20 DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Synagogue Adult Institute to Begin
2nd Year with Expanded Curriculum,
—
Friday, October 30, 1953
IDDIES'
Histadrut Plans
Drive Opening
By Uncle David
Dear Boys and Girls:
Our late President Franklin
D. Roosevelt Warned, in the dark
days when he first took office,
that the thing people most fear
is fear itself. In other words,
never fear! Fear only fear! But
there is always the fear of God,
and I'd like to tell you a famous
Jewish story about fear.
A Jewish coachman was tak-
ing a passenger to a neighbor-
ing village. On his way he found
that he was running short of
fodder.
The coachman wanted to turn
back for more food for his
horses, but his passenger would
not let him.
"We'll be late for my appoint-
ment," said the passenger, and
they proceeded on their journey.
In the distance the coachman
saw huge stacks of luscious hay.
He got -off the wagon, walked
over to a large hay-stack, and
reached to grab some for his
horse.
Thereupon the passenger ex-
claimed : "Somebody is looking."
The coachman, who might have
turned into a thief, thought the
farmer was watching him. He
•became frightened, dropped the
hay, jumped back on the wagon,
cracked his whip and let his
horse gallop at top speed.
After a while, he paused and
asked his passenger: "Did you
really see the farmer watching
me?"
"No," replied the passenger.
"But you said someone was
looking," said the driver.
"Yes, God Was looking," came
the reply.
*
4.
*
SHALOM—PEACE
I have already shared with you
some of the fine poems of the
eminent Jewish poetess, Jessie
Sampter. Here is another, which
she labeled "Shalom," which
means "Peace":
I saw a picture of a street,
A Jewish street in Palestine,
Where Jewish families like to
meet
Opt Yom Toy, when the clay
is fine.
The little houses were their own ;
The sun I knew, was shining
clear
Because r saw their shadowS
thrown,
And what they said I tried to
hear.
My heart with longing almost
broke
Because I heard them: they
were home
And Hebrew was the tongue they
spoke;
And one I heard—he said
Shalom!"
THE PROPHETS' IDEAL
Let me share with you also
some famous words from the
Prophets, also about peace.
These lineS are from the Books
of, Isaiah (II:14) and Micah
(Iv:1-3):
The Word that Isaiah, the Son
of Amoz, saw concerning
Judah and Jerusalem.
And it shall come to pass in the
end of days,
That the mountains of the Lord's
house shall be established
at the top of the mountain,
And shall be exalted above the
hills;
And all the nations shall flow
unto it.
And many peoples shall go and
say:
"Come ye, and let us go up to
the mountain of the Lord.
To the House of the God of
Jacob;
And he will teach us of his way,
And we will walk in his paths."
forth
For out of Zion shall
the Law,
And the word of the Lewd from
Jerusalem.
And he shall judge between the
nations,
And shall decide for many. peo-
ples;
And they shall beat their swords
into ploughshares
And their spears into pruning
hooks;
Nation shall not lift up sword
against nation,
Neither shall they learn war any
more.
* * *
Delegates from branches of the
Farband, Labor Zionist Organi-
zation, Landsmanshaften, Work-
men's Circle and various trade
divisions will gather at 2:30 p.m.
.Nov. 15, in the Labor Zionist In-
stitute, 13722 Linwood, to map
•plans for the opening of the His-
•
tadrut Campaign.
The meeting will be the an-
nual, city-wide pre - campaign
conference of Histadrut. Elec-
tion of a board of officers to the
30th anniversary convention, to
be held in New York over
Thanksgiving, will be featured.
Delegates will adopt a campaign
quota for Detroit. •
Locally, Histadrut's 30th anni-
versary will be celebrated with a
special program following t h e
conference, at 8:30 p.m., Nov. 15,
in Central High auditorium.
A musical salute to Histadrut's
accomplishments, the program
will present Naomi Bat-Rachel,
Israeli soprano, Menashe 0 p
penheim, Yiddish artist, and Is-
rael Stolarsky, assistant national
secretary of Histadrut, who will
be guest speaker. The commu-
nity is invited.
•
Daydreaming Rewarded
"Take It Easy" by Thelma
Harrington Bell (illustrated by
Corydon Bell) , published by Vik-
ing Press, is a story, in 170
pages, intended for 12-year-olds.
But parents also have a lesson
in it. Those who are worried
when their children are slow-
moving will find encouragement
here that there is always a so-
lution and a way out.
Sometimes it is a matter of
imagination, or of an unseen
power. In the case of Marjie
Benton, the heroine in "Take It
Easy," it is Mr. Askew, with
whom she converses, from whom
there is inspiration, although no
human talk.
Marjie's mother was worried
over her daydreaming, but her
father had faith and his faith
was rewarded. Marjie's day-
dreaming and dawdling was not
damaging or dangerous. It was
rewarding. It was while she was
cleaning a brass elephant that
she was "introduced to Mr. As-
kew"—and the experience makes
a grand story.
Center Top' Concert
To Feature Dr. Farbman
The first "pop" concert of the
Jewish Center Symphony Or-
chestra, Julius Chajes, conduc-
tor, will be heard at 2:30 p.m.
Nov. 8, at the Davison branch.
