Greenberg Quits Javits Says 'Blanket Stern-Hu rw itz
of Silence' Fallen
Troth Announced
Baseball for
on Russian Jews
NEW YORK, (JTA)—Senator
Other Business Jacob
K. Javits, New York Re-
By HAROLD U. RIBALOW
(Copyright, 1961,
Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.)
_ Hank Greenberg manages to
remain in the headlines, not
like other retired players. He
has been part of the front
office in baseball since the day
he quit the field.
Now, he's made new head-
lines. He has resigned as gen-
eral manager of the Chicago
White Sox because, he said, he
had to give more time to his
other business interests. He did
agree to remain to the end of
the season.
Greenberg came to the White
Sox in 1959, when Bill Veeck
bought the controlling interest
in the team. In June, Veeck,
who is sick, sold out, and Hank
sold out with him, but stayed
on as general manager.
Now, he declared, "The job
of general manager is a full-
time one. He has to be on
hand every minute to make de-
cisions. He can't delegate au-
thority and do his work prop-
erly." And so, he left.
But it is hard to believe that
Hank Greenberg has left base-
ball for good. He has been part
and parcel of the sport too
long—and he has been a dis-
tinguished figure in it as well.
He should be back.
Diamond Worker Strike
Idles 5,000 in Israel;
No Settlement Prospects
TEL AVIV, (JTA)—The na-
tional strike of Israel's diamond
industry which produces the
country's leading export item,
entered its second week with no
propect for an early solution.
Pinha Sapir, minister of Com-
merce and Industry, said how-
ever, that he hoped to intervene
personally in the walkout which
paralyzed the industry, to pre-
vent loss in foreign currency.
Sapir said he would not sup-
port any increase in the export
premium paid by the govern-
ment to diamond producers,
which the latter are _demanding
to cover any wage increase.
Histadrut, the Israel Federa-
tion of Labor, began looking for
alternative
strikin
rkers. • eve 1 hu
dr
amond workers were re-
ed to have found temporary
mployment. The strike began
in four f ctories after a demand
for a s per cent age hike.
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"SATISFACTION GUARANTEED:"
.
publican, declared this week on
his return from Russia that "a
blanket of silence has fallen on
the entire Jewish community"
of the Soviet Union.
The Senator spent nine days
in Russia discussing the possi-
bility of improving trade be-
tween Russia and the United
States. He said that neither
members of Soviet Jewry nor
Soviet officials "want to discuss
the - prosecution of Jewish re-
ligious leaders in Moscow and
Leningrad.
"Aside from what I could
analyze, it was very difficult to
get much information. However,
there is no inhibition on actual
attendance or worship at syna-
gues. But a veil of silence falls
when there are any inquiries
about arrests or reasons for
them."
He said he felt "the purpos
of the crackdown on Jewish
v-
ligious leaders is to serve
ent
ing that the Soviet gover
will not tolerate any emi ation
of Jews to' Israel or an agita-
ich is
tion to that purpose,
anti-
symptomatic of a closed
religious society."
The senator also expr
the belief that "it is very im-
portant for world opinion to
express its disapproval o£ the
manifestations of the closed na-
ture of Soviet society. The So-
viet Union is very sensitive to
anything that smacks of anti-
Semitism."
Novel Stirs Up
Hornet's Nest
About Suburbia
MISS ESTELLE STERN
lvd.
Irving Stern of 0
,, aa
of his
announc
daua
, stelle Narcia, to Ron-
an Hurwitz, son of. Mrs.
illiam Hurwitz of W. Outer Dr.
The bride-elect is a senior hy-
giene stu nt at th University
of Detr Dentistry
ad' to
Her fi
Wayn
wa
here
Phar
ated with gma Al
1 profes-
ternity an
A July 1, 1962
we ing is planned.
