THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS . . 38—Friday, May 5, 1967 McKay to Publish Firit Lieber Novel Israel's Recession and Immigration • By ELIAHU SALPETF:R Mrs. Harold Silver • Dies in Israel migrants from scores of other in a nation of new immigrants; in ZIA Correspondent in Israel } countries. Ile was probably given his old country he was a member (Copyright, 1461, JTA, Inc.) Mrs. Harold (Feigel) Silver, a house or an apartment in one of of the more privileged class of formerly of Detroit, died April 26 JERUSALEM—It is almost a - n the development towns where "intelligentsia." And while a in Israel where official axiom here that Israel she and Mr. Silver , Joel Lieber's novel, "flow the present . economic recession i s many of his citizens came from the grandmother from Yemen came to- were making their home. Fishes Live." was published April caused, to a large extent, b s same country as he did. And as gether with all her children and The Silvers, of Jerusalem, had Y long as as he had a job. he was grandchildren, and a grandma 28 by David McKay Company. the dwindling of mass immOratio been visiting their daughter in Urim more or less happy with his lot. from Britain can fly home any for the Passover holiday and while For his first novel, Lieber has to this country. The arrival of ten chosen a subject of considerable of thousands and even hundreds o s Immigrants from the States. on time to see her dear ones left there Mrs. Silver became ill and emotional impact—anthropophagy, thousands of new immigrants i f the other hand. came from an in- behind. the situation is entirely was rushed to Beersheba, where or by its more familiar synonym, earlier years, though straining t n clividualistic society. Each pres- different if the old lady arrived she died. Funeral services were • ented an individual problem of from elsewhere. She is very happy cannibalism. breaking point Israel's finaneia held in Israel. absoroti our earn w as' I. e • o tb be near her son and grandchil- Russian-born Mrs. Silver, who A ship on its way from Europe resources, kept the economy 'run dren the idea that the initiative for solv- in Tel Aviv. But the grand- nine in high gear to provide hous was in her late 60s, had resided in to the United States blows up and - ing his problems had to come from children do not understand her Detroit from 1933 to 1963. The sinks. Hundreds lose their lives. ing. employment and. services fo ✓ him and not from the authorities. Yiddish and she cannot talk in One lifeboat manages to pull away. the newly-arrived. couple left for Israel upon the res- The newcomers under the their Hebrew. After a few months, Aboard are II people. They are ignation of Mr. The firmness of the economi c . family-reunion scheme also she will also long to see her daugh- Silver as director Isaac Wolfe, former Jewish ter- foundations laid in those hecti c present, each one of them, an ter and grandchildren left behind rorist against the British in Pales- years, left much to be desired of the Jewish individual problem. But life in —but she cannot just buy an air- tine and fighter for Israeli inde- though few people then had time Family and Chil- their old country trained them ticket next summer and visit them pendence: Betsy French, young, to worry about long-term implica d r e n's Service. - to expect the authorities not only again. Free university education. attractive, clad only in a man's Lions. On the other hand, the con Mr. Silver had - to provide theni jobs, housing free health services, cheap theater white dinner jacket; Byron Holt, siderable concern often expressed and education, but also take care and opera are things expected by also been the well-off advertising executive in about the sociological implications, executive direc- of their leisure time. Some voice members of the `intelligentsia" his late 20s: eleven-year-old An- in terms of Inter-human relation- tor Resettle- the sentence "Nobody cares what there, but are not necessarily the drew Wallace; a retired Conserva- ships. has proved so far less justi- ment Service and I do after work" not in a tone case in Israel. tive Jewish couple, Mr. and Mrs. fied than it seemed in the fifties. held many im- of satisfaction but as a corn- Difficult as these individual portant chai r- Simon Sachs; seasick George Tensions between ethnic groups. plaint. Also, a doctor or engineer problems are. Israeli authorities Moore; steward Ronnie Williams; and between "Oriental" immi- Mrs. Silver manships on the for example, who arrives to expect most of them to be solved crew member Bernoldi; Mario grants (i.e. 402m Moslem coun- join his welt-established middle on an individual basis—exactly local, state and national scene with Parker, male nurse; and Sieg- tries) and Eurirpean immigrants in regard to his interest in child and class children here, will prob- because the numbers involved are fried Trial). German-American bus- general have considerably dim- welfare programs. ably have—in absolute terms— so limited: But everybody in Is- inessman. inished. The very fact that tens Mrs. Silver was active in the a higher standard