September 20, 1957

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S«cond-CI>»i Miller offic«, Om*n«, Nebraika, under Art of 1#79

Roth Hashonah 57! 8—Friday, September 20, 1957

Published every Friday, lOl'N. 20th, i# i y y y u l K|o I Omaha .Nebraska, Phone JA 1366 Vol,AAATI—rio. 1

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Judaism Will l,ts Religious And Cultural Trends,Change? we experience today we have already experienced; that our triuU and tribulations also were, the challenges of yen* lei-yearn; that history repeats itself. A Oood Age Yet, this is a good age. Tt is an age in which we can look' back, calmly, upon repeating event*, upon plague* that were overcome, by mankind. Thohusic idefits of mun survived the Umlhnome and oppciihiveelements of life. In our land, the traditions of freedom and democraey triumphed over the threat* that came from bigot*. The genius of America emerged as the guide for the world. » It in proper to think of theiie thing* ax we observe the 2Wth annivnrsory of A press, published for Jews, in tlio spirit of our Propbcln mid of America/ and to look bnck a. hundred years, to the, days when men and women pverywere in jitters. With our neighbors, we liuve survived many tilings. We have Keen the ri«e and fall of the Know. N'othiug Movement, the Ku Klux KIHII, the Kn^cixt*, the American Kirsters, ilin extreinUtH in bigotry. In truth, wo Nee them rJHC ngain. Only tbe. other day, another sut'li movement attempted'to revive hiiury myths, to ereatn liolred, Four yours ago, I wax asked to pre- 'to inspire, prejudice agHinut people of differing'religions and tinted skins. We pare a time capsule for the University chuckled IIK we rend about them. And of Iowa. I then wrote a column which we said to them: "Jtrothe'rs, (aren't we may have iiperial hearing on the qitrsall brothers?) turn hack the pafrcs- of tion. I t WBK my answer to the question history J There it a lesson in sloe- for refardirijr American Jewry's stnlus in you! Iniquity ciiiuiol survive! hook at 20.V1, In a sense, it still is my iiiiMver, although it may chancre, a vr»r from the movements nkin to yours: Cou-rlilin 1 now, ilfrr is the column M* it wan pub- and Ford retired, into solitude , and Kuril iipoliigi/ed t«> the Je«H T i l " Kit lished nn May 15, Ifl'il Klux Ktnri turrcil home people mid slii'd THE PLACE OF SHALOM sonif blond : lint they a l w a y s had to hid IK THE CAPSULE OF THME

ish New,s|wpcrs, offered tho-e ^ in response to the re<|nral of the Iowa University'"! Associate I'rofesnor of Jonrnalism Edward F. Mason: April 13, ao;>,1 SHALOM!PEACE I The eonscrvntive Kiiplisli -Jewish rrorffl, now 200 ycari old, looks hack uerejiely to iU birth,Hiiine ins;trume>nto of our Hfre are hoary Iluf our beard hatin't even begun to sprout There ji jndehlruciibility in »gc hasn't (he IPfiaImist proclaimed,- "l-'or H thounand years in tliy si™hl are bill an yOHterdny . . . " It is no wonder, then, Ihnt what

Edition Dedicated To Jewish Scientists The Now Yc?ar's Edition of (he Jewish Press is dedicated to the contribution of Jewish scientist', to cKlv.inccincnt and progress of mankind and its civilization Tho Intern.ition.il Groplnsic,il Yen, the thud hold within a century, has focused the attention of the world upon the role of the scientist in human pio^iess Jewish scientists have K<nncd renown through their n< hie\enicnls and < onti ilnitions. They occupy an import.nit niche in the Hall of Scientists Significanl, too is the fact that the infant State of Israel, hardly ten years old, is participating maturely in the International Geophysical Year, through its world famous scientific institutions, such as the-Hebrew University, the Israel-Institute of Technology, the Israel Scientific Research Council, and the Israel Geological Institute. Altogether, Israel and her scientists have made a creditable and imposing contribution to the March of Progress. That Israel is recognized among tho nations as an advanced outpost of scientific research is evidenced by the fact Hint the International Conference on Nuclear Structure is now being held at the Wcizmann Institute of Science, Tsruel; 155 scientists, representing seventeen countries of Europe, America and Asia will engage in research of nuclear science. It is characteristic of Israel that beleaguered though she is, and engaged in absorbing 100,000 refugees currently this year, and beset with many weighty problems of building a State, she has already succeeded in establishing herself as a significant country where science and acicntific progress arc of utmost importance. As we nowenter upon a New Year, I would like io extend to • the members of our community, on behalf of the Federation for Jewish Service Boards and Committees, our very best wishes for a Happy New Year. May il be a Year of Joy, Satisfaction, Health, and Peace for us and throughout the world. '

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ABE GREENBERG, M.D., President Federation for Jowish Sorvico

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Yom Kippur Friday, Oct. <i Kol Nidrc

6:00 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 5 Morning Service 8:00 a.m. Yizkor Service 10:30 a.m. Youth Service 11:00 a.m. Mincha-Nc-i-lah Service 3:15 p.m.

Beth Israel and Beth Hamedrof h Hagedol Rosh Hashonah Wednesday, Sept. 25 6:30 p.m. Evening SerVice Thursday, Sept, 26 . 7:30 a.m. Morning Service . . .10:30 a.m. Sermon .10:30 a.m. Junior Congregation . 6:30 p.m. Evening Sei vice . . . * Friday, Sept, 27 . 7:30 a.m. Morning Service . . . .10:30 a.m. Sermon .10:30 a.m. Junior Congregation . 5:45 p.m. Evening Sei vice . . .

Yom Kippur Friday, Oct. 4 Kol Nidrc Sermon Saturday, Oct. Morning Service Sermon Junior Congregation Yiskor Service Junior Congregation Nc-l-Iah Concluding Service

IHIIIIIII h o o d s % T h n should h n \ e k i i o » n l l u i r 0 " n sh.iiue Mi CurlliMsm )\»il a s h o r t life Vn Iliollicis, JOII c a n ' t s u r \ i w Hrung a n d i n j u s t i i e . "

Thus, the battle continues, eier for the rifili), with dangers ahead, but with faith tlie friumphing element in Man's existence. Exit of Yiddish This in an interesting day for the American Jew. It is reflected in our Prciw When we first hfgan there wore newspapers for Jews in Yiddish, and in Lmlinn, and in Hebrew. Lndino, tho dialect of Spanish Jewry, was the first to dihiippear. Yiddish had a slowerex il. I IN decline is a tragedy. Its rich literature was best understood in, tho original. Today, modi of its gems are either lost or forgotten. Of the non-English instruments of ptibjic opinion, o(nly Hebrew mir\jvcd. This in the indestructible language. It is the Iqngliflgn of the, fjiblr nnd of the J'roplicti. It is no wonder that it can

Holy Days Wednesday, Sept. 25 Evening Service 8:15 p . m . T h u r s d a y , Sept. 26 Morning Service . . . . . . . 8:00 a.m. Youth Seivice 11:00 a.m. Mincha-Mdiiriv 6:00 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27 Morning Service 8:00 a.m. Youth Service 11:00 a.m. Minchd-Maariv 6:00 p.m.

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(Tlii- Jewish I'r^ss (jives you the Future «f .hidais'in ,is cimnioncil by nonif of our literary ,<II<! ri'hgiotifi leader* ,i. PROGRESS ON DECLINE? : V By .Philip Solomovitz '" Editor, The Detroit Jewish News Jewish lenders arc debating a moot flotation: What will American Jewry \ b« like in the year 2,0007 1 e,i|l il a moot question hcenini; conditions rhrinc- w> rapidly in onr tim^ that it is (lun^croiiN t-o ahMimc th« role of A prophet. Furthermore, in the Jijrht ot p»«t e i p r i r n r o s . when one take* into e nfridrration the fort Ihnf in Kfjypt, lesx than -,<HH) roars ngo, there were More than a million .lews—-who have disapp e a r s ! ; whe none look* info (ho record »nd finds I hut there arc very few American Jews >rho ran point (o Jewish ancestry l*>0 yearsback in this country— this twins a clear indication of total amtimilation, iiilerniarriai:e and conversion— then one mint look into other fields for new reasons to {five n« faith that American Jewry will count in Hie millions—aii we do today—a huudreil years from now, .

A few weeks ,1(;o, y m i r (.'oinmeiitator w a t asked to p,irtn ipati* , i n p r e d i c t i o n s p.itlii'mj hy tlx I iiiwrsiM of I o w a School of J o u r n a l i - n i to he p|,ieed in a time eapinl<% sealed in t h e I'niverwity'j n e w (Vimniuim iitinni ( ' e n t e r D n i l d i n ? , to be opened in 1IK) y e a r s . T h i s (.'onime.ntalor, a s k r d for hix view* in hi;< c a p a c i t y ns pre-iident of , t h e A m e r i c a n Asuociiiiion of p

Services

5:55 p.m. 6:15 p.m. 5 7:30 a.m. 10:15 a.m. 1015 10:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 2:30 p.m. ? j 5:55 p.m.

Temple Israel Rosh Hashonah Wednesday Sept. 25 Evening Service .8:15 pan. Thursday, Sept. 26 Morning Service 10:00 a.ni. Children's Story Hour. ..10:00 a.m. Children's Service 11:00 a.m. Friday, Sept. 27

Evening Service . . . . . . . S: 13 fun.

Yom Kippur not and will not die I( remains utidyirrg also for another rciisou, i t is the language of Ixrael. Which Imds us to another titiusc Cor rcjniniMring on tliis interesting day of Ajuil 1!), 20.">;j. One hundred yennr iifjo Ismel WUH barely iive years ,old. 'flint little land Htrug-' gled against gieat oildx, hut mirvived attacks: Today slu* is a beacon light unto the- United Nation*, a« her fore, runner in the Holy Lmiil n AH more than 2,000 yenra ago. Israel'* rise and s u n i \ a l is proof ol the indestructubility oC an uieiil, of. the superiority of light over wrong, True, Israel needed the help of Amer. ica. The accpliHition of mich help is indication of the justice of the cause. Right Is Might An/1 hiMMiisf I I I K I I I t i i i u i i p l m o v e r w r o n g , nil t h e t u n s of j e s l c r j e n r s , e s p c i ' n i l h of l ' l ' i l , n\ir a n H i T p e n d i n g d r s t r i n l i o n nf I b e w oi til I n Ili•• nliiinii 1 b o m b , linvi" v m i i s h i ' d , lii",'lit. is ' M i g h t . W h a t , a g l o r i o u s t e s t a m e n t , In f a i t h m i l ' Io Itighli'uiisiii'ss' lluil .MUM'S f e a r s w e r e i i i i i i c c i ' s s a r y iiml u n j u s t i f i e d . lilcsseil I * «• ( h i s d a y of I ' C I I I ' P ! il- i s / t r i i ' 1 , a s h a s h r f t l Naiil, tlifit. " X o m a n i s it p r o p h e t ill h i s ou'll (.'OUhI r y , " i t m a y b o s l a t e d w i t h ei|iial t r u t h t h a t n o m a n is a p r o p h e t i n h i s o w n t i m e . I t a l s o luis b e e n Hiiid that, " t l i o best, r e p l y ID H i i r o p h e c y is a n o t h e r f o r e c a s t . " T h e r e i.s a. Y i d d i s h s a y i n g t h a t " A X o v i i.s a X m i r , " — " A p r o p h e t \H a. f o o l . " We. i i i e n t j o n tJiose not- o n l y If

in our own defense but also as an evaluation of our augury: We have, drawn upon fnilli in evaluating tItn future, and in faith we. l>olicve, that liight will conquer Might, that justice must prevail in the world. AVc iiavn many pxiiinples in history to point to .the.-contrary, but sill of thn ugly Kcutjons, all of the, cruel experience, wern passing phases in man's existence, ThR.aftcrinHt.il of each declin-

ing era lias witnessed the resurgence of that shall lend meaning, and beauty, better dajs. ho It will be 111 '20."),)— and rn hncs.s to our faith, nnil xii it mil be a thousand \cHrs after ' Tims we envision the not all-tooHint—m spite of thicnU from atomic distnnt future—the year 2000. or other outbmsts. Our own tune in the beijt proof of GREATER HOMOGENEITY IN our confidence. It is a tough age; perYEAR 2000 haps it even will toughen out- childicn ^ y Adolph Rosenberg iigittnst all impending dangers Hut it is ^ Kditor-Piibli&her, The Southern a most interesting age to 1Mc in—esIsraelite, Atlanta, Georgia pecially for one who is given a chnnen AVe foresee, the emergence of j i new to be a prophet in his ou 11 countij ami J o u r y within the next half century, in his own lime. Mjth .members more mature in Jewish (A.ir Feature) philosophy, more secure in their position, possessing greater understanding " PERIOD OF FLOWERING O(f the whys and wherefores of our gVtfat H'ligion. By Jacques Bock Perhaps this ni'W Jewry may he Editor-Published, the Observer, smaller than the .Jewish pi>piilution in Nashville, Tennessee America today, though with the inAVo witness today 11 refreshing upcreases in birth rulr, identification ami preuation of Jcuish \alues Ourjfliilhs awareness, it may just as well be larg—the men and uoiiu-n, who, in the final er. It will, however, pcissess greater nmihsis, fashion the pattern that will h o m o g e n e i t y a n d p n s i l i M - u r s s ,1 f u l l c i doniitiatR the'religious' life of the .coin-.. a p p i e e i a t i o n o f i t s -\ . i l u i - . i l m - i I i n n a m i 111 unity some, forty-odd years hence, p have, come io realize, that, to be. comI'allem of this new Jewry will will plete, they must ninirisl.1 distinctive t l i es|)iritunl qualities, niiisl, clinjj to and c h a n g e , w i t h t h e i j , u >i e (| ;Mc n< •c< i. ,| 1t e1 <mu fpf <o< >( i. if m limns a m i ninny of o u r prcsenl-diiy cusd believe in their faith. toms will bii considerably alferrd or There.is today eonvinring eviilenec • chnii tred.tlmt, the general ions which alltiiiti to Vet, with thn l i n n foundation w e Hie stature of leadership—tile trustees optimistically• p m l i r l , (hero i.s 11 b r o a d of n cherished inheritance—-can be renml iidniiruble biise.npon which l o ' c r e lied upon to curry the luuiner forward, ale. even g r e a t e r spiritual anil c.'iHural I hat American .Icwry definilely will d e v e l o p m e n t in the, f u t u r e . bo i>rogressing. Hint, the year 2000 will be a period of flowering and fulfill-' rocnl. A UNITARIAN JEWRY This is not hopeful opliinism—not By Jack I. Fishbcin an illusory prediction, Notwithstanding Editor-Publisher The Sentinel, the. careless statement, that thn Jew's 'Chicupo, III. religious identity is but n breath of the It, is quite obvious Io anyone familburied past, ft tribute, only, as it wore, iar with (he speed with which Amerito our pioils fathers, wo find ourselves can Jewry is driving'toward nssimihi-. in a new, a promising climate of re- tionism and decay, that by tlio your ligious awareness; no longer "Jewii in 2000 A.D. ..lows will be, no'different name only," but in search Xor the truths' (Continued on Page 2-A)

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Friday, October A Evening Service 8:15 pja. Saturday, October 5 Morning Service 10:00 a.m. Children's Service . . . . . . 1:15 p*m.

Congregation of Israel Rosh Hashonah' Wednesday, Sept. 2S Evening Service 7:00 pjn. ' Thursday, Sept. 26 Morning Service 8:30 a.m. Friday, Sept. 27 Morning Service 8:00 a.m.

Yom Kippur Friday, October 4 Kol Nidre 5:55 p-m. Saturday, October 5 Sermon .10:00 a.m.

B'nai Israel of Co. Bluffs Rosh Hashonah

Wednesday, Sept. 25 Evening Service , 6:30 Thursday. Sept. 26 Morning Service . 8:00 •Sermon 10:30 Evening Service . 6:30 Friday, Sept. 27 Morning Service . 8:00 10:30 Mincha-Maariv . 6:30

p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m.

a.m.

a.m. p.m.

Yom Kippur Friday, October 4 Kol Nidrc 6:30 p,m. Saturday, October 5 Morning Service ,' 8:00 a.m. Sermon ....10:30 a.m. Yizkor . . . . . 1 1 a.m. Children's Service . . . . . . 3:00 p.m. Nc-i-iah 5:25 p.m. Candlelightlng Wed., iScptembcr 2 5 . . . . . 5:57 Thurs., Septembcr_26.... September 5:55 p.m. Kri., September 27 5:53 i.m. F i October O t b ii . . . . . . . . . . 5:d p.m.Fri.,

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Edition—THE JEWSH PRESS—Rolf Haihonait 57I«—Ff1d«y. SspfcnuW 20

A Look

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(Continued from Page 1-A) from Unitarians in every meaning of the term. ' Israel, by that time, will be fully,, kettlfd, «o there will be no need for U.J.-A., elv. Philanthropy wiO^ have very likely disappeared completely and hlncc thin is the •basis for Jewiiji tif,e in America, the result is inevitable. It may possibly be that on Rash Hasbonah and Yom Kippur, Jews will turn on their television sets for a brief service. Beyond that, most temples and syrtagegueii will be used for social purposes : only. : ." . (AJP Feature) AMERICAN ISRAEL Rabbi Samnel Adelman Beth Hamedrosh Hagadol Congregation Denver, Colorado Two and two make four. True. Sociologically there are many conclusions to which we carl arrive as we view the Ame"riean-.lVivis|i Community today. By all rules "f Injrie we should'have lens perished from I lie fare f HIP earth. But what do you do with a people that can .sin?, "1 Believe in the Coniin? nf the Messiah," even as they are being marched to their death ! 1 am afraid tlia we, even Rjibbis, living in a pragmatic age are too prone te nse as our weapons and yardsticks the tools of the age—logic, sociology, proof! Of what valne are these things when pitted against, what to our visionleas age seems to be, the illogical, proofdefying, spirituality of Torah ? Ezekiel, in his day, also was. asked t« predict the future of Judaism. "Can tiles'- dry bones live," he was ' asked. ''Oh Lord, OIKI. Thou knowest,* was his answer. Here was a Rabbi whose••'only tool was that for which he accepted his railing-—faith! A word much forgotten in the modern lexicon. With all of our prognostications, ean we predict what is locked up in the mystery of (iod, His Torah and His people" "Oh Ijord, Hod, Thou knowest " High on a mountain in Tiflis laht rammer, I got my answer. There 1 stood with my colleagues of the Rabbinical Council of Amerii.i delegation behind the Iron (.'urtam As we looked down on the city and i i w the hngc valley of dry bones that is the Soviet Union today, as the week of disappointment welled np in our hearts, how dismal-the future looked, ho whopetess t he year 20001 Suddenly three workers introduced themselves to us. They had seen ui in the .Synagogue that Morning and »ere so happy to meet us again. As we chatted—through an interpreter—even the

Future common language had been taken from u*—we asked, and for good reason, "Do you have any T'filin i" Kxcftpdly, they prinned and ran to their -work-bugs and pulled out their t'filin! Old, worn, battered, but t'liliu! An we stood, speechless, on that mountain, surrounded by the vailt \ ol the dry bones—Kzrkiel'h words mruik me, "O Lord, God, Thou kno«ist'' To the gloom and doom prophetwho, from their f,o< lolojrii'iT tindnigv, make dire predictions about .American Jewry, I say, with tin' words of Kzekiet :• ".Sun of Man. Thou dwelli/st in the midst of a rebellious house, which have eyes to .see. and sec not ; they have ears to hear and hciir not; for they are a rebellious house." There «ai> one Rabbi, not of our delegation, who ran to the Soviet Union last glimmer: .He spent 10 days in Moscow and in Leningrad only had a 10ininutc interview with the late Chief Kubbi Solomon Hchliffer and then hurlied baclt to America to predict calamity. . He is symbolic of an age and a great segment of a spiritual leadership that has lost its spirituality. We should be very careful of the false prophets who have borrowed from the crassnew of oar age in an effort to compete with it. We seed a s p i r i t u a l leadership whose spiritual giganticism will be their only tool. We need the r a b b i s .who, when asked, "What of the futnre of Judaism in America in the,year 20001" will answer: "O Lord, God, Tbon knowe«t P

LOVE OF GOD When the heroine of Solomon's Song of Songs discovers that her l>e]n\<d is seeking her attention, she exclaim-, de lightcdly, '"J.'ehold there he. stiiinl-. liehind our Wall, looking through the windows, peering through lattice II.TV" Similarly, at the turn of the year, when man is thankful for the harvest vield, he becomes aware that our Creator. « ho loves us, desires from every indiMdii.il much more, than casual attention, II' wants the complete removal of our b.irricrs. . . -The sound of the Shofar alerts us to attend to our own growth and direlopment as well as that, of our iro|is to.weed out.'Of our life the useles-, ,ind wasteful, to distinguish between the non-essential and the vital. It's thi- sire n eall for moral adventure appealing to us to choose to live. The earnest urging pf the Shofar plead for a return Ironi our wayward straying to the Souice of Life and to renew ourselves to brmjr out tho vast unexplored treasure of every individual. The Talmud says that. God asks of man: "Open uji to me even as little as the rye of a needle and I shall open to you as a wide <rat.c.".Because.straipht, tinmnddled thinking, also, becomes habitual. This traditional season for serious. ness and for (self-searching, for mending our relations with God and Man, serves as a self-induced jolt to shake off our complacence and to create a sobering • atmosphere to t a r r y over

throughout tho year, never again to be separated from the Roek of our Salvation. LOVE 0 7 ISRAEL , At this season of "joyous trembling" it « well to remember that millions of Jews, trampled under the Soviet boot, dare not eclebrate these holidays or alUm themselves any other display of Jewuih feeling. During the recent Sinai Campaign, Jews had to work two hoars owtnfto for the benefit of Egypt. Any0M #h» wfiwod was deported. Several

JriO gfefe who «tood we m

BELIOIOVB KEBOBR By Darld Horowiti AJP Correspondent at the UN Long before the year 2000, I see a merger of the three branches within Judaism—the Orthodox, Reform and (he Conservative—on the basis of the fundamentals of Judaism an blueprinted in the Mosaic bnw and which arc

even today recognized ait basic by the three groups. Such development, as 1 see it, will result from an international conference of Jew ii-h leaders t<j be ht'Jd in. Jerusalem'-as a sort of "Saiihedrin." This Sanuedrin will once ami for all establish—on the basis of the Torah serving as th« common denominator~-B religious code in accordance with ,tbc times in Hhah we lue and whuh Hill be acceptable to all groups. Tin* teiin "Mosaism" will increase JII popularity llj the jcar 2000) million^ of non-Jews will join the Jewish ranks. Uecdiise of iU applicability to everwlu\ liung the Jlosaic Kaith will become the prc dominate philosophy for mankind Ju daism will be vindicated before the whole world. YIDDISH LITERATURE Starlight, Pa. (WNSj—Yiddish litetatore—far from being a cultural hasbeen—"is fait coming into its own a» ( one of the great modern literature* of our Lime," it was declared here by Dr. Ilasye Coopctrman, a lecturer at the New tk'hool for Social Research in New York, '

their cldu^roonts and asked why Israel w.fy continuously reviled, while Arab murder-.ittacks were never mentionod, were deported with their faratilies. One child WAS stabbed by her classmates. In terror of their neighbors, many Jews hid their identity for years. When they found out, their children are ernclly lieiten In- the other youngsters. llmi much longer ran we fail our brothers without laxting injury to our nun «/11-beinjrJ Let os declare our Motherhood, that we shall never be separated from our brothers. To allow the vast liussian propa?inil<i-ippnr.itui to convince ns that our our brothers are lost, to nf would be unl'orjrivcable!1 Kveryonc, as an "nilnjilu.il «'iin do snindhinff to pierce the curtain of steel and «moke arid exert sijme pri'-fiire, h o w i e r small, on the ^o\ JI t le.jders M.tny p'oplc. not owrcome by faI.IIMIC di-iuir vnte weekly letters to the .Soviet delegate t/> the IT. NT., His Hxiiollenev Arakady A. Hobolev, 0S0 1'ark Avenue, N. V. (.'., and to Am-. bassudor Orfgori X. Zaroubin, Washington. T). ('., requesting that Jews be allowed to leave. This is one small thinp that, we can • do and it. is all the more imperative that we do it. Multiply this small effort by (Treat numbers and the Soviet, rulers may become more willing to talk with the firemenf. Jewish leaders. Through this experiment, in peaceful persuasion on a current problem, wo may perhaps restore, the. majesty of the individual's conscience, and it« praetical effectiveness. . • • In Ezekiel's vision of "The Valley of Dry Bones," the bones come together one to the. o+bcr beforfi they receive the breath of life. To revive Jewish life and learning in America —.nd te precent it from becoming a museum piece, it may 'jelp. if we draw elose to oor brothers first. Thfn we shall again become a living body, rejoining -the creative stream of historical Jewish d«- • wloptnent

Marriages Doris Rapoport and Ahin Atiramson Sandra Zalkin and Kdward L. Belgrade Hetty M. Isiick and Michael N. Blclchcr Phyllis Kaplan and Klliot lirown Nadine K. I'reslow and Ktirm;m i;. . Chiidncoil S i n d i . j K n / i ! i , II ii'! !> ,'i II I " I , n L a u r e l .1. O r u c h mvi ( i o n l o i i K l e w i l / C lilllC

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Adeline N . i tHIM r fit ^ n i u ' I drn'ilci J . i n c t I h ' u n i i i n d M >t I n n I ( j l i ^ s

Jluthann Chu<l;tcnlf and Man J. Hcogir Marilyn ltiec unit I-oul.s Hurwitx Lee Jahr and Arnold N. Kantcr Sylvia Shyken and Dr. Jacob Kirnhner IJcne A. Sachs and Donald S. Klein Nancy llodncck and Richard J. Kohun Barbara J. Ruback and Marshall B. Kushncr Jane Kinktc and Sol Logman Barbara Jean Frank and Jay Lashlnsky Barbara Lltt and Harry U Lewis Nannettc Cooper ind Joseph D. Lincoln Barbara Harwln and Brad H. Marer

Shirlce jrVGrcen and Dr. E.- Gordpn Margolin. Sarah Bernstein and Abe. Meyer Suzanne J. Simons and Neil F. Miller Caroline R. Kully and Julet M. Newman Sondra J. Green and Frederick J. Oitrow (,«(iidi)l>n blupiruund FUimon i P r H l.\c [tundcll and Juliu-, I'-idMi Sandra Jean Kfldman unfl Jcnuiu Rddu/incr Arlenc Weit/.nian and Hurry Klehman ^h.irlene 1 i^hcr .ind l»i '/ (.onion Kips Bc'ttylu Klut/nick ami l>r. 1'aul W. Saltunan

Kllnor DeKovcn and, Howard Sllbrrmwi Nancy E. Farter and Martin A. Smith JoKllcn Cioldchbcrg and Jerome A. Turner Judith Rosen and Kenneth P. Weiner Fayann Sokolof and Mclvin Welis Bcttc F. Gindlln and Norman M, Wohlncr Jane Brodkey and Pacey L Wohlner Sara Kadis and Walter P. Wwkotf Joan E. Rcmcr and Marshall N. ZaMn

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JUDAISM'S SURVIVAL By Dr. Helm Hirsch, feature Editor The Jewish Standard, Jersey OHy Judaism has always been aupernational and humanitarian and hence universal. Its prophetic vision has embraced all races and nationft^rince Jewt everywhere are united by ties 6f blood as well an of faith. Although, in ourijufck-living time of the atom, a time with ever-skirting values, it is more than ever impossible to make statements ex eathedra or to prophesy what American Jewry, will be like in sibout half a century, and so one can on!.i utter vague guesses of vpry ilubioui value, to JIIJ body, let me vei turc the following prrsonal opinion. Whether in the year 2000 there will be a stronger leaning to a more elastic •mil accommodating Judaism or whether there will be a marked return to the strictly orthodox fold—this is a merely personal question which has nothing to do with the over-nil vision of the future: there may be, in the year 2000. \«iryuiK degiees in the strength aild honest finality of individual J e * i ah

The Traditional Season for Seriousness, Soul Searching By Ruehen Arfa

faith, but Judaism, being a national religion, will—in stroujrer or weaker form -^-Survive. For millennia, we have been the 'bearers of Holy Are uud this has helped us through our long historical pilgrimage through time and space: our religious consecration having rendered us an "eternal people" with an ever-living spiritual message fur humanity, we wear a badge ol suffi r.im i ,md a badge of honor as well. TIH'M> have become our source of eternal life everywhere HfMrdli'v> ol f>'tt\ queilion™ of environment or putting on a seismograph ie scale the "pros and cons" of statements which, witli all due honor to the \<ilue of philnsojiliK speculations, have little influence on the future of a group, a future depending on so many outward meaning political, and to many inner, meaning psychological factors.

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A Synthesis of , Science And ^ Judaism i*i:l h

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Moses Malmonidet

' The middle ages gave the world its first great Jewish physician whose conception of nctalth embodied the moral and spiritual needs of man as well as those of his physical bejng. In an hour of darkness the young Moses Maimonides escaped from Spain to C a i r o , Egypt—destined to halt an era of persecution for his people—while he lived. Endowed with a magnificent intellect, he studied to be a rabbi. To earn a living, he studied medicine to become a famous physician and surgeon.

, . / The Sultan SaUdin elevated him to court physician. It (s_said that during the Crusade*. ' Marmonides was called upon to tave the life of . the English King Richard when wounded near Jerusalem. ^ Had he lived today, his skill and perception might have helped unravel some of medical science's secrets. Or, as a man of the gospel, his good works might have intoned tranquillity and kinship among the bitter of the earth.

A man of such great piety, he has been compared with the first Moses, the man of God. His name spread far and wide in tribute to his good works, compassion and skill in medicine and learning.

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His deeds were not in vain. i

He left a code of living that will always be a source of good hope and courage to Ml people.

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N»w Y«ar'» Edition—THE JEWJSH PRE?S-^R(>»h Haihonah 5718—Friday, September 20, 1*57 The word "rinjr' occurs in Exodus XX 22 where il tcils of the olieungs of 1 the people of Israel in the desert; in Numbers XXX :'it) and in Can tides V: ]i where it possibly /night 1M> rendered with "rods." Legend lias il Hint the Pharaohs of Egypt were tin- first to skeleh the circle as a .symbol of eternity and U> be-

Ancient Ruling of Rabbis No Jewels on Wedding Band

lieve that the ring wae a heavenly sign that life, happiness and love had no beginning and no ending. That rings should be. rarely &?hided to in the Old Testament might seem to be. proof that they were not extensively worn in the Land of Israel as some have aKsumed. The finest ancient Hebrew signet ring is said to be ooc of Uie timr-

, By Ruth Morris An eld Biblical riddle asks: "What is sweeter than honey and stronger than a lion? The answer is: LOVE! Since Biblical times, it was the first duty of parents to marry off their children. And it always has been their most cherished hope to see their children's children, before, all the sons of their sons—according to the Psalmist and the Proverbs. In . m i lent tiring x n l d i n ^ i u - u a l l v t o o k p l . i i r i n I IK In . i i i t i l n l m o n t h o f A < ] n r u In n "tli< w . t i t ' r i s |i.it.l, t h e r a i n i s o i C M i i m l g m n , » In ii t h e f l o w e i s a p p e a r cm | b e riirili; w h e n t h e time o f

pinging is come, ami the voice of the ttirlle is heard in our land (Hong of Soups 2-ll.lL') To the Prophet Jerciniah, tile most distinct feature of desolutioh in the land was the absence "of "the Voice, of mirth and the voice of gladness, the voice of the bridegroom and (he voice of the bride" (7:3-1,25110, 33:11). Since one form of contracting marriage (kiddushim), consisted In the giving of » *um of money or of an object of value to the bride by the groom, it was a natural transition to make this object a ring. Thus the one of Hie coin t u • abandoned and with R the laat of the outward form of "par" disappeared from Jewish mar' fiage. Eventually, the euitom became • s common that the words "With this i m g . . ." ('betabba fath no . .-.') became n*rt of the binding ceremony of PMrriage. WHY WO JEWELS? According to » strict ruling of the jmbbis, wedding rings were to be made • f metal without any jewels The reaton given for this strange ruling wan the impossibility to estimate at glance tbe real value of a jewel when no one •raid Ml immediately whether or not the ring presented were of proper worth of money. ANTIQUE WEDDING RIKGS A great number of valuable old a d ding bands have been preserved in The Jewish Museum in New York City, but

the world's greatest collet-lion in in the Victoria and Albert museum in London. So are the rare old rings pictured here, .Vumber one (from left to right) is a gold ring, the bezel in the farm of a gabled building, which in frequently used and represent* cither the beautiful old Temple of Jerusalem (King Solomon's Temple), or one of its modern counterparts—the synagogue. The ring in the middle is made of bronre, richly "chiselled, The third, made of gold, is a wide hoop with two rows of, filigree homes, the bezel is square with applied foliage and bears the frequently used inscription "M. T." an abbreviation for "Mazel Tov." A very rare ring is now being exhibited in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London: H shows on its sides the creation of Eve, Man's Down* fall and the Expulsion from the Garden of Eden—a sample tf. highest craftsmanship and unequalled artistry. SYMBOLISM Or THE WZDDDXG

penciled the mibjeet further. "Doesn't it menn anything special tfl you when yoii rend the prayers at 8* nagogue*"i I asked .Jonathan. Joniilhiin's big ha7el even opened wide, and be answered.with a (|neslion, as is the »m-"i, illi S.iliras "Why lmm;ile|i. fliltle mother) you "know..we re.-icl Hebrew nil Hie year round at school, M> why should it be different when I re.ul tlic pravcriiit Si n.i^'ogue* Of course F iinderstnnd Ihein more ancl miiri1. b n a i i - e r\rr\ le.ir we ^'o deeper nncl deeper into thi Tcimh at s< hc»ol M tlonathnn was now Inijiirltcd on liis finoiiti' siilijdt, the Tor.ih l i e p n k i d li|> our lii^' family liihle, which has Hie Knu'li'ih and Hebrew side by nide. "\\ In II I licar the u o i d s in Iwi^'lisl Hi" \ liawn'l an} tn-ile for me," he said "Dm of the biijipy things about l i i u i " in Isi.iel is that }<tu enn get (he real tiiste. of the liihle in Hebrew. If I rend the Uible in Knglish, I don't feel thai my forefallierrt are speaking to me, bee.inve il wasn't Ihnr language " To him—lil<i; to other children in Israel—-the liible is n living hook. Our fort fathers who wrote it speak direi t]y I/) him "They explain c;iir historv they hhow us mistakes, ancl ii.ingir^when a king didn't (.'» wilb (Jod, you knnw what happi ned '" Joll.ltli.tll nodd cd his head meaningly. The Hible showed us bow we could m.ike n u n v h e s slrongei mid bftler b} earing for jliitiee, and the rigllU of

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J'Yom earliest times on the, ring, of whatever material, has always been a symbol of life to which great import- . liti'c lid*- h f f n a t i d i h e d f r o m c i a d l c t o rTNiw 1'rom l\]o t,ilisinatie g e m of t h e guardian angi I, t h e c o n l i i m d t i o n n'nsr, the < 11-—, ring a n d b e f o r e all a n d e v e r v l h i n g - - Hie b e t r o t h a l a n d w e d d i n g i m g .1 i orni r s l o n e m l i l c is r e m e m b. red

And this in iU deep meaning, for the ring has always been the symbol of otcr/lity. For tlic old Egyptian* it WHS II god J'henix who represented the symbol of eternal return—rising out of the a s h e s — without beginning nor end. 1'heriix means "year" and the. year in the time measure of the circle, for it encircles "Time" (Chronos) in it« eternal round. OKIOIN OF THE EIWO The word "ring" ('tabba - ath*) appears once in Genesis 41/42, six time* in the "Book of Esther" (111:10-12), •VIII: 2—8, twice and 10; the ring of Ahaauerua.

'I bus Hie t o i v of nnp-s is most inli l e t t i n g In , ,iine ol t h e d e i p s j m b n l i s m which t h r o u g h m a i i v c e n t u r i e s h a s grow II up n o u n d t h e m S i n c e the time of the ( i e s l a K o n i a n o r i i m u p t o IVoccaec lo, A n o s t , I^ x s^ing a n d nunipronb iiHidedn w r i t e r s , t h e r i n g h a s b e c o m e A

revered symbol of life and love. Warn may come and go, frenzies of men may overwhelm the world, but. the ring, without beginning or ending, that token of love that; will n e v be broken, represents Hie best in man and will remain forever.

Antfqoe wedding ring*

(Standard Feataree Syndicate)

spro In Hie words of the Torah binder "May he grow up for the Chupa," there may be se'en the paramount importance attached by Jews to marriage* Regarded as a religious duty of man and woman, the marriage ceremony was emphasised by a great number of rituals, the first step being a gift from thr groom to the bride, as a visible sign of their union,'And the ring became the s/mbol mid token of this union, Meant at that time M n ritual object not to be worn in everyday life, il was of unwieldy' size The ring represents the picture of the circle—no beginning and no end.

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thr people," continued Jonathan. The way he said "tzedick, only Ucdick," made me realize how deeply ingrained in the Jewish people is this paanion. for justice. And how meaningless the word is for the greater part of the world. As long as we had harped on "jus-^ tice" before the tribunal of'nations, we were just regarded a« nudnickx. The world only sat up and took notice when ' we showed that we could fight as well. Our children get their history from the Bible, their literature, their ethics, their patriotism, their holidays, their geography, their similes. Even nature study has ite roots in the Bible, for Israel's seasons and their growths arc the same now as then, A thousand veftrs n but a day to our children. For Jonathan, Sisera's defeat by the Israelites 4,000 years ago at Kiryat Hsroshct—next to where we live—is just m vivid as Allenby'a r>feat of the Turks in the sane area, only 40 years ag«, ' ' ( One spring day we issued from the boose for a Shabbath walk. The sky was, like a blue dome overhead, and the sun's rays beat straight" down on ns. "It wa« just such • time as this"," said Jonathan, "that "Abraham our father sat at the'door of,his tent, rod the, Jflff , J came to visit him." , "What time wan that?" I asked, "after lunch J" "No," said Jonathan, quite matterof-fae. "In the heat of, the. day." When we'returned home, Jonathan found.the reference for me, Genesis 1, XVIJIJL. It ii only a bare sentence, but my little Israeli hud been able lo clothe it with its background of scenery, and could even feel the rays of the sun on his fnee, for Ibis was his scenery as well, mid the sun he loo had felt from earliest memory \ n wonder, then, that in the mindi of our wuing Kianlis, there is no gap bctwien Hie .leuiih people from whotc history was created the Hihlc, and the Jew-, who are agnin ereiiting history in Urt'lr. Isiacl. "We miiKl continue our history, mid make the Iliblc fatter and falter," Jonathan explained to me, and my mind begun to speculate on how some very ili.slnnl. generation would handle the epiwidc of tbe. Sinai Camiwngn. We Jews have passed through terrible dangers We II,MC sarrilieeiJ much, iiml no don lit will be culled upon to make more sacrifices I!ul isn't it possible that our prayers nrc already anMuered, and the Israeli child i« a living symbol thai the Jewish people hai once ntfain been written in thcB<Jok of Life! Shalom. , ((seven ArU Feature Syndicate WorlcJwire News SeMieei f

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The Terror of Childhood, Polio-- Vanquished—

Rosh Hashonah—And Israeli Youngsters By Anita Engle Kiryat Amal -When 1 asked my 12year-old .Jonathan, and his friends what Bosh Hashonah meant to them, they just looked at me. "It means a m*w year at school," they said, "and maybe different tcacli*nt," "Nothing eltfer" "Well, affrr two months holiday, we begin the year all fresh and new, and willing to help the Bowery." \ Knowing how futl of the festivals the enildrcn usually arc, I wax surprised to find myself, unable to elicit any further response. ' When I wns a child m Canada, we tmew that Rosh Hanhonah and Yom Kippur were the holy days of the year, and if we nevrr appeared in Synagogne at any other time, we appeared then, and tried to read the service*, if only in English. On the other hundrt-he other fwti*afe, which arise no naturally out of 4 M season* here, and fit so beautifully into the pattern of Israel life, hardly Mean a thing to children in moot other •oantnc*. I n»frne*l therefore, to accept M»e mraal pot statement, that children in Israel arc by nature irreligious, and

of King Jerobeam H (790-749 B. C. B.) found at Maggidi. It was the seal of Shammai, the King's Minister of State. It is of jasper and bears the, finely engraved figure of a lion. Tbe form is oval and (be seal measures <i.7 by 2.7

Through The Discovery of This Modest Scientist

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Jonas Edward Salic

One of the finest gifts to civilization was achieved .through true scientific curios- ^ ity of Dr. Jonas Edward Salk, physician and virologist. i

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The anti-polio vaccine which bears / his name has become mar's most powerful , weapon in eradicating th»: scourge of paralytic polio. / Dr. SaDc's discovery announced in 1955, when he was 4P» testified that oppor« ,, tunity for achievement is open to everyone, regardless of social, economic or religious background. ' ' " ' . ' , ' It may also be noted that this modest called attention to the fact that scien' tific advances are the result of cooperative effort. y man

When he accepted a medal from Congress, he remarked with great modesty of this accomplishment, "When it was fin-

ished the feeling of gratitude was showered upon' but one — and he was among the last to contribute." Evidence continues to accumulate that the Salk polio vaccine provides an effective and safe means of reducing, if not entirely eliminating the threat of paralytic poliomyelitis. Dr. Salk first used the vaccine upon himself and his children before testing it upon a broader scale on other youngsters. It is little wonder that the name of Salk has become immortalized in the hall of medical science fame. v

The world will be a brighter one because a quiet, friendly man with dogged determination, and love for his fellowmen, sought to protect children from a terroris* ing cripplcr and killer.

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SECTION X

of Remembrance BT SAUL CARSON

United Njitiow, N. Y.--TJ* data ww October 29,1956. K i t tmm. Human, ehainntm ot the inogiaai committee of the U n i W Jiataona Children's J*nnd, was presiding at * meeting eanaidering UNICEPs worldwide piawi o/ work for the iM»xt fiscal ytmr. On the anemia w»> an iti-m allocating a snm of money for a project to aid Egyptun rhildren mifferinp from trachoma. To Wn>. Harm an, an Israeli, ehfldren are children - no matter where th«"y live, hhp put the Hfryptian item befons the house ami indicated that sbe hoped for qiiM-k and unanimous adoption of thr measure At thut mom K , she saw A member of the British nMefration Mrmc in from tin? nearest corridor, whinner sooirlhinj; to the In ad of th« B'-ilKh detection The !,itIer shook his he,id in di-ihi li'-f indu <it> il bv h k altitude thai In h.id jn 1 hi'.ird si nO«M new. Mr, Il.innin wiM' .i. note U> one of the Isr.ir li ii< 1' L-'He-. « hn ,n-ted mi her uiiisLnjf Th' 'i< If -. Lid "J'm enriomh Tnr lirilph ill1-! seemed 'o have got «om<' import-ant rw w>. PhMse

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Mrs. flannaii's aidf left the ronfer*t»cfi chamber, iv-turTH'd i-n .-several minntflfi, pawned a no4e to tf>e Profrrdm Committee cnairmiiii. This note read: **Ho"w f^*r can otir detractors £0* Xow they are. a<v-i*.sin^ Fts of invading the Sinai." The date m . OHobei- 29, W66. thiabatcd Excitemont Prom U>e first hflfcemi.-ril eonferenre aitTA where Mr^. Harman f*rr«idfd over the UNK'EP program eommttlee's worts, »)l the way up to Secretary OenertA Da^ llamrnandtjold's :t»th floor penthouse, tl»>n- were mixtnros of disbelief and dismay. The dHepatet,1 loflnges vtfrp, \Ttt\Viit:d, and all voices were cxtited. 'Hie. word had spread: "fsrael has uilai-lccd Kfypt." And the next sentem'p, almost invoriahty, w w : "Now Fsrael is washed up." . Meetings, Continnons In 100 hruirfi, the Sinai (rampaicrn wae, indeed, "washed np.*1 Bnt th* dmbbins had ™one the other way. Egypt's myth of Huperiorit.y — <tlong with rts arrnifs, and all the fancy arrnnmenta it, had obtained from it.s Soviet pals—had been shattered, eaptured or dwpereed. But- here the. battle lasted longer, mnclt longer, than those htindred hours. Here, th^ firht, wont, on for foor solid monl,li«. The iiernrity Cooncil qnickly threw np its hands. "Tie General Assembly, m Spoetal EmcrpciKry Session, took over. Meetings startipd »t JO m the mornin™. went on, with nnly little, lime out, all through

lb*> night The Special Eroergmey K**sion transformed ltwlf into the Regular Eleventh .Seseion of the general As>i-mbly. Tluit was only a technicality. Until March, the Israel - Eg? pt problem h*ld the spotlight almoat wilhoot a break. Foreign Ministers earoe and wtnl—among them Israel's Mrs Golda Mcir. Hut Mrs. Meir stayed on longer than mofet of the Forri^n Ministers— as did ln»r Epyptian eoiinterpart, Dr. Mahmoud Kawzi. Waa Isr.icl "washed irpT" If you judged by balloU taken in th^ AssenjWj, the answer »-»h tragicttlly affirmative. Six ti*neh resolution* were p « ••entrd falling upon Israel to withdraw it* fori-es from Egyptian territory—' and from the Gaza Strip. Israel W M tnld in no uncertain terms to get out— '•forwith," "immediately," "without del.ij," "at onee." But Israel irtayed on. The Arab delegates thundered; th« Soviet-bloc renresentativeii fired their In a\ lest gun-.; in vote after vote, Israel •<l<«xl alone; it was only on the last'ballot. on the last of tJiese six resolutions ordering iNrael to "get out," that one c-ountry—France—voted with Israel. ISRAEL STOOD fffiM Vet 'throughout this long ordcal,fIhnie| stood firm. One time it wonld be Mrs. Meir who would reply to I'reel's detractors; then h would bo tb« pcrmeneot chairman of the Israel delegation, Ambafibador Abba Bbaa. Threats againnt Jsrrael grew in riralenee. Rwsie was sending "volunteers" to help, Egypt. So wain Red China. Britain,"-it* own skirts muddied in the Suez Canal, took on a holier-thaji-thon attitude, showed tbo world that h was not an airy of Israel by insisting that Israel get otrt of RK last two strongholds, •Sharm el Sheikh* and Gaza (and diplomats were reminding Israelis here that . "when you have, England for a friend —you don't need, an enemy.*) The United State* wa* threatening to invoke MUictions against Israel (and other diplomats were reminding Israelis: "God 'HBVE you from your friends"). The Afro-A»5an bloc was meeting virtually every day, doing, it* best to drum np as mueh trouble as it could.

