Annual Book Fair Brings Noted Authors to Detroit Maurice Samuel One of Scheduled Speakers; Yiddish Night on Nov. 9 Highlights to Focus on 'Literature and Jew' for New 6-Part Series A highlight of the 15th annual Jewish Book Fair, to be held Nov. 5-13 at the Jewish Community Cen- ter, will be the appearance of Mau- rice Samuel, noted author and lec- turer. Samuel will speak 8:15 p.m. Nov. 13, in the Aaron DeRoy Theater, under the co-sponsorship of the Conference on Soviet Jewry, coordinated by the Jewish Commu- nity Council for 25 national organ- izations. Teacher-at-large to almost two "Literature and the Jew" will be the topic explored on "High- lights" during the next six weeks. Dr. Lawrence I. Berkove of the University of Michigan will act as host of this series beginning Sunday. "Highlights" is a Sunday morn- ing program presented by the cul- ture commission of the Jewish Community Council at 9:45 on Channel 2, and 9:15 a.m. on Station WJBK. "New Voices," those of young Jewish poets Jon Silkin, Howard Nemerov, Robert Mezey, Allen Grossman, Karl Shapiro and Hyam Plutzik, will be presented through readings by Center Theater mem- of New York will be the guest speaker 8 p.m., Nov. 8. She will appear under auspices of the Jew- ish National Fund. Mrs. Pool was national president of Hadassah from 1939 to 1943. A pioneer in establishing Youth Aliya as a program in Israel, she initiated Ramhat Hadassah Szold, the reception cen- ter for newly ar- rived Youth Ali- ya charges. A descendant of a long line of rabbis and pio- neers in Israel, she is the wife of Rabbi David de Sola Pool of the Spanish and Por- tuguese Syna- gogue in New York. She - has collaborated with h e r husband in many writings and is co-author Mrs. Pool with him of "An Old Faith in the New World" and "Is There An Answer?" * * - HADASSAH DAY, NOV. 8 MAURICE SAMUEL "The Challenging Years—Peace or Panic?" will be the theme of Hadassah Day Nov. 8. The morning session beginning at 10:15 will feature Rabbi M. Robert Syme of Temple Israel dis- cussing "If My Grandfather Were Living Today, What Would He Think of Us as Jews?" A luncheon is planned, followed by an afternoon session to convene at 1 p.m. The speaker and discus- sion leader for the afternoon ses- sion will be Rev Dr. Carl Her- mann Voss, prom- in e n t Protestant clergyman and- author. Dr. Voss,. has recently re-raw turned from an extensive tour of the Middle Eastk, where he visited Israel and the, Arab lands for the seventh time. He is familiar with the installa- tions at the Had- assah Hospital in Dr. Voss Jerusalem and has observed closely the work of the Jewish Agency for Israel and the American Joint Distribution Committee. He will present "A Non-Jew's Observation of World Jewry." Mrs. Maurice Perlman, Hadas- sah's vice-president of education, will serve as chairman of the day. * * * generations of American Jewry, Samuel has been described as a one-man educational movement. He has traveled widely and is a keen observer of the contemporary scene. Samuel's newest book, "Blood Accusation," has been highly ac- claimed. He is known for his other writings, "Prince of the Ghetto," "The Gentleman and the Jew" and "Harvest in the Desert." The public is invited to this lec- ture. * * YIDDISH NIGHT, NOV. 9 The Book Fair will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the death of Sholom Aleichem, 8 p.m. Nov. 9. The evening will be under the sponsorship of the Hebrew-Yiddish Book Fair Committee of the Cen- ter, announces ::Mrs. Julian S. Tobias, Book Fair chairman. An outstanding program will be presented featur- ing Boruch Shef- ner as guest speaker and Her. shel Gendel as .guest artist. . Chairman of the evening is Morris Nobel. Serving as co-ordinator a nd adviser is Mrs. Morris Friedman. Shefner, whose CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS Gendel subject will be Mrs. Abe Zitomer announces that "The Laughter in Sholom Alei- Mrs. Martha Marenof and Mrs. chem" has been identified all his Harold Orbach will be highlighting life with Yiddish literature. Edu- this year's c h i 1- cated in Poland and Vienna, he was dren's programs. a writer and editor in Europe until 0 n Nov. 6 , World War II. Since coming to NI r s . Marenof, America he has been a columnist author of numer- for the Forward and has published ous children's four books. books, will con- Gendel, a product of the Yiddish duct two story- stage, is an outstanding exponent t e 11 i n g sessions, of Yiddish-American humor and is 2 p.m. and 3 particularly noted for his renditions p.m. of Sholom Aleichem folk tales. He Nov. 13 will has appeared throughout the West feature Mrs. em Hemisphere at recitals and con- Harold 0 r - certs, on radio and television, and bach presenting is recognized as a rare story teller "Mottel the Can- and monologist. The JCC Senior tor's Son" by Adult Choir under the direction of Sholom Aleichem _ Cantor Nicholas Fenakel will pre- Mrs. Zitomer a t performances sent three Sholom Aleichem songs. at 2 and 3 p.m. * * Also on Nov. 13, Mrs. Marenof JNF NIGHT, NOV. 8 will hold storytelling hours at 2:15 Mrs. David (Tamar) de Sola Pool and 3:15 p.m. For information contact the Jew- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ish Center Book Fair office, DI 40—Friday, October 21, 1966 1-4200. hers Bluma Seigal and Ruth Hur- witz, with their relevance to both the literary and the Jewish scene reviewed by Dr. Berkove. Succeeding weeks will hold pres- entations on "The Jewishness of Israeli Literature" with Yaakov Malkin, Israeli writer and lec- turer; "Drama" with a presentation of "2x2=Schultz" by Ephraim Kishon; and a scene from "Death of a Salesman" by Arthur Miller, with Center Theater actors; a con- versation with Maurice Samuel on the relevance to the contemporary scene of his new book "Blood