of living than rael would prefer to be the prob- The boat drifts. There are no of thousands arrived from the Jewish National Fund and Labor he had in his old country. lem of much larger dimensions. rations aboard. One person dies, same country helped each individ- Zionist movement (Histadrut) and In Israel, however, he is likely gladly accepting it as a price of then another, and all slowly weak- ual of each ethnic group to over- had also been a member of the en. After more than two weeks, come some of the initial difficulties to be yet another new immigrant mass immigration. committee on services to the aged the suggestion is made that the of life in a new country. of the Jewish Family and Chil- lifeboat company draw lots, the dren's Service. She had been ac- Mass immigration brought loser to sacrifice his life that the tive as a visitor to the sick and "mass-problems," for which the others might live. This is rejected homeless in hospitals and institu- government and the Jew ish by the majority but in the night. tions. Agency tried to develop mass one person is killed and all con- Besides her husband. she leaves solutions. Parallel to this, there sume the forbidden nourishment. a son, Dr. Reuben of Cleveland were the problems of a different A few days later, the lifeboat Israel hasn't had much luck wi th Israeli sympathies," and he con lleights; a daughter, Mrs. Philip kind of the much smaller num- is sighted and rescued, The sur- ( Rena) Schwartzberg of Urim; and ber of immigrants from Western some of the United Nations tru ce ments that when he arrived at vivors are questioned on their sur- a six grandchildren. countries. While for immigrants supervisors. General Burns caus ed prisingly good physical condition from, say, Yemen, Iran or Mo- some trouble. Now we have e% , i- Jordan session "it was presume d Those wishing to contact Mr. and the killing and the eating are rocco it was a question of dence of a lack of friendship, per- by Jordanian Intelligence . . . h e Silver may reach him at Neve confessed. The last part of "How haps eves cordial- had come Straight from the arm s Granot 2, Knisa 6, Jerusalem. . absorbing them into the modern the Fishes Live" is the trial of twentieth century- social and ity, on the part of of an Israeli mistress in the Jew the two survivors accused of the ' economic fabric of Israel, for Maj. Gen. C a r ish sector." murder. The story is full of sus- von Horn who was 1 Mrs. Margoshes Dies newcomers from the United pense, both in the days at sea Again, Walter Eyten, directo ✓ States or Britain there was the chief of staff of NEW YORK (JTA) — Mrs. Rose and in tin- trial that follows, the UN Truce Su- general of the Israel foreign of ' Kirschenbaum-Margoshes, wife of effort to adapt to the lower flee. is referred to as "high-browed . Dr. Samuel Margoshes and a Yid- . standard of living in this coun- pervisory Organ- ization. If we are dart-eyed man of r a the r shor t dish author in her own right, died try. Benjamin Merkle. 70 to judge by what stature," and he writes about thei ✓ here at the age of 80. These days. Israel is facing an he wrote, and the first meeting: Benjamin Merkle. former owner Born in Galicia, she came to the for 30 years of Victory Market in entirely new kind of problem in way he wrote, in "Eytan did all the talking on thi s United States in 1903. Under her Wyaridotte died Monday at age 70. the field of immigrant absorption. i s "Soldiering occasion. With him in the room wa s pen-name of Kirschenbaum-Mar- Mr. Merkle was a retired sales- In the past two years a small num- for Peace," which Yosef Tekoah, Siberian-born direr - goshes, she wrote for various Yid- man for Mohawk Furniture for ber of Jews, who have close rela- has been publish- for of armistice affairs with whom dish dailies and magazines, includ- the past 11 years. and he was a tives in Israel, were permitted to ed by David Mc- I was destined to have many tortu - ing Der Yiddisher Kempfer, the charter member of Temple Israel. reunite with their families here. Kay Co. (750 3rd, , ous dealings. I regret to say tha t Jewish Daily Forward, the Tage- Born in New York. Mr. Merkle was Their number runs only into the NYI7), he is not even at this first meeting Tekoah's - Blatt, and the Jewish Almanac. She look and manner reminded me for also contributed to the English- a 50-year resident of Detroit. lie hundreds. but they present a chal- renderingthe: lenge for which those who han- cause of good re- Gen. von Horn lived at 19$41 Cranbrook. cibly of the reptilian order Ophidia language Jewish press. dled the absorption of tens of . . " Later. he writes. he struck Survivin_!! him are his wife, Rose: thousands in the past are not yet lations much service. As a young woman, Mrs. Mar- up "a happy relationship" with a ifaughteri Mrs. Melvin (Ellen) fully prepared. When he describes Arab spokes . 1 goshes worked in the New York Yosef. Then- he states that he Rosen of :van Francisco; t h r e e men or other UN officials. they port as translator helping Jewish An immigrant from Iraq. for brothers, Sam, Saul and William; have "kind eyes" (in the case of sensed a latent resentment in For- immigrants to explain their prob- example, came with his entire eign Minister Golda Meir. and one grandchild. lems to the immigration author- family, pa re n t s, grandparents. Ralph Bunche), or good features 4. 