' 7 THE JEWISH NEWS .20.-1951 - Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle com mencing with the issue Member American Association of Eng,lish-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 18075. Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $10 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager Alan Ilitsky. :News Editor . DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager 11(9(11 Press. .kssistant N• ∎ts Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the eighth day of Tishri, 5737, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Deuteronomy 31:1-30. Prophetical portion, Hosea 14:2-10, Micah 7:18-20 and Joel 2:15-27 Yom Kippur Scriptural Selections Sunday evening, Kol Nidre. Monday morning: Pentateuchal portion, Leviticus 16:1-34, Numbers 29:7-11. Prophetical portion, Isaiah'57:14-58:14. Monday afternoon': Pentateuchal portion, Leviticus 18:1-30. Prophetical portion ,Jonah 1:1-4: 11, Micah 7 : 18-20. Candle lighting, Friday, Oct. 1, 6:56 p.m. Friday, October 1, 1976 Page Four VOL. LXX, No. 4 Trek of the Penitents Everyone -- nearly everyone! Will be cribable to the group to forget the need for trekking for penitence as the coming week atonement by states and nations. The in- will commence with filled synagogues mark- consistencies that relate to the United Na- ing the Day of Atonement. tions are the best example of deviation from For most it will be an adherence to trad- justice in the universal sense of group sin- ition, to many the Yom Kippur day will ring. The past few years,, during which the mean a time for genuine desire to pledge respect for a new year that beckons for jus- Third World, under domination in great tice and honor and respect for fellow men. measure by the Soviet Union, registered so Who will question the need for atone- many ills that the hope for a strong instru- ment and the value of it? Isn't sinning, ac- ment for peace under the aegis of the UN cepting the formality of it as defined in the has begun to vanish. Individuals often gather in houses of 'The House on the Roof' dictionary, more common than sainthood? Would there be a policy for justice if there worship for atonement. Yom -Kippur is a day for Jews to do penance and to pledge adher- were no lawbreakers? Doing penance, however, in the univer- ence to strictest humanism. The test is for salistic sense, is much more valid when the world, which does not have a special Day communities are taken into account, when of Atonement, but it has much more to it is the state rather than the individual atone for. It is mankind that needs to do David A. Adler is the author of a very delightful story for that is sinfully criminal, when injustice be- penance. Those who have condoned inter- very young readers. He has timed it for the coming festival with comes a problem for Mankind. national crimes and prevented the UN from a Sukkot theme and has appropriately titled it "The House on The individual is part of the spoken becoming an instrument for decency have the Roof" (Hebrew Publishing Co.). community. He is important in the-consid- sinned the most. The hero is the grandfather and his accomplices irr building eration of the injustices for which nations There is need for penance, and group that "house" are his grandchildren who are enjoying his antics. Grandpa worked silently. He began by dragging a great big are held responsible. It is because- the indi- penance is the most vital of mankind's obli- vidual permits the state to become corrupt gations. A turn to decency and justice for all wooden box up to the roof of his apartment house. The mystery that penance beeomes a duty for group is not an impossibility — provided the soon developed into a reality. He was building a booth, a house and his family. human factor will become a factor on the for himself guilt. The landlady was furious. She had only rented -an apart- Too many corruptions have become as- international scene. ment and had not given permission_to the old man to do con- Fun Galore for Young Readers in Sukkot Story A World Basking in Hypocrisy In truth, Scriptures can be quoted for all purposes, and it is not necessary to be gullible to appreciate the realism of much that stems from traditional admonitions. - The international community is steeped in so much hypocrisy that there is no wonder so many turn to prayer, pleading with the Almighty for protection from the evil-doers who serve in the name of diplo- macy and domination that so often becomes authoritarian. In view of the miseries that stem from unruly government, a realism in Psalms (5:10) is ever timely. To quote the Psalmist: There is no sincerity in their mouth; their inward part is a yawning gulf, their throat is an open sepulchre; they make smooth their tongue." How applicable this is to what stems from and keeps developing