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January 03, 1975 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-01-03

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

Russian Jewish Artists to Perform
in Special Show at Ford Auditorium

Zwerdling to Get Special Honor
at Ann Arbor Hasidic Happening

Os•as Zwerdling, founder of
the Ann Arbor Jewish com-
munity, will be presented
with a special citation at the
Hasidic Happening concert 3
p.m. Jan. 12 in the Lydia
Mendelsohn Theater, Ann Ar-
bor.
Zwerdling, 96, will be pre-
sented with the citation by
Professor William Haber,
president of the World ORT
Union.
The concert will be per-
formed by "the youth for the
youth," featuring hasidic en-
tertainers of college age.
Among the entertainers are

Maddin Named
.to Fourth Term
as Sinai Chief

This company of more than 100 Russian Jewish singers, dancers, entertainers and
musicians from Vilna will perform in a special show, "We Are Here at Last!" 8 p.m.
Feb. 11 at Ford Auditorium, sponsored by Cong. Bnai David• and its auxiliaries. The
artists, who performed in Kishinev, Riga, Vilna and other Russian cities, are now citizens
Milton M. Maddin was re-
of Israel. Under the auspices of the Israel Immigration and Culture bureaus and Hista- elected to a fourth, term as
drut, the company is making a tour of major U. S. cities. For tickets, call the Bnai David president of Sinai Hospital
office, 557-8210, or Max Mondshine, men's club president, 398-5063; Lorraine Weiner, of Detroit at a recent meet-
sisterhood president, 353.2350; Sam Ravitz, 547-4618; or Stan Finkelstein, 557-2624. Gen- ing of the board of trustees.
eral chairman is Max Sosin. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Victor are assisting with arrange.
Other officers re-elected to
ments.
one-year terms on the board

Knob Woods Group
Plans Gathering

The Wednesday evening
rap sessions, a meeting of
neighbors in the Knob-in-the-
Woods Apts., will meet Wed-
nesday at the apartment's
club house.
The program will include
a word game and refresh-
ments•. The weekly meetings
are sponsored by a commit-
tee of apartment residents,
which includes Bert Gold-
man, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Linderman, Ruth Mann, Her-
man Kazdan, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Rubiner, Sophie Berlin,
Ida Waldman, Ben Schore
and Blanch Rich.

Whose loquacity, like an
over-full bottle, could never
pour forth a small dose.—
Charles Eliot

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labor, entails a lesser or
greater surrender of one's
independence."
One of the first questions
to be resolved in the agri-
cultural society of talmudic
times was whether the la-
borer could eat of the food
he was producing. The Tal-
mud says that it was the la-
borer's privilege because of
the "increased productivity
resulting from the partaking
of the refreshments."
The laborer might agree
to refrain from eating, pro-
viding he is given money as
compensation. To protect
themselves, employers had
the right to stipulate how
much food was to be given
before a contract was en-
tered into.
While labor legislation fa-
vored the worker, Dr. Weis-
feld noted that the employee
was bound by specified obli-
gations, especially those who
render services to the com-
munity.

Missing Relative
Sought in Detroit

A Boston physician, Dr.
Irwin Asher, is seeking the
aid of the Detroit Jewish
community for information
on the whereabouts of Mania
Solomon, sister of Boris Sta-
vitsky of Tallin, Estonia.
According to Dr. Asher,
Mania Stavitsky of Herson,
Ukraine, arrived in the U.S.
in 1914 and married Philip
Solomon, reportedly a furrier
in Detroit.
She wrote to her brother,
Boris, until about 1940, until
it became dangerous for So-
viet Jews to answer letters
from abroad. The couple had
a daughter. Ellen, who was
training to become a bal-
lerina. It is reported that the
,family may have moved •to
California.
Persons with information
about Mania Solomon, may
call Dr. Asher, 617-253-6879
daily, or at his home, 617-
354-0199, or •the Detroit Jew-
ish Community Council, 9624'
1880.

34—Friday, January 3, 1975

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Yeshiva U. Study Details Labor
Legislation in Bible and Talmud

Present-day society in
search of guidelines in labor
relations and the work ethic
can find insights and an-
swers in biblical and talmu-
dic law, according to a com-
prehensive survey of the sub-
ject published at Yeshiva
University by San Diego
scholar Dr. Israel Weisfeld.
Entitled "Labor Legisla-
tion in the Bible and Tal-
mud," the monograph is part
of Yeshiva University's se-
ries, "Studies in Judaica."
According to Dr. Weisfeld,
director of San Diego's bu-
reau of Jewish education,
"Jewish Law in viewing an
action or relationship asks
not Is it legal? but rather:
Is it ethical?"
Dr. Weisfeld said t h a t
Jewish Law is thorough in
its provisions for employer-
employee relations, including
legitimate grievances, moral
c o m --p la int s, wage agree-
ments, general labor condi-
tions and "portal to portal"
payments.
"Fundamental to all Jew-
ish labor legislation," he
said, is that the "laborer's
prerogatives derive from the
law's express intention of
protecting his freedom and
personality; since all labor-
ing for others, even free

the Morristown Moving Spir-
its and Marvin Weinberger,
an Ann Arbor student and
folk and hasidic violinist,
who bills himself as "Moshe
and his Hasidic Violin."
Ann Arbor Mayor James
E. Stephenson will give a
key to the city to a Lubavitch
representative to be pre-
sented to the Lubavitcher
Rebbe on the occasion of the
25th anniversary of his lead-
ership.
For ticket information, call
Rabbi Berel Shetov, 398-2611.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Jeep Sm ith — Dick Stein
Shelby Lee — Patty Grant
Mori Little — Leonard McDonald - Etc.

From one to any number of musicians
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"Music T he Stein Way"

MILTON MADDIN

were Sol Eisenberg, David
M. Miro, and Erwin S. Si-
mon, vice presidents; Max-
well Jospey, secretary; Mal-
colm S. Lowenstein, assistant
secretary; Alfred ► D. Deutsch,
treasurer; and Jerome J.
Frank, assistant treasurer.
Maddin was first elected
to the Sinai board in 1959.
Named a vice president in
1969, he was elected acting
president in September 1971.

Center to Hold
Spring Registration

The Jewish Community
Center will hold registration
for spring classes 9:30 a.m.-
1 p.m. and 2-5 p.m. Jan'. 19
at the main building. Non-
members may register 2-5
p.m.
Classes available include
sculpture, painting, music,
dance, gourmet cooking, ma,
crame, theater, slimnastics
and athletics.
A brochure describing
classes, programs and ac-
tivities is available at the
Center. For information, call
the Center, 341-4200.

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