Book Fair Will Attract Thousands

Noted Speakers, Varied Programs,
Exhibits Featured at Annual Event

Opening night of the 11th An-
nual Jewish Book Fair and Arts
Festival at the Jewish Center,
18100 Meyers, will be celebrated
tomorrow evening against a
backdrop of 5,000 current books,
200 paperbacks, exhibits of un-
usual books, historical manu-
scripts about the Jews in Mich-
igan from 1761-1812, and a 10-
year pictorial history of Book

Mrs. Adler Mrs. Oberstein
Fair. There will be hundreds of
books and records for children.
At 8:30 p.m., the public is in-
vited to hear Dr. Stanley F.
Chyet of the Hebrew Union Col-
lege—Jewish Institute of Reli-
gion in a lecture on "The Chang-
ing Role of American Jewry."
Center Theatre opens the cur-
tain at 8:30 p.m. on its major
production of the season, Paddy
Chayefsky's "Middle of the
Night." The play will be pre-
sented again on Sunday night,
and again on Nov. 10 and 11.

which reservations must be
made in advance) will be Ju-
dith Laikin Elkin, author of
"Understanding Israel."
Mrs. Elkin' earned a Bache-
lor's degree from the University
of Michigan, and the degree of
Master of International Affairs
from Columbia University in
New York.
Commissioned as a United
States Foreign Service officer,
She was assigned first to New
Delhi, India, and later served
two years in the Consular Sec-
tion of the American Embassy
at London, England. Since her
return to Detroit, she has been,
successively: regional director
for the American Jewish Con-
gress, a columnist for the De-
troit Free Press and other news-
papers, and is currently an in-
structor in political science at
Wayne State University. She is
married to Sol Elkin, assistant
principal of Chadsey High
School.
The Sisterhood of Congrega-
tion Shaarey Zedek will attend
Ladies Day at the Fair in lieu

Nov. 4, at 2 p.m., the public
is invited to hear a lecture
on "The Jewish Trinity—The
Book, The Thought and the
Action," by Dr. Judah J. Sha-
piro of New York.

Also on Sunday, Children's
Omnibus will present the movie,
"Drums Along the Mohawk" at
2 p.m. and again at 3:30 p.m.
Dr. Ernst Scheyer, professor
of art history at Wayne State
University, will give an . illus-
trated lecture on "Modern Art
in Israel — Its Architecture,
Sculpture, Painting and Graphic
Art," at 8:30 p.m.
"Ladies Day on Monday will
open with a 10 a.m. original dra-
matic presentation on "The
Jewish Home," written and nar-
rated by Mrs. (Morris) Goldie
Adler and Mrs. (Harry) Ger-
trude Oberstein. The community
is invited to attend. Both Mrs.
Adler and Mrs. Oberstein are
prominent in the community as
book reviewers and lecturers.
Guest speaker at the noon
Ladies Day Luncheon (for

Join a Histadrut Tour
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JUDITH LAIKIN ELKIN

Joseph Schuster, the inter-
nationally famous cellist who
resides in Beverly Hills, Calif.
will appear in concert on Tues-
day at 8:30 p.m. in the Aaron
DeRoy Theater.
Schuster has played in Eur-
ope, Central and South America;
and has been featured soloist
with major symphony orches-
tras both here and abroad, in-

On Wednesday at 1 p.m.,
Leonard Leone, director of the
Wayne ,State University Thea-
ter and professor of speech,

Mordecai Teiler, director of
the Workmen's Circle Shule,
will speak on "The Quintes-
sence of Sholom Aleichem's
Humor" at 1 p.m. on Nov. 6.
"Tevya," a Yiddish movie based
on Sholom Aleichem, will be
shown at 3 p.m.

will speak on "Evolution of the
Drama." This session is co-spon-
sored by the Women's Commit-
tee of Brandeis University.
Leone is credited with the es-
tablishment of the Wayne State
Circular Theater, an experi-
mental theater which. provides
acting, drama, staging and di-
recting experiences for drama
students. He is advisor to the
National Collegiate Players and
has produced two motion pic-
tures, "Speech in the High
School" and "Mexico through
a Windshield."
An inter-agency meeting of
the Women's Division, Jewish
Welfare Federation, is sched-
uled for Thursday at 10 a.m.
The public is invited to phone
the Center, DI 1-4200, for infor-
mation regarding the Book
Fair.

Photo Exhibit
Is Record of
10 Book Fairs .

