Comma ity 8 OVER 80 from page 71 frightened Filipino social worker in her 20s, the youngest of 15 local women who agreed to help about 200 prisoners, many of them Americans, dying of malaria and dysentery. They also assisted women and orphans suffering from the rav- ages of Japan's invasion of the Philippines. The social worker later came to America and became Nena Dillick after marrying Dr. Sidney Dillick while getting her master's degree in social work at the University of Pittsburgh. She also converted to Judaism. She returned to her native country three ago to receive a medal and other honors for her wartime work. During her first post-college job in Rhode Island in the 1950s, Dillick earned praise for helping integrate African Americans into the local community, organizing "Dillick Teas" in her home to foster racial harmony and understanding. The move to Detroit brought 30 years of active membership in the National Council of Jewish Women, serving as a vice president and belonging to many committees. On May 19, at Congregation B'nai Moshe in West Bloomfield, the 84- year-old will become an honorary lifetime NCJW member. She is affili- ated with Temple Emanu-El and is past president of the Visiting Nurses Association and Oakland County Family Service. "I enjoy prodding Jewish women to get active in these organizations," she said. For 25 years, her husband was dean of Wayne State University's School of Social Work. Married for 53 years, they have two children and one grandchild. "The war was terrible and we did all we could to help those who suf- fered," she recalled. "The Japanese let the social workers walk along with the prisoners in the Bataan Death March and help them as they dropped from exhaustion, disease and malnutrition." About 10,000 prisoners died in the nearly 100-mile march to a prison camp in 1942. Dillick experienced a personal tragedy in 1981, when her daughter, Patti, 27, public relations manager at Detroit's Sinai Hospital, was killed in an auto accident. Patti was instru- mental in planting 1,000 trees in 5/14 2004 72 - Israel in memory of family members. Congregation Beth Shalom. HARRY & SYLVIA GRENADER JULIUS J. HARWOOD They are the first people to be hon- ored as a couple in the Eight Over Eighty program because, together, they founded Camp Mak-A-Dream, a free camp for children and young adults with cancer. The camp bright- ens the campers' lives and teaches them how to cope with the -disease. While operating several McDonald's Restaurant franchises 10 years ago, Harry Grenader sponsored Ronald McDonald Houses, which provide housing for families to be near their children being treated for cancer. "I saw how sick the kids were, and I was determined to help them," he said. He donated 87 acres near his ranch in Gold Creek, Mont., plus seed money, and opened the camp, accepting about 200 youngsters and women with breast cancer to experi- ence camp life each year. They go horseback riding and fishing, play all sports and use facilities in a new health center to give them chemotherapy and blood transfu- sions. "The kids tell us they love the camp because they're treated like normal people, not patients," Sylvia observed. "We never use the 'C' word; we just show them a good time. They say the worst part is when they have to leave. It's very emotional for us, especially when we find out later that certain children have died." Volunteer doctors, like Dr. Stuart Kaplan, come from as far away as St. Jude's -Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. The camp has a board of directors, a full-time executive director, Lauren Altman of West Bloomfield, and raises about $250,000 a year in Michigan. Harry, 88, and Sylvia, 84, have been married 60 years and have five sons and eight grandchildren. Harry, an ex-Wayne University football player, formerly owned Great Lakes Lumber & Supply Co. in Southfield, and one of the couple's sons now operates eight McDonald's franchises Downriver. Sylvia, one of the few women Air Force pilots in World War II, is an expert weaver who teaches the camp children how to weave. Harry also is past president of When an oil crisis gripped the nation in the 1970s, causing high gas prices and long lines at the pump, the automakers swung into action to produce more fuel-efficient cars and trucks with lightweight materials and electronic engine controls. At the forefront of the around-the- clock effort was Harwood, who spent two decades at Ford, eventually over- seeing about 100 research scientists and engineers as director of Ford's Materials Science Laboratory in Dearborn. It was one of the high- lights of Harwood's 45-year profes- sional career in government, educa- tion and industry as a researcher, entrepreneur and consultant. At the special request of Henry Ford II, he visited Israel to survey the country's manufacturing capabili- ties for the potential of becoming part of Ford's worldwide supply sys- tem. He also received the Henry Ford Award for Community Service. Harwood was no stranger to Israel, having made 13 trips there from 1967-81, starting with a Jewish Federation mission, to serve as a con- sultant in science and technology to industry, educational and govern- mental agencies. Until recently, Harwood, 85, flew to Washington, D.C., regularly as a technology consultant to the Internal Revenue Service. A New York native, he had spent 20 years with the U.S. Navy's research area, worked for a U.S. Defense Dept. think-tank and was elected to the National Academy of Engineers. He got involved in Detroit com- munal activities after being recruited by Ford in 1962. "I was impressed by the cohesive nature of the Jewish community here," he noted, "with the-emphasis on service and volunteerism. I've continued with a strong commit- ment to Jewish education, communi- ty lifestyles and Israel's security." As president of Congregation Beth Shalom, he helped unify and stabi- lize the synagogue after the untimely death of Rabbi Mordecei Halpern just before the High Holidays in 1972. He is past president of the United Hebrew Schools and the American Technion Society's Detroit Chapter, was on the board of the Jewish Community Council and belongs to the Institute of Retired Professionals. Now a member of the Birmingham Temple, he's a board member of the International Institute of Secular Humanistic Judaism. Harwood and his wife, Naomi, married for 20 years, have three children and eight grandchil- dren. BELMONT KERSHENBAUM Shoppers at Meijer's and Hiller's markets will find Kershenbaum, 83, in those stores early each morning buying cereal, eggs, produce, bagels, coffee and other breakfast staples to provide a hearty meal for those attending the morning minyan serv- ices at Congregation Shaarey Zedek's B'nai Israel Center in West Bloomfield. For 20 years, he's been getting up at 5 a.m. weekdays and Sundays, leaving his Bloomfield Hills home to hit the markets, then preparing breakfast. He and his wife, Gert, married for 53 years, have two children, and have been B'nai Israel members for a half century. "I try to cater to the tastes of the minyan regulars," Kershenbaum explained. "One likes a certain kind of cereal, another likes peanut butter on everything, another wants his eggs cooked a specific way. And I treat them all with chocolate bobka on Fridays. I try to please.and relax everyone." He collects money from the 15-20 minyan regulars to finance the breakfasts, but the daily contri- butions from others are donated to Yad Ezra. The name Kershenbaum might not sound familiar, but when it's short- ened to "Kay Baum," you get the name of a chain of 12 women's apparel stores popular in the Detroit area for 32 years, operated by Kershenbaum and his five brothers. He was the buyer for the stores, retiring in 1980 after the stores closed permanently. Born in Pontiac, Kershenbaum was a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army, landing in France 17 days after D-Day and seeing combat action with the infantry. PHYLLIS RUTH NEWMAN Newman, 80, has demonstrated a strong commitment and leadership role in the Detroit area Jewish com- munity for 55 years, joining her hus- band, Albert, to whom she's been