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July 01, 1988 - Image 107

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-07-01

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

SHELDON
MONUMENT
COMPANY

Dr. S. Charnas

Dr. Sidney Charnas, an or-
thopedic surgeon, died June
21 at age 73.
Born in New York, Dr.
Charnas lived 70 years in
Detroit. He was graduated
summa cum laude from Nor-
thern High School. He
studied at Wayne State
University from which he was
graduated in 1935, and earn-
ed an M.D. degree in 1940 at
WSU.
Dr. Charnas interned at
Wayne Country General
Hospital, did an orthopedic
residency at Children's
Hospital in Oklahoma. He
was an orthopedic surgeon in
England and Germany dur-
ing World War II. He began a
private practice in Detroit in
1947.
He was president of the
Detroit Academy of Or-
thopedic Surgeons in 1964.
Dr. Charnas was chief of staff
of Providence Hospital in
1978 and an emeritus staff
member of Sinai Hospital. He
was an active member of Pro-
vidence Hospital's staff until
his death. He was a member
of Temple Emanu-El.
He is survived by a brother,
Dr. George; a niece, Mrs. Alan
(Maxine) Friedman of Creve
Coeur, Mo.; and a nephew, Dr.
Dale.

Bernard
Friedman

Bernard Friedman, an at-
torney with offices in
Southfield, died June 23 at
age 62.
Born in New York, Mr.
Friedman lived 45 years in
Detroit. He was the founder
and operator of Camp
Tanuga, a councilman in
Bingham Farms, past presi-
dent of the National Camping
Association and a member of
Temple Israel. Mr. Friedman
was graduated from Wayne

State University Law School.
He leaves his wife, Sharon;
three sons, Sidney Friedman,
Howard Friedman and Scott
Brennan; a brother, Sol.

1'

Jewish Agency
Maps Changes

Jerusalem (JTA) — This
year, a change in the proposed
budget of the Jewish Agency
for Israel is a portend of the
future. Rather than the sim-
ple listing of past years, a
renamed Project Renewal and
Development budget takes
center stage in the 1988-89
Jewish Agency Proposed
Budget, occupying a strategic
slice of the budgetary pie and
commanding no less than $90
million in income and
services.
The change, a fundamental
conceptual shifting of gears,
says a lot about the spirit of
the Jewish Agency today.
Overseas Jewish communi-
ties are no longer content to
simply funnel contributions
into innumerable bureau-
cratic pigeonholes in Israel.
Detroiter Jane Sherman
told The Jewish News that
changes are occurring at the
Agency and "I believe that
major changes will occur as
quickly as is possible in
Israel.
"In the U.S., you fight to ap-
prove something and then it
is implemented. In Israel,
after you get approval you
fight to get it implemented?'
Mandell Berman of Detroit,
president of the Council of
Jewish Federations, was at-
tending his first Jewish Agen-
cy Assembly. He said that the
board had "good control of the
Agency for the first time?'
Project Renewal is but one
example of a concerted effort
to bring constructive, orderly
change to the fund-distri-
bution process. Similar
changes are taking place in
many other spheres of Jewish
Agency operations.
These changes will be
manifest at the Jewish Agen-
cy Assembly, where 800 world
Jewish leaders gathered this
week to make important deci-
sions about the future direc-
tion of the agency. The dress
rehearsal for this conclave
took place last week, when
the World Zionist Organiza-
tion's Zionist General Council
convened here.
Already, major players in
the Jewish Agency have join-
ed the debate over Israel's
efforts to curb a 92 percent
dropout rate of Jews leaving
the Soviet Union on Israeli
visas.

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the National Conference of
Christians and Jews, was
honored by the United Jewish
Appeal with its Israel
Freedom Award for his ac-
tivities on behalf of the Stat€
of Israel, was active in the
Elfun Society and received its
community achievement
award. He was graduated
from the University of
Detroit.
Mr. Manko is survived by
his wife, Edith Lillian; a son,
Dr. Gary Alan of
Reisterstown, Md.; a
daughter, Mrs. Steven
(Gloria) Silverberg of
Bethesda, Md.; a brother,
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

107

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