THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30 Friday, lanary 4, 1960
sume when a man displays
skill in some feat, his
capacity is therefore consid-
erable.
We should be on our
guard against the tempta-
tion to argue directly from
skill to capacity, and to as-
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Sermon 13 & 14 411141
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The Best of Everything)
(Continued from Page 29)
11/2 pound charcoal
broiled steak with huge
salad and B. & B. for
$1.25. A corned beef
sandwich for 15 cents,
salami for 10 cents. Pop
for a nickel and a siphon
of seltzer for a dime ...
Yes, things have
changed.
"Uncle Harry's Deli is
owned by Harry B. Meltzer
(my brother) formerly of the
Oakland Health Club and is
successfully doing business
on the east side.
"The food is good, the por-
tions are generous, the
prices are commensurate
with the economy, the pies
are homemade, the cheese
cake (nine flavors) is a good
as that which we served at
Darbys, the atmosphere is
friendly ... It is worth the
ride from the west side, ac-
cording to many of his
patrons.
'You will meet Aunt
Nancy, Grandma Florence
and Rick, who makes trays
almost as good as his 'Uncle
Frank' (I'm still teaching
him . . . but he does real
well). They close on Sunday
and at 9:30 p.m. on week-
days."
—Frank Meltzer
Sea Terrorists Sentenced
Ai, mission was to fire the
TEL AVIV (JTA)
military tribunal in Lod has rockets into Eilat and
imposed stiff sentences on then beach the vessel
10 terrorists captured in an which was loaded with 40
attempted sea-borne attack tons of high explosives,
set to dentonate as soon
on Eilat last September.
The leader of the grbup, as the terrorists escaped.
Abdallah Daud Jaroud, and
The blaze would have
his second in command, leveled the town, Israeli
were each sentenced to 25 authorities said.
years' imprisonment. The
The ship called a
others received sentences of
Lebanese port where the
8-11 years.
Eight of the men were terrorist leaders boarded.
crew members of a After another call at Cyp-
Panamanian-flag vessel rus, it passed through the
that sailed from the Sy- Suez Canal and approached
rian port of Latakia Eilat on Sept. 30. There it
where senior Syrian was intercepted by an
army officers installed alerted Israeli naval patrol
Katyusha rocket laun- and its entire complement
chers on the deck. The was captured.
—
News Service Ceases in Britain
LONDON (JTA) — Be-
ginning Jan. 1, scores of
Anglo-Jewish leaders and
organizations ceased receiv-
ing the daily bulletin of
world-wide Jewish news
which has been a feature of
this community for over
half-a-century.
The Daily News Bulletin,
mainly compiled from the
wire services of the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency, was
terminated because some
British Zionist leaders say
that they can no longer af-
ford the subsidy of more
than 30,000 Pounds Sterl-
ing ($60,000) per year
needed to keep it going.
It will be the sixth Jewish
publication to disappear
here in the past 10 years,
and its closure is a further
sign of the wholesale de-
cline of the Jewish press in
England. The only sur-
vivors are the London
Jewish Chronicle, the
ultra-Orthodox Jewish
Tribune, and four local
newspapers in provincial
cities.
Sidney Shipton, one of
the three directors of the
JTA London Committee,
said that it had only a few
hundred paying sub-
scribers and could no
longer justify spending
money "which would
otherwise have gone in-
MOVIE
GUIDE
BERKLEY THEATRE
2990 W. 12 Mile Rd.
Berkley
LI 2-0330
All Seats $1.00
at all times
Weekdays incl. Sat.
HELD OVER
Julie Andrews & Dudley Moore in
"10" (R)
7:05 : 9:30
Sun. 2:20, 4:45, 7:05 & 9:30
WASHINGTON THEATER
426 S. Washington, R.O.
541-0082
All Seats $1.00
at all times
Al Pacino & John Forsythe in
"... AND JUSTICE
FOR ALL (R)
Fri. & Sat. 7:15 & 9:40
Sun. 4:45, 7:15 & 9:30
Mon.-Thur. 7:15 & 9:30
directly to Israel." The
bulletin is also mailed to
some private subscribers
and non-Jewish institu-
tions.
Shipton, the general sec-
retary of the British Zionist
Federation, said closure had
been contemplated for some
time but the question had
come to a head in the last
few months because of the
stringent financial situa-
tion of the Jewish Agency
and the World Zionist
Organization.
In New York, JTA issued
a statement saying it would
"explore all possible ways,
within our means" of con-
tinuing a daily service for
Britain.