Accusation"; a program on the rich variety of Jewish thought as expressed through the many dif- ferent Jewish publications; and finally a program on "The Novel." Dr. Berkove, originally from Chicago, earned his bachelors degree from the University of Illinois; his masters from the University of Minnesota and his doctorate on 19th Century Ameri- can literature at the University of Pennsylvania. He has been teaching on the college level for eight years and is in his third year at the University of Michi- gan Dearborn campus. These programs on "Literature and the Jew" are being presented in cooperation with the Book Fair at the Jewish Center. The ent;~.. series has been planned by „- Lawrence Wember, librarian' Temple Israel, and Mrs. Re-, Frankel, members of the broad- casting committee. Dr. Berkove worked in conjunction with Evelyn Orbach, program associate of the Jewish Community Council and pro- ducer of "Highlights." Puzzling Contrasts-Israel and Vietnam Policies BY MILTON FRIEDMAN (Copyright, 1966, JTA, Inc.) Is Syria to become a privileged sanctuary for anti-Israel ter- rorism? According to the State Depart- ment, Arab infiltration into Israel does not justify the same counter- measures that the United States employs in Vietnam against simi- lar guerrilla tactics. Syrian raiders use Viet Cong types of Communist-manufactured mines and weapons; identical "liberation war" slogans are pro- claimed. But the State Depart- ment is trying to restrain the Israelis from using the same de- fense concepts in the Near East. A detailed Israeli memorandum was submitted to the State Depart- ment several months ago when Israel found it necessary to un- leash an air strike against a Syrian base of aggression. That memorandum is said to have drawn a brilliant analogy between the Israeli action and the American military role in Southeast Asia. The Gulf of Tonkin resolution of 1964 was cited along with the sub- sequent air bombardment of North Vietnam—buttressed by statenymts of President Johnson and Secretary of State Rusk against the pri- vileged sanctuary concept. U.S. officials lauded one aspect of the Israeli presentation. It re- portedly had accepted as valid the entire legality of the controversial American Vietnamese policy. Officials noted, with considerable embarrassment, that they never- theless had to reject the under- lying premise that Israel had a right to use the same counter- insurgency tactics justified by the United States in Vietnam. The loophole cited by the State Department was the distinction that the United Nations allegedly maintains an effective presence on the Arab-Israel borders while such a UN "shield" is absent from Vietnam. American experts were well aware, however, that the U.N. failed to prevent the Arab "fe- dayeen" raids that led to the 195G Sinai-Suez war. The State Depart- ment also had detailed reports that the Palestine Liberation Army, Syria and Egypt openly advocate a Peking - style "people's war" against Israel. But the U.S. administration wants to avert war in the Near East at a time when commitments in Viet- nam and Southeast Asia are re- garded as more important to America. Washington is mindful of Soviet arms shipments to Syria, Many Ex-Nazis Belong to German Extremist Party BONN (JTA) — The semi-of- ficial newsletter of the West Ger- man Interior Ministry asserted Sunday that at least 1,200 mem- bers of the new extremist National Democratic Party were Nazis be- fore 1933, and that others had been high Nazi officials. Egypt and I r a q. American jet bombers and tanks are sold to Israel. U.S. authorities are also aware that Israel is a convenient buffer protecting, indirectly but effectively, the anti-Israel but otherwise pro-Western Arab re- gimes of Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The State Department feels that a tough Israeli defense policy, in- volving reprisal actions, could he exploited by Communists to under- mine Jordan and Saudi Arabia while penetrating even further into Syria and Egypt. This is one reason Israel is being told not to hit back. A more compelling factor is that the Defense Department does not want U.S. Sixth Fleet units—air- craft carriers and marine detach- ments—tied down in a troubled Mediterranean when reserves are required in the growing Vietnam involvement. Washington is strongly against escalation—in the Near East. This is because of neither pro-Arab appeasement tendencies nor hos- tility toward the Jewish State. It is simply that Vietnam is the guid- ing star of all policy courses now charted in Washington. Other con- siderations are secondary and subservient. A danger is emerging that pres- sure for Israel to use maximum restraint might invite increased Arab guerrilla attacks. It pro- motes a specter of Syria as a privileged sanctuary that could mount sadistic attacks with im- munity. Syria could be cloaked by a Soviet security guarantee while Washington tells Israel to use re- straint and "appropriate UN ma- chinery." Israel, apparently, is to make continued appeals to a United Nations that is made im- potent by the Soviet veto. Washington may be saying in effect: "Don't do like we do, but do as we say for you to do." HEBREW SELF-TAUGHT BY yes kehn4 no loh also gahm he hoos she hee T .6 N17 .7 DI .8 AHARON ROSEN peace (greeting) shah'-lohm2 I ah-nee3 you (m.s.) ah-tah X171 .9 kV;:i .10 you (f.s.) aht who mee .5 Most Hebrew words are accented on the last syllable. Words accented on the next CO last syllable will be marked accordingly. 1 ah between hat and hall 2 oh — as in more 3 ee — as in need 4 eb — between pen and pail \ 3 oo — as in soon Reading material in vowelized Easy Hebrew, and also invterial for advanced students may be obtained by writing to: Brit Ivrit P.O.B. 7111, Jerusalem, Israel. Published by Brit Ivrit Olamit