; one m • story
eat i o a
Two Soloists at Cohcert Canadian Girl Enlists to ssist in
Not Cricket, Claims • Nahal Oz Defense Against Fedayeen of a Doomed Man's 'Struggle with Life
Violinist Isaac Stern
How does a man react to life it, 'and take the next plane
ti
O
MIAMI BEACH, (JTA) —
Violinist Isaac Stern, who has
fiddled his way with aplomb
through the uproar of low-fly-
ing planes over New York's
Lewisohn Stadium, refused to
play second fiddle to a cricket
at a concert here.
S_tern said it was not cricket
to have two soloists on one pro-
gram and called a halt because
of the competition. He had just
finished playing the first move-
ment of the Brahms Violin con-
certo when he walked 'over to
conductor John Bitter and held
a whispered conference.
Then he turned to the audi-
ence and said that • when he
agreed to play in Miami Beach,
"I understood I would be the
only soloist on the program.
Now it appears that I. have a
competitor, a cricket."
Pointing with his bow at
three potted palms at the right
of the stage as the source of
the unscheduled solo perform-
ances, he walked off the stage.
Three attendants marched
over to the palms, and tried to
trace the caroling cricket. Un-
able to find the insect, the at-
tendants took all three palms
away.
The violinist then returned
and completed the concerto.
when he knows death is ap- back to V the' kids. They're what
proaching? What are his wife's, would. be important then.'
his family's, his friends' reac-
" 'Good!' said Wert."
tions to so sad a state?
The sufferer - himself, in one
The touching and soul- and of his bwn brief comments in,
heart-searching account of such the 'book, wrote: "I prolonged
a man is told by his wife in the my twenties; cut short my thir-
remarkable story of Charles ties, had in full my forties, and
Weitenbaker, "Death of a missed my fifties."
Another of his pieces is. about:
Man," by Lael Tucker Werten-
baker, published by Random Woop "The Man. They Couldn't
Break" — who denied being a .
House.
Both, the subject of this trag- Communist, who told of his
edy and his, wife who narrates fight with the Nazis who had;
it, are well known authors. tortured him and whom Wer-:
Wertenbaker's physician re- tenbaker quotes:
"My mother killed herself
vealed that he had a cancer
and that he did not have long because she didn't want to be
to live. His wife decided not to afraid any more. It was while
keep the secret from him and I was in prison in Prague.
She wrote me a beautiful
he learned of it on Sept. 27,
1954. -"Death of a Man" Is the farewell letter, saying that
moving story of his sufferings, someone should go to God •
his wife's patience, her care for and tell Him what they were
him, the effort to make the doing to me. She thought
final months ' happy ones for God would listen to her, even
after she had committed sui-
him and their two children.
cide. She was an Irish Cath-
The story is as much a trib-
olic, but she asked to be bur-
ute to the author as to her
ied in a Jewish cemetery.
husband who withstood pain
She wanted to be with peo-
to carry on with the knowl-
ple who had suffered."
edge that there was no hope
Thus, the narrative and the
from an operation which
could only prolong life for a interjected commentaries, the
stories of people who struggled
"while.
to live, suffered while they
Interspersed in the touching lived and bore their brunts
story
are
several
of
Werten-
Perelman - Todd Projects
bravely, are told commendably
baker's brief essays on the sub- in an unusually touching story
S. J, Perelman, one of the
ject of life and death. There that is a tribute to the writer
A Canadian girl, known only as Lila, gets her first expe-
world's brightest wits, has been
signed to do another screen play rience as a volunteer worker at the Nahal Oz settlement near is this brief conversation be- and to the one described.
for Michael Todd, with whom he the Gaza b _ order in Israel. Here, she lends a hand to, an Israeli tween them recorded in their
was so successfully associated aid of the security chief, known as Zvi, who has just cleaned home in Ciboure, near the
in "Around. the World in 80 his rifle in' preparation for a possible Fedayeen attack on Spanish border on the Basque
coast of France: -
Days." Perelman's second as- Nahal Oz, where Arabs are charged with placing - mines.
