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February 05, 1968 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-02-05

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

34—Friday, February 9, 1968

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Ziprin's Recollections .. .

..,Triss Goldman Engagea

Man and Wild Animals

to Harvey Pearlman

By DAVID SCHWARTZ

About the Royal-Now Defunct

By NATHAN ZIPRIN

(A Seven Arts Feature)

The once-green Second Ave.
pastures are now largely seared
to me, yet the urge to return in
nostalgic memory is often irresist-
able.
What beckons most is the Cafe
Royal, where I spent more days
and nights than I care to remem-
ber, talking about the sacred and
mundane. discussing art, listening
to gossip, evaluating the girls,
playing pinnochle and resting from
the turmoil of the street.
There were many stories circu-
lating about the cafe, among them
one that its last owner won it in
a pinnochle game. However, what-
ever the legend. the truth is that
it was one of the rarest enclaves in
the world, attracting the elite, the
poor, the rich, dignitaries and-
charlatans. purists and gamblers
and such disparate segments as
writers and actors.
For some reason I have never
been able to f a t h o m, the Yid-

Podhoretz to Speak
for AJCommittee

Norman Podhoretz, editor of
Commentary magazine and author
of the current best-selling "Mak-
ing It," will ap-
pear at the Jew-
ish Center under
the auspices o
the American
Jewish Commit-
tee, 11 p.m. Feb.
20 on the topic
"How Jewish is
Commentary?"
The public is in-
vited.
A native New
Yorker. Pod-
horetz was a
Pulitzer scholai
at Columbia Uni-,
versity. He holds
degrees from
Cambridge Uni- Podhoretz
versity where he was a Fulbright
and Kellett Fellow. He studied at
the Jewish Theological Seminary.
He has taught English and philo-
sophy at Cambridge and was edi-
tor in chief of the Looking Glass
Library, publishers of children's
classics.

Scientist's System
Makes Objects Float

REHOVOT—A magnetic method
which permits objects to "float
in the air" has been developed by
Ben-Zion Kaplan, of the Weizmann
Institute of Science.
Kaplan's system is based on the
fact that the inductance of an elec-
tromagnet varies in accordance
with the distance between it and
any ferromagnetic body, such as
iron, within its field. The electro-
magnet used is part of a series
resonance circuit, fed by an AC
voltage source, whose frequency
is slightly higher than the reso-
nance frequency to which the cir-
cuit is tuned.
Objects can be suspended below
this electromagnet and held in
place. Moreover, even when
weight is added, equilibrium can
be re-established quickly, leaving
the object "floating in the air."
Similar systems have been de-
veloped independently in Britain
and the United States, but Kaplan
has made a special contribution
to the field by explaining the ten-
dency of the suspended body to
oscillate by an analogy to para-
metric electromechanical systems.

Almogi to Speak Here
for Labor Zionists

Yosef Almogi, former minister
of development and housing and a
member of the Israel Knesset, will
address a dinner sponsored by the
Labor Zionist Movement Israel
Bond Committee 7 p.m. Feb. 21,
at the Labor Zionist Institute.
For reservations to the dinner,
call Israel Bonds, DI 1-5707.

