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February 05, 1968 - Image 9

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

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

Gets Heritage Award

Boris Smolar's

German Court Is Allowed to Inspect Auschwitz

'Between You
. . and Me'

(Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.)

Saul Bellow, widely acclaimed
author, will receive Bnai Brith's
1968 Jewish Heritage Award
for "excellence in Jewish litera-
ture." Bellow, whose novels in a
24-year career include "The Ad-
ventures of Augie March," "Seize
the Day" and "Herzog," will be
given the $1,000 literary prize at
the annual meeting of Bnai Brith's
adult Jewish education commission
March 3 in Philadelphia. Previous
award winners Elie Wiesel and
Maurice Samuel will speak at the
event.

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This advertisement is neither an offer
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as a dealer, sales literature will be de-
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

16—Friday, February 9, 1968

JEWISH SCHOOLS AT 50: The Arbeter Ring Yiddish schools are
unique in the sense that most of the children who graduated from them
remain nostalgic about them all their lives . . . I know graduates who
have grown up to become physicians, engineers, chemists, physicist,
musicians and social workers, and all of them are still in a dreamy
mood when they talk about the years they spent in the Arbeter Ring
schools . . . They are middle-aged men and women—some have school
age children of their own—but the impact which the Arbeter Ring
schools made on them in their childhood never evaporated . . . No
matter what their profession is today, they did not forget the Yiddish
they studied in the Arbeter Ring schools; they have an attachment to
Jewish literature; they remember the Jewish history they learned,
and they are very much Jewish-minded although not religious-minded
. . . A good many of them send their children to the Arbeter Ring
schools now, maintaining a link between themselves and the school
of their youth . . . They are also building a better understanding
between themselves and their children . . . The Arbeter Ring school
system, now celebrating the 50th anniversary, was considered the most
modern Jewish educational effort, when it started .. In those years
the Talmud Toras were old-fashioned institutions with very low teach-
ing standards . . . In the course of time, the curriculum in other
types of Jewish schools improved; the selection of teachers underwent
a change for the better, and supervision over them became stricter
and more centralized . . . However, the educational standard of the
Arbeter Ring schools still ranks among the highest, and the 50th
anniversary of these schools finds the organization which maintains
them in numerous communities still in the forefront of modern Jew-
ish education.
INTENSIVE EFFORTS: The Arbeter Ring school system enters the
second half century of its existence just when Yiddish is being
introduced more and more as a subject of study in many Universities
in this country ... It can be truly said that if any educational system
was a "bastion of Yiddish" and led to the recognition of Yiddish in
American institutions of higher learning — it was the modern Yid-
dish school system of which the Arbeter Ring's was the largest . .
At present, Yiddish is on the decline in daily use ... But the interest
in literature originally written in Yiddish is growing among American-
born Jews . . . This is indicated not only by the unprecedented success
on the Amercan stage of "Fiddler on the Roof," a play based on works
of Sholem Aleichem, but also by the fact that books by Yiddish authors
written a generation ago are now suddenly "discovered" and published
in English translation by various well-known American publishing
houses . . . One suddenly finds out now what the pupils of the Arbeter
Ring schools knew long ago, namely, that 50 years ago there were
Yiddish novelties, poets and critics who could compare easily with
today's best English-writing American Jewish authors, whose books
are considered a part of American modern literature . . . In its tradi-
tion of keeping its schools on a high level, the Arbeter Ring has now
embarked on a program never practiced before by any type of Jewish
school . . . It seeks to attract Jewish teachers in public schools to
become teachers in the Arbeter Ring schools . . . In order to qualify
in Jewish knowledge, these teachers will have to attend special courses
which the Arbeter Ring is planning to establish for them . . . The
reply of numerous Jewish teachers in New York Public Schools to the
call of the Arbeter Ring has been encouraging, according to Joseph
Mlotek, education director.

Adv.

Novelist Charles Angoff
Hails Priest's Poems

Charles Angoff, novelist who is
now a member of the faculty of
Fairleigh Dickinson University,
Rutherford, N. J., has written a
highly commendatory foreword to
the volume of poems by Father
Leonardas Andriekus.
Published under the title "Amens
in Amber" by Manyland Books,
the priest's poems are religious in
nature. Angoff asserts that "reli-
gion . . • is living poetry." He
points to the manner in which
many poets have been inspired and
states that the Franciscan priest
Father Andriekus "belongs in their
tradition."
Illustrations for "Amens in Am-
ber" are by Telesforas Valius.