JTA President Martin
Fox said the closing of the
daily bulletin in London
would not affect JTA cover-
age of the news in England
and Ireland.
March of Dimes
Sports Awards
Dinner Slated
The 10th annual March of
Dimes Sports Awards will
be held Jan. 14 at Cobo Hall.
Emcee for the evening
will be Sonny Elliot. He will
be joined by "Jimmy the
Greek" Snyder.
For information, call the
March of Dimes office, 864-
6000.
Absolutism and Fanaticsm
By RABBI MARC
TANENBAUM
(A Seven Arta Feature)
The just-concluded Festi-
val of Hanuka is rich with
many customs and themes,
but quite possibly one of its
most important lessons for
our times is that having to
do with the havoc wrought
by absolutism.
The struggle of the Mac-
cabees was at its core a re-
bellion against the ab-
solutist Syrian Emperor
Antiochus who fanatically
carried out a ruthless war in
order to force the entire
Jewish nation to conform to
his authoritarian, ab-
solutist will.
In a recent full-page New
York Times holiday adver-
tisement, the Jewish
Theological Seminary de-
clared that the greatest foe
of peace is absolutism. Ab-
solutism is defined as the
rigid insistence on a single
"right" way that is blind to
alternatives, deaf to the
needs and feelings of others.
Some of the most hide-
ous brutalities in history
have been perpetrated in
the name of an unbend-
ing ideal, the "perfect"
solution. The surest way
to create disharmony is
to insist that others —
husbands, wives, chil-
dren, neighbors — live up
to some rigid measure
•that we have set for them,
failing to recognize their
own goals, their needs,
their wishes.
Only by rejecting the un-
compromising absolute is
the path opened for peace
between individuals and
communities as well as na-
tions of the world, and in our
own families, between hus-
bands and wives, parents
and children.
The only appropriate way
to pursue peace is by mutual
concessions, by a willing-
ness to accept a state of af-
fairs short of perfection, and
by a readiness to live with
others who are also far from
perfect, working with them
in mutual respect.
That is a lesson still to be
learned by religious and
ideological fanatics of all
traditions — by the Ayatol-
lah Khomeinis who regard
everybody else as infidels,
by the fanatic, so-called
pious Jews who obscenely
painted swastikas on a Con-
servative Synagogue in
Boro Park.
Before more human de-
struction results, let such
absolutists ponder the wis-
dom of Ecclesiastes, "Be not
righteous overmuch," for
before God we are all imper-
fect creatures.
Tourist Volume
JERUSALEM (ZINS) —
1978, Israel moved from
eighth to fifth place in terms
of tourist revenues per
capita. The revenues to-
taled $461 million, or $128
per capita.
The highest ranking
country is Austria ($494),
followed by Switzerland
($304), Hong Kong ($189)
and Denmark ($184). • -
In
Evron Says PLO
in Decline as
Result of Iran
NEW YORK (JTA) — Is-
rael Ambassador Ephraim
Evron said in New York
that the Palestine Libera-
tion Organization was now
in decline as a result of the
terrorist attack against the
American Embassy in
Teheran and that there was
increasing recognition
among policy-planners in
Washington of Israel's role
as America's only stable
and reliable ally in an in-
creasingly hostile Middle
East.
In a briefing to the Con-
ference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish
Organizations last month,
Evron said the only "bright
spot" in the Middle East
today was the Egyptian-
Israeli peace treaty and the
progress toward normal re-
lations being made by the
two countries and their
leaders.
Noting that his talk
marked the anniversary
of his appointment as Is-
rael's envoy to Washing-
ton, Evron said the ten-
sions and confrontations
that had earlier marked
U.S.-Israel relations were
now "a thing of the past"
and that the two coun-
tries had achieved a
"modus vivendi" in
which the natural and in-
evitable differences be-
tween them could be ap-
proached constructively
and calmly.
He warned, however, that
during the past year Soviet
Russia had made "signific-
ant progress" in strengthen-
ing its foothold in the Arab
world and that the outcome
of the current U.S.-Iranian
crisis would have a "direct
effect" on the chances of an
Arab-Israel peace.
Award for Rabbi
NEW YORK — Rabbi
Solomon J. Sharfman, of
Brooklyn, will receive the
National Rabbinic Leader-
ship Award at the 82nd an-
niversary national dinner of
the Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of
America, May 18, at the
New York Hilton.
People never improve un-
less they look to some
standard or example higher
and better than themselves.