A few miuutcs Uler afier she had sf>okcn, there ».ts anolhiT shift. The Unit«srl States, iie|.. K a( r , Henry Cabot Ijodgc, had spoken, he had not gone a.s far us lamel expetteii it U> go in accepting the '•a-siiiiiptiouo'' that Mrs. Meir had just pin pointed. Israel dug in again. It was only the next day^—when I'rohidenl Eisenhower cabled a letter lo Israel's I'rime -Minister David Ben fitirion—it was- only then that Israel ordered its troo|>N lo move back to Israeli terrilory.

iu granls-in-aid from the United titaUs were resumed in full. Was Israel "wanlu'd up?" Far from it. Mrs. Meir and Mr. Kfc>nn—and tin 'r team of bright sides and deputies—had performed a miracle on the diplomatic front equal to the wonders enacted liInrai'lV army, air force and little navy during the shooting phase of the SinaiOaxa campaign. Delegation after delegation had been quietly, persistently won ovqr to vie w«t least name' ,of I«rael's confeutions as righteous and just. Even Mr. Jlaminarskjold finally Events to Remember bent a,little. Irfgaliutie, cold, ultra>' Thche are among the things to re- juridical, Mr. Hammarskjold had bemember/thing* that happened in 5717. gun to build a reputation df consistent Bat ofeher thing* happened too. Dur- willingnesji to iieeepf Egypt's word and ing the four months when Israel sfuud as con^is-tciil iinwillingn<>n> (o Fee any embattled hcrer Israel gained tremenvalidity to any of Israel's claims, nut dous strength. When H ,hnd, finally a titnr came when even Mr, Ilammarjkwithdrawn it* troops from both Or ;'i jold could no longer ignore Israel. He and Sharm el Sheikh—its Port of Elath wrote to Mr. Ben flurion, suggesting was a free port, its international porthat he would like lo^vjmt Jerusalem. tion here was strouger thun ever, even Old 13. (J. replied with extreme eour-

bad ibown that tin Arab League front - WM anything but solid. Fearful lest the Arab bloc fill apart altogether, Syria made big noise* here, backed by Kprypt and the other Arab representative* fund the noisome, meddlesome Sovvet prefer n o t to discuss with M r H a m croud of cniirsf). m a r s k j o l d : h e w o u l d imt d i s e u s s d e On the diplomatic front, the year ployincnt of the I ' m t e d N.itions Dmer- • ended as it had ln'j.'iiii—with noise*. g e n e y K o r t e o n t h e I s r . n l s i d e o f th*

te*y; indeed, be and lira. Ben Qurion wpuld be happy to welcome the Setretary Oeneral of the United Nations; but, added the Israel Prime 'Minist -. there are certain matters that he would

Kgypt-lsrael di m a n .it ion l i n n . In w o u l d n o t d i s i I J - S M i t l i d r . m a l of l--r.nl t r o o p s f r o m N n / . i n , i ( K l A u g a ^ , he w o u l d n o t <lisri|s^ t h e \')ji\ |• t l-r.ii I a r m i s t i c e w h i c h I s r a e l c o n s i d e r s A d e a d let

t e r , o n e k i l l e d b y K g y p t . ISut Mr«. II. (ranted yery hadly t o g< to I s r m l l T h e r e w a s a t - ompro|iiwf He would come—and t h e r e would be no set sgcii da. H e d i d - g o l o I s r a e l - - o n terms that

suited H. G. ntAHOE A REAL ALLY The year wcnl on. France had developed into a rest ally—At leant until the government of Guy Mollel frit. Jordan was" shaken by threat of revolution, young King Hussein (funshed that rebellion, the Kiscn bower Doctrine faeed itv first te«' in action—and Israel, incidentally, faced internal crisis because, <he lien (iurion Government insisted on endorsing the Eisenhower Doetrine. These otcnt-» had their repcr. cussions here. The troubles in Jordan

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Hut there was a difference. At t h ' beginning of the ,\enr. ninny diplomat* here-tbought, or said thej thought, that Israel wan "washed u p v But Israel passed a "number of miracles, following through with diplomatie. victories the gain* it had scored on' the military field. At yenr's end, Israel, her*—before the entire world — was stronger than ever. This,-then, 'must go down t i the Year of Ucmembrance—the Ye*r 5717 of I»ruel"n life at (lie United Nation!. (Jewish Telegraphic Agency, I^ne.)'

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The Bible IlluminatedAs Fast As Civilization 'Is Penetrated

But Israel i-ontimied to stand firm. At one point, Mr. Eban told the Assembly that Israel would eontinpe. to pursue "its course, of truth and. Justice—if neettisary, in Holitndc* . ISRAEL. WITHDRAWAL AHHOUNCED On March 1, Mrs. Tfe'rr—bw w e e almost breaking with emotion—told the Assembly that Israel was ready to withdraw from Sharm el Sheikh and Gala

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Inri.its i l i r . c t n l against Isrwel. A l l I h r o i i u l r t h e siiinmcr of 1057, the anttIsr.ieh a t l . i ' l 1 - ' I n ! not a b i t e I'.iil l s i . n l ili.I not M i r At t V end nf the vcar, ».•- at the beginning, Israel f a r n l the world h« re ^ i l h nrar .ifreand \*ilh f o n ^ n t i o n tli.if its eourt-e "of t r u t h and . i i i s t i c " f t ' i use Mr. Khan's phrase) must, in the end win

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Holiday Brings to Mind BY DAVID SCHWARTZ By David Schwarti

"•So you aru starting wp again," ' shouted th« second. Everybody looking lo spii: and spim The blowing of the ram's liwn, the, —the scrubbing of the house for New worshippers beating their breast*'as Tear ,tbe new suits of clothes we chilthey confess their sins, the »tory abWt dren got,, the. honey on the tjiblc to the man who was beating his breast jrweeten the New Year . . . t h e Chaleh with both hands, czpla'ining that he in the form of a ladder symbolizing the had come in late and wanted to mafye prayers ascending to Heaven. up for lost time. "HJU erowd goiilp; t/> the jtynagofrue, The ceremonial Taeiilieh," the symtfee many who paid high prices /or tickbolic casting of one't ains in the river,' ets to enter the synagogue, hut who prethe time when papa took o« boys to ferred seemingly to stand outside and "tHshlich"^ and my brother said it was "shmoos" instead of inside and pr.i.i ing a good th'mg there was a big river in —-the women in the galleries all pretthe town and that even with that, the tied, np, the old Jews with beards and river would probably torn muddy from "yarmulkcs" and wrapped in praying all the sins. shawls, a picture H Rembrandt would The mnving story of Rabbi Ammoh have delighted to paint. of Mayeneo and the composition of the The old (jag about the. man wit fl"I.'ntliiiniie Tokef," the beautiful words' oat a ticket who fold the policeman ot! "Uvchen Ten Pachdecha" which standing in front of the synagogue, he. amounts really to a prayer for a Unitjust wanted to fro in to sen somebody ed Nations: "Vut they awe on 11 manand the policeman replying, "Well. kind that all whom Thou twist ercalejl okay, hut if I catch you praying you'll may join in one society." get H." T h e awf>r>itii' Miiniils of t h e w o r d s The Yiddish story about (lie man aniiouni-in™ I hat. Kosb ILishonah was who came to flic synagogue vilh « judgment, day; the .story of (he. Rabbi pillow explaining ho wanted to "betof Uerdielieff' who-on the High Holy BUS" <i poor7 jr.ir days "ordered"' <!o<l to p u t his people a s The long pi ,nv rs myy broiler ha ppy \c.\v Vrac, amazed at nn speed m inishin^ our, . The way I ho Kwb Ilashnn.ih pr.irprs remarkint; tlidt I must he cheating wm to assume that we have all (.ornwhich was a double sin on Rosh Humittcd pretty nearly all the sins in fli( ionah ciitalog. - If what, we sny is true, we The benul iful poem \ Emma Lashould all be indicted' by tlie grand zarus about Rosh lLishonah coming (fs jury. "We. have sinned, we have robbed nature's folin^c turns to fiery gold. we have, falsified, we have spoken vainFreud's humorous story ubont two Jews , ly. Apparently .FinJai^m does not. thinK meeting on the e^c of Itosh Hasbonah one man is much b e t W than the other in the bathhouse !md one ijighing to and tho best, niucli better than t h e the other: "Well, .mother year h a p worst. passed." And the good dinner which mama The oldi Confedi rate veteran who had prepared for our return from the used lo visit us .1111111.illy on\Rosh Hasynagogue which made us forget our. Bhonah, and who s.nd he had fought sins pretty quickly. Under Ijcc \\ (• used to t.ill him "Lve(Jewish Telegraphic .Agency,'Im\) iShanii Towi." The custom ol .isKin^' loignnie-^ SYNAGOGUE TO SEMINARY and making uj) uith AOIII CIRIIIKS l.» Munich (JT.\) — A seniniarv fop forfi Rosh Jlaslionuh, the stur.v about ti.lining (..itholn piiists has bet n openthe two women « ho nmcli- up " l , t t ^ bi id in tlir building \ \ h n h housed the ffirndH now,"1 suul the first, "»nd I main synagogii' of Fochreiiwald, C.c i want to wish tun for the New \ e,ir Jewish Dl' (amp that was Uic last of ,t&itievrr you «ish mi-" iU kiud m (Jernun\.

Nelson Glueck

Tjie Bible, the Book of inspiration to mankind, has. become a- iouree of new wonder through the* fantastic penetration of great archeologitts. , , '

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By examining hundreds of ancient sites and dating tKe time of their occupation by "means of broken fragments of pottery *till to be found, he was able to chart the boundaries of Ammons, Moab and Edom.

Modern^ times owe much to the revelations scientifically unearthed by Nelson Glueck, one of, the greatest modern explorers, and his contemporaries. '

His insight and scientific probing have illuminated many passages of the "Book." Ancient sites have come alive through his interpretations.

The findings of Glueck, whose use of .pottery criterion in identifying ancient periods, can be counted among the remarkable advances in the progress of civilization.

Such confirmation of fact will be responsible for greater understanding of the beloved writings intensified faith of man through new realms of realism.

Nelson Glueck made a survey of South- , crn Transjoran east and south of the Dead Sea (between 1932-39) and discovered that No-' madic peoples settled in villages there in the centuries before 2,000 B. C.

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Dr. Glucck's contributions to biblical background are invaluable. His archeological identifications of the early history of Israelites and Christians have contributed significance and clarity to the era of biblical emergence.

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Wltkp-THE JEWISH m$$—Roih H«.fioMh 5718—Friday, September 20, 1TO7

Modern Jewisj V family Is Tar Cry7 From Ancestor's By Kelvin Green

Hway from "m-law

The success of American Jew* in itdapting themselves to the needs and the freedoms of America'* industrial- , ized economy may be produung one *,l the most mobile, isolated and striss-rid-

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Iie*> with it the ublig.it um mi the young uewlywedH to build iiiid support Irwr new

I I H I H I - I I O M H i l l i u . n c i i i i M i l i ' 1 i If) T ) i i - > m o d i M I \ m i n . i n f i i i i u l i i-, n o l w i i l \ i s n l . i l c d Injtr Ifir i l n m i n i r r . i h O l M i t i i iiI-.U 11n•,11j>11r<rI< ii K t n i i n l i i m o o f " U T i 1 i r u u b l i - , Il i e I w n ^ o u i i f t u d n l t s

il, 11 fuliuliefi in •lew isli i n - l " r \ T i l l * Is till 1 p l i t u n til {In- l l m d i ' l h . l e w isli f u m i l y u h i r l i i i n i r ^ ' i s I m m . m finalv.sib b y (Juluinli.,1 I n m i s i t t ujrinl S i d n e y A r u i i s n i i I M S MIIII n i a r i z e d m i n i r i s ' . m l i s i n d n mi tiV J e w i s h f i i m j U in t h e I ' m l n l S t . i l i -

\r} in uurl, out lln'ir problems on their OH II, S'o Jielp i-, expected from the IHO sets of iii-1'jiTi., either in setting up the new household or in working out problems arising JII I In; marriage. ' Model for Jewish Family pouit not noted by Dr. Aronson in thai Dr'. Aronson, in |ir. Ruling liu lindthe demand for inJ.au s as baby-sit rs ings to thi: Second tieneral Ah^embly is high and lucky feels the couple wlio of the Synagogue Couneil of America, has at lciist on« set of Jn-lnws who will declared that the middle class white h?rve us, baby-sitters without thereby urban 1'rotestant fumily hat. become a "assuming1' the "right" Io offer ujr;ceskind of model for the Jewish family lions on child-rearing, Most of the features of the "typical" Relationship of Equality American family — contrary to 'he Another historically unusual feature views both of Protestants and emnlotof this family is that it* structure is ing Jews—are not "natural" at all, if symmetrical, that is, neither patriarchal the comparison is with the family patnor matriarchal. Within the immediate terns of the old world from which came family, Dr. Aronson finds, this symmost Americans or their ancestors. In metry "it indicated by a relationship the history of the family as a social ' iof equality between husband and wife." rtitution, the American version is quite This is an equality, he also notes, which UDiqnc can be. more apparent than real. In the seme way, Dr. Aronwn point* • Another distinctive feature is tbe ai oat, the Jewish family of the old decay in feelings of responsibility to world and of the early period of the needy parents, whether'the need is for ghetto, is both "natural" and very difhelp, in the form of money, or in at-. ferent from the American Jewish famtentlon and love. Thanks partly to soiry-of today. cial security and pensions, married sons Unique Features -and daughters arc "let off the book" in What are some of the unique feaproviding support to aged parents. The ture* of the modem American family. aged in the United, States (end to be- , which are trno in large degree*both of come separated and isolated from their tlw non-Jewish and Jewish family married children. Apparently there has alike* , never been in past history—certainly One is the custom of "free mate , not in Jewish history—anything comparablo to the "colonies of elderly perehoicc," which historically is very unsons" which havo mushroomed in the usual/says Dr. Aronson. "Much more warmer parts of the United States. typical historically is the "institution of arranged marriage." Dr, Aronson notes Influences on Pattern that arranged marriage was the normal Prom the sociological viewpoint, this pattern of tbo European sfatetl and that American family .is a response to indus"marriage for love was a privilege of trialization, urbanization and, in more poverty. To the Jew, as to so "many recent years, suburbanization. In per• people in the world, lovo was-the result sonal terms, the factors of tbe desire for of marriage and not a prerequisite to - success and for tho symbols of success, it." also havo tremendous influence on this pattern of family living. Few Jotot Households Another striking feature of tiro The economic opportunities created American family is its composition "f by industrialization require- two kinds . hnsband, wife and dependent children. of mobility—geographical and vertical. Tn the old world, the family meant all Geographically, a man must be ready . relations, typified by the idea of the to move to whatever part of the- Tnilcd Jewish "mishpocheh." The joint hou.-•States is required for a hotter position. hold of three penerations living nndcr Vertically, ho must also be free to move the same roof in the hhletl was comup the ladder of snecoss. Freedom from mon. A three generation family—Jewkinship ties is necessary to both' kinds ish or otherwise—ih practically nonof mobility. existent in modern American suburbia. The man-wife-child family pattern Equally unusual is the isolation of interferes least with the demands of the this two-generation family. Young marindustrial society. The' two-generation ried couples are not only supposed tn family has the basic effect of isolating live slonc but they are also supposed its members from relatives. This isoto lite on their nun. The right to be old lation means less contact between the enough to get married and to move adults of the modern family and their

Dr. Aronson'u thesis it, that the present-day Jewish family i» very mv like the non Jewish family fn fdet, lie believes that the Jewish home in Americd "is inert, Amrruan tJiaii most olln iioraeb in tbe T'llilfd States "The tones which have produced the modem'Ai. ci nan family "are especially upeiatite in rhe Jewish tamily ' The lorte exception stems to be that the concept of romantic love has n I yet become strong enough among American Jews to weaken eiidogamous restrictions—that in, Ami>ricHii J i u s M still marrying Jew-. ' ' Family More Mobile In most other respects, howewi m New Factors ' American Jewish family may bi iimn , Another prico is the frequent abmobile, more isolated, more imlmdual henep of inlcfrratiou between the husistic, more unsupported and siibjut I' band and wife of this riiodern Anierigreater pressures than comparable non •can. family, Dr, Aromon blames this on Jewish urbau and buburban faiuilic "the husband's nvdr-involvement with It is a Jewish family strikingly dii succcjis and the wife's over-involvefereut froiri the Jewish families of the ment with the community . . . and . past by 'which Jewish contijiuitj Ma*. j o i n t under - involvement • with the. assured, particularly in terms of mu- ' home." tool Jewish aid. "The Jewish family to^ Even children, historically a strong day, is very mobile," says Dr. Aronson, integrating force in marriage relation"anfl mobility and strong family soliships, aro sometime resented "because darity are' mutually exclusive." they curb the individualistic activities (Soven Arts Feature Syndicate •of both husband and wife." ("Worldwide News Sen-ice)

t relative*! Tliig situation, in turn, fits the demands made by the struggle for bUceess on the time of the young couple, particularly the husband, There isn't much lime l.-ft lor Im larnjh lei ulone his pjrLiit^. brothers <md sisters and other lelutius Tins fuimly is mi i h adni>ti-d to the demands of twnilicili century Amprii-nn industrialism but ther<- is a price. Apparently this family is lcs» balfui;tory at, n \iliiile both for individual sali-,fai-tioii-> ,iriiI the perpetuation unrl iraiiMnihiion of \alucs in which (he family—especially the Jewish family— bus been of critical importance throughout hinlory

Condolences Edward Abrahams Mn>. Fannie Abrahams Ilymie S. Alperson Mrs (Bashcvd) Baum Harry BeanDas id H licckei Buiijamin Bclmont .Sol Berg Sam II. Binder • Hobert A. Bleicher X.aurcncij K. Bordy IJ tii JJra\t 1111 in 1 h 11 Ji A ( ' m i l l Id >lr ' aiin> I o h m \1i i't ill ( oh( n lls'iii.'in C o m j m a i i I [ in-j 1J nibkv 1 MOM 1 IJ Doli'otl II i n v I (IdiiM-n "Ii- Id 1 l t l d m a n 1) n id 1 ui niiin Di liuijdiiiin T F n e d m a n I s a d o i c (Jerelick

Israel JI Gershatcr Louis GlUin Laura Gootz Lillian Habler Mrs. Vittel Hertzbcrg Mn. Bessie Hornstein Mrs. Rose Kagan Samuel Kaplan Max Kasper Mrs. Bess Katskee

Charles Katz (.loses W. Kogan , Louis Kohll Mrs. Rose Kort Harry Lazarus Mrs. Kose Leiben Mrs. Sarah Levinson Mrs. Else Loewcnstcin Solomon London Mrs. Sophia Mandel! Darwin S. Marcus Mrs. Dore Miller Mrs. Julia Newman Harry Osterrnnn Mn» Susie IU UIXMI

Moms Rich Aaron lloginsky Mrs. I'cdrl Rosinsk> Harry Rubensleln Mrs. Vittel Schapiro Mrs. Rose Sehonbrun Mrs Molhe Segelman Mrs Bessie "eghn Joseph Siherman Mrs. Sarah Spar Adolph Stein Julius A. Stein Sam Stein Sani Tarnoff Mrs. Rebecca S. Treller Mrs, Mplly H. Tully Lewis Weltzman Mrs, Judith Winters Aleck Yarmolnak

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ChaimWeizmahn SCIENTIST AND STATESMAN OF VALOR

Congratulations Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baker Or. and Mr». Jerome E. Blelcher ' Mr. and M n , Marvin S. Brookitcin Dr. and Mrs. Marshall Chcfetz Mr. and Mrs. Jay X Chosen Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clgclman Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Then L. Conn Mr. and Mrs. AMn Comlsar

Mr. ami Mrs John D. Cooper Mr. and Mrs Snrmiel V. Cooper Mr. nnd Mrs. .Sheldon Coren Mr. ami Mrs Sam Diamond Mr. nixl Mr- Willis Kpslcln Mr. rind Mr. Harold H. Epstein" Mr. and Mrs Ilersz FIatowlc7 Mr. and Mrs I mnny 1^ Kogcl Mr. iiml Mr, J'.-wl Gelbart Mr and Mr* Mixvin B. GiUntky Mr. and Mrs. M irvin Gorcllck Mr. ami Mr- W.iltcr Grecnbcrs Mr. and Mr- Joel Helfman Mr. ind Mr H irold 11. Kaplan Mr. and Mr. Hich.ird Uoslnsky Sfr. and Mrs Donild IF. Schocnbaum Mr. and Mrs Siecbcrt Sclmlman , Mr. and Mr. Alan Simon M^r. and Mrs. Inin Singer Mr. and Mrs. IJobert Sloan « Mr. and Mn;. Allen Tully ', ( '' Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Wagner Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wclner Mr. and Mir. Allan Weinsteln Mr. and Mre. Herbert White * Mr. nnd Mrs. Harry Wise, Jr. ' Mr. and Mrs. Harold Y. Wolfson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wolfson Mr. and Mrs. Kdwaixl Zorinsky Daughters Mr. and Mrs. David Bacr Mr. and Mrs. Myron Markow Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Monsky Mr. and Mrs. Irving Moss Mn and Mrs. William Nash Mr. and Mrs. Gene W. Oshcrolf Mr. and Mrs. Elllc M. TUitncr Mr. and Mre. Emll Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Mlllard Rosenberg Dr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Rubin V i Mr. juid Mrs. Charles Scudder

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Dr. and Mm. Irving Shapiro Mr. and Mrs. MUton Soskin Mr. Mia M n . Jerome Wosscrman Mr, and Mrs. Richard L. Wintroub Mr. and Mrs. Morley Zlpuraky , Mr. and Mrs. Lazar Kaplan Mr. and Vn. Marvin KapUn Mr. and Mrs. Karl Katz Mf. and Mrs, Max Kirshcnbaum Mr. and Mrs. Morris E. Klrshenbaum Dr. and Mrs. Morton H, Kulesh ,Dr. and Mrs. Benton Kutler Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lehman Mr. and M n . Stanford Llpxey Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lobc^ Mr. tmd M n , IJyman Lubman Mr. and Mrs. Mlllnrd Margolin Mr. and Mrt, Tfarvey Mnrkit Mr. nnd M171. Meyer 0 , Mcycrson Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Milder Mr. artd M n . Jerome J. Milder' Mr. and Mrs, Orvel Milder ' . Mr. and Mm. Calvin M. Newman Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Novak , Mr. nnd Mrs. Bennett Raduzincr Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rajgrodiskl Mr. and Mrs. N. Julian Rips Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Roslnsky Mr. and Mrs. Isadora R: Bernstein Mr. and Mrs. Gerald W. Bcrnsticn Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Blotcky

•' Mr. and Mrs. Bernald Bogdanoff Mr. and'Mrs. Sanford I. Brophy Mr. and Mrs. Jerome K. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Saul Z. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Irving E. Epstein Mr. and Mrs. Ajon Farbcr Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fcdman ' Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Feldman Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kercr , Mr. and'Mrs. Morton Fisher Mr. nnd Mrs. Eugene Glventer Mr. and Mrs. Milton B. Goldbi?r? Mr. nnd Mrs. Edwin L. Gorellek Mr. and Mrs. Yale Gotsdlner Rabbi and Mm. Benjamin T. Groner (twins) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Katlcman Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Kotzen Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lincoln Mr. an dMrs. Joseph D. Lincoln

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nn~.*~ * *i~ * / L_TI' . ^ p parts of a brilliant per parts with of agreat brilliant personality,Component he served both physical endurance and intellectual abundance.

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He discovered the process for moUing acetone and butylcne from starches, an achievement recognized as a "forerunner of ,aU modern industrial fermentations, such' as those of antibiotics and vitamins."'

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Parallely, he transformed the or* ganized Zionist movement from an exclusively political movement to a practical program of building in> Palestine.

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, He traveled wide and far to robe funds for the land's reconstruction.

&c founded rite famed Hebrew _ .„ , versity in j e r u s ( d e m and t h e Wekmann It*. stitute of Science. In his laboratories, he - sought the economic solution for lands like Israel, poor in mineral resources but rich m sunshine. ' *

Israel came into existence May rjfi^< /^;*[< ' 1948. Chaim V^eizmann, ill, weary and l JV'i"$'h'1 nearlyy blind, bbecame the first president of - 'i^ <**'•*«? ' the new nation. He only lived four years longer, but > -long enough to give the homeless a sane- " / tuary and to pave the way for new scien- \ , tific contributions for those who chose to ' ' follow in his footsteps.

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Mr, and Mrs. Herman Locwcnsteln '

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' Chaim Wekmann was ike' perfect , fusion of scientist'and valiant statesman. '

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Elath Needs Housing, Girls

Omaha, Nt*r.

Entered a* second-class matter at Omaha, Nebraska, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Year , ...51.00 Advertising Rates IXirnishod on Application. EDITORIAL OPPTCE—Jewiiii Community Center, Ktt No. 30th St, Omaha. PRINT SHOP ADDRESS—4606 So. 25th Street. THE JEWISH PRESS b published by lire Federation toe J e w i s h Service of Omaha. The opinions expressed in this newspaper aw tho»e of the editor and should not be construed as necessarily reflecting In any way those of the officers of the JcwWi Federation or of any individual or group in the '-community. (MRS.) "rTiANCES KLEIN Editor

BY DAVID SCHWARTZ ^lajor llanriueh XeniUT, l he vuun^ muyor of I lie yoiiM^t-st unti fastest growing city of Israel, Klutli, which lia-> been so much in tin- IK-M-.-, of J;it• •, iudieate.s that lii.s town Jiu.-. Iwu .shurlafji-.-.-, Jionns and women. M n \ n w Xenm-i' recounted with :iome ;r|fe how a. Hungarian family willi l i v e unmarried dau>,rhl-er;, came i<> ICI.itli. ]!efi:iv the month Ava.s over, all « r n : bride.-.. There is a fine i-ojumimity e..-nler in Klulli,

In Retrospect— The Sinai Crisis (The author of this article, writing under • fictitious name, is a younij American artist wlioso poema have IX'^n published both hero and abroad. We consider this article of special importance in th<\ hope that it reflects the thinking of crea-live young people in our mlcHt).

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Klath, Israel's outlet to the Red Sea, is currently in tho news In connection with the C.N. debate on freedom of navigation through tho Gulf of Aqaba. At the same time, the town is playing an Increasing role M av resettlement eeater f or Jeariah refugee*. Here, new unpiigrantg at Haifa airport chat with alrforco personnel before embarking on plane which will bring them to new home* In Klath. The resetlement program, U implemented by the Jewiah Agency with t i n aid of "L'JA fonda.

• If thft lufnro is inevitably tiro conscience of the past, then the Xew Year rather blatant contradiction to the tradeserves .'i preponderance, of retrospec- ditional character and principles o£ tion. Seers like Solomon always have American.:policy, as understood even eyes in back of their heads simply be- by Boy Scoots. We were angry at Iscause tliey know where to look, ft is raeli because Israel pushed us to the a common ritual among moral men to point of having to profess our approval re-examine f he <lay before sleep is )>cr- of Nasser publicly. Eisenhower's anger mittcd its dominion. The ritual of the was not the anger of a man of peace Xew Yesir itself devolves more m the against a nation that acted militarise past than it does' on days to come. The tieally. Were it that, he would have future allows opportunity, but the past been pained. Instead he was furious is always loo late. One can't tmtio it by belying the real point He was furious, -commonplace means. Jfc can only be ex- as all'lmew-, in having to make a aboir of hand, at having to make an open pirated. avowed. Unique Year Moral Choice Tiro past year, for Jews particularly-, was a unique one. Tho Israeli invasion And so we come perhaps even one of tho Sinai Peninsula was the most sig- level closer to what indeed m the nificant public event of tbo preceding crux of that crisis. I t was that Israel twelve months. It was, in fact, the most bad once again, as it had so often in the significant event sineo the defeat of Ger- past, become the object by which the many, with the exception perhaps o£ "world" at large ires compelled to a the Communization of China. It exceed- pnrely moral choice. (I speak now of ed in tension by far the atmosphere of "Israel" in its Biblical sense; not in its tho entire Korean debacle. It made the merely geographic or political sense.) losses of the French in Indo - China To afford that choice,, and to be inseem a feather in the wind. The Hun- volved in it, seems to be Israeli's pergarian uprising and defeat, however ennial function, its metaphysical duty. crucial, was never fraught with the Jn tills Israel itself has no choice. It was danger engendered by the. four day the undertaking vowed in the original blitz of tho Israeli armies toward Suez. Covenant. To this writer, it .seemed of That it brought the U. S. Sixth Meet course most fitting that puny Israel, by ' into tho Mediterranean simultaneously a comparatively puny four day military with the announcement that the Com- action across a hundred miles of arid munist states would permit tho emigra- desert, should have held in its action tion of fighting "volrmtcers"' to the the possibility of actually instigating threatened area, indicates certainly how tho Third World War. That Israel much moro important the Israeli move should havo been placed in that unique was, when rated in comparison to any position can only serve to further unlike military maneuver .since the cessa- derline its peculiar relations to the tion of World War If. One can remem- "world" in general. (Certainly had Isber tho dour gravity Eisenhower and rael jiot retreated, "volunteers" would Dulles displayed in their talks (o the have arrived all too soon only to. be* met nation a night or two following the. by American contingents.) The second Israeli action. That televised broadcast World War was not instigated, after was devoted to preparing pnblie opin- all, by the invasion of Poland. It beion for the scyero measures that were gan with the anti-Jewish decrees of the planned against the Hebrew state, Nazi-Government, decrees that remainplanned no doubt far in advance of the e d unopposed by the powers that at the time Israel would be compelled to lash * • time, of their institution could have inback. Those were grave days. Every- terceded and eradicated them; What one this writer knew was literally ill. this means of course is that Israel i» One can still picture the sleepless Eban that which calls forth the judgment of running frantically between the offices the nations. It gives the "world" the of Ben Gurion and thoso of Dulles, and opportunity from timo to time to destanding alone at the U. N., to be as- clare itself either on the side of the sisted finally by Mrs. Jfeir. Dulles sat angels or not . . . and the "world" rebeside Ambassador Lodge that night. sents, more often than not, being forced The camera caught them very well. into the deci.sioti that must ensne. IsThey were prepared to sneer ;U Mr. rael is the scale against which the Ebon's "apologia," but try as they '"world" is weighed. • might, they couldn't, at least not as Te3t Ahead Ion gas the actual words were heinfr The history of Europe can be writspoken. ten'solely in terms of. this premise. Anger at Israel .Spain, to laics, an obvious example, has And this, strangely, brings us to per- still to recover from lier behavior tohaps what was most curious about that ward "Israel." Eastern Knrope, though crisis. If one can judge by what's in in suffering, has still to expiate its sins. men's faces it is safe to assume that, Germany is divided, and hasn't even although Israel was condemned and begun the payment of her debt. This is branded on aggressor, not a single vot- not to say that Israel is lily pure; she ing delegate in the General Assembly is not, or is it her nature to be. If she believed an iota in the justice of that were she, could not effect what it is her unanimous decision. Even those dele- function to provoke. Consequently, in gates who could "comprehend" tha ur- looking back over the year, we can only gency of Israel's need to act in face of bo. proud of having once again served g r a v e and continuous provocation, the purpose Israel must always serve nonetheless gave way to raisin;? a%eon- . . . neither a pleasant nor an easy denmatory hand at the vote. Moreover job. It can't be escaped, however. To that was an inexplicable anger at Is- realize this should make-tho burden rael. It was felt by all, but particularly easier though. It should remove the by the official spokesmen of our o%vn miasmas of doubt and question. The Government. The anger was generated days ahead may bo terrible, and doubtby having been forced by Israel into lessly, will grow worse. But they are making a decision against Israel. It only a testing. Little else. Israel should was generated, more particularly, by only offer continual gratitude to the being forced into a position to stand Creator for 'employing it as lie does. up, because of underlying expediencies, One can only pray that each New Year on behalf of political entities we pre- .finds Israel a more willing and flexible sumably always oppose. Israel em- servant of its purpose. barrassed us. If tho indignation against (Seven Arts Feature Syndicate the Israeli action was put on so lolty a Worldwide News Service). moral level, it wan because the moral problem, was oar own. Israeli action Hollywood (WNS)—Disclosure that pressed TIB into the open. We came to ho was planning a'i'ilm based on the Nasser's defense only because we felt "Dead Sea ScroIIst" by Millar Burrows Nasser to be on our own team. We vt.is made here by producer John Suthdidn't want to be made to say so pub- erland, who said he plans using animalicly, because to befriend a Nasser is ix tion to recreate tho Biblical periods.

a new building ereeted in memory of the -American labor leader Philip Murray. The young men wend their way to th« center every niglit. In I'Jlath, between the mountain and the s«a, there is everything to delight — everything .save as the popular song puts it, dames. The best of teencry palls oti young n»n when they arc lonely. Mayor Dfenser declares that jnit u in early America, the cry WM, "Go wot, young man," in Israel today, they are saying, "Go sooth" to the Heger and in particular go to Elath, destined to be the chief port of Israel's "wild sooth." Bo the young men are ooming bat the women haven't kept pace. To attract the girls, the government recently erected a special hostel for women only thinking that they might

TU< r»«dtm teoop thovel at work in IIK Even V'Sid fnnitc qutrriu near Elath trpllio tho pnclirtl >»e lo which Stale of Israel llonri dollira are pul in the exploitation of Imcl'i niluril m-ourttt. In addition, Iirad Bond•Miilance is helping lo develop Klilh into a modern deep-*n port to facilitate tb« thtpment of cargo to lite countries of Africa ami thr Far Kdtt. Granite from the q t u m o eetx Bath is exported to the United blalfi and other countries

JERBSALEM LIGHT BULB COMPANY INCREASES PRODBCTIOll WITH ISBAEL BOND ASSISTANCE

conn; if they were jiruvided with /Uure genteel accommodations than are eopiuiou in thi.s uiu.st Israeli pioneer town but despite the fine hostel, tin* wunivn didn't respond v) the women's ho.stel was viiyerti-d into ;m ordinary hotel not restricted to any c'D'ler.

Elath would seem to be a natural place for romance. It has the most wonderful scenery, a big Oriental moon. It even has historical precedent for romance. There King Solomon received the Queen of Sheba. A shortage of women is natural in any pioneer community. In the early American days when the French held Louisiana, the French Government dispatched so-called "casket girls' 'to New Orleans to meet the need. Victor Herbert's o p e r e t t a , "Naughty Marietta" is based on this theme. In the California Gold Bosh, there was the same cry. Men starved for affection were known to be overcome at tho sight of a skirt and even a lady's handkerchief brought tears of nostalgia lo the miners. / As late as 40 and 60 years ago, immigrants to this country from Russia were.beset by tho same problem. The men who immigrated first, were like ships without rudders, like aunts without uncles, like wheat cakes without syrup. They all stayed at boarding houses asd the only ones these young Russian Jewish immigrants could look at fondly were the lady boarding house-keepers. The Jewish papers used to run regular features about these romances. Also there were the picture brides. Immigrants would exchange pictures with girls from the "old country" and many marriages were made that way. Perhaps something like this would be appropriate for Elath. The weather is warm, in Elath. In fait, six months of tho year, it is very hot. Tho other six months it's pleasant, tho temperatures ranging in the seventics. The climate is said to bo much like that of Arizona. Israel looks forward to its development as 'a great port citj, but essentially it is an outdoor city. It should be said for the benefit of any American girls who may be inclined to respond to the clarion call of Elath that they shouldn't think of coming unless they like such things as swimming, skin diving, fishing, boating and so forth. If you don't like those thing3, you will be better off in Scranton or Peoria or wherever you may be. But if you do like the outdoors, if you do like the pleasures of the water, if you like lolling on the beach, if you would enjoy living in one of the most scenic places in the world, if you don't care to dress too much and like to walk around in shorts, if you have no objection to many men'conrting you—if you like all these things, why, you will like Elath. * AN to Ihi! shortage of homes in Elath —that will be cared for. Israel Bonds is financing the building of many thou- • sands of homes in Israel. Elath will get 1,000 of these homes this year and another thousand every year fo.riitc next f i y e y c a r i f .

Karliel Snlwfr, C!i, Mho recently came lo Klatli from Morocofc mrel* her nru- < lassniati s. 'Die Klufli airlift which brought Rachel and her family to new limiies in the pruning lied Sea port I* directed by tliR JiMMi .H-.-ncy with the uirl of I JA funds.

One year ago this month, this first plane load of Immigrants arrived at Elath on the southernmost tip of Israel. W t h tbc aid of the Jewish Agency the nruronirni hrne rjulikly ailjuttrd to their unfamUhar stirroiwdinKa. Now the khip-to-ix-UIcraent airlift ten Haifa, to Elath baa bocomo routine.

Mining vajnp at Tlninia, where n new roppi-r Industry near thn alto of King Suloinon'n Alines. Many m-wcnmr-rH at Klath with tlin nit! or IMA fund* ure employed herr. Israel In rxpectnl lo produce a total of 348,000,000 worth erals of varloui t

«ncrge» i rfACttled In 1D5S of min-

"V • . r - : ' * - . • • . . ; •'.-"-.-:"" - •;.'•.'*• ;::-* •-.•*.. •;

(Copyright, 1957, Jewish Telegraphic . ; Agency, Inc.)

Day of Atonement Once on a Kol Nidro eve. Rabbi Lcrvl Yitzchok of Berdichcv remarked that the generation of today was superior to the previous ones. In days gone by, people dared to tell lies in tho very house of God. Whenever they beat their hearts In confession, "Oshamnu— we have been guilty: lwcnadnu sozlanu—we have dealt falsely and dishonestly, "it was nil lies. Not a single word they uttered in their penitential confession.': was true! Today, however, our generation recites the lame con- • fesxlon and every single word is true, the very e s s e n c e oC truth . . . "For that nlonn," he concluded, "for tellinc the truth, we deserve inscription in the Rook of Life."

3IOTTO: "Blent art Thou, O Lord, who in merry bearkenest to the sho. far sounds of Thy people Inrael." —(From "Shofarot). "Prepare to meet Thy God, O Israel. Seek yo the Lord and ye shall live!" These words of Amos. the shepherd of Tekoa, are tbc eternal summons of Vom Kippur, of the day of fasting and penitence, of the holiest day of the year. The keynote o£ this solemn day is spoken in the creat religious poem, tho Unesanch Tokef, which praising God's greatness, depicts how the Aimighty, the Kreat shepherd, before whom all human beings pass for judgment on Yom Kippur, determines who shall live and who shall die, who shall be destined to wander and to suffer and who shall be blessed. But prayer, penitence rind charity will avert the evil depree. On this Tioly fast day, wo arc reminded again and again that man is like a fragile potsherd, a fleeting shadow, a dream that vanishes. But God is everlasting. In a beautiful prayer which is recited on Kol Nidre night—this solemn introduction to the day of repentance—man is compared to various kinds of materials nnd God to a craftsman: God is the potter, man the clay, God is the mason, man tho stone, God the smith, man tbc pliable metal, God tho weaver, man the warp and woof: Lol As tho potter rnoulilctli plastic clay To form bis varying fancy does display, So In thy hand, O God of lave are we, The bond reg&nl, let d a be

veiled from Tboc

The beauty of Vom Kippur lies in its completenos»: humbly wo .stand before God for communal confession nnd prayer. We ask God's mercy, we pray that our life may be prolonged nnd our slate wiped clean. We do not deny our errors nor abate them. Humbly craving pardon, we feel at this solemn moment more than ever that our wisdom is small and our experience! limited. We acknovledgc our responsibility to God and we arc taught by the shofnr"!; strident blasts that God alone may utter the redeeming word "Salatha!" "I have forgiven!" God alone holds lho keys to peace and forgiveness nnd on thi". solemn'day the shofar will carry to the people of tho "irth tho glorious message of forgiveness and new hope. , 1

Tel Aviv (WNS) Israel lias 40,000 Christians, or 2 per cent of the total population. There arc in the country about 1,000 monks and nuns, fifty clergymen, 200 churches and monasteries and fivo

Christian religious courts.

ELATH EXPANDED DURING 5 7 1 7

I'ipclino now under <on»trii<'floii will brinK oil from Etath port to Beershelia, the >T«j»ev'f> rnpltui, from wlicro It will be transported by rail to ^hn refineries in the north of the country. New immigrants rradtliu nt Klath by Hie Jewish Agency with tho aid ot VJ\ fund* help to Imlld I his nnv line ivhlrh 1H designed to make IsrnH'n oil nupply Independent of (In: much disputed through tho .Suez Canal. Only a tew years Igo Elath conTiisted of one battered mud hut. Today it is being dcrelopcd into a port city and already has a population of 5,000 and some 800 buildings. Its growth is reflected in the abore picture of a young immigrant mother, who has chosen the most southerly Israeli community in the Neger despite the many difficulties and primitive f a c i l i t i e s . The influx of 100,000 immigrants dnrinr; the past year has stepped up the development of similar communities throughout the country and has taxed the country's resources to the utmost. The United Jewish Appeal has been enabling the American Jewish community to assist the people of Israel by setting up a $100,000,000 Emergency Kcscuc Fund (o resettle refugees. This drire is over and above the funds sought by the regular UJA campaign which provides funds for welfare and rehabilitation facilities for newcomers to Israel and assist* Jews in distress in a score of other countries. The UJA monies arc expended by three constituent organizations — the United Israel Appeal, the Joint Distribution Committee and (he New York Association for New Americana. A fourth agency, tht United Was Service, £ partlcipaling in (be reaulta of the Emer>

f encjr Rescu FowL .

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CarmcUa Anhkrnazt, 10, ot Tel Aviv and Israel Bccliar, SO, from litanbul are apprentice* In Elath's newly established diamond Industry. The Jewish Agency, realizing: Kiath's many employment oportanltlc* continue) to bring new Immigrants to tho south.


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ALBERT EINSTEIN—Great Scientist and Phibtopher

Out of tire fertile mind of Albert greatest thinkers of all General Theory ofRelawould show the continuous unitary universe. , Einstein, who fled without a posses;$ton from Germany to America when Hitler k came to power, spent his entire lifetime' explaining the workings of the universe.- He ,be^ came a member of the Institute for-Advanced ^ y a + p r ' n c e f o n - n e v e r ceasing to battle secrets of the universe. f

. unlock the forces which ushered in the atomic i

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In a memorable statement, he said, l r W e must never cease to warn, we must , > never relax in our efforts to make the na,> .tjons of the world,, particularly their govern>, ments, conscious of the inexpressible disaster Which -they are. sure tvo provoke if they do not alter their attitude toward one another - and toward the task of shaping the future." x

v..:

His thoughts forscience did not end '.. witlf his death in 1955, at the age of 76. For, in his will, Einstein left his brain to science, - '*th'e brain that created a revolution in thinking.

Einstein spent much of his time after Hiroshima arousing the world to the dangers of the atom bomb. With other scientists, he sought to protect the world from its terrors. * fSurvival rather than destruction was his first thought. v l- '• ',• ;' Ironjcafly, destiny tapped the man<iK r A Einstein, a foremost pacifist bf his time io \' v

, As Professor Zion Dinur, formerly Minister of Education and Culture of Israel, ^described the great man — "Albert Einstein exemplified the ideal man of wisdom as conceived by the Jewish sages—one who explores nature with a view to attaining the highest knowledge and understanding of God." I,

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A Woman of Valor

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By Dr. tf elen H i n d i MOTTO: "If there be any one whose power is in beauty, in Ppurity, in qoodness it V is a woman." (Henry Ward Beecber). gooaness. it "I have a feeling as though sonic un— . — earthly creature bad presided at my birth and when I came into the world, stabbed me with these words: 'You shall shall be tensitive, jon uhdU be great-hearted and noble, JOH shall see

]83.'J) who had fuundi'il tin- first liter-

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. . . but j o u shall be a Jewess"—ami now my whole Jifo U a continual bbedmif." Thus spoke Haelitl IJCWU f 1771balon m ISerlin and

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OPERATION SINAI By Ben Katan

By any test, the Israeli operation againit Egypt in the Sin.ii Peninsula and its aftermaths ranks as the single most important evnit of the Jcwi-.li

year. T h o w e l f a r e o f J-iiael j \ n o t t h " o n l v s i g n i f i c a n t i n t e r e s t ol .Jews i l i n > , i ; ' h " u t t h e w o r l d . B u t it i> I ' l t a m K ,i k, \ , r. t e r e s f c a n d a n y m a j o r i \ m l a i l i • tin-; [-, r a e l a u t o m a t n all} i-. ,i ii • .li i i h V . M M o r e o v e r , the n \. i n > i ''• tl. \ , l u p m e n t a n j w h e n 11-, • n ' i. •]• \< h \ < i M d u r i n g r>717 t » r 1 ill » ' I ' I • I-• • njJ i i o f t h e S i n , u i -inr\

1

International B.jiiific«ncs T h o ill t i l l l I " !•' 1. O J K - l ! " I , I n l l o c a l , n g i " ' i , l a n d i. ti i » ;; i o " i ' n i t i i i . n i c . J ' ii -in i l r . . l 1 i !>• .i," . i n t i n t J .r<i( i .-.i n •• 1 i o r i , --iil> t . t u i n , » s k i l l i i m l ( o u i a c ' i 1""'" l . n r a r " , i > l u ' l i r m o d e r n f q i u p m u i 1 , A • ! - I I K . I C ti m ,i m a t c h f o r ;t c o . i • i p ' . i n i \ n l , t j n i d o a b t p o l u e . ! . i t ' , i M 'i t ' " i u " l i t l . a t a r n n w a s b o n n l i f u l l v I I , I U ; I I > <1 -ii.it M ! > , n u -

tst a n d di'.nll S o v i e t arsenal.

t '.

.prm- Iron)

the

I'qiially iippui'.u ' .' ll i Ui>tniition of porii.ipi !") JI, " 11 nt ot 1 hi- millions (if dr,ll,ir. -..u-t'i ()]" Soviet >iar equipment of which L ^ j i i i . i n Dictator E a s i e r Ind ;n i n'ifuliptiv c nun ted for 7isc in smaOun;' I r rl at .i moment of his ehoii.Miif,'. V i t i •» n J'H IH-U- Soviet Mibmarinr rift i to I > \ p l lould diminish (he impnilaiK' 1 nf the almost total wreckage of X.i , n i > dream of a mechanised blitzkrn," ajraimt Israel.