dish poets and writers of belle
lettres always kept themselves
aloof in one corner of the cafe
as if by silent agreement with the
more talkative actors. One could
tell which was the actors' corner
by its exuberance and the exhibi-
tionism of its occupants. its gaiety
and the string of unusually, and at
times exotically, dressed women.
The corner where the writers were
wont to congregate was generally
more subdued, except of course
on the frequent occasions when
they were engaged in literary, poli-
tical or personal feuds. At all
times, the actors seemed to be
beyond the pale of the dreamers.
At its heyday, the Cafe Royal
fevered with Jewish writers, intel-
lectuals;' poets, actors, playwrights,I
producers, journalists, bon vivants
and / what then seemed to us, the
younger set, an array of the mostl
beicutiful, most interesting and
most exotic ,women in the world.
Such was its fame as a literary cafe ,
that it attracted celebrities fromi
every part of the world and in ev-
every field of human and creative
endeavor. Trekking to the Royal
a-as like going on a pilgrimage.
An ineradicable event in this
writer's memory is the night when
the Hebrew poet Hayim Nach-
man Biahk came to the Royal. An-
other is the black night of terror
when Sacco and Vanzetti were exe-
cuted. All of the Royal then seem-
ed frozen in silence.
An indelible recollection is the
occasion when Abe Cahn, the leo-
nine editor of the Forward and a
literary figure of world renown,
learned the meaning of "a Jewish
gazlen." He and his wife were
seated at a table with a prom-
ising young writer whom he
apparently antagonized. Angered
by the rebuff. the young man be-
yin shouting unwholly unprintable
deprecations and raised a butter
knife against the now frightened
editor. However. before he could
lower ,t‘he boom, the young man,
the would-be Jewish killer, fell 'in
a faint from which he was revived
by Cahn and his wife. When the
turmoil was over and the white
faced young man was revived,
Cahn ordered the waiter to serve
him a cup of hot coffee. Revived
and still boiling with anger, the
young man tried his hand anew at
murder, but it would not obey
him. He fell prostrate again, ob-
viously convinced that he was not
fated for murder. When the con-
fusion subsided Cahn remarked,
"Now I know what it means when
people say about one that he is a
`Jewish gazlen.' "
To stray visitors the Cafe Royal
was a curiosity. To its habitues it
was a sanctum to which they trek-
ked daily: One met friends there,
but more often than not the meet-
ings were moments in literary dia-
logues, exercises in disputations,
and at times, promenades into the
pardes that is within the exclusive
domain of the creative. The tables
at the Royal over the years were
often silent witness to literary
judgments that either spelled ra-
diance or extinction for aspiring
writers. They were witness too to
the germinating of new literary
movements on the Yiddish rialto
and to literary conspiracies by the
ungreat who feared fresh voices.
The Royal, of course, also at-
tracted the queer, the bizarre and
the unsavory of character.
The closing of the Royal — an
inexorable victim of time and
change—ended the reign of a uni-
que Jewish way of life not only
on Second Avenue but on all the
streets, avenues and nooks and
corners of the East Sides through-
out the Jewish world, bringing an
end to a climate that can never
be imitated.
The story of the Royal is of
the very folklore of the now large-
ly vanished Jewish East Side. Only
the poets and writers who were of
its stream are competent to record
the story of that unique corner of
12th and Second Ave.

MISS MIRIAM GOLDMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Saul Goldman of
Burton Ave., Oak Park, announce
the engagement of their daughter
Miriam to Harvey Pearlman, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Moe Pearlman of
Roselawn Ave,
Miss Goldman is a graduate of
the International Data Processing
Institute, and her fiance a grad-
uate of the Detroit Institute of
Technology.
An April wedding is planned.

Beth El to Host
Dr. Hunter Sunday

Dr. Sam Hunter will be the third
lecturer in the Theodore and
Mina Bargman Memorial Scholar
Series of Temple
Beth El 7:30
p.m. Sunday.
Dinner will be at
6 :30.
Dr. Hunter, di-
rector of the Jew-
ish Museum, New
York, since 1965,
will speak on "Is
There Jewish
Art?"
He has lectured
Dr. Hunter
widely on mod-
ern and contemporary art at
museums and public galleries in
this country and in Canada. He
was formerly lecturer in fine arts
at Barnard College; assistant pro-
fessor of fine arts at the Univer-
sity of California; visiting profes-
sor at Harvard University; art
critic for the New York Times and
associate curator of the depart-
ment of painting and sculpture at
the Museum of Modern Art.

