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August 11, 1961 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1961-08-11

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

Golden Rule Aid Society Donates
$1,000 to Pioneer Women's Council

'

Daniel Lublin,
Sobeloff-Rich
Detroit Builder, Rites Solemnized
Runs For Mayor



On behalf of its 20th anniversary, the Golden Rule Aid
Society has contributed $1,000 to the Detroit Council of
Pioneer Women to further the work of its sister organization
in Israel, Moetzet Hapoalot (Working Womens Fgderation).
Presenting a plaque to the officers of the Golden Rule Aid in
acknowledgement of its gift is Mrs. Michael Michlin .(right),
national representative of Pioneer Women. The plaque will
perpetuate the name of the Society in Beth Chana in Tel Aviv
and a similar plaque will also perpetuate the name of the
late Celia Citron, veteran member of the Golden Rule Aid
and Pioneer Women. Accepting the plaque, from left, are
Mesdames Sarah Korman, treas.; Anna Berg, president;
Goldie Dorfman, vice pres., and Rebecca Kolovsky, financial
secretary. Others instrumental in carrying out the project
were board members Pauline Epel, Rose Sharloff, Sadie For-
man, Jean Lipkin, Rose Leibowitz, Rose Sherman and H.
Golden.

Daniel D. Lublin, a builder
who has played a major role in
the rapid growth of the Detroit
metropolitan area, has begun
his campaign for Detroit's
mayoralty.
The 32-year-old candidate
says, "Detroit is in a state of
unrest because of wide-spread
unemployment. The people of
this city want action; and youth
and agressiveness are in my
favor."
Lublin has been married for
12 years and is the father of
three children, Bruce, nine;
Nina, seven, and Bennette, two.
Lublin and his partner, Daniel
Dunitz, are presently one of
the largest home builders in
Detroit..
The candidate obtained his
builder's license in 1947. After
eight years, he suspended op-
erations to attend Wayne State
University. He graduated- with
a B.A. in Education and has
taught ..in the Detroit Public

'The Human Season,' by Wallant
Earns High Book Council Award

It is no wonder that "The
Human Season," the novel by
Edward Lewis Wallant, pub-
lished by • Harcourt, Brace &
Co., (750 3rd, N.Y. 17), won the
Jewish Book Council award as
the best Jewish novel of the
year.
Wallant shows a keen under-
standing of human nature and
a fairly good knowledge of Jew-
ish traditional observances, and
he has incorporated both ele-
ments into his story.
* * *

This 192-page novel describes
the inner struggles of Joe—Yus-
sel—Berman, after he had lost
his wife with whom he had an
idyllic life. His daughter stayed
with him for a month, then
pleaded with him not to live
alone, but to move in With her.
He asked for six months, his
wife having died in May, but
in September he finally yielded,
after experiencing a number of
soul-stirring experiences.
He tried many things. He
turned to liquor, he fondled a
scrubwoman, he went on a tour
of the city, refusing to tell his
partner or his daughter what
his intentions were. He contin-
ued his work as a plumber in
his home town of New Haven,
but he was tortured with lone-
liness, yet waiting to prove to
himself that he could live alone.
He even took in borders—dis-
charging the two try-outs each
in his time as he became dis-
gusted with their habits.
* * *



During all that time he. Joe
Berman, who was sentimentally
an observant Jew, cursed God
for what he had done to him.
When the -rabbi visited him he
derided him. But in the end he
returned to a faith and reality
which, in the author's words, is:
"he knew then that the Torahs
and prayer shawls and churches
and saints were just the art
men tried to create to express
the deeper feeling . . . "
This is one side of "The
Human Season. The other is
in the flashbacks—in the recol-
lections of the earlier life that
accompany each current Ameri-
can experience. There are
reminiscences of Joe's arrival
in this country as an immigrant;
of his love affair with his wife,
the American who honored him
with her affections; of the fight
he had with an Irish anti-Semite