Stepping Nasser T1IIN Sm ii opt ration was a decisive factor in tin: besiiiiiiti;' of the downSradmf; ot Xa< ,er', \p:u>mou? efforts to dominate his A r a b neighbors and to tie them to h i , anti-Western a n d antiIsrael chariot. The destriw tion of Xasscr's military potential also was the indispensable prclimijiarj' for m a k i n g it possible for the Li enhowor Doctrine to 6 t a r t functioning. I s n u l ' s deflation on the Sinai p l a n s of Nas-er's <.elf-propctcd image lo the A r a b m.i r -.e, ps t h " A r a b l e a d e r who could d e s t r o y Israel was essential b"for<" o t l u r A r a b lenders could pull a w a y from Xa ir\ antiWestern crusade. f

Israel's strufj'li t u n lin s , n i-- f,-iin<. from it.s hnlliaii! d . . n { MI in-y had c m a l l y si^'inii m l inte'-natio'vl ramification-. Iji th" linic di b i i ' \.h,i h followed in tin- I ' m ! i d .Nation-, on withd r a w a l , I T . I ' I in.idi' iK i,isi) and won worldwide s \ m p n b y ;L, HI I I T before. T h a t .-.\inpith.\ "A.i, mn-it < learly manilesleil ,n tin ii iction ot intense div'ippro\al .irnoricr all of A m e r i c a ' s allii i lo tin' arinrnirii ril n adincss of the Eisenhower Adinini-liatiun to impose eri[iplm^ < i onnj/iic s,1 ni'f ion - a - a means of forcing eomjih (•• I rai Ii M j l h t l r a w a l from the Sinai J'I ninsid.i. "Whdlier the 3'jisr nhoHi r Ailnunislr.il mn would r e a l ly ]i,i\p tlamiird down the u l t i m a t e i-ani'tioiis aL.',nn-t l-r.nl v ill p r o b a b l y not b,' KiiDiin iinlil i . n Am. n, an offioials in ti,i d i a i ' i i fjublisii , Jii'jr n u moir',. ~\\')i.i\ i, |,um n i, ih.it lhi> ]mtilify of Amciie.i's allir, to all-out Aincrican s a m t i o i u stri u^lln ii"d Jsrael's determination In n i l . tin Hiseri hower wrath ili.it Ii nl I'onijx'lled tin Iiritish and the i ' ' u m h to ^.ull oul ol

Egypt

i II.

The argument, will continue indefinitely on whether Nrarl won any durable .set m i t y •rains Irom the United Nations debate Uut it is hardly likely that • be irtat.on ot the I'nited Nations Iliiieic' in .i 1 oii e —tlie first truly intcriiitnnial poln ,• l o n e in world history - - u i 1 ! In l a l i d as anjthing but a gain I,'i \ u i l i l s, i u r i t y .

IIon Ion- rXEF will last and how li>'i',' it will remain on tho Gaza Strip bni d, r and at Sharni el Sheikh not even ih< I ^secretariat seems to know. *" it i In precedent of an international polu i inrce as a stablizing element on e\plr,-ne borders has been »ct. The effectiveness of the UNEP tran'imlizer hhould not be casually dismissed. There has been a tremendous di op in infiltrations into Israel and the renccupation of the Gaza Strip by J'pypt was not accompanfied by a re* sumption of fedayeen raids. The Arabs have been making menacing noises every time-a ship has passed through the Culf of Akaba bearing Israeli cargabut the fact is that the ships are going through Gulf of Akaba and the Straits of Tiran at the month of the Gulf. " AH long as Egyptian guns were in position at Sharm el Sheikh, Israeli shipping was barred from the waterway and Elath was a dead port. At the very least, the UNEF stablizer at Sharm el Sheikh is giving Israel a < chance to build up the •all-important, precedents for the international status of the waterway. Loyalty Tert Not the least of the consequences of the Sinai operation was the test which developed for the loyalty to Israel pf American Jews. The aftermath included the development of an open and avowed conflict for the first time in the history of American Zionism between the,overwhelming p r o - I s r a e l sentiments of American Jew-s and the hostile-position of a President of the United States about ,m a< t of Israel. Dw iprht I). Kisenhower appealed to all Americans to support a policy which Ins Jewish audience felt was wrong. He warned that Israel's course was dangerous to American security, a plain .statement that those. Americans who Mipportcd its conceivably might be hurting the security of their country. If ever any Jewry might have been ••xpected to run for cover and leave Israel in the lurch, it was an American Jewry confronted by the anti-Israel anger of the President of the United States. Nothing of the sort happened. Jews throughout the United States stood firm, challenged tho lightness of tin Eisenhower utan3, as each sew development unfolded. By resolution and by contributions, they steadfastly opposed ;i policy—even a policy of the President —which they thought was wrong. Xo one can predict what tho year TiTlS will bring in final defeat or ultimate triumph for the gains which flowed from the Sinai operation. But a prediction is in order that the solidarity displayed by American Jews in the greatest crisis of their dedication to Israel will endure. f s ''\cn Arts Feature Syndicate World" ide News Service) '

magnet of intellectual life. In the literary movements of the day, he- s " >n played tho leading role, and t,hc was among the first to understand and recognizo the genius ol (Joel he She dominated the joulli nl the impn-ssiw and serisitup Hi inn. h U<me, who umld i liof iiij,'iiiatu-,

ing them the very same rights as were granted to men. She is the mistress of her home for "In all that riarah saith unto thee, hearken unto her voice." (Gcnckis 21. VI). Women Extolled in Proverbs and Poetry The main theme of the immortal "Son™ of Sunga" is woman's moral puri!ai In I is a lr,i, i< pii-.i>ntatiic of, ity; many allusions to her excellency lin .Iiui^li Human. « hu j> |lie subject are found in the Proverbs, such as "A nl iiiaii> winidiiliil passaKOs in the Bivirtuous woman is a crown t« her husbli ami I'roMrb-., urn] it is of g r e a t band." (Prow 12, 4). i ultiiral iiisiinj. ,,| n . t i r c i t to t r a c e In his famous "Proverbs," King Soluuiiian'i ln-ti,r\ ilu\wi to its •\ery r o o t omon says: "Uer light i.s not extin—the u n m a n or "fi'inali 1 '' hcen us p a r t guished by night." of Ihe male "Mio shall be called 'ishah' Many proverbs of all nations praise (unman), because .sin- was taken out of woman's worth, such as "A faithful 'l-sh' (man)," (Genesis L'.L'S). The Kngwife becomes tho truest and tendcrest lish word "woman" derived from tho friend." Jn Proverbs (18, 22), it is «,aid: old English "wif man," means nothing "Whoso findeth a good wife, fitidcth » else but the 'female man.' good thing and obtaineth tho favor of "And the Lord said: 'It is not good the Lord." And only a few lines farththat man should be alone; I will make er (Prov. 19, 4), we read: "Houses and a helpmate for him.'" (Genesis 2, IS). riches arc the inheritance of fathers, The Hebrew names "ishah," "jiaveth but a prudent wife is from the Lord." bayith," meaning "Judy," "mistress," And again: "A woman of vnlor wlio cau show woman's important part in life. find) For her price is far above rubies." While other Oriental peoples made (31, 10). slaves out of them and completely domIn Hebrew Poetry, women are called inated them, Jewish laws always in"Daughters of Zion" or "Daughters of sisted in honoring women and in givJerusalem." Jewish history is tho story

Howard Shner Robert Singer Bruce Wintrouh

R.\K MITZVAHS Miclviel Altman Stephen Appcl Unicr Bernstein Neil Bloom Mark Bradkey Sherman Brodkoy Arnold Colin Burton Epstein Thomas Fcllman I^onard Frank Barry Frcdkln Jon B. Freiden Richard A. Friedman Robert Friedman Roger Friedman Terry Goldenberg Mike Green Robert Gross Allan Horwlch Stewart HurwHz Jim Kagan Marshall Kaplan Irvin Karl Stephen Kort Donald Kraft Sheldon L. Knzeknan

Larry Kuw Lawrence R. Mayer Gary Mulnick Howard Mulnick Justin Mulnick Dennis Passer ' Marvin Polikov Joseph Schlk

•.^/•i

And did not 1'ouragcpus Esther dare her royal liunband's displeasure and brave death to saw her people from wicked Hainan's nefarious plansT Sarah, Mother of Israel The symbol of tin: ideal Jewish worn-' nn has always been Sarah, Abraham's faithful consort, in the Midrash we readof tin: eluud of glory that lingered

A n d it w a s because thi; J e w i s h m m en—in contrast to tlif'ir enslaved Oriental bistirs—fivrly ((ink p a r t in public assdiibln s a n d intile (lie fo!l:-fra<ts.jnyous lhr'iui;h music and d a n c i n g ( J u d g e s 21-21), (hat they Ijirame the fiKhtint-' preeunon i o r women'.'; ri;;liK fiwhich llieir non-.Jewish sisters had lo strtif.'),']," for centuries. J u d g e s , p r ' -illc t c i s i i , snipers and rtili rs l i n y \ n r ,

IJVIT her limiif and of fin; perpetual liL'ht that, brightened it on workdays. Sarah, kind-hearted and hospitable as A b r a h a m , was ealled the "Mistres-, ol I lie home <if the fmir duors." because their hoiiM- j/ave Ihe w a n d c r c i s wclconi'j from every sid,:. Sarah (alked to In-r w<iiii.-ii-frieiids ahuiit I lie only nnd line fiotl win, n a n (In; I/nnl nf the hravi «••, thiii lull lifiill_\ lu'lpini; hi i husli.Diil in his f«i«.k nf sj.iiMil iiuuiDlhci-in

Talmudic Praise of Women I heir mother—and later the woman— their wife. There nre many Talmudic sayings defining the position of the woman, such aa: "A man must always honor his wife, for upon her depends the blessiug in the home." (Baba Mefzia 59a). "A man should eat less than he cap afford, but Bhonld honor his wife and children more than he can afford."

Ijetause Sal ah laired her sou I s i a c

in the lo\e Und fear of (iod, he readily consented tco hia-nfice his young life, for his mother nc\er tired of teaching him.the holiness of God's will. Isaac waa desolate when he lost her. Only years later was ho comforted when llcbccca proved to be an loving and good an Harali. To her truly applies the verse "The woman's good deeds brings blessing upon her family." (Proverbs, 14,1).

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David Sarnoff's Name > /*• a Symbol of Achievement in the Yearning ofMankind for "One World" \

The turn of the century brought to America a fad of nine, whose genius was to hold,the . to world communications. - -

„ Not only is he distinguished as a brilliant industrial leader, but he served valiantly, as a brigadier-general on the staff of General Eisenhower during World War II.

Geographical barriers became obliterated as David Sarnoff unlocked, the lines of ^global communication. *

He recently celebrated a half a century of achievements in radio and television, a milestone not only marked by his friends and colv leagues, but with special honors from Dropsie College of Philadelphia.

1

yards of modern science and technology that achieved in the field of sound.

The College cited the famous leader "for mastering the mysteries of science for the betterment of man's fate and destiny."

The study of radio, and later television, challenged and captivated the brilliant mind of David Sarnoff from his early youth.

The high ideals of David Sarnoff are typified by the message he delivered on this occasion, when he declared—

In a fantastic career, David Sarnoff rose from a job as a messenger, when an orphan of 15, to head Radio Corporation of America.

"More than anything else, mankind needs today a consistent view of the good society and the good life—and the courage to defend it/'

an

extraordinary

transformation

has

been

Richard G Zacharia

,

BAS MITZVA1IS Maureen Borden •Susan D. Brodkey Diane DcnnenberR Avna Fcldman Nancy Fellman I^cslie Forbes Judy Gcndler Kay Goldstein Nancy Herzoff Helen Katz Nancy Katz Dorene Kraft Madeline F. Kripke Sharon Lintzman Sharon Miller Sandra Nearenberg Rosalyn Nogg Frances Rifo Jlenee Rimmerman Carol Rosenbaum Carolyn Rubin Piryllis Shapiro Michele Simon Linda Siref Judy Verct Cherlyn Wcinberg Linda Zalkln

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erne Baiters

Bette Zoorwill

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of woman's glorification; for*Sarah, Rebecca, Itachcl and Leah ari* all mothers of our nation. Moses, who owes his life lo his sister Miriam (Exodus 2.1, 26), tells -JS how woman (,'ladly sacrificed their jewelry and their precious mirrors for the erection or the "Tent of the Meelinp." Early Emancipation

From tli"ir early j out Ii, Jew ish boj s are being taught to honor the -vpinaii—

It was under his leadership in the vine-

Ba rand Has Mitzvahs

SECTION A

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Year's Ediflen—THE JEWISH PRESJ-^ifT HJ.KOMK STO—Frlday, S»ph»mfeer 20, l « 7

JEWS /JV SCIENCE

By Victor E. Levlne. M.D.. Ph.D.. Professor and Head of Department of Biological Chemistry and Nutrition, Crelghton University School of Medicine _ Science is not the sole possession of any one country or any on? cultural, ethnic or religious group. .Science has a universal flavor and attraction. It is no wonder, tliurofoi't-*, that we find men of .scientific attainment among Americans, Englishmen, Germans, Dutchmen, F r e n c h , Spaniards, Italians, Hungarians, Russians, Poles, Chinese, Japanese, Hindus, among Jews, Christians, and men of other faiths. Tin's world uf (wr.-, is inhabited i,v •bout two and a lialf liillion people, of whom ten or cloven milliun arc Jews, who coiiMilule iiiii'-li lens tlian half ol one percent of the total populntiun of this Rlobe. Yet Ihi.s little bund lias produced devotees of science, literature and art far out of proportion to its meager numbers. As a matter of fael wherever thero is a worthwhile human activity, one finds-in the front ranks as pioneers and leaders Jews dedicnV I to the widening of the boundaries of knowledge, to the making of a better World and to tho increasing of human ' happiness. Our latest Jewish pioneer»is Major David/ G. Simons, Air Force Medical scientist, who reached an altitude of nineteen miles and who.remained aloft for many hours cramped in the gondola of hi* balloon in order to gather information about weather conditions and about the ability of man to survive in the upper atmosphere. Can we find an explanation for so large-a proportion of Jews dedicated to. the"scholarly* and intellectual activity required Jn the field of science? Wo think we can. From time immemorial the Jew has been imbued with a sense of respect and veneration for the teacher and tho scholar. The word rabbi in Hebrew means the great one. It signifies the teacher, tho one who teaches the world. The qheder and the yeshiva in tho past generations have implanted consciously or subconsciously in the Jewish soul an unquenchable thirst for learning. To the Jcwj good works are more important than faith and right conduct more valuable and more bene- ' ficial than right belief. According to the Talmud, every man is assured of Heaven, the heathen who observes tho moral law being equal to the highest priest. Ono of the sacred and practical teaching of the Jew can'be summed up in this single sentence: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." This command holds good regardless of the race or creed of tho neighbor.

geometricians of his t i m e . Fuchs (1833 1902) and Tullio Lcvi-Curlo (1873-194^) of the Hebrew University were also great mathematicians. Jssai Schur (1875-1941) was the last of the Jewish scientists who was forced out of Nazi Germany. He devoted fh'1 last years of his life to the Hebrew University. Paul E. Appel, (1850-1930) was president of the Mathematical Hn' ciety of France. Helig Urodctsky (.18M1944) leading mathematician of England, was at one time president of tin1 Hebrew University. Avrahnm A doll Halevi Fraenkel, formerly a loading mathematician in G e r m a n y and in Switzerland, was head of the mull matics department of the Hebrew University during 1938-1940. Chaim L.

n;iM.'ii(. science of rlmology, and i.s now in charge of u research project commissioned by thi! European Command of (lie United States Air Force Sidney Goldstein, formerly chairman of the British Aeronautical Research Council and Dean of the aeronautical engineering department at Technion-Israel Institute of Technology at Haifa, and now at Harvard University, is rated as the world's foremost aerodynamieist. He in the author of leading text-books in aeronautical engineering. JEWS IN THE HELD OF Perekis, of the Massachusetts Institute MATHEMATICS of 'Technology, jg head of the departTho contributions of Jews in the ment of applied mathematics at the field of mathematics is universally acAVeizmann Institute of Technology, is knowledged. Carl Gustav Jaeobi (18041851) in his short forty-six years of life ' h e a d , of the department of applied mathematics at the Weizmann Institute initiated new fines of mathematical of1 Science. ' theory. George. C a n t o r (1845-1918) pioneered in tho mathematics of inTurning to our own country We take finity. Jacob RosancM (1842-1922) was great pride in mentioning N o r D e r i an outstanding authority on algebra Wiener, of the Massachusetts Institute and geometry. Luig; Cremona (1830of Technology, who discovered cyber1933) was director of a school of enginetics, a new science which explores the neering in Italy and ono of the foremost analogy between the human brain and

electronic devices. Abraham Adrian Albert i>> chairman of the division of mathematics of the National Research Council. Richard D. Urauer, professor (if mutlieinaiies al Harvard University, is president of (lie American Mathematical Society. Jeltufliicl Oinsburg is head of the mathematics department of yeshiva University and Director of tiniVshiva Institute of Mathematics. JEWS IN THE FIELD OF COMMUNICATIONS, ELECTRONICS AND ENGINEEEINO Among the. important figures in communication, electronics and engineering may bo mentioned General David Sanioff, president of the Kadio Corporation of America. All research projects of the National Broadcasting Co. and R.C'.A. are conducted under hh supervision. Philip Kpom heads the

versity. John Turkevich of Princeton

University has become famous in the use of this device in exploring fields that could not be reached by the ordinary microscope. Franz Ollendorf, dean of the electrical department at tb? Technion in Haifa, is renouned for his scientific; experiments to aid tho blind and tho deaf. At, the head of the department of electronics a t the Weizmann Institute of Science is Dale Pollack. JEWISH. INVENTORS To mention a few: Alesandro Artom (1867-1927) made a gr^at contributioi to telegraphy by eliminating the possibility of interception- Walter perfected a life-saving, fire-retardim chemical to protect industrial and military establishments. Paul Schwartz kopf developed the process of malcinp solid bars of iron and steel out of powAmerican Gas and Electric Company and is also vice-president of the Amer- yder. Henry A. Berliner designed am' developed flight stimulators and trainican Nucle.ar Society, and G e n e r a l ers,'and Arthur Knntrowitz, of Cornell Wvwpo is head of tho International GenUniversity, budt the first practical i nmeral Electric Company. One of t.ic greatest inventions is the electronic mi- pressor which utilized Mipersonn velocities. , croscope. It is many thousand fold as JEWS IN THE pojverful as tho ordinary microscope.

This instrument has opened up new fields in science. It was invented by Bheinhold Budenberg of Harvard Uni-

raw

OF CHEMISTRY

Many Jewish scientists, have gained (Continued on Page 10-A)

Dr.. Victor E.-Levine of theoretical or basic science as well us in the field of applied science. Of special significance in this age are their contributions in physics. Albert ' A . ' Michclson (1852-1893) was the first American scientist to receive tho Nobel prize in physics for his accurate measurement of the speed of light. Jews have played a very important role In nucleic physics, a scientific field which led to the invention of the atomic bomb and subsequently to the h y d r o g e n bomb.. It is sad but true that atomic energy has been utilized as powerful weapons of destruction, but the day,will come when atomio energy will be available only for constructive peaceful purposes.

Wo shall now proceed to inention' some of the outstanding Jewish nuclear or' atomic physicists. Isidor I. Rabi, Nobel prize winner, is one of the greatest authorities on nuclear phy'sics and is chairman of the General Advisory Committee to the Atomic Energy ComThe pursuit of science gives the Jew ' mission. J, Robert Oppenhcimcr is Di•rector of the Institute for Advanced an unusual opportunity to satisfy kin (studies at Princeton. He was during thirst for learning and for intellectual World War II Director of the Los pursuits, and also presents an opporAlamos Laboratory. For six years he tunity for loving his neighbor specifiwas Chairman of the Advisory Commitcally and humanity generally*by entee to the Atomic Energy Commission. larging the sum of human knowledge, Edward Teller, designer of U.S. nuclear «ince this enlarging of human' knowlweapons, conceived tho original Hedge is destined lo lead humanity upBorab. Samuel A, Goldschmidt is the ward and forward in its constant strivformer chief of tho Scientific Intelliing for a better physical, moral and gence Mission to Europe. Felix Block, spiritual life. another Nobel prize winner, and authorIt. is rather unfortunate that here ity on atomic physics was a former diin this great country of ours, tho press, rector of the Europetn Research Centhe radio a n d television have popularter at Qeneva. A. M. Weinberg Is the feed the names of prizefighters, basedirector of the Oak Ridge National ball and football players, Hollywood Laboratory, the greatest atomic reactors and actresses, and mho individsearch center in America. Otto Stern, uals on the shady aide of life, inch as of the Carnegie Institute of Technology gangsters, 'thugs, and murderers. Tho is another Nobel Prizq winner in physaverage- American'is hardly familiar ics. James Frank shared" the Nobel Prize with any of the great names, Jewish or with Gusttav Here for discoveries of Christian, that have illuminated science. tho laws governing impact between Perhaps the names of Marconi and electron and atom. Einstein are exceptions. How m a n y know the names of those who have From Great Britain we have Joseph contributed to tho ' universal 'speedy Rothblat, executive vice president of travel'made possible by sliip, by train, the Atomic Scientist's Association. In by auto and by airplane? How many Frances Bernard Gplijschmidt is tho know the names of those who have connuclear scientist who.Is a member of tributed to the expansion of civilizatho Atomic Energy Commission and tion ami of modern ideas and methods technical advisor to tho United Nato ever}' eorner of tho earth through tions Atomic Energy Commission. Amos tho medium of thu telegraph, the teledc Shalit, th6 brilliant Israeli atomic phone, the radio mm television J scientist, is head of .Department of Nuclear Physics at the weizmann Institute How many arc acquainted with the nanifi of those who invented tho or-' ' of .Science at It o h o v o t h, Israel. Zvi Tabor, Director of the National Physics dimiry microscope, the electron microLaboratory of Israel is a member of the scope and tho telescope, instruments Israeli Atomic C o m m i s s i o n and a which make it possible for the human pioneer in tho use of solar energy. beinff to see worlds fur beyond tho ' JEWISH PIONEERS IN capabilities of the human eyt'7 AVho are the dedicated individuals who havo AERONAUTICS made possible a deeper understanding Before, the airplane engino was inof tlie Jiunian body and its functions vented, Otto Lilienthal (1848.1890) toas well as a deeper understanding of ecthcr with his brother Gustay (1849the human mind" AVho are responsible 1933) succeeded in making a thousand for the lengthening of the life span and filghts in gliders which they had defor the jjreat advances in curative and veloped. Another pioneer in aeronautics • preventive medicine* V h o are pioneerin Emil Berliner. He flew I.M early a« ing space travel to outer worlds? 1903 a 31 pound jet-propelled aircraft There has been published recently »i few milen outside of Washington.-'In a volume entitled: " J E W S IN Till! 1909 he made the first vertical flight WOULD OF SCIENCE". It contains in this country, und in 1919 he and his the biographies of 3,000 leading living «in developed'the first helicopter to Jewish scientists of more than 30 counachieve horizontal flight. Benedict Cohn tries. This volnme nlso contains an another aeronautics scientist, mnde posarticle of tribute to Dr. Chaim AVcizniblo the Uoeingr oupcrfortress and the raanu, equally famous as a Zionist and double-dei:k commercial stralycruiser. as a scientist. There are also two triMartin Hommerficld of Princeton butes to Albert, Einstein, one written University i.s '.responsible for the deby Dr. J . Robert Oppenhoimcr and velopment of rocket engines used in the other by Dr. Itzhalc J , C.irniin. An JATO '(jet-assisted take-off) flight of introductory a r t i c l e by Dr. Harry military planes. Gerhard Neumann, Cohen, one. of the. editors, surveys the (jcrman-boni engineer, developed for field of science in which Jews have, General Electric the enpjino which will made significant c o n t r i b u t i o n s . power tho first supersonic jet bomber. (Editor's note: "JEWS, l.V THE Erich .Sehnlz developed E l Al, Iho WOULD OF SCIENCE" contains a binIsraeli National Air Lines. Markui graphy of Dr. Victor E. Lcvinc.) IteLse, chief of tho d c p a r t in o n t - f mechanics at Technion, is co-founder JEWS IN PHYSICS ivitli V.if/rtu- ('. .Hinjfbnm of tlie very / Jews have been eminent in M,,. f; i,i

, -:.,-»

fie Delved Into' The Labyrinth' , of THe Mind

Sigmund

. ' "Who divined tKe famed riddle was a man most mighty." ' These are the words inscribed at the base of Sigmund Freud's statue in Vienna. Once scorned and ostracized, he was almost a legendary figure in medical science when he died in 1939. Sigmund Freud by his writing and experiments brought about a revolution in the study of psychology and in the treatment of nervous and mental disorders. His theories of the unconscious ^ his method of bringing man's repressed" thoughts to the surface of his conscious mind have created a new and dynamic psychology. Endowed with a brilliant intellect, he

stuctiecl the biology of rate ffefi 'foe Beitne years. Financial difficulties induced him to give up his laboratory for medicine at the age of 26. He specialized in cfimcal neurology* studying the brain and nervous diseases of childhood. He caused an uproar among His medical colleagues when he turned to curing patients by hypnosis. Then he conceived the idea at curing patients by having him analyze the depths of his own conscious mind with the doctor's help. This was the foundation for the science of psychoanalysis, today considered indispensable in the medical world.


•>*L-.A* ,-.

iwr 20. 1 W ri

Igloo Synagogues-A Future Possibility By David Schwartz Theodore Herzl f orev i-,ioin'd Israel as teaching the world him to make tlie worm regions of the earth more congenial for man's habitation and I don't doubt that man will also learn to make the eiwsnivel/ cold regions morq suitable for people i\li» arc not Eikimos Doubtlesn in I hi- not (DO distant future, there will lie towns around tlif Poles. There -mil be an igloo synagogue, they will sell Israel bonds, collect for Yeshivas, for the UJA, for the Seminary, for the JWB. Yes, there is a lot Of fund-raising ahead now for those regions where dnly Polar bears collect

now. There luve b> on u t oniiderable

FAMOUS SCIENTISTS

•ft

.S;

(Continued from Page 9-A) prominence in the field of chemistry, lu this, field we find such remarkable personalities as Heinriich C'aro (1834-1910) of Oerinany, who pioneered in the dye induHtry, Alchard WilMatter, of Germany (1H72-J943), Xobi*l Prize winner, who made many discoveries in biochcinisry ,Otto Wallaeh (18744931) of Germany, Nobel Prize winner in organic chemistry, Georgo Lunge (1839-1928) of Switzerland, prominent in tho field of analytical chemistry, Kaphael Meldoln (1840-1913) of England, one time president of the Uritish Chemical fcSocietv, and Ludwif? Mond (1839-1909) of England and hu sou Alfred (1868-1930) who became Lord 31e|eh<>tt. T a d e u s Jteichstcia of Switzerland, recently received the Nobel prize for his isolation and synthesis of cortisone. While Chaim WVi/mann (1874-1932) is well known as the great Zionist who vi,is instrumental in bringing about the famous Halfoui- Declaration, we r , >t not forget that he w as also equally well known as a preat chemist. As director of the British Admiral!} Laboratories during \ \ in Id \\ ,ii I h<* made non discovmr'i v UK h (iial)lul the lintisli to

i

m a i n t a i n t i ni r M i p p l u ol ammunition t o « , ! « • w i r ,iLMin-t t i p e n e m y . H o f o u n d > >! t i p I l i b n u 1 n i M i s i h j t J e r u salem ti> I ) , i n p I M I f l 1 n ~ t i t n t * a n d t h r \ \ ( I / I I I , I J n I n . i i i u t i o l f-L l i n e a t IMiovith l ) i u u u ' V, i n l i l W a r 11 e i / i n a L i n \\<i^ i n ( r i / i\ i ,i i H I m i s t a n d i o n t r i b u * ^ i l t i 11 < n i • -.^ »i T I < >-) T I tlH'i i j f n r t i n il ' i . i i ' n ' I I H I < l i e ( f i l I n • I T i l j » [ i i>. i i i I In . N a l i I I s -

tat'I.

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number of Jewish . \[ilorcrn of th frosty northern regions. To mention IHO outstanding ones. AnpVJo Ifrilpnn, the son of the distinguished Jlielmil lleilijiin of Ciiil War da}», ulio head«'<1 t)»> IVury belief Kxpedition; anri tlif prematurely i-ut off Edward I.-rael who was with the tlrccloy expedition in thi> 'eighties and of whom many ex p-'otf il great lliingH. A ponderable number of our brethren iin- not toy far from the l'ole—in Alaska. A couple of friends of tin; p r o •'fit writer moved there teli years ago. They (aim- bark some months ago. but onlv for a temporary ,«tuy. Thej live in Telakcll, Alaska In fact, they a n the only residents of thib Alaskan town.

JEWS IN THE FIELD OP THE MEDICAL SCIENCES It ji in IMI fn Id nt tin mi'diial suieixvs IIMI the .lew luis taken a Irading role. This cnininer in the field of mediral •.(•!(n<"(s sirnis from the fact that tln'.IenloM s lid1. He lia.s an inborn rovcrem i tor life. l i e holds very sacred UK> Jilc of Iiuninn beings as •well as of juumaK A conversation between Albert lOinst' in and Walter Eathenan, the tfiw ivho rose to hi- ilianeellor oC the Oi rman lleieh, is of interest in this connection. In this cohv'fination Itathnnau exclaimed that "whenever you iru'et a hunter benl on killing for sport rest assured he is not ,i -fi1^.' Dr. liol.i >s ( h 11 k <l"\t loped the S< h n k 11 st by uhieh dm1 i an < I r-t • mi me whether a elnld i r adult JIO-SI ssc , nnniurutv iig.nnst dipthi II.I 1'r .Innas K. Salk de\flop«il (hi \aiiiii' l o [iioint children a n djmi.ij' dull ,-L'ain^t t i n de\a>>ting I«>IHIMHI I H K rn m lm i l l • p ir . t l y s H . i t » , h I'aiil l ^ m l ' i h t .Nn'irl I ' r i / e w i r i i n r wli'i n r - t I I M U M I U I . I euro i o r\\|ilnli^ I* i-. I n n u H s m t i n W a i s c r m a n l> •>' a n d l h K i l m t i - t m i t .1 diaKU<i^i-< Hi v . j i l n l , - . ( i n o i l I n i I i b J i s h e d . i t J-> t i n a n ' i l n i l n ' . I r i ' i i t o i n j ein, d i s i o M - r u l I n S i l n i n 1 \ Wal<sniami, Nobil 1'n/i \iiunr lli.il n.i < ] > r o v e i l \ e n -\ i l i i i b l i m l i n I n .i 1 m i nf of tuberculoMK 11 i , i h e A s i l d i f i m Z o n d e k t f - . t l i j u h n ' j i a d i a .'inisis o l p t c R i i a n c ^ i a n \>' m . i d i ' j n t i n i a i h m o n t h s . J t i i S i i n r m I !• \ i n r u l i o J n .1 i s o l a t e d III'1 b a c i l l i , ! m a tv a l l n - i m v o f t h s e n t u ' } . I l i-. K ' a i l k o l l i r who iuccredit'd « i t h tin n v a n d uitli tin p o p u l a r i / n i ! ; o f l o i a l .in.i* s t l n I n s II w a x ; i I l u n i r a r i m . I i u . S i i n u n l i i i ' i - . 14 110 c x p l i i i m d H i " I M I I - I ' ill i l i i l d l n i H i l i \ i r w h i c h b r o u g h t a b o n l t h ei l l , i l | i o f l i m n s . i n d s o f i M i n n n H hj i i i ' M i i l m lmtliod practised lodij makes childbiith safe, thus s a \ i n ^ thou-jiids ol -uonn'i

Jrom pnmature dialli. Medind science i « i , inuch lo tin Jpwii. Abraham .7,n olu « a s llii' I irher of pediatrics, and ifav Ijinlioni I In1 father of g.Lstioenferoio;o. M.itn <lii cases are named alter J"uish phjsiu ans. To mention .i few . Uueiffrr"* dis. case, Tay-.Sai-ks disease, Libmans' disease, Ilir^chsjiriuig's disease. We have mentioned J*aul Elirliii, and Solntann A. AValcsman as leiipienb

of the Nobel l'r'uc in the medical sciences, but there are stiJl others who navo won this prize. Ernest Boris Chain, W^o escaped to Britain from Germany, shared the Kobcl Prize with Alexander Slffftiag and Sir Howard Florer f«r

the diseo\ery of the first antibiotic, penicillin. .lost ph Krlan^er ot (hi- t'niversit,} of Washint'tim shared tlie .Vi.bel Ptiw with II. Spencer fur studies on the finietion of individual i u m i l'Vilz Lipmuu of the Jtiuclu'inirul liriPlin-li Laboratory of Jlassaehuselt-. (ieueral Hospital and Hans A Krebs nf the L'm' varsity of Sheffield, England, were recent recipients ot the Nobel 1'ri/e in medicine. Otln 7<upni, non at the New1 York Tniveisily College of Jledieine, "won this coveted prize for discovering the chemical reactions involved in lhi; transmission of' nerve impulses. Karl Lamisteiner received the Xobel l>rJ!'«1 for Ins diseoverv of blood t.vpintf AVithout correct blood t>pinp, blood tra-wfusions could caum> great bodily harm and e\eii death. To uin the Nobel Prize in medicine a .scientist need not Jje a physician. Any scientist uho makes fundamental contributions to medicine may become n candidate for the coveted prize. SVaksnun is a bacteriologist. Erlanger is a physiologist. Krcbs and Lipmann are biochemists. The list of notables in the medical science would not be complete if we fad to mention a few more illustrious men. ,Ma.x Ilubncr in Germany aud Lafayette H. Jlcndel in this country at Yale 5'nivcrsity did much to establish nutrition as a 'science. Casimir Punk pioneered in the field of vitamins. In tact he originated the term vitamin. Jlernafd N. Hulpern of France Is credited with finding the first antihislamme Arieh Dostrovsky first described the nature of the disease, endemic urticaria. Mechialav Minkow&ki of the University of Zurich is a leading scientist in the physiology and anatomy of the brain. Isaac Bercnblum, formerly of the University of Leeds, England, and now of the Hebrew University is head of the department of experimental bi-1 ology at the Weizmann Institute of Science. We have by no means exhausted the list of illustrious Jewish scientists. Nor have we touched upon evory; branch of science, for every branch of sicencc can boast of famous Jews. JFor example Alexander S. Wiener and Philip Levine in aerology, Franz Boas and Harry L. Shapiro in anthropology, and Nelson Glueck in archaeology. The Jew ltas penetrated every branch of science as he has penetrated every ^lortion ol the tflobe. Only very recently the papers announced the death pf Peter Freuchen, descendant of a Danish-Jewish sca» taring Jdimly, adventurer and explorer, whose studies and writings about tho Eskimos have pained for him a place annniL' sin lal anthropologists. We n'«'ii-t to cut our story short. Dill In I on- doinjr so, vve must not fail In mention thai the Jeus hav» given to lln vwirld, tun of the greatest mindrt thai I'.W lived —Albert Einstein, Nobel I'n/i u i n n i r a n dS i p m u i i d T r e n d . T i n s i t w> m i ' i b i v i n v o l i i l i o n i / e d t h e u i n h i a n dl i a v i i h . n i p i d o u r l i v i l z a 1ion I j n s l i i n Jiis i oiiiplxt'ly altered o i n l o n i i p K o l 111" o u t r V i o i l d , t i n 1 a t o m . III i l ' t l l o n h u h i u i n h b o d n s liv d i - i o v i i n . - ; I l K ' J , I I1 1 h . i t i n a l d r ( i n In i m i v i r l i d t o i i n i u ' \ a n d t i l i l ,i v i j \ SJM , | | i | n , i II i n , o l III i l l ( r i a n b e I ran-.fin m id wilo a i i r n l i i .imuiint o l i i n ri'_\ i n a i u n u n l t l n n i - u d s n l l i n n -> Wit a d r Hi a n o u r i i a ' i n n d d i lit l i e I m l 11i' l o i i n d a l u i i i I M I f|, .uoiii'i bomb a m i H u l ' \ i | i n j r i n In m b \ I u \ , d l i v t h e i l i t l l i . i t J l i l b i"-, - l i n t - N w o u l d l a ' . n l v n i l i ' i 1 o f I n s d i i n v , i n •> a m i t I n i - 1 nl III a l o i n i i " j i l i \ s i i i , N . I n ]II i n n d t b l.-iinni-, l i l t o l o J ' j i s i d i n l l i o n s , . i l l , v l i n h J u l l o n s i i n li i i i l m i n . i t n i " i n I h e d i ' MInpiiii n l o f t h e m o s t j m v w r f , i t » iapon ni diminution. W o e lo III" e m l i A d i v o i j d i f A n n i n inil s i n n i i ' >

had In'i n askfp nt the sv it'll and IIilli r's sen ntist-i « ould h . i v ill vi loped ihe atoinn bomb I V/hile Euiifrin (omplefely (handed our notions ol the outer world, biijmund Freud changed our idea? of the inner world, the world of thoujrht and emotion. Einstein has helped us to understand the world outside of us. Freud has helped us to understand the •world within us.

Tlie nightkarc limft in Teakell. For six month;, there is Jittle sun, 1ml ihev like i t Jews were among the f jrst white settlers to go to Alaska, some of them going with the Russian fleets which first ocenpied that country and, according to Bernard Postal, an authority ot Jew ish Americana it w.u a couple of Jews, by the namei ol GeibUll .md Goldstein who got SecreUty Sevvaid mtcicited in the idea of Amuici buying Al iska from Russia The two Jcv»- vvcie inter ested in Uie sell fislicut-, and they enc cecded in obtaining- a 20-ye;ir exclusive contract for^the exploritation of those fisheries

SECTION A

cr lay crumpled, "deJKLThVatttojnobilfl had travelled drudkenly out' of its lane and had met a bus head-on, as Chuck __ found out from n ilneWs be interviewed. That nmu't nil a! that N'cw Year'-, tragic events. Kelt IIBJ'H nevvapapers reported hundreds killed on higlnva.vs By Alfred Segal on New Year, to say nothing about drunken fights among crouds in hoteU. CHUCK MEETS ROSH HA8H0NIn journalistic meditation Chuck AH—-liiL«l 1(<I>II Jlaslionali m y friend told me something Mire should be done * hm k a lillow nevtsiiiaii on Ihe d a l l y to make the eve of January 3 safer . . . l i . i p i r Tnr n h u l i I w r o t e , i n v i t e d h i m "How silly," he said, "that people start ••(II to In mv (fucst u t the hervicc in off a New Year in these ways. Why f the syna(;i»{, ue can't the ove of January 1 be given 1 Hun , Cliiiek, eonie along, I wild. I'llC 1' .S ui,| unit ,'nt A l l - l v J , but soiuo morn) iiud spiritual Mgnificancc. • 'buck's a (fiij not oulj with deep revtin1 eoinpanv nj .IIHI.II lurrnrs paid oven though wo continue to hold on to Tilde Siim inori tli.m »7,aKi,0ft() in fei'- erential respect for other religions than it joyouirfy." his own (lic'nf Catholic) but he'a aLo and rentaU—JM liliicb as the f. S jiaid ''Chuck,'* I replied, "mav bo it would one with it sharp nose for new*. CJiuck'n ) be of .some good for people to be told Kussia for the HIIDII- of AUku. A No, ni'Huy uoiiP denirod in dtiek itself iutn savrt I'osUl, lhe Oersfell eompany built how tl;c JCH-H obirrvr their Xcw Year ' one of the waj-, of Jewish religion roads and trading po.stH and launched in September." . . . Hint ih tn MI.\, lo ledfn how J e « a. line of steamships between Sjtn KrmiThat still in mind. Chuck a.sked me go about their onn New Year by con- loo tuke him along to our (ejnjili: nn eisi-o and the Alaskan oitiejt—.all ;i-s trast with OK' uaj the N'-w Yiar of part nf the contract. • , lto>.ii Hnsilibnnh of the fcame year. Junuai-j 1 is ulim-rvrd The Jews, the chosen people, and the I lin inlet! Chuck our 1'nron I'ruyer Cliui'k had felt hornblv distressed • Eskimos, the frozen people, teem to get book ai we seated ourselves. Ho read bv iiappening.s around town on lhe Janalong very well According to Postal, the first lines of (bo morning: s e n icn for uary 1 of that vcar. A j?uy had hhot an many Eskimos claim to be of Jewish llosh Hniihonah : "liaise the voice pf joy other in a drunken brawl in the carl} ancestry. There has been considerable unto the Loril, nil >°c lands. Sore the morning nf that iluv.' ('liml^ himself inter-marriage. The two'Eskimos, Mala hord with gladneosj come before J Ii.-. had just letired ut about midnight arid ,Rae Wice, both of whom starred |iregfiiee with Milling . . . Kor tin when he twif, iiHiiki'in'd by a terrifie in recent moving pictures with an Alasl<ord is good. Ilia mercy is pverlaMing kan background both claimed to be or crnsh mi the direct jiM in front «f his iiml Jlif, truth endurcIh lo nil genera house lie dressed hurrieillv ,^riiu into Jewiah.Eskimo ancestry. tioiw.'1 turned over on its top Insideflhc d m A number of Jews have risen to po"That's i»," Chuck vv h i n p o ^ J . litical jiromineiKe in Alaska Isidore "Thta'H the ^«ii In olarl off u new lloldhtcut herwd six terms as Mayor of jear right. It gives n big idea for *,tnrlJuneau and Dr. Hex Kuurtr. lias been no anti-Semitism in Alaska. I suppose ing January 3," JIajor of Nome. There has. been a J c « in a snowstorm no one ii> jin anti-SemThe temple »us crowded . every i"h Federal judge jn the territory and ite. «ent taken . , . "This croud,'" he said, the former (iovernor of the. territory (CopvTigli1,*l!)57, Je« ish Telpgraphie "if> bigger CMVI limn any vmi might ">IM> was Jewish. Obviously, there is little or Agency, Inc.) in' one of the hotels an the eve ot Jiuiii\

Another New Year

a r y ' , , , . , . and all itery sober . . . all speaking to God . . . all thinking how to niakn the b«»l of your New Year " (I wouldn't have >ou get the idc i that Chuck is a fellow ulm dm-n't know hif. way (iround JII tin wddei life of ihe world. I have found liim eongenial eoni|Mii\ at o u i Im n l liar w h e r e h e d u n k s o l d l,i~lii'ii,i.], I Jut ( J h i j e k K I I I I H - . w i l l t i n In It r w a v , o f l i v i i i ; . ' , t h o i i i r h I n I n . li ' ' i " i " " f t h e b e s t o fo u i i nn^llll n I '-• b ' - n " »

MllC(i> 111 111 ' l,n I III ll II II.I- IlllillJ'llt up li (rnoij sun iv |,o i Mm] m ' for the Cntholi) eli r(.'v • T l i e H o i l i llii.shoiiah s e r v i " c c o n l i l i u e i l T h e l a b b i « , h n nlinf,' t o ( i o d : " < i n l l u r a l l '1 li,\ ( I n l d i i n a r o u n d T h j l u i i i i e r of t i u i l i ilinl T h j N a m e n m y h e h a l l o w e d f l i i o i i ^ h u s i n .-ill t h e vrorld a n d I h r c n l i i e h u m a n fuiinJy m a y b e b l e s s e d w i l l / t r u t h a n d jicoi't 1 ."

, ''You people linvi" the right idea of what a New Year means,'' Chuck was whispering to me. "TIMI'H it( You think of .vour New Yi'ur HH a lime to renew dedications' to peace and justice." • Then came tho time for the shofarblntt ing. ' ' ' Chuck himself sat there enthralled, lirM himself to reverential silence until after (lie service when we were walking out into the street . . .'"You know," lie said, "when the iniiftie of the Sbofiir was .sounding, playing lo God, I cQiiiilu'l help thinking of ths r0ck-n'roll with which thi> New Year of Janunrj 1 is greeted H( the drunken partics." •

. >So Chuck and 1 went our wdy from the temple Chuck returned to the newspaper office to write tho atory of his experience of the Jewjitii New Year. (Seven Art* rVaturJ Syndicate Worldvvire News tJcrviec)

Zklsjs ZMrPrdpa

"Sound theGreat Horn for Our Freedom THIS ROSH H^HONjm'asiinaixientidaysJthis-will'bcrtbe ptuytu witm'Jewjgitthcfitotoectjfte Kew Year. •

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i Men in free lands, in*our.cwn««writrywrjd»lsxaeUwilIiS3yjtbcscrwot^ liberty they enjoy. '

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foV the ,

But in grim lands of oppression'and danger, •wherever Jews'date Wutter it, the Rosh Hastionab prayer will come as a cry' from the heart

// will be a cry as well to you. For you must help if the prayer tsto tome true. The people of Israel are ready to do their part Since Rosh Hashonah last, -despite the gravest hardships, they have taken in 10,000 new refugees every month — a great human flood that is pouring out of Egypt, North Africa, and above all, Eastern EurbrJe. They welcomed all, unhout stopping lo tount the cost —because lives were at stake. Nor will they count the cost now —while tens of thousands of Jives remain to Ix; saved. lint you must help. Hasten the day of deliverance for those who must leave places of danger and dcj-jir for ITJCI or other free lands. Help those who cry out for freedom to start a new life in the New Year. Through vour communit) (..iinp.'igii — give a /'reater gilt to meet greater needs. Give to both the regular United Jeurli Appc.il and the UJA Emergency •Rescue I und to 5>avt 100,000 Livi> Git c today. 100,000 LIVES MUST BE SAVED

*ibO.OOO.OOO UJA CMEROBMCV RBSCUB F U N D . . . "OVER AND ABOVE" THE 1OO7 RBOOLAR CAMPAION

In Omaha United Jewish Appeal, Receives Its Support from the Jewish Philanthropies Campaign 1 , •

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SECTION A

N»w Y.tr'i Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—.Roth H»»hon«h 57IS—Friday, September 20

The Sound of the Shofar By Eleanor Welsberg Tekiah, Shevarim Teruah. Tekiah, the shofar blows on Hashonah calling the people to pause in their earthly pursuits and to direct their attention to their spiritual well-bein^. Awake, ye sleepers! and ye stupefied ones, bestir .-•ourselves, the sound and the very tout's inspire its hearers' with awe. These were the "sounds that were rai.- when the walls of Jericho fell. These are the .sounds destined to blow when the son of David reveals himself and when God leads the exiles of Israel into their land. Heard in every synagogue throughout the world on the High Holy Days and steeped in traditions of the past, the shofar is a symbol of the heritayeof Judaism. l'nli!;e " i l t c r m u s i c a l i n s t n i i n i n t - . it lias never v.iriril in strurtur.- from its preliiittorie Mliipljrily ;IIMI Ilill* heroines *in eli'TiiuI nionunien; t-wnmeninriiiintr the event* on .Mount .Sinai when ( i o d . through _Ml")M'S. ;_MYe l.*rilel His (.'lilllniHiidtnent-s. " A n d iill the people perceived the Iliiinderin;;*. nnrl the light. nings, and the voiee of the horr, and the mountnin smokint.'; and when the people Mm i i . I|I,.\ irendiled, mid j>tood afar off."

