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May 28, 1965 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-05-28

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

Yeshiva University to Honor 7 Leaders

MONUMENT UNVEILINGS

(Unveiling announcements may be
inserted by mailing or by calling The
Jewish News office, 17100 W. '7 Mile
Rd., Detroit 35. VE 8-9364. Written an-
nouncements must be acompanied by
the name and address of the person
making the insertion. There is a stand-
ing charge of $3.00 for an unveiling
notice, measuring an inch in depth.)
* * *

The family of the late Ben
Shpiece announces the unveiling

of a monument in his memory 1:30
p.m. Sunday, May 30, at Beth
Abraham Cemetery. Rabbi I. Hal-

The Family of the Late

BELLA DORFMAN

pern and Cantor Ackerman will of-
ficiate. Relatives and friends are
The family of the late Philip asked to attend.
* * *
Wuntner announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory 2
The family of the late Fannie
p.m. Sunday, May 30, at Machpelah Dunner announces the unveiling
Cemetery. Rabbi Gorrelick will of- of a monument in her memory
ficiate. Relatives and friends are noon Monday, May 31, at Turover
asked to attend.
Cemetery. Relatives and friends
* * *
are asked to attend.
The family of the late Jacob
Koralchick announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his memory
The Family of the Late

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in her
memory 10 a.m. Sunday,
May 30, at Machpelah
Cemetery. Rabbi I. Hal-
pern will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are asked
to attend.

A

Seven leaders in the arts, sciences and public life will receive
honorary degrees at Yeshiva University's 34th annual commence-
ment exercises, June 15. Dr. Samuel Belkin (upper left), president
of Yeshiva University, will award the degrees to (upper row, from
left) Dr. Mary I. Bunting, president on leave of Radcliffe College
and member of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission; Francis Keppel,
U. S. Commissioner of Education; Bernard Botein, Presiding Justice
of the New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division; and
(bottom row, left) Nathan Barnes, permanent representa-
tive to the United Nations from Liberia; Dr. Willis E. Lamb, Jr.,
Nobel Prize winner who is Henry Ford II Professor of Physics at
Yale University; Rabbi Mordecai Kirshblum, member of the execu-
tive and head of the Torah-Education and Culture Department of
the Jewish Agency-American Section; and Dr. Solomon Zeitlin,
Horace Stern Professor of Rabbinic Law and Lore at Dropsie College
of Philadelphia.

Ziprin Honors Editor Frisch

By NATHAN ZIPRIN

Editor, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate

The word occult to many of the
intellectuals in my coterie of
friends is virtually in the cate-
gory of unprintable words. Not
for me however. In a world of
confusion and uncertainty such as
ours, the rationalists may indeed
not have the last word. In any
event, I am not averse to looking
at times at other visions.
In fact, this column is a pro-
duct of that vision.
It was an ordinary night some
weeks, ago when my sleep was
penetrated by a dream. It was a
dream of Leo Frisch of the Ameri-
can Jewish World of the twin
cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul, and
the occasion was a festive one.
Nevertheless I was d is tur be d
when I woke up, and the first
thing I did was to run to my book-
shelf for the Jewish Who's Who,
where, to my delight, I found out

my good friend, if he thought
about it, was now celebrating his

he named his weekly the "Ameri-
can Jewish World" because he
had a vision of a national weekly
with roots in local Jewish com-
munities throughout the country.
In 1924, he negotiated with the
late Stephen S. Wise the forma-
tion of a national English-Jewish
weekly under the editorship of
the famed rabbi. After analyzing
the cost, which he estimated at
more than a million dollars, he
abandoned the idea. His present
concern "is in the trend of our
day in Jewish community life for
local federations to take over the
weeklies as more and more of the
old-line publishers and editors
are either tiring, retiring or dying
off."
Frisch is a thinking man. His
basic credo is education of the
masses of our people in Jewish
lore, tradition and history and
the absolute need to help Israel
grow and become the center of
the fulfillment of prophetic
ideals. .
The English-Jewish press has a
bright future if its leaders in the
years ahead will be men of the

75th birthday. Obviously, what I
failed to remember in wakeful-
ness, I was now nudged into re-
membering by a dream.
dedication of Leo Frisch.
Seventy-five in this generation
of longevity is but the beginning
of ripening. But Leo at 75 is the Chief Rabbi of Sweden
youngest seventy-fiver I ever met. Dies of Heart Attack;

Over the years I have often
corresponded with him. In one
of his most admirable letters

he tells me that when fatigue
comes upon him in the evening

he says to himself, in the words
of Pirke Avot, Ethics of the
Fathers," yours is not to com-
plete the work."

No man of course will ever
"complete the work," nor, in fact,
is any man ever fated to complete
the task. What Frisch means was
that in our preoccupation with
Jewish problems, in our groping
for solutions, we unfortunately
lack the wisdom to understand
that if we solve all problems we
will only succeed in passing on to
our followers the worst of all
problems—no problems.
The truth is that each gener-
ation forges its own path, its own
destiny, and that the task of com-
pleting the work is not ours not
alone because no task is ever done,
but because there is a greater
wisdom which says that no task
must ever be completed.
What is involved, then, is on-

going, contiuity, growth.

noon Sunday, May 30, at Chesed
shel Emes Cemetery. Rabbi Gold-
schlag will officiate. Relatives and
friends are asked to attend.

