COMMUNITY Campaign Closing At JCC On Thursday The National Council of Young Israel will honor Fayga Dombey with the Shofar Award at a banquet next week in New York. Dombey, of Southfield, will receive the national award for her work on behalf of the Detroit Metropolitan Coun- cil of Young Israel. The daughter of Rabbi Mayer Israel and Lois Her- man of New York, Dombey settled in Oak Park when she married her husband, David Dombey. The city at the time had no synagogues or day schools. Fayga and Dave Dombey were among the founders in 1952 of Young Israel of Oak- Woods, which started as a minyan in private homes then moved two years later to its own building. At Young Israel of Oak-Woods, Dombey has served on the board of directors and as sec- retary, banquet chairman, journal campaign chairman, sisterhood president, vice president of programming and donor lunch chairman. Dombey, who twice receiv- ed the Woman of the Year Award from Young Israel of Oak-Woods, was instrumen- tal in the establishment of Akiva Hebrew Day School. A founder of Akiva's twelfth- Generations Concert Is Set For March 29 The sixth annual Dor L'Dor concert will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 29 at Adat Shalom. The program is jointly spon- sored by the National Coun- cil of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section, the Jewish Community Center's Senior Adult Department, the Jewish Home for Aged — Fleischman Residence/Blum- berg Plaza, Hechtman Fede- ration Apartments, and Hillel Day School. Hillel sixth graders and a group of "adopted grand- parents" first exchanged let- ters and eventually came together to rehearse and pre- sent the first Dor L'Dor con- cert in 1985. There is no charge. An afterglow has been planned. NCJW's "Up and Out Pro- gram" will provide bus transportation for its par- ticipants from several pick-up points to the synagogue. For information, call NCJW offices, 258-6000. Funk Is Honored Alan Funk, executive vice president of the Jewish Home for Aged, has been chosen as the 1990 recipient of the Dr. Herbert Shore Young Ex- ecutive Award presented an- nually by the North American Association of Jewish Homes and Housing for Aged. The award is given to honor young executives who have demonstrated significant potential in the field of long- term care management by virtue of their cumulative achievements or innovative results in the area of general management. Funk was the 1987-1989 chairman of the Allied Jewish Campaign Social Services Division. He is a member of the United Jewish Appeal Young Leadership Cabinet and an appointee to the Na- tional Council of Jewish Federations Task Force on Federation-Home Relationships. Funk is a member of the Michigan Non-profit Homes Association Health and Reim- Fayga Dombey year program in Israel, she received the school's Tribute of Distinction Award, was honored by the Friends of Akiva and served as a mem- ber of the day school's edu- cation committee, executive committee and board of di- rectors. The founder of the Batya chapter of Amit Women, Dombey is a past president of the Great Lakes Chapter, Women's Branch of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America; a past board member of the Women's Division of the Jewish Welfare Federation; and former coordinator of volunteer services for the Jewish Family and Chil- dren's Service, a JF&CS department she helped es- tablish. A member of Young Israel of Southfield, Dombey serves on the Advisory Council of the JWF Women's Division and the board of directors for the Women's Division of Bar Ilan University and Aleynu/Aish HaTorah. . Home For Aged Cites Volunteers Alan Funk bursement Policy Committee, the Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association Board, and serves on the Quality Assurance and Long Range Planning Committees for the North American Association of Jewish Homes and Housing for the Aged. The Jewish Ensemble Theatre will present The Last Resort, a comedy, as part of this year's Recognition Party saluting the Jewish Home for Aged's volunteers. The party will be noon April 1 at the Maple-Drake Jewish Com- munity Center. Daniel M. Clark, the Home's president, will pre- sent an award to the "Volunteer of the Year" and volunteers with service ex- ceeding 2,000 hours will be cited. An award will be given to the Community Group of the Year by Marica Mittelman, administrator of the Home's Prentis Manor facility. After a petite brunch, Bea Breiner, Auxiliary president, and Alan S. Funk, the Home's executive vice president, will speak. Comedian David Brenner and the Detroit Jewish com- munity will come together Thursday at 7:30 p.m. for the Allied Jewish Campaign clos- ing celebration at the Maple- Drake Jewish Community Center. Joining Brenner will be Campaign Chairmen Paul Borman and Joseph H. Orley, who will announce an ex- pected record achievement for the closing. The 1989 Cam- paign raised more than $27 million. A pictoral essay of the Jewish community, focusing on people who are touched daily by Campaign-supported agencies, will be shown. Campaign divisions are completing their assign- ments. The division which records the highest percen- tage of pledges prior to March 22 will receive the 1990 Com- munity Achievement Award. In advance of the closing, more than 100 area rabbis and congregation members volunteered at a phonathon March 8. A wine and cheese buffet will open the March 22 festivities at 7:30 p.m., and a dessert reception will follow the program. Everyone who has made a pledge to the 1990 Campaign is invited. For reservations, call Federation, 965-3939. Federation Advances $2.5 Million To Israel The Jewish Welfare Federa- tion has agreed to send an ad- vance of $2.5 million to the United Jewish Appeal to help Israel through its current financial need brought on by the aliyah of Soviet Jews. The UJA asked American Jewish communities for cash to alleviate the fiscal crunch. Local Allied Jewish Cam- paign cash mobilization chairmen Robert Naftaly and Morris Rochlin are asking all who have balances on their Campaign pledges — as well as those who have paid their pledge but would like to make an advance payment — to send a check to the Campaign as quickly as possible. The cash emergency is be- ing felt throughout Israel, said Naftaly. Programs the Campaign supports through the UJA, including Youth Aliyah villages, hundreds of rural projects and programs for the disabled and aged, will be jeopardized unless there is an infusion of funds, he said. Rochlin emphasized that the $2.5 million advance to the UJA will be against pledges already made. Sinai Aids Emigres In order to better serve the many Russian immigrants expected in the Detroit area this year, Sinai Hospital has expanded its health screening program. Its purpose is to detect health problems and to certify the immigrants for employment in the United States. "We check their vaccina- tions and provide a full ex- amination to determine if they have any serious health problems and if they may be certified for employment or if they need follow-up medical care," said Dr. Marc Feldman, coordinator of the program. Those requiring further medical care are referred to the Primary Care Center, a general internal medicine practice at Sinai staffed by both attending physicians and residents. Russian immigrants are referred to Sinai for medical care through Jewish Family Service. Sinai anticipates screening about 1,000 im- migrants from June 1989 to June 1990. All physicians participating in the program have donated their time to screen the im- migrants. In addition, Or- thodox Jewish men who were not permited to have ritual circumcisions in Russia may do so at Sinai. Several anesthesiologists and urologists have also donated their services to perform this procedure. Russian immigrants were previously treated in the primary care center. However, the expected increase in im- migrants warranted a screen- ing program solely to serve them. A new location was chosen in the Blumberg Pro- fessional Office Building on West McNichols in Detroit. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 49 OMM N IT National Young Israel To Honor Fayga Dombey