Tekiai, 8hevarim Ternah, Tokiah, the* shofar lilaMs, out u. second time on Hosh ITft.shoiiiili in thin, the twentieth century, and the bound, legends say, is supposed tu eon fuse Satan and make . him think the Messiah is coming, The sounds ring out for a third tinje aod Satan becomes dumbfounded because lie thinks the Itwurrectiop is at hand and his power in at an end. The Bible abounds with references to (lie shofur an a signal^ horn or war anil here we havo the timeless struggle oF the conflict between good and evil. Tho shofar, however, represents the spiritual part of the body and the first Masts of the Tekiot and the whole purpose of blowing is to awaken the Higher Mercy, to call upon God to lie kind. Usually 'made out of tho horn* of n a m , the shofar recalls to God thp binding; of Isaac. "Why do we sound the. horn of a ramf" llaimouides wrote. "God Mid: Blow me n ram's horn that I may remember unto you the! binding of Isaaci the son of Abrabum, and I Bhall account it unto you for a binding of yourselves beforn me.',' On the other hand; in order not to recall to God tho incident of the idolatrous worship of the Golden Calf, the horns of the ox or cow tiro banned from ever being made into a shofar. On Jiosh Hotdioinih when man re- '

• members tin? bi-^'innin^ of ihe world, <ind rriiifiiibiTs t h e deeds of His crcittnrcs, and Israel r e m e m b c r i its .special function a s Jlis vvitiir-Ks, God i n w r i h e d t h e " h o l l y r i g h t e o u s into thn Hook (if I,ifi', tin! wholly wicked into the lioul;

of Death, and suspends the intermediates until Vom Kippur. Ten reasons arc always given for the blowing of the sliofar on-Rosh Hnslionah, and in his pamphlet on The Hiiofar—Its Use and Origin the lute Cyrus Adler, former president of The Jewish Theological Seminary of America, listH those outlined by Rabbi Suadia (.iaoii. ' . " ' First. Because this day is; the begin, ning' of the creation j>n which Ood created the world and thus began to reign over it; and as it is customary at the coronation of kings to sound the tnunpets and cornets to proclaim the eommencemont of their reign, we, in like manner, publicly proclaim, by the sound of the cornett that the Creator is our king, and thus tays David, "With trumpets and the sound of the cornet shout ye before the Lord." Second. As the Mew f e a r is the first of the ten penitential days, we sound the Shofar as a proclamation to admonish all to return and repent, which if they do not, they cannot plead ignorance, as having been fully informed. Thus also we find earthly kings publish their decrees that none may plead ignorance thereof. Third. To remind us of the law given on Mount Sinai, as it is said, Exodus 10:10, "and the voice of the oornef was exceedingly loud," and that we ought to bind ourselves to the performance thereof, as our ancestors did, when tboy said, "All that the Lord has laid,

The Modern Exodus Samuel Dalvu, aged 23, and Abraham Rotenberg, 19, mechanical r.»1 electrical engineering students, are among t h e Egyptian Jewish ref1 ugecs w h o were suddenly driven out of their homes by the modern Pharaoh in Egypt, dictator Nasser. The universities where they studied closed their gates on them. The following is a recent Interview with them at .Ihe Israel Institute of Technology (Technlon) In H a i f a where they are presently studying.—Editor —— —— Q. Could you divide into periods the fr Jews of Egypt had nttained was rei'^nt history of the Egyptian Jews! forfeited. In the eoneentration camp we nn>t women who had been chased . , V i: Find, before the rise of Nanout v ot the hospiUil immediately nftor I • ' ond, during his rule, third, durgiving birth. ii, ,, • .Sinui Campaign. • J. Whiit wus the position of the .lewd Q. What were the renction's of your , p.'ij/ to Xusser's rise to power? fellow students? _\i .II'IVH eamc to Egypt during the A. Friendship generally does not period of the Y'ml and Krcond Temple. recognize nationality barriers. We Had There are those who maintain tJmt Jews very strong -ties with boys and girl* remained in Egypt from the time of with whom wo had studied for many Moses, but most of tho Egyptian .Tew* years. Our friendship grow iiguiim the have come during the last few generabackground of our studies amPcdmmon tion*. C'u the whole, the tlown who < •>• experiences. They didn't bplieve what to Egypt surpassed the Egyptians in KO they honril and for tho most part tried U* a* their knowledge and experience lo encourage us by saying lliut this was Were concerned, DO that within a short a dcerce that would certainly be changtime they were able to prosper in Egypt ed. Yet outwardly, they were obliged to their own and the State's benefit. to say that this step was necossnry. Q. How was this* expressed ? I Q. IIow did yon gut to Israel? A. The Jews were engaged mainly A. Wo were taken 'to Greece ;und in the liberal profession* and,commerce Italy, and from there wo came to Israel. and together with other foreigners conJn Greece and Italy, wo met representastituted the majority in these fields. tives of the Jewish Agency. They noted Their economic position became very towards us like parents towards their •tamff, enabling them to help greatly children. in the development of Egyptian econQ. IIow were you taken dare of omy. here 7 Q. Did these circumstances change A. We applied to the Tectarion in irith Nasser's rise to power? Haifa to continue our studies, and wo A. Indeed it did j although not immewere accepted. diately but gradually. Tho Jews were Q. I understand that formally you dismissed from government jobs, their were allowed to continue your studies movement from crty to city was rebut theco most harts been many diffistricted, a n d Jewish organizations culties at fint. » r, ceased to exist. A. Yes. "We were faced with many Q. IIow did the Sinai Campaign afdifficulties, First'or-all tho language, feel (he Jews in Egypt* We don't know Hebrew; so in tho afterA. We heard of the beginning of thfi noons we study in a special UJpan. Then notion in Sinai over "Kol Yisracl," there is th.e difference in tho level (whieh we listened to al the risk of pertechnical studies which are moro difsonal dan;,'ei) a short time nftcr the ficult Hero and thus wo havo to work "Voiie of C.iiro" pave the information much harder than wo did in Egypt. mid ii ported that the Egyptian Army Q. AYhat are your plans for tho fuhad gained .1 lirillianl vietory over the ture f Zionist ennu\ During the first hours A. This is onr last stop. We hope «•• did not ItmiH what to think; yet that in a short while we will become up id ih.it point (in liana h.id been done urclimalizMl in this countrytu u*. Oidi . i t l i riwird*, uhile we were Q. Havo you had any typically I»ai tin 1'imrr-iily, did other information riifli experience yet? lie/in In Idle)- Ihidiigli to I'pypt. NnA. YPS, ninny. Our meetings with tnm ili^i s|||di-nts began to inclle the Israeli students, with Israeli profes- ] r i r i ( n| w.ir » I I H 1 I lias fell by e w r y sor<, uiih free Jews from all tho corinie dii'iell.\ I'olliiu MI(? the liondmif,'-. ners of the world, with an Independent I l e . i l i d ili'-eiiisions nere heard on e\State. n_i Mih .mil v.i » . r e in l h " middle ol (} H.ni" \ on mei am- Arabs, in IsH T i l " I m i * r i i l i » i i . r l d i i ,1 and r\niel? eiwme h.id lo i nli-<l in the " \ i i t i i n i , i | A. Yes, ue haw met Ar.ili Htnilents Cn.lid " TlniM i ho i. In-, d i n ie liahli .mil i w'u dislini;iii ihfil Arabs huch as to s i \ montii • .nipii-omin nl .i member id th" KlM-siel. They are all (^ Wliftl u.is i our 11 ,i"lioii " m i n i *tn| in what hapjn ned to US in A. X . i t n r . i l h » •• made no snili n l.j'ipl, TIM'\ ,is],ed us m.inv f|tiestionH f|iiest lull liy eveniii1.' ive iind our piiimid tool; n Kpeein] interest in us. They ents iind in-.-n pljie.-d in u I'on.'i-ntraui:re inli-ivsled in the events at thp tioon eiimp and \vv wrri* lett \vitli o- ly lime of the Sinni (.'iimpaifrn. An Arab l the elothen \\ f wnr wi-arinir. They (old I'hrisliau member of the Knesset wan II* llnil the •iiiicl.-er v.r f<:,-jrot <nr lie niiisl inleresled in the fate of the. Arab l<v.i:,'iii(.'n and .'jnine- l l . .•; : -i• • i •.» l'lui-l ; ans mid Copts and we told him lie f o r l i t . A l l l l n i i ,..ni uililliui their turn will also-surely uomc

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will we do, and be obedient." Fourth. To remind us of the prophets who are compared to watchmen blowing the trumpets as mentioned in Ezekiel 33:4, "Whosoever hearcth the sound of tho cornet and taketh not warning, and the sword cometh and taketh him away, his blood shall be upon his own head, bnt he that taketh warning shall save his life," Fifth. To remind us of the destruction of the Holy Temple, and the terrifying alarm of the enemy's warriors shouting to battle as mentioned in Jeremiah 4:19, "because thou hast heard, 'oh my soul, the sound of the trumpet, the alarm of war," and, therefore, when we hear the sound of the cornet, we

ought to beseech the Almighty to rebuild the Holy Temple. Sixth. To remind us of the binding of Isaac who willingly submitted himself to the will of Heaven; thus ought we also willingly submit even to death itself, for the sanctification of the unity of His holy name. • Seventh. That when we hear the sounding of the cornet we may, by the

dread thereof, be induced to humble ourselves before the Supreme Being, for it is the nature of these martial wind instruments to produce dread and terror. As the prophet Amos observes, "shall a trumpet be blown in a city and the people not be terrified?" Eighth. To remind us of the great and awful day of judgment on which the trumpet is to be sounded as men-

tioned, Zephaniah 1:14-16: "The great day 0 fthe Lord is near, it is near and hasteneth much, a day of the trumpet and of shouting." Ninth. To remind us to pray for the time when the outcasts of Israel are to be gathered together, as mentioned, Isaiah 27:13, "and it shall come to pass in that day, the great trumpet &hall be sounded and those shall come who were perishing1 in the land of Assyria." Tenth. To remind us of the resurrection of the dead and the firm belief thereof, as the prophet Isaiah saitb, "Yea, all ye that inhabit the world, and that dwell on the earth, when the standard is lifted up on the mountain, ye shall behold when the trumpet is sounded, ye shall hear." l.'sbcred in by Hie shofar, the llifjli Holy Days are also ushered, out hy I lie shofar for the long blast, of Tekiah ends the Fast of Yom Kippur, Day of Atonement', and the individual Jew resumes his normal business of life, more deeply conscious, however, of tlie divine spark within him, and more deeply aware of bis heritage as a Jew. Seven Arts Feature Syndicate Worldwide News Hcrvicc

' from Hyntie Milder ond Associated Skelly Dealers Acme Tranifer Company 5026 S. 24th St. Belitz Service . . .• ; . . . ,29tfTand Vinton Brooks Bellevue Slcelly Service. ..1008 W . Mission Blackstone Terminal 36+h and Farnarn Sts. Bryant's Service (Skelly) 2601 N. 24th St. Capitol Garage " . . . 202 N. 19th St. Charlie's Skelly Service.. . . . . . . ,42nd and Grover Cherry Garden Garage . . . . . . .3701 Leavenworth Claxton-Skelly Service 19th and.,Missouri Ave. Commodore Garage .' 24th and Dodge Commodore Automotive Service . 19th and Cass Davenport Garage 1814 Cuming St. Don's Skelly Service 21st and East Locust Easy Parking Company 1415 Dodne St. 15th and Harney Sts., 1622 Howard Stf 107 S. 18th St., 14th and' Douglas Sts., and f4th and Farnam 18th St. Parking 18th and Do^ie Fairway Auto Service 25th and " O " Sts. Ha,dan Auto Service .8516 Blondo Irvtngton Mercantile CoV Irvington," Nebr. Joe Kosiski 47th and " L " Sts. Charles Laushman 81£> Center St. Louis Illis Service 42nd and Center Sts,

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Rosh Hashonah Message from Ambassador Abba Eban In t h e history of Israel the year which is now drawing to »t.s close will stand out as one of the most stormy and perilous, of all. It was the year in which the people of Israel made its most conspicuous effort to reinforce its seem i n and to rally world opinion to its cause. It was a year marked h\ IIKUI\ s i n ifieii's, lint .'l-o crowned with a rich harvest of achk-UMin ni \ i ' « oppoitumties for Israel's economic consolidation |I,IM»IUCII opened, foremost amnru these the realization of out link IIIHUMI the Red SIM an»l the M e d i t e r r a n e a n . An excitinc' i h ipt< i 1M- IICI n added t o t h e epic of m a s s i m m i g r a t i o n a n d ncii 1\ one h u n d i t d thousand of o u r brethren h a v e come t h n u f h Uic up.n ",ii< -. of 1-iael to s h a i e with us in t h e exhilaration of oiu n'm V < d -.o\i'ieiL'iil\ In all tlicsi 1 oidi.iN div\ i )i Ulon^t's American J e w r y h a s surr o u n d e d u s u iih di (|i ,iff( 11 ion, trust a n d pride. 1 extend t o them m y bincere u MI" S loi the i-oinin'* \ e a r . confident t h a t in t h e great d r a m a of Isi.iels t i b n t h t h c \ will continue to play t h e i r noble p a r t . Mav t l n j find inspiration a n d reward in t h e rich t a p e s t r y of a c h i e w n u n t uliifh Isi.iel is weaving Into t h e fabric of o u r generation's hfi1. M;iv you and the whole House of Israel be inscribed for a year of peace.'and prosperity. Leshanah Tovah Tikatelvu Vetlchateimu.

a'bi*{ory.and let/seeking Ksjgto from contemporary affairs." A response to an assault upon ' taraei's historic repute, he asserted. ''i-> not a mere exercise in academic controversy" but one affecting "the wry (, -enee of Israel's destiny in life jud thought" and he- then proceeded to ilwi mate To} nhty with fact and ton<riie ami sarcasm He tallnl Towibee's pri'senla lion nC J « , s b history a "<jri>teoi|tji .ibeiii'liun d e t l i r i n g t h a t "if Israel ' .i. a ' i i - - I i i i-turii •> agij. t h d i ltd bur\i\,d i-, i . . | j i i r i i \ an archnioin a n d itr. •-..' "n ,i frr< ii s'jue p a r a d o x . " K i n " .s j . t u l u r t u l pcTbonality, with • li'l'! n " ' iii[>loi)].ii y a n d in all that s

loiicln il by Ins hund and mind The eulI.vi.'fl -jifiches confirm what we had known all aionp. They are a-, fresh a» if (hey had just been delivered, for they tell the ttory of unirjuc events and of one of the men who stood in their very center. 'Israel in the agony and turmoil nf oar timcu has extended' hearth and home and hemschech, continuity, to a people. Eban has recounted that sap/i before the nations with unmatched bril liance and pious devotion to text (Seven Arts Feature Syndicate Worldwide News Service)

Carnegie Concert Tribute to Israel New YorL i \Y.\>i A M.T} UIIKIUorchestral i u)n i r t Mill be p i i - v i i t ' d in • ariU'Ki'- Hall Tui-s'lii> • \ciiiujr. " c l o bir1">. V ' i 7 . d'"'he.itnl iu otivngiilii'iiiii culturul ivlulinns a n d uiuli i sliunliii between | h c l u l l e d M a t e , a n d Ura.'l Ili-an .Idiiii's , \ , j ' l k c ill the C a l h e d r a l of S t . tlllllll till1 DlMUC UIIUOUUCI'll hi'. •

us president of thVNtw York t h a p l ' i of the Amenca-Isi'in;l ijoeii l\ I/ler Sulomon, makiiifr his lirsi ap pearancc here siuco t>is distin^iii^li-d buniBii'r M'unoii at the Anpeii, I'ulnrud" Music kcntival, "ill conduel the S\m pholiy-of-the-Air in b jirnirruni foa'tuiuig the Aiucy-lcan premiere n( a ne« vrork by JIOIKTI iStuftr,' (me ot IsrarlV hest-known colnposcre, with 7,v\ Zeitliji Israeli violinist, us soloist. The^ Carnegie Hull concert h one of M-verti] eients of special cultural interest being HDuuDored by the Society in i centers this (Season.

President's Greetings • Washington (JTA)— President Eisenhower issued the follow ing message of greetings to U. S. Jews on the occasion of Rosl Hashonah: "At the beginning of the Jewish New Year, it is fitting for al 'o give thanks for the past twelve months and to look*to the futurt with confidence born of the mercy of God. "The blessings or life arid the freedoms all of us enjoyin this kind today are based in no small measure on the Ten Commandments which have been handed down to us by the religious teachers of the Jewish faith'. These Commandments of God provide endless opportunities for fruitful service, and they are a stronghold of moral purpose for men everywhere. "In this season, as our fellow citizens of the Jewish faith bow their heads in prayer and lift their eyes in hope, we offer them the best wishes of our hearts."

DWI&HT D. EISENHOWER , Jerusalem (JTA)—Tloberto Regala is the first Philippines Minister to Israel, f •

ABBA EBAN

1, f 1

Profile of a Statesman

By Nathan Ziprin Tt is whrn h< takes "respite from Addressing the U. N. General As<nnt. mj)oi,ir\ affaire"' that wo see him sembly on May .11, 10-10. on the oceaMnn in inII st itnre rt-. scholar and interpreof .Israel's admittance to the family ol ter of tlie J r m s b pattern along th« 1 nations, Ambassador Khan remarked • <i\ < ol history Alost of u i remember tnat Isr.icl was "new in the; art of prai ilban for his d(fmse of Israel and'its 1 tn .il slatei raft.' If Israel has now in »cause, bejore the rouneds of the natered th it art, a good deal of Hie cretin tion, fnr^( ttinjr that he has m a n y belong tu the youthful diplomat who-' iihifwmrnts ol .irtn ulateness in other name is Irjjend in millions of Amerit tn in is SII h ,is his I rdliant retort to h<7mes of ,ill faiths. l'ruf> ssur Tovnl). o s here^jed and falsehowl a b o u t Jtuish peregrination* Meteoric Rise through tin path of history. Hban's meteronc rise tn stat.ema;i Master of the Pen ship will ,n:v<T be forjruttcn by those lib in is <i master of the pen and the who listened to liis memorable addrt ss 1'iitri^. mil « bib Hie collec ted speeches of Julj 1'i I01K. when h.' reminded th' i iiistitui ,i (Jironu le of the p\cpt"i of N>iMjnt\ < oiniejl tli.it, Arab ud\-an<ith d.ii thf> also trii tlip story of t h ' jnto I^rai 1 on May 2<> of that year in man who p> urn d thf rn It has been said defiance «.f a .May 22 Coum-il demand "f llban that IK has fi « peers in diplofor an unconditional cease • fire -con matic skill l\< most certainly has few stitutcd not only a threat to Israel, but a test of (ho moral power of I be fam- superiors as master of the word. ily of nations in an hour-of. crisis. His ijb m's pit si nt.itjon of Israel's cause \ o i c w j i sonorous, hi.-; bearing was alb'ioie v\orldaii'l \raencanpnblic opinmofit majestic and his delivery was ion )i is bej n masterful by all standards. weipnted uith conviction and gnu ( But tin re JS another and equally im Here was a young voice with Mm quol poriant faret in tne pietnre—Eban'« ity and ring of, the old prophets. When icisatilih breadth of interest, historic hi* was finished there was genera! rfc pirspcitnr and <ril)cal evaluation. o^nition, amonj friend and foe, tint Docs the fj< L of Die existence of Israel here was n statesman of immeasurable -ettlf an\(lni)L' J he asked on the third •itature and an articulate, voice with the t n m \ e r - a n , dnd h n repl> \sas that power of chastisement and persuasion '«hat lon-ititntes. (be final answer is In fact, it has been said that one of not the existence of the state, but its Israel's most authentic 'miracles was nature and quihtj " Jsraii, he went on the emergence of this youthful diplomust capture its Hebrew roots and remat, who was to lend lui c o u n t r y tain, its Jewish roots "but in our conthrough the ma^c 'ind w I'derne-s of (he cern vMlh recapturing JI'brew and JewT/nited Nations. ish loots, we must somehow avoid the pitfalls of provincnlism." Superior Orator Listening to his addresses one has Toynbec Debunked the feeling as if Ins ^ords n r r e "ti^ii Heller t n " ]<rrhaps of his deeper ing forth effortlessly uith the po'ver "iff was DIHHH s»jpttion of the Yeand rhythm of a vvnteihill On reading snna Lnnersitj for one of his most inthem that impact is not lost. On the eisiic and mo^t significant talks—decontrary, the essence of (ho word takei bunking Professor Toynbce's heresy added meaning against the background about Jewish hhtorj and the Jewish of the written nage and the pattern path in histoij. "I ba\c come to yon," that one could sense bnt not discern in he fold the spellbound audience, "not the individual address. in my diplomatic capacity bnt rather

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ast Hopes and Dangers BY ELIAHO SALPETER These past twelve months marked in the Jewish Calendar as the Year 5717, were the most eventful and dramatic in Israel's history sinre its establishment nearly ten years ago. Again, as ten years ago, little I^iciel made world hi.story and thaee crucial months between the beginning tot the Sinai Campaign and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza the fate of world peace seemed to hinge on Jerusalem. W h a t preceded t h e Sinai campaign was actually rather plain a n d evident: Egypt's dictator having realijied t h e enormity of t h e t a s k of raising the .standard of living of hi.s people by development of the country's n a t u r a l resources, decided t o do what ultimately all dictators in human history tried (and sometimes succeeded) d o i n g : instead of guiding h i s people toward producing Hie wealth of their own, t o take awav Die wealth produced by others.

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Nasser has long realized that the constriction of the Aswan Dam was Washington and .Moscow that WOUld not solve Egypt's economic saved Die Egyptian dictator, actualproblems; at best it would arresi ly it was London to whom Nasser the constant decline of per capita1 should oiler 1 hanks. agricultural income. To raise ih' Israelis Believe British Bungled standard of living and improve I lie . The unbelievable bungling of lot of the Egyptian people required the operation by the British saved the arduous and protracted process Nasser not only by failing to defeat of raising its cultural and educahim. It saved him even more by tional level. The American'decision preventing Israel from doing the to withdraw the offer of assistance job. Israelis are convinced that they in building the dam was only a » elcould- have, by themselves—percome pronouncement, by somebody haps with some material aid from else of what Nasser actually did the outside—defeated Nasser and not dare himself to admit to his that such a defeat would be a fatal people. blow to his standing not only in the Thus Nasser turned to the alterArab world but in Egypt itself. As native of taking away the wealth it happened, Nasser managed to of others. To the South lay the fer- minimize Israel's share in the beattile lands of Sudan, to the Southing he suffered and to depict a east and Northeast the rich oil mainly politically dictated draw as fields of Saudi Arabia and Iraq. To a victory for small Egypt against lay his hands on this wealth, Nasthe imperialist forces of Britain, ser produced the image, of an Arab France and Israel. Empire, with Cairo as its capital Still, it was a defeat for Nasser, and himself as its actual ruler. uncomplete as it was. And the conGrandiose as this dream appeared, sequences of the Sinai campaign it seemed still easier to achieve began to reverberate acting as a than to produce Egypt's own wealth by the brains, the skill and the catalyzator of political, social and economic processes. sweat of it.s own people. In the sphere of Great Power Dream of Empire relations, the debacle of Western To implement the dream of an intervention put the seal on Britain Arab Empire, Nasser needed three and France's recess into, secondthings: to buiki for himself an overclass status, andestablishea—more riding prestige among the peoples, visibly than anything before—that to build an army stronger than any the fate of world peace, for the time of the other Arab countries combeing at least, rests almost solely bined, and to destroy Israel. Hapin the hands of the United States pily, the three things seemed to and the S S oiv i e t U Union. It also Nasser mutually complementary. seemed to prove what many sciTo build an overriding prestige, entists and politicians have predicted, namely that in an Atomic he had to play on the growing naAge the two greaiest powers cantionalism in Arab lands, expressed not tolerate any major scale miliin hatred for Israel and hatred for the West. lie nationalized the Suez tary action between powers of secCanal, increased the intensity of ond or third class and therefore Fedayeen attacks on Israel and be- they must sot up themselves as gan to undermine th regimes of uninvited policemen of the world. other Arab countries, lie found an At the same time, the Sinai ardent helper in the Soviet Union, Campaign, and particularly the which was also eager to oust the lnrqc booty of latest type Soviet West from the Middle East, destroy armaments captured by Israel, Israel, cptured by any local regimes friendly to the .forced Washington to stop closing West and has not taken a too its eyes before the massive Soviet friendly attitude toward Israel. penetration by Israel's action, was Out of this mutuality of Com- the Eisenhower doctrine: the sucmunist and "Nasserist" interests cess of it though still far from certain, it marked at least the begingrew the notorious Czech-Egyptian ning of an attempt to cope with arms deal which later developed a situation the explosiveness of into an open stream of Soviet arm•which has been long stressed by aments to Egypt and her satellite Israel. Syria. The receipt of Soviet arms bolstered Nasser's prestige almost Suez Closure Pushed as much as his nationalization of European Unity the Suez Canal and his anti-West The closing by Egypt of the outbursts. It also brought him his Suez Canal, and the ensuing shortchance to build an army stronger age of oil in Western Europe, gave than that, of the other Arab counan unestimable push to the long ries combined. outstanding efforts toward the esNasser's own revolution five tablishment of a European Atomic years ago established as one of the Authority and of the European basic tenets that Israel defeated Common Market—both hoped to be Egypt in 1948 because Farouk's corthe forerunner of the U n i t e d rupt regime did not provide the States of Europe. Indirectly, by arms to fight with. Now, with the demonstrating in the eyes of the receipt of Soviet arms Egypt should entire world the difference between be able to succeed where she failed I n d i a's subdued reaction to the in 1948. And after destroying Israel, Soviet intervention in Hungary, on the only physical barrier between one hand, and her still hysterical Egypt and the other Arab countries, reaction to the Anglo-Frcnce interNasser will stand at the head of vention in Suez, the Sinai Camthe victorious army, admired and paign did a lot to demolish Mr. feared by all the Arabs. And nothNehru's self-styled Moral Judgeing unsurmountable will stand beship of the West. - tween him and the Empire, with its In the Middle East proper, the riches of fertile land and fabulous Sinai Campaign clearly resulted— oil fields. After the Arab Empire, for the time being at least—in elimentire Africa and the Middle East inating the geographic limits of will be waiting for a leader. o v e r t Sovet penetration to the Nasser's Own 'Mein Kampf boundaries of Egypt and Syria. A role in search for its hero. It Nasser may tell hi.s people' the was all there, written in the semiSinai Campaign was a great Egypllterate little book entitled "Egypt's tian victory won by the help of the Revolution," Nasser's own Mein Soviet Union; the rulers of Beirut Kampf. But apparently nobody and Baghdad, Amman and Jeddnh read the book, and certainly nobody were well able to see the difference took it seriously. Nobody, except between claimed victory and actual Israel. The slaughter of six million defeat. While an undefeated cocky Jews was a lesson that could not be Nasser was a man to be feared and easily forgotten and it taught-fsrae! played un to, a Nasser whose army that in the unwillingness of normal fled in Sinai leaving behind their human beings to believe the insanishiny Soviet armaments and their ties of Mein Kampfs is exactly Czech shoes was much less of a what makes Hitlers so dangerous hero. and so effective. Thus Lebanon joined the Eisenhower Doctrine, despite Nasser's As more and more Soviet jets denunciation of it as an Imperialist and tanks arrived in Egypt, as Plot; Iraq's Nuri Said, who before America showed less and less inclination to stand up even for the the Sinai Campaign seemed like an embattled Last Mohican friendly to rights of her closest allies Britain and France, as more and more air- the West, about to go under with his Baghdad P a c t in the w a v c s fields were built and strategic highcreated by Nasser, now felt secure ways were built in the Sinai, Israel enough to give the Premiership to decided not to wait for the trap to on of his aids and' go for a rest spring. In the effort to destroy Nasser abroad; Jo top it all, even Jordan's there was a unity of purpose be- little k i n g feared N a s s e r just tween Israel, France and Britain. enough to purge the army from e l e m e n t s , but not It will for long years remain the pro - Nasser 1 source of argument between poli- enough to cow under the ire of the ticians and historians to determine Egyptian dictator. Israelis somewhat vvent wrong with the Suez times wonder whether Washington campaign. Israelis know that their realizes to what extent the Eisenforces, in a brief lightning thrust hower Doctrine owes its initial sucoccupied a vast barren territory. cess to the Israeli Army's victory three times I s r a e l ' s size, and in S i n a i . . . reached the Suez Canal only to Meaning of Sinai Victory withdraw in accordance with the In field of Arab-Israel reAnglo-French announcement that lations,the the Sinai victory marked they would separate the Israel and a turning despite dangers Egyptian armies. The Israelis also that renewedpoint Western appeasement feel that France did its best to car- of the Arabs may undo much of ry out what was intended. And achievements won in Novemmore and more Israelis become con- the vinced that while on the surface it ber. The Sinai Campaign destroyed

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Egypt's forward bases of aggression, inflicted considerable material and moral losses on the Egyptian Army and thus staved off—what is hoped for a considerable time— the imminent Egyptian a t t a c k . Israel's leaders believe, moreover, that the effects of the Sinai victory are more far-reaching and basic that thai. By defeating Nasser1* well equipped army, Israel hopes to have destroyed the Nasser-fostered myth that insufficient armaments were the cause of Arab defeat in 1948. Now, seeing that even the latest type Soviet arms cannot'

do t h e trick, t h e Arabs should b e gin t o realize t h e futility of their hopes t o ' p u s h Israel into t h e s e a ; this should finally induce them t o accept t h e existence of Israel a s something t h a t is here t o stay. Once this fact is accepted by Die Arabs, a way towards an ArabIsrael modus vivendi. if not immediate peace, c o u l d easily be found, Israel's leaders believe. In a more visible result, the S i n a i- Campaign destroying the Egyptian positions at t h e Straits of Tinin and handing them over to the l.T. N. Kniercj-ncv Force Units, broke the stranglehold of Egypt on the Gulf of A f| a b a and E I a I h, Israel's onlv d i r e c t door toward Asia. P e r h a p s not less important than Diose military results, t h e Sinai victory changed Israel's atmosphere

from that of growing encirclement to that of considerable self-confidence in ability to stand up against a "Third Round," should it come. While before Sinai the nightly raids of marauders seemed like a rope getting tighter and tighter, now such raids seen in much calmer perspective are reduced to the proportions of an evil that has to be

lived with, but can be outlived too. Israel Turn* Attention to Immigration

nurses and practically no skilled laborers or technicians a m o n g them.

With t h e imminent d a n g e r greatly reduced by t h e Sinai victory, Israel h a s become ready to devote her primary attention to the second greatest event of t h e past twelve months, one that in historical perspective m a y tin c o m e even more important that the victory in Sinai: the renewal of immigration from a number of Kuropean countries from which now .lews have eome to Israel in the past eight, nine, ten or even twenty Nevertheless t h e importance of tlu-ir coining is not lost on anybody in Israel. Ilnving absorbed, in the iivsi years of her existence most ol the remnant of the Nazi holocaust in Central Kurope, Israel's immig r a n t s in t h e past years have comr mostly f r o m Oriental ami Arabspeaking c m i n i ri e s. They eome

Slowly, a s their numbers grew, they created an increasing shortage of professionals without whom no modern s o c i e t y can prevail. There w a s a c l e a r danger that Israel's pace of development will have to be slowed down, its general cultural standard lowered as a consequence of the shortage of enough professionals and educators. But beyond all that, though nobody mentioned it in public, what was actually at stake continued influx from abroad and their higher birthr a t e,- oriental immigrants wou.'d soon form the majority of Israel's population and sooner or l a t e r water-down and oven obliterate t h e W e s t e r n n a t u r e of the modern Isral civilization. The r e n e w a 1 of immigration from E u r o p e on a major scale promises not only to provide Israel with doctors, engineers, chemists, plant m a n a g e r s and other technicians a n d professionals s o badly

from societies much more backward t h a n the European immigrants came from; t h e y entered Israel coming from the nineteenth, eighteenth century and. in s o m e cases come to Ihe twentieth cenJury straight from the Middle Ages, There were almost no doctor? and engineers, very few teachers and

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needed, but also to restore Ihe proportion between the Western and Ihe Oriental Ingredients from which the new Isniel is being cast (Jewish Telegraph Agency)

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JBWTSH

Emergencies Relieved By Charles H. Jordan (J.D.C. Doctor S M M I for Onnui Opl~»..il

rtfSS~Ri«r4tiihoni»i

LAND OF MY FATHERS

By Alfred H. Pool ArJefle aod her hitKhand, Ijtr, wt»re deeply (iwapfxi-inlcd, but trying hard not,to «4KW Oramlpop bow badly they fnJt Their son, ISill, they wer« ftortain, liad Iryl draiMfpop down. "I'm afraid, (J rand pop," mid Adelie, "TOUT two-door lecture WAS wasUd on liiU." In Iliii |n " / i ,,in il,. I,, m Di.tnbii She mtOtxl an .MM mid ft., bat K ww ti"ii • Commitl" pl.iM'l ,i \ it.il ro!< Hetr that sbe WM annoyed. For two viehnw ki toiiywwy hrmiJrs and orJf><.' |>IOM'Illl Mil' I " ' III \ }|i I p tflVl'lI boors tn*t evcoing, after the family ganiced a apeeial f m d in jwrtaenbip I I I K . m i l n i ' i l |he , M I , k i n ivilh hop'', had finished the sumptuous meal break1 Kiivi' them Ih' will lo live «nd the with the Claims Cwrfemtee, the Jowing U>e Yom Kippnr fast, Grandpop lif.nl In (rinliiiin K.in\inp for a belter inh Colonisation Association aod the had bean in earnest eon versatiou with life Tins «nrk of mir-. the Jewish world the 14-year-old Bill at the bead ot the Central Council ot Jewish OoMMnities knew and Mijifiortrd, American Jewry dining room table. Adelle and Lee had of Qreeee. in |nirlir:iilar, through the 1'nilcd Jew. heard snatches of the long discussion, JDO brought bemtth and bop^-life i*h Appeal. They had seen Oramlpop showing Bill lT—to Jtwilh mother* and children his 200-year-old Mahzor, the volume There w,i* another phnn? of our in Iran. While Jew* in other Moslem containing the speeial prayers for Roufa wniK, however, that the Jew* j>f Amereonntriea were facing the unknown, Hashonah and Yom Kippur. They had ica al«o imj>|>orted, work &n neeessary JfHJ watt making life easier for Jews heard some of Bill's question*—which »r. the emergency help we (rave1, but, in in Jran, providing them with health and seemed eager; had noted that be ap. the drama of the fjreat crises, aljnojt medical services, they had never before , peared to be intensely interested in evnimolieed Thii wan the equally greet, known, taking them from the darkness erything that Grandpop w«s saying/ hut more "conntruetive" work that .11)0 and ignoranee of their 14th eeutury Now1, however, Bill had gone upstairs earned on during thin u m c period., gbettoee into the light and knowledge lo prepare for bed. Be was in the showof the 20th ecntury. JDC took a barden from the ibonler. And throughout the house his ado• den of Israel. We know the great What haa been most gratifying in lesecnt voice resounded, a voice rang•tram under which liiracl 1)M been laall this has been growing awareness of ing uncertainly from the raggy remboring in receiving and finding homes the communities and their steadily innant of ehildhood soprano to a basso as ' for the tens of thousand* of newcomcreasing participation. At first JDC yet far from firm or profound. ' « • who poured into the »%He during footed the entire bill for these and oth"And listen to what he is singing," t i e p««t years. Absorbing the young er such projects. Today the financing continued Adelle, still apologetic. and healthy in a gigantic problem in it- and administration is a partnership be"Anyway, that's better than bis self—but with them «nne hundreds of tween JDC ana the communities'. Tousual rock 'n roll shower solos," said tfce aged, the chronically ill, the handimorrow we ean Jook forward to a full Lee. He, too, was embarrassed. capped, so mit«h more ot a problem assumption of responsibility by the Bill Was singing twt> lines, over and than the other*. communities: Slowly we are marching ovrr sgain: "Land Where My Fathers in that direction. ' fortunately, Israel was wired Hris Died i Lund of the Pilgrims' Pride." burden. The vart welfare program JDO brought tb« Jewish children of "Now what has 'America' got to do ,} known a« MaJben, the hcmpitsln, home* a disturbed country back to normal with what yon and Bill were talking , t«r the aged, sanatorium*, rehabilitnlife and security. In the past two yours about?" said Adelle to the old man. ( tioa eeoters and sheltered workshops of upset and insecurity in the life" of "I think," added Lee, starting to • set up and administered by .IDC took Aforocco, JDC's main concern has con- walk upstairs, "I'll tell him lo pipe $ m the crippled, the old and the nick. tinued to be with the children, JDC down." JDC provided them with home* and helped keep the schools open and, in "Don't," adviied Orandpop "Don't, the face of dwindling income from otht with medical care; JDC in training as I know why. 1 know." , many a* poKgible for jobs they can do er sources, provided the necessary j despite their handicap*. Israel ran for' funds to innuie the continuance of feed-, .Grandpop had been showing Dill { gtt them, knowing that JDU won't, and ing, clothing and medical programi. In his yiilued old mahzor, printed at Motr, 1 Israel can devote it« energies to receivthe precarious, unsettled conditions in m H e b r e w with Germanic-Yiddish ing and absorbing the young and the Morocco it «-n« more importante than translation, printed on heavy, handhealthy. ever lo «be that children *ere not made made, paper, tinted in Hebrew in the to Miffer'unduly. I JDO' fared a Jewish community year 1768. from extinction. Al the MIIIIC time that The year 6717 was s year in which "I didn't know Jews lived there thouinnds of i;?\ptnin .lews lunried in JDO fought an emergency b a t t l e dial long ago," said Dill. . . I i Athens, fleeing from persecution and against crisis, upheaval and danger. It eame to the prayer -called "Uneta'nna j misery, JDC VIM builtling homes in is no less a year in winch JDC, quietly Tokef." Bill recognized the words as, . Volon, one hundred miles to the north and undramatfrally, helped thousand's softly, Grandpop chanted them; Bill of Athens. Stricken by miccemive earthupon thousands back on the path to a ' had heard that prayer that day at the quakes, destitute and discon raged, the normal and more satisfying life. synagogue. ,• Jewish community! prepared for the Seven ArU Feature! Syndicate ,"It means," explained Grandpop, | evacuation of Volos. JDC' housed the Worldwide Kews Service "let us give strengteh to "the sacrednecs '

Af we approach Rosli Hashonah 5718. we recall bow deeply tflrrvd we hare been by the crises and emergencies of the past year. Tbeeccap* of Hungarian Jews to Austria, the Israel-Egyptian difficulties aod their aftermath, the expulsion of the Jews from Egypt, the great flow of newcomers to Israel, all are events that occupied our thoughts and called forth unprecedented effort on our part. We all did what we could to p r o v i d e help and friendship to the victims, to alleviate their lot, to more them to new homes, to help Israel in the difficult job of receiving and absorbing the destitute newcomers.

571B—Friday. September 20, 1957

of the D i i y - the DHV of the New Year ami the ])ui of \<nn Ki|>|,in I n ifi• Ip>r.|• intoned Ihe word- ,ind int. i j m i. <l ilicin frcelv:

"On [f.onh HaKhmiah Ihe Lord intcriben the judgnimt. and on U m l\i|> par the verdict in sealed—who shall live, and who shall die; who will dio by flame and who by water; who by sword and W4K> by hunger; who by pesiilenee, who by - - -" "But this is so awfajL Grandpop." And Grandpop told Bill about Kabbi A moon of Mayence who, in the Fourteenth Century, first recited that prayer. Tbe Archbishop of Afaycnce bad had Rabbi Amnon's hands and feet amputated because the Rabbi bad refused bo convert to Christianity. On New Year's Day, Rabbi Amnon had himself brought to tbe synagogue*There, he recited thin prayer: "Unetanna Tokef." When the llabbi had finished his prayer, he died —• and immediately his body disappeared. Three night* later, llabbi Amnon appeared in a dream before tbe famous Rabbi Kalonym us, recited the prayer again. On Yoni Kippur, Rabbi JCalonymus chanted "Unetanna Tokef." And, since then, Hi is prayer, has been part of the Bosh Hagfconah-Yom Kippur rkoal. Bifl wvntad to Vno-w how far baek J«rws had lived in that old city of Mayenee, and said h« had never heard of the plaee. Grandpop told him ,k is the city now known as Mainz, He, told of the'very old Jewish eommutiity in May. cnee; of the ancient Jewish communities of. Speyer, Worms and Mayencc which, as far back as l.he year ] 150, made an alliance and organized a synod which met periodically until the end of l the Fourteenth Century. He told Bill about how the Jewk of Mayenee fought conversion; of how, in 1348 and in 1341) they took to the Htrceta \o fight against forcible conversion; nf how, when they saw the fight w»s lost, they let fire to their homes—mothers killed their own

i l n l i l r ' l l .Hl'l i "111 111 l i t ' i l Minnie tfl <-. i ,i |M* h. |»! ii i lid'-1 u in, w i r 111 ai i \ , j u m p ' il ' n HI,I"-"-' I " ' " Hi' ilrflll, , n1 111, li (IH II IjllllllllJ.' h u m ' -

ISlI <.hui|i|i r, <l 1ml ,i I " I for n>'<n I!i,iinl]>''|i fol'l linn about iln linn'M of tbe -1,-si-, fiirliunjr fonible bapiiMn iliinnp tin I'liri-tiiin < ni-.ide '"J'hiil m where sonic ol (nir fathers died," said (jfaiulpop And witltlenh liiJl perceived Ihe explanation to something that had pursled him ever since he had been in about the third grade. He had never told this to anyone—not even to his mother Adelle, not even to his father I#e. Bill confessed that uneasiness, for the first time in his life* to Grandpop He could jif^cr quite sing those words in America, those words "Land wllere my fathers died," "Uecai.se my fathers,1^ Bill .jseijl, "you, itnd my father, did not die here — how could T sing those words—'they seemed to me dishonest." Apd Orandpop explained further, ' Koine of our fathers died there, at, Mayen«e. Some in the gas chambers built by Hitler.,Some in the uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto, fighting the Nazis. Others in the Sinai campaign conducted by Israel in 1956. All, all of these art our fathers. .There were Jews who fought in tbe Revolutionary War in America; and in the Civil War, on both sides; and in the Die World Wars. Back in Napoleon's time, there were Jews in the armies—on both sides. Grandpop told Bill the story of the French general Mjndcr Napoleon who had observed, one soldier miilferinpr .strange words eauh time the man fired his gun.-'The general asked the man wlml he w»m saying. The man explained : "1 am a Jew, mon general; each lime I fire, I say the Sbema—the prayer that ever Jew must Hay before he dies For you see, inon general, my ball may kill a iellow Jew across the lines.

\rul fir l i r . m n Inrlml mi:?Ill not h«r« ih' linn i n - , i \ m i ^lif ni,i before I have lull,,I him ^HV limit' d i n " . " i.inl (irnnilpop, «uip tin in Kill loud . i n , ' clear Von IIHW A i.^'hl In Ilieni lor I r f i d o m , Jor nicini iKeilimi 1 -, 10111 l . i t l u n W)iir IIMII\ l,ilheri, 1 lir \ l i a \ i d i x l ISIII, they

have died." liill Ifiiikrd once more nt the old Mrih/or He redd the >-iiiplr Jinr of tjjie lie could understand, a line in lionuin thdrscters. "A Met/, ehe/ Joseph Antoine. Jjnpiimeur ordiiiriirr du Koi ' firandpop looked nt iiill. n ad the thought."

"Some,day, Hill," he said, "iome day when -I am gone— tell your father, te|l Lee, that thlf> book, Ihi.i old Mnb/or, is "Thaiikn (irmnp." said Ittll And he went up to prepare, for bed. And as hoe sucked Hi Ins profespipe, annoyed by his hon's loud braying of the repetitious verses that seemed 80 irrelevant; and as Adelle decided to try to drown out Bill's voice by turning on the hi-fi, Orandpop repea tej : ( "Don'tchildren; don't; I know why; I know." (Seven Arts Feature Syndicate Worldwido News Service; EDITOR CITED . ' Ottawa (JTA)—Abraham' J. Arnold of the Jewish Western Bulletin, Vancouver Agnlo-Jewish, weekly, was Ihe only editor of any local weekly in Canada to receive a citation from the Howater Awards for JourpaliRm in 1956. HEBREW CREDIT (JOURSE Milwaukee (JTA) — A Jour -credit course in beginners'Hebrew « ill be p'ren it the ( l'niversil,\ of Wisconsin, Iitunrh in Milwaukee, officials announced here.

I

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ns Ihe •r hole ouldoois1 . it )'iot iclieshin^i I t r nol la dcciibc ihe In lo 'I'ol her been ;Ct}pt,iiicd m c/eiy Mp becau c it r liK' a rjreczy, ^unny qood to bo nh/e d o / From noluic *un ^licnrh^d bop ( , rjolden hecirtt of bailey c i v m l p u i e wciler oil dponcd IOQCIIIC a 'lov/l/ c the 'pan of Notuio s own son om 1 Why don 1 you have o glti'.s oi Sloi? We ilinik you t rr.lip'-liii'ig, loo

*

RESHING


SECTION A

ef 20. 1957

PLAIN TALK BT ALFRED SEGAL

As Einstein Saw Religion With Albert Einstein I was having a discussion on what it means to be a Jew. He ;ind I were in my living room together. Yet it really can't be called a discussion, since I am not one with mind enough to exchange ideas with a mind like Einstein's. All I could do as I sat there in the big chair was to .shako my head and give out a few words of agreement to what Einstein was telling me. The

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•7c\*H throuirb a Ion?. Inn;' tirnc. . . Ami indcfMi, it IIH1- ufi^n br-'ri hrourrht up in this column Ihntus'li 11K* yrnr-i. Inilrn], ihfM-c avf rc^dors who h;tvr ^'Ohl^'fl ni^1 on thcil, IjH i'r told m*1 I sliould leave it Ir. 11) •• [alibis to toll pen. pic what it means to be a .lew-. W h a t do I knmv aiiinil t h a t ! they asked. Xoir here ^v;^s Albert Einstein in my hods'' telling me bis idea of what being a 'lew is. As I turned lhf» pa^es ol' his book I t.'inild dreply appreciate his opinion si hunt this, thout'li ho lvas no r a b b i . It is my belief that Jio really know God b e t t e r than most rabbis do. He k n e w Hod intimately by rhr laws of t h e universe H'hk-li he found in physics a n d in.ithfinalirs and. which few o t h e r in the whole world understand. i

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Features ut Jewish Tradition Well, Albert Einstein started off by tellinsr me in the first paragraph of 1'n^'e !•] what be thought, it means to be a Jew. lie said: "The pursuit of knolwedjre for its oivn sake, an alnio.it. fanatical love of justice, and the desire

f drew a deep draught ont of My Iiipe ;iml noddeil my head arfirmatiTely . . . "Doctor. 1 can't figure out »our theory of relativity. but I-know rou're sure riyhl "n what brinf a Jew ia." Moral Attitude "J »d a ism," he continued, "a*etn» to me to be concerned almont eielnaiTelr with thr moral attiude in life and to life, f look upon it »« the essence of »n attitude which is incarnate in the Jewish pulpit . . . To me Torah and Talmud are roereij. the niost important eri"lencc for the manner in which the Jewish conception of life held away in earlier times." T had thought of Albert Einstein's mind as one which mine ncrer could hope to approaeh, considering all m,v limitations. Rut now we were mind to mind, a couple of follows who might be walkinjr under<tandingly together on a tree-shaded lane of I'nnceton I*niversity- . . . "Doctor you're no l o n f r stranger to me.'' "It is clear." ho *aid "that SerrinR <>od' is equated I in .ItidaiMn) with '.servin? thr livinp' The best of the -IcivUh people. es|ieinll\ the /'rophots and J'-hij!;, contended tirplessly for this.

The. Kgnctifieatiou pf life in % sup'raj>erson«ii tpnic is deniutidnd of I lie Je" s. 1 interruplcil. "<->h. dear doctor, my poor mind can go alonjf su liu|>|iily with your ow'n OH this . . . up int" tin1 hejghts. It can't 'g» as far ax yours nut into the universe, but it can under«Und with yours what being a -lew really is.'* Spiritual Sustenance Now Albert Kinst'-in's eyes seemed ajjlvw with another vision of •ludaisiii he was looking at. He said: "The ,|e«-i»!i .tradition also •-untain.s sotnrthing else . . . .something which finds splendid expression in many of the I'sulmv . . . namely a sort of intoxicating joy and amazement at the hcinti and f.ri.in deur of the world . . . It is the feeling from which true scientific research draws IU spiritual sustenance but which also seems to find expression m the songs of birds." The doctor went on to tell me rather regretfully ,it seemed, that even anong Jews the high doctrine pf what being i Jew really is "gets obscured by much worship of the letter.' Vet Judai«m seems to me one of its purest and most vigorous manifestation*," and he added: "This applies particularly to the fnodantal principle of the sanctifiestion of life." So holy is al^life in tbT Jewish tradition that, as Albert KintMn puts it, in the Ten Commandments "animals were expressly included in the command to keep holy the Sabbath day, ao •trong was the feeling that the ideal demands and- tolidarity of all living thing*." The doctor smiled, as he remembered something that Walter Ralhenau had said toNhim long ago one day in Germany. The Jew Walter Rathenau * H top statesman in the German Republic which stood before Hitler's time, Dr. Einstein was recalling: "Walter Katheau remarked to me, 'When a Jew says he's going hunting to amuse himself, he lies.' The Jewish seme of the sanctity of life rould not be more simply expressed." (Vet Rathenau who, as Jew, cherished the sanctity of all life himself was to die by assassination,) I felt thankful to Albert Einstein for the few minutes in my living room. I told him how complimented I felt.' And I thank friend1 Sternberg of St. Louis Park, Minnesota, for introducing .Albert Einstm'n into my living room. Moreover, I welcome here the written protect of any rabbi who may disagree with Einstein on what being a Jew is.

It's on the House BY UHI SHALTHIEL son took over the Louisiana terriSome thirty y e a r s back, an tory. Touro established himself in American Jew returning from tin* New Orleans 1 , was one of l.'J AmerJewish Honiolaiul and uritiim icniicans serving under.lackson woundiniscoiK'es of his journey, tnl<l liou eil al the battle of New Orleans. passiiiL' one day in the Galilee, he I'rosperin:; in business. Touro was saw some people ln-ekonin:; to him nationally noted lor his philanthroto eome over. py which extended to all creeds. He approached and saw the In his will, ho'left also a bequest to group was s t a n d i n g by " h a t bo administered by Sir Moses Mrniseeme<] a freshly completed house. tefiore for the erection of a resi" C o m e , " they saiil to him, dential section in .Jerusalem. This "we're eolobratint; the completion " s h i k i m " constituted the first of a house. Ilavo a .schnapps." homes built ouside of the Old "It's on the house, as we Mty in city, the bo},'inniny of modern .)<-iti Ameiica, e h ' " IIMII.II kod the Anifisalcm. ican. He swallowed the d r i n k , "Whoso house is if" ho asked. In Touro's day, America, too, "Whose house! Whose house!" had a housing problem. Thr piorepeated one man in the party. neer could cope with it more; or "What does it matter? Es baut less by chopping down a few (toes sich Yisrocl. Israel is being built." from the woods and building himThere was great joy over the self a log cah[n. Unfortunately, completion of one house then. whatever timber Israel possesses is of recent planting by Jews, Today Ifiraol's mind is again, as It were, "on the house," but Israel The p r e s e n t year more than is thinking npt in terms of single 120,000 immigrants are expected to houses, but of homes in the mass. come in—and every-year .seems to During the coming year, aided by tap some new stream. When the Israel Bonds, it ife proposed to crvct Ymenites and the North Africans 30,000 housing units. began to let up, emigration began from Poland, Hungary and Egypt. The beginning of the era ,of During the mass immigration of modern housing in Israel, Interestyears past, jthe immigrants to Isingly enough, goes back to, an early rael were more or less dumped into American Jew who never saw Erotz huge'Maaveroth, which turned into YisrocI*, whose name was a very eye-sores and were baneful othersynonym of American patriotism, wise. Israel will have no more of a man who was eulogized by no this. The plan now calls not only less a person than Daniel Webster. for the building of homes to acThe man was Judah Touro, of the commodate the newcomers, but for famous Touro family associated their erection in areas where they with the Newport synagogue in can find suitable employment. At Rhode Island, the oldest synagogue, Elath, it is proposed to b u i l d a in America. thousand homes /tnnually for the When President Thomas Jeffcr-

s five years. This city, with its growing Importance as a port and its nearness to the copper mines, is a " n a t u r a l " for offering employment. Between LDoL and L9.V7, the Government of I s r a e l allocated $177,720,0CX) for housing. This sum included S51.Ciil.VXX) of Israel Bond money. This year it is planned fo devote S7.V.X>0,O0<> for housing and the Israel B o n d percentage will naturally be larger. Housing is Well on the way to becoming a major- industry in Israel. Experiments of various kinds are liein:; undertaken in the way of developing new types of homes especially in the m a t t e r of N e g e b housing u i l h ili tiopieal (hm.ite Ji wish luiildt i . hii\o plajed iin outstanding role in the blillrliiv; up of the Tniled S l a t e - The !,Ue Wm. Allen S, White once chanting a I'aen to the Now Yot k Cily sky lino, singled out for special praise the work of the Jewish builders. There is no reason why some of the Jewish genius in this respect should not express itself as admirably in the Jewish state. (A.IP) COURT APPOINTMENT Trenton (WNS) — (iovernor Hobert R. Mcyner has named A.ssoci»te Snprcmc Court Justicr Joseph Wcintnub, yoiinpptt tnrmbor of the scvcn-mia court, »» Chief Justice of the State Supreme Coart. HONORAST LIFE Knoxvillc (JTA) — G e o r g i I t Dempster ,an Epittcopalian aetivt ia philanthropic and intrrfaith aetiviliec, his been made in honorary life Member of the Knoxriltr Jewish Commtlfait? Center AMoeiation.

1

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ISRAEL BQH®S SPUR HOUSING AND JOBS FOR IMMIGRANTS ENTERING ISRAEL

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fhe Eternal Light

Xnrtel i* preparing to absorb mr>rr lb*n 100,000 nrw immigranl* * h o will Mrrht ttiii y n r . Approximatr< If 30,000 permanfnt Ji on ting nnitt m n t t b * b n i l t with t h r aid mi Israel Bond*. Job opporfnnilif* mtt*t be tre*\rd hj txp»n<ltn%, indnMrj and »fTiru)iurr,Tht impart • f Urtri Jlontl Hollar* on Jtra<T* rfoaonty n^w hoii reonomy in t* shown shown in in n^w hoii'in^ Jirf (top. l(ft) for immigrant familir*, p v is the JcTlir«Um r.lfthr Bulb ttr fc

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tymbol «f a batfef so profound •'•at .neither indifference nor hostility could dinTit . , .

brf'S bacx on bnll>«: in jrrifcatinn tTitftni (bottom, I'ft) that add nrw arable mrrrt and nr* crop* to NrapTi atrirtilhiral T K M ; and in n+* sloragf lanki f bottom, rifhtl t i the Dead S*a Potash D i n t >n SMom. Iprarl Bond rapital ii uird t« itrfngthfn a.1! facrli of lira?]'* Itrowinf ttonomr.

IXOMJS And fheu sh«lt command the children tf lir«»l, that they bring unto that pure oil beat*n for the light, to caute a lamp to burn continually 2 1 . In the Tent of matting, without the veil which ii before the-testimony, Aaron and hit loni ihall set It in order, to burn from evening to morning before the LORD; it. ihall be a statute for ever throughout their generations on the behalf of the children of Israel.

T H I S LAMP, which has hung in synagogues alt over fhe world since the • origin of the Bible itself, is an inspiring symbol of the profound, unceasing faith of a great people and their untiring efforts toward a better tomorrow.

for fun .. phone ahead -for reservaffens !,*;\~.,j ' Your vacation trip H doabrf enjoyable when JWi'rc sure that comfortable accommodations are waiting for you at the end of the day. A fast, incxpcnsi\c long di-tancc call k all it takes to make arrangements for your flat overnight «op,

Trr tbis idea on your nrxt trip,,.»ee for rourKlf how relaird and enjoyable rour journey. becomes. It's another way the telephone help* make living more fun! P.S. A telephone credit card let! ytw charge long; distance caJIs when you are away from home. Call your telephone bwsinca office for details. Norihimler* Belt Tdeplxme Company

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In thirty scattered landi, this lamp of faith burnt with the lame inspiration for all those on whom its light falls, be their place of assembly a synagogue • f stone or a tent of goahkin. It has been so through the ages. We need look no further for a better symbol for the uncertain times of today than faith like this . . . the knowledge that man, with the help of God, can solve his own problems . . . that lasting peace in tho world will come fo us only when the principles of charity and justice govern the actions ,o/ man. May this new year bring tho answer fo prayers of man of'all faiths for a peaceful solution of the world's problems . . . that Rosh Hashonah will bo recorded as the beginning of a new era for man . . . that within it he will reach a greater dignity through a more complete realiiation of the purpose (or which he was1 intended.

Omaha public Power [tisfrict

I


^

THE JEWISH PRESS SECTION

New

Ye«r'i

Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Rosh

Federation for

Hashonah

5718—Friday,

September

20,

Page On*

1957

ish Service,5717

M<

Paul Virrl Kxerlltlvr Director

Hubert If. Kl>op«r l'"lrnt Vlce-rmsldent

Harry Trimtln Vlce-Pi-otldfnt

Arlluir II. (lolilntrln

The Jcu'hh Federation of Omit- phv Is our Community Center, lvlties and projects for schools h«i has .ilw.ivs brrn mure Him >iwhich Is the common denominator nnd the community at large. flacJtI or administrative apparatus. of Omaha Jewry, s m i n c «« The Jewish Community Library Throufihout fiftv-foui j H r ^ of does the collective Jewish group in toddy is recognized an one of the «{n1cc, it h.i1- hcrome thornughlv Omaha. There has been a pro- most complete Jewish libraries in saturated with Ihe spirit t h a i nounced Intensification of JewUh the country. In addition to the charactril/es I he Onuihn Jewish content In lt» programming. Em- wide selection of Judnlca. booK*, the community. Tins spirit is one of phasl« hn« Iwen placed on Jewish library also maintains n motion eoniciotn Jewishm***, desiring to picture department of f i l m s of perpetuate Jewish Jiff irncl Jew- identification, Jewish problems, Jewish interest; a collection of reJewish nrt-i nnd valiien, all of cording of Jewish interest, film ish tradition In our community. ..'Thp implications or Jewish life which help to maintain the dignity strips, pictures, and other program and the meaning of Jewish ihlnR of Jewish Jiving today. nnd educational aids Many bibJjnp not merely been a wishful There has been, too, during the iographies and help/ul references pfillo«ophy in our cummunlty. but past year, more planning for menv wrre prepared and made availrather a cry-Mul-clcar bencon by brrs of our community particular able to tcachen, club lenders and Which the Federation charted its ly for our children, through pro- Indents. course. This spirit of Jewish liv- grams of Junior ncthltlPH, which Or. I'tilllp Sher Hume for Ing and Jewish practices is mani- prnUelcd intisfylnR outlets for the fested fn almoil every nnpect of cl.itire time of our youngster*. The fulfillment' of the Fifth Commandment. "Honor Thy FathFcdonitlon activity. Participation on the part of chil er nnd Thy Mother," also found Bnrritu of ilrwlHli KiluniHon drcn nnd teen-agers in the phynl xprcsilon In the Dr, Philip Shtrr cal education program hnVbcpn In Tlili attitude reflect!! Itself fore- crcaned considerably, One huri Jcw|ih Home for the Aged Durmoot In the Jeulxh education pro- dred nnd fifty children attended ing 1956-57 the Home, sencd)65 gram In Omaha Jewish educiillon the Ccn'cr Day Cnmp at Peony Individuals.^ Since this Home was ounded, it served altogether 166 here is fullered and sponsored Park. residents Jointly by the Jcvvihh Federation Our Jewish Youth Council, 'the «nri the synagogues, through ii The residents of Ihe Home arc Jewish Youth Communi- enjoying a \arlcd program of receommunlly nurcnu of Jrwlih I.'du- organized 1 cutlnn. Tit.* tvp-" of " I T T ; ' I '>'aer< ty, embarked upon its twenty reation; a program of occupationprop'1'' emplwi'sls on the impor fourth year of continuous exist- al thernpy is now being planned tancc that our community fit nce with n reasonable and en Through this Home, Omaha Jewry Inches to n ells-wide priviam (if courni{lng program of bringing up IK making an Important contrlbu J e w i s h cd'icr.tion, d<M"n"d to the Omaha Jewish Community of Ion to thp welfare and comfort reach the maximum of Jewish tomorrow, leaching them how to of its aged and Infirm members, children. plan together nnd live loRether. ho arc In nc«d of custodial and During the year l!t3fi-."7 there and in the process of training in- congregate car?. liRei.t leadership for the fu Camp Jny-C-C were enrolled In the.Hchofil«, supJewish content at Camp Jayported by the Krdcnition a tolal ture. JrwUh Community Library C-C during It* ] 957 encampment of \,0ia rhlldien AvernBe enrollment In the reSince we bellcvn that the fu unctioned not as a thing apart of sperti\e schools iliinn/ >!»• \e,irture of the American Jewish com' •nmp program, but rather as an were nn folluus: lieth l-'A 'ralniwl nily lies In the fostering of Integral phase of camping tx>Tornh -'ir>; He Hi Kl S u n d n y Jewish knowledge, and Jewish cul- pel lence.' The finest Jewish tra •School--111"; lieth Ismel Tiilinud ture, we have been doing some- dltlons were maintained through Tornh 171': I'.rth Israel Sunday tlilni; about it. The Jewish con s/>r\icc<, both Snbbnth nnd weekSchool — i'o I. T< innle I s r a e l repl of AM HASI.Fi:it, the People day, Jewish music, Jewish dance, Kchooh 2,1'-'. .ind Shi UP Z i o n of the Hoolt. finds tangible ex- Jewish stories, and Jewish obTalmud Tonih- 10. The rpimber pression In thp form of our Jew senftncci, In this respect the o( pupils allrndiiii; the srhooK i<h Community Library. A verit- camp certainly offers n wonderful reached a new hlj;h duiiii(; the able treasure of l>ooi<s, records opportunity to complement the past ye.ir. 'Hiero has also been an and films of Jewish Interest nnd program of religious hchooln by Improvement in the staff* of the content 1« at the service of the urnishing a natural atmosphere various schools, which resulted in community. Increasingly, we nre or Jewish living and Jewish ex, better instruction. becoming aware oMIs ImnortHncc pression. JrwMl Community Ontrr. in the community, h e l p i n g In A total of 193 children were at Not far behind In this philono- planning many Jewish cultural ac- camp this summer, Included was group of teen-agers who received a special'camping period. This experiment met with coniderable success, which again Is

New Year's Greetings^

Krncht A. Nogg Treasurer

'Dr. Tlilllp Sher (i Honorary I'rcsidcnt coining through Omaha arc taken building and . strengthening onr Division IMuI Sliyken, Chairm of the Youth Division; and nun care of by the Family Sen ice De- own community in Omaha, we riiicis upon hundred', of vpluntee partment. Other problems con- Jiave'tned to lie equally aware of sidered are cmplo>menl, contact our problems in the United States w*orkers nnd solicitors. with Jewish patients in Stale in- as well as abroad and in Israel. Jen Ish Tress. Dunng 1956-57 the Federation stitutions, and applications for ad-l'etfcratlon Board mission to the various national The followini; are officers of the continued the publication of th Jewish Press, which has served r Jewish Hospitals, as well as to Federation: Dr. Abe Greenberfc a meduim of Jewish news, local) the Dr. Philip Sher Jewish Home president; Robert H. Koopcr, first for Aged. vice-president; H a r r y Tmstin, nationally and internstlon a 11. Through the columns of the Jew Contemplated for the new year second vice-president; Ernest A. are Parents Education programs, Nogg, tiedsurcr; Arthur H. GoldIsh Press, life in the community is constantly reflected; activities and a coordinated program for stein, secretary; Paul Voret, ex.ire brought to the attention of th the care of Jewish aged in the ecutive director, and Dr. Philip Shpr, honorary prcsident. community and material of Jewlsl community. educational and cultural v a 1 u i As a functional Federa t i o n , Members of the executive combrought lo the readers with reg which encompasses all facets of mittee are: Wilton R. Abrahams, Jewish service, we have tried to Paul Blotcky, Mrs. Edward E. ularity. have a balanced approach to all Biodkey, liudore Chapman, Harry Kctleratlun of needs and the tJik of meeting i c B. Cohen. Arthur A. Cohn, Leo Jcnlsti Women's C'lulm (Continued on Page 13.) Under the leadership of Mrs sponsibilltics that arc ours. While Dr. Abe < irreilberg Henry A. Newman, Jewish Wom Jewish Federation President of Omu en's organisations continued t focuuing our attention.on the ur since Its objective is to r e a c h perform Important tasks throug gency of sreuung a site for our >\eiy Jew in Om.ih.i for his share the Federation of Jewish Women' ' own camp. A camp oN our own n this great human enterprise of Clubs. will open up new Wstns for teen As In the past they participate* age camping, young adult camp- Ihe Jewish Community. In Community Choht-Rcd Cross The effort was achieved under Needlework (Juild, and other fun ing, for the aged, funuly cumplni the capable leadership of Arthur raising and community functions and winter camping. Our Federation has ulways be- H. Goldstein, General Campaign A Holiday Party program at th lieved that its camping program Chairman, and Mrs. Edward E. Dr. Philip Slier Jewish Homp fo must be wholesomely Jcwi«,h, s Brodkcy, Chairman of the Wom-Aged was continued In which al en's Division. Associated w i t h that through their camping ex- hem in the campaign were: Da- women's organisations partlcipat ed., periences Jewish children q vid Blacker, Initial Gifts ChairDuring the pust year, the Oma benefit not only fiom the gener- man; Louis Canar and Ruben Llpal advantages that camping of- JKJU, Co-chairmen Men's Division: .ia Jewish Family Service Depurt ment hml a special case' load oi PHOTOGRAPHER fers, but In addition may be mon rlrs. E d w i n K. Brodkey; Mrs. firmly attached to Jewish fredl Mike Freeman and Mrs. Herman about IK.'i families and individuals An increasing number of loba tion and living. , Bondarln,' Co-Chairmen of the families came for help with prob Jewish Philanthropies Women's Division; Miss Marilyn lems related to their personal an HARNEY 1044 81? SOUTH 36TH STREET The Jewish Community of Oma Rice, Chairman of the University riei.il adjustments. Transient ha gn\e expression to the age-ol tradition of ZEDAKAH "througl Its 'annual Philanthropies Cam pnlgn. J l is through this yearly it l l I I • • I • I • • t; I fl III nll-ln-one drive of the Community that Omaha Jewry U able to <i< its share for the United Jewish Appeal, for our civlc-protectlv agencies, our national Jewish hos pitals, our cultural and religious institutions, and help preserve and maintain Jewish life In Omaha, In America, In Israel, and thiough ou\ the world. At. this time; the drive raised about'.$323,186, 'contributed, by some 4.411 subscribers. The cam palgn itself is still in progress,

A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR

*

John Kaliria

GREETINGS

AND GOOD WISHES

TO OUR MANY FRIENDS OF THE JEWISH FAITH

FROM

Omaha Lace Laundry, Inc. ERNIE WINTROUB

HEADQUARTERS

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Ihr I tl.lt

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h|>cil true liWi, llu- hou^i or Dt-fi h.in H u m mi in MuV. tAfoH fny f rccojfJcr, iin iimptirirr ,t word i-hiinecr «r lurn Inblr: ynu'tr Mnrt them M IhP lintjsr nf hi-fi MrrLnphnni' < rfuiprn^nt" I h e h'Mjs. of hi-fi 1 I'ltithe flnrsi o{ fi'lrlliv r< corillnfT* In hoth pln-sll' l

for a Happy and • Prosperous . .. hjew Year

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To Our-

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Friends elnd Patrons

,

COMPANY 1108-1110-1112 Harney St.

house of hi-fi 4628 DODGE Mtmtor 111 Clwrgt Swvfct orr.N OAII.V; it A.M..( r.M.

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OMAHA MEMICI rCOCIAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

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M M T I Y M A EcfttUstaJTME JEWISH IFWKU PRESS—Roth PPEC.<_J>1V|.

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amzations C o - n m u n i t y Center and -p. d paiki';cs for C A M ; to h 1 p p e d rtbio id lor ncerlv

AZA No. 100

[i - Hie tnuMbr! 1 -. sold tri.r> 1 President—Jndi Ban. A l i p <joilol—.Nikon linrdlllnn. DP ( i ' n w i t o u n s t K P t Linn r First Vice President*—Murirl | <>[ which t h f pr"Lrrti^ w e n ti , <l stoseablatt, Martene Friedman, \l<j»li \I,i/Uir<—Hi rnir <irrx*>ii f ir hlui'l c n i h l i r n M m j \-olur Second Vice Pre»ldent—Phyl- I (ccis Irojii K O I M J I U ' ' w i n k e d .it B# Abraham*. , ( . i v l i o r — I l i m a n l •>liisim lilnml R a n k jMMm:; I ilx-ls o n Recording Berretary—Ua>le i jfiii fijHJ makiiij^ tncin^tlxc*- JCIH •PeMaasu Alrpli sliut»r<> (i.ulnl —Mlki ally 11-,-cful At a Golden Club mrct CorrespondingSecret! ry— | mi; the girls put on a miccc-fiii 1'latt. Barter* Adler. Alrjih .Shntarr Union—Houripmaram of Israeli dancin.,' aiyi BUI Treasurer—Betty Krnian. , »r<l .stnl Doea Treasurer—Tonl Kaplan. t Altph Siijililrs—Itmi-r Illn-nm, Sergeaat-at-arm*—<i«ll Tre! ftohanuc had a busy year in l i r n a r d tlhmtu. ttack, Myra Llpp. •ithlctlo. The Youth council hponAlrpli Kolira IMKIOI—lirrnlr Reporter—Shflla Not Ik. voied a bowling tournament in Polfkov. Youth Council Krpri'Mrnt.itUr which Romanuc won the RlrJs dni-! All ph II 11 I o r I 1 n — M o r —-Nancy l*»1*. A 11 r r n a t r— sion. The club also placed first nnd Beikm. Sandy Oro»«. third in g*ping-pong tournament. Alrpli Mureh—Irv Brtzcr. During the year the club at- AZA Is based on its "Five Kold Historian—Jo.v r'n-lilrn. tended en masse a , morning _ , _ - , ,scrv- .''nd Full Program" which i& as old Rohanue 11 p.nt ol ti.e lc« i^h ice at Temple Israel. The religious an< j tested as the order lUclf The Youth Council *pu.i"ir(rl by the program aKo included Israeli five foundations of this program Jewish Communilj CVntr-r II via1, dancing and singing at many of are religious, osciaJ, community) organued by a rioup of Sophoy the meetings. service, athletic and cultural.! more girls in 1953. i Judl Ban An ppening and a closing prayer They cover almost every activity During the school year the club fl(>n meets at the Community Ccnlei <">»e »' d , aw.irded the Best nt each meeting is given by a ot the dub in such a way as U>| at 3:30 p. m, During the .suninur r l u D Award for its many projects'member. Also at one of the meet give each member something to! I the meetings are held at vanous Jnd outstanding work from amcne'll?!' , , D o n n 8 M a r U n of a local do. AZA 100 has had a very enrichmember's p. -m. '•"'- Uhomes at '7 " i»'her cl.,b, m H« Youth Council J S l " " ^ ing religious program. Members The year 1956-."J7 has been a re.il| The club completed many comaeeomplishrncnt for Kohanue, due munlty piojcct.s durmc the year. has a Big Sister Idea where the of tfce dub have taken port .in I to the efforts of its officers, chair- At meltings the members \olun- active members act as a big sis- AZA Sabbath and Youth Council men, their committees, and the tccred for work at various Oma- ter In helping the new members, Sabbath. We have had discussions Rohanue started out their socia and speakers- on different aspects! members and parents of Kohanue.'ha hospital-, The glrh met at year by having a jail bird rush of Judaism; for example, keeping1 party at the home of Barbara kosher. Wolfe for the members graduating The dub' main soda] event, in 1960. Alio for that claw, th also sole money making project, . girls in August held a mother- was iU second annual Sweetheart j daughter rush tea at the borne Dance, the Spring Serenade. Can-lf of Nancy Vengcr. The club spon- dldates for sweetheart were Lln-r sored a bake sale In October at da KavJch. Muriel Rosenblatt, Brandels which brought in fifty Barbara Greenberg, Maddle Mir-i dollars. Another event was the otf, Maureen Zeviiz and Joan, forma] Initiation party at Nancy Marx. Elected Sweetheart of AZA| Venger'a home. Early In the year. 100 was Muriel Roacnblatt. while! the club save a daddy-daughter the other five candidates became dinner dance at the Fireside Res- hostesses of our dub. Other social taurant honoring their fathers events included a boat party, a Also at the Fireside the girls held train parry, a *teak fry. a treasan installation party for the new re hunt, and house parties. officers of the first term. Their The community service program lOtfc and Harmy StrMt. Mckson 2323 annual Mad Hatter open vice was >nabled the group to lend a helppresented in March at the Jewish ng hand wherever needed. Community Center. The Club's *The organization participated in "dream boy," Nelson Gordman, :hc Federation of women's clothes, was chosen at this dance. In May, lrivc, a safety drive, synagogue! .the m e m b e r ! gave a Mother- if fairs. United Jewish Appeal and' Daughter luncheon at Town House. wiped distribute cancer posters.' Mothers' Day at the Town House. The club was awarded the YC At this luncheon the new officer* Dlymplc trophy, placing first In of. the second term were Installed. lag football, softball and second; In June, Rohanue presented their in basketball, bowling and ping Spring formal dinner dance on the pong. Terrace of Al Green's Skyroom. The cultural committee sponThe parents of the girls snd their sored excellent films of the Suezi dates were I n v i t e d . After the criato. -The club has bern briefed; May We Wiih You the Nesting dance, a house party was held at by good speakers on civil defense,' the home of Marlene Friedman. military service, our fire departIn July the club ga\-c a Callipso ment, and communism and had of Continued Health and rush party at the home of Toni discussions " and panels on Inte Kaplan for the class graduating gration and the Anti-Defamation In 1961. In September the club League. Prosperity in the Coming Year nlso gave a mother-daughter rush Members attended the AZA-' tea at the home of Edic Singer for BBG conventions in Omaha and the same class. Uncoln. Member* of the club ha\c held Regional nnd District AZA office*. Youth Council, and B'nal B'rith Youth Council offices. The chib is composed of 64 members and three \ery c.ipable advisors, Lou Cnnar. Dnn Gordv man, and Marv Treller. President — S.m Bleieher ««e«Ury _ Msrlys Itack Omahanx went to St. Louis for T r e a s u r e r — Gall Shrier the regional winter concla\c. The Temple Israel Youth Group From the first of the year till the end of school, the youth group has provided many activities for held a bi-weekly study group on ts members over the past year. comparative religions. During Pefirst event was a condavette sach the youth group was host to 675 No. 50th WA2442 The held In Omaha, Ocotbcr 28-29, the Dundee Presbyterian Youth 1956. More than 80 people at- Group for a model sedar. In April, eight members went to epring tended. ' conclave In Kansas. City. In June, During Winter vacation five Dick Speier went to Kansas City for • weekend of study of Spinoza .which was sponsored by the regional group. , This summer Marrys Isnck nnd Sam Blclcher attended the NFTY .National -Training Institute in lOConomawae, Wise.. During the .last week of vacation seven memLbera went to the Regional Training Institute in Iowa. The general chairman for the institute wasMarty WeiL

WISHING OUR MANY FRIENDS AND PATRONS A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS . NEW YEAR

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N«w Y««r'i Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Roth Haihonah 571 t—Friday, September 20, 1967

Beth Israel Sisterhood

aod friend* and has proven a most

happy relaflonship. Sisterhood alto sponsors an annual party M the Home for the Aged; and entertains at the Veterans' hospital. The Citation Dinner honormg J'r«*id«-»t — Mn. Sam Kateformer .President Hurry i>. TIIIman. man, although considered <r -;jn.i-

*lr»t V l i v - I ' r « , W m t _ M r » . A l fred Frank. Second VI«-rrmtW»»it — M M . Milney K n l t M . Third Vlrc-I'r<'HM<M>t — Mm. Harold Z*llnnl<v, Trriuwirtr—Mm. (irurKr fw hn]»ir<i. Ilt'conllng Sorrrlnry — Mr«. Sum Herman. f i n a n c i a l Scrrrtiiric. — Mm. Ruben Itutncr »»nl Mrs. l l i r liorl M i l l i n g CorrrsiHirulhig SiMrr (arlrs — Mr». IlHrmy (irry ami Mm. All>pfl JSnrkin. J'arliiunrftiiirUin — Mm. Norman lluhn.

Women's Organizations mafia Pioneer Women

Soguc dmiii.it [ I I I K I I . , 1 t i ™ m o r o wil-,1 mrl n,; . \om (>•CrftKo of (hp c*)-oniin it< (I ( f / o r N tlt .ill ^ n a , ' . « ' i l in<i r v (ii t in

IV* hUli nt— M r v s u m Mi< I'rosldent—vim. I ' I Iclriun.

Sher Home for the Aged in March. The organization's Anti-Defamation League) committee placed literature with all the principals of Omaha Public and Parochial Schools. In April A. D. L. committee sponsored -a barn dance Jo further aid in the purchase of nth material. Many of the ;u:liv(! members are pnrticipatinf; in the B'nai li'rith

B'nai B'ritfi Nebraska Chapter

Noviik J J I O

I'rfsMlffil—Vfrs

Siukh

H o w l i n " I (ij;ue H i iff a b o proud o f t h e n r o ^ r i *s h i n ^ niHfic in t h e Junior H'niii H'rith B o w l i n g ii* uf

J I r h t \ I 1 r-l'rf**>drnt—-Mrs

Sol J,ittin.in SMimri \ Mc-l'rf-MKirn*—Mrs Wllll.uil StorMllnril Vlir J'rrnHlint—Mrf. Al /»< rime l»M<>r(iln£ S r r r r t a rv—Mr* ( hfirli •i Sr nrlflrr

f Iniiiii i,il M i n-lar.v—Mm. Ml ton N.an-Mhirj,'. C urn h|Min<llin' ,S«.< relory—Mr*. Milton .N( HrPnlH-rg, Ili'f o n l i n e fx-iwtary—Mrs. II. Rl< lilln Treiutin-r—Mm, Snm Klfkln.

Kiipl in Omiiha Pioneer Women arc p.irt of a.ndtionjl organi/utL m*r tlidt waj. founded In 1924 who Sentinel—Mrs. Paul Wolk. there was a ihortage of wuter B.'th IMJI-1 S I - I I rivml ,is ,ui ,if rri'Mili-iit— Mrs A < . Krllmnn. (.uurdlan—Mrs J<x- Kpoteln. Gatylce, Mrs, Ben Zvl, Israel's f« filiatc of W.,iti<n s lii.in h i,i A dm IH \ |i I l'rr-iili-nl — M n . Historian—Mrs. Ilnrrj Kp«teln. lady, wrote an American friend UOJCA, K (toiir.ilrd i • ih<* lurlh AlfrnI I le<lli r. Trustees.—Mm toe Upton, New York asking her to get (uliiirnl \ (ip-rmliirnt—Mrs. Mm. Sam Mamitz, Mrs. Edward touch with some friends and a '•minm | s, iNruniHn. ' Mrs, Sum ITovak Rubark and Mrs. Harold Slegel. range to lend them 140 pounds I Mrs. A. V. Felhmut I linil-ltHHn; Mir-VrrtUlrni— tec and special events chairmen, build a cistern. It was this loai u July. Luncheons were served Nebraska Chapter No 346 holds; Mm s u l n n Tielrtcr. that-mado American Pioneer, thi t $1.00 per plate which provedtheir board mcellngb the first \\* Ifiin*-Si»<. VirF-f*r?«|<f4».nt—-• plan and execute the various fundraising projects throughout t h e sister organization of the Israel w:ry successful and also profitable. Thursday night In the month, and Mr*. A In- ] t nj;rr. their regular meetings the fourth working Women's Council. •{<•<online; hft-rftary — Mrs. year. Chairmen of various committees Thursday night in the month in Kn c ,nc Kiih. fund* raJsed are used for the Pioneer Women maintain chil- are: conjunction with the Nebraska dren's homes, day nurseries, anc ( <>rri-h|Hin(lin(; S e r r f U+J — maintenance of the Sunday school, Pubhcity-Mrs. Leonard Fmko- L ^ ^ N O U i 5 M c e t i n B S a r ch c ] d MM. Allx-rt Rlmmrrman. - A. i l n i . . _ _ f _• . •«•* . . < M «* to provide scholarships to send home and reception centers for inv ' l l Z » at the Fireside Restaurant Prorinnndal tN'irUry — Mrs. young people to synagogue spon- migraht women M well as trad< Israeli Bonds—Mrs. Marian Bon- grams for the past year included Sniiiucl (io(K)m«n. sored summer camps, and to beau- and vocational schools in Israel. da rin. movies, guest speakers and various In the last five years, ,Pion*ci I'lnnndal Srrrrtmrj — M n . tify and furnish additional equipNational Fund — Mmes. Sarah social functions. Women's the Women's Labor OrKotx-rl H'mwr. ment (or the new building. ganization of America has shipped Okun and H. Richlin, In November a paid-up memberTrramirrr—Mrs, Morris gtelMeetings, luncheons, style show to Israel 1,000,000 pounds of doth—Mrs. H. Richlin as- ship luncheon was held at the congregational dinners, Donor af ing or an average, of more thai istod by Mmei. Max Levine, I. B'nai Abraham Synagogue, which Audltor—Mrs, 3am D M . fair, mother and daughter banquet, one garment for each of the 1,500,- •"orbes and Nathan Martin. aUo honored new members. Parliamentarian — Mrs, D S T M book reviews, pard parties, and 000 men, women and children ir R. Cohen. Nebraska Chapter, together with Men's Club dinners will provide Membership—Mrs, J. Kaplan. that country. i Dlrrc-toni, J9M — Mrs. M. H. opportunities for the members of Cultural—Mrs, MiHon Nearen- the Henry Monsky Chapter, comClothing is collected from Jew. berg. pleted another successful fundBrodkry, Mrs. Harry Pereosteln. the entire congregation to, particiMr». Ertw.t w ; 1MT, MT,Mrs. Mrs.pate in social events this year. Ish and n^n-Jewish people and or- Representatives to Federation of raising effort, B'nai B'nth women Kobi-rt H. Hooper, M Mrs. A Aaron Plans this year' are also being ganizations throughout the world. Jewish Women's Clubs — Mmes. bowlers also contributed to fundraising. J Mm, Hun Katimaa Rips, Mm. M. A. Vens;rr. made for interested women to The items afo assembled In a ware, Sam Novak and H. Richlin. house in New York and are sortec Consultant — Mrs. M ; t r 8, work with JJraille. Jointly with fhe Henry, Monsky i of the high ideals of Tornh Krlpke. and balled for shipment to Israel Israeli Supplies—Mra. Sam NoSisterhood members serve on Chapter, members continued their True Judaiim: and to promote. In Omaha ' Pioneer Women" have vak. R e g i o n * ) Trfawirei—Mrs. Sunday School and Talmud Torah monthly Bingo parties at the Vet•Wtry Instance, good fellowship Used Clothing to Israel—Mrs. S. erans Hospital. Kas;w>.' Committees and plan and assist in this past .year shipped 30 largi •moriR all IU peoples: and to exert ffl Kx-Qfflclo—Mrs, Joseph Gum. the celebration of all Jewish holi- boxes of clothing and $235.00 i H. Binder. In cooperation with the other iU efforti towardj better com- The fall season of 1937 marks days. A Sisterhood committee )' cash to be used as needed. , Hospitaler—Mrs. I. Forbes and lodges and another chapter in munaj Ufa in every field of activ- the beginning of the 29th year of In charge of the nursery school The clothing some new and some Mrs. Max Felwlowitz. Omaha we continued sponsoring ityaetlivty for the Beth El Sister- which is rated one of the best used ranged from baby things to Courtesy—Mrs. Max Felwtowitz. B'nai B'rith days at the Red Cross Sisterhood activilioi i n c l u d e hood, The alms and purposes of nursery schools in the city. It is overcoats, dresses and men's apBlood Center s u p p l y i n g both Sgt. at Arms-Mrs. M. D. Cfalmonthly luncheon meetings: di<- the sisterhood are the strengthen- recommended by several pediatric- parel. ^ donors and workers. One ot our >n. ' Irlbutlon of Chanukah candles to ing of traditional Judaism - byians and approved by Omaha UniAn annual shower is held In May past presidents, Mrs. Max Sacks, Bake Sale-Mrs. J. Kaplan, the congregation; management of farthering the spiritual, material versity for credit to practice teach- headed by Mrs. Sam Novak. has been president or the Red Picnic—Mrs. Sarah Okun. the gift shop; an annual donor and social Interests of the syna- er*. Cross Gallon Club for the past The year 1D56-57 has been a real Flower Ddy—Mrs. Sam Novak. two years, and has acted as overluncheon, which has become one of gogue by advancing Jewish educa, Our monthly programs presented accomplishment for Pioneer Worn, Luncheon — Mmes. J. Kaplan, all chairman for our three big the highlights of Sisterhood (unc- tion hmong l u members; by assist- at our regular meetings, follow a en, Our main proceeds came from Morris Stcrenberg, Dav c Epstein. blood drives for the year. tion*: publishing a monthly Sister- ing in every way possible in bring. designated theme and are designed an ad book. Ad Book—Mmea. Sam Rlfkln, H. Chapter support w a s given to hood bulletin; «cti\c participation Ing fU youth closer to the syna- to be educational as well as en- The ad book committee ihrago, Milton Ncarenberg, assist he Community Chest, March of gogue and J u d a i s m , and by in, youth commission accomplishtertaining. A series of »-.-. headed by Mr. and Mrs, Sam Rlftd by Mr. Sum Rifkm. ment*; weekly Klddunh (luncheon) strengthening the religious life of study groups were held , Dimes, Easter Seals, Tuberculosis kin. The ad books were distributed Executive Board — Mmes. Sam Campaign, Cancer Drive, Chilthe Sabbath junior congrega- the local Jewish community. and plan* are being m a o ior a at an annual donor dinner at the Lehman, H. Wohlner, William dren's Memorial Hospital and Jewlion; similar series this coming year. Fireside neslArant, May 9. The membership of the group Is ; tossen besides the regular chair ish Philanthropies. Other projects of the past year ncn and officers. The nnnual "know thy nelghhor 330 women, who arc divided Into Our c o m m u n i t y cooperatlon For Chanukah a check was sent Sabbiith" Is hottcitsed by Boih Is- 18 circle* Kvcry member is called chirmnn represent u« in t h e Included the Child Rescue Fund. to tho Bellcfalre Orphan Home in rael Si<terhoiJd..Thln Is a special on to participate In synagogue a c Woman's Inter^Club Council, at A banquet was held in conjunction Ivitles. The circle chairmen, to. the Federation of Jewish Womwith tho project at the Jewish Cleveland to purchase gifts for Friday eionlng arrvlec to which en's Clubs, and at the Veteran Community Center in December. grtlu-r "Mh the the children. are 1 ilrrl our Chnitian eommit- Hospital. They bring matters of Approximately tl.300 was earned. In February, the fourth Annual local and national importance to The Pioneer Women hold regu. Women's Citizenship Award was the Sisterhood's attention and lar luncheon meeting* the fourth Jerusalem (JTA) — An exhibi- given to an outstanding women stress nodal action* on occaxlon' Tueid^y of every month at the ion portraying Israel's achieve- in the community in commemorawhen the Kr0*'P enn lake Mep» Community Center; board ncnts during the first ten years tion of Brotherhood Week, toalong those linei The Kroup sews meetings arc held every month. statehood and forecasting trends gether with the Henry Monsky for the Synagogue, for Israel and Chapter. The Ones Shabbat, a literary for the Dr. Shore Home for the gathering Ls held once a month or the coming decade wi}| b? The annual Pnrhn Party was •penod here next Juno for three Aged. nt the home of various members. nonths. held for the residents of the Dr. The Gift and Dook Shop makes Programs include a local speaker, Officials said the'exhibit would available nijny articles and books reading* by various members, folk Je modeled after the "Festival of of traditional Jewish menning, ITic songs and di.tcumions of Interest. Britain" of 1951, with tho basic sisterhood, together with the other Locally we contribute to the Imilianly to be reflected in the sisterhoods In the National Worn- Jewish Philanthropies, Community net that the exhibit will aim to ,A BETTER DEPARTMENT STORE en's League of the United Syna- Chest, Red Cross, and help in their how ail aspects of the first dogogues of America, help support drives. We also contribute to the adc of statehood, including the the Jewish Theological Seminary Jewish National Fund and Chil- >litical, economic, immigration, Cornell Bluffs, Iowa by railing fund* for scholarships dren* Memorial Hospital, Veterans bor security and cultural phases for rabbinical students. Hospital^ and helped entertain at The exhibition will cover more the Dr. Philip Sber Jewish Home lan three acres and win involve Tel Aviv, fJTA)-,A new bridge for the Aged. budget of 1,500,000 I s r a e l i over the Yarkon Wvcr In northern We arc also active in National Minds. The Jerusalem MunicipalTel Aviv on the Tel Aviv-Haifa Fund Council. ' y has planned a number of pro"*^I w « » ?wung Into position in Our annual pjenic was held with lotional efforts for the exhibit one of the biggest operation of its Wishing H w B t i l o f Everything the Jewish National Farband and will bo closed Saturdays In type ever seen In Israel. the Poale Zlon at i:imwood Park ference to Orthodox opinion. TO YOU & YOUR FAMILY

'Die B n n L f i t h f.irK n^ptcr h u i slioun ( row i h inri proc rss We are liippv to h i \ r a par\ n helping ^THHI OI the-.f p;roiif>s as well a s f»ir Iwo fine A. Z. A. Ch«ipter s Tho Nehi,isk,i Chi p i n is prwiri of the si»i\icr M )s linrirnnc: not

Beth El Sisterhood

only to District, No. 6, but to our community as wr-ll

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Festival to Show Israel's Grpwth

GREETINGS FROM

Happy New Year

MORTUARIES

4 SEASON'S GREETINGS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS •

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W L MASTERMAN COFFEE CO. 1409 Harney

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BENO S

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TO OUR MANY FRIEND? AND PATRONS. , WE WISH YOU 1 .

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THROUGHOUT THE

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OUR BEST , WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR

HAPPY NEW YEAR

KING FONG CAFE

Producing a better and happier way of life is,

SPECIALIZING IN CHINESE AND AMERICAN FOODS

bttr business. Good insurance gjves us peace

• Egg Roll o Sweet end Sour Pork • Chow Mein Egg Foo Yong o chop Suty

of mind for better living day by day. W e a I-

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A Very Happy Prosperous

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way* appreciate an opportunity to discuss ORDERS TO TAKE OUT

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your insurance problem* with you.

315 So. U l h Sr.

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17 TM»—Omako'i OUttt CMMM I n t e r n *

Best Wiihos for a

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AlFHD S. MATER

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HOWARD KAPUN

TED J . SAMFORD •

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"REPRESENTING BUYERS OF INSURANCE SINCE 1917"

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2205 Farnam Street

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,


JEWISH PRESSr-Ro.h Ha.honaJ. 571»—Friday. S«pt»mt>w JO, 1957

Women's Organizations

-Fetid* — Boxaane

BB. Henry Monsky WctSSmL: Chapter No. 470

glporin. Tfe»urw—Bernard Bloom. Uorreapoading; Secretary — Dl»«e tstoner.

lAI n

hi

^ X'r * '™.'"';.! ;E. Roosevelt BBG Nate Gitniek is Chairman l»r this.

district cultural chairman during annual «pring party, a «t«ak irf, was held at Elniwood Parkthe year 1956-1937. One of the highlights of tho Mrs. 'George Cohn and M * vcar wan a fund-ralslns projeqt, Stanley Shapiro serve as adviser* car wash The girls washed cars to the chapter. !fnr one dollar each at a local gaf 'station m, May 26. OIMJANIZATIONS BKNEHT

.

I Kleanor Roosevelt Chapter was Boston, (.1TAI- Educational aiM A I-Jumjr Fund hunurs the n'natj 'represented in the Jewish Youtn cultural organizations, many Ol U n t h Hilkl Foundations whichCouneil. With the help .'( th-yheni Jewish, win be the recipients resident—lierdinr drcen ^ne located on approximateiy 2')O: M. I. T. Muther—Mutljiljn entire chapter. E. 1!. placed sre- -i!of a Mini exceeding $700,000 becnllr^e criinpu-.es in the 1'nitr-d in the will of the late in the ratings of the r.i'st c l u b .States and Canada. The newly esI'rrsiilint—Marilyn Au;ini sponsored by Ih Youth ]',re M. i'riertman. Boston lawyer Max Kriwltablished Ilillrl Koundjili'in ;.t Ih'- !lw>rl.hl land Jewish historian, which ha» tnan. Hebrew University In Ji-ril- -'I' -"i Kee'irdiiiK i Karl In the early p;irl of May th^'j'^t l l c r " f 'l r ( ' ' o r probate. ls—Mrs. Sidney is iluurishiflr;. hi I >ee.-nil><-r. I'.O") (nrn-poni H a r r y Smith, Zneimer, Mrs. the B'nai H'rith members of I In,:- IlllHI Mrs. J a y Sti.li r. hind opened their f i r s t IIiliH Trrasim-r — Ma\ln« / Iteennliiig SeeretHrv -^- Mrs. Futindalk h k - h SK'ili tin Mieliey Kaplan. financial Treasurer — RARE PLEASURE thoil.snnd- nf .U-vs ;lurl'!lts Correspoiiitint; Secretary — KulH-nstrin ti' unh ( i; i! i Mrs. Nathan Kaplan. Viinili (.» llllrll lleprt s' nl itl\< 1 MEDIUM PRICED I 11 I oil i; li I i,, nr I-'lwuls tin !•' i n a 11 elal Seeretary—Mrs. Miriiff nnd .Miirll.wi Chapter has Hipp ' t i i i t h i - l l ' i i a i Itell lll.ltt. I|nspital Hrith National J.-.ii.-h Maun < ii i pstf in l>li, -s Secretary — Mrs. Sol lIMorian T h i s li.i,pilal IJI Deiner. Cul Miroff. Ihas won international acclaim as-""'1, l r < ' " rll IWiner Tn-Msiirer—Mrs. (ieoree Cohn. a tuberculosis treatment and re-! •><-|>" ' > - Arlene (»r<isstn in jsearch center. I .Miriam Kalr.. nmt I.\ mi ^irik1 <" Sentinel—Mrs. Alx- Cilnsburjf. Jlislnrian—Mrs. Ben M*g»»The Uochcsti'r Center ut the' J-lcanor ICleanor KIl'n»s4-\eit h n n P, iilh Mnyo Clinic in Rochester. M l n n . , ' ^ was formed in l i h i u a i v . min. •serves as n rrliKlou<!, social nnd[ « II ;i r <i i a n — Mrs. Blrbard Mm. M»x Krirotman cultural center for patients nnd. \\ right. Trustees—Mm. Hrnry Apprl. Children .it the Bcilcfiilie Hume,their families who come to the 1 Mrs. A. L. Cohen, Mm. lUrry in Clc\ eland were the recipients of]^]'" l e J""1} 'j|) p,;.lt: j

Recording Secretary—Carole. \ aombrrf. '' Historian—Ronnie tWnunons. KfU *t <rro» BriK-f Bloom

S. V, O , Synagogue Youth Organization, is sponsored By t h " Union of Orthodox Congregation* of America. The national office, N, C. S. Y, The National Conference of Synagogue You lit. located In New York. There are approximately ten regions throughout the country. Each region has its own chapters in different cities Twice a year the entire region, meets. Once in the summer forajI'V ">'-• . v o u l h l^'l'-rn, C.,IIII S .-I1.,I>. cornpinR session and onto in thfjand Kabbis. At .seven-thirty in the winter for a convention: alii" thciiiinoniini,' we all urusc with the sometime durim; the year, all tho1 {rJi.u, O i l U ; f ) O m ,,,.,, (i .. 1( , l l n | 1 , regions net together for ii natioiiiil; ( . j; , n , „-,. F , ) t dressed. At h (0 » . convention. Both .Israel S.Y.O. wn,- w c l . ( ; -, t thi, M ( .,, s n . , | | Uir f | , , organized five years ago aniT l":,.;^],,,,. After fla-_; raisin \w- ili part or the Mid-west region. Thc : „,.,,.,.[„..,) <]uun t0 l h ( , s \ n u-n-UP Mid-West Region just recently met) f o r s t . r v j c e s ; which were ltd m Munltm* - MM. Iliirrj, SM- many useful Chanukah Gifts. out at Camp Moshava, Wild 14o:--n , i r e l y b y t n c c a m , , c , . s H y t n i , | b> the members of this Chapter'(,;,, w o r |{(. r w h o helps countless Wisconsin for thrir one week sum-| t i m < , ,s e r v iccs wen; over we" wercl man. The C h i l d Welfare League of numbers. Our Chapter supported Henry Monsky Chapter No mer enmpnit: session. Amtinn the| r l l l starved, so tip to the mess is again successfully fulfilling its America mnde a study of the top thene project* through a donor •-- many essential "- 1 t e n institutions in the U nl tedifund^ ,....* ..__ —. Goodman J_Mrs. — Dan is local kids from Omaha were Dora Ger- hlM for somi ne •breakfast. Hicikftist obligations to the lier, Sandy I'arilman, Sheila Ilud- was always [un. Everyone woufci And worthwhile projects of B'nai stales in order to xct standards chairman The Jleiiry Monsky Foundation crman. A viva Keldman. Gary Panl- always be. talking, singum, eut- U'rlth. ifor child care work, chow Belleman. Diane Groner, Carole Fish- ning or (loins Israeli dancing Our "Doll', for Democracy" pro- fairc as one or the "Top Ten." We is also serviced through a chapter er. Dennis I^ewis. Carole Gom- Once in a while someone would gram ha^ grown to fifteen dolls are justifiably proud of our Belle- d o n o r ' f u n d . The Foundation berg, Keva Shyken, Susan AJ.II, recite a news report of Jewish This unique human relations pro-; fa ln\ Children'* Home In Cleve- throughndult Institutes of Judaism Marshall Kaplan, Helen Katz and affairs around the world. jeet feature* the story of person-] land for the outstanding Job It aimed at deepening and enriching I-eonard frank. We were accom- After breakfast our day began. alities who ha\e made outstanding! does In helping unhappy, troubled the Jewish cultural and religious panied by Mr. Sam Stone and Mr. We had several different work- contributions of « r u c e to thi»lr| youngsters find t h e i r way Into heritage. Camp B'nai H'rith, located in the Pocoho Mountains Irving Stern, our leaders. Besides shops from which we could choose fellowman. A story-teller presents happy and useful lives, y p near Starlight Pa., wax purchased Omaha, there were other cities what we wunted, There was Israeli the dolls nnd tells the h story off tthe} h} part of on observance, of and I* maintained by "the Henry there. Kansas City with 27 Camp- There was Israeli Dancing, Sins- person and their contributions t Nations Week, the foreign Monsky Foundation. The Camp ers, and St. Louis which came mg, h t tthounhljtyo^t,, hu attending di g colleges, ll d offers a complete kix week jOuth g, Arts and Crafts, a Tzit7n society, emphasizing mh ipi g tthat / und down for the first time was repre- workshop for I he'.boys, lectures they differ diffr in I rare,, religion ,,,,^,,,!!!,,, |j n Omaha were enter i-rnted by a delegation of 28 camp- and olass discussions with visiting creed, their n Omaha wcr« enter' camp session. The Camp B'nnl he common attributes or,tta Nation* Supper pp a [[nno( o ( j aa t „ United Nation B'rith program draws deeply from ers. At the time they came i!own rabbis and cantors. are the same and trans- | n j h c n o m e o r Mr, Mr,. George Berdlne Green are SplU- our rich Jewish heritage and students tr, Moshava they were very much -WHIie.we were there wc held M-rvlce ll barriers ThroiiRh •'•l^'pr. students traditions in order to help each cond* all all r pr. This party honoring student interested in SYO but they had no a Jewish Marathon; In Hebrew itjprojec.it. this 1956 by a group of young leaders. i vital t l brotherhoodjf b t h h d j ther lands has become an surh Kroup at all in St. Louis. is called. Macabla.' That was lots <if message was 'presented to, nenrly! rom o| \rnt. enrnper m u t e a meaningful life The group selected the name of After they went home, they pr- fun. There were,four teams, each twenty thousand adulti nnd chil- n n n u l l c Kleanor Roosevelt in tribute to At the beginninB of the club « canized a croup and elected of- was given a different colored Mas, dren In Omahn ,-ind w\eral thouThe fourth annual B'nai B'rith the famous woman's philanthropic d the h ficers. This December the Mid- Durint; the marathon the team sands In nearby cities hnve beer year the chapter presented work and support of B'nar B'rilh. | Lcaguc'ii menr W oin a n ' s Citizenship Citation West Convention will be held in had to row across a lake, from ent visited in the p past three years l O r a n ( l u m calendar and desk pad Award wns presented to Mr.,, It In the purpose of the chapcnled at St. Louis. Also represented there, divers had to dive off row' "Our Dolls " for """ Democracy pro" 'clubs affiliated with Alexander McKle In recognition ter to carry out the seven-fold camp were Clayton, Missouri i boatjS and swim to the shore At pram Is well launched, with «n|, h) , W o m ( , n . , i n t c r . a u b Council of outstanding community service prop-am which Includes social, Peoria, Illinois, Duluth, h Minnesota, thati point the flags were handed Increasing number of requests forh p n n e i p ( l ] s o f B i | Omaha, public in the improvement of'human c o m m u n i t y service, nfhlctle», and Marshalltown, Iowa. "-- presentation of the dolls nnd ! f - - - schools, - - presidents - - • relations..The citation Is presented cultural and rellcious. and B'nai over to runners. The flags were the The entire session turned out to passed. about until they came to theirr uto'ries of «>r\ice to club nnd' land, members of the Omaha Adult annually in February By B'nai B'rith Co-operation. be. a hiiRC success. Everyone at the basket ball court. After *o school troups and will continue Education Comraittne. This com- B'rith Women to an Omaha woman Their seven full progratjn 1 Moshava had a super-duper time many baskets were made the flags to flourish. pact item lists all the major holi- In recognition of outstanding carried out In many ways. For A very fine program was planncdwore passed to girls with books The B'nai B'rith C h 11 d r c n s' days of the Jewish and Christian i-crvlce In community and civic example-,- ADL movies, workln» (Home in Israel H patterned along faiths as well as national holidays affaire for the Improvement of at B'nai B'rith Women's bazaar*. the llines s of the Bellefnire Home. It goes a step further and sug- human relations and the advance-senior luncheon, overnight at B'ith gesls programming for democracy ment of citizenship responsibility." Camp Brcwster, participating In A new and enlarged B B'nnl B'rith This Citation Luncheon was given brotherhood scrvlco, and their Chlldrens' Home was dedicated aid, useful In observins the : jointly by the Henry Monsky annual formal dance.* October, 1955, in Jerusalem, where days, amidst p pleasant surroundings and The Veteran* Affairs chairmen, Chapter and the Nebr. Chapter In December of 3956. the group a wa* host to the AZA-BBG con'with ft competent staff, children MitiM. Richard WrlRht and Bertha at the Highland Town Club. 'who were victims of Nazi nnd: nd Kllh and their committee con- The B'nsl B'rith Young Groups vention in Omnha;.The chapter participated In volleyball .bowling, other oppression* will be i tinued their outstanding work i t nre in full swing. Partial scholarMay you and yours be blessed with health and jitated through skilled psychiatric the Vcteram Hospitals-In Omaha ihips to attend the B . B G. District and storytelling. Madnlyn Miroff i treat ment The ladie*. of our new-.and Uncoln. Monthly parties were Convention are presented to the and Joan Marx were chairman happiness and may this year bring you all you 'Ing group. h*\r fulfilled our ob-:held at the Omaha Hospital: an groups. The B'nai B'rith Girl's of the convention. hentlons hy making approximately a n n u a I p a r ( y a t the Chapters arc the Hot)! and On June !>, a formal installation cWire for a richer, fuller life. 100 articles, eorwiirtini! of *Mrt»,,pita). " E l e a n o r Roosevelt". Mmes. of new officers was held at the I rlrrwes, blouses, skirts and blan- -The chapter co-opewtod" fully Stanley Shapiro, George Cohn and home of Pecgy Tlubenfltein, kets for the Children's Home 'n with the Israel Bond Campaign Dan Gordman are advisors for the The S Summer Regional R d l C ConvenI Israel Under Mrs. A. I* Cohen's and shall continue to mport and girls chapters. tion wn» held In Sioux City, Iown, 'fine direction Ihn group will con- urge the purchase of Bonds for This Chanter and the other June 10-12 At this convention! tinue to sew this year. Omaha, Nebraska 324 So. Urii St. Israel. ,'B'na! 'B'rith oponsored a Chapter and Lodges In Omaha Joan Marx win elected president! dfy-wldc Israel .Bond Rally at sponsored a very sucrssful Blood of Cornlwlt Region. Eden Cohn' on their heads. The winping team the fllactafoni Hotel. Mrs./HBrry Bank Day in Omahn at the ncfl,nnd Pect;v Rijben->tr.n both given, won a watermelon; the team that Lippett is the Chairman (or Bonds Cross Blood Center. Mmes. Charles rcRlwnal chairmanship* Fisher and Millon Margolin arc During the latter pnrl of June,' came in second, a cantclope; the this ycdr.' B c r d l n c G r e e n , Kdcn Cohn,; one that came in third, a peach; Added cmphasU will be 'given Blood Bank chairman. and last but not least, the fourth to the development of the B'nai Co-operation was extended to Florence Shraco, and Joan Ttfarx one got a cherry, B'rith Martyrs' Forest In Israel the .Community Chest, Red Crois. attended the District CoivenUon Of course, besides all the lun which is being planted by Jews the Easter SenK Cancer Drive and at Schwnrtz'« Resort various other local endeavors Wc Lake WI Bdi wo covered a lot of bunlnes*. Our world to WWMMI<V1IIMMI"J commemorate our WUrlil over V**- 1 *** UMI * _---._ . _ _ _ . _._ _ - __.. . -^_region decided to Uvt the money Jewish Martyrs. This vast forest provided workers to stuff envelopes for the Tuberculosis Campalcn and that they bad been collecting since i» taking root on Israel's Judcan ihe last convention in December, Hills, on Jewish National Fund staffed the Chest X-Ray Mobile 1956. for a worth-while project. Land, ax II Jiving monument to the Unit. Mrs. Nathan Shukert will The Jewish lied Cross, The Mogcn six million Jew* murdered by the be community Co-operation chairOovid Adorn. Wc hope to purchase Nazis. A sanctuary cut out of man. Under the chairmanship of Bernard Slegicr we will a resusrltator for J30000"for the solid mck'wlll be constructed. In. the- B'nai B'rilh section o'f the continue active participation In Statr of Israel.'1 All in all a grand time was had Martyrs' Forest, For 51.50 oneIhe Clvfl Defeiuc 'program. Mem by the campers, counsellors and can plant a tree and kindle a bcrs arc jiartlcipatinp: in the candle of green In this forest. Mrs. bowling program and this will see youth leaders. the bowling league grea'ly enlarged. "The Joint fund raisins event was an outstanding success. A Thanksgiving card parly and Ipuwar was Held a* the Blfickstpnc Accept Our Very B«t Wliftei for a Most Hotel. Each Buest received • comhlned recipe and year book fenturIng favorite recipes of B'nai B'rith ' Happy and Prosperout Women. TW* yean fund rai«inR Ba»eB h Jacobs ranks 38th in rize « n o n g the adverevent will be- Sunday, Nov. 17th New Year The Monsky Chapter bake wile tising agencies of the country. There are approxl-" helped make it possible to meet mately 5,077 advertising- agencies in the United our basic allocations for the ninny fine philanthropies nf n'nal ]"rith States. Kor this we received nn honor certificate at the District C'onvn lion

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more than 75 prominent local, regional and national advertisers are taking advantage of the pool of advertising, public relations and merchandising talent we have assembled at our general offices in this city.

The Chapter was recipKUl of a plncnur1 presented by thn H i m iB'rlth nulletin rontest which Is ••••"^^ sponsoierl b> the N.itionnl Jeulth - - iMnntlilv The •Chipter Clutter" 'Bulletin won third pn/e lor the 'Women's pilntfd division Mrs |lli'ir> riietim.in was .n fin,; Kdiloi ,for 1O")S The Henry Mnnsky Chapter Ko. 1470 of Omaha, one of the integrant parts of the national orcani/ati'in takes e m i t pride in tho accomplishments of its program.

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I nr-ni'va CWN81—Jews In AlRfria i "will bf a-MIred of equal riKllls. jupporliinilie.i and obligations." InloiiKlIni; the ri;;ht to emigrate to Isiracl or any other country. 11 was |declared here by Farhat Abbns, p" lifical leader of tho Algerian rebo! forces. . Adr!ro-s:infj a pre.-s conffroncc the; rebel leader plodgr<j .safety an'' equality for the Jewish cwnniunlt;. iii an indofM.'iKi''nt, Algerian state lie said the FL.\, the rel»el nrcair /ation, would like C> have Israel' support In the U. N. General A? semWy when the Algerian problrir is dcbalr-d, adding th/it ho saw '.'n. contradiction lietwcen . I s r a e l i French friendly relations anrt ]•> mell iupporf of the Algerian CMI*I which can nnly help bridge th' gulf which fcepirntPi Tsmel fr»n-

THE WORK OF RIGHTEOUSNESS SHALL DH PEACE; A N D THE EFFECT OF RIGHTEOUSNESS QUIETNESS A N D ASSURANCE FOREVER.

HOLIDAY GREETINGS

the rest of the Afro-Asian countries.'* '\

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Y W « EdttW-WE JEWISH PRESS-fto*

Robert Levine, publicity chairman; Mrs. Jay Malashock, hospitaUty chairman; Lois Lee Rodin, progrum chairman; Mrs. Stanley Katelman. luncheon c-hairman.

Visitor Reports Israel's Progress

Women's Organizations Omaha Chapter Brandeis University

Temple Israel Sisterhood I'TvsUWnt—Mrs liorl. l''irst vW'f'-prf'M Jriil, Depart m c n t (if Itrlj^ion nd Ijlucution —Mr* K i h i . m l l Sriojiil v p r t fli ill, Oiji.iii llivllt of -iuhrlhlilt* ;iml .\clniinistrjiti\ Service—.Mrs, StmiIiy FW.

Mrs. Sam Epstein, Mis. Abe Bear, Mrs. Harry Siref, left to right. l f - ?. Wolk not in picture. . i

Thlnl \i ill, I). |,.irl|.r. (Ml AllMIIII'CIIICIll of ,|tl(lft Mrs. I. II. Wrlllf-r. Kml 01)rlh

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l'ru»lili'iil—Mr». Ibrnliarrit Wnlr. I I r s l \ i r < - | i r c h i d r n 1—Mr*. KrfU-Kt

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Scroml \- i v c~prrs'MWnt— M! A. It«-M'O\i<i. Third \ l i c - p r i s i i l , i l l — I J A S K»jdiii ,IIH1 Mri. Sirln<\ \ o <"*irr<s\ioriillni( s t r r c t u r y — '

Mn, Onviil Hlnlar. | Auditor—Mrs. l.ouis liiilukof-

Kadimah

United Nations, N V (WHS)-

•lulU nottd Ameilcan agricultural mm UXI|H r ition d i m m n,lliuiil.v who has recently rei;ni I mliin i V'">1 no tmiipcl fiom .i two-year stay In <h nun in Mi l-i ii I •!•> ftthnicjl assistant ex» 1 jiic-nli nl iii HI IJIjm i mi |j<)ulf uf the United NaW o n i u i - I ' I I I 1 ood ind Agriculture Orm./ ition

di clarod at a press

was n u in 1-.uic 111 M I nln i s ol l " n t l " " c ^ h<-ii t h t Israel Isr •qKrei,s . . J i.f d i m ten, lur l''-)T--is l "> i k l r l ' ' t r i n i r n d o u s ' prq i iifr.il ii Jiioniy ind that t s i i IJIM^ Ii Mi' n .mil* Mis J 11 t l 1 jiml i i , dihirai^ in1 ii^ncultu

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n.r lor.il chapter ...Mod 11K-honor, of their'fust lady" by|' il' luii'iiiation." He had.ibeen assijn.il by FAO to help (h e Haifa unanimously bcUowint: her o with Techniuu develop a m'w Uupartthe position of Honorary ^ ~ 'iiicnl of agriculture engineering. time IVesident. Tlic lolloping arc ilie 193T-58 New York, (WNS)—Forty of the Dr. Lowderniilk disclosed t h a t country's h i g h e s t scholarships'Teehnion had already opened its Committee Chairmen: to students of the high'new department of a^ricultura) Mrs. J, J. Friedman, purchas-; ing chairman; Mrs. Charles Itosen- school of the Yeshiya of Flatbush, I engineering, graduatinc eighteen Mrs. Brooklyn. agricultural engineers this year. stock, -telephone

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llororthng N f i r r lar,v—Mrs. tAt> i : l K B i l a l t . | | Financial S i • I a r .v—Mrs.

me/it on HurtLin Itrlnlioni Mr«. David l£o»rn»l iWomen in Israeli maintain-, a; Harold Kasln. Corroponrflng fcecrrlarj — Financial Secretary co-chair(network of over 110 Uistltutions Mrs. I'aol ItltiUIi.i. man—Mrs. Clarence Bergman. I for women and children* In Israel. Trraxurrr — Mri. M 111 a rd Hoard of (Governors—Mmfi. These institutions include d a y 1'urlimentarlan — Mrs. IJoyd Mrs. Bernhsrdt L. Wolf Sam KrwU-ln. Harry Slrrf. Aim nurseries, full time 'children's Krasnc Friedman. Auditor—Mrs. Abe Brodkrj. I) The Omaha chapter of the NaJutages. Mrs. J, L. Zwelback is the Bear and Foul Wolk. home;, reception centers, rehabilRecording Secretary — Mn. lonal Women's oommittce of Corresponding secretary — itation centers and homes for Mm. Charles ttoeenhekn. Brandeis University is now enter- The Women's Committees are immigrant women, agricultural Maurice Frank. dedicated to the perpetuation of Doe» Secretary—Mrs. Ijuar ing its fifth year of existence. Financial secretary — Mrs. braining farms for young people, the University's growing book r Bernard Kaufman. Mrs. Hyman Ferer guided the fund. All dues arc forwarded to vocational and trade schools for Kaplan. • Parliamentarian—Mn, Lloyd >ryanizallon d u r i n g Its initial Recording necretary — Mr». women, r e c r e a t i o n facilities Wnltham, Massachusetts to be for school children ana teen agers Friedman. Sidney Zneiracr. used to bup new books and to Treamrer — Mrs. H e r b e r t and classes in home economics, The The National Federation presidency. help defray building maintain domestic sciences and hygiene for Wlntroub. of Temple, Sisterhoods bands to- This year, as last year, the main ance costs. women and glrla. A board of governors, comgether 100,000 Jewish women rund-ralslng event will bo held at The Omaha Chanter feels that prised of Mmcs. Sam Kpstdn, Kadimah Chapter fund raising 1 local theater. Luncheon will be it can reflect c r e d i t toward Harry Siref, Abe Bear and Paul during the year consisted of a -.trved and a new first-run movie Brandeis by also participatmg in rummage sale and tnree dinner Wolk. bends the Kadimah ChapWll be Mhown. local community projects. In view parties. A donor dinner party was ter of Pioneer Women for 1957-58. •'tierP will bo aii aftcrnon Bible of this, the members have aided held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Other officers for the year in- Raymond Corey. =>tucly Group, Hebrew classei tor in the Red Cross Drive, '• made clude Mmes. Charles Itosenheim, t'isirrl'ood members, and open 4is- visits to the Veterans and ChllKadimah Chapter contrlMtes to corresponding secretary; Herbert mssiorw on Basic Reform JudaJan. drens Memorial Hospital, helped Wintroub, treasurer; B e r n a r d local projects as well. The chapter Flobbi Sidney Brooks wUl lead the Heart Fund nnd Jewish Horn members during too past year Kaufman, financial secretary, and these discussions, one? a month for the Aged activities. recording secretary, Mrs. Sidney took part in 'such local drives as The Brandeis Women's Com ifter Friday night services. the Bed Cross and Community Znelmer. The House of Living Judaism- mlttee, has been recognized as a Chest campaigns and the Jewish tferg Memorial in New York City, useful and growing organization. The board of Governors has ap-National Fund. They' contributed .lands as a tribute to the devoted Huge membership gains, both of pointed thr; following committee to the Needlework Guild and to •fforts of Sisterhood members, the life and annual type, have been heads: Mines. Itnymond Corey, the Children's Memorial Hospital donor cards; publicity and his- bazaar. A program was sponsored torian, Nathan Kapun; Davo nt the Drt Philip Shcr Jewish Wine, sunshine cards; Isadora Home for the Aged and at the Falk. telephone committee, Abe Veterans Hospital. 'Kloppcr, bulletin editor, Sam KpMonthly meeting featured Inutoin ami Ilnrry Slrt-f, .fund raising; Paul Wolk, membership, Abe teresting speakers and diversified Bear, program; Eugene Braun, entertainment, ,with the presenhosfllality and Richard Spcfgcl, tation of original skits. Each meetins included a social hour. federation representative. Mrs. Edward (Hlhcrt Kadimah Chapter of Pioneer ' Delegates .from Israel offered cultural and educational programs 540 sisterhoods throughout the Women's objective* is to assist in the upbuilding of Israel as a dem- at luncheons and were entertained United States and in cities of Canocratic state and to deveop among by'the_ Kadimah Chapter of Pio-ada, Cuba, Panama, the United r Kingdom, the Union of South Amertoin Jewish women an un- neer Women. Africa, and Australia, The Nationdcrstnn.:.i»: of (he way of life tit al Federation of Temple Sisterwell at the needs of women Mn niMiNOLOor COOBSB- ' Israel; thereby making the Amer- Jerusalem (WNS) A special hoods In the women's arm-of the ican Jewish women more cognizant course in criminology In to be Union of American Hebrew Con. of their rcii|»on.ilbllitics from an Introduced by the sociology depart- gregations, the central organisament of Bar llan University at tion of neform Judaism In Ameri"American viewpoint. Kadimah Chapter, through Its Rnmath Gan, with guest Professor ca, and n member of the World stetcr organization, the Moar/pl'Siuiiuel Kocnlg of Brooklyn Col-| Union for Progressive Judaism. The program of the Federation, Jlapoolot (Council of Workincilege, N. Y., as'lecturer. as carried forward through'its member Sisterhoods and District Federations, Is devoted to the advancement of Jewish and' humanitarian causes. This program is Implemented through the various departments listed above, one vice president having charge of 'each department.' A number of To Our Many Friends I committees and projects fall within each department. The twenty-first , biennial scmbly Of the National FcderAtion ACROSS FROM THE of Temple Sisterhoods was held in Toronto, Canada, in April, at GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT which time Mrs. Ilcnry Monsky, a former Omalmn, was elected to the *

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Our (Thirtieth Year Handling Ford Products /

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r f JEVWSH HUSS—Roili W«SKOMJI 571S—FtM«y., 99pf9MvCT 2D. OT7

Hadassah Report for Omaha Chapter, 1956-57

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Diwetow. Parliamentarian—Miss Dorothy Jacobs; 1957-59 — Mb* Evelyn Levy; 1937-60—Mrs. PbUlp DKosenthal. Ex-Officio—Mrs. Carl Lagntan. Schwartz.

8«t!natat Jt» mefltaal program HADASSAH MEDICAL, ORGANin 19% when Hadasiab sent two IZATION AND VOCATIONAL AnwtfBfft trained nurses to Jeru- EDUCATION Hadassah Medical Organization salem, a danger spot In a disease and Vocational Education chapter rfdden tent this organization of chairmen, Mmes. Kred Brodkcy, women has J, J. Friedman and Ira Whitegroup p chairmen to the fidd of health book and the g l in/Palestine and Israel Now itsMines. Sidneyy Katleman, Raduziner, J k installations are ot such quality Bernstein, Jack Jacoown, g A-Sain Hothenl*_rg aM quantity, that the influence bert Wohhur, H i m It.lit/, M ht Hadassah in felt throughout the Doruthy K u b u r i t h . i l .1 tl it{land. Hadassah operates live hos- late Mrs. T. A. T u l h , and thfir undt i the (lncctiu'i of gfpiUklt in Jerusalem; one in Eetrif sheba, in the Kegev, and a tubcr- Mis L t o \V<it/, fund-rai mz u fi culosis hospital in Safed It hu/, aordmator aid r h a u m n of th Gift Fluid filli-'l and ovt-rsubJ tltal bed capacity of 700 beds. It scribed Mrs. Meyer fi. Rubin th,- lociil quota. T h e

Best Wishes for a

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Mm. Stun Green Wfitman I ' m . Levinson, Mrs. Morris M. Frank Financial Secj-. — Mrs. Max Mintz. Mrs. Sam Roscnblum. UABASSAU BOAED at a Captain's Tea in August. the Jerusalem corridor, visited by Mm. Miix Canar's efforts as play-. lin, Mrn. Aaron Kips; 1936-5»— Cprrcspondlnc Secy.—Mrs. Alan some 260,000 mother:; and chil- iiifj Kroup chairman, added, t o the' Honorary Preiidont—Mrs. J. H. Mrs. Samuel Wolf, Mrs. M. V.'alk, Mrs. Dan Lintzman. Wolfson. Recording Secy.—Mrs. Irvin dren annually; an outpatient de- suee;-.1:--: f>f our carniiai^n. In t h eKulakofsky. Levinson, Mrs. Dave Sherman; Recording Secy.—Mrs. Irving President—Mrs. Meyer N. Rub-1957-60—Mrs. Leo Weitz. Mrs. Ir- ublnow. partment in Jerusalem containing sale 27 clinics and treat in;: approxi- spring of 1'J.J a rummage vin C Levin. Mrs. J. J. Friedman. Corresponding Secy^—Mrs. Har-Chudacoff. 1 In. \\.e; helvl under tht mately 100 patient? per day. It. ExOfficlo—Mrs. Hymen Bel Vice-president — Mrs. Phlneas y Marks. employs a ttaff of come 1273 of M l i . Ger,i-o Spit: man. Wintroub, Mrs. Morris C. Fell- THEODOB HERZ GROU1" Ex-Offldo—Mrs. Majc Green- Directors, 1956-58—Mrs. Wm. physicians, nurses, technicians and man; Mrs. Bennett Conn, co-chair- man, Mrs. Max Greenbcrg. EXECUTIVE BOARD man and her committee. The rumother related worker;; ha.-! tho Herzl Croup President—Mrs. President—Mrs. Arthur Gold- srg. Alberts; 195649—Mrs. Fred Braddevoted service of <i i j . . , ma;;e ma;:e sale saie together xo^reine with an offerDirectors, 1956-58—Mrs. A. V. stein. table television set Arthur Goldstein. key; 1957-60—Mrs. Maurice Newgroup of women vuUvntei Vice-President—Mrs. Sam Roth Yledman; 1957-59—Mrs. ' Dave rsubscribing our Welzmann Group President— man. have formed a bespit U auxiliary H.M.O. quota to the extent that Mrs. Sam Green. enberg, Mrs. Ervin Simon. Catleman; 1957-60-Mrs. Wm. Ra- BUS. AND PBO. GBOUT called Yaal (Helping Hand nf the name of the Omaha Chapter Recordlnc Secy^-Mrs. Irving t'M'IWS1 BOARD Haddastah). I t e3;|ibUshed 27 Szold Group President — Mrs. ludner. years aso, and still :;ponsorj. thev. ill appear on the Map of Honor Sidney Katleman. TJncoln, Prealdent—Mr* Charlei S. Row. Henrietta SzoW School of Kurs- in the new Medical Center Build B A P Group President—Mrs. Treasurer—Mrs. Seymour Zoob. WEIZMANN GBOCP Vice-President—Mrs. Alice BeeinB, from v,-hicli throughout the Charles Ross. ger, Mr*. Julius Newman. Secy.—Mrs. Max Kapyears, 730 nurses have been ;;i";du- The pro-donor 1 u n c h e o n in Treasurer—Mrs. ADen Kohan. lan,Financial Mrs. Ray Simon. Treasurer-^Mn. Iska, Rotbhotz. President—Mrs. Sun Green. atod; it conducts courses i" ucOctober featured Mrs. LoUella Financial Secy.—Mrs. Jack Kauf-LeeGreeniiberg. Corr. Secy^-Mrt/ Robert Fem- Vice-President—Mrs. Joe Guts, Financial cupatlon;il therapy, mifl-wlfory. Shapiro from the Hadassah na- man. Financial Secy^-Mrs. David pra ctical nursing. tional office at a very crucial Recording Seey.—Mrs. Alfred Irs. Mix Blttoer. Becker. ^ Ex-Of fido—Mrs. Abe Bear. lime in Israel's history. She emTreasurer—Mrs. Nathan Tor- Correcpondlns Secjr* **- Mrs. ITadassah, for most "t its lrK-m- phasized that, we re-dedicate our- Fiedler. Corr. Secy.—Mrt. Ira WhHe- Directors. 1956-58—Mrs. Albert icr. bcrs, lias become a way of lift'. selves to Uie work of Hadassah book," Frances Greenberg. Fox: 1957-ae—Mrs. Harry Ravltx; They find in its program an op-is the need for hospital care would Einandal Secy.—Mrs. MUUm Historian—Miss Myrtle FreeAuditor—Mrs. Morris Stalmas- 195740—Mrs. Morton Richards. portunity to realize their cun bo greater than ever before. potentialities. They KC-C in itr, un- Tho Hadnssali Vocational Educa- ter. Parliamentarian—Mnt A. D. HENRIETTA SWMLD OBOTJP dertakings an opportunity !'«• tion EXEOOTIVE BOARD Services are , becoming In- Frank. joint action in behalf of common creasingly important as the need Secy, to the Pres.—Mrs. Alfred President-Mrs. Sidney Katlcjobjectives. They come to under- of Israel for skills and trained Frank. stand, human suffering, human workers fa repeatedly acknowl- Ex-OffWo—Hn, D«»W Brod- Vice-President — Mrs. Arthur striving, human aspirations. They -d;;etl. Vocational Kducaiion Grossman, Mrs. Max Grossman. Servsatisfy their lonj;in[; for idenli- iefj participales in the Maabarot key. flcation with tlieir jwople. Tlioy proicram of Youth Aliyah and Directors, 1955-5S-Mrs. Isldor Treasurer—Mrs. Louis Slporin. develop a sense of purposeful liv- Iladassah Medical Organization in ing. Above all, through this •or- Hartuv, Knstel .'ind Talpiot. ganization they r.erve, tliey find piv-voeaiional and vocational faith, the hope and the couniKn in:; This d e p a r t m e n t of| to face the c h a 11 e n i;e of theeiiueution. Hadassah also participates with future. i'oulh Aliyah in tho JVural VocaThe following report of the past tional Center. year's nctivities in the Omaha 'Die Donor Affair was the culChapter Hadasaah is further proof of the H.M.O. and V.E. of tho dedication of the members mination Ben Novak Edward A . Rosen drive at tho Paxton Hotel on of our chapter. Decemlicr 3Gth with a "This Is / Mervin Rosenberg Julius Novak The first event on ITad.a^alfs Your Life" pmi^am honoring Mrs. calendar for 193G-57 m s our nii- .1. Harry Kulakofsky, Honorary Sidney Novak Elmer Novak Nathan Novak nual style show and card parly President of the Omaha Chapter. •The Mad Hatter" headed by- MB. Samuel Wolf, donor chairMrs. TrvinK IIer70£, chairman and man, together with Mrs. Morris her committee, Mmes. Max Platt, Ffllman rind n. largo committee Sam Geifman, Henry GrcenberK, made this an outstanding event. Barney Hoberman, Ruben Marcus, Mrs. Mosps P. Epstein, past naIrvine; Forbes, Seymour Colin, Abe tional president ot Hadassah, was Katelman, Alfred Frank, Norman the speaker who crime to honor Cain and their captains. This af- Mr?. Kulakofsky as representative h national i l 'office. ' fair was held at the Pax ton Hotel from the on Auerust 21st, the proceed. MKDK.'AL CENTKH Harvey Hoffman Horma« Hoffman toward Hadassah porjects. To consolidate all of Hrulrissah's health and medical teaching servOmaha's Outstanding Delicatessen During tile year 395G-57 thelices, to meet the needs of Israel's membership of the Omaha Chapter wowing population, and to reLocated in the Beverly Hills Shopping District was increased by 301 new mem- place the beautiful building on bers. The committee consisted of Mount Scopus which were lost TE3207 war of. libera- 7830 Dodge Mrs. Ervin Simon, c h a i r m a n : during the Israel c Mmes, Morton Friedlander, Lazier tion, Ilddassah i. ; currently buildSinger, Hymie Gendler Norman ing in Ein Kerem, on the outskirts Lincoln, Sam Berman, Morton of Jerusalem, the H a d a s s a 1TOpen M M , tftru Fri. 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. Richards, Julius Katzman. Art Ilebrcw University Medical Center. Tile Israel Government is Clewd Sohrdoyi Ahrams and Sarah Dansky. Two Service affairs were held for the nevv building, adjacent to the MediOpta SMdoy. 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. members; one for the new mem- cal Center, a psychiatry hospital bers and the other for the mem- which will enable it to use the (Continued on Pace 1.) bers and their husbands.

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M«w Y««r'« Edition—THR JEWISH PRESS—R<wb Wa»hdn«h 5718—Friday, September 20. 1957

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In charge of ho pitality were thej man was Mrs Morris Franklin' department was handled Tjy M « . bach s e n e d ns tourist ihapter handled by Mrs Sol Logman and chairman this past year, assisted Mrs Louis Albti I Thru commit Mmes Dive Sherman chapter Proceeds from me Yearbook arej A ibert Runmorman who kept all ^ ^ by her committee lonsistui • of lees wen Almcs h.dSiiron 1 ( u i L )i a i i in a n and liei cummittei. designated toward Hadassah p r o j - ] H a d a s s a h workep> tuppUed Mmes Loins Rat/, Moms (jio^s- mil -sdiem IIirj\ 1" i n-n in. Mmes. Max Hosrn, (ieiii-Ri- Spitii,., Ki,i,.,. i , • , jlhe needs of their department. m m .mtl Moms Ki/n <!• | 1 homas H u k n i \ \V 'jiinple. /fr, .Maurice Ni'wmnn, .Si^nioLir in UII.I.S AVI) lUXil ICSTS 'and Abe, krarit/. o r " , b r ; ^ ,°™h»?:'rj""Hiida"ahr Aliraiii.-, I'aul Sacks and .Sally .apu;,.'<t r ; 1 (Continued from Paf>o 6.1 It Inn nnd Program Committees'met reyionni and local Youth Comis'I'jihle (Jceorations WI.TC handled The fact Dial .'jjdent for the past year was Mrs. Jin-Ms, cll- by Mrs. H. (iillii-ii Aron./ff and MeyiT.s-. I." farihties of Ihe Medical .School:uncc ;• month for an Onea Shab- sions, has become increasingly ac- lions from trusi f ,nd> JAIeyer N. Itubin; presind life 'I'll'.- iiatioiial c o n v e li I i II n in ;dent, rient, Mrs. .Mrs. ,1. II. bon-irary Kulakofsky. Kul.ikofsky. A A her committee, Mines. JIarl \Veiss, and the hospital which will be;bat and discusMon. (."hainnan of lice in encouraging Jewish youth insurance policies Omaha <-hap- | d i v i s i o i ) ( j | | h ( ; m , m b [ , 1 , s h i p ,„,„ complete in every detail. Af the 1 the education council wrfrf Mi?-, to experience the meaning of Israel importHIII sources f' inci ni 1 f r i Maurice Feldmaii. Ir\in;^ lspstein October 1was held in Houston. 'I'vx. lid l u ; s l ^"'•'-•'••ssfiil; (-,-„„. ,, ,,| , i , . Hie croup plan and tin regional eonfcii-ni'f in r lrWj u n r ' ' " " ' ' ' jiind Kenneth Robins. Table sctfoot of the hospital there will h'-'l'aul VerH. C h a i r m e n of thejand of Jew i.'h identification, : I ladassah n I lcels redit " '• plaeeil the membership under the ur jtin^s v\ ere bandied by Mines.: May al l^iieynne. Wy.i. Mr.-. Ab- ' • a n i p a i e i , ,jf t h i s eo-i "" n shikun (housiiiRl connected with! nr"U|>.s were Mine... Joseph .So.-h-| young Judura, one of the af- i undi'l'lakint-'s in m rliainnaii. H a d a s s a h w i i m i ' i i sr-j \*'il on all• icirJiTKliip of the follov^il:^ group Louis Cutler, James .Samiielson, Hear, c o n v e n t i o n the Medical Cenler which is now;nik. I/>uis Hurivit/. Albert Ku.v niiaies ,,f u i e commission, has hud welfare, child resei l i l y ; ue. and vocahandled the arraiipeinenl;: fmHi. ' ; ; " " " " " ' • " » i w i ; . ; n s , , , - > l l , l . , , , ; : Mrs. Arthur Goldstein, 1presi(ienls '''•''l Max Kj'i/elman, I-nvin (.JiKidman.j l u m r l Kiryat Hnd.i.-,,;m i II id.-n- and Miss Aluivn C.eishater. |., very .successful yenr nationally. tioual e d u c a t i o 1 which have Irving P.nrilman, and Mrs. Royj Omaha delegations. The Omalia Ih'-y vM'i-e called upon lo pHrliei-:Tin-odor U.-ivl Croup: Mrs. Max fah Town> which while primar-; AMRItllAN" A l l ' A I K S I An organization of boys and K brought us international renown; pale under the direclioii or Mrs.!,;; rc .ei,b,. r ~, Henrietta S/old Group: ilyy planned for .Medical ('enter; Through the American affnirsjfrom !0 to 18 years of age, with and on our benefactors who have Roffrnan. p ,, . . , . . . ., i holb con\entipns and eontribul'd I'-'lward )•„ Drodkey who was us- ,M rs , j | J n l , . n t i e I m a n, CHiaim S have a i,ro^ran>. the Hudnssah member isia membership of approximately a m i a l l i e d |K'I>'(?ITH-I. ' S,,'*' '"'" Schnc>Wer -!\Veit/.man Group and Mrs. Charfcs ""dassohduring had many p r r c r n t a r ' c of [-"I ...|i...,j / „.,!,*.• j . , p[ i u f u j m r d of d o n i s t i r a n d M.000 throughout the country, it thus sought to Jink their names pt'ogrums the outstanding past year to their success. in in \\ ilium riiiden and liohcrl | i{ l l s s ,,f t |,, | j 1 K , , , , , s j n d Protes1 1 I ditor and K' " i 'I ' h mm m B m<> r e s i d e n t s , in o r d ' ' ' " ui i t f u n ii n e \ i n t s . ' f f i c t i n ^ oui e o u n - continues Its activities, among nnd their gifts lo thi b »ork To P™ ™ of IladaS 'I'"""" ""'" liMiisttm 'Ilus lommittee pio- S l l i n j ] c.roup Mrs M o m s CJrossi l k c r ; i l y r'ltli'ii i Spectat u- of the Hid'issih Vi ii ho ih Di Mdtil enioiinnmcnt at Hi- Vu-',,,,,, i' I1 i1'-! | f i " ' l i v mil of l e g i s l a t i o n w h i c h h a * W i h this jear were Ihe Camp Hiidassah such fund< are cspec- I"™151"? , ^ h c J c t M l , l S j r | u , o r l o the B lecloiy was Mis A I) 1 i ink .ina n J l n c C-e.1il f.,r " I• 11 MHip.inn,' on c i e i y d n h\infj. L a s t at ller/l Camp and Tel Inlly desirable because they enable lar tor 1930". Mrs. Morns C Fcll- sisted by Mines Jack Kaufman >i ins IIospit.il and at Ihe Ur in(i v, n . j m , „ M , . \ n r . ink of o u r M e d i c d ( r nl< i ' | u »1 i f <>< s man of the chapter was assisted this department rmphasi/Pd Yehuda and the Summer in Israel us to undertake programs which . K i n m - i C th u ™matin S u ^ Max Grohsnidii, David Hiodkej I h i h p She, Home tn chapter <-h n u n in Mi- lulnis 1 thc> Imporlnncp of reglsttrltiR and Institute,, for senior Jii1?3ni »nd we might otherwise not be able by program group chairmen .Mmes and In'in L,e\ln rieneial .li eb.iirIhe -nimbi's jnd M ml uds ' ''"• •Stein /Hid and bh i iraiimllH Mines ' voting. As in former j r a r s , Ha- for leaders It is ejso interesting to support. They are classifiable Donald Nogg, R o b e r t Rosen Mai IVomUin _.Ii>n Perelnun djssnh maintains its liaison with to note that the Israel study an a "plus" which helps lo enrich Arthur Schuffman, Jordan Lug Maurice Melchei, Momi J'lavi* Katzmari Mrs M i\ Shapiro the United Nations and continual- groups in the United State* have all facets iif our work. Chapter man, and Miss .lulu /.uki r and their Jy advocates support of its alms grown ln'number and In strength chairman for (his activity was Shapiro and Ahuvu Gershater. captains. With the ible and purposes. Chairmen of the The Hadassah Bowling League Mrs. Nathan Nogg assisted In Kadio and, television publiclt of Dr. Abe Cu enlx i|> I)r Morrl' American offal™ committee un- provides funds for malntaing our the g r o u p s by Mmes. Harry chairman,' Mrt. Morris Jabenli obtained all the radio and tcli Mnrrolin was honored with a spec der the leadership of Mrs. Robert national organization of Youth Wlgodsky and David Gross. vision publicity required of her inl citation nt nui Medical Center Kaicr, were Mme/i. Leonard Could. Commission and for Cnmp scholar. . Other Hadassahh p porjoets, under the direction of Mrs. s. £ o WeiU, W i U , She assisted In the' direction o! /Tneetin^ in January Irving Gendier, Sol Llttman and ship, to send children lo Camp Included l d Jewelry arid merchandise the Hadassah Spectacular and di rfllCIIASINd ANI> Phil Sifhwart/. Heivl and Te) Yehuda Prc '"ni salesi Mrs. Harold Cooperman, Our supplies work began in 1916 ZIONIST PUBLIC RELATIONS of the bowling league was Mrs. chapter chairman was assisted by rectcd the Heart of Hadassah. i We have received many fa\orabli with n handful of sewing nnd knltt Zionist public relations has an Phil Sokolbf. Mmes. Aaron Levin, Alex Wolpa, reports both nationally and region Ing groups which made garments important part fn Hadassah's Ynle Cinsburg and Sam TurkeJ ally on our local bulletin "Ha and collected linens for the Hadns- over-all p r o g r a m , keeping the The national tourist department Speclnl events chairman, Mrs. dassali Highlights" Issued month Bah projects in Jewish Pnlextlne. member informed of events In the of Hadassah -was established In Irving Herzog handled special afly and planned by Mm. So] CranThe idea was so nppcnhng; that Zionist world, the latest develop- 1950 to .meet the needs of its 'alrs and headed the sale ,of dell, chapter bulletin chairman the project noon developed ifito ments In Israel, and helping to members for a clearing-house of theatre tickets. together with Mmes. Steven Lus a separate department, the pur- tighten the link between the two Information and directives conchasing nnd supplies bureau. The dcmocrat|c civilizations, America cerning tourism In Israel, The ob- The telephone committee headed garten, David Fredricks, Henr; Stem and Carl Lagman unde; Jnitlnl reason for our supplies' and Israel. Hadassah'a Washing- jectives of thin department arc \o by Mrs. Irvin Levin I n c l u d e d the direction and supervision o work was that ihe goods w c made, ton representative relays Informa- promote travel In Israel: to ad- Mmes. Joe Lerner, Irving Lincoln, Mrs David Brodkey. Leo Rosenberg, Sol Kuller. Jack collected nnd shipped were not tion of the developments In Wash- Vise prospective tourists about Hitreadily available In Israel Today, ington concerning domestic and dassah's projects and about the Levey, Sam Davis, Abe Marcus New'spapcr publicity covering al: activities of Hadassah was handlec however, Israel's textile Industry foreign affairs and represents Ha- Hadassah tourist clubs in Israel; and Fannie Sherman. Luncheon arrangements were by Mrs. A. C. Fcllman. G o v e r n m e n t to assist tourists once they arc In be* grown to the point where it dassah before can Itself provide the necessary agencies. Chairmen of the Zionist Israel In planning their sight «he«t«, linens, clothlnn and gar- public relations committee were seeing; to provide means for capl ment!. The. Israel Covertiment, chapter chairman, Mrs. J. H. Kula- tali/Ing on the goodwill of re p m e concerns are to build kofsKy. and the . . group _ . chairmen, turning tourists. Israel offer; whosee prime industry and prwkje employment Mmes. Char, Caret*, Lcc Gendlcr, tourists a lasting spiritual ex has asked Hadauah to buy. in Is- Max M Grossman G and Mlw M Mild Mildred perlencc which dan be duplicate! nowhere else. T o u r i s m make rael good created in Israel, ln- Levy. Btead at shipping goods from here, ZIONIST VOUTH ACTIVITIES available to Israel the valuabli And our women have responded to Hadassah, co-jinonsor with the dollars which Its economy need; €hls chfngo vlth understanding, vi- Zionist. Organization of America io urgently and helps to creati •Ion ind redoubled effort* in be- of the American Zionist Youth housands of Jobs for the peo^li / half of supplies. Chapter chairman Commission, and of the various n the country. Mrs. Herman Auer * u Mrs. Samuel Steinberg. Her domnVttee was Mm. Arthur FriedHEATING' man Mrs. Robert Noddle, Mrs. Lou . X e w f c M n , Arthur Green, Mrs. HOT WATER - Charleii Fcllman Mrs AJ Woh'nor Mrg.' Ilarry Goldjtrom and their CLOTHES DRYING . 15 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS captains. INCINERATION JEWISH RATIONAL FUND IN OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS ,"Por over thirty years, lladassah COOKING FROM nnd Jewish National Fund have been partners In restoring, reREFRIGERATION . claiming nnd nfforesting the soil AIR CONDITIONING of Palestine nnd Israel. Hadassah's project last yenr, Nachlat 10, was to reclaim the land in Bar Giora, In the Lnchlsh urea, an exceedingly stmtoelc rCRlon, one which Ihe . . . Rovomment of inrael is rapidly INCORPORATED preparing for settlement of Im„ clean, scrfo, dependable mlirrnnts Immediately upon their nrrlval In the country. Thus HaWINE AND LIQUOR DIVISION * V f!n«ah ]n participating In n project designed not only to restore the soil but lo KtrenRthen the land nnd Its inhabitants. The Blue Box collection is held in the snrinK ' 1. R. Cirnlno, Division Manager and fall of each year. The Chnlrmrri w r e Mrs. I'hincns Winlroub nnd Mrs. Aaron KIJK assisted by Broup c h a I r^n e n Mmes. Louis Cin.ir, Phil Rosenblatt. Snm Stem, Arthur Adler, I^on Kellmnn, Louis Albert and their cnptalns. Through the sqle of trep certificates Ha<Jn«F"h hns planted vast forests In . ifPitnl. Clmirmen were Mrs. Abo Vf'iiRpr, GrtJiip Chairmen Mm™ 'I. B. Zlegman, Lou!* Kohll, Sam C ' V n «nd Alice Hecgnr. TOUTH AIJYAYI -' We invtfe you to tune In KOWH for new Voulh Aliyuh, of >vhlch Hadas-

Hadassah Report

Our Eest Wishes ior a Prosperous and Happy Year Ahead

HOW TO LIVE BETTER FOR L E S S . . .