Ex-Detroiter Gets
Research Grant

Former Detroiter Dr. Arnold H.
Kadish, son of the Jack Kadishes
of Patton Ave., is principal investi-
gator of the project which recently
received a two-year grant for study
of automation control of blood glu-
cose.
The $118,866 grant, to Cedars-
Sinai Medical Center in Los An-
geles, was by the John A. Hartford
Foundation of New York.
The grant will aid in the develop-
ment of an on-line computer sys-
tem and will be directed toward
more precise prescription of in-
sulin.
Dr. Kadish, a member of the
California Institute of Tech-
nology's Metabolic Dynamics
Foundation, attended the con-
ference on hormonial control sys-
tems in health and disease in Oc-
tober in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif.
He was recently appointed senior
research fellow in engineering by
CIT.
Dr. Kadish was Instrumental in
the development of a miniaturized
system for the continuous monitor-
ing of blood glucose, which will
allow rapid and accurate, precisely
timed determination of the proper
insulin dosage and, also, the com-
position and timing of meals for
"brittle" diabetics.
He is the author of "Cybernetics
of Blood Sugar and Fat in Health
and Disease," a paper published
by Acta Diabetologica Latina, a
Spanish-English journal.

(Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.)

The world's leading dealer in
wild animals is Frederic Zeehande-
laar. His son was Bar Mitzva last
week in New Rochelle, N.Y. The
World Almanac contains a brief
account of Mr. Zeehandelaar's
business. A full biography will
shortly appear, written by Paul
Sarnoff and published by Prentice
Hall.
It seems strange to find a Jew in
this business, but after all, maybe
it is not so strange. Take the name
Ben-Gurion. Gur means a young
lion. Yael—of Yael Dayan—means
gazelle. The Bible shows a great in-
terest in animals. Solomon bids us
learn from the ant planning for the
future nad points to the success of
the little spider 'in entering even
kings' places. Isaiah admiring the
eagle prophesied that man would
yet soar on wings like an eagle and
looked to the time when the lion
and the lamb will lie down together
peacefully. His first prophecy of
man's flying has materialized. Per-
haps, his second about peace, may
some day also be realized.
The Bible Zoo in Jerusalem aims
to have all the animals mentioned
in the Good Book and by the way,
during the recent snow storm in
Jerusalem, the zoo animals suffered
severely. A power blackout cut off
the heat of the building; and what
do you suppose the animals did,
when there was no heat?
They had a schnapps! The hip-
popotomus and the orangoutang,
were given shots of brandy, and
the other animals had wine.
Frederick Zeehandeelaar (the
name is Dutch for sea merchant)—
he had escaped from the Naz.i,J-
was born in Amsterdam. C He
planned a medical career, but as
Mr. Sarnoff explains, he was im-
patient with his medical studies,
dropped out of school and went
into the pharmaceutical export
business. Then came the Nazis. He
was arrested but succeeded in es-
caping. His father and mother were
murdered in concentration camps.
When peace came, Zeehandelaar
immigrated to the United States
and returned to the pharmaceutical
export business.
He owes his success to the fact
that one of his customers in Mada-
gascar couldn't pay his bill. He
offered instead "some monkeys
and some snakes."
What sort of monkey business is
this, Mr. Zeehandelaar first
thought. Then he got busy and
made a very profitable sale of
them and with this began his new
career. He introduced efficiency
into the wild animal business that
it had not known before and be-
came world famous.
Perhaps subconsciously, as a
Jew, he had absorbed from the
Talmud a respect for the superior
qualities of many animals. "Had
the Tora not been given," says
the Talmud, "man could have
learned from the ant not to rob;

from the dove not to commit
adultery; from the cat to be mod-
est; and from the rooster, good
manners."
"A calf may wish to suckle but
the cow wishes even more to give
suck." (That is, the teacher has
need to teach as much as the pupil
to learn.)
"If you do not teach the ox to
plough in his youth, it will be diffi-
cult to teach him when he is grown.
(The early years are the most form-
ative of character.)
"When the ox falls, many are
ready to slaughter him. (The lamen-
table trait of some men to jump on
a person when he is down.)
"Lions are before thee and thou
inquirest of foxes." (The practice
of consulting inferior advisers.)
The Talmud says a good word
even for the most despised crea-
tures! Even concerning scorpions,
spiders and insects, it is written
"It is good."