" 'If I die in New York, what
signment is the cinema adapta-
Will you do,?' asked Wert.
tion of Cervantes' classic "Don Innocent Passage
CLEANED and HAND FINISHED
Quixote," set for production in
" 'Leave our relatives to take
Ambassador Cleaners
Europe early next year.
care of our remains,' I said
12813 Linwood TO 8-8044-45
without stopping to think about
at the Strait of Tiran and along
By .JOSEPH KADANS .
strategic
points
near
the
Gulf
If the United Nations follows
of Aqaba to insure innocent
A Limited Number
the example of the League of
use of the strait and of the
Nations in connection with the gulf not only 'by the ships of
of Public Reservations
IS COMING
Dardanelles and the Bosporus, riparian states but by the ships
it will establish under its aus- of all nations. On July 24, 1923,
Now Available
BACK!
pices certain demilitarized zones the Straits Convention was
for both Rainbow Catered
_signed, which proclaimed `the
principle of • freedom of transit
and ofnavigation by sea and by
air" through the straits of the
Dardanelles and the Bosporus.
Evenings of APRIL 15 and 16
Many other nations have re-
cognized the right of innocent
at
passage. In 1852, Argentina
opened the Parana and the
Uruguay Rivers not only to the
navigation of riparian states
but to ships of all nations en-
Seven Mile Road West at Greenlawn
gaged in commerce. Similar
action was taken by Bolivia in
Rabbi Israel- I. Halpern and Cantor Shabtaj Ackerman
1858 with respect to the upper
will- lead the ritual and the music.
waters of the Amazon and La
Plata Rivers and Brazil opened
FOR
the Amazon to the vessels of all
INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
nations in 1867. In 1869, Vene-
zuela opened the Orinoco 'River
CALL THE SYNAGOGUE:OFFICE ...
and its branches to ships of all
UN. 1-6696
nations.
Two important rivers of the
African continent, the Congo
and the Niger, were declared
at the Berlin Conference of
1885 to be open to merchant
Melt-in --yoUr mouth cookies!
ships of all nations equally and
the provisions of this agreement
Sugared or chocolate-coated.
were declared to be "a part of
the international law."
The United States has con=
sistently been on the side of
Rabbi to con
free navigation of waters by
A well-known Cantor
ships of all nations. This prin-
duct the Seryices; to
to be held on the
ciple was forcefully stated in
controversies concerning the St.
premises for the entire week.
Lawrence, Mississippi and Rio
MINERAL BATH S . available to all.
Our own famous I Grande as well as during 1848
when the United States in-
egg matzoh
sisted and obtained the right of
Dietary Laws Strictly Adhered tie
of the Gulf of California
coated with rich I use
(entirely surrounded by Mexi-
Write or call, at once
chocolate—.
can land -except where it opens
tempting, 1 into the Pacific Ocean) because
to MAX ELKIN
the lower Colorado River
Managing Owner
delightful i emptied into the Gulf some dis-
tance after that river left
United States territory.
—
Drapes — Lampshades
— Curtains —
Will UN Follow League's Precedent?
SPRINGEL
.
1
PASSOVER TR E ATS
FOR THE YOUNGSTERS-.1
-
-
I
I
BETH ABRAHAM SYNAGOGUE
Passover Reservations
Now Being AccePted
EGG KICHEL
I
PASSOVER SEDORIM
I ALL KOSHER FOR PASSOVER!
I ALL PARVEt
Chocolate Coated 1
EGG MATZOH
I
I
1
1
I
a
delicacy! I
1
HOROWITZ-MARGARETEN I
DISTRIBUTED BY:
Huddle with French Chief
PARIS, (JTA) — Israel's Fi-
nance Minister, Levi Eshkol, ac-
companied by Ambassadoi to
France, Yaakov Tsur, conferred
for an hour with the French
Finance Minister,. Paul Rama-
dier. Neither side would discpss
'DETROIT the subject of their conversation.
GOLDEN CRACKNEL & SPECIALTY CO.
600 CUSTER AVENUE
"\ 1
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