40—Friday, March 8, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Business Briefs CLAIRE PEARONE in the Somerset Mall will exhibit ceramics by DOROTHY DUNITZ and weaving by URBAN JUPENA March 15- 21 at the women's apparel shop. Dorothy Dunitz has ex- hibited throughout the state and has received many awards and prizes for her work. She has been awarded the Mrs. Richard Webber prize by the Detroit Insti- tute of Arts and the Artisan's Purchase Prize for the per- manent collection of the Uni- versity of Michigan Museum of Art. Urban Jupena during the last four years has ex- hibited in more than 30 shows and events throughout the U. S., in which he has won many awards for his woven art forms. * * * LESTER R. SCHOEN- BERG, general manager of the Northland-Detroit gener- al office, has been named one of the outstanding gen- eral managers of NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO. for 1973, it was an- nounced by R. Manning Brown, Jr., chairman of the board. Frankel Named to Perry Board Strong Plea for Jewish Folklore Retention, Use of Yiddish Marks Singer Lecture Here Isaac Bashevis Singer, not- dress, which, he indicated, ed author whose stories have was the same that he had de- appeared in several volumes livered at the Hebrew Uni- and in the most popular versity in Jerusalem and American magazines in therefore addressed itself to translations from the Yid- the Israeli writers, that Is- dish, made a strong plea for raelis were imitating Euro- retention of Yiddish as a vital pean and American literary force in Jewish life, in an practices. address to more than 500 He deplored the diminu- people who filled the Shaarey tion of religion in -Jewish lit- Zedek social hall Tuesday erary ranks and in emphasiz- evening. ing his own style and placed It was the annual- Lichter emphasis on the importance Memorial Lecture established of the mystical, of the use by Dr. and Mrs. David Lich- of the symbolic. "We are still ter in memory of Dr. Lich- influenced by stories told ter's father, Adolph Lichter. around the stoves in the Old While dealing with matters World," he said. related to literature on a Recalling his experience universal scale, Singer's lec- when he came to this country ture was aimed primarily at 35 years ago and applied for defining his own approach to a position on the staff of the Jewish narrative writing. He Jewish Daily Forward, the emphasized the importance editor, the noted Ab Cahan, of folklore. He expressed the asked why he wanted to work view that folklore contrib- on a Yiddish paper when the uted toward the survival of language is doomed to die in the Jewish people. He de- 10 years. He pointed to it as plored the abandonment of proof of his contention that instinct by Jewish writers American Jewry has gained and he was especially critical strength, that it is producing, of Israeli writers who, he that it will be as wholesome maintained, are abandoning as the shtetl was decades "the colossal riches of the ago. Jewish people." He also said that he had Singer stated in his ad- been criticized for his form Jack A. Robinson, chair: man and chief operating. of- ficer of Perry Drug Stores, Inc., the southeastern Michi- gan based chain of retail diseount drug stores, an- nounced the electi9n of Sam- uel Frankel to the Perry board of directors. Frankel was one of the- initial organizers of the Packer Supermarket chain, and later was president of Wrigley Properties, a sub- sidiary of Allied Supermar- kets. As president of Frankel Associates, Developers, he is known for his development of Somerset Mall, and re- cently, co-development with Berry and Seyburn, of the Somerset Inn, Office and Theater complex adjacent to the mall. Frankel is a member of the board of directors of Michigan • National Bank- Metro North, a trustee of IC By Sinai Hospital and an officer- Isaac Singer's Newest Short Narratives director of the Jewish Wel- JERRY MUSKOVITZ fare Federation. Isaac Bashevis Singer pur- for New Yorkers, therefore Photography A native Detroiter, Frankel sues an established pattern. the resurrection of it, in "A is a graduate of Detroit His stories deal with mysti- Day in Coney Island," will College of Law (1935). cism. He writes fables. He delight the nostalgic. quotes Yiddish sayings and "The Son From America" links both spheres and is a liturgical phrases. Some of his tales puzzle. paean to the sanctity of the Let The Professionals Perform "A Crown of Feathers," the Jewish home in the Old title story in his new book World village as well as an (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) is indication of the retention of such a mixture of incidents, links between immigrants to Jeep Sm ith — Dick Stein social and religious experi- America with their families Shelby Lee — Patty Grant ences that the reader who in the old ghettoes. Mori Little — Leonard McDonald Etc. In the process, political knows the-background of the From one to any number of musicians Jewish communities that recollections of Trotsky, af- Complete Party Planning on Request functioned under Polish land- fectations by Yiddish and in on a Jewish owners' domination will ask: other writer's factors emphases themes 358-2777 are all these possible in one make the Isaac Bashevis "Music T he Stein Way" plot — apostasy and rever- sion to Judaism, mixed mar- Singer approaches almost riage, betrayal, self-castiga- routine to schedule in this writer's Yiddish thinking and tion, intolerance, lots more. English transformations. There is a cruelty in the Several translators were totality the portrayal that utilized the as stories in this may be of applicable to the old book, for and, on previous of writing, for resorting to demons and myths and fables and had been told: "You are caught up in spiderwebs." He defended his approach and defied the "spiderweb" charge as pointing to the fail- ure to understand the value of true approaches to the folkloristic in Jewish life, completely rejecting the criti- cisms leveled at Responding to a request during the question-answer period that followed his lec- ture, Singer read one of his stories from his latest book, "A Crown of Feathers" (re- viewed here) the eight-page "The Son From America." Mrs. Joseph Deutch intro- duced Singer and the question period was conducted by Jack Greenberg, Mrs. Deutch's co-chairman of the committee that is arranging the new lecture series. The series was opened with brief remarks by the chairman of the Shaarey Zedek commis- sion, 'Maxwell Katzin, who emphasized the congrega- tion's desire to extend inte- rest in literary matters in the community. 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The young man is an readership that is constant idealist turned irreverently as an admiring force for irreligious, and his viewpoint Singer. is understandable. The old man's arrest may be logical. Noteworthy about "A ORT Publishes Book Crown of Feathers" is the on Its Role in War combination of American The American ORT Fed- with Old World stories. eration has published a 40- Singer is settled here and page booklet, "ORT in a he now depicts the stories Time of War" for circulation related to the New York to ORT membership groups scene and other American around the world. motivations. In "The Cabalist Published in English, the on East Broadway" he in- booklet is filled with eye- jects the Old World back- witness text and photographs grounds into the New World documenting the role ORT environment, the area where students and teachers played Singer works on the Forward during the Yom Kippur War. and gets inspiration from the For copies of the booklet new life acquired by the write: Information Depart- settlers on these shores. ment, American ORT Feder- Not much is heard now ation, 817 Broadway, New about that summery haven York, N. Y. 10003. Rated No. 1 in the U.S.A. Come in and see why before you buy! From $49.50. QUIST _ TYPEWRITER _ _ Co. .INC. 'I 717 STEPHEN- SON-FIWY. (North of Maple) TROY • 689-8000 GATEWAY to ISRAEL, U.S.A. and EVERYWHERE We help you plan your trip, you help us maintain our Nursery and Kdgn.`Dentc. 851-3397 • Arthur Cohen, noted av: - and lecturer, eminent ary critic, will be the next speaker in the current Shaa- rey Zedek lecture series. 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