Friday, April 20, 19112 — 1 2 — THE DETRO IT JEW IS H NEWS Boorstin's 'The Image': Incisive Analysis of the A merican Dream `image,' which comes from the Latin imago, is related to the Latin word imitari, which means `to imitate.' According to mon American dictionary defi- nitions, an image is an artificial imitation or representation of the external form of any object, especially of a person. Images now displace ideals. But an ideal is much more difficult to de- fine. It is . . . an old-fashioned word and an old-fashioned no- tion. 'Ideal' is related somehow to 'idea.' . . . Differences be- tween 'ideal - thinking' and 'image-thinking' are the differ- ences between our thinking be- fore and after the Graphic Revolution." Discussing the "best-seller" as a "by-product of the Graphic Revolution," Prof. Boorstin com- ments on the Bible, the World's Best-Seller, and describes the Torah, the heirloom handed down from generation to gener- ation, reverently written. as "in almost every way the antithesis of our distinctive writings, our newspapers, our mass - circula- tion magazines and our best sellers." History Professor Daniel J. Boorstin of the University of Chicago, who recently has been given the assignment as the first professor of American his- tory at the University of Paris, describing the "Graphic Revolu- tion" and the pseudo-events in evidence in the world today, has written a most entertaining and most informative book. "The Image—Or What Happen- ed to the American Dream," published by Atheneum (162 E. 38th, N. Y. 16), is a volume that has so many valuable as- pects that the book is certain to become a guide for advertis- ing men, for writers, for histori- ans—for all who seek an under- standing of "the image" that is ours as Americans. Seeking a yardstick by which to measure our experiences, Prof. Boorstin suggests that "it is expressed in a universal shift in our American way of speak- ing: from talk about 'ideals' to talk about images.' " He depicts the image as synthetic, believ- able, passive, concrete and vivid as well as ambiguous. "Movies and books mirror each other," we are advised. "Both give us the fantastic, unreal image that we wish to believe of ourselves. Music becomes a mirror of moods. Experience becomes little more than interior decora- tion." Thus, we are admonished. "the peculiarities of the mod- ern image and the consequences of image-thinking appear even clearer by contrast to what has been displaced: thinking in ideals. The English word corn- Describing the world of our making, the illusions we be- lieve in, Prof. Boorstin states: "When we pick up our news- paper at breakfast, we expect —we even demand—that it bring us momentous events sine-, the night before. . . . We expect our two-week vaca- tion to be romantic, exotic, cheap and effortless .. . We expect everybody to believe deeply in his religion, yet not to think less of others for not believing. . . . We expect the contradictory and impos- sible. We expect compact cars Hebrew Corner which are spacious; luxurious cars W hich are economical. We expect to be rich and Kiryath Shmone (the name of a charitable, powerful and mer- town) was set up (founded) in 1949 ciful, active and reflective, in the northern part of the Huila kind and competitive . . . valley. on the site of an Arab village. from which came (on Ilth of Adar Never have people been more 54390) the murders of Joseph Trum- the masters of their environ- peldor and his friends—The place is planned to be an agricultural village. . went. Yet never has a people The first settlers were housed in felt more deceived and dis- the mined houses of the deserted Arab village. In the first part of appointed. For never has a 1950 came an additional wave of people expected so much immigrants that were housed in a large temporary neighborhood of tin more than the world could houses crowded together. The build- offer." ing of the first housing projects started in 1950. Houses of stone and Then-e he proceeds to show prefabricated wooden houses from Finland were built, while alongside the effects of the Graphic Revo- them were small farmsteads, and the water supply was arranged: the lution and the reflection of the large temporary neighborhood was "image." Prof. Boorstin's fine done away with. Factories were built and a local council was founded that style and challenging ideas. accepted upon itself to run the local I marked by a splendid sense of matters. humor, make "The Image" an The draining of the Huila (lake the founding of industrial project s, outstanding and incisive diag- and large development operations — ' nosis of the American dream all these caused the doubling of the and the thinking of our time. number of inhabitants of Kiryatl Kiryath Shmone Shmone and made it into a good example of a city in development.. (Translation of Iichre, column..Pub- lished by Brith Ivrith Olamith. Jerus- alem. ). Want ads get quick results! 3 7. 