Soloists for the '§'''‹.1::
concert will be
Lidia Mendel-
son, pianist,
Hortense Mis-
chakoff and Dr.
Aaron Farbman,4
violinists.
Dr. Farbman,
well known De-
troit surgeon, is
assistant c o n-
ertm aster of :
the Center or-
chestra. He re-
ceived his violin Dr. Farbman
training at the Ganapol School
of Musical Art in Detroit and
later in New York with Nicola
Thomas, a pupil of Leopold Auer.
Dr. Farbman will be heard in
Bach's Concerto in D Minor for
two violins and orchestra, with
Hortense Mischakoff as his part-
ner. The program will open with
MendelSsohn's Overture "The
Fingal's Cave" and close with
Beethoven's Piano Concerto in C
Major No. .1, with Lidia Men-
delson playing the solo parts.
Accountants Begin
AJC Efforts Nov. 1
The accountants' section of
the professional division of the
Allied Jewish Campaign will be-
gin solicitation Nov. 1, accord-
ing to co-chairmen Russell S.
Nida and Julian S. Tobias.
I
of the sponsoring synagogues.
In addition to the Tercenten-
ary symposium, four other lec-
ture courses will be offered, in-
cluding a course for young moth-
ers, to be taught on Wednesday
mornings. Hebrew classes will be
given in reading and language,
and include beginning Hebrew,
conversational Hebrew and ad-
vonced studies.
Assisting Biber in planning the
Institute are Dr. Paul L. Frai-
berg, Bnai Moshe, viCe-chair-
man; Mrs. Isadore Leemon, Aha-
vas Achim, vice-chairman; Mrs.
Alex Kohner, ShaaArlebyZedaep...
k,
secretary; and Mrs. Albert K
lan, Beth Aaron, treasurer.
Saturday Night Party
To Open Social Inc. Season
Social; Inc., will open the sea-
son with an open membership
party at 9 p.m. Saturday, at
Adas Shalom Synagogue, Curtis
at Santa Rosa. The first time
in eight years that the group
has sponsored an event on a
Saturday night, the party will
feature an interesting program.
Carlos Rivera and his orchestra
will play for dancing. Member-
ships will be available at the
door.
Nervous? Run Down?
TIRED
OFTEN?
If lack of thiamin and riboflavin is
the reason, here's how you can feel
stronger, peppier, in just 7 days
without risking a penny!
We/ GIUE VAT? &tie Of'
UTOL
EE
0 Lord, God, thou hast begun
to show Thy servant Thy great-
ness, and Thy strong hand.—
Deut. 3:24.
DETROIT CAN DO IT TOO!
Cleveland, Louisville, New- York, Durham,
Windsor, Norfolk, Cincinnati, and many
other major cities have found that
Full Representation is Good Business
VOTE FOR State Senator Charles C.
COMMON COUNCIL
The enthusiastic response I
which greeted last year's Syna
gogue Adult Institute has led
to the widening of its scope and
the increase in the number of
its courses for this year, it was
announced this week by Max
Biber, of Adas Shalom Syna-
gogue, chairman of the Insti-
tute.
The second year of the Insti-
tute coincides with the 300th
anniversary of Jewish life in
America, and. the rabbis of the
sponsoring synagogues will co-
operate in a series of 20 lectures
describing the impact of the Jew
on American development.
Under the auspices of the Con-
servative synagogues of Detroit
—Congregations Adas Shalom,
Ahavas Achim, Beth Aaron, Bnai
Moshe and Shaarey Zedek—the
Institute is open to the general
public, J.ew and non-Jew re-
gardless of affiliation.
Registration will take place at
8 p.m., Nov. 10, at Adas Shalom,
at the opening convocation. The
film, "And the Bush Was Not
Consumed," will highlight the
program. The faculty Will be
I present to guide registrants in
their choice of courses. Regis-
tration also may be made at any
r.
No 14
Yes, FREE! Regular $1.98 RYBUTOL is Yours At No Extra Cost
When You Buy The 100-Size RYBUTOL At Your Druggist. You Must
Feel Stronger, Peppier in 7 Days, Or Return The 100-Size For FULL
CASH REFUND. In Any Event, Keep The $1.98 Size As A Giftl I
If you are tired, nervous, run
1
Nothing to lose but your
miseries -because amazing
down, simply because you're no
getting enough energy-releasing RYBUTOL gives you precious
thiamin and riboflavin from your thiamin and riboflavin in high.
food, get in on this wonderful potency amounts, plus supple.
RYBUTOL give-away-- mentary amounts of other vita.
We'll give you $1.98 bottle of mins,plus certain trace minerals,
RYBUTOL FREE when you buy Tiredness, weakness, or irrita-
the 100-size bottle at your drug- bility, Glue to lack of important
gist. What's more, you must•feel elements in RYBUTOL, disapb
stronger, peppier in 7 days, or pears fast!
Act now! This FREE
return the 100-size bottle for full
cash refund. In any event, you RYBUTOL OFFER limited. Get
your gift $1.98 RYBUTOL--today!
keep the $1.98 size as a gift.
YOU MAY NEVER KNOW HOW GOOD YOU CAN FEEL UNTIL YOU'VE
TRIED RYBUTOL — START THE 7 - DAY RYBUTOL TEST TODAY',
On Sale at All