MAX I.WALKER

Use GAS for

SEASON'S GREETINGS

McKESSON & ROBBINS

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OMAHA, NEBRASKA

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' *ah Is the official representative In the United States, was led'by Henrietta Szold, founder of Hadassah,' from 1934 until her death In 1045, A unique social and humanitarian: movement, dedicated to the rescue, rehabilitation and re-education of children and youth. In Its 22 yearn it has saved and trained about 75,000 young rcfuBeerf from 72 Inndx. There arc now irt.OOO children and youth tinder Its guidance, plnred In 2<0 youth A11 y a h InstnllatlonR. A momentous event In Youth Allynh was the CTnduatlan of the. first Arab class in Irrlditioh farming lit Nciirim. Mrs. Adolph Mayer handled the shipping of boxes of clothing to Ismel Iler committee consisted of Mmes Jfnrry Mulnlck, I5.iv1;! Iilelclur ,ind Henrj' Rlckes

proach to f the business of broadcasting. For • advertisers, KOWH is an outstanding buy . . . Omaha's outstanding buy on the basis , of cost-per-listener. TUNE TO 660 O N YOUR 1

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S H O W THAT KOWH HAS MORE O M A H A - , COUNCIL BLUFFS LISTENERS THAN ANY, OTHER RADIO STATION. Call Account.Exexutive, Eric Ross, ATlantic 2228, and let > him tell you how KOWH can increase your'-

Iliiflnssnli's Kducnlion Depnrlment, which Is basic to the Selfdrvelopment and awareness of the Hndairaah nK_nil>er, In OctoberJ 30,">C made a priceless contribution to the entire American Jewish Community; its latest publication. "Trie Great Apes And Ideas In August. J95ft the Omaha Chnptcr was inviterl to participate' In an ICducalion .Seminnr held In Ksles Park, Colo., for the specific ptirposc of training a group of women from Ihe chapters of the Mountain Plains Iteglon to lead study croup-. 011 llid.issah's book. "Ilio Great. Ages nnd Ideas of the Jewish People" which at lhat time hud not yet: been published. The. seminnn was led by J>r. finikin, one of the authors of the lx>olc. Our Clnptei wm represented by Mre. J. II. Kulnlcofsky, Mrs. Morris Grossman nnd Mlis Ahuva Gersbntcr who are presently leading study croups In November the Thco. Herzl Group ncted in hoMc-ses at n combined meethif; which featurcdi n program consisting of n )Vnnef| of our threo nabhls. In acconlance with our practice, hooks were presented to the Omaha I'ublic Library, Omaha University and Crefghlon University libraries. Durliif; the jcar threo Onef; Shnbbils were planned by Mrs. Isador Obcrmnn and her committee. ICach program was well received and followed by refreshments and a social hour. The Education Council of Hadassah, Including. the presidents, members of the American Affairs, Zionist rublic llclations, Kduca-

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business.,

Rosh Haehonah, 5718 Anno ivumai, ihe o t * .*ii New Year, has been celebrated since ancient days by people of this faith. Peoplo of all faiths in America and wherever religious freedom , » prevails extend .felicitations to their Jewish friends and ?»1W '* * iitizens on this! their sacred holiday.

» . The Woodmen of the World, a non-denominational frateii, « benefit society, is pleased to haVc many hundreds' of Jewish me. < ' and boys in its membership. Their fellow Woodmen extcn ;. cordial "Happy New Year" greetings to them as ihey celebia1 Rosh Hashonah.

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Personal Greetings for Rosh Hashondh MB. and MRS. MAX ARBITMAN and family extend to all friends and r el a t i v c s their heartiest wishes for a Happy'«nd Prosperous New Year. —o—

B MR. and MBS. M. A. BERCOVICI extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. ' —o— BETH EL SISTERHOOD wishes all its members and friend* a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year. —o-~ BETH I S R A E L .SISTERHOOD wishes ail its members and friends a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous Now- Year. —o— Best wishes for a! happy and prosperous New Year from the mem• bers of BKTII ISRAEL SYNAGOGUE Y0I.T1I ORGANIZATION. —<> THE BIKUR CH0L1M SOCIETY wishes ail its members and friends a Happy, Healthy, and Prosperous New Year. —o— MR. and MIIS. ELI BITTNER and family wish all their relatives and friends n Happy and Prosperous New Year. ME. and MIUS. SAM BLOOM and family take this means of expressing their best wishes for the New Year to their friend* and relatives. MB, and MBS. FRANK BLOCK extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. B*XAI ABRAHAM LODGE extend their greetings and good wishes 1o all its members and friends for a luppy Neu. Year. —o— B*NAI B'BITTI X KB It A S K A LODGE XO. 141.'! wishes the entire Jewish Community a Healthful and Prosperous New Year. —o— MBS. M. BRODKEY extends New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and r e l a t i v e s for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. —o— SIR. and MBS. A. II. BRODKET and family extend their groet. ings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

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JRABBI nnd MRS. S I D N E Y BROOKS, daughter, MIRAM, and son, JOEL, extend their greeting and best wishes to the Community for Happiness and Health in the coming year.

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MB. and MRS. R E U B E N II. BROWN e x t e n d New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

MB. and MBS. DAVID CHATMAX wish their friends and relatives both far and near a Happy New Year. —o — SIR. and SIRS SAM M. < LAYMAN wish their friends and relatives both far and near a Happy New Year —oSAM and LOTTIK C'OLICK extend New Year Greetings .'iml good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, anil Prosperity. —o— MR. and MRS. II. COOFERMAN extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. 'MR. and MRS. PHILIP CRANDE1X, take this means of expressing their be** wishes for the New Year to their friends and relatives. MB. and MBS. MAX CBOUNSE extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends find relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

D BABBl and MRS. RALPn DEKOVEX and family extend best P , Wow Year wishes to Beth El Synagogue staff and members and to the Community.

MR. and MBS. IKVUTU B. EPSTEIN and their daughters, LESUE ANNE and. CYNTHIA wish all their friends and relatives a very Happy and Prosperous New Year, MR. and MRS. SAM EPSTEIN and LESLIE and BOBBY, 8432 Hickory Street, take this means of expressing their best wishes for the New Year to their friends, and relative!. To one and all the members of EPSTEIN MORGAN POST No. 260, J E W I S H W*.R VETERANS, extend a most sincere wish that the New Year 5718 be a Healthy, Happy, Prosperous and above all a PEACEFUL YEAR.

DR. and MRS. A. D. FAIER and ions. MATTHEW YALE and JEROME MKLVIN wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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H IIADASSAII, WISHES YOU . . . a good year of health and happiness for yourself and family. TOGETHER. THROUGH HA' DABSAH, May we continue to receive the blessings that came to those who seek after knowledge, protect our precious freedown and serve our people and the land of Israel. MR. DAVE IIAHN, and mother, MRS. HARRY HAHN extend New Year greetings' and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, H a p p in ess,,and Prosperity. —o— MRS. BEN HANDLER wishes her friends and relatives everywhere a very Happy New Year.

MR. and MRS. SAM FAIER and family extend their greetings and, good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

MR. and MRS. JOE U0RN8TEIN and family wUh their friends and neighbors both far and near a Happy.New "Year.

FABBAND LABOR Z I O N I S T ORDER, BRANCH M, POALKZION, hopes the New Year will bring peace to Israel and to the ' whole world.

MR. and MRS. KKVA HORNSTEIN and Family wish their friends and relatives both far and near a very healthy and happy New Year.

MR. and MBS. JACOB FELDMAN extend New Year greeting and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. Bost wishes for Prosperity in the New Year to all officers and members of the Adas YcshurehIVnai Jacob Synagogue, the Jewish Welfare Federation, and all our friends in the Jewish community. RABBI and MRS. N. FELDMAN. —o— MB. and MRS. MORRIS FIRESTONE wishes all their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MBS. I S A D O R E FORBES extend their greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity.' MB. and MRS. ALBERT FOX extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives' for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. MR. and MBS. OSCAR FOX extend their greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MRS. ROSE FREIDEX extends her best to all ncr relatives and friends for a Happy arid Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. ABRAHAM B. GENDLEIl and FAMILY extot) New Year Greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity. -- o- MR. and .MRS. ALFRED GLASS and family, wifch all their friends and relatives a very happy New Year. A Happy New Year to .ill their family and friends. FROM THE GOODBIXDERS. DIt, iinil MRS. ABE GREENBEBG extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity.1. MR. anil MRS. BARTON GREEKBERG and daughter, BETH wish their friends and relatives a Happy nnd Prosperous New Year. -, —o MR. WILLIAM <.BODINSKY wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. RABBI and MRS. BENJAMIN OROXER and Family extend New Year greetings for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity to all.

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MRS. M. GROSSMAN and Family extfnd New Year greetings «nd good wisher to friend* and relatives tor Health, Happiness, and Prosperity, MR. awl MRS. H. UC8S and family extend their greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives tor Health, Happiness and Prosperity, t

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DR. and MRS. HERMAN M. JAHR and children, wish their friends and relatives a very Happy and Prosperous New Year. i

Best wishes for a Happy New Year to all our friends. TUB JEWISH PRESS.

K KAD1MAH CHAPTER of Pioneer Women extend their best wishes for the New Year to all members and friends. ;

| MB. and MRS. GEORGE KAP* LAN wish their friends and relatives both far and near a HappyNew Year. MR. and Mrs^ SAMUEL KAPLAN. Marshal and Marljm and Mrs. Ida Kaplan, 5431 Lafayette offer their best wishes to everyone for a Happy New Year. MB. and MBS. Joseph KIRSHENBAUH extend their greetings! and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health Happiness and Prosperity. MB. a n / M R S . SAM KLAVEB and son, LINCOLN, take this means of expressing their best wishes for the New Year to their friends and relatives.

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MRS. LEONARD KLEIN and daughter LESLY, extend New Years greetings and good wishes to Friends and relatives for Health, Happiness nnd Pros-, ncrtiy. --O--

MR. and -MRS. S. ABK KLOI'FER and SOX wish all their relatives and friends a Happy and Pros-perous New Year. — o— Best wishes for a 1 lappy New Year to all friends from .lilt, nnd MRS. M A R T I N KOLM and Sons. —o — DR. anil MRS. IIKXTOX.KL'TLKR nndChlldren, wish thdr friends and relatives a very happy .-ind prosperous New Year. —o— MR. and MRS. SAM M HITLER and Son. I3ennctt and mother, Mrs. Eva Polikov extend New Year greeting ,md rood wMies to friends and rcl/itivcs Ijolh fnr^and near fur Health, ILippincss nnd Prosperity.

-MRS. M. F. LEVENSON and family extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a very Happy New Year.

MR. and MBS. NATtt&tf LEVWSON wish all their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous year. Best wishes for a Happj New Year to all my friends. M B g , 8AUL LEVY. MR. and MRS. HAJIBY LEWIS and sons and MR. M. B. DOLGOFF extend th«lr greeting* and good wishes to their friends and relatives for health, happlr ness 'and prosperity. MRS. SOL LEWIS and family extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. MR. and MRS. HAVL UBOW8KI, JUDY and JEFFEBY, wish their friends and relatives both far and near a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS, STANFORD LIPBEY and daughter JANET, and nnd son DANIEL, with oil their, • relatives and friends a Happy' and Prosperous New Year,

Best wishes for a Happy New Year to all our friend* from MR, and MBS. MAURY SCHWARTZ and family. —o— MR. and MRS. RUBIN (SHAPIRO and family wish nil their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MB. *>d XBS. LOUIS PAFEBNY and family extend their greetings and good wishes to friends ' and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity. Best wishes for a Happy New Year to all friends from MR, and MRS. MORRIS PARILMAN and Family

MRS. TILLE SHERMAN and Sons, ABE SHERMAN stnd IKV1NO B. SHERMAN, 1806 No. 19th Street wish much good Health, Joy and Prosperity for all their friends during the year, 5718.

MR. and MRS. D. PARKER and family wuh their relatives and friends both far and near a Happy « n d P r o s p e r o u s New Year.

MB. and MRS. DAVID SOUKEST nnd children extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

THE PIONEER WOMEN'S ORGANIZATION takes this opportunity of wishing their member* and friends a very happy New Year. •

MIL Mid MRS. J. SLOSBERG, it. extend New Year greetings and gopd wishes to friends and relative* for Health, Happiness., and Prosperity,

MR. and MRS. NATHAN PITLOR and JOEL wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. S T A N L E Y i. SLO8BURG and family extend best wishes for a Happy New ' Year to all our friends.

Wishing our friends and relatives a Happy New Year. May each new one bring added Joys. MB. and MRS. A. rOLIKOV and

. DR. and MRS. A. A. STEINBERG, and d a u g h t e r s , DONNA and SHELLEY, winh their friends and relatives a Happy and Pros* , perous New Year.

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M MIL and MRS. MAX MAOID and sons. DB. B E R N A R D and STANLEY take this means of ' expressing their best wishes for the New Year to their friend* and relatives. MR. and MBS, PHILIP S. MANDEL of Brooklyn wish their friends'and relatives both far and near a Happy New Year. SIR. and MRS. NATHAN MARCUS and sons BUD and 8TJEVE ' extend their greetings and good wishes for the New Year to their friends and relatives, both far and near, DR. and SIRS. MILTON .MARGOLIN. JERRY and INA extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friendi and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity. ' MB. and MRS. BEN MARTIN wish everyone a Happy, Healthy, / and Prosperous New Year. MR,-and MRS. B. M3ROFF extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friend* and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity. • f MIZBACtn W O M E N , Omaha Chapter, wishes it members and friends a Happy, Healthy, and Prosperous New Year. MB. and MRS. BEN frOBRIS wish their friend* and relatives bo(h far and near a Happy New Year,

N MR. and MRS. AL NEPOHNICK, BONNAT DIANE and STEVE. wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous Now Year. Best wishes for a Happy New Year to all our friends from MR. sad MBS. JACK 31. NEWBEBG and FAMILY. MB. and MBS NATHAN NOGG wish their friends nnd relatives both far and near n Happy New Year. —a— MB. nnd MIIS. RALPH NOGG and the girls take this means of expressing their best wishes to friends and relatives for n Happy New Year. —o— The National Women's Committee of BIIANDKIS UNIVERSITY, take this opportunity to wish our nieinbern and friends 'T.o Shonah Tovah", a happy New Year, and .ill things good for the coming year.

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OMAHA SECTION. NATIONAL COUNCIL OI1 .II.MIMI WOMEN, extend to you and your dear ones sincere ROIKJ wishes for n Healthy and Prosperous New Year. MB. nnd MRS HYMAX OSOFF extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friend* and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

SHU and MRS. BENNETT RADUZINER wish all their friends and relative* n Happy and Prosperous New Year.

DR. and MRS. MAURICE STEINBERG, Tom and 3. P., wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. NATHAN RESNICK extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends, and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

MR. and MRS. NATHAN STEIN-• BERG extend best wishes to all > their friends and relative* for a Happy and Healthy New Year.

MR. and MRS. JOE M. RICE extend their best withes to their friends and relatives for n Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR, and MKS. S. S. STEINBERO extend New Year greeting* and Kood wishes to friend* and relative* for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

M a u d MRS. S. A. RICE and family extend New Year greetings and good wishes to friends) and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

DR. SAMUEL Z. STERN his friends and relatives a Happy New Year.

MR. and MRS. DAVID "SONNY" RICHARDS and children, SANDRA, CORY, and SCOTT; extend their best wishes for the . New Year to their friends and relatives, both far and near.

M a and MRS. I. 8TISS, Theresa and Sol. take this means of ex* pressing their best wishes for the New Year to their friends, and relatives.

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, TEMPLE ISRAEL SISTERHOOD WISHES all its members and friends n Healthy, Happy and Prosperous New Year.,

MR. and MBS. If. RICHARDS extend New Years Greetings and . good wishes lo friend* and relai live* for Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

M a and MRS. HARRY TRUSTUT . and family extend th«ir good wishes and greetings for the New Year to their friends and relatives.

MB. and MRS. AARON RIPS and son, SHELDON, take this means of expressing their best wlihcs for the New Year to their friends and relatives. MB. and MRS. JOHN ROBINSON, or Norfolk, extend New. Year greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness, and Prosperity.

M a and MRS. ABE VENOEB i n d - daughters, NANCY and ESID wish all their r e l a t i v e s and . friends a very Happy New Year. M a and MRS. MOE TONOEB and son Jerry, "extend their' greetings and good wishes to) friends and relatives for Health. Happiness and Prosperity for the New Year.

MR. and MRS. Ben L. ROSEN, and son, PAUL *nd BILLY, extend their greetings and good wishes to friends and relatives for Health, Happiness and Prosperity. DR. and MRS. SIDNEY L. RUBIN and daughters, HHELLI aad ROBIN, wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. PAUL VERET and children, BARRY, LINDA, and JUDITH, 120 South 51st Avenue, extend 16 their friends sincere wishes for a Happy New Ycnr-

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DR. and MRS. A. S. RUBNITZ extend New Year 'greetings to ' friends and relatives.'

MR. and MRS. OSCAR WALDVOGEL wish nil their relatives and friends n Happy nnd Prosperous New Year. —o— • MR. anil MRS. ISADORA II. WEINEB and FAMILY *ish much good health, Joy and Prosperity for nil their friends and relatives during the New Year, 5718. ' —o— MR. and MRS. JAKE WINK wish till their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

T MR. and MRS. MAX SACKS and sons, A. George and A. Michael wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MB. and MRS. PAUL HACKS wish their friends and relatives both far nnd near a Happy Prosperous New Year. — o— To our relatives nnd friend.';, please accept our wiih Mncore for a happy and prosperous New Year. MR. nnd MBS. LEON HCIIMIDMAX and JO ANN nnd LINDA GAY. o MR. and MRS IlKlt.NAItl) II. SCHWARTZ rxlc-nd New Year greetings and good wishes to friends find relatives for Health, Happiness, nnd Prosperity. - o— DR. anil MKS. M A U R I V, K Ft. SCHWARTZ nnd son wish nil their rrlatiioi and frundi n Happy and P r o s p e r o u s New Year.

WORKMEN'S CIRCLE LADIES A U X I L I A R Y wish n. very Healthy and Happy New Year lo all the Members. Mrs. h. Whltkln, President; Mrs. S. Hinder, Secretory; Mrs. 'Sam Schwartz, -Treasurer; Mrs. 11. ftiiderman, Hospitality chairman.

MB. and MRS, ALLen ZAI.KIN anil FAMILY extend their grcctand good wishes to their friends and relatives both far nnd near for « Happy nnd Prosperous New Year.

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New Year's Edlfion—THE JEWISH PRESS—Rosh Hashonah B7I8—Friday, September 20, I9S7

lational Council of [Jewish Women FrrsMent—Mra. I. M. Hor-

<'li.Liriilun—Muriun I t u n d a r i n . Vin- ( h a i r m a u — S c l A*.ii. Iti'i iinlinjj S c < r i t . . r > — Mrh. I I .

C'buirmitn—Uuyd Hank. Dave nicich*T Adolf Mayi-r Mrs. Maurice Frank Mra. J'uul Grossman Mrs, Sol Kriwrlman .Millaril Ilos^nberi,

W'a)» »nil Means Vlce-Pres. —Mm. Stanley Ucrzoff. Social Wflfare Vltv-Pres.— Sirs. Itobert Ixvlnr. Kduratjon Vice I'rrs.—-Mni. John Soljinon. Public Kclntlunri Vlre I'r'S.— Mr.. Harry llujklit. Mi-mfofntlilp Viio I'rra.—Mnt.

ommittee are: A BIG Day, house ond annual Chanukab Festival OB house solicitation, and the sec-December 15.

Farband Labor Zionist

Temple Israel Religious School Committee

Best Wishes for a Happy New Year

I'oalii /.ion SHrrlarj—h.irn IIIfKln. Hosj)itallrr—.1. l"f l4itn.ni.

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Treasurer—l^ouis I'rl< <lnuii Vafional I lint! ( h.iirmjin—fl. Ivlaiman. A, < n r r f i i p ondln

JtilitiH Cohn

Claude Constable

Millard 8pelcr h.ere(arj-J. Dr. J. K. <ioldncr r ' • »iil Hoiti'n. The J'\i rl),i nil L. /.,im.> lA'sllv, Davis itrnmlillK Scrrt-tary — .Mrs. group reports tlirtt Iton Zcff .\ Miry l'rriim-U-r. partinpntrd in nil ,'irtivitifs m, l.loyd Friedman L irrrxpnlKllilif Sern'lary — t to Jewish hff, lncluflinj^ 4829 Dodge RE Thr 'JVmple Israel school comliltmi 1-clir. ji)h lit the Philanthrop i.iittcc Is charged with the respon;.:r!;;rt Si'irrtarj—Mrs. A. V. Dnvo. Our Uond drive chainnn. sibility of conferring with the was Ham Icifkm. William Ciroduisky Rabbi and the Director of Kduca*i'ii:;uiurrr — Mr*. N o r m a n 'Jlie organuation coopeniU'c Mrs. .1. M. Hurwlch Mrs. Nnrmxn I'ltlor tion in fill matters of policy afI ' t in. with the Yiddish Cultural Com Duia Br« nlarics—Mrs. llarl a sewing group which meets at fecting the Temple Jsniel Religiouj mittct' of the Center .with J. Had W.isii, Mrs. Yule ICI< liurds. ' the Dr. Sher Home for the Aged. nnd Hebrew School. inowski us chairman of this com Parliamentarian — Mrs. Har- Another "White Elephant" sale mittee. We celebrated the Puri: The committee acts a.s liaison Chairman—William GrtxJInold Karber. was held, and with the proceeds between the religious school staff affair and this was dedicated ' sky. President—Mr*. Norman PltAildllur—Mrs. Harry W'rln- the Golden Agers presented a sil- and the Temple Board of Trustees, the National Fund. The group Is GnnJian Chairman—Robert ver serving tray to the JCC. These making recommendations on mat lor. member of Zionist Council < ^ First Vint - President — Mrs. which Marion Bondarin is chair Felnberp. Dlreetorfr—Mrs. Homer I'ar- arc only a few of the activities ters of administration in conjuncSpecter S a l « C h a i r m a n •>ber, Mrs. Allicrl (iai'r, M M . Kd- of the'Golden Agcrs. man. Zarband cooperates with the tion with parent representatives Harry Lewi*. Second Vlce-Prrsldent—Mrs. Yiddish Scientific Institute known Samuel Wolf. ' nard I^vin.son, Mrs . .Sidney Our annual parties were given for each separate class. The com Women's Division Cbstrman '.•• Sclmartr.. _, as the YIVO and the Congress for at the Veterans Hospital and atmitteo sponsors Parenl-Teachcr Ernest Hothstor. Recording Secretary —• M r s . Yiddish Culture. Hoard ArrafiK''ni<"ntH Chair- the Dr. Sherllomc for the Aged. consultations, programs and an Mra. Mike Freeman. ~.~." Every rrremW of_ our organization man—Mrn. Kam Zacharla. The Service to Foreign Born Com- annual Faculty Recognition Serv Sun Shyken. The Zarband contributes an rionarary Women's Dlvtalon Corresponding SecreUrJe* — nually to the Heart Fund, Com. E\-Offlc-io—Mrs. Lloyd Fried- mittee helped '• several refugee i c e . : • . • . ; • ' ••. • • ; . - . ••.. • Chairman—Mn. J. H. Knlakotjoins in expressing fhe wfsh' for a tin. Mandel Simon w d MM, X man. . families, including two Hungarian munlty Chest, the NatlonalJewisr sky. J. Kraft. • > ; . . - - V : » • • • • - -'- • • Hospital in Denver. I ' contributed Tlic Nation.-il Council ofiJewish families, get. settled in Omaha. : Happy New Yew. May it be a year Sponsor Oo-Chalrmen—Mr*. three synagogues. Mrs. Rita GilTreararer—Mrs. Ilarold Bu* to the Labor Committee of Israel Women, organized in 1893, is an Living quarters were found, a furMorris Gronunaji, M n . Bennaa organization which ,in the spirit niture bank started, and suitable bert spoke at Temple Israel, Mrs. for HistadiMth. • bright with happiness and joy, lor. goo. ' of Judaism, Is dedicated to fur; clothing collected and dispensed Stanley Herzoff at Beth-El and r Throughout the year, the Beth Social Cultural meetings are Bondarin. CouncU Bhi«s Otaainnan— thering human welfare in the to thesefamilies, : ; • ; ' : • M r a . J u l i u s K a t z m a n a t B e t h I s - Israel P.TVA,. concentrates it» ef- held monthly at the J.C.C., and ;••.". .': •;••• ••' ' " •-'• . •;. forts towards the. Interests of the the attendance Jewish and general communities, Campshlps were : given to Newr a e l . i average, 60 to 75. Mrs. Ben Oershtm. both here nnd abroad We are Americans for summer day camp, Monthly programs covered a children' df thfe Beth Israel Schdol Executive Board: Mrs. J. FeldChen Chairman . Mi*. Nathan wide variety of subjects. In Sepproud that Council's past has been and Camp JCC, and bur annual system; Various social _ gaUiertags man. Sarah Okun, Mr. Karl Rosen the story of pioneering tfchleve- scholarship to the Camp Fire tember Professor Wm. T. Utley arc held, during tho year, of Which berg, Max Relsbaum, and Hermat The 1956 Israel Bond Campaign * • • ment. It la primarily a story Of Girl's Camp,Harriet Harding. • of Omaha University discussed the 'proceeds are presented to theilUrmitz., was the most successful in OmaOmaha's new City Charter. In Synagogue yoUth 'commission, the Women in the vanguard 6- social ha's history. Under the guidance Council's newest undertaking, progress—of women who, recog- Inaugurated just a year ago, theNovember a panel discussion cov- school library and the Talmud of Chairman Joe Rico and Mrs. nizing their responsibilities, took Home for the Aged Project, has red "From Here to Maturity.' Torah Building Fund, .-::'' J. H. Kulakofsky, Mrs. Samuel advantage of their opportunities had a very, successful year. Sev- Participating were Dr. Thaddlus The Beth Israel P.T^. portld Wolf and Mrs. Isidore Levlnson, to courageously forge a dynamic eral pieces of furniture have been T. Krush, Dr. noderlck B. Peck, pation is not limited just: to fiover $175,000 in Bonds were told program of education and service. recovered, and a card table and and David Orkow. nancial projects, but efforts are , Buenos Aires (WNS) — Moses to over 400 people. , As we reflect on the history of Chair set was purchased. A large In January "Arc Our Children Leavitt, executive vice-president of Council since Its founding, wo procollection of beautiful Jewish pic- Over Indulged" was the topic of made to promote between parents, the Joint Distribution Committee a The 1957 Campaign opened witii Fashion Show featuring Marstruck by thq fact that the con-tures were framed: to. be hung in Dr. Philip Starr's informal di teachers and students the dose now touring South America, decerns of the past have persisted he new wing of the Home'. The cusslon. In April an open board relationship for which this school clared there that Brazil had ad-ilyn Cantor, daughter of Eddtt Cantor. A dinner honoring Mrs, 1316 JONES S L through the years, although, to recreation program Was well re- meeting featured reports of the system and P.TA. is known. $oclal functions through the mitted some 1,700 Jewish refugees Eleanor Roosevelt will be held on bo sure, the specific problems ceived and has made rapid prog- National Convention in Washingfrom Egypt and that all of them Sunday, November10. ' Other have changed. Our goals remain ress. There are many articles of ton, D. C, glvcnby the delegates! year usually slart With an ice of have made adjustment to their new the same, as we adapt new pro*handwork made, by the residents Installation of officers, and artcream sbcjal a t , t h e Opening ._ surroundings as excellent adminis- events scheduled by the Bond -grams to meet :ih«f needs of the of the Home on display In the riginal musical skil) "Solid Gold classes In the fall,This js an after- trative and white collar workers. changing scene, : . lounge qf the Home, Wonderland" was presented in noon event which attracts chlldreh He made the disclosure at a as Well as adults., A« winter ap" In carrying out oi/r local proPublic It proaches, the adults join In a fes-press conference where he said gram of service, social nctlon; and One of the outstanding pro* tive "potatq lotka" porty foMowed that there were now some 6,000 education, we shall place our ef- Each year we publish a Year grams of the year was Council's Egyptian Jewish r e f u g e e s in forts where the needs are greatest Book which is sent to all mem-presentation of "My Fair'Lady." by the Chamikah holiday. During France, where they are allowed to and where the possibilities for ef- bers. This book, besides being a This was given as an evening per- Chamikah, the P.T.A. hoHt one work. Apropos the Jewish situafective notion seem reasonably as- roster of all members, contains formkricc, with a coffee hour fol of the Synagogue's largest gather- tion in Poland, he said that some ings at the annual family: Chanu_! I, Our present and continuing all chairmen and vice chairmen, kah 'Dinner.- This is the tim« when 25,000 Polish Jews had emigrate concerns reflect this philosophy. our by-laws, and a list bit nil •".• : Membership • ' • ' • • ' ; . .'.'. the entire Beth Israel family sits to Israel under the new regime cheduled meetings. Every month but that Polish Jews who were re Ways and Means i bulletin Was sent to every mem- The Omaha Section of Council together and lights the traditional * To carry out nny program an. ber to keep them Informed of all received a membership award Chanukah candles, And as subse- patriated from the Soviet Unioi organization must raise money, news of the Omahtt Section and certificate for the year 1955-56 at quent religious days are.observed, were not permitted to leave Po and our Wuys and Means depart- our National organization^ Our the National Biennial Convention thl« P.TJV. strives to Attain a t a land. ment had a busy and successful program was nlso covered by ra«held In Washington, D. C. in social level an understanding and year doing just this. dio, TV, and the newspaper pub- March, 1957. Omaha was one ofcloseness of not only the teachers can be described by a popular ad54 out of 245 sections to receive nnd parents' but also of the chilOne of our outstanding special licity. vertising slogan somewhat revised this award. Seventy-five new dren. events was our annual overseas ' Education members were added to our sec- The work of this organization —"Children arc our business—oui luncheon. The proceeds of this only business!" tion for the Council year 1956-57, Under this department are our affair arc used to supplement our r o g rn an m m1 i) ona rg( 1, Ship-A-Hox: program to send study ^ ^groups, p,„,„ d d Philadelphia (JTA)—Doctors lawyers nnd rabbis in thn Phlla dolphin area were urged to helj combat the Philadelphia "blad market" In babies. The appeal wa made by Alfred J. Goldsmith president of the Association fo fill our national quota. QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Jewish Children. A It'uminagn Sale and Hnkr lhath was held March 15th at the "Sale, in addition to nur regular Gift Shop was nart <if fund raising program. There arc many filings under MORE T H A N 60 YEARS I N BUSINESS ways and mcini flint K<> on all durlns the year. Thcso .include our special funds each supporting LAUNDERERS AND DRY CLEANERS a definite project, such as the 231 1 N Sf. •' MA 4750 Mollle "Schlmmel Kund, Golden Age Fund, and Marion Stolcr -Scholarship Fund. Under these we- have furnished parrot the Dr. Philip Sher Homo, supported our very active Golden ARC Club, and given n college scholarship yearly. Each yenr at our May meeting Council Plates arc given to members who have contributed J17.50 or over during the year to our dinner dance nnd funds. Soalal Welfare The ahlp-a-box program was an active one, and during the past year the organization sent 32 OMAHA, NEBRASKA : boxes of clothing, toys and school CADILLAC IN OMAHA supplies to children of Morocco RAPID CITY. SOUTH DAKOTA and Israel. In addition to the overseas luncheon, the Council has a display at every meeting. MANUFACTURERS OF FINE Council Women have been very active in v o l u n t e e r projects throughout th* city, and these include the Omaha Hearing school, well baby clinics, and Children's Memorial Hospital. The group also Distributors of participated in nil Civic drives OMAHA, NEBRASKA under our community co-operaWELDING EQUIPMENT tion program. Plans arc now being J\ mvorite of travelers all over made to do volunteer work in the America! modern Hotel Paxton WELDING SUPPLIES mental health program at the stands In the heart o£ Omaha, th« Nebraska Psychiatric Hospital. crossroads of the nation. Smartly apMACHINE TOOLS Council's Golden Ago project pointed, air conditioned guest rooms feahrcs ha., another highly successful From ture radio and television sets, and the MILL SUPPLIES year. One of the highlights of the fashionable Pax Room U a "must" for year was a bus trip to Lincoln dining and dancing, Visit the beautiANESTHESIA GASES for n tour of t h e Capitol. While ful Mural Lounge for a cocktail, there, fhn Golden Accra met the and try the delicious food of tho OXYGEN THERAPY EQUIPMENT f-mous commentator, H. V. KalTavern Grill and Cotfec Shop. Ride With t'-:ibi>rn. and made him an honIn Omaha . . . choose the Paxton. "•*.•• member of our Golden Age '"'"b. Another highlight was a bus AUTO SEAT COVERS Carry a Unlverial Credit Card . . . It'i ••'i to Kioux City last spring. convenient and iafe. Writs lha National — WAREHOUSES — ' Vn Anorn have Invited the and Hol«l Company, P. O. Box 39, Gakeilon, .Texai. ' MV Citlans to Omaha In OctoAuburn, Nebr. Sidney, Nebr. ' • Cililcn Agcrs also started a CONVERTIBLE TOPS • -lni'iif; group at the JCC and Wahoo, Nebr. Chadron, Nebr.

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WILL KEOOVEBUEO £ ^ OTA) A resoluPhiladelphia, (WNS)—Recovery j <WNS\ the ut the last will and testament of Manor Synagogue, situated- In a tion asklmr'the Rumanian govern, 'lUberca Gratz, • which had been new Cincinnati suburban develop- ment to permit the rmigration s-tolf-n from a collection housed ment, become the first congrega- to Israel of 10.0P0 Jews with pect and possibly spurious. It Jiatloru Abramsou—rrvsident >i I he Philadelphia City Hall, was tion to eh-ail itself *of a prefabri- relatives in Israel was adopted announced. The will wan offered cated house of worship under the the attractive co\er ot a beautiut tt'inaK* meetinK arranged II. (iuns—Vlci' rn'xldriit , TT ful book: but we are dismayed to for talc by a well-known collector * ' 4 Hurry l(lrhlin--Tn-iiMin-r rlnd bIa k in an ad appearing in a Ncw York The High Holy Days each year n Pa««< within, llarr) 'St II-IIIH ru—Si i rntarj There aiu both recognized jn.J| The apprudchiiii; Holiday SI-.Iserve many Jews as a reminder' , A a * e Prepare Gun,eliea for the unrecognised "rcd»onV" why we son is u most effective pcrod in Ili>n I.lmli'ftliuum, Urr. Miroff, in Hspapcr.. Edwin Wolf, II, li-the Union of Orthodox .Tettl.li Jewish IDHtltullon* In Brn/.il and of America. 'thi; United Zionist N e W Yt ar e l e m < d Jews fluck to uur 5>'ndgo ;uw on which lo remind Jewish lurent' brarian of the Philadelphia Library t J. Kuplun, .Ma\rr I'ranU, .Nathun and a symbol: a reminder that as t™,^' , ' we * should ? ! , * at religious" services, the High Holidays.. Sunie of us go of the importance of religious edu- lU-kiili Ii. Company ami historian of PhilaJews they have religious duties p, e paxe also to 1.11 the blank because we have developed the catlon lor their youngsters, A >lni. ICUM' (jiribtuir^ unO lW-it- delphia Jewry, saw the adver?-??_? *y | n b o 1 l h a t t h e y h a v e f u J - pages with meaningful experiences habit of regular attendance at pub- child should be sent to Hebrew jtivrnent, notified the American filled them. It is not even unusual a, ld w l l h endeavors worthy of our lie worship and the holidays could School at the age of seven; a good Jiilnln KlulnniM. to fwd Jew* who consider in all effort*. In a society which pre- not possibly be jn exception. For foundation, at an early age, is the The Oniuliii Wmliiiicn's I>j;m , Philosophical Society of IVnnsytjiama und the will was recovered serfousnesa thtft a few hours -at fabricates homes, pre-cooks and others, the iiigh Holidays are the best mean* of building up a desire Association was founded m 1H1G I by the |K>I1CX\ attendance at Synagogue terrain quick freezes our fruits and veg- exception and, eti d once or twjca a ia the student for further cxlcnon the Holidays are really all that ..tables, and series us instant cof- year, a return to the _ synagogue sion of his studies if. adolescence Judaism requires c.f them re- fce and instant tea. let us not befor a refresher* course lit Jewish and adulthood. tu the members at the end of each ligiously. It Is as though they have beguiled into thinking that food worship experience is felt neces- If a parent seeks to justify ii an annual "conv«™on" «hich for- o u r s u u l s , . a n j * , prt^dige»ted sary. Meetings are held evrry Monneglect or delay irt.enrolling his suffice them for .1 y<Mr for us, or injected Into our stream diy evening at the Jewish ComBut I am convinced that the ma-youngster by saying "He'll be a On the other lurid, IIPOIUM.1 of of consciousness in a single shot jority of our people In the syna- Rabbi a year later , ne Dctrayu a munity Center, at which time the Judaism's practlc.il approach to which sustains us fur a full year gogue on Rosh Hashonah and Voni pathetic ignorance of the day-totuisinrss of tho Association is life and its relatively minor em- In the main, "instant religion" Klppur are but'vagueJy aware of day importance of Jewish learntian.;actcd. Payments and loans, phasls on immortality, Jews ha\c does not exist. If Kosh Hashanah why they are there. I believe that ing. To become an intelligent .we made nt these meeting*. always been ind.ned fo be puz- and Yom Klppur draw us to the we Jews cannot escape the call of Jewish layman requires diligent The Oirmhu Workmen's Loan zled rather than impressed by the Synagogue lei us go there with history or personal memory and application to Uie study or lieAssociation prides itself of makAT THE CENTER sudden comers-ion* ami winnings high hopes and exalted spirts but that when the call U strong brew, of Jewish literature, and of ing loans the same day that the of souls so (jii'ally cherished by with humble souls and hearts; and enough, we cannot fail to heed It. our religion and history. Every note Is submitted. evangelical Christianity. It Is. true,'let us find The religious exper- And so some would say that they day of potential study that Is lost f linadcd thut the Talmud speaks of the ience of the Holy Days a call to worship «. on our High _..„ Holidays , . be_- represents a measure of possibility of winning one's place.a continuous guest, day by day,cause others do, or because their quaey in the ultimate personality in the World to Come In a single |week by week, and year by year. elders want them to, or because development. moment—by some gteat ami over-[for the teaching of Judaism and departed parents or grandpa/ents WV also find it necessary to em. reaching ,ni of repentance and]the uplifting religious experience would have liked-them to, or be- phasize the point that education atonement, by some instantaneous of the Jew. One of-out prayers, cause they would1 pay memorial is not the exclusive domain of the "conversion", by a sudden chang-'read daily at" the morning serv- tribute to the departed or simply school except in a limited and for p ing of one's way of life, isut iuoie.icos. reads "Oh Lord, my God and b Jh mal sense. In actuality, the home because it iis genei ally, Judaism h.is alw ay. pic-(God of my fathers,'-save me this self respect. a matter of Jewish environment of the student Is the biulorn Ahranuum tilled tlv religious way of life to and every day . . ," While I find these reasons sep- laboratory where thb. academic be ;i ilay-tiv-dav. ji-ai-by-jiar i'f-i May thL. New Year bring to ailarately and collectively, immature principles acquired in the class- and incorporated in 1917 for the fort to 1m j.< ni.ii.iy .mil icini- <jf us. to the House of Israel, and and incomplete, I do ncA disparage room are re-lnforowl by dally purpose of serving it's members p.i'.siou ill ly with •,!!,, fdluw to all mankind, the beginnings of them. For out of them can come practice. Sonv paretiU, unfortu- and the community. Since it's inid man .-.nil dc v .Inilj ljif.in- Cud peace and freedom and Jy Joy. more significant Jewish awareness nately, take the attitude that corporation. The Association has It i^ w i n !•']> • 1 I . . l . i i (lienRabbi Myer S. Kripkc, if we wish it so. 1 venture to hope schooling is a substitute for home helped many a business and salforr, th.it « • en •In i i , i i M r d t h i ' Beth El Synagogue. that our Iiigh Holidays will be that training. By registering their aried men to overcome temporary .*iii(lcl<'n s\\ (II in1 i ' Ii » Mi n ' l i •!• kind of a beginning for many of children In Hebrew School, motn- reverses by making available to o*is frrv<jr <>n tli Ill -li H..U l>w. Washingtor. (W N S)—Private us. My fondest wish tor the Newers and fathers occasionally feel them loans at nominal cost. O n t h e oil' bird it ,-, natural con'nbutions made by America for our community would be that they arc completely relieved During it's existence the Assoof any further responsibility. What psvcholopcilh .mi] r u n drsir-,to Israel since the end of the i they seem to rorget is that the ciation has loaned out over one ablr: on the othrr hanil, it is MIS- total some $700,000,000, stirred at this season by the mem school can help the child only by million dollars to the members. ories o( our People and our faml supplying with intellectual Many a .business man today Ucs in 'terms of answering the be-tools; to behim wielded with proficien- points out with pride to the start hest of God and the need for per-cy, supervision encourage- he got through the Omaha Worksonal spiritual cxpression'may also ment at home arcand Indispensable. men's Loan Association. Qnd the deeper and more signifi41«Se.lSMiSf. cant paths through Jewish life. Let A youngster can be taught at Funds with which loans arc us not lust go through the motions school how to read Hebrew, but made represent the accumulated of grayer as did our fathers. But fluency can be achieved only by savings of our members. Loans The Prietmen Fcmiry by joining together enters the Year 5718 offering over • beWlet us imd increased loyalty to theregular and dilgcnt practice of hisare available in sums up to 3.000 needs and hopes of the Jewish Peo- newly acquired skill at home nnd dollars at S per cent to responsible century of combined printing, advertising, «*d marketing experience. ple becoming a part of our lives as at Synagogue. A boy or girl will members. For every share of it was a part of the lives of ourlearn about Sabbath and Holiday slock that a member owns he is ancestors. And! when w e reflect observance in school, but only par- entitled to borrow a certain upon our own personal destiny and ents, through their encouragement, amount of money; All loans arc beseech God for life and health in can ultimately solidify the teach- secunnl by notes which require Gains won the coming year, may we at the ings OC of the uie school. senooi. .uainj won at a icosigners. same time resolve to make Jewish- «>e desk must be consolidated in Anyone desiring to become a James L. LTpsey Millard H. Rosenberg member can .'secure an application ly conceived ethical HWni; and thethe home. card and turn It in to the secreRabbi Benjamin Groner. unyielding defense of the ways of tary or any other member of the Beth Israel Synagogue. Justice and Peace the passion ot Association. If the application is our personal dally Ji/e as we beaccepted the new member may lieve it to have been the goal of the buy his shares. For those who arc lives of our forbcarcri. whom wo unable to pay for their shares in say we revere. full a plan has been designed Personally, I care not what call brings us together in our places of New York (WNS)—A member whereby shares may be purchased CSTAOUDHCD I M O prayer on the Holy Days. I am pro-of a famous Israeli family will on the installment plan. 1105 South 24«i St. foundry grateful that we still hear star in an A r m s t r o n g Circle The Association is governed by that Call. And I pray that w e may Theater dramatization of the Dead board of 11 Directors, elected find m answering it a real sense Sea Scrolls, Wednesday night, annually, who with the exception JENNTE PKIESMAN, i t . EJtNeST PMEStMN. T«i*-Pni. t JUSTIN NIESMAN. Take this opporitinTfy lo wish thoir many friends of spiritual achievement that October 2, over the CBS network. of the. secretary serve without and customers a Vory Happy and Prosperous any compensation. All the earncolor our lives lor many years He is Yosef Y/adm, a member ot New Year. ahead with the greatest good of Israel'* Chamber Theater and sonnings, after deduction of nominal life: the doing ot Cod's will and of the late Prof. E.' Sukenik. noted operating expenses, ore distributed visrr OUR BRANCHES AT: archaeologist He will portray his the service of mankind. Habbl Sidney II. Brooks. late father in the hour-long show Central Marker Temple Israel. m a television adaptation of n Brcndcis Persrry Dcpr. book, "The M e a n i n g of the Jerusalem (WNS)—Amoftg the Scrolls," written by his soldierHinky Dinky S'.-orci immigrants who entered Israel archaeologist brother, Vigal Yadln, last month there were approxi former Israeli Army Chief of matcly 200 doctors Staff.