71 ;1 p 7-W7o73 rrip ,rr's4P 135P5-1 1 pt3 71'17 7.P1 ' 1117 'RV? nt''N.P? 1744777 n7p477z ;a7nn ".7 17.PP lni7171 rt*ITTin n-93 31 rlrn '71rp nrt r17417 '717 ri T7tp47. .roir7 W1 '4',41? ,71177 rin7 ~ , '?4747 11a ri,4711 - 1317. Inspl - ni3r) -p ninp nil ru-TrT pi'?px lt.rn;71 nnix 7 1tz2421 Nintz? rrlp L t# rnrIP - T1f7 frrn`pr rinri rol? ra:pn?) mcpp nwp:in ri4i74 1-1,-qp. MT!. ,7 LTY1T171 p74 rin .4 ,21';147 ri -1:4;. L7v 717077... p 7 4 ry - 1-11in x", ) 11.z7, - ?ppi -up riai, 'i7IVI (D- -In 117'11 airpnn .15 -1r0 nil .rrWTip. r7n-lp n -r,17. ni-i;-. ■ '? laptp n'4itni -)7 tr4tg,r17;, ri r -ri7. r.ri '7V rn,ainrri 4'7 4 4 n'tnxn4 qrri77 rr'47.,-,7 ric7i3 Ln taiFe, 47';-1 1950 - 4774 134V -ngti ,t3-'?is7 'V .n91Dli ri Lrl`p r:ninD 11-1 1950 – n'Try..);1 rr44 I77171 .alitz*1;7 rx414tpri Senators Honor Hadassah Mrs. Karbel Is Re-Named Torch Drive Chairman Mrs. Sidney J. Karbel, 19630 Stratfor:, has been reappointed Torch Drive chairman for the North Central Region. Her appointment was announc- ed by Mrs. S. Graham Cookson, Torch Drive chairman for Cen- tral Wayne County. Mrs. Karbel will recruit, train, and direct Torch Drive solicitors ill the region bounded by Schoolcraft and Eight Mile road, Greenfield and Woodward and, for the first time, the City of Highland Park. Mrs. Karbel served as region- al Torch Drive chairman last year, and before that as a volun- teer worker. She is a past pre- sident of the Jewish Welfare Fe- deration Women's Division and a member of the executive com- mittee of the Jewish Community Center. The wife of Attorney Karbel who is a prominent Bnai Brith leader, Mrs. Karbel is the mother of two children, a married daughter living in Washington, D.C., and a son attending the University of Michigan Law School. The 1902 Torch Drive will be held Oct. 16 through Nov. 8 to raise funds for the 1963 budgets of 195 health and community services Top leaders of Hadassah are shown above chatting with Senators Hubert H. Humphrey (D.-Minn.) and Kenneth Keating (R.-N.Y.) at a luncheon in honor of the 50th anni- versary of the founding of Hadassah, held in the New Senate Office Building and attended by more than 20 members of the Senate, given for Hadassah by Senators Huniphrey and Jacob K. Javits (R.-N.Y.) Left to right are Senator Keating; Mrs. High Salpeter, member of 'Hadassah's national board; Mrs. Siegfried Kramarsky, national president of Hadassah; Senator Humphrey; and Mrs. Rose L. Halprin, national chairman of Hadassah's Golden Jubilee. The luncheon was followed by tributes to Hadassah in the House and Senate. Happy 7assover to Our Friends and Patrons GREZ'S HUNGARIAN VILLAGE Specializing in Native Hungarian Dinners and Chicken Paprikash Sunday Family Style Dinners — All you can Eat ;2.95; Children Half Price Alex Shandor Gypsy Music Open Daily 5 p.m. — Closed Monday New York Students Demonstrate Against Soviet Ban on Matzohs 935 Lowndole, N. of 8600 W. Fort NEW YORK, (JTA) — Sev- eral hundred students from a Happy Passover majority of New York City col- t lege campuses marched silently in front of the Soviet Mission in the United Nation- in pro- test against the ban on matzoh baking by Soviet authorities for 3146 E. JEFFERSON this Passover. The marchers carried a va- riety of banners protesting the ban. They were under instruc- ••• tions not to speak or demon-1 Happy Passover strate in any way and the schedule called for them to march back and forth in front of the mission for two hours. In a statement issued prior to the march, the sponsors as- 14201 W. 8 MILE RD. j serted that the ban was "the culmination of five years of gradual encroachment on this key aspect of Judaism" and that the ban was "part of a larger official attempt to de- stroy the bond between Soviet Jewry and the traditional roots of Judaism which have a na- PRINTING—OFFSET tional historical significance." I V 12-9294 PENINSULAR DISTRIBUTING CO. LO 7-7202 ROSE-HILL BUILDERS, INC. UN 4-6100 4•0•0•0•0•00•esosol•••••••••••••••••••••••% • e Greetings on Passover 1 • . : SAFRAN PRINTING COMPANY • . do Israeli Blossoms Presented to N.Y. City at UJA Affair NEW YORK (JTA) — Rina Kishon Miss T,-,.'.,,l presented to the city of New York a col- lection of gladiola blossoms and bulbs. The token of friendship to the City of New York was pre- sented at the Spring Festival L.(ncheon of the Women's Divi- sion of the United Jewish Ap- peal of Greater New York in Manhattan's Central Park. The flowers were accepted by the New York City Parks Com- missioner Newbold Morris, to be planted in Central Park. Mrs. Frances J. Bloustein, city-wide chairman of the UJA Women's Division, presided at the cere- mony. • o e • 3939 BELLEVUE • o • /11110111111111•11110•••••••••••••••••••••••••111•111••1114111110411• Passover Greetings z Waksman To Help Plan New Laboratory In Israel Dr. Selman Waksman, Nobel Prize scientist, will visit Israel this spring after a tour of Rus- sia and India, and will assist in the development of a new microbiology laboratory to be established on the campus of Technion-Israel Institute of Tech- nology in Haifa. Neighborhood theaters a r e cooperating with the Michigan Cancer Foundation in the fight against cancer by scheduling free film showings of "A Breath of Fresh Air," latest film on prevention of breast cancer. -7- SHAW & SLAVSKY, INC. I 13821 ELMIRA TE 4-3990 Happy Passover .. . May this festival of freedom inspire all men, of all faiths, wherever they may live, to strive to retain their liberties and to help in guaranteeing the freedoms of all peoples. MR. AND MRS. LOUIS M. ELLIMAN