▪ Historian Dr. Samuel Sandmel Karen Ratner Engaged Ex-U. of D. Dentist, Dr. Samuel Lewis, to Donald Albert Nord to Help Set Up Hebrew U. Department to Speak in Midrasha Series • "The Jewish Sources of the New Testament" will be discussed by Dr. Samuel Sandmel, provost of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Reli- gion, 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the Esther B e r man Building, United Hebrew Schools. This will be the third in the series of Mina and Theo dore Bargman Memo- rial Lectures, held annually under the auspi- ces of the Mid- rasha, College of Jewish Studies. Theme of this year's series is "The World of the Pharisees." Sandmel Dr. Sandmel, who is professor of Bible and Hellenistic literature at the Cincinnati seminary, is a spe- cialist in the New Testament and its relation to Judaism. A graduate of the Hebrew Union College, where he was ordained in 1937, Dr. Samuel was appointed to the faculty of his alma m at e r in 1952, and named provost in 1957. Earlier, he had been Hillel professor of Jewish literature and thought at Vanderbilt University and direc- tor of the Hillel Foundaton at Yale University. He served for nearly four years in World War H as a Navy chaplain. A native of Dayton, he obtained his BA from the University of Missouri and his PhD from Yale. He was president of the Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis, and was a Danforth lecturer in the arts program of the American As- sociation of Colleges. He is the au- thor of numerous articles in sci- entific journals and encyclopedias, such as the Brittanica and the In- terpreter's Bible Dictionary, and is a member of the editorial boards of the Hebrew Union College An- nual and of the Journal of Biblical Literature. Awarded the President's Fellow- ship by Brown University, he wrote "A Jewish Understanding of the New Testament," "Philo's Place in Judaism," "Genius of Paul," "The Hebrew Scriptures," "We Jews and Jesus," "Christian- ity in the West: A Critique," and is working on "Herod the Great." * * * Prof. Holtz Stresses Need to Teach Jewish Values to Youth Don't be shocked at what "hap- pens" to your college-bound stu- dents, a university professor warned, if you send them away from home without a knowledge of Jewish value-concepts. As- similation takes its toll in many ways, and the Intermarriage Dan- ger is only one of them. Dr. Avraham Holtz, assistant professor of modern Hebrew literature at the Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary, was responding to a query after his lecture Wednes- day night at the Midrasha In- stitute. His topic was "The Intel- lectual Outlook of the Makers of the Talmud." Dr. Holtz referred to the 11- century-long rabbinic period- 5th Century BCE through the 6th Century—as "the formative period of that complex known as Judaism." The four "value- concepts" stressed by the rabbis of that era were, he said, Torah, Israel, Midaat-rahamim ("love") and Midaat ha-din ("justice"). These value-concepts cannot be simply defined, Dr. Holtz pointed out, but must be taught through action (halakhah) and speech (haggadah). Yet, "Jewish society . . . in America no longer transmits or inculcates rabbinic value-concepts . . . When the majority of our THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 32—Friday, March 18, 1966 college youth remains unaware of such basic rabbinic concepts as . • . derek erez (`etiquette') .. . berakah (`blessing'), and are ignorant of the conceptual con- tent and emphases in the Keriat Shema . . . we are in need of a fundamental reorientation in ed- ucation." Dr. Holtz shied away from defining Hebrew terms like those above. He insisted that the rabbis expressed these value-concepts in Hebrew, and they can be trans- mitted in their true meaning only in that language. "We'd better begin to talk like Jews," he said, "or else, we'd better start using a pareveh language." * * * Dr. Gerson Cohen opened the series with a talk on "The Early Pharisaic Creed" March 10. Dr. Cohen, professor of history at Columbia University and the Jew- ish Theological Seminary, is cur- rently working on a book on the history of Pharisaic ideas. In his lecture, Dr. Cohen pointed out the trinity of monotheistic principles laid forth by the Phari- sees in the 1st and 2nd centuries before Christ and called their effect on the history of ideas "profound." The three principles, which, •set forth, marked a major revision in the old pattern of God worship, were Creation, Revelation and Re- demption. Time and again, Dr. Cohen said, there are instances of this revision. He cited the Shema, Rosh Hashanah service (Malhuyot, Zihronot, Shofarot) and the three- part Grace After Meals as ex- amples of the recurring "trinity" theme. The Nazarenes (Christians) later reformulated the Shema in their own terms, Dr. Cohen said: the Father image as Creator; the Son as Revealer; and the Holy Ghost as Messiah, or Re- deemer. Yet, as Louis LaMed pointed out in introducing the speaker, the image of the Phari- sees has been "grossly distorted . .. in the New Testament. Noth- ing is being done to correct this distortion even in these ecumeni- cal days." The Pharisees' revision, with its trinity refrain, was no coincidence, Dr. Cohen said. Their insistance on the three principles was their way of battling the Hellenistic skeptics who challenged Judaism after Alexander the Great's con- quest of Palestine. LaMed called their work of in- terpreting the written law accord- ing to the spirit of the times, "the foundation for Judaism as we know it today." Essays on Religious Unity Preach Amity Retired Kalamazoo dentist Dr. Samuel J. Lewis has been invited to help establish an orthodontic department in the school of den- tistry at Hebrew University. He is being sent to Israel under the sponsorship of Alpha Omega dental fraternity, which is con- ducting a testimonial dinner for Dr. Lewis April 24 at a meeting of the American Orthodontic As- sociation at the Americana Hotel. A dentist for 57 years, Dr. Lewis taught orthodontics at the Univer- sity of Detroit from 1931 to 1949, and in the past summers has lec- C MISS KAREN RATNER Mr. and Mrs. Morris Ratner of Burt Rd. announce the engage- ment of their daughter Karen Rochelle to Donald Albert Nord, son of Dr. and Mrs. Melvin Nord of Pinehurst Ave. Mr. Nord is a senior at Michigan State University. 1.11•1100 ■ 41. ■ 0i21.1 ■ 04.11111.41 ■ 041 ■ 0.411•11.3 ■ 1 1 .1114 gewry tie zr This Week's Radio and Television Programs MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 6 a.m. Sunday Station: WXYZ Feature: Rabbi Paul M. Stein- berg, professor of human relations and education and dean of the New York School of the Hebrew Union College, will speak on "Caring." * * * DIRECTIONS '66 Time: 1 p.m. Sunday Station: Channel 7 Feature: "The Eleventh Man" is the third episode of a four-part dramatic series, "Then and Now," dealing with the morality of war, examining the difference between a murder incident to a bar-room brawl and killings on the battle- field. * * * ETERNAL LIGHT Time: 10 p.m. Sunday Station: WWJ Feature: "The Travels of Benja- min II," part two, will be present- ed. It is a dramatic rendition from the diary, "Three Years in Amer- ica" by Israel Joseph Benjamin, 19th Century world traveler. (Postponed from last week.) * * * HIGHLIGHTS Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday Station: WJBK and Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday Station: Channel 2 Feature: "Tzedakah — Reaching Around the World" will close this series depicting the work of the Jewish Welfare Federation and its Allied Jewish Campaign. Host, Hy- man Safran, president of Federa- tion, will be joined by Mrs. Arthur Rice, chairman of the Women's Division; Sol Eisenberg and Irwin Green, general chairmen of the Campaign. * * * HEAR OUR VOICE Time 11:30 p.m. Sunday Station: WCAR Feature: "Cantor Frederick Lechner" will be heard in a series of renditions, "Likras Shabbos"— To Welcome the Sabbath. Cantor of New York's Central Synagogue, he will be joined by the synagogue choir. "The Star and the Cross: Essays on Jewish - Christian Relations." edited by Mother Katherine Har- grove, R.S.C.J., has been issued by the Bruce Publishing Co. of Milwaukee. Bringing together a series of essays written by prominent Chris- tian and Jewish authors, the book is arranged in three major parts, Unity, Tension and Toward a Deeper Unity. Among the authors whose essays comprise the book's engaging dialogue are Rabbi Marc H. Tan- enbaum, director, interreligious a f fairs department, American Jewish Committee; Dr. Joseph Lichten, d i r e c t o r, intercultural affairs, Anti-Defamation League, Bnai Brith; Guenter Lewy, author of the controversial "Pope Pius XII"; James O'Gara, editor Commonweal; Msgr. John M. Oesterreicher, director of Judeo- Christian studies, Seton Hall Uni- Parents Group Sets Talk versity; Jules Isaac, French on 'Meaning of Passover' Parents Without Partners will scholar and author; Emil L. Fack- enheim, Robert Hayt and Rabbi hear a discussion of "The Meaning of Passover" by Rabbi Noah M. Arthur Gilbert. Gamze of Downtown Synagogue 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Jewish Like a draught of snow-cooled Center. water in the time of harvest Nominal charge for nonmem- Is a faithful messenger to those bers. For information, call Bernice who send him. — Proverbs Robbins, KE 8-0038. Jessel and Barmore at Bond Dinner Fete George Jessel and Jacob Bar- more, consul-general of Israel for the Midwest, will head the pro- gram at the champagne dinner- dance, to be host- ed by Shaarit co - sponsored by Haplaytah a n d the United Jew- ish Social Club, April 2, at Shaa- rey Zedek. T h e program is being arranged through the cour- tesy of the De- troit Israel Bond Committee. Eric Rosenow and his Contin- entals will • fur- nish the music. Joe Goldschmid is the dinner Jessel chairman. For reservations call the Board office, DI 1-5707. tured at the University of St. Louis. In Israel, he will arrange stud- ies for both students and practi- tioners at Hebrew University, Dr. Ino Sciaky, dean of the school, announced. Dr. Lewis will lecture four of the six weeks he plans to stay in Israel. In the interest of orthodontics, a Dr. Samuel Lewis Fund, benefit- ing the Jerusalem dental school, has been established by the Alpha Omega Fraternity and the Ameri- can Friends of the Hebrew Uni- versity. Detroiters interested in honor- ing Dr. Lewis may send contribu- tion to Dr. Leonard Sidlow, 203 Northland Medical Building, Southfield. Dr. Sidlow is national chairman of the Hebrew Universi- ty School of Dentistry drive for furtherance of orthodontics in Is- rael. Israel's 1965 Tourists A total of 296,000 tourists visited Israel during 1905. This repre- sented an 18 per cent increase over the previous year's total. by HAL GORDON and Orchestras UN 3-8982 DAVE DOMBEY UN 3.5730 ASSOC lArrES LI 8-1 1 16 LI 8-2266 Photographers — Specializing in Color Candids and Movies V•••••• ■•■ • WE RENT NEW CONTINENTAL MOHAIR Tony Martin Dress Suits ALSO FEATURING A FINE SELECTION OF Men's Clothing Discount Prices HANDELSMAN CLOTHING 7651 W. 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