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August 25, 1995 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-08-25

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

How to do
Central America
on $17 a day.

Rosenfeld Earns
The Butzel Award

RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER

-."

IISC 00111' •'CW/h.'11S.

R ight

SINAtil'htigN

(b) nig jilliVidc S104'11;111 ',Orli:4;111M.

s495

now,
Of course, an
a month"
for a limited 36 months. S1,635 down payment offer like this
time, vou
∎von't last f()rever,
can n get t Lancl lover Discovery
so whv not come in 14 a test clri•e ...'
for just S495** a month With-
If You consider all the Discovery's
out any acquisition fee.
features. its a great travel package.

DISCOVERY

NED 'AVERY CO.

4-99 S. Hunter • Birmingham

Showroom Hours: Mon. & Thurs. 9am-9pm
Tues., Wed., & Fri. 9am-6pm
Service Hours; 7am-7pm Mon. thru Fri.

6454930

"Offered by participating Land Rover dealers to qualified lessees in conjunction with World Omni Financial Corp. Must take retail delivery by 8/31/95.
Subject to availability. Monthly payments based on 36 month closed-end lease for 1995 Discovery equipped with package B. Manufacturer Suggest.
ed Retail Price $31,725. Inclusive of dealer prep and destination charges. Total of monthly lease payments 517,820. S1,615 consumer down payment
+ 5500 refundable security deposit + S495 first month's lease payment. (52,630 total due in advance). Lessee responsible for taxes, registratiorvtitle fees,
maintenance, insurance and any options plus an excess mileage charge of 12 cents per mile for each mile over 15,000 miles per year. Purchase op-
tion at maturity S17,766 + applicable tax + S250. Purchase option prior to maturity. $250 purchase fee + the adjusted lease balance + applicable tax.
S250 disposition fee if vehicle is not purchased Lessee does not acquire ownership rights unless the purchase option is exercised. Other conditions
may apply. Equally competitive residual values available on all other Discovery models.

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I
J

Dulcie Rosenfeld of Detroit jok-
ingly describes herself as the
"Madame X" of volunteerism —
but she's modestly forgetting Y
and Z.
In fact, Mrs. Rosenfeld can ap-
pend A, B and C to her name,
which is known throughout metro
Detroit as synonymous with "D,"
dedication to Jewish and secular
causes.
For her years of commitment,
Mrs. Rosenfeld will receive the
Fred M. Butzel Memorial Award
for Distinguished Community
Service. The award, to be pre-
sented at the Jewish Federation
of Metropolitan Detroit's annual
meeting Oct. 2, is considered the
most prestigious in metro Detroit's
Jewish community.
"The award recognizes an in-
dividual who exemplifies out-
standing service to both the
Jewish and general communities.
Dulcie, she's done it all," says Fed-
eration President David Page.
"She has tremendous energy, in-
tegrity ... competence. She's a
warm, wonderful person who re-
ally cares about this community."
Recent recipients of the Butzel
Award include: David Mondry
(1994), Conrad Giles (1993),
William Davidson (1992), Jack
Robinson (1991) and Joel Tauber
(1990). The award has been giv-
en annually since 1951.
Mrs. Rosenfeld, past vice pres-
ident of the Jewish Federation,
was a member of the organiza-
tion's board of governors for 22
years. She also was a Women's Di-
vision president and chaired its
Allied Jewish Campaign effort.
The native Detroiter and Cen-
tral High School graduate has
served on boards of the Jewish
Home for Aged, Jewish Commu-
nity Center, Jewish Community
Council, Jewish Vocational Ser-
vice, Agency for Jewish Education
and the Sinai Hospital Guild.
She is a founder the Jewish In-
formation and Referral Service
and a member of "Greening of De-
troit," a group that restores sec-
tions of the city with parks and
trees.
Mrs. Rosenfeld also is a past
president of the Friends of Hillel
at the University of Michigan. She
is a vice president and trustee of
the Detroit Historical Society and
a board member of the Gleaners
Food Bank, United Way and
Wayne State University's Hilber-
ry Theater Understudies.
Volunteerism is a calling Mrs.
Rosenfeld pursued step by step.
After graduating from the Uni-
versity of Michigan, she and her
husband, Norman, began raising

money for the Allied Jewish Cam-
paign.
The mother of four — Jill, Nan-
cy, Hank and Jim — remembers
pushing her children in strollers
down streets in Detroit to solicit
funds door-to-door. Today, she
campaigns by phone, but her mes-
sage to contributors is the same.
"A gift to Campaign is your vote
in Jewish life in Detroit," Mrs.
Rosenfeld says.

Dulcie Rosenfeld, on tax returns, lists
herself as a "Career Volunteer."

She remarks, tongue-in-cheek,
that her reputation as a die-hard
Campaigner hasn't always boost-
ed her popularity.
"It's gotten to the point where
people cross the street when they
see me because they think I'm go-
ing to ask them for money," she
laughs.
The hours Mrs. Rosenfeld has
devoted to causes outside the
home hasn't hurt her family life,
she says. The Rosenfeld children,
grown-ups now, have followed
their parents' example. Case in
point: In 1968, Mrs. Rosenfeld
won a young leadership award. A
generation later, her daughter
and son-in-law, Jill and Evan
Stone, received the same type of
award from the Jewish commu-
nity in San Diego, Calif.
Mrs. Rosenfeld, on tax returns,
describes herself — not as
Madame X— but rather as a "Ca-
reer Volunteer." The Butzel
Award, as Mrs. Rosenfeld's latest
kudo, hasn't put a cap on her de-
sire to volunteer. She and her hus-
band plan to continue their
involvement.
"I've worked with Dulcie in
every capacity at Federation,"
says Tillie Brandwine, the 1989
Butzel Award recipient. "She's
dedicated. She spreads herself all
over the community and does it
well. She doesn't spread herself

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