- tional concerns, and the Center for Jewish Community Studies, a Jerusalem-based think tank headed by former Detroiter Dr. Daniel Elazar. Other national beneficiaries include the American Jewish Committee, the National Confer- ence on Soviet Jewry and the Joint Cultural Appeal. The sum allocated to HIAS, Jewish Telegraphic Agency and the American-Israel Cultural Foundation was $126,000. Re- duced funding for HIAS, the He- brew Immigrant Aid Society, re- flects the continued decline in numbers of Soviet Jews allowed to emigrate. The lengthy budgeting process this year was under the leader- ship of James August, chairman of the Conference of Division Charimen; and the following: Culture and Education: Peter M. Alter, chairman, and Dr. Dan Guyer, Allan Nachman and Mar- vin Novick, associate chairmen; Community Services: Stuart E. Hertzberg, chairman, and Har- vey Gordon, Edythe Jackier and Jessie Stern, associate chairmen; National and Community Rela- tions Agencies: Lawrence S. Jac- kier, chairman, and Mark R. Hauser and Beverly Peterman, associate chairmen; and Capital Needs: Hugh Greenberg, chair- man, and Herbert Sillman and Jerome Halperin, associate chairmen. The process this year included additional communal input at this spring's Town Meeting pro- gram at the Jewish Community Center. Peter Alter told The Jewish News he believes the "process of consensus" is working well. "There are no revolutionary changes" in the allocations. "Change occurs gradually, and I think that's right. In the final analysis I think we've been very successful." Alter said the allocations fol- lowed no formula. "We tried to evaluate in a concerned and realistic way and look at each agency's particular needs and particular problems." As examples, he cited in- creased funding for Yeshivat Akiva, which has a long-term debt problem, and the problems of the Home for the Aged. Alter credited the Max M. Fisher Jewish Community Foun- dation for many innovative pro- grams at local agencies. Pilot programs funded by the founda- tion have a proven record when the agency boards must decide on their value and funding after the foundation funding has run its course. The foundation currently funds 10 programs totaling $200,000. Some of these are the in-home re- spite care program at Jewish Family Service, Fresh Air Society's Teen Israel Travel Mis- sion, the Community Network for Jewish Singles at the Jewish Community Center and the Jewish Information Service. Lecture Series Sparks Protest Tel Aviv (JTA) — The latest incident in Israel's ongoing "kul- turkampf" — the insistence by ultia-Orthodox Jews that the secular community conform to their religious demands — oc- curred outside the Habima Thea- ter building in Tel Aviv Saturday morning when a strong force of helmeted police and border police armed with clubs and shields acted to prevent a riot. The Orthodox, angered by the regular Saturday morning lec- ture series which began at the Habima Theater earlier this month, marched from their quar- ter a considerable distance away to hurl abuse at ticket-holders, journalists and photographers and curses at the police who formed a barrier which prevented them from reaching the theater. The police also kept in check a counter demonstration by secular Jews sponsored by the Citizens Rights Movement (CRM). Mayor Shlomo Lehat affirmed that the weekly lecture series will be held as scheduled. He said the lectures and panel dis- cussions do not violate the Sab- bath and the Habima Theater is not in an Orthodox neighborhood. Ties Endorsed New York (JTA) — Fifty-four percent of Americans oppose a reduction of ties with Israel ac- cording to a recent telephone poll conducted by Chilton Research Services Inc., of Radnor, Pa. and supervised by ABC News.