Koufax: The Hero of the Perfect Game
Sandy Koufax is holding up four baseballs to symbolize his four
no-hitters. In the Sept. 9 game he struck out 14, walked none. He
exceeded the record for three no-hitters of previous years set by Bob
Feller, Cy Young and Larry Corcoran. Thus, on Sept. 9, Koufax set
27 Cubs down in order. But on Tuesday, Koufax lost to the Cubs and
to Bob Hendley who pitched a one-hitter against Koufax in the
sensational game on Sept. 9. In Tuesday's game, Koufax had three
strikeouts before he was taken out in the sixth inning — running up
his total of strikeouts for this season to 335 — 13 short of the all-
time record set by Bob Feller.
Jewish Theological Seminary Starts
$35,000,000 Expansion Campaign
Sandy Koufax is shown here being mobbed by his Los Angeles Dodgers team mates after his
perfect game on Sept. 9, when he defeated the Chicago Cubs 1 0, becoming the first major league
NEW YORK (JTA) — The responsibility for the success of pitcher to hurl four no-hitters. He did it in four consecutive years. From left with Koufax (32)
are
launching of a $35,000,000 cam- Seminary endeavors in their re-
Willie Davis, Wes Parker, Ron Fairly and Don LeJohn.
spective
home
communities.
paign for the expansion of the
physical facilities of the Jewish
Theological Seminary of America,
central institution of Conservative
Judaism, was announced by Dr.
Louis Finkelstein, chancellor of
the Seminary.
Albert A. List, a member of the
JTS board of directors, will head
the drive as national chairman.
The campaign, Dr. Finkelstein
said, will be part of the institu-
tion's year-long observance of its
80th anniversary.
Speaking at a news conference,
Dr. Finkelstein said that $35,000,-
000 must be raised in capital and
endowment funds to enable the
Seminary to construct three new
buildings, repair and modernize
existing facilities, provide for
faculty growth, annd offer scholar-
ships that would attract qualified
students to both the rabbinical
school and the teachers institute
of the Seminary.
The three new structures, he
said, will be a library building,
an academic building and resi-
dence halls for married rab-
binical students and women
students of the teachers in-
stitute. The latter structure, to
be known as the Mathilde
Schechter Residence Hall for
Women, will be the first erected,
with official ground - breaking
ceremonies taking place next
Sunday. Construction of the
other buildings and alterations
on existing ones, will go forward
as quickly as funds permit, he
stated.
List disclosed that more than
$5,000,000 toward - the $35,000,000
goal already has been contributed
by a few close friends of the
Seminary, and that this will en-
able the institution to begin its
building program this fall.
He outlined the immediate and
long-range plans for the fund-
raising campaign, and stated that
Jewish leaders throughout the
country already have responded
enthusiastically to the Seminary's
Scholarship has always played a leading trasted with the staffs of editors and spe-
anniversary program. These lead-
role in the Jewish ethic, but even in that cialists compiling modern encyclopedias.
ers will, List said, serve on the
tradition Michael Heilprin's scholarly
Heilprin also became an editor of The
national committee and assume
attainments were extraordinary.
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95 Scholarships Awarded
for Studies In Social Work
Ninety-four scholarships a n d
fellowships have been awarded for
the 1965-66 school year by local
Jewish Community Centers and
YM & YWHAs, the National As-
sociation of Jewish Center Work-
ers and the National Jewish Wel-
fare Board to 69 students for their
graduate education in social work,
it was announced by Mrs. Robert
M. Klein of New York, chairman
of JWB's national scholarship com-
mittee.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
14—Friday, September 17, 1965
1 he Scholar
Born in Russia in 1823, Heilprin emi-
grated to Hungary and became a fighter
for freedom in the 1848 revolution. When
the revolution was suppressed, he was
forced to flee and emigrated to the
United States.
While earning a scant living as a
teacher, Heilprin made the acquaintance
of the editors of Appleton's New Ameri-
can Cyclopedia. Impressed by his learn-
ing, his photographic memory and his
knowledge of 12 languages, they offered
him the job of editor. In addition to writ-
ing many of the leading articles for the
Cyclopedia, Heilprin revised and edited
all historical, geographical and biograph-
ical items, an incredible feat when con-
Nation. He was the author of The Histor-
ical Poetry of the Ancient Hebrews. A
passionate advocate of liberty, he became
an outspoken foe of slavery. In this con - •
nection, he wrote scholarly articles re-
futing the view that slavery was justified
by the Old Testament.
When, after the pogroms of 1880,
thousands of Russian Jews emigrated,
the scholar became an organizer. Heil-
prin established Jewish agricultural col-
onies in New Jersey as well as in Kansas,
Oregon and the Dakotas. Largely through
his efforts the Hebrew Emigrant Society
came into being.
The outstanding non-theological Jew-
ish scholar in America in the nineteenth
century, Michael Heilprin died in 1892.
P. LORILLARD COMPANY
ESTABLISHED 1760
First with the Finest Cigarettes
through Lorillard research
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