News Brevities

LYNDEL STUDIOS will show a
new concept in metal art at North-
gate Apartments Community House
2 p.m. Sunday.
* • •
To accommodate the increasing
interest in the Orthodox Jewish
marriage ritual ("TAHARAS HAM-
ISHPOCHA"), a free 76-page book,
"Jewish Family Life" is being dis-
tributed by Agudath Israel of
America. "Jewish Family Life,"
now published in its eighth revised
edition by the Spero Foundation,
is the work of Dr. Sidney B. Hoe-
nig.
• •
Declaring the need to establish
a dialogue between Jewish youth
and the adult Jewish Community,
the American Zionist Youth Coun-
cil announced the publication of
"THE MACCABEAN," a magazine
serving as a forum for American
Jewish youth. The new magazine
is sponsored by the American Zion-
ist Youth Foundation.

•

tive D. Blechman conjures up a
world of hate, violence and danger
—a world on the brink of plane-
tary disaster.

•

.Gems, fossils and rare and beau-
tiful minerals, along with the work
of skilled lapidarists and jewelry
designers, will be on display at a
free exhibition sponsored by the
MICHIGAN MINERALOGICAL
SOCIETY, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Nov.
7 and 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Nov. 8 at I
Brightmoor Community Center.

Links With Israel Sought
by Kremlin, Says Envoy

JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Soviet
Union would welcome more techni-
cal and economic cooperation with
Israel, Ivan Kuznetsov, the second
secretary of the Soviet Embassy,
told a meeting of the Economic
Club here.
Replying to a question as to
whether Middle East recipients of
Soviet aid realize that the aid is in-
tended for peaceful purposes, the
Soviet secretary said only that the
goal of "imperalistic attack."
He added, however, that it was
impossible for the Soviet Union
to remand guarantees that Soviet
arms would not be used for belli-
gerent purposes.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, October 23, 1964-15

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel's
cabinet approved at its regular
meeting here an additional state
budget, calling for expenditures
totaling $80,000,000. The addition-
al revenue, it was said, is expected
to come mainly from higher tax
collections.
The major items in the supple-
mentary budget include $17,000,-
000 for defense; $27,000,000 for the
construction of 5,000 more apart-
ments for immigrants; and $22,-
000,000 for farm and transporta-
tion subsidies.

Zalme Zylberciveig to Deliver Three
Lectures Here on , Yiddish Theater

Zalme Zylbercweig, author and
lecturer who has edited "The
Lexicon and the Yiddish Theater,"
will address three• meetings here
during an eight-day visit in De-
troit. --
Wednesday evening, he will
address a meeting convened by the
City Committee of the Farband, at
the Labor Zionist Institute, on the
theme "Doctor Sholem Aleichem."
Thursday, at 1 p.m., he will speak
at the Jewish Centeii r before the
Jewish Culture Club, on "Nation-

Yeshtvah's 50th Anniversary Dinner
to Feature Comedian Lou Saxon

The entertainment program for
the Businessmen's Council's semi-
centennial dinner in behalf of
Yeshivath Beth Yehudah was an-
nounced by Sam E. Dashow, pro-
gram chairman.
Scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Sunday.
at Cobo Hall, the dinner, at
CITIZENS F 0 R JOHNSON- which the Yeshivah will celebrate
HUMPHREY has opened a local its 50th year of service to the edu-
office at 18613 Livernois. Volun- cational and religious needs of the
Jewish community, will feature
teers who wish to join a station
Hal Gordon and his orchestra, Lou
wagon brigade Sunday to distribute
Saxon, comedian, and other guest
campaign literature and bumper entertainers from Elmwood Casino
stickers to the entire Northwest of Windsor.
area, may call the office, 862-9561.
Highlighting the evening' pro-
*
gram will be the major address
ELLEN PROXMIRE, wife of
Senator William Proxmire of Wis-
consin and author of" One Foot
in Washington," will appear at
Detroit Town Hall Wednesday.
The talk. "The Perilous Life of a
Senator's Wife," will be held at
11 a.m. in Fisher Theater.
* *
General chairman of the Oak
Park March of Dimes MRS. EARL
SCHWARTZ reported that $8.460
was collected in one month during
the Oak Park campaign this year.
• • •
A musical radio 45-minute "spe-
cial" tracing presidential campaign
songs from "Adams and Liberty"
to "Hello Lyndon" and "Go With
Goldwater" will be aired on
CKLW, Sunday, Nov. 1, 5:15
p.m. Called "BALLADS AND BAL-
LOTS," the cavalcade will be nar-
rated by Oscar Brand, one of the
nation's best-known folk singers.
who also sings some of the selec-
tions. The program was conceived
by Martin Weldon, RK0 General
Broadcasting's director of public
affairs, who wrote and produced it.
* * •
The Masque Theater in the Wol-
verine Hotel is presenting "THE
TENDER TRAP," by Max Shul-
man and Robert Paul Smith
through Nov. 28.
• * *
Burt Blechman, author of "The
War of Camp Omongo" and "How
Much?", recently adapted for the
Broadway stage by Lillian Hell-
man, has a new novel "STATIONS"
coming from Random House on
Oct. 6. The stations of the title
are those of the New York sub-
ways, where the homosexual pro-
tagonist searches for young men
and where he is hunted in turn,
from station to station, by detec-

