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September 18, 1970 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-09-18

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

Piogranis Are Listed for Book Fair on Nov. 7-15

Nov. 7.15 are the dates set, for
the 19th annual Jewish Book i'air
to be held at the Jewish Center.
The eight-day exposition will in-
clude lectures by 15 noted authors,
special programs for children and
youth, a Yiddish Theater group
from Philadelphia featuring, Chay-
ele Ash and her players in addi-
tion to the Center Theater.
Hundreds of books of Jewish
interest will be on display and for
sale ranging from inexpensive
paperbacks to heirloom editions.
Included is a large selection of new
books in Hebrew and Yiddish.
Organizations participating in
Book Fair are: Layman's Insti-
tute on the Middle East, Subur-
ban Congregations and Temple

Sisterhoods, Yiddish Committee
of the Jewish Center, Hadassah,

Parents Without Partners-Single
Adults of the Jewish Center,
Michigan Association of Jewish
College, Students, Young Adults
of the Jewish Center, Michigan
Region Women's American ORT,
National Council of Jewish Wom-
en, Brandeis University Na-
tional Women's Committee, Bnai
Brith Women's Council, Jewish
National Fund, Friends of Akiva
Day School, Friends of Hillel
Day School, Council of Pioneer
Wcmen, American Jewish Com-
mittee and Bnai Brith Men's
Council.
Book Fair will officially open
Saturday evening, Nov. 7, with
guest speaker Charles Angoff, pro-
fessor of English at Fairleigh
Dickinson University and editor of
the Literary Review. Together with
Meyer Levin in April 1970 he
edited "The Rise of American
Jewish Literature," an anthology
of selections from major novels.
He is the author of the...novels
depicting the saga of the Polonsky
Family beginning with "Journey
to the Dawn."
The final performance of "Born
Yesterday," a Center Theater
presentation, also will be held.
On..-Nov_" 8, Book Fair will con-
tinue with special programs for
children and youth and Angoff will
speak to youngsters of Detroit and
suburban Sunday Schools in grades
5 and up.
"Omnibus," a Jewish Center
children's theater program, has
chosen Horakudeem Entertainers
of Toledo, to be presented at 2
p.m. Nov. 8 at Aaron DeRoy Thea-

ter. Also included in the Sunday
children's programs are qualified
story-tellers.
Dan Kursman, author of "Gene-
sis 1948: The First Arab-Israeli
War," will speak Sunday evening,
Nov. 8, on the ,topic "Israel, In
The Beginning." This program is
cosponsored by the Layman's In-
stitute on the Middle East.
At 10 a.m. Nov. 9, Philip Stern,
author of "The Oppenheimer
Case," will speak on "Secur-
ity—?".
On Nov. 9, the Yiddish Com-
mittee of the Jewish Center will
present Moshe Starkman in a
lecture in English on "100 Years
of Yiddish Press and its Rele-
vance to the Present."
Nov. 10 has been designated as
Hadassah Education Day. Marga-
lit Banai, sabra and co-author of
"The First Million Sabras," will
speak on "Israeli Youth-The y
Dance To a Different Tune," at the
morning session. A luncheon will

Miss Neuman Engaged
to Mr. Dennis Penner

follow and I. L. Kenen, editor of
the Near East Report, executive
vice-chairman of the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee,
will lecture on "The Reluctant Al-
ly, an Up-to-the-tMinute analysis

of the Arab-Israel-American In-
volvement."
Also on Nov. 10, the Detroit-born
poet and author, Prof. Esther Mas-
sermon Broner, will speak.
At a breakfast meeting Nov. 11,
Wallace Markfield, author of "Tei-
telbaum's Window" will be the
guest speaker. He is a professor
at Kirkland College in Clinton,
N.Y., and a National Book Award
nominee. Co-sponsors of this event
are the Michigan Region of Wom-
en's American ORT, National
Council of Jewish Women and
Brandeis University National Wom-
en's Committee.
Gunther Lawrence, author of
"Three Million More?," will lec-
ture Nov. 11.
Leonard Slater, author of "The
Pledge," will speak on "Where
Are They Now?" on Nov. 11. This
lecture is being co-sponsored by
the Jewish National Fund.
The Nov. 12 session co-sponsor-
ed by Friends of Akiva and Hillel
Day Schools, will feature Dr.
Joseph Gutmann, professor of art
history at Wayne State University,
on the topic "How Traditional
Are Our Traditions?"
Henia Karmel-Wolfe, author of
"The Baders of Jacob Street,"
just recently released, will speak

Israeli Shaliakh
Joins Center Staff

An Israeli, Eliav Naharin has
been appointed to the Jewish Cen-
ter's Hebrew department as an
assistant director. He will assist
director Itzhak Margalit.
Born in 1927 in Tel Aviv, Naharin
was graduated
MISS LINDA NEUMAN
from the drama
Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Neuman school of Habi- f.z
of Rockledge Dr., Farmington, an- ma; Israel's na-
nounce the engagement of their tional theater, in
daughter Linda to Dennis Penner, 1947. He joined
son of Mr. and Mrs. David Pen- the army during
ner of Rosemary Ave., Oak Park. the War of In-
The bride-elect is a senior at the dependence a nd
University of Michigan's school of after completing
dental hygiene. Mr. Penner is a his tour of duty
freshman at U. of M.'s medical returned to Habi-
ma. In 1951, he Naharin
school.
A December wedding is planned. and his bride Tsofia moved to
Kibutz Mizra, where they lived
until 1958.
While living on the kibutz, Na-
harin attended Oranim, the kibutz
teachers'
seminar. He later attend-
Agency)
(From the files of the Jewish Telegraphic
ed Tel Aviv University, where he
40 Years Ago This Week: 1930
studied bioldgy and in 1960 started
Adolf Hitler issued a 10-point program for the expulsion of German to teach at the high school in
Jews, the annulling of peace treaties and the nationalization of banks Migdal Haemek where he was
and department stores. His newspaper said of Berlin-born editor principal from 1962 to 1968.
Theodor Wolff: "This Galiciar
iJnw must be the first one expelled."
For the last four years, Naha-
Prof. Albert Einstein said in Berlin: "There is no reason for rin attended Haifa University,
despair, for the Hitler vote is only a symptom, not necessarily of studying education and psychol-
anti-Jewish hatred but of momentary resentment caused by economic ogy.
misery and unemployment within the ranks of misguided German
The Naharins have three chil-
youth."
dren. The eldest, Ohad, will begin
Theodor Herzl's 40-year-old son, Hans, shot himself to death in his service in the army.
France in grief over the funeral of his sister Pauline.
Under an expanding exchange
Russia's Jewish Communist press admitted its anti-religious cam- program, 15 Israeli communal
paign during the High Holy Days had failed.
workers are joining the profes-
Three Jews were arrested as smugglers for trying to bring Polish sional staffs of Jewish centers in
esrogim into Russia.
the United States. Their arrival,
10 Years Ago This Week: 1960
marking the sixth year of a pro-
Mrs. Beba Idelson, deputy speaker of the Knesset, said the 75 gram sponsored by the National
per cent female turnout in the most recent elections proved Israeli Jewish Welfare Board (JWB), the
women were more emancipated than any other country's.
youth and hehalutz department of
Pioneer Women, lauding Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt's "outstanding the Jewish Agency for Israel and
contributions to the cause of Israel," voted to build a lecture hall in the American Zionist Youth Foun-
her honor at the Hebrew University.
dation, bring to a total of 32 the
The West German Association of Municipalities voted' $1,450,000 number of Israelis currently placed
ease
Israel's
housing
shortage.
at Jewish centers. Seven exchange
to help
The first Jewish school in Greece since World War U was dedicated workers, having completed their
in Athens.
assignments, returned to Israel,
Dr. M. C. Shelesnyak of the Weizmann Institute of Science was among them Mordecai Tel Tsur
said to have deieloped a birth-control pill from extract of mushrooms of Detroit's Center.
after eight years' research.
Foreign Minister Golda Meir, President Gamal Abdel Nasser,
SAMUEL BANKLER, 56, of
Premier Nikita 'S. Khrushchev and Premier Fidel Castro attended the Marks and Goergens, Inc. broker-
opening of the 15th General Assembly. Khrushchev avoided Mrs. Meir age, was one of the four food firm
and greeted Castro; Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold avoided representatives cited by the Asso-
Khrushchev and greeted Mrs. Meir. King Hussein, in Jordan, called ciated Food Dealers of Michigan
Col. Nasser "the great neutralist" and said, "He will be representing for "distinguished and extraordi-
himself only, and perhaps a few friends he has in Cairo and Damas- nary service" to the food industry.
cus. He will try to regain some of the prestige he has lost in the The awards were given during the

The man who writes a good
on Thursday afternoon, Nov. 11, at
a luncheon meeting co-sponsored book while sitting in torn breeches
by Pioneer Women's Organization. should first mend his breeches.—
That evening will feature a talk Montaigne.
by Albert Vorspan, the contro-
versial author of "So The Kids
THE EIGHT GIFT . . . FROM
9 co-spon-
Are Revolting
sored by the American Jewish
OUR DESIGNER COLLECTIONS
Committee.
Nov. 14, the Yiddish Committee
of the Jewish Community Center
will present Yiddish Theater star-
ring Chayele Ash and her troupe.
Nov. 15 will feature special
events for children and youth, and
there will again be story-telling.
At the concluding session on Sun- FREDRICK JEWELERS

"

"

day night, Nov. 15, Prof. David
Patterson, editor of the Bnai Brith
Jewish Heritage Classic Series,
will speak on "The Dilemma of
Jewish Life Today."

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This Week in History

PaUer, were sentenced to 10_ days or $100 fine lei: defacing the Huai association, - representing nearly

TIM 1111111017 .111,11111 NEWS
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