Author to Sell Manuscript
of 'The Passover Plot'

NEW YORK, — Dr. Hugh J.
Schonfield, author of the contro-
versial best seller, "The Passover
Plot," has donated the original
manuscript of his book to World
Service Trust. The original manu-
script will be sold to the highest
bidder above $5,000, and will be
accompanied by a signed title
page and a personal letter from
Dr. Schonfield.
The fee received will be used by
the World Service Trust in its
humanitarian work giving relief to
victims of natural disasters. The
World Service Trust is a regis-
tered charity in Great Britain.
Offers for p u r.c ha se of the
manuscript must be received by
March 31 at the offices of the pub-
lishers of "The Passover Plot,"
Bernard Geis Associates, 130 East
56th St. New York 10022.
Dr. Schonfield's next
book,
"Those Incredible Christians" will
be published in June.

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WASHINGTON (JTA) — Secre-
tary of Defense Robert S. Mc-
Namara has reported to the Senate
Armed Services Committee that
the Middle East "stands high on
the Soviet scale of politico-military
priorities" and that the situation
there has deterioriated in the past
year.
He added that "while the over-
all situation in the Middle East
has deterioriated during the past
year. there have also been some
He
encouraging developments."
cited as examples "the United Na-
tions efforts to resolve the Arab-
Israeli dispute and the withdrawal
of Egyptian troops from Yemen"
in addition to the easing of Greek-
Turkish tensions and achievement
of economic progress in Iran.
The defense secretary charac-
terized increased Soviet naval ac-
tivity in the Mediterranean as
primarily "a diplomatic gesture
aimed at recouping political losses
suffered as a result of Moscow's
inability to forestall Israel's vic-
tory over the Arabs in June, 1967."
He contended that the Soviets
"probably do not plan formally to
acquire permanent bases in the
Mediterranean and the Arab world.
Indeed, we believe that these coun-
tries which have potentially useful
facilities — primarily the United
Arab Republic, Syria. Yemen and
Algeria — would probably resist
granting full base rights on polit-
ical grounds."
Noting the Soviet re-supply of
the Arabs with arms following the
Six-Day War, McNamara said that

Russian military aid shipments
now appeared to have fallen off to
pre-war levels. But he added that
"the Soviet Union's partisan polit-
ical position on Middle Eastern
questions, its increased naval pres-
ence in the Mediterranean, its in-
tervention in the conflict in Yemen
and its efforts to reduce or sup-
plant Western influence, generally,
have contributed to instability in
the region."
Because of this situation, he
added, the United States relaxed
its arms freeze and resumed
"selected and limited arms ship-
ments" to friendly nations in the
Middle East. He pointed out that
"virtually all of the items sup-
plied were ordered prior to the
(June) war and, except for a
limited number of aircraft pro-
vided to Israel, were support
items."
He said that "Soviet naval craft
in the Mediterranean, including
guided-missile cruisers, a number
of submarines, lesser warships, and
support units which could provide
for year-round operations, have ef-
fectively shown the flag. Although
modest in size and punch compared
with the U.S. Sixth Fleet, the So-
viet fleet provides the type of
visibility which Moscow has elected
to seek. It has similarly signaled
that the future Soviet posture will
include marine amphibious forces
and helicopter carriers. How all
these activities will affect their
future behavior is a matter to
which we will give close atten-
tion."

Mayor of French Border Town Cited;
Saved Jewish Children from Gestapo

GENEVA (JTA) — A former
leader of the French resistance
movement who rescued 32 Jewish
children from the Gestapo in 1944
at the risk of his own life, was
presented here with the Award of
Righteousness, a silver medal and
illuminated scroll symbolizing Jew-
ish gratitude for acts of bravery
by non-Jews in their behalf.
The recipient was Jean Def-
faught, former Mayor of Anne-
masse, who served the French
resistance in the Franco-Swiss bor-
der region during World War II.
The award was presented by the
new Israeli envoy to Switzerland,
Ambassador Aryeh Levivi, in cere-
monies held in the Israel Mission
head quarters here. Ambassador
Mordecai Kidron, permanent rep-
resentative of Israel to the United

U.S. Governors in Israel
Visit Shazer, Eshkol

Orchestra and Entertainment

' „....
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-

Deteriorated, Notes Arms Freeze
McNamara Says Situation in M.E.

