100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 16, 1966 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-09-16

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

16—Friday, September 16, 1966

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Congregation Leaders Meet a ii) Inner

Slate Holy Day Bond Appeals

Twenty-four Metropolitan Detroit
Area congregations are participat-
ing in the Israel Bond High Holy
Day appeals.
Topped by Adas Shalom Syna-
gogue, which has consistently led
all congregations in the nation and
whose members, in response to
Rabbi Jacob E. Segal's appeals,
have subscribed $1,500,000 in Israel
Bonds in the last five years, the
congregations in Detroit are plan-
ning to set a new record this year.
Three nationally p r olm i n e n t
speakers are coming here to ad-
dress the worshipers, including
Abbie Ben Ari, director of the Is-
rael Tourist Office, Yehudah Hell-
man, executive director of the Con-
ference of Presidents of American
Jewish Organizations, and Eleazer
Lipsky, author, playwright and

Novel 'The Rabbi'
Now a Paperback

For many months a best seller,
"The Rabbi," by Noah Gordon,
first published by McGraw Hill
Book Co., has been issued as a
paperback by Fawcett World Li-
brary (67 W. 44th, NY36).
This story about a young man
who studied for the rabbinate, who
was under his grandfather's in-
fluence. who ordained a Reform
spiritual leader but acquired much
of his inspiration from an Ortho-
dox rabbi, attracted wide attention
for many reasons.
The young man fell in love with
a Christian girl who became a
convert to Judaism both out of her
love and because she had acquired
an appreciation for Judaism.
The rabbi had many struggles,
first in the South, then in San
Francisco. His problems involved
civil rights differences with his
congregation; therefore the story
is timely in relation to a dedi-
cated man's refusal to yield to
pressure.
There enters into the tale about
Rabbi Kind the "edifice complex"
involved in synagogue building.
Conflicts with synagogue lead-
ers, community reactions to his
wife, the young rabbi's dedication
to his traditions—all play an im-
portant role in a work that has
been both praised and criticized
but which contains many aspects
of excellent writing, of a well-
motivated narrative, of a story
applicable to this era.
In the paperback "The Rabbi"
becomes available to a large audi_
ence that will undoubtedly, mer-
itoriously, retain for Noah Gor-
don's tale the best-seller status.

president of the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency.
On Rosh Hashana, appeals are
being made at Young Israel of
Greenfield, Cong. Beth Moses,
Mishkan Israel Nusach Hari-Lu-
bavitcher Center, Cong. Beth Ye-
hudah and Cong. Bnai Jacob.
Louis Levine, former president
and founder of Arlazaroff branch
of Farband and of Pinsker Pro-
gressive Aid Society, will speak
at Beth Moses and at Beth
Yehudah.
Hyman Crystal, executive direc-
tor of the Metropolitan Detroit Bnai
Brith Council and of the Michigan
Bnai Brith Council, will speak at
Mishkan Israel.
Most of the appeals will be made
on Kol Nidre and at Yizker serv-
ices on Yom Kip-
pur. Rabbi Segal
will speak in the
main sanctuary
on Kol Nidre and
in the social hall
on Yom Kippur.
Dr. Jacob Gold-
man, director of
,,the Ford Motor
Company scie n-
N:t if i c laboratory,
will make the ap-
peal at Young
Israel of Oak-
Woods.
Hellman w ill
s p ela k at Beth
Abraham.
Hellman
Lipsky, son of
the late Louis Lipsky, who was
president of the Zionist Organiza-
tion of America, is a prominent
attorney who
served in the
New York Dis-
trict Attorney's
Office. He is the
author of several
best - selling nov-
els, some of them
having beenlmade
into outstanding
successful m o v
e s . He has
served as editor
of the New Pal-
estine Magazine
and is a vice
president of the
American Jewish
League for Israel
Lipsky
and counsel" for
the American-Is- rael Cultural
Fund. He will address Shaarey
Shomayim and Beth Aaron.
Ben Ari will make the appeals
in Ahavas Achim and Shomrey
Emunah.
Morris Dorn will make the ap-
peal at Beth Tefilo Emanuel
Tikvah.

Try and Stop Me

By BENNETT CERF

Z SA

ZSA HORNTOOT, irked by her husband Arthur's
frequent charge that she was a sloppy housekeeper
went over the whole apartment one day with a mop ar
dust-rag. That evening
she had a moment of un-

alloyed delight. Her hus-
band called out petulant-

1Y, "Zsa, Zsa, where's the
dust on your bedside
table? I had a phone num-
ber written on it!"

* • *

*

Offered a $25 U. S. Say-.
ings Bond if he could pen a
short, pithy -sales letter for
a mail-order course in pub-
lic speaking he just had
completed, a Kentucky lad
came up with the follow-
ing: They laughed when I
announced that I was going to tell them a hilarious aneedW
but stopped- short when I told it."
*
*
*
QUOTABLE:
"The•fastest wilting plants in the world are laurels that
rested upon.—Carl Rowan.
"The world is full of 'crooks, but thank Heaven, they put
part of their time cheating each other."—Arnold Picker.
'Tm fed up on that."—Baby pointing to a high chair.
"Experience keeps an expensive school, but fools will learn
no other."—Ben Franklin.
1964, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features Syndicate

IRWIN NATINSKY of the Motor

City District Agency of John Han-
cock Mutual Life has been cited as
the company's second highest re-
gion-al sales producer.

