Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1992 Page: 14 of 24
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14 TEXAS JEWISH POST, DALLAS, THURSDA Y, JUL Y 23, 1992- IN OUR 46TH YEAR!
Hillel Fund Memorializes Late B'nai B'rith Leader Stanley Kaufman
(Austin, SPL to TJP)— A
fund memorializing Stanley
M. Kaufman, a past district
president and national career
and counseling chair for
B’nai B’rith International,
has been established at the
University of Texas Hillel
Foundation. The fund will
be used specifically to de-
velop young Jewish leader-
ship at Hillel.
Rabbi Kerry Baker, execu-
tive director of the UT Hillel
Pers Travel
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Foundation, welcomed the
fund’s establishment enthu-
siastically. “We are fortunate
to have many, many ener-
getic and talented Jewish
youth on our campus and at
Hillel,” Rabbi Baker said.
“The cultivation of leader-
ship is one of the most im-
portant aspects of Hillel, and
we are extremely grateful to
the Kaufman family and
those who have honored
Stanley Kaufman with their
contribu lions.
“These funds, in the com-
ing years, will be used to
teach skills and nurture quali-
ties that mark outstanding
leadership, those exhibited
by Stanley Kaufman himself
during his lifetime.”
Kaufman, a District 7
president in 1958-59, was a
member of the UT Hillel
Foundation building com-
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mittee with his father-in-law,
the late Harold M. Oster, and
uncle, D. Aaron Topek of
Houston.
Kaufman also served as a
two-term president of Con-
gregation Shearith Israel in
Dallas, one of the largest
Conservative congregations
in the United States.
Aaron Kaufman, a Dallas
attorney, a Dallas/Levy
Lodge member, and one of
Kaufman’s three sons, said,
“We can be proud that these
funds were donated by
friends and family and are
going for a cause that Dad
believed in strongly - help-
ing young people and per-
petuating Jewish values. I am
pleased that the good deeds
and Tzedakah that are cen-
tral principles of B ’ nai B ’ rith
will be continued.”
The fund will be adminis-
tered and promoted by the
UT Hillel Foundation. Any-
one wishing to contribute to
the fund should send their
contributions to the Stanley
M. Kaufman Memorial
Foundation, c/o the UT Hillel
Foundation, 2105 San Anto-
nio, Austin, Texas 78705.
Maturity
continued from p. 11
public opinion, especially in
the United States.
The elections also gave a
powerful boost to the cause
of electoral refoim. Labor
— the party that shook itself
up the most, the party that
supported reform and in-
creased constituents’ influ-
ence by choosing its Knesset
candidates in primaries —
was strengthened. Likud —
the party that went back on
its initial support for elec-
toral reform — was sharply
reduced.
The two largest percent-
age increases in votes were
garnered by the two other
parties that were strongest
for reform: Meretz on the
left and Tsomet on the right.
The religious parties, which
fought electoral reform tooth
and nail, lost their leverage
as indispensable partners in
a governing coalition.
Labor focused its cam-
paign on Yitzhak Rabin.
Since the campaign was
highly successful, it added
prestige and the smell of vic-
tory to “American style” poli-
tics. This will strengthen the
next push for American-type
district representation.
The most decisive state-
ment of all was the failure of
all the new small parties (and
some of the old) to gain
enough votes for any Knesset
representation. The voters
made clear that they want
less electoral blackmail.
They strengthened the major
parties and reduced the num-
ber and leverage of minor
parties.
Labor and Likud are thus
encouraged to offer them-
selves as representing policy
alternatives which can be
carried ou t and for which they
can be held accountable.
Now especially, if the lead-
ing parties show the religious
public that their legitimate
needs will be met without
blackmail—the way is paved
for the dominance of inclu-
sive “American style” par-
ties.
Hopefully this will replace
the fragmentation and undue
influence of special interest
groups and break the policy
deadlock that has bedeviled
and frustrated Israeli politics
in recent years.
Rabbi Irving Greenberg is
president of CLAL — the
National Jewish Center for
Learning and Leadership
and author of “The Jewish
Wav" (New York: Summit
Books).
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Wisch, J. A. & Wisch, Rene. Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1992, newspaper, July 23, 1992; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth755427/m1/14/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .