We itavegenerving The Cro'ri . ' l unitv -$Tovi- R 5;fkkag Aww•ho.10.07 trove Ace.. lwr. LET THE KATZ KIDS HELP YOU MOTOR COACH TOURS — 13 YEARS EXPERIENCE! BUILD YOUR OWN SUKKAH * WE HAVE CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY INSURANCE * Protect Yourself & Demand Proof Before Booking Any Trip! * "PHANTOM OF THE OPERA" * kind of thing wasn't fostered in Cheyenne. We were just proud of who we were." In the exhibit, there are pictures of a sheriff's badge, belonging to the father of the artist, next, to a photo of the community's only copy of the Talmud; a photo of a young man, outlined against a barbed wire fence and cloudy sky, who had returned home for the High Holy Days; a series of stiff photos of men and women from the past century who had clearly capitalized on Wyoming's periods of growth and pros- perity. There were also pictures of the community's most ob- vious failures and successes: The doomed Jewish Agricultural Society, organized in 1900 by the Baron de Hirsh, whose only remains may be the picture of some dozens of young Yiddish-speaking workers; or a photo of the Idelman family, one of the wealthiest and most prominent in the state, which was instrumen- tal in developing its liquor and tobacco industries. "Without people like the Idelmans, or Max Meyers, who sold chy goods and hats, the West might not have been so active," said Ms. Wolin, who explained that the community has passed its heyday and was looking toward a less active but perhaps still vibrant future. "These Jews came and saw opportunity in the land rush, the gold rush, the railroad rush. They must have said, 'What can we do here to make a life?' " Ms. Wolin, in the course of exploring the Jewish com- munity in Wyoming, also tried to figure out "what was Jewish, what was cowboy, and what ultimately became American," as she writes in the exhibition's program notes. "I think that the wit and pathos of the cowboy were similar to yiddishkeit," she said. "It was a kind of life where you just kept on go- ing, regardless. Life dealt its blows, but mostly it was all kind of fun." ❑ Despite its November 1947 resolution to make Jerusalem an "international city" under United Nations administration, in February 1948 the UN Security Coun- cil declined to organize the defense of the city against attacks from Arab League forces. 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