NEW . .

At the annual Israel Bond Pre••High Holy Day congregational

dinner are (from left) Louis E. Levitan, Israel Bond director; Norman

Allan, Morris J. Brandwine, Max Sosin and Judge Nathan J.
Kaufman, co-chairmen of the Congregational and High Holy Day
Council; Phillip Stollman, High Holy Day council chairman, who
presided at the dinner; Rabbi Irving Miller, past president of the
Zionist Organization of America and of the American Jewish Con-
gress, guest speaker; David Safran, chairman of the Detroit Israel
Bond Committee; Harry Cohen, Israel Bond vice chairman and
cash collection chairman; and Cantor Reuven Frankel.

for

Breakfast — Lunch
Snacks — Dessert

Lawyers and Physicians
Commonly, physicians, like beer,
are best when they are old, and
lawyers, like bread, when they are
young and new.—Fuller.

Yiddish Proverbs

God waits long, but pays with
interest.
God strikes with one hand and
heals with the other.
Man strives and God laughs.
Whom God would regale, man
cannot quail.
If thou intend a thing, God will
help thee.
God gives naught for nothing.
One path leads to paradise, but
a thousand to hell.
Better to receive from God by

anytime!

Delicious flavors all
the way through

v " .s LIHANAH

TOVAH

mown;

the spoonful than from man by
the bushel.
The world can be changed by

neither scolding nor laughing.
A man can bear more than ten
oxen can draw.
God forbid that we should ex-
perience all that we are able to
bear.
Ten enemies cannot do a man
the harm that he does to himself.
A man can eat alone, but not
work alone.

CARPET CENTER

SOL AND ANNA NUSBAUM

World's Largest Display of Carpeting

At 20 years of age the will
reigns; at 30, the wit; and at 40,
the judgment.—Grattan.

.1". 0 IMO. ./.4)./..1 ■1■ 11.0 ONIWOMMIll ■ 0.11•1111.1 ■ 1111.3.1M. ■

.11111.0 ■ 4.111111.41111111.041•110-0 ■ 01.11111.311=1•11.=.111in ■ MIMMILVI.10111,0 ■ 111.) ■ 11.1•1=1 •■•

■ ....1.111111M.I.I., .110.0 ifift

LE SHONO TOVO

DEPARTMENT OF ICHIGAN
JEWISH WAR VETERANS

Of THE UNITED STATES & LADIES AUXILIARY

Sincerely Wish a New Year of Continuous Peace
and Happiness to the Entire Jewish Community.

DETROIT POST NO. 135

PFC. JOSEPH L. BALE POST NO. 474

Morris Simon, Commander
Ethel Arden, Auxiliary President

Morris Hoffman, Commander
Edith Bale, Auxiliary President

JONES POST NO. 190

POST 510

Joseph Jones, Commander
Deborah Bregman, Auxiliary President

Emanuel Friedman Commander
Lila Reder Auxiliary President

LT. ELI LEVIN POST NO. 230

LT. ROY F. GREEN POST NO. 529

Dr. Oscar Bean, Commander

Milton Greenberg, Commander
Bernice Silver, Auxiliary President

FLINT POST NO. 231

YETZ-COHEN POST NO. 530

Herman Cohen, Commander
Ilene Wiseman, Auxiliary President

LT. RAYMOND ZUSSMAN POST NO. 333

Saul Forman, Commander
Florence Amster, Auxiliary President

SGT. MORTON.A. SILVERMAN POST 418

Charles Glass, Commander
Ann Rubin, Auxiliary President

SHOLOM POST NO. 537

Al Penick, Commander
Dorothy Goldstein, Auxiliary President

HARVEY DATER POST NO. 559 (Lansing)

Dr. Leonard Schreiber, Commander
Joy Schwartz, Auxiliary President

Bernard B. Friedland, Commander

BLOCH-ROSE 'POST NO. 420

OAK PARK POST NO. 716

Saul Glasser, Commander
Fern Seltzer; Auxiliary President

David Gildenberg, Commander
Rosalyn Liner, Auxiliary President

ROBERT J. RAFELSON POST NO. 431

PFC. DORAN GOLDFARB TRI CITY POST
NO. 727 (Saginaw)

Fred Erlebacher, Commander
Evelyn Schwartz, Auxiliary President

JACK BERMAN

DEPARTMENT COMMANDER

Dr. Lewis letterman, Commander

MARY LOVE

DEPARTMENT PRESIDENT

HARRY L. ERDMAN

JWV MEMORIAL IHIOME ASSOCIATION

411•11P Ili= UMW 01111M13111111111.4111.M41 ■ 11. IIMIM MIMI' 0 MIMS. .I ■ 1. 0 1•IIIIMLHM11.0•IIIIIS.IIII•M-C.M11..1M. 4, ........41•11114)11111M 0111••• 011•1111.4.1.11111.0111•11.1111•111 , 0 41•1111,1 411111•11.1111111.4 ■ 13

--\

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan