THE DETROIT JEWISH PEWS Friday, ti•rambor 27, 1970-43 ADL Leader Urges Support of Nixon on M.E. NEW YORK—Seymour Graub- rectify the situation—to fulfill his ard, national chairman of the Anti- promise of maintaining a balance Defamation League of Bnat Brith of power in the Mid East" urged nationwide support of Pres- The ADL leader went on to say ident Nixon in his "statesmanlike that only with public backing of and courageous position" on Israel. the President's stand can Congress Addressing an ADL Women's be moved to act swiftly on passage Division luncheon at the Plaza of the bill before it appropriates Hotel in honor of Mrs. Itzhak military and economic aid to Rabin, wife of the Israeli ambassa- Israel. Calling Middle East issues an dor to the United States, Graubard said "It Is clear that the President American concern, Graubard said understands Israel's position on Israel is the U.S.A.'s "bastion and Egypt's violation of the cease-fire shield in that part of the world." He said that "one small nation, agreement." Israel, has stood in the way of "Mr. Nixon," he declared, "must the Soviet Union's grand expan- be backed in his determination to sionist ideas." Czech Jew in Israel With UJA Aid Dan Maid, a 22-year-old Czech who came to Israel with the help of the United Jewish Appeal, works in the library of Hebrew Univer- sity. He is a student counselor for immigrant students at the Uni- versity. Birth Announcernents Nov. 21—To Mr. and Mrs. Mar- vin S. Littky (Roberta Meadows of Skokie), 30250 Westbrook, Southfield, a son, Joseph Harold. • • • Nov. 20—To Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ert Loring Cohen (Cynthia Brem- er), 23206 Ennishore, Novi, a son, Jonathan Harold. zAREAMH MOREL 341-1595 Rabbi A. M. COHEN Certified & Accredited MOHEL 542-6401 RABBI LEO GOLDMAN Expert Mahe! Barring Hospitals and Homes LI 2-4444 U 1-9769 Nov. 15—To Mr.:and Mrs. Ber- nard Baskin (Arlene Milstein), 21710 Parklawn, Oak Park, a son, Eric Scott. • • * Nov. 15—To Mr. and Mrs. Don- ald Freedman (Marilyn Foster), 21971 Cloverlawn, Oak Park, a son, Scott Alan. • • • Nov. 10—To Mr. and Mrs. Morton Eskin (Barbara Pelavin), 4911 Thorntree, Walled Lake, a son, Jonathan Howard. • • • Nov. 9—To Mr. and Mrs. Mar- vin Hayman (Sandra Berman), 4062 W. 13 Mile, Royal Oak, a daughter, Gayle Elyse. • * • Nov. 5—To Dr. and Mrs. Law- rence M. Loewenthal (Shirley Rosenberg), former Detroiters of Springfield, Mo., a son, Jeffrey David. o t • Nov. 3—To Mr. and Mrs. Edward Silberblatt (Tobie Kahn), 23551 Moritz, Oak Park, a daughter, Lisa Faye. • • • Nov. 2 — To Mr. and Mrs. Jo- seph Hebert (Linda Malin), 21125 Middlebelt, Farmington, a son, David Michael. • • Oct. 31—To Mr. and Mrs. Marc I. Rich (Cindy Smiler), 3256 Coo- lidge, Royal Oak, a daughter, Jodi Ann. • • • Oct. 30—To Mr. and Mrs. Nor- man Herbst (Linda Lawson), 4618 Fifteen Mile, Sterling Heights, a son, Bradley David: • • • Oct. 26—To Sp. 5 and Mrs. Ivan J. Valentine (Nanci Kahn), 20121 Mark Twain, a son, Marshall Ross. • • • Oct. 2—To Mr. and Mrs. Albert Levey (Gerri Weinberger of De- troit) of Phoenix, a daughter, Stephanie Faye. Catholic Critic Berates Passion Play for Its 'Uncured Anti-Semitic Bias' NEW YORK (JTA)—A Catholic writer asserted this week that "You don't have to be Jewish to dislike Oberammergau's Passion Play," adding: "You don't even have to go to Bavaria to view it, as I did, in order to recognize its published script's inconsistencies with Scripture and its uncured anti-Semitic bias." John E. Fitzgerald, who covered "this well-known and interna- tionally disputed folk pageant" for the national Catholic weekly "Our Sunday Visitor," elaborated on his reactions in a front-page report in the Nov. 18 issue of Variety, the show business weekly. Fitzgerald added: "This latest production, the 36th in a 386-year history, is not just a bad produc- tion of a good play, nor a good production of a bad one, but a had play done badly. Although dealing with a highly dramatic series of incidents, 'Das Passionspiele' turns out to be a dull bit of drama, banal as well as bigoted." But, the writer added, "Some- one must like Oberammergau's Passion Play, for repeatedly they have had sellout audiences and a tremendous tarnaway of thousands of ticket requests . . . This season's 98 performances have been seen by 500,000 or so tourists—actually somewhat less than that since the anti- Semitic publicity caused many ticket cancellations. "Still, the production will prob- ably bring in more than $10,000,- 000 to this alpine hamlet whose principal industry in other years is woodcarving. "It seems ironic," the Catholic writer declared, "that Christians can miss the anti-Semitic tone of the 1.970 production . . . The irony of Christians failing to perceive such a tone is compounded by that of Germans perpetrating, perhaps unwittingly, such a concept . . . Nevertheless, no German can af- ford to possibly further that which he or she especially should fight. "Thus, in what Pd humbly call my professional opinion, I'd apathetically suggest that .the pre- sent text should be either tho- roughly rewritten or scrapped. However, personally and ethieelbt, as well as professionally and aesthetically, I must angrily add that I feel that it must be re- written or scrapped." fltzgerald recalled that Adolf Yeshiva U. to Mark 25th Anniversary NEW YORK—Yeshiva's 25 years as a university will be celebrated at the institution's annual Hanuka dinner Dec. 13 at the Plaza Hotel, Manhattan. The dinner will focus on the growth and development of the school during its leadership over the past quarter-century by Dr. Samuel Belkin, president. University citations for "leader- ship in higher education, in ex- pressing the Judaic heritage and in contributing to the vitality and progress of the nation," will be bestowed upon Samuel M. Elow- sky, Joseph Lorch and Ephraim Propp. University status was granted Yeshiva by the New York State Board of Regents Nov. 16, 1945, seine Ea years after its humble beginnings in a rented room on New York's Lower East Side. The early, difficult beginnings, the merger with the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary in 1915, and the many moves to dif- ferent locations in the city, cul- minated in 1928 with the school's occupation of its first permanent home in Manhattan's Washington Heights (Main Center) and the establishment of Yeshiva College. Under its first president, Dr. Bernard Revel, who died in 1940, and continuing with Dr. Samuel Belkin, who assumed the office in 1943, Yeshiva moved to broaden its base as an educational insti- tution. Hitler, who saw the Passion Play in 1934, wrote in 1942 that *lever has the menace of Jewry been so convincingly portrayed" and that Pontius Pilate "stands out like a firm clean rock in the middle of the whole muck and mire of Jewry." Catholic-Jewish Relations Reported at ADTIme High; Anti-Semitism Still Widespread WASHINGTON, D.C. . (JTA)- The secretariat for Catholic-Jew- ish relations of the committee for ecumenical and interreligious af- fairs of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops reported that Catholic-Jewish relations in the United States was at an all-time high. In the past five years, the unit said, the two religions have reached a point "which has never been witnessed before in Christian history." Detroit was among the 35 dio- ceses with apparatus for handling Catholic-Jewish relations, which had made progress. "For the first time in our his- tory," the secretariat stated, "re- lations between Jews and Chris- tians, the church and synagogue approach the normal, with Chris- tians and Jews approaching each other in full respect and brotherly love and in dialogue." The church in America "has performed with distinction" in this area, the report noted, but it listed such "serious obstacles in our path" as "low-toned and unconscious" anti-Semitism, the slighting of Judaism in Catholics' concept of Christianity, and Chris- tian apathy regarding the fate of Israel. In London, the Roman Catholic primate of England declared here that the persecution of the Jews in Germany, not the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, was the "greatest shock suffered by mankind in modern times." John Cardinal Heenan, Arch- bishop of Westminster, said it would be educationally valuable to screen films of Bergen-Belsen for young people once a year so that they could see "what was done in the name of national purity and eugenics by 20th Cen- tury !nen and women." Cardinal Heenan made his re- marks in a lecture to students of the London School of Economics. He said the great shock was the realization that national leaders in the 20th Century could plan the systematic de- struction of a whole race," which put an end to belief in the myth of human progress." He said that although the trials of the criminals responsible for the torture and murder continue to this day, "the full horror is scarcely known to citizens under 40 years of age." The cardinal also disclosed that he had personally effected the recent resumption of British Cath- olic representation on the Council of Christians and Jews after a hiatus of 20 years. Cardinal ,Heenan, speaking at a luncheon of the Foreign Press As- sociation, said that he was "from the very beginning dissatisfied" with the Holy See's ordering Catholics off the interfaith coun- cil. "My investigations showed at the time that Rome had as- sumed that the Council was against church schools," he recalled. On acceding to his current post, "this issue was uppermost In my mind," and he informed the Vatican that Catholic ab- sence from the Council "is being Interpreted as anti-Semitism, which is not only untrue but actually harmful." "As you know," the primate told the press group, "the Vatican does not like to change things in a hurry. But I told them that I was returning to the Council of Christians and Jews and that the next time I come to Rome I will have added the joint presidency of the council to my office,' And so I did." LET US DO YOUR BAR MITZVAH PARTY, CHECK OUR PRICES! Saba- 25435 SOUTHFIELD SOUTHFIELD RD. Mrs. Karen Pearson 1330 W. 12 Mile Rd. South Lyon, Mich. 48178 Who was formerly associated with ate Mary lee Salon had a 7 lb. 1 2-oz girl at the Sinai Hospital on Nov. 21st produce THE JEWISH NEWS Over 200 Craftsmen are employed by PAK printers' there is no substitute. 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