Festival '66 Opens Wednesday Wayne State President, Johnson Aide to Join Karl Haas at Ceremonies Roger Stevens, special assistant ' on the arts to President Johnson; Dr. William Rea Keast, president of Wayne State University; and Karl Haas, chairman of the Michi- JES Enlarges Group for Bible Translation Sol Satinsky, president of the Jewish Publication Society of Am- erica, announces that the society has expanded its Bible translation committee through the addition of three young American Jewish scholars and two rabbis. The three scholars are Prof. Moshe Green- berg, of the University of Pennsyl- vania; Prof. Jonas C. Greenfield, University of California, Berkeley; and Prof. Nahum M. Swim, Bran- deis University. The rabbis are Saul Leeman, of Cranston, R.I., and Martin S. Rozenberg, of Port Washington, N.Y. The new group has been as- signed the responsibility of trans- lating the Ketubim (Writings), while the original group, which consists of Prof. H. L. Ginsberg, editor-in-chief of the Nebi'im (Prophets), Prof. Harry M. Orlin- sky, who was editor-in-chief of the Torah, and Rabbis Max Arzt, Bern- ard J. B a m b e r g e r and Harry Freedman, will continue with the translation of the Nebi'im. Dr. Solomon Grayzel, editor of the society, will continue as secre- tary of the Nebi'im translation committee. Dr. Chaim Potok, asso- ciate editor of the society, will serve as secretary of the Ketubim Committee. The JPS published the Torah in 1963 as the first work in the new translation series. Next scheduled for publication, in 1967, is the Torah with Haftarot and Megillot in Hebrew and English. Swiss Jews to Observe Emancipation Year GENEVA (JTA) — The Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities announced plans here Tuesday for the celebration during the current year of the 100th anniversary of the official emancipation of the Jews of Switzerland. It was in January 1860 that the Swiss people voted in a referen- dum to abolish the requirement in federal legislation and jurisprud- ence that Swiss citizens belong to the Christian faith. This constitu- tional change, however, only sanc- tioned individual rights of Jews. The acknowledgement of Jewry as a religious community and the right of freedom of worship for non-Christians were recognized in 1874. In 1893, the Jewish community suffered a setback with the in- troduction after a referendum of a ban on shehita, or Jewish ritual slaughter, a measure regarded by Swiss Jews as discriminatory. The Swiss Federation of Jewish com- munities will dedicate its annual assembly in Zurich next May to the centenary of Jewish emancipa- tion in Switzerland. gan Council on the Arts, will key- note the opening of the Jewish Center's Festival '66 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Center's Aaron DeRoy Theater. Ceremonies opening the month- long art exhibition in the center's lobby and Allen Lounge will fol- low. Refreshments will be served. The center invites the entire com- munity to attend' at no admission charge. Stevens, Dr. Keast and Haas will each speak briefly on the Nearly 20 other center volun- Kavafian, teen-age violinists, will teers have been working since last be the soloists. Winding up the first weekend spring on Festival '66. Steering committees for Festiv of Festival will be an 8 p.m can- torial concert Jan. 30. The pro- include: gram, "Gems of Our Tradition," Dance — Mrs. Reuven Franke , will feature 15 prominent cantors chairman, and Mrs. Thomas Kra- of the Detroit area. mer; Drama—Joseph Nederlander, Tickets for all Festival events chairman, Mrs. Edward E. Levine, are available at the center, DI Mrs. Harold Orbach and Mrs. Sid- ney J. Winer; Fine Arts Mrs. 1-4200. Lester S. Burton is general Marcus Fordon, chairman, Mrs. chairman of the cultural arts Lester Burton, Mrs. Sherwin David-. program. A long-time active son, Dr. Irving Burton, Louis Red- Center volunteer, Burton also stone and Max Shaye; Music — served as general chairman of Cantor Harold Orbach, Mrs. Alan past year's Winter Cultural Arts Berlin and Mrs.. Albert Silber; and Publicity — Rudy Simons, chair- Festival. man, and Jack Malamud. Festival '66 has a much expand- ed program, to continue through March 1. WHEN YOU Ric A COCKTAIL Honorary chairman of Festival '66 is internationally noted sculp- George Maislen, past president, tor-artist Jacques Lipchitz. Several pieces of Mr. Lipchitz' work will United Synagogue of America. UNITED BRANDS, • DETROIT. U. S. A. • 12 PROOF Also Max J. Routtenberg, presi- be on display at the center dent of the Rabbinical Assembly; throughout the Festival. Rabbi Jacob J. Weinstein, presi- dent, Central Conference of Amer- ican Rabbis; Mrs. Joseph Willen, president, National Council of Jew- ish Women; Jacob Blaustein, hon- orary president, American Jewish Committee; Milton Waldor, na- tional commander, Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A.; and Rabbi Joachim Prinz, president, Amer- ican Jewish Congress; as well as Stern and Rabbi Cohen. A Phone Call Will SAVE You Money! role of the arts in their respec- tive fields. Haas will represent