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Six
American governors and the gover-
nor of the Virgin Islands, paying
a five-day visit to Israel as guests
of the government, were received
formally Sunday in separate visits
to President Zalman S'hazar, Prime
Minister Levi Eshkol and Foreign
Minister Abba Eban. They also
visited the Hebrew University and
Yad Vashem, the memorial to the
victims of the Nazi Holocaust con-
ducted by the Remembrance Auth-
ority.
In the group were Governors
John A. Volpe of Massachusetts,
chairman of the National Governors
Conference; Tim Babcock of Mon-
tana; Warren P. Knowles of Wis-
consin; Robert E. McNair of South
Carolina; Charles Terry of Dela-
ware; and Hulett C. Smith of West
Virginia. Gov . Ralph E. Paiewon-
sky of the Virgin Islands is also a
member of the group.

Yotvata Age Ten

EILAT—Yotvata, the first kib-
utz founded in the Arava, 40 kilo-
meter north of Eilat, celebrated
its 10th anniversary. It presently
cultivates some 1,200 dunams (300
acres) of land reclaimed by the
JNF, 250 dunams (62 acres) of
which grow dates, melons and flow-
ers for export. The kibutz's 300
dairy cows provided Eilat 'with most

of its dairy needs:

Nations in Geneva participated in
the ceremonies. A number of Mr.
Deffaught's former resistance corn- I
rades were present.

Israeli Commie Joins
E. Germany in Attack
on 'Aggressor Israel'

BONN (JTA) — A joint com-
munique, issued in East Berlin by
the East German Communist Party
on behalf of itself and the Com-
munist splinter party in Israel,
called Israel the aggressor in the
June war and demanded Israeli
withdrawal from occupied Arab
territories, it was reported here.
Issuance of the declaration fol-
lowed several days of talks with
East German party officials by
Meir Wilner, leader of the Israeli
party, who also said, in an inter-
view in East Berlin with the Com-
munist paper, Neues Deutschland,
that the meeting early this month
between Israeli Premier Levi Esh-
kol and President Johnson about
peace talks with the Arabs was a
"political maneuver."
The Israeli Communist also as-
serted that Israel was becoming
"more and more isolated" and had
"lost sympathy" in many countries.
He also charged that Israel was
seeking "new adventures."

Harman Hails 'Decency'
of U.S. Towards Israel

NEW YORK (JTA)—Addressing
500 guests at a farewell dinner
Jan. 23 tendered by the Confer-
ence of Presidents of Major Jew-
ish Organizations, Ambassador Av-
raham Harman of Israel paid trib-
ute to "the sense of decency and
fair play" which he said the United
States had shown towards Israel
and other small nations that had
obtained their independence fol-
lowing World War II.
The ambassador praised the
United State for its "unswerving
policy" of upholding the right of
every state to be its own self and
to see its existence respected. He
said that "never has this policy
of supporting small and indepen-
dent state been more effectively
and clearly expressed than in the
American stand during the Middle
the
.
East crisis °last' June - andin.
' UN debate' since that

Friday, February 9, 1968-35
Scholar Condemns THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Moves to Condone Orthodox Groups Resume
Homosexuality

NEW YORK (JTA) — A leading
Orthodox rabbinical scholar has
charged that contemporary Chris-
tianity "is reverting to its pre-
Judaic roots" and showing signs
of a "resurrection of a long-re-
pressed pagan past" in the growing
questioning by church leaders of
the ancient Judaeo-Christian doc-
trine that homosexuality is morally
wrong.