The Family of the Late

MOLLY
HEARSHEN

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in her
memory 11 a.m. Sunday,
May 30, at Northwest He-
brew Memorial Park Cem-
et e r y. Cantor Bermanis
w ill officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to
attend.

chief rabbi since 1948, was 65.
The Nazis had repeatedly accused
him of anti-Christian activities.
Born in Magdeburg, Germany,
Dr. Wilhelm was ordained at the

Jewish Theological Seminary in
New York and served as a rabbi
in a number of German cities
prior to the Nazi regime. He emi-
grated to Palestine in 1935, serv-
ing as editor of the Schocken Pub-
lishing House in Jerusalem until
1948, when he settled in Stock-
holm.
The murder plans of the Nazis
were found in documents uncov-
ered by police in a recent raid in
which seven of the Nazis were ar-
rested. Police also seized two
caches of arms.

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory 10 a.m. Sunday,
May 30, at Machpelah
Cemetery. Rabbi Donin
and Cantor Adler will
officiate. Relatives and
friends are asked to
attend.

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in her
memory 11 a.m. Monday,
May 31, at Oakview
Cemetery. Rabbi Lehr-
man will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are
asked to attend.

MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES

CLOVER HILL PARK CEMETERY

The family of the late

ISSAC AARON
LIEBSON

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory noon Sunday,
May 30, at Oakview Ceme-
tery, Royal Oak. Rabbi
Lehrman will officiate..
Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

The family of the late

MRS. RACHEL
SKOLNICK

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in her
memory 1 p.m. Sunday,
May 30, at Chesed shel
Emes Cemetery. Rabbi
Panitz and Cantor Ber-
manis will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are
asked to attend.

OF

CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK

Fourteen Mile Road - 1/2 mile East of Woodward

ADAS SHALOM SYNAGOGUE'S

NORTHWEST HEBREW
MEMORIAL PARK

cordially invites its membership and the community
to attend the annual

MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES

Honoring Our Jewish War Dead
in cooperation with the Joseph Bale Post of the
Jewish War Veterans

RABBI BENJAMIN GORELICK

of Beth Aaron Synagogue will officiate

CANTOR NICHOLAS FENAKEL will chant the prayers

Memorial Day is a traditional time to pay tribute to the fallen
men and women in the Armed Services, and at the graves of
beloved relatives and friends, as well.

NORTHWEST HEBREW MEMORIAL PARK

The Family of the Late

ABRAHAM DUNN

and

LOUIS DUNN

Announces the unveiling
of monuments in their
memory Sunday, May 30,
at Chesed shel Emes Cem-
etery. The services for
Abraham Dunn will be at
11:30 a.m. and for Louis
Dunn at noon. Rabbi I.
Halpern will officiate.
Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

All=11111111111111111111111111.

Holocaust Exhibit in June

NEW YORK — "Visions of the
Holocaust," an exhibition of 18 oil
paintings by the Israeli artist,
Shaul Banay, will be shown at the
Herzl Art Gallery, 515 Park Ave-
nue, Tuesday through June 22.
A member of Kibbutz Ginagar

since 1936 when he left Poland for
Israel, Banay has devoted the last
The Jewish community of five years of his artistic life to the
Canada, which dates back to the painting of surrealistic visions of
first half of the 18th Century, to- the Nazi holocaust.
day numbers some 255,000 per-
sons, about 40 per cent of whom THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

The Jews of Canada

Leo Frisch at 75 has many con-
cerns about the future of the
English-Jewish press in the Uni-
ted States. His interest in that
press goes back to more than a
half a century. As early as 1915, live in Montreal.

MRS. THERESA
LANG

Sunday, May 30th, 1965 11:00 A.M.

Plot Exposure Blamed

STOCKHOLM (JTA) — Chief
Rabbi Kurt Wilhelm of Stock-
holm died after a heart attack
reportedly caused by disclosure
of plans of a Swedish Nazi gang
to kill all Swedish Jews.
Dr. Wilhelm, who had been

The Family of the Late

STANLEY
BRAWER

38 — Friday, May 28, 1965

28500 West Six Mile Road (East of Middlebelt)
David Galvin, Chairman

■ IIImmmmmmmmwmwr

THE HEBREW BENEVOLENT SOCIETY

(Chesed Shel Ernes)

WILL HOLD MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES
SUNDAY, MAY 30th, at 1:30 p.m.

At the Veterans Section of Their Cemetery

HEBREW MEMORIAL PARK
14 Mile Road at Gratiot Avenue

With the Participation of Julius Rosenwald Post
No. 218 of the American Legion.

Rabbi James Gordon (of Young Israel of Oak-Woods)
will officiate.

FAMILIES, RELATIVES, AND FRIENDS
ARE INVITED TO ATTEND

Philip Langwald,

President
Harry Partner, Vice-President

Leo B. Furst, Vice-President
Samuel S. Portner,

Cemetery Chairman

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