in the poisoned atmosphere of the United Nations! It was not many months ago that the leader of the PLO, the hate-mongering _or- ganization that misuses an historic name and calls itself the Palestine Liberation Or- ganization, dominated over the world or- ganization with a speech aimed at Genocide, at a _ n appeal for the-destruction of Israel, in an aura in which he had the support of the overwhelming representation in the UN. iviucn has happened since. In the name of the PLO many acts were perpetrated in efforts to annihilate the Israelis. Jews were not the only ones to suffer. One of the tools of destruction of the dastardly group was hijacking, another was blackmail, and in the main it fed on terror against humanity. PLO inhumanities reached their heights in Lebanon where Arabs in the un- iforms of the PLO were massacring fellow Arabs, Christians as well as Moslems, in the battle for domination. Had the PLO suc- eperipd fhp wholesale massacre might have been so terrifying that a new page of bar- barism might have put to shame the cruel- ties of the past. Last week the retiring president of Lebanon, Suleiman Franjieh, spcike bluntly, frankly, exposing the PLO, de- manding its dissolution. What he said de- mands widest circulation. Franjieh, in a farewell radio address, said, "They came to us as guests in 1949, when the new Israeli- created state kicked them out. We awarded them every possible hospitality, -but even- tually they turned into savage wolves, sought to kill their hosts and become mas- ters of Lebanon," Franjieh said. Franjieb proposed that a pan-Arab council be set up to take over leadership of the Palestinian guerilla movement "be- cause the PLO has regretfully proven itself unfit to govern the Palestinians." This is where the condoning of hypoc- risy comes in. It took many months for a Lebanese to speak out against Arafat. Where was he and where were his fellow moderates in the Arab world when Arafat was advocating destruction of Israel? Perhaps silence on the part of Arabs is un- derstandable because, at the time when Arafat was glorified as a hero, life was in- secure for moderate Arabs. In spite of the Franjieh outcry there now is evidence that the PLO still is collect- ing funds in the United States, as Jack An- derson exposed in a syndicated column last week, and even in the U.S. State Depart- ment there are government officials who are mollycoddling the PLO. The decent people in the world must live on hopes that what Franjieh said will re- awaken the sleepers in the diplomatic spheres. Perhaps there.will, then, be less of hypocrisy in universalism. struction work in her building. Grandfather completed his task. The house was built. The family joined him and they celebrated Sukkot. But the landlady was angered. She took Grandpa to court and registered her complaint. The defendant told his story. He was celebrating hiS holiday. The judge smiled, then became serious. He held the elderly man guilty of a misdemeanor. He has abused a privilege. He allowed 10 days for the "house -on the roof" to be dismantled. Both men smiled. The task was accom- plished, the holiday was observed and the abuser of a tenant's privilege was punished. It's not a new plot, but Adler's is timely, simply told for the young reader, and the story is well illustrated with pictures by Marilynn Hirsh. In the Adler-Hirsh story-there is much fun for the youngest readers. 'Bagel Baker of *Mulliner Lane' Magic in Bagels to Delight Young Readers in Funny Story Judith Hope Blau fills a great need for young readers. She provides humor. She delights with a story that will charm yoUngsters and will find an audience as well among their e "The Bagel Baker of Mulliner Lane" .(McGraw-Hill) i personal experience because it is a true story about her farm y, about Grandfather Izzy and Grandmother Sonny, and about family and neighbors. Because it is a true tale about the bakery of her grandfather in the Bronx, it is like a history of a New York neighborhood. Mrs. Blau, who specialized in art and sculpture, is not only the author of this charming story: she is also its illustrator, and the combination is unique and expressive. But the story itself is the especially welcome provider of humor for young readers. It is humor and adventure, since it relates the magic of Grandfather Izzy's bagels. The secret of the baker's bagels is what creates the sensations emerging into an adventure that must be read to be delighted in. Grandfather's creations were pirabagel and an elephan- tagel bagel, and their baker danced to the tune of magic-making that gives the story action with dickagel and other bagels, m atching presents as Grandma Sonny gets into the act. Parents searching for delightful stories will share their children's laughs as they read to them or with them "The Bagel Baker of Mulliner Lane."