L. to R. — Mrs. George Simon of Grosse Pointe Farms, Mrs.
B. Levinson of Park Drive in Southfield and Mrs. J. B. Swainson of
Lafayette Towers, look over the program for the Detroit Spring
Antique Show Benefit Preview, of which Mrs. Simon is Chairman.
The Preview will be held on March 6th, 8:00 - 11:00 p.m. at the Light
Guard Armory on East Eight Mile Road and is being sponsored by
the Spirit of Detroit Association. Champagne, hors d' oeuvres and
prizes will be featured and proceeds will be for the 1968 Gold Cup
Race, scheduled for June 30 on the Detroit River.
Mrs. Levinson has worked with Mrs. Simon on many fund rais-
ing projects.
The Antique Show is the third largest in the country and will
be open to the general public March 7 - 10, 1:00 - 11:00 p.m. daily
and will feature 100 exhibitors, an appraisal booth and daily furni-
ture refinishing seminars.
The Show has been selected by the National Association of
Tourist Organizations in Washington, D. C. as one of the top 20
tourist attractions in the United States.
FOR PREVIEW TICKET INFORMATION CALL: 823-3010..

Israeli Wins Award
for British School Design

LONDON (JTA)—An Israel i
architect, David Shalev, is one of
the two first-prize winners in a
competition for the design of a
new comprehensive school for
1,700 children in Newport, Mon-
mouthshire.
The prize of 2,250 pounds sterling
($5,400) was open to all architects
licensed to practice in the United
Kingdom. The competition drew
165 entries.

Ross REALTY CO.

Avoid accidents—know the safety
rules and practice them.

Hope Abandoned for Lost Israel Submarine Dakar

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, February 9, 1968-17

ORT Votes to Extend Its Israel, France Programs

GENEVA (JTA)' — The World gration and the requirements of
ORT Union executive voted here countries, quantitatively as well as
Monday for further expansionf of qualitatively."
its programs in France and Israel
to meet pressing needs of Jews in
those countries for vocational and
technical training. Max Braude,
director-general, presented a rec-
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Their purpose is to gather evi-
BONN, (JTA) — Judge Hans
Meher of the Frankfurt court, with dence in connection with the trial
two state prosecutors and three de- of former "Kapos" concentration
fense lawyers, has been granted camp guards selected from the
permission by the Polish govern- camp inmates — who are charged
ment to visit the site of the former with war crimes and are to go on
trial soon.
Nazi death camp at Auschwitz.

MORIS HUPPERT

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All hope was abandoned this week for the lost Israeli submarine Dakar with the 69 officers and
crewmen aboard. The loss has been conceded by Admiral Shlomo Harel, commander in chief of Israel's
Navy. The accompanying photo was made when the craft was commissioned at Portsmouth, England,
Nov. 9, 1967. It shows crewmen boarding the Dakar. •

TEL AVIV (JTA)—The families of 69 officers and crewmen of the missing Israeli submarine Dakar
were assembled at General Headquarters here Sunday night and told that the intensive search for the
underseacraft that began 11 days ago has been called off. The sub disappeared Jan. 25 and has not been
heard from.
Meeting the bereaved families were Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Chaim
Bar-Lev and Admiral Shlomo Erel, commander-in-chief of Israel's Navy. They said that everything will
be done to determine what happened to the Dakar and solve the mystery of her disappearance. Admiral Erel
disclosed that the submarine, which Israel purchased from Britain, was not armed on her maiden voyage
from Portsmouth Naval Base to Haifa. Even her quota of torpedoes was shipped to Israel by other means.
Because the vessel was light, she was ordered to make the voyage submerged, Admiral Erel said.
Chief Chaplain Shlomo Goren of Israel's armed forces, said that the families of the Dakar's crew
do not have to sit shiva (the traditional seven-day mourning period) at this time because it is possible that
some clue will be found to the fate of the submarine and her men. Rabbi Goren said a date for shiva
will be set later.

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NEW YORK (JTA)—Orthodox Jewish Scientists here. Addressing that the association, here and
Jewish scientists should help find the association's 20th anniversary abroad, could contribute to the
an answer to the question of how banquet, Dr. Domb, president of gen4a1 community "what no other
Judaism may be brought "to the organization in Britain, said group can but that the community
masses of Jews estranged from it," Orthodox scientists should seek needs so urgently."
Dr. Cyril Domb, British physicist, ways to educate "the new genera-
told the Association of Orthodox 1 tion of Orthodox Jewry." He said
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