SS,
W. Ger
s in Clash
Dele
Ov Anti-S 'tism
cl
IS, (JTA
en - the We
to and th
ver anti-Semit .
the us
ountries mar
o
utine meeti
ti
• .4
est
er c-
Otto V
the So-
Ger
arge
nion practiced "anti-
emitism and racism." He said
the USSR practiced widescale
anti-Semitism both in its press
plication of Soviet
and in
e ted that S et
law.
ov's
delete
cis
s
.clai
h they
wa
in
iet U
of
an th the Sovie
Russia
non-discrimin .
*
e Soviet delegate emphati-
cally denied that charge and
retorted he was surprised that
the representative of "a coun-
try responsible for the murder
of 6,000,000 Jews s
to speak on t
clash of vie
mitted from
the mi
the , committee
on or
f the chairman.
Judith Heiman, herself in the
early twenties, in a new nov
"The Young Marrieds,"
er,
lished by Simon and Sc
ong
reveals some situations
urban
newly married in a
area that will shock t readers
estions,
and will raise many
ity she
such as: is the imm
e well-
describes widespread?
lly so
to-do newly married
tempted into extra-marl
perienees as she depicts? are
temptations so great when a hus-
band works late or a wife has
cess to much freedom into
eas away from home?
It is a story about a couple
at loved each other, but each
ifted: she into an affair away
from the Hawthorne Farms into
Greenwich Village; he soon
thereafter with a secretary in
his office.
ish Cemetery Is
In both instances the affairs
esecrated
Braz
ended unhappily; but they wer
RIO DE JA I I, (J
not alone in their search
The second
as
experiences additional to t
incident, d crati
acquired in their married 1
cemeteries
a m th, was re-
If it wasn't the suburb,
ported here by Federal offical
it the husband's working la
The latest outra
night? and if it was that,
Jewish
did the wife enter an affair
cemetery of Porto Alegre, the
broad daylight in the Village?
Miss Heiman, whose novel is third largest Jewish community
exceptionally well written, is a in Brazil. Police said several
copywriter for a large advertis7 dozen gravestones were smeared
ing firm in New York. She is a with swastikas, inscribed with
Vassar graduate and apparently "Heil, Hitler!" and other stones
has made a fine study into her were overturned.
available characters and situa-
A month ago, similar
tions. Is she right in her tery desecrations occu
the
analyses?
Jewish burial gro
s at C
As the Ken and Liz Mosely tiba. Police aut Ales said they
extra-marital and post-divorce have been t ng to trace the
affairs come to bitter ends and vandals b
that, so far, have
they are about to meet again in met with
success.
her apartment, the author offers
a thought:
Rad
ciety
"He had begun to realize that
kah
because suburbia was thought of Hol
Th
Mut
S
as a children's paradise it has
secon. Hanukah
lured many women—women who will
Saturday at t
had become mothers before they party
had learned to be wives, women Hayim
who had at first seen only its ing food, game prizes. Tick-
benefits and then belatedly had ets may be obtained at the door.
understood its erosive effects." For information, call Oscar Gold-
This may or may not be the- berg, UN 1-2223, or Mrs. Eleanor
answer to the many perplexing Manela, LI 5-8075. ,
problems in this novel, which
poses many perplexing questions.
Weddings may take place on
Miss Heiman certainly has stirred Hanukah, but not on Purim,
up a hornet's nest about suburbia although both are minor festi-
,vals in the Hebrew calendar.
morals.
4
League of Jewish Women to Hold
2nd Community Relations Meeting
The League of Jewish Women
will hold its second "Community
Relations Meeting" 12:15 p.m.
Thursday at Hadassah Hou
16240 W. Seven Mile.
Discussions will center
such problems as segr
school educational stand
neighborhood mobility.
A panel consisting
Brand, executive secret
Human Relations Program for
Detroit Public Schools; Rabbi
Irwin Groner of Cong. Shaarey
Zedek; Lawrence Gubow, U. S.
district attorney for eastern
Michigan; and Mrs. Julian Kro-
lik, member of the Detroit Com-
mission on Community Relations,
will lead the discussion.
A dessert lunch will be served.
m ade
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