•

Israel Cabinet Adopts
Additional. $80,000,000
Budget; Tax Revenue Up

by Rabbi Isaac Swift, former chief
rabbi of Australia and New Zea-
land.
A plaque of honor will be pre-
sented to Dr. Clarence B. Hilberry,
president of Wayne State Uni-
versity. on the occasion of his re-
tirement.
Over-all chairman of the dinner
is Leon Jay Simon, whose co-work-
ers are Daniel A. Laven, chairman
of the ticket committee, Mack
Thomas, chairman of the catering
committee, and Howard H. Fin-
silver, secretary.
Reservations for. the dinner may
be made by calling the school of-
flees, 862-6668.

al Significance of the Yiddish
Theater."
He will be the guest of the
Sholem Aleichem Institute at the
Oneg Shabbat Oct. 30, at the In-
stitute and will speak on the
subject "The World of Jacob

Gordin."

During his visit here, intended
to evaluate the status of the Yid-
dish theater, Zylbercweig will meet
with groups of interested people to
be enrolled in sponsoring the next
volume of the Yiddish( Theater
Lexicon which is to be devoted to
the martyrs of the holocaust. He
also will contact relatives and
friends of Nazi victims whose
names are to be incorporated in
the new volume.

Winnipeg Lawyers Ask
Law Against Hate Mail

ZALME ZYLBERCWEIG

WINNIPEG (JTA)—The Manito-
ba Bar Association has called on
the Canadian government to enact
legislation to halt the dissemina-
tion of hate literature throughout
the country.
In a resolution adopted by the
Association's. Council, the govern-
ment was urged "forthwith to take
all appropriate steps to amend the
Criminal Code of Canada and all
other revelant statutes to prohibit
the dissemination of 'hate litera-
ture' and effectively to bring its
disseminators to justice."

The Rabbi's Daughter

Women in the nineteenth century were
chattels, subject to their fathers or hus-
bands. All well-bred young women con-
formed to this feminine ideal. But not
the rabbi's daughter, Ernestine Rose.
She was a rebel at the age of five, reject-
ing mere authority as an answer to her
questions.
Born in the ghetto of Piotrkow, Poland,
on January 13, 1810, Ernestine left home
at the age of seventeen. She travelled
alone to Berlin, visited Holland, Belgium
and France, and settled in London. There
she met Robert Owen, whose humanist
philosophy influenced her deeply. There,
too, she met William Rose, an Abolition-
ist, who became her husband. In 1836,
the Roses emigrated to the United States.
Ernestine, the rebel, found much to

rebel against in her adopted country.
Women in the United States were legally
on a par with infants, idiots and luna-
tics. Ernestine launched headlong into
the campaign for women's rights. An
eloquent, witty speaker, she became one
of the foremost orators of the day. With
the leading intellectuals of the day, she
worked for the rest of her life on behalf
of legal and political equality for women
and the abolition of slavery.
"The slave she helped to free from the
bondage of ownership, and the minds she
had set free from the bondage of author-
ity were the glad and proud remem-
brance of her last days." This tribute to
Ernestine Rose from the eulogy delivered
at her funeral in 1892 best sums up the
life work of a great spirit. .

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