Gov. George Romney at the program. The dance sequence of Festival '66 will open 8:30 p.m. Jan. 29, with "The Village I Knew," a panorama of the shtetl in song and dance, choreographed by Sophie Maslow. An abbreviated version of the program will be held for chil- dren 10:15 a.m. Jan. 30. A family concert, with Julius Chajes conducting the Center Sym- phony Orchestra, is also slated for Jan. 30, at 2:30 p.m. Gordon Goodman, 16 - year - old pianist, Sheila Fiekowsky and Ida Top-Level Committee of All Faiths Maps Interreligious War on Poverty WASHINGTON (JTA) — Jew- ish, Protestant and Catholic groups Tuesday formally established a united front in the war against poverty by forming an Interreli- gious Committee Against Poverty at a closed meeting here attended by top-level leaders. Joining in the creation of the 45- member committee were the Syna- gogue Council of America in co- operation with other Jewish groups, the National Council of Churches and the National Catholic Welfare Conference. Louis Stern of Essex County, N. J., past president of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds; and Rabbi Seymour Cohen of Chicago, president of the Syna- gogue Council of America, are among the co-chairmen of the com- mittee. They said combined ef- forts of both voluntary and gov- ernmental agencies are required to help eradicate poverty which they called "morally indefensible amid our national affluence." The committee will not be a pro- gramming agency but will en- courage, evaluation and coordi- nate efforts in the anti-poverty war, Stern and Rabbi Cohen declared. The Synagogue Coun- cil of America and cooperating Jewish bodies represent the organized Jewish community's coordinated anti-poverty pro- gram. Jewish -groups have been extremely active in community action programs against poverty since the Economic Opportunity Act was passed in 1964. The committee will meet at regular intervals and will have head- quarters here. Leaders serving on the commit- tee include Moses I. Feuerstein, president of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations; Rabbi Mau- rice N. Eisendrath, president, Union of American Hebrew Con- gregations; Aaron Goldman, Na- tional Community Relations Ad- visory Council; Philip Klutznick, former president of Bnai Brith; Rabbi Israel Miller, president, Rab- binical Council of America; and • • Israel's New Ambassador to Paraguay Takes Post ASUNCION, Paraguay (JTA) — Moshe Alan, Israel's new ambassa- dor to this country, presented his official letters of credence Mon- day to Gen. Alfredo Stroesser, president of ParagUay. He was accorded the traditional honors given to a newly accredit- ed envoy, reviewing a military for- mation and being greeted by a military band playing the national Don't Go Now—Pay Later Shortchange your education anthems of Israel and Paraguay. now and you may be short of He was accompanied during the change the rest of your life.—The ceremony by Aryeh Shefer, Isra- el's economic attache to Buenos Thomaston (Ga.) Free Press. Aires; and by Banjamin Sapira, Israel's honorary consul-general THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS here. 8—Friday, January 21, 1966 No one undersells HARRY ABRAM. Reform Rabbis Teach Germans About Judaism NEW YORK (JTA) —At the in- vitation of the State Ministries of Education of West Germany, American Reform Rabbis are being sent this summer to the Federal Republic to teach students and teachers-in-training about Juda- ism, the Jewish people and the holocaust, it was announced here Monday by Rabbi Maurice N. Eisendrath, president of. the Union of American Hebrew Congrega- tions. "There exists in Germany today a virtual vacuum on any informa- tion on Judaism, other than its victimization in the Nazi era," Rabbi Eisendrath said. "There can- not be anything but a warped view of Jews and Judaism, if the only Contact with them is either to read of the tragedy, or of the lingering bitterness which one imagines be- sets the Jewish people in relation to Gerinany and the German peo- ple." The program has received the endorsement of the boards repre- senting the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, the Cen- tral Conference of American Rabbis and the Jewish Chaut- auqua Society — an arm of the National Feder _ ation of Temple Brotherhoods. Plans for the project were out- lined at a news conference by Rabbi Balfour Brickner, director of the Commission on Interfaith Activities of Reform Judaism; and Rabbi Joseph Asher, Greensboro, NC, who proposed the project after a return visit in 1964 to Ger- many, from which he fled in 1936. Rabbi Brickner said in June and July of this year, at a time when the German academic year comes to a conclusion, 10 to 15 Reform rabbis will be sent for a two-week stay to West Germany to lecture in the gymnasiums to students on Jewish history, theology and reli- gious practices. They would lecture in German and English and meet with smaller student groups to allow for greater personal contact and discussions. . 1 PENN REALTY CO. 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