COMMUNITY RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer F Ashley Bloom, Alexandra Rabiinowitz and Jeremy Sasson, children from the Jewish Community Center's Child Development Center, show off the VCR the center won for its participation in the Scott Paper Co. educational drive, "Learning Tools for Schools." Travers Will Perform At Campaign Closing The 1989 Allied Jewish Campaign will conclude with an event for all Campaign volunteers and contributors on April 12 at Thmple Israel. The 7 p.m. program will feature singer/human rights activist Mary Travers. A cocktail buffet will precede the program, and a dessert recep- tion will follow. There is a charge for the evening, and all attendees must have made their contribution to the 1989 Campaign. Campaign Chairmen Jane Sherman and Paul Borman said volunteers will be mak- ing an effort to enroll every member of the community in the fund-raising drive. Several "Countdown to Closing" telethons have been scheduled to record as many pledges as possible by April 12. "The more pledges we have by the Campaign closing, the more accurate the numbers will be when it comes time to allocate Allied Jewish Campaign funds," said Borman. Sherman added than when a contributor makes a pledge, they have the option of defer- red billing. "They'll have un- til December to pay it off," she said. This year, Borman and Sherman will announce the recipient of the 1989 Corn- munity Achievement Award to the Campaign division which has recorded the highest percentage of pledges over the past three months. The name of the winning division will be permanently displayed on a Mary Travers plaque at the Jewish Welfare Federation's Fred M. Butzel building. The highlight of this year's closing - event will be a talk and performance by Mary Travers. Long recognized for her efforts on behalf of Soviet Jewry, Travers' song "Light One Candle" became the theme for the Soviet Jewry rally in Washingotn, D.C., in 1986. As a member of the Peter, Paul and Mary folksinging group, she has entertained au- diences around the world. Affiliated with the Washington-based Interna- tional Center for Development Policy, Travers has traveled and spoken extensively on behalf of human rights. She visited the Soviet Union, where she met with a number of Jewish families. our Detioit-area men are forming Michigan's first chapter of the Friends of the IDF (Israel Defense Forces), the American fundraising part- ner to Israel's Association for the Well-Being of Soldiers (Aguda Lema'an Hachayal). The organization, unof- ficially known as the "USO of Israel", provides social, recreational and educational services to the Jewish state's men and women in uniform and also provides summer camps for IDF widows and orphans. Morton L. Feldman is chair- man and director of the Detroit-based Friends of the IDF State of Michigan. Other founding members of the chapter are Jay Abramson, vice president; Harvey Kline, secretary and Jerry Gold, treasurer. Friends of the IDF has chapters in New York, Los Angeles, Miami and Chicago, with new chapters in Cleveland, Minneapolis, St. Louis and San Diego. "I feel it is necessary to lend our support to the IDF at this time because it has become increasingly clear to me how lonely and difficult being a defender of Israel in the Defense Forces has become," said Feldman. "Before, Israel was a David in a sea of Goliaths. Now, sud- denly, according to the world media covering the intifada, Israel is the Goliath, and that's simply not true. I feel so deeply that we need to do whatever we can to help Israel's troops keep their morale up, what with this terrible situation that exists." Feldman is chairman of Classic Optical, the largest importer of Israeli-made op- tical frames in the United States, serves on the boards of both the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce and the Michigan Region-AIPAC (American Israel Public Af- fairs Committee) and has been active in Jewish federa- tion work both in Detroit and New York. "It would seem to me these lonely soldiers are getting a bum rap for really defending themselves against warfare. Really, despite the intifada, there's no lessening of the threat of war along the Lebanese border, or with Syria and the Golan Heights. "Detroit is known nation- wide as one of the most generous communities in the country and this cause is so important because the defense of Israel is the No. 1 insurer of the survival of Israel. These young men and women every day put their lives on the line for the defense of their country," he said. "In this era of budget cuts and talk of budget reductions, it becomes increasingly more difficult to provide human services for the IDF. "We realize there's no lack of worthwhile causes to. put Morton Feldman: IDF bum rap. our efforts toward, and that's one of the big reasons we've established realistic fundrais- ing goals for the IDF," Feldman said. Noting that the national Friends of IDF goal is $2 million for 1989, and figuring the Michigan Jewish popula- tion at 75,000, Feldman said the new chapter's goal would be to raise an average of $1 per person. "Of course, if our first member contributed the first $75,000, all we'd do is double our goal to help these people in Israel who need our help so desperately," Feldman said. He said in the last few years, about 135 Detroiters have contributed to Friends of the IDF projects. These include: • summer camps for soldiers on leave for rest and recreation, from $2,400 for a platoon of 30 soldiers to $15,000 for a battalion; • hitchhiking stations enabling IDF members to stay out of the weather while awaiting rides, $5,000 if built with solar lighting; • gymnasiums at military bases, $7,500 each; • USO-type clubs on bases, from $6,000 to $15,000; • furniture for the clubs, $4,000 per room; • summer camp at Netanya for widows and orphans, ser- ving 2,500 people in five one- week periods, $100,000. The IDF helps fund a soldiers' home in Haifa for ag- ed and incapacitated IDF members. A planned addition will cost $1.5 million, Feldman said, and two new homes are planned, one in Eilat ($4.5 million) and the other in Tel Aviv ($10 million). Feldman, who served in the U.S. Army as a radar specialist in the mid-1950s, recalls being stationed on a "lonely base in the North Sea for 1 1/2 years with 50 other men." He also lost a cousin during Israel's War for In- dependence — one of 80 Americans killed in 1948. ❑ Hillel Names Chairmen Of Annual Fund-Raiser Hillel Day School an- nounces Barbra Chaitin, Martin Gene and Sonia Pone are the chairmen for its an- nual dinner May 10 at Adat Shalom Synagogue. The din- ner is the culmination of the school's annual giving campaign. All three dinner chairmen are Hillel parents and active board members. Mrs. Chaitin is chairman of Hillel's special events committee and the Sinai Guild financial secretary. Gene is active with many of Hillel's fund-raising endeavors and volunteers his time with the Jewish Federa- tion Apartments. Mrs. Pone is an executive committee member of Hillel, a board member of Congrega- tion Shaarey Zedek and is ac- tive with the Jewish Associa- tion for Retarded Citizens and the Professional Division of Jewish Welfare Federation. Mrs. Sadie Cohn will be the honoree. Rita Haddow and Judge Avern Cohn are honorary chairmen. Special guest speaker will be Dennis Prager. For information, call Mar- cia Fishman, 851-2394. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 45 OMMUNIT Four Detroiters Organize Friends Of IDF Organization