4' 4. and are friendly, but the Jews are ities. She also did social work at aunts. uncles, cousins. nephews, creating suspicion! Versi4 for the Week t ' s amazing to what degree the the Henry Street Settlement on all. On his very first day in Israel He that gathereth in summer is ' he was likely to meet other Iraqi He seems to imply that Bunch e von Horn dislike for Israel and the New York's Lower East Side. Israelis carries him. Mrs. Meir is a wise son: but he that sleepeth Jews who arrived before him and warned him against the Israelis, in harvest is a son that causeth have already settled and he could and when von Horn speaks he often the Balku lady, everybody in Israel Dr. Frank Sternberg, shame —Proverbs 10:5 talk in his native Arabic to im- intermingles Jews and Israelis and is plotting and scheming, but when Dentist for 40 Years the Jews are the culprits in his he writes about Arab leaders they Dr. Frank C. Sternberg, 5094 W. relationships with them, although are "remarkable" men. Outer Dr., a dentist in Detroit for he occasionally expresses regret, To him Israel is always the trou- that the peace sought by Israel ble maker and because General 40 years, died April 29. He was 68. could not be attained. Dr. Sternberg was born in Hun- Laskov pleaded that Israel desires • • • a chance to breathe he termed it gary and graduated from the Uni- versity of Indiana in 1923. He be- "the Laskov Respiratory Theory." Describing I sr a el Ambassador longed to Phi . Epsilon Pi Frater- Not infrequently, von Horn does nity. He had been retired for Kidron who was among the first with whom he negotiated, he refers not hesitate to commend the Arabs three years. to him as "small, dark, and neat as having been so ready to cooper- Dr. Sternberg leaves his wife, with a high, sloping forehead,“ and ate with him—only Israelis were Ann; two daughters, Cherie and he bad boys. It's no wonder that that he "left him with the impres- Wendy; two brothers, Dr. Harry sion that the Israel government , he stood accused by Israel as a pre- and Dr. Jack; and two sisters, Mrs. udiced commander of the UN force would soon 'put me right'." In con- Morris (Lois) Cohen - and Mrs. on the Arab borders. trast he says, the United Arab Re- Grace Buck. public An Omar Loutfi "Soldiering for Peace" could well "was a genial man who radiated be relabeled as being prejudiced great charm and went out of his' against peace if it were to benefit way to be friendly." Israel. The win Horn book indicates His introductory chapter, a sort in no uncertain terms that a UN of historical resume of events pre- representative harmed Israel, had ceding his assuming the UNTSO set out to gather data to harm the For the first time science has found post, speaks of the "hot seat" he new state, delighted in telling tales a new healing substance with the as- was offered, refers to his predec- o a f b fo ic ui t alJ s cwesses who were seducing tonishing ability to shrink hemor- Dr. Amos de Shalit (left), director general of the Weizmann rhoids and to relieve pain — without essors — American General Riley surgery. In case after case, while Institute of Science at Rehovot, has a high-energy chat with Dr. C. who "had been regarded as taking It's no wonder that Israel faced gently relieving pain, actual reduc- N. Yang. 1937 Nobel Laureate in Physics and New York State Uni- too favorable a view of the Isra- s uch difficulties, when in their own tion (shrinkage) took place. Most yevsity professor, at the second International Conference on High amazing of all — results were so thor- ells." Danish General Bennike who m idst were enemies who were set ough that sufferers made astonishing Viler* Physics and Nuclear Structure held recently at the Weizmann was declared persona non grata by o n denigrating nearly everything statements like "Piles have ceased to 41.tititle. The conference, jointly organized by CERN, cooperative be a problem!" The secret is a new Israel and General Burns who was t he state did. From Israel's point healing substance (Bio-Dyne®)— dis- mulear research undertaking of 13 countries and the Weizmann accused of favoring the Arabs. Then o f view "Soldiering for Peace" covery of a world-famous research Institute. was attended by 200 distinguished scientists from 22 he mentions Colonel Leary the - de- c ould easily be condemned as a for- institute. This substance is now avail- ountries, including representatives of 20 American universities and able in suppository or ointment form vout Catholic "was in high disfavor m er UN official's self-indictment 'as ientific laboratories. called PropiSratioa Eli. At all drag with the Arabs who accused him of a n enemy within Israel's gates. counters. I Gen. von Horn's `Soldiering for Peace': Was He an Enemy Within, Schemer Against Israel? I■ choNot Physics Parley Draws Experts Shrinks Hemorrhoids Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain