jewish:Boolc-Aainual List& 962 Titles .1 Yiddi,vit- Actress
Coverbv- Diverse Areas of jelltry-
ort Stage in
' USSR
'MUM
NEW ..YORK
Essays on.-the
treatment of Jeivish identity and
Jewish- suffering by three prom-
inent -American Jewish novelists.
the- literary activities of Jews in
India - who are known as the "Bute-
Israel," and Jewish library col-
lections and archives are among
the feature articles in Volume 29
of the Jewish Book Annual, pub-
lished by the Jewish Book Council
- of the National Jewish Welfare
Board (JWB).
The 217-page trilingual yearbook
of Jewish literary creativity also
"Selected Private Jewish Library
Colleetions," by Salmon Faber;
"The Library and Archives of the
Leo Baeck Institute in New
York," by- Max Krcutzberger;
"Leah Goldberg — In Memoriam,"
by Itzhak Ivry, and "Cecil Roth.
1899-1970," by Solomon Grayzel.
Copies of the Jewish Bo& An
nual are available from the Jew-
ish Book Council, National Jewish
Welfare Board, 15 E. 26th St., New
Y , rIc 10010.
books of Jewish interest, published
in the United States. Israel and
Great Britain during the 12 month
period ending May 1971.
More than 962 new Jewish books
are listed in seven bibliographies:
American Jewish nonfiction (430),
American Jewish fiction (42). Jew-
ish books for children (51), Ameri-
can Hebrew books (72). Yiddish
books (125), Jewish 'books pub-
lished in Great. Britain (105), and
selected books of Israel (137). The
bibliographies were prepared by
I. Edward Kiev, Harold U. Riba-
low, Hilda B. Wagner, Theodore
Wiener, Dina Abramowicz, Eliza-
beth E. Eppler and Ben-Shalom.
Articles published in the Jewish
Book ° Annual include "The Lit-
erary Activities of the 'Bene-
Israel' in India," by Walter J.
Fisckel; "Jewish Identity and
Jewish Suffering in Bellow, Mala-
mud and Philip Roth," by David
H. Hirsch; "Jewish Bibliographic
Journals," by Charles Berlin;-
minutes. Although the perform-
ance was nonpolitical, she had to
pay lip service to Lenin, the rev-
-
olution and the assertion that "we
are
all brothers and sisters in this
NEW YORK (JTA)—Establish-
merit of the Dr. JOseph J. Schwartz country."
training program for community
Miss Guzik's troupe is one of the
center personnel at the Hebrew few small Yiddish variety groups
University in Jerusalem was an- that is still snrviving in the Soviet ,
nounced here following an agree- Union.
Daughter of Yakov Guzik, a Yid-
ment reached by the university and
the Joint Distribution Committee. dish vaudeville performer at the ;
In announcing the new program time of the Bolshevik Revolution,
Louis Broido, JDC chairman, said she became identified with the
the. first 12-month graduate course, operettas of 'Abraham Goldfaden,
with an enrollment of some 20 stu- the 19th Century founder of the
dents, would be given during the Yiddish musical theater who died
current academic year. Supervi- in New York in 1908.
sion of the program to train top-
echelon personnel for community `U.S.-Israel Pact
centers will be under the univers-
ity's school of education and the in Effect Since '49'
Paul Baerwald School.
TEL AVIV (ZINS) — Dr. Moshe
Broido said that the commun-
ity centers in Israel have been Sneh, a member of Knesset repre-
suffering from a severe lack of senting the National Communists,
professionally trained personnel. stated .that an unpublicized but
There are 14 centers in opera- valid mutual defense agreement
tion and- another six are sched- dating back to 1952 exists between
uled to open shortly. In addition, the United States and Israel.
there are plans to _build another
Dr. Sneh based his charge on an
40 centers.
excharge of letters between the
The centers are located mainly in two gmernments. The American
low-income areas in the cities and ambassador to Israel, Mond B.
development towns, Broido con- IDavis. had addressed a letter dated
tinued. "Most of the residents are 'July 1. 1952 to David Ben-Gurion
comparatively recent immigrants and received a reply from Foreign
with varying levels of education," Minister Moshe Sharett on July
23, 1952.
he said.
According to Sneh, the agree-
"Wel-functioning community
centers, with a broad range of so- ment specifies that "the govern-
:
merit
of Israel is entitled to re-
cial, creative and cultural events
would help ease their transition ceive tt , ilitary assistance from the
lists and briefly describes 962
■■.
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I
NEW YORK tZINS) — This is
the latest Vie ;circulating in the
Soviet Union;;-as reported by an
American traveler. Two scientists,
an American and a Russian are
discussing their respective living
conditions. The American explains
that he lives in the suburbs, and
that he uses his car to travel to
work. The Russian argues that
this is very wasteful. He, the Rus-
sian. uses the Moscow subway
which is speedy and comfottable.
He does not need an automobile.
The -American asks, "What do
you- do if you, are going to visit a
friend who lives outside of the
city?" To which the Russian an-
swers, "Oh, friends? When it
comes to visiting friends, we use
tanks." •
-
r s.
rmtin.Alittn tic ate..
Ha.. II
vm•Y AIM
SAO
341.
„3„ • slartaa N.....4.-",a
m
pheo
1140 to
TH
nist, two Yiddish actors and a few
props, the - 62:year-old actress re-
portedly enchanted the capacity
crowd of 800 in Moscow's Sovets-
kaya concert hall.
Miss Gunlic did create a micro-
cosm of Jewish life for a few
from the old world to the new."
Under the agreement, Malben.
the JDC agency in Israel. will pro-
vide some $31,000 annually over the
next' five-years to match an equal
sum provided by the university to :
finance the prOgram.
t Organ. :At
USN
MOSCOW—Anna Guzik.- a popu-
lar' music hall - performer in the
heyday of the Yiddish stage here
in the 1920s and '30s, reappeared
recently in a one-night stand,
dramatizing S.h ol. e m Aleichem
stories and singing Yiddish songs.
Singing, dancing and performing
skits with the aid of an accompa-
Hebrew U's Ulpan
Opens to Record
Number of Arabs
1114114:00
U.S. at cost. in accordance with
paragraph 408 (5) of the 1949
Act on Mutual Military Aid." In
return, the government of Israel
accepted certain responsibilities re-
quired by the American statute.
Since that eovernment has never
heen aLrogated Sneh added, it is
still salld and there is no neees
city for a new mutual defense pact
hetwe - n the two countries.
Jericho
—
Then
Friday, ilevaadbar 26, as ,u:
THE
Norway's Jewish Commi.nity-Small,
but Flourishing in Scandinavian Area
°MI
tinn
By MICHAEL LEVY
JTA Scandinavian Correspondent
OSLO (JTA) — Although the
majority among some 50 Israelis
who established themselves here
are married to non-Jewish women.
the local Jewish community is not
troubled by mixed marriages.
This view was expressed herr
by the president of Norway's Jew-
ish community, Harry Koritzinsky,
.
in an interview with the JeWish
y
Telegraphic Agency.
This. however, might be due
to the fact that in all of Norway,
there are only some 15 Jewish
marriages each year, Koritzinsky
noted. The Jewish community was
founded in Norway on June 5,
1892.
Sone 935 Jews now live, in the
A local bnai Brith chapter .was
founded in 1952, the Oslo. chapter
of the Jewish Scandinavian Youth
Organization has been in exist-
! ence for 52 years, and a Jewish
community center was built in
Oslo in 1958. Also, the Norwegian
Jewish community joins in summer
camps with Jewish communities in
Sweden and Denmark.
Abou 15,000,000 people suffer
from tuberculosis.
For 25e .
UNICEF can provide the BC , :
vaccine to protect 25 children fret ,
that disease.
BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Now looking . . •
ED
BURG
and his Orchestra
country, including 100 Jews in
the town of Trondheim. Out of
the 935 Jews, 325 have paid dues
to the community, Koritzinsky said .
The Trondheim community is
worried by the lack of any relig-
ious leadership. There are current-
ly vacancies for posts of town
rabbi, synagogue cantor and ritual
slaughterer or shochet. As for
Oslo, there is a rabbi there, -but
not more than 15 or 20 Jews come
each Saturday to synagogue. This
creates a problem that a minyan
may not always be assured.
The synagogue is a modest but
extremely handsome building sit-
uated at 13 Bergstien Street. Near-
by, on 15 Bergstien Street is the
new building of the community
851-6118
Portraits - Candids
Restorations - Passports
Frames - Invitations
Marilyn Shapiro's
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23352 Farminton Rd.
Farmington, Mich.
474-7762
•
center.
In all of Norway there are
only three synagogues, and of
these, only two are active. The
discover
the world of
government of Norway pays the
Jewish community $4.50 for each
inscribed community member,
and the local municipalities prO-
vide an additional $1.50 grant
to their communities for each
congregation member.
ufinan's
Upholstering & Furniture Galleries
Whether its a throne bench from thCrx
On the bright side, Koritzinsky
observed, all congregation mem-
bers attend Yom Kippur services
in Oslo.
There is little or no anti - semit-
ism vin Norway_
In spite of its small numbers.
the Jewish life and organizations
flourish in Oslo and elsewhere, ac-
cording to Koritzinsky. The Zionist
Organization of Norway was
founded in 1912. Many Norwegians
have participated in the Zionist
congresses held since that year.
chambers of the Vatican, a glass topped
baroque dining table of European origin,
or a balloon tufted. tie dyed
sofa
from
our own shops ... you'll discover a new
world of decorating at Kaufman's.
4—
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Th urs. Fr , e.I 9. Toes.W.i. Se. s til 6
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and Now
HAMBURG tZINSt — Europe's
authoritative weekly Der Spiegel,
in a feature article on Israel's
THE SAMPLE -RAK
capabilit, report, "Thou
sands of years ago Israelis cap-
tured the Canaanite fortress of
Jericho by trumpet blasts; today's
Israelis have the capability of
destroying i:ypt's Aswan Dam
with their '4,..:richo' missiles."
Israel's rockets, according to
Der Spiegel, threaten not only
Cairo and Alexandria, but Rabat
Amon and Damascus as well.
They are effective up to 500 kilo-
meters (310.5 miles), and can be
fitted with - atomic warheads. The
article compares the ratio of mis-
sile experts as between Israel
and the UAR.
As of 1967, Israel had a 4-1
edge over Egypt in missile ex-
perts, which by now has increased.
to 7-1, and by the end of this
year is expected to be 10-1.
Technical development and pro-
duction of the Jericho missiles
was begun in partnership with the
French but was ended by action
of the late Gen. DeGaulle. The
Israelis continued on their own
and are now said to be producing
four to 'six Jericho rockets month-
19.
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