Battle Against Autopsies

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Ultra- be permitted under any circurn-
Orthodox groups renewed their stances without written consent
demonstrations against autopsies from the patient prior to death or
at a rally here on Jan. 31 attended from his family after death.
by more than 4,000 persons. At The Israel Physicians Assoela-
the same time, posters appeared tion has asked the prime minister
in Jerusalem streets accusing doe- to take steps to protect the medi-
tors of selling human limbs for cal profession and the reputations
profit. The Orthodox protests had of doctors from "a smear cam-
been suspended during the Six-Day paign by certain fanatic elements."
War.
The Orthodox groups are de-
PRESENTS
manding revision of the present
law which permits physicians to
order autopsies without prior con-
sent of the deceased or his family!
in cases where there are over-1
whelming medical or scientific I
reasons for autopsy or the suspi-
cion of foul play. The law requires
BIG BAND OR SMALL COMBOS
that three physicians concur in the
UN 3-8982 UN 3-5730
need for autopsy. The Orthodox
contend that autopsies should not

Rabbi Norman Lamm, founder-
editor of Tradition, the rabbinical
periodical, professor of philosophy
at YeshivaUniversity, writing in
the current issue of Jewish Life,
publication of the Union of Ortho-
dox Jewish Congregations of
America, cited the recent report
on homosexuality to the British
Council of Churches, a meeting
on the problem in New York last
Nov. 28 attended by 90 Episcopa-
lian bishops, and a variety of
similar pronouncements by Swed-
ish and German church spokes.
The minimum industrial wage
men.
in Nicaragua is only 21 cents an
He summarized the "new think- hour, and unskilled labor earns
ing" on the Christian view on less. Contributions to the CARE
homosexuality, as expressed in Food Crusade, New York 10016,
those reports, as holding that such help provide a daily meal at new
acts should not be dismissed as preschool, centers for undernour-
wrong, per se; that when per- ished children from low-income
formed by "consenting adults," families.
they should be judged "by the same
criterion as a heterosexual mar-
riage — whether it is intended to
foster a permanent relation of
love—" and that such acts are
Now Booking - -
"normally neutral" and even, at
times, "a good thing."

BY POPULAR DEMAND !

Judaism, Rabbi Lamm said, con-
demns homosexuality as an abom-
ination and the Tora legislates on
it in the context of other sexual
vices, such as adultry, incest and
bestiality. Capital punishment is
ordained in Leviticus for such acts.
Homosexuality, whether male or
female, "can never be legitimized
in the eyes of Judaism," he
stressed.
This does not mean, the rabbini-
cal scholar emphasized, that "Jews
who live by Judaism" lack com-
passion for the person "trapped
by this dreadful disease" or that
a case cannot be made, within a
Jewish religious context, for treat-
ing homosexuals as sick, rather
than evil, but authentic Judaism
can never agree "to the current
campaign in this country and in
Europe to declare homosexuality
a matter of personal taste within
the range of normality."
lie warned that Jews must view
"this new tendency in Christianity
with dismay and profound regret,"
adding that "this change in direc-
tion in Christian opinion" would
"undoubtedly have its effect on
non-Christian citizens as well."

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Scientist Projects
Possible Error
in Einstein Theory

NEW YORK (WNS)—The pos-
sibility of error in Einstein's theory
of relativity was projected here by
a young Jewish scientist who main-
tains there are particles in space
that travel faster than light.
According to Einstein, there can
be no speed exceeding that of light
but according to the young physi-
cist, 33-year-old Prof. Gerald Fein-
berg of Columbia University, the
universe is filled with particles that
move faster than light or even at
infinite speed.
If the theory is tested and proven
correct, it will revolutionize man's
knowledge of the world and his
capacity for reaching out for hith-
erto inaccessible distances in space.
Dr. Feinberg, who is professor of
physics at Columbia, stems from an
Eastern European Jewish family
and is himself immersed in Jewish
intellectual interests.
Scientists at Princeton, with
which Dr. Feinberg was associated,
are expected to continue research
into his theory.

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ALL SILVER FIRST QUALITY
rbo•a Orders Accepted
Mail An

RTHWQOD JEWELRY CENTER,

2602 N. WOODWARD
at 216 sm. Bead
131 9-18
ROYAL -OAK;,'

Al Iteigler, Your Host



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