for whom he worked upop his
arrival in this country, a fight
in which he lost a finger but
in which he gave the anti-Semite
a better thrashing; of a sex de-
viation with a. girl in Europe,
of visits in the synagogue, of
his father's devotional life, of
DANIEL LUBLIN:
drunken bigots in the town of
School System. He has also
his birth.
worked with the youth of Con
* * *
Shaarey Zedek, and is a me
Every chapter is accompanied ber of the congregation's men'
by a flashback. The story be- club.
Lublin is a member of the
gins with June 1956 and has an
April 30 1956 (his wife's last National Psychology Honorary
day on earth) flashback to Society and the Detroit Build,
c l a r if y the beginning. Then ers Association. His wife is a
comes the linking of June 1956 member of the Denver League,
with September 1949 and April Sinai Hospital Women's Guild,
1945 and July 1934—connecting Hadassah, National Council of
related recollections with the Jewish Women, the Allied Jew-
Morge
present; carrying the Berman ish Campaign, OR
ith
story all the way back to Sep- . thau Chapter of
tember 1907. It becomes a com- Cong.. Shaarey Z
plete life history of the man
4 >ro
Currently ther-
who finally made his decision.
Although brief, the novel is grams leading to a bachelor's
thorough. It is excellently writ- degree in engineering at
ten. It has earned its accolade. University of Michig

Danny Kaye and Senator liar
Discuss Refugee, Escapee Pr

,

• •\•*:,,

MRS. JONATHAN SOBELOFF

Millions Will Be Spent
on Homes, Employment
for Immigrants in Israel

NEW YORK, (JTA) — Fi-
nancing totalling seven million
dollars has been extended by
Ampal American Israel Cor-
poration of New York, to the
Jewish Agency for Israel of
Jerusalem, and the Israel Gov-
ernment Central Housing In-
strumentality, Amidar Ltd., to
finance construction of new
dwellings for immigrants ar-
riving in Israel, Abraham Dick-
enstein, president of Ampal,
announced.
Dickenstein reported that ac-
tivities were at record level
during the three months ended
June 30, 1961. During the
quarter, he noted, Israel De-
velopment Corporation, an af-
filiate, acquired 900,000 com-
mon shares of the Dead Sea
Works Ltd. for $520,000, and
itself purchased $2,000,000 of
eight-year debentures of its sub-
sidiary, the Israel American In-
dustrial Development Bank Ltd.
Ampal also deposited $500,000
with the same bank to be re-
paid during five to 20 years.
The Israel American Industrial
Development Bank then ex-
tended loans to existing and
newly established industries in
Israel to create employment for
new 'mmigrants.

Barbara Rosalie Rich, daugh-
ter of Benjamin Rich, of Ches-
terfield Rd. and the late Mrs.
Rich, was wed to Jonathan
Sobeloff, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Isadore Sobeloff, of Muirland
Ave. on Sunday. The ceremony
took place at the bride's home.
Rabbi Morris Adler officiated.
The bride wore white mous-
seline de soie over white taffeta
made with an open neckline
and short sleeves. The gown had
an empire bodice of handrun
Alencon lace and a pleate
cummerbund of white s
Individua
shows up most
c mg in a golfer's p ting—or his re-
de soie. Appr • -
e dome- marks if he
lace disti •
ses.
ended in a
shaped s
aifi
• - • twojtiered,
chapel

finger veil f own
of th andrun
n. an
earn
to• d
whit
s and ivy.
Sha
Rich was her si
maid of
ant.
Mr
his son's

b

a_
ollOwin
eption was h
ton-Cadill
The co
left for a motor
• through Canada. Th

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Entertainer Danny Kaye, soon to be nominated for a
presidential commendation for his work through UNICEF for
children around the world, meets with Senator Philip A. Hart
of Michigan, chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Refugees
and Escapees. The two discussed the continuing problem of
children in connection with the United States' continuing
refugee and escape programs.

ge 12
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Chil

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MIRIAM SIEGAL

JEWISH FAMILY and CHILDREN'S SERVICE

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