JOSEPH SCHUSTER

Simons Exhibit
Featured at Fair

On exhibit at the 11th Annual
Jewish Book Fair and Arts Fes-
tival to be h e 1 d Saturday
through Nov. 20 will be some
unusual books from the library
of Leonard Simons, prominent
comunity leader.
Simons' Judi-ac collection in-
cludes some 500 books rebound
by Olde World Binding at a
cost of more than $10,000.
An avid reader, Simons has
access to research in every
phase of Jewish life. The col-
lection includes the complete
works of Rabbi Abba Hillel
Silver; Dr. Nelson Glueck, pres-
ident of the Hebrew Union Col
lege, Jewish Instiute of Re-
ligion; Dr. Jacob R. Marcus,
director of the American Jew-

Karpel Lippe, a nineteenth
century Rumanian-Jewish physi-
cian, played a leading role in
the struggles of Rumanian Jews
for emancipation and was one
of the earliest Zionist leaders
Photographs of the Jewish in his country. (JTA)
Center Book Fair, taken by Bob
Benyas and Jack Kaufman from
1952 to 1961 will be on exhibit
Get Your
at the Center during the 1962
Money's Worth
Book Fair, Nov. 3-20.
The photographs illustrate Oil Per- $ Q 50 and $ 12
the highlights of the previous manent
Complete
10 annual Book Fairs, attended
Mon., Tues., Wed. SPECIALS
by 50,000 visitors who came to
purchase the volumes of more SHAMPOO & SET
$1.49
than 100 famous authors in-
Thurs., Fri. and Sat. $2.00
vited to speak at the fairs.

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Covensky is associate pro-
fessor of history at Wayne
State University. He has done
considerable writing on west-
ern civilization, is a member
of the American Historical As-
sociation, and was a member
of the • American Society of
Church Historians.

"The Artist as Critic" will
be discussed by Nicholas
Snow at a dessert luncheon
co-sponsored by the North-
east Chapter of ORT (organi-
zation for Rehabilitation and
Training) on Tuesday at 12:30
p.m. ORT members and guests
are urged to attend.

Concerto in D Major
Tartini
Poco largo—Allegro moderato
Grave ed espressivo—Allegro
Sonata Op. 69 in A Major Beethoven
Allegro, ma non tanto
Scherzo: Allegro molto
Adiagio cantabile—Allegro vivace
Fantasy Pieces Op. 73
Schumann

INTERMISSION
Suite Espangnole
de Falla
El Pano Monruno—Nana—Cancion
Jota—Asturiana—Polo
Nigun from "Baal
Ernest Bloch
Shem" •
Introduction and Polonaise
Chopin
Brillante Op. 3

of their regular. meeting. Mrs.
David Benson, Shaarey Zedek
Sisterhood president, will give
the invocation before the Ladies
Day Luncheon.
At 1:30 p.m. on Ladies Day,
Dr. Milton Covensky will be pre-
sented in a lecture on "The
Enigma of the Contemporary
Jew."

Mrs. Samuel Aaron is chair-
man of Ladies Day.
A Yehoash Symposium at 8:30
p.m. Monday will present two
student readers, one from the
Midrasha (College of Hebrew
Studies), and the other from the
Mittle Shule (Jewish High
School). One will read from the
Bible in Hebrew, the other will
give the Yiddish translation.
Yehoash was the translator of
the Bible into Yiddish.
A panel of speakers composed
of Moishe Haar, Movsas Goldaf-
tas, Morris Becker and Morris
Nobel will discuss the readings.

eluding the New York Philhar-
monic and the Berlin Philhar-
monic: He has performed under
such celebrated conductors as
Toscanini, Mitropoulas a n d
Rodzinski. Schuster's program
will include:

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LEONARD SIMONS

ish Archives; and the complete
works Of Lion Feuchtwanger,
published in English.
The Simons collection includes
almost ,all of the writings of
Jacob Wasserman, Maurice Sam-
uels, Stephen Zweig, Mordecai
Kaplan, Cecil Roth, the great
Jewish historian of Oxford, En-
gland; Isaac Mayer Wise,
founder of the Reformed Jewish
Movement in America; - Kaufman
Kohler, former Rabbi of Temple
Beth El, who was also a former
president of the Hebrew Union
College; Rabbi Stephen Wise,
Martin Buber, Rabbi Leo Baeck,
the great German Rabbi who
lived in a concentration camp
and died in the United States
recently; Rabbi Maurice Sam-
uels, who will speak at Temple
Beth El on Nov. 5 and who will
visit the Book Fair and view
the exhibits; and the complete
works of Rabbi Solomon B.
Freehof, who will autograph all
of his books in the Simons' col-
lection when he visits in Detroit
ill the near future.

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