' Messages

BethEl

Temple Israel

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Omaha Workman's Loan Association

(FAMOUS

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Beth Israel

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A Very Happy New Year to You and Yours

Li

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JUSTIN PRIESMAN ANNOUNCES THE APPOINTMENT OlF. ERNEST PRIESMAN : AS SALES-MANAGER OF

OMAHA UNO-SLUG PRINTING CO.

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Universal Advertising Agency

Ortman's

GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY MEW YEAR

Son to Portray Father in TV Role

Happy New Year to Our Friends-and Customers Both Old and New ' •

The Priesman. Family

Delight the family with zesty NOODLES ROMANOFF tonight

To Our Many Friends and Patrons FROM

H. Z. VENDING & SALES CO. 1205

DOUGLAS

MR. AND MRS. HYMIE ZORINSKY AND FAMILY

Greetings less than 13<} a main dish when made with

SKINNER EGG NOODtES

from

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Noodles Romanoff—crisp green salad— rye bread. It's a tempting m e a l . . . extra fiood when the noodles arc Skinner Pure Egg Noodles. Fresh frozen egg yolks give Skinner Noodles that delicious homemade flavor. Look for Skinner Pure Egg Noodles at your grocers.'

for all kinds of sandwiches... . . . Peter. Pan Fresh Bread is first choice! Daisy-fresh .... fine-lfjilurwl... wit ha tender, golden-brown <;runt! Un delicate, wIiMty flnvor is BO good it makes everything served wilh it taste tetter than everl So no mntter what kind of sandwiches ore on the menu . . . make

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Now Ywr'f Edifon—THE JEWISH PRESS—Roih H«ihcm«h 5711—Friday, Sepfqnbor 20, 1957

agogue Presidents

Zionist organization can help stem ulate Israel'* leglmate aspirations the tide of anti-Israel propaganda with force and effectiveness." he n the American scene and artic-

Zionist District Of Omaha

HAPPY NEW YEAR

P r r t i d r n t \hr II Grndlrr. \ U r-pr* -»ld< nt, Jos* ph flurns(< In I ><< n liirj-(r<>isur, r, II .1 r r >

from

/ . ' i l l i - l ll UK I (,f t Jill <!, 'diii ,11/ tin- i n i t \r ir (untinjirj it ,npp.)i( of ihi Zioi.nt "irnitli C 111] 'irjli Oilmll.l /Killlit ( u' .ai'l iui}h a n i i i t i w p r( u i J» / . ] Ji P h i l u i t h n » j m , ( ' i m p

PETER TRAYEL BUREAU 2002 No. 16th St.

Anywhere — Everywhere in Travel

Ml HoiniUin . i t t i m i l il i i m i , 1 M U i . K < , i o n i l ( ,i

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Hurry JluISof/, |ire:;!,lenl. I1'./Kjilph XuRg, vlrp-prrHltirnt. Dr. A. <1, Itlmnierniun, rlcopr< slileitt. Dr. MorrU M a r g o l i n , honorary vlre-prcsldcnt. Saul (iratez, secretary. Nathan Turner, treasurer. Executive Board) Norman l>att. Fred II r o d k it y, Hum Epstein, Dr. A. C. Fetlmiin, Morrl* Frllnuh, y«le (lotodiner, KImer d r o n , Joseph Ifornsteln, Irvln Irftvin, Stanford Upwy, Ernest Nofir, E u g e n e Rich, IxwnanJ Segal, Earl Slrfaf, Brnest Wlntroub, Morl<>7 Zlpur•ky, Mrs. A. V. Fellmim, Mr*. Joseph flow, Mm. M. H. Brodkey.

Miuirire Kntzmac :

Maurice lintiman, prcKldcnt. D M donlman, vir<vprritldrnl. Menry Apprl, jwcrctiiry. Izadore Kli'Mttr, treasurer. Ham llahn, financial wcretarj. Benjamin tironer. Rabbi EU Kagsn, Cantor

President—A. II. Brodkcy. View-President — Harold V. Farter. Hecrctary—Uoyd Bank, Treasurer—Lazar Kaplan.

Israel Men's Club

Milton ( .Kkui .uirl Iljju.in O'Off in AU^UKI. were I'lpi^jinled memJ of the Onidii i Zioniit Cciuudi ipjiiPiPntin;; the district District nienilicr.ship iliirin;; the year reached the ~'0O mark, Mr. 'Jendlcr reported, tMinim; \ill,u/e in th. N i B ' \ . The district under the leader- village, t-poii'iOicd hy the '/.\oni'> ihlp of Mr. Gendler is partlcipa- Organization of America, train, iins in th« national program of !lie ZOA. This program is aimed young Israelis in modern America at cementing American-Israel re- methods or agriculture. Morlcy Zlpursky lations through an exchange of The ZOA House in Tel Aviv ha: cultural Information and student been described hy Senator Ksle: President—Morley Zlpumkj. fellowships. The program is also Kefauver as a laboratory for the Vice-President — Albert I - designed to alert American public promotion of American Ideals tha Feldman. opinion against anti-Israel propa- is quite unmatched in the h l ganda being spread throughout the of the Near IJjit Secretary—Stan Bllvemuw. nation by the pro-Arab lobby. Mr. Gendler, in his New Yeai Treasurer—Mel Tatleman. 9ther ZOA programs include message, urges the ZOA mem We have approximately eighl meetings a year. At these meet- support o f the Daniel Frfsch ZOA bership and all its friends of Israe Ings we have a speaker of note, house In Tel Aviv, Israel, which is in Omaha t o stay organized an These are dinner meetings. In ad-a cultural center designed to pro-on the alert against the dangeri dltion to this wo have a father mote American-Israeli friendship, facing Israel on the political an and child banquet, which is held and -Kfar Sliver, the agricultural economic front. "Only a stron in January. We also have several dances and also a baseball outing. Last year the group went to Kansas City. We also participate ir the youth activities at the Synagogue aiding them in whatever way we can.

President—M. \Vr Tepper. Vice-Presldents—Harry I * w b , I. J. Kraft and Harold Itubln. Corresponding Secretary—Leo Kraft. Recording 'Secretary—Walter A variety of activities, dmigntd Frank. to encourage fuller participation Treasure! -Norman PlUor. by Beth Israel membership in the Trustees — Barney Drevich, religious, cultural, social and eduDan Gordmaa and Samuel Kapcational program of Doth Israel lan. synagogue, characterized this past In August 1936 the Men's Club, year and made it one of the most under the sponsorship of the Synaactive And successful years in Beth gogue planned and directed the AIR FORCE CAN COMPETE Israel historyTel Aviv (WNS)—The Uracll annual picnic at Elmwood Park, This program was achieved In the fall a series of three a|r force con successfully compete through the combined efforts of with the Ugyptlan and Syrian air dances were held. the Men's Club, the Sisterhood, the The Men's Club annual' New weapons, Commander—Marvin Kaplan. P. T. A. and the staff, all working Senior Vlco Commander—Del- Year's Eve party was a huge sue In close cooperation with the mar Klein. ,,' cess, with u substantial sum turned year were honored, with a dinner, synagogue Board of Commission Junior V i c n (Jomnmnd'cr — over to the Talmud Torah building Rabbi B. Groncr was guest speakers and Its committees, which fund. er of the evening. The newly electcoordinated the many activities Martin fllluuky. Post Surgeon — Or. Milton In May of 1957 the Bar and B«sed officers of the Men's Club "vere held during the year. Margolin. Mitzvah celebrants of the past nstalled at this dinner. •> Religious Inspiration and devotion Judge Advocate—raul Croun»e, was provided through regular FriHcrgcant-nt-Arms — Max Belday night late services during the High Holy Days and all other holy grade. Chaplain—Ape MUler. days and festivals, ns well ns the Historian—Mae Levine, Sunday morning Breakfast mlnAdjutant—Robert Kutlrman. •» yan». Junior Congregation for Qiuutermastcr—Mike Nbker. Beth Israel youth was conducted Tho Epstein Morgan Post No. regularly also. The Beth Israel 260 Jewish War "Veterans carried ' senior choir, and on special occa- out a diversified program thls'past sions, tho junior choir, was an>ear. It purchased a "three minPlease Accept Our Very Good Wish 'integral part of all religious fcer- ute" autoclave and a cyoupctte vices. For a Happy and Healthy New Year compressor for the Children's Under the supervision of the Memorial Hospital, a contribution, synagogue y o u t h commission, we feel will benefit alUhe children cl-:hl youth croups, offering vari- in the Omaha area. \ ous activities for the youngsters, m«'t Ihrr/ugh the year. lU'prciient. Fund raising this year will be in Abe and Jennie Bear .-itivr.1 of these clubs attended the the form of a Veteran's Day dance 25th and "U" South Omaha annual National Council o[ S>na- In November. Funds will be used to continue vital work at the Vetgogiie Youth convention in Mincr.m'K Hospitals In Omaha'and In neapolis, Minn,, in December IWofi Kducatlon of lleth Isr;ii'l child- Lincoln; and costs of medication of ren was accomplished in the Tal-.i needy T.I?, out-patient. JewKh War Veteran's Sabbath mud Torah mid .Sunday srheoK and both divisions h:id peak fiiroll- Services were held at Beth lil, Temple Israel and Beth Israel ments throughout the year. Stir this past year, and curriculums wero designed to g arc being- made to continue the youngsters n wrll-ioimc i this practice. schedule'of fundamentals, historj The post, this yeur, sponsored and background and traditions, al of which an: necessary p.irts of one night a month at the Omaha n Jewish education today. In ndd Municipal Stadium for V. A. paHSon to classes for children, an tients during- the baicball season. extensive program of courses for Memorial Services ,thL< year adults was offered by the Institute were held at the graveside of Dave of Adult Education, classes being Becker. The Post was honored by representatives from the D. A, V, held weekly. and the V. F. W, The Epstein A major part of the social and Morgan Post sent representatives cultural program of the synagogue to the V, T. W. and the D. A. V. w a s sponsored under the direction and. the American; Legion Post at o* tiie Men's Club, the Sisterhood their respective Memorial Services. and P. T. A., nnd these affairs planned t o coincide with tho many J. W. V., as i t has in tho post, festivals and holidays during the joined in the solidtaUon and colyear, were responsible for creating lection ot Philanthropies funds this a great deal of activity among the year as a further service to the Jewish community. synagogue membership. brtranet M w c t n Dodgt and Capitol Av«. This year the American ConferThe eyes of the nation were focused on Beth Israel synagogue ence to Combat Communism held on tho night of March .T when their annual meeting In Omaha, former President Ifary S. Truman ad the Department Commander was present toreccivo Beth Israel's for Nebraska-Iowa was singled out Fifth Annual Citation for being to represent our National Comnn "outstanding humanitarian, mander at this conference. distinguished statesman, and pat The Epstein-Morgan Po*t has Jnron of the State of Israel." Mr. tlated this year a Youth Talent Truman's address, which touched Program to help combat juvenile various aspects of the Israel sit' delinquency, and also provide enuatlon wan reprinted In leading tertainment at various hospitals newspapers In the country and mid institutions in the Omaha area. Jewish WAT Veterans stand alreceived the attention of many prominent commentators and news ways ready t ° preserve peace and analysts. This Citation Dinner hud defend the rights of all mankind. ono of tho largest attendances In The Epstein-Morgon Post No. the history of Beth Israel. 200, Jewish War Veterans, extends — PRESCRIPTIONS — New Year's greetings and pledges Members of the Board of to serveIhe \cternn and the comDodge at 50th St. ' Phone GL 8900 Commissioners for the coming year are:Mr£. Henry Appoi, Max munity of Omaha as It has for Arbllman, Sam Bloom, .Ilyman these many yeir.s. Fercr, Mrs. Alfred Frank, Alfred Frank, Mr,1. T>. \V. Frank, Sam Freed. Mrs. Max Fromliin, Mr«. Sidney Goldberg. Arthur Gould. .pToriimn Hnhn, Ernest Ifochster. Maurice lUitdmnn, Mrs. Sum Kntzman. Morris Kiltlor, Morris Lewy. Nathan I.evlnsnn, IInrry Lewis, William Mildrr. Dr. Hnskr-11 Mo-i-ls. Mm, Norman Pitlor. M. M. Ptdlnkoff. flyroii Rnznlrlc, Ccorc" Sr-'-"plro. Mrs. Samuel Shyken, Mr-, Hurry Sldmati, Harry Slref, Mulvin Tapper, I. M. Wriner, William Weiner, Bernard White. ir--\)M ZMInsky, Sam Zwrlbuck. Pant Presidents: Joseph I.. Dlcnstfrcy, Max Kromkln, Dr. A. 3 STOPES GrcenberK. Harry Sldman.

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B'nai B'rith Nebraska Lodge

BBOWM U N l V t K S I T V ' " * ' / , J w u » a l e m ; 'lW188j~3fc'<Mf in t e n u r e s will fisV tSwi* I r o n t M Cincinnati »JTA)—DocomenU i,TiO * < K > « " a d r h ' and > a i - . , . ^ West G e r m a n , Republic' t o enable establishing t h a t Jewish m e r - capacity tnui fawn nUned by J h u l them t o g«t o n t h e i r feet £ c h a n t s in Colonial N e w E n g l a n d —• * '~l d u-erc instrumental in Ihe fu"d-| Ing of Rliodo Island College, forerunner of Urown Vnivcrsily, have President—AUn H. M i r b . Tlrft M.e-I-re»ldeot—William -I been acqulrW by the American t for thc dty of Omaha, 'Jewish Archives. Dr. Jacob R Stone. i L'lliot Brown and \lvm Abram-i Marctu, its director, announced ChainiMn—I.. Witkin > Second Vlcc-1'rci.lilent—Saru this week. son again were co-chairman of I^Vine. tne 1 Treasurer—Max t rounv . Fraldent—(irrald Bernstein. i Service Fund Drive Thougn Thc college, Baptut in&tilutlon -AI iloffmaji. Se<rrtarj—M. I'. <>»odnian. Vice President*—KUIot Hrcmn, ! t h c Quota V a s not met. the lode rrrnldrnt—Ruben Ltppett. (fuarantced freedom of religion to t r f Wllli* Epstein. Harry Alloj. jeontributed a major sh-ire of their Kci'orthnu .Sccrflar> — AI its students and ut one point even First Vlor-I*re*ident> — L o u Th.s rf[»uri will C u i - - l \j . >c.troffered to appoint a Jevvfsh teachRecording hecn-tarj, Dave portion. C'anur. ly actiVUn-a .>r th,> \V. C. f.uiijlj Eire, | Highlighting theSoci.il OilendnFinancial Secretary — l'nll er if there were enough Jevviih Swund Vire-rrrsiil»nt—Lou I This cueni»>iU. ,;ruup K iiudi- up studvnU .it the college.,It further Corresponding .Secretar), Jmk Ivvaji the annual spring d.mre, held Jess. ' of WorkiT»"n , c'ircli brjncne-, J7J, Kutlrr. offered to allow the J e n s to Cohen. jrft the Birchwood Club in April i Warden—Jue. Kpstetn. Thini Vlrc-rn-.lilcnt—Millard ' ^ 1 M 1 ' IJ "<h^ , l i e . i k l l l > ; establish n th.ilr of Hebrew to be Financial H«-rrtarj, Jmcpl The lodge stag held in Janiian. M.trgnlin. , Unncii i Wur Lircie Chaplain—Marvin Kaplan. Steel Files — Desks — Chairs — Safes occupied by a Jew. Mayer. iwaj the best attended uffjir c.f matiL- flub, ihe, Trustees—Abe ' Hear, David I lU-ccirtlin,-" )«ecreUirj — S a r a Lathi > Auxih irv Treasurer, Alvin thramvm. 'the >eai. Lsrjel Laiununicatioiis t;> I !>->U In. nicUher, Max Sacks, Harold 2550 Farnam duardlan, Marty ( ult< n. | Willie L p i l e i n i .> i • i p hip I «nd the Jewish radio tclceraphy aro maintained Segal, Sol Martin. Tri usurer—Nathan Turner. Wardrn. Hv ( oniU.ir ,(.11 urmun cjinid a Njli'ni.i] ( ,>| LOIKJ" C O HI niltby radio telephone Chaplain, Dr. II.ilpli Turlic-I. jt ficate of .Ment for M -ninj o>f i , Itn.in, Lil >,(.( r<'tar> — .11. F. 'J'liu p.t-t jeni has seen tin' TniHtren, Miltor ( df kin, War 'JO new nuvnbers ff>r ('urn)iu'-l^ r hasan. jI A l l till* ,ir-t stiady j,rrr»wth of l l v Her Frohniun, J» ro.d Kotrit. ( It » j , the pliM-uir cjf i ornities ami f u n d s ] Warden—Sidney Tarrn. I The pist >L ir ^ m ( Tiihii-k'i hn--k<-i I.<H!K>- ID art .r> lioM fui raised for cant> (inardIan—Julius Mchrlebrr. !inc|r" thr* f'll^t'r -ii cf it:, ithe Sprin ; S. W. RP'IXIKII D'nai were under the ( haplaln—Sam I'olL-vrk. Prr-sidr-nt, I)r l{,il|ih T u i k i l p.11- I l r l l h O m r l n s c llonnrary Trustee — Dr. Abe s p o n s orship of tlripati in lur.il .ind n it'oi.ul I! n j t A m o ; v ; o t h e r actnitiOa u h i r h ; the Mid - W e » JTrith work t>oi" tl.c n ever 1«'- n u d e t h e p j s t j e a r o n e of senTrustees—F. Ralph NOBS, Earl District Commit tore. |ico was participation in the Jewish! Slegel, Edward A. Kovi, Har- tee. The Workmen's L. W l Uli. In thf fir Id of AmencaniMii, 1: philanthropies c a m p a i g n , R«lj rj-Colirk and Marvin TrelJer. Qrcle Dramatic Robert Newman and Ins commit-,Cross, Polio Dnvc, Blood Donors| BBKAD BREAKERS top ably and njaessfullv co-oper- and ADI... Club had their annual Jewish Chairman—^Sidney Tarrn. Vint Chairmen — Sol UttmaJi at the Community Center and celebrated their 25th anniversary durand Mlllard Margolin. B'nai B'rith, the oldest and larg- ing the year. The Ladies Auxiliary est. Jewish Service Organization in had thrir annual card party at tho the WoHd, is a thoroughly reprc- Labor Lyceum. The Jewish Labor Committee FOR A had their annual membership drive dinner at the Labor Lyceum. Thc (whole group had their annual ba>?aar at the Labor Lyceum All funds raised through all the activities were distributed to chantTo Our Many Friends able Institutions in the United States and in Israel. Thc total FROM Alan n . M M I U amount of money given for chanty was over 52,500 of which $1,000 l o d c c o f u-riUj w | l n t h c was used for thp adoption of three support und cfHjperatkin of its ! Jew ish orphan children in Israel. members participating actively in I The officers of the folli/wing or- many programs. ganizations: Aware of. Its responsibilities to Workmen's Circle Branchy 173 the community, it participated in Saul Ash, Secretary. behalf of thc UJA, local drives, Workmen's Circle Branch, 2 5 8 - lied Cross, Donor Program, VetMorris Goodman, Secretary. ran* Hokpltak, , lied Feather Workmen's Circle Branch, 46-1 - agencies and other: 5922 Military WA5611 Nebraska lodge has continued rSol Mann, Secretarj. Workmen's Circle DramaUcOub support of il^ youth organizations j Mrs, M. Nearenberg, Secrctar> (and encouraged the lattcr's pro| Workmen's Circle Ladies Auxiliary—Mrs. Sam Binder, Secre- Nationwide, the lodge focused tary. its attention on the activities of Jewish Labor Committee-Max thc Anti-Defamation league and the Hlllel foundation. ^ ' Boben Uppett Crounse, chairman. Nebraska lodge has maintained sontaivo group, a cross section of its motto, "Grow with B'nal B'rith *.: .World JewTy, dedicated to benevo. of-each month, from September to ^i the Nebraska lodge" , lence, brotherly love and harmony. May. ' if. 1 This vast organization includes Durine this past year thc lodge Junior High School boy to be sent men, women, boys, and girls of the has presented a well rounded pro- to Cornhu&ker Boyn State at LinJewish faith. gram designed to benefit nnd en-coln. A letter of thanks was re+ B'nai B'rith roots arc deep In rich the National n'nal U'riUi Pro- ceived from the. chairman of the . 'American life. Entablised in 1843,gram and our own local cormnu camping committee of thc Covered .B'nai B'rith has founded such phU- nity. Wagon Council, Boy Scouts of •anlhropic organUatlons the Under the direction of president, America, for thc generous contri* Bellefaire Home tor Maladjusted Sam Poiak, the 1956-57 year, has bution to the Camp-Ship Fund, 'children (formerly the Cleveland been a year of accomplishment. for helping to sendji boy to sum* Orphan Home) in Cleveland, Ohio; The local daily newspaper ac- mrV camp. ; the Leo N. Levi Memorial Hospital corded the lodge''Words ot praise Our aim is to continue to + 'in Hot Springs, Arkansas, dedicat in an editorial, for their recogni- achieve thc goals of our great * >d to the treatment of arthritis tion of outstanding service in corn- order, for we w e fully aware of md kindred diseases; the National munlty and civic affairs, in their thc .service to humanity that B'nai r 4. ewish Hospital in Denver, devot- presentation of the Americanism BIrith performs. xl to the treatment ot tubercu' Citation Plaque presented to V. J. + losls, and many other philanthropic Skutt, president of Mutual of institution*. Omaha. The award It presented Through thc Anti-Defamation annually by the lodge to a man M \ members combat bigotry. of the community, who ban con-id spread inter-faith understand. tributed locally to thc general ad' 13. Through B'nai B'rith Hliicl ot citlanshtp 'jundations and Counselorshlps. ^ ^ c a m m u n ] t y g c r v | ( ; c pTohclii] y, y p encourage students on more han 200 college campuses, Includ- civic affairs and public welfare acng Israel and one In England. Oth- tivities. jr national bodies coordinate patri- > Proceeds of thc Pant Presidents' (3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU . Stag, contributed to the District otic activities. FOI tOUTI SERVICE CALL JA, 0,143 OR Cl UU Henry Mon*ky Lodge, 3M, con-Service Fund — A proportionate ' rs. Meet- share of these proceeds have been Uututes over 1,000 members Wednesday acknowledged through letters reling* are held the last Wee 'calved from thc following agencies: H'nat B'rith Cofiunlltcc for Israel, '.unking the lodge for their tup. >rt of this important activity; ji'iial B'rith Rochester Center; the LM S. Levi Memorial Hospital; Xalionsl Service Committee for the Armed Forces and Veterans, and the National Commission on Citizenship and Civic Affairs; also Bellefaire, in behalf of thc Boys and Girls at this home; thc B'hai D'rith National VouUi Service ApJ peal, which finances the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation^ B. B. Youth Organization*, 8 . B. Vocat'oonal Service Program. Each of thise letters expressed appreciation for our participation In thc Dl.-t.-ict 6 Service Fund.

Men

mzations

B'nai B'rith Comhusker Lodge

Monsky

Best Wishes for a HAPPY NEW YEAR • • •

Workmen's Circle

Lodge

All Makes Typewriter Co.

SEASONS GREETINGS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS

BEST WISHES

HAPPY NEW YEAR

.

A VERY HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR

HARRY ROCHMAN

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The lodge joined with the Jewish ''Community Center and the other Omaha B'nai B'rith Lodges nnd Chapters in bringing a scries of'five unusual Jewish cultural| programs to Omaha. This series of programs included Lw> W. Schwartz, a u t h o r and speaker; Otto N a t h a n , internationally known economist: Bill .Johnson. Bass Bariton; Tnidc-\Vris<i-P.ob-| marin, author, lecturer find cdl-: tor; and Irving Davidson, lecture^ and humorist ot Jewish wit. | Omaha was honoroil to •.cri' -L'( host to over 800 li'nu H'nlh bowlers to 111? Nation il }i n.11 B'rith Howling Tourn-'t'iT-nt hcldi in Omaha. Members of our )ixh;ir participated in making this yn! outstandinR toui-n^imcnt. I Two lodge officers, \ico-prcs-, Idcnts R u b e n Lippotl nnd ls>u Canar, accepted the responsibility of serving ,'i.i co-chairmen of thr General Men's Division of the ]ft."i7 Philanthronies drive and with thr' volunteer workers from the loOcej spearheaded a successful campaign. I The Brea'Ibroakers," composed j of a group of active members of 1 Henry Monsky Lcxigr, met every 1 Wednesday noon, primarily to have lunch, occasionally rnjoy an irjterestlns speaker, spend an hour] In lively discussion of B'rul I! nth and encourage g o o d frllw^liip among their brethren. Locally, members of our lodge participated in the B'nai B'rilh 'riood bank day; in the cancer '"ivc, sponsored by thc American dancer Society; contributed to the Anu

iican Legion, In sponsorine a

Again we at M e f i want to wish you the greatest happiness at this season. • May the year 5718 bring you prosperity and blessings abundance.

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[SECTION •

N»w Y«<r'i Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—RoibJiiliiPn»h $718—Friday, September 20, 1957

P*9« TMrfewt

Bureau of Education; Dr. Daniel! Communist Party In Moscow Miller, Camp Jay-C-C; Louis Can-! Vienna (WNS) rhe Union of urging restoration of publication ar, Community Center; Arthur A.! Soviet Writers was reported to of Jewish books and of JcwiiJi (Continued from Page 1 ) Eisenstatt, David Forler, Dr. Abe Cohn. Dr. P h i l i p Sher Jewish have submitted a memorandum to cultural institutions in th« Soviet, according to a Moscow report C. Fellman, Mrs. Mike Ki-eeinan,l I l o m c i L o u i s K a t z ' * a m ' ! y S e " " Dan Gordinan, William Ur.jdin.sky ! i c c : W i l l i a m Gy, Grodmsky, i r e e the Central Committee ot the reaching here. 1 1 lie, educational and church groups; Goldstein, JewS. Elmer Gross, Paul Grossman.I -"'" : Arthur II, makes contacts with Senators and Ruben I.ippctt, iJr. Morris Mai-go- '• h Phil'inlropios. F. Ralph Nogg. Congressmen, the President of the lin, Calvin M. Nnvman F. R a l p h ! J t ' w i s n ' ' l o K s ; P a u l Shyken, JewLf. S., the State Department anfi Prrsidr.nl; Warne.r I'Vohnuin. NogR, Morton A. Ilii.-liurds, Mayor i h l ) Youth Counnil President; and the United Nations. -Special nolo i.-, lOxrcutive Vli'ii-r r e s i d e n t : John KoKcnblall, Hairy Sidman M l ! '- Henry A. Newman, president made of Israeli holidays, and .speJoseph KoKlinik, Dr. M a u r i c r " r l h f ' J'>der.-ition of Jewish Wornrwld'nt — Fred Brodkry, cial programs are .spawned in the .Steinberg, and 1 Mr::. .Samuel N. ™' s Clubs. Robert II. Kooper is VJco I'rrhldent: Ajim Karbor. i(ZOA) . orimnmity. Book;,. ;,nrj Jiterahuv Wolf. iOx-olTieio members arc chairman of the Budget CommitSicretiir.v: Moyil IVicilrnan. I VIrt-preiildent — Mr». Marion ol all sorts petrl-nnin- to I-r.ivl Trrjisurer: J.ediiar<l Ktilaliof- Rabbi Kidney H. Jlrooks, Rabb tie; I-co Kisenstalt,, Community fllond&rln, (Pioncrr Women) and the Middle I'.'ii-.| an- pr< M-nl -li.v. chairman; Harry SidNalhan Fr-ldniun. Jtabbi Benja- S t a l l s Treasurer — tor. HornUeln, ot the puhlii: library, lo univer-.it Tin1 .Men's Club of Temple Israel min Groner, Rabbi Myer K. Krip- man. rhMirman of the Committee libraries and lo hi;;h schools, Secretary—Mrs. C'harlm (inr- j Is a service organization for the kc, Mrs, Henry A. Newman, and on Federation Properties; Harry operation i-. c\!enne<j lo and Federation .Past Presidents: Sam IS. Cohen, chairman of i-/O£al Comill. <Hndw.Rali) : Ti;mple and its uffiliatc|. 10:05 P.M. mittee; and David Ferer, Pledge To interpret Israel's neols imd] The purpose of the club Is to Beber, Hyinun Ferer, .Morris E Redemption chairman. lion for Jewish .Scr\-iee e-ipeei Jacobs, J. Harry Kulakofsky, Milto the American people Monday through Friday in the field of Krael-U. S. rela act os a service organization for ton Livingston, Jack W. Marer Paul Vcr'et, Executive Director bn<! lo Impress u|Hjn thnn the lioiK. Joiiu nM'etings ha\'e beer the congregation and to sponsor and Joe M. Rice. of the Federation, has continue! Prepared by mid strategic necessity for held by the OZC and the Federu Inter-faith and cultural programs Department chairmen arc; Mil-to serve the community, working nj; Israel's survival is the Nebraslta'j Largest TV lion, resulting in action vis:a-vi: for I ts members. with a staff including David Or ton R. Abrahams,'ADL Advisory Special responsibility of the AmerThis past year the Temple our State Department and its Mid kow, superintendent of the D Newi Department— ican Zionist Council. The AZC Is Men's Club tponsored a Falhcr- Committee; Dr. Morris Margolin, Sher Home; Saul Silverman, di die East policy. In national body consisting of rcp"Jrahdfather-Ch11 d r c n ' s supper Reported by Floyd Kalber We have attempted, but to dat rector of Center Activities; Jamc: i of all nntiumil Zionist without success, to organize i with prograrn and entertainment. and convenience for the parents. lfarbatsch, Director of Health an. lorsanlzatlons in the U. S. It is the branch of the Stud»n£ Zionist Or- During Brotherhood Week the The Temple. Men's Club has un- Physical Education; Sherman Pos iclearine house through uliich th<ganization on the campus of Oma. Men's CIubi*>as host at an Oneg dertaken to supply trained ushers ka, youth Director; Joseph Micek ' Fred Brodkey j constituent member on-ani/atiom ha Unlviersltyi and also withou Shabbat and reception following at all the services and special Swimming Director; S o 1 o m o f f ordlnatc their common rndr.iv-i brought .ilwut Israel's wilhdra Goldfarb, Director of F a m 11 n applicant* p p * for f r ia a special service at which Rabbi events. success to find < In the fields of XloniM cduca fiom the Giua Strip and the Ana summer Ulpan held In the Eai Steven 8. Schwarzschiid was guest The first general meeting of the Service; Mrs. Frances Klein, cd speaker. Members of the congre- Men's Club will take place Wed- tor of the Jewish Press; Mis' | \ jn, Information, public .mil com region placed a moral reaponslbl during the summefr months where g gation had invited 'friends and nesday, September 18 at 8 p. m., j munlty relations Its youth depart- ily for safeguarding Israel's to college ll youth could intensively neighbors to this service as a ges- at the Temple. Programs for the Kalah Franklin, Administrative [ment sponsors the Student Zionist erclgn rights squarely before thi Assistant; Mrs. Sam Colick, Fedftudy Hebrew. I Organization and helps co-ordin- U. S. and the U. N, In the light Work* with Edncatloiu) Group ture , of Inter-faith cooperation. coming year will be discussed and eration Financial .Secretary; Mrs | « t e Zionist activities of the various of the concern of all Americans The OZC through the AZC Following the service, a tour of enlarged. Rosella Smith, Librarian; and othIjouth croups. The AZC maintains with American foreign policy in works ckMely will) the American the Temple was taken and refresh- Committee: Temple Service and er members of the staffs of th,c ibraneh offices m Chicago, San the Middle East, members of Ui Christian Palestine Committee, a ments were served. ^on-Jewish Attendance, Morris Llpp; Inter- various Federation departments. lFranclseo and I>os Angeles, while Zionist movement must assume national educational organization, visitor!, had an opportunity to ask faith, Leonard Kulakofsky; ReIthe national headquarters In New special responsibility for helping WHOLESALE designed to give Americans an un-questions of their hosts and to en- ligious School, Dr. Earl Wlgodsky; The Agudat Israel Workers' Or lYork City. clarify Issues Involved. derstanding of the forces at worjc joy exhibits of Jewish ceremonial Temple Service, Marvin Taxman; ganlzatlon has a membership of I Changr* hi 19S5 in the Middle East, and an oppor- objects prepared especially for Special Events, Dr. Leon Fellman; over 19,000 and Its members are The Omaha Zionist Council is Social Welfare, Willard Friedman Insured with the Hlstradut's Sick • UntU the fall of 1955, the prob- integral part of the American Zlor tunity through fellowship to re- them. Cigars - Cigarettes - Tobacco - Candy K B e m of Israel's relations with its 1st Council and haj as Its con late this Understanding to their The Men's Club has organized Bud Wolf, co-chairman. (Fund. Kupat Holim. •Arab neighbor";, » h o continued to stltuent members Farband, Hadas- own activities and communities. special committee of Us memFountain Supplies and Specialties • • > - Implacably hostile, was looked sah, Kadlmah, Pioneer Women, One of its main activities h to >ers who a,re prepared at all times • s a local or regional difficulty MUracW, Men, Mlsrachl Women, guide tours of solectcd non-Jews ;o welcome visitors to the Temple Bo be dealt with by the United Poale Zlon and the Zionist Organ through the Middle East during ind to deliver short presentations 6perators of Cigarette and Candy Tfafions nut during the fall of zation, Representation in the Cour the summer months, To date the m Judaism and its practice. J955 the situation changed radlcal- cil la based on the'size of ca OZC has not been f o r t u n a t e Under the Chairmanship of Dr. r Vending Machines '.Rusila. which for centuries had member organization. In additii enough to participate In this proj- Earl Wlgodsky, a committe of the lsuceessfully tried to Rain a foot- a number of members at large at ect, but some groundwork has been Men's Club organized new pro 10W In the Middle Knst, began to inylted into the Council to ass; laid which it Is hoped will bear cedures for traffic control before 212T liofd St. " l l / c her ambitions through the in IU program of work. Month! fruit next year. AT 4344 i Hnd, after the Templd Religious ! of Soviet bloc arms to Egypt, meetings are held from Scptembc School sessions. The plan resulted The officers of the OZC elected followed in quick succession through June and Its budget ; In increased safety for the children last June to serve ton 1957.58 arc! k Nrirs of events starting with covered.'by assessment upon tr President, Mr. Fred B r o d k e y Vasscr's nationalization of the constituent organizations, (ZOA)i Vlcc-Presldont. Mrs. Mar-Important fact for us. U M of Various Media. fuel Canal, followed by the Ion Bondarin (Pioneer Women); HOSPE PIANO CO. Interpretation or I«rael Role hlliUry action of Israel, England The' press, the radio and Treasurer Mr. Joe H o r n s t e i n The events of this past year have —* France in October and Novem- films, speakers, especially thos (ZOA); and Secretary, Mm. Chas. conclusively proved that when the 1512 Dodge St. 241S M it,r of 1936. which brought the from Israel or who have visited "larctz (Hudaasah). JA 5588 MA 5338 lusttce of Israel's position Is un Phole Middle , East ' problems Israel, are the media through The tensions in the Middle East derstood, the American people ean » again to the United Nations. which the Council functions; The today wcro ,not created ,by the be relied, upon to support IU posi» assurancesof the V. S. which Council places speakers before civ creation of the State of Israel. Is- tion. Therefore those who believe rael, however, has become a focus In the. existence of the State of Is< of these tensions and th 0 sultant rael must realize that today their dangers, because It has become the Hole of Interpreting Israel's probchief target of varied aggressions. lems and aspirations to the AmcrlThe most dangerous force which a n public and to the American now looms as a threat In the Mid- [ovcrnment, U more urgent than dle East Is international Commu- ver and that they must continue nism. We must keep the American build support,for the Stati of people continually aware that Is- Isarcl. To this purpose the Amerirael stands as a modern self-gov- can Zionist Council and Its conerning sodcly and Wealcrn-orlent- stituent local Councils are Medi•,VA c J a n d antl-Compiunlst-natlon, an ated.

Men *s Organizations

imerican Zionist Council

Federation—5717

Temple Men's Club

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paper drive. ». If I Cultural and human relational!

Organizations

piojects included • movie on PM-II Uiamentary procedure, an ADLjl Speaker and a discussion on racial i discrimination During Brotherhood week in February AZA 1 held1

AZA No. 1

BethElWLU

Aleph Shutare Katonr. Cnd its annual Hi-Y basketball g""" fcgt.-al-arrm). Louis KU-h. file t a m e is played every year tn Aleph Kohen lifxlol (rhapiuin) establish better relations with t'pb Ciodol (prt'bldcntj, Har- Allan Klrgrl. uur non-Jewish friends. uld Kuiniitn. of A Z A The thirty-sec d Previewing the new year WHS Alcpli (virt-prr»ident), N'o. tK*gan with Ihn UMnry-llnrd Ihe Cornbelt Regional Convention, Miltun 'annual "Swcotrirart." Malice. Diheld the last part of December Aleph M a z k i r (wfcrelarv). ane .Singer \\a-- cimwieri AZA 'in Omaha. AZA ami lil'.C chap•Sucr-the.u I" lor tin- ]!K)(i-.~»7 M t i Gerald I'rtmlinan. iters from Kinu\ City, I>es Moines, in NrpH'fnb'W. Muthr) ALi Alcph <il/.l»r (treasurer), AlMuux Falls. Lincoln and Omaha in'Tiil>cr,-hip i n r n . ^ r d len Lp*tt'in. ' parl iripatrd in (he enmcnt.oti, Ali-ph Mnrchs (f>lt-«l[;i-mas- In L'T tii hnirn Al* jih^-In-'l'rain-] jwliieli IIH:1Ii'I.-tl (Mii'ii.-ii-.-, athletics, ^ I lie t"liil V) O U T tiOj I<T»), .Steve Diut>|;urf and Jerry •soejal i-u-nls, luncheons, seminars. •ini'inijer>. iAfter the d:in<e ti)r' : (ioldstruni. •Hireling.-, (mil a banquet held al Aleph S S o p h r r l m (rliaplrr I-'i\e-f>'iild-l- ulJ c u in m i t J e e s of; Beth l-l acl S\nas;.>«u.\ paper editor*), Kriwin .SidniHn inunit>' ()and cultural-human rela-' i In S e p t <• in h o r of !!!.">(> the ;t*(jns K u'rned the chapter's oc-! ; ".School ol AZA" bf;;an n|nTiitinn and Sum Blcieher. j Ali-ph Shotare fcoilnl (1»1 jtivities. I This AZA year witnessed sonw| ngt.-at-iirnM). Howard Martin. »»««-r i^e^feOed'M^r^^ — — of the Chapter's finest . social . i l ,ish ,,.-,, Yinith Council Thank-jjiuri); t h o u g h li.iln.ni; in the ru->lom-< 1 5 cral c h > j'n.n ,ng th*. dffair The pn.srdin ron- "*"" ' " " > | " ? '\ * " . s 1 . m c c , ' i"f M " l h c l (">»'l>ter, thc Alepl.stcd or a conldta Hntten bvr a c k n d c ' a n o^f-n'S 111 K i l i e. a,"-"• Iln-Ti.uning were Rraduated from

rmidesU-JIHUB Lewta. GUM.

Secretory—Carolyn

Corresponding Secretary'— Mike Kate Treasurer—-Aral* Weintroilb. F)r>t 8 r t - » t - A r m . — Sheila Novak, Second Sft.-at'Ann*— Htleae FrankUa. During the past sea-son, BI-1X' 0 . S. y, has been sponsored and| aJuied by the Beth K] Si-.tpihuod and "Synagogue Surf, Mrs. S. Smrider, Mrs. N, Turner, and Mr. and Mrs. S. Crundrll ha%c served t I In the capacity of sponsor and! nabbl R: DeKovcn, Rabbi M.I F * 1 Bl^n\ e e%KoTmmi*nt^lll^ve^".^'AKrlpkc, M. Panlman, and P. P^ai?-| » Pr^'<-ction( Alcph. of Mother Chnpler com.j,he .. S ( . h ,^ „, Xzh'. into the rodsky as advisors. Oftiecrs for the! rael's quest to live. Afterward*, the stag, anniversary party, swtnvjpHed o icr one hundred man-hours club as members. Justin Lewis past season wore Bcrnic DeKmvnj campers demonstrated new Israeli ming party, rushing affairs andjof service to Ihe Community. They limning parties dominated thi>.j — president, Justin Lewis and w;is held in ElmM-uod park fol- «ong< and "horas" learned at canip! stags following mass attendance offered their sen ices to thc Doug- summer's scenr. EscnU Included Ann Weinlivub vjce-pre.-idenl.v lowed by ;i biisebjll same and par- o members and "rushces.11 This at synagogue* culminated the las County Blood Rank, Omaha u Omaha Cardinal Baseball gamc.j social year. Thc highlight of and a bowling parly for Arnie Wcinlr.nib ;ind d .\nn .\nn Wein-! Wein! !y y at at Carolyn ynKdgan g g home. home. There here as followed by social dancing and Mother Chapter'* social year is Jewish Community Center, ft'nal »thestag freshmen and their parents. troub — secretaries Mike K i i t z - || a .skit written by Sheila S N No\ak w«i refreshments climaxed by the sing- the annual "Sweetheart" Dance B'rith Regional A.D.L. offices, and thc March of Dimes Cam* One of the most important trc-asurcr. ;i"d EobKellinan and 'presented followed by .social danc- Ing of "Had Hayom." paign. In addition to these purely eients in the Mother Chapter AZA Vet, there are many other facets in thc fall. Barbara Urccnbcrg scrgoantt-at- ins and refreshments. The event 'ended with everyone in a circle o V. S. Y. Since It is part of an Although Mother Chapter didn't service ctcrils AZA No. 1 con.tr!-, No. 1 .year is thc annual Parents' arms. international o r g a n I z a I ion. its surpass the athletic achievements buted to thc national BBYO Serv- Day Weekend In May. Thc outR Thc chjl) practices a three f•"> 1 • 1 doing a h"hora" and then "Rad ice projects with money raised by standing part of the weekend In; and full program rcll-ion.-,,' cul-', Hayom." The "Patio Party" was memben enjoy the benefit* of con- of pre» Ions years, the club »UII (he Founder's Banquet, which wa<; : lural, and social. The main ohjec- the club's first "m.->h" c^ent of theventlonj, conclaves, and summer made a fine showing. Thc group a city wide paper drive in October. held at thc Blackatone Hotel this] season. It conMictrd of a buffet- camp. This year the regional con- tinlnhed thin) in tha Youth Coun- Mother Chapter received national year. of the organization cil's basketball tournament, and recognition for their work on the rich the lives <>( ii., mrinl> is -tyle dinner at thc home of Its vention will be held at St. Louis, many I n d i v i d u a l Alephs won through tho stuily and ;*r>E>licatj jnl nowly - elected pre-.ident, J u s t i n Mo., during Thanksgiving vacation. awards and honors In track) ban-; After dinner a skit written A bis delegation from Omaha is! of Conservative Judaism. JH-LU U . j l ^ S. Y. mecu its objective l>y h,i\-jl>y .Sheila Novak was presented expected by the region. Theria-ketball and baseball during the, 1 ing religious services and cultural and a que-ition-jntwer season eir tlonal convention will be held at regional convention*. The chap-1 discussions, filnts, etc., at its a l \ <»<-d. The incoming fueshmen asked Chicago during winter vacation. A ter also flnlnhed third In Youth fairs. It also encourages study al quorttions while a panel of experLi conclave Is to be held in Omaha Council baseball. The sporta zenith the Beth El High School of Jewish eon-siating of Ju-itm Lewis, Jim this spring between Lincoln and of the year wan reached when Study. Last .season was hijjhlighted Guss. and Carolyn Kagan provided Sioux City club members Summer Mother Chapter's team retained by a successful "Shaljbit ' held at answers. Afterwaidi, two college Camp was held from June 2<-July the Cornbelt regional Softball the Iicth K| Synagogue. Friday alumni-Sheldon Rips and Jc"lTy 14 at Webster, WIs. Herzl Camp championship for the second connight and Saturday morning .-.crv-1 Zcigler discussed why every BethSite. Only members of the club'««>tl 4 e year at the summer conice* were conducted by the mem- E| youth of high '.chool age should are eligible to attend these tunc-\^ntlm in1 Sioux City, Other bcrs. Refreshments were served in| belong to BI-LU V. S. Y. Foll«w- lonj. athletic events included bowling, .-• the social hall fulU/wing the s e n - i n g their discussion refreshment! At present the club is conduct- wrestling, badminton and volleyices. | « i r e .served and the event ended Ing a big membership drive Loul* ball comictltlan both In Ihr BI-LU IT. ?. Y. meets on the ^ last! with the traditional singing |gg of Rich-GL 3160, and Sheila Nm«k|Vouth# Council ^nd AZA regional GL 2836, 2836 membership bh co-chairhi and district levels. Sunday of thc month for a short i"Rnd Hayom." T h c "Home Camp- —GL * — Select Fashions — men, urge all interested h i g h Members ,of Mother Chapter executive and busincs participated in the Omaha Jewfollowed by pnx;ram. secoml "rush" event, took place "at school youth to contact them. y a planned p p ; h Beth B h El. El Th The meetings always begin and; the The e v e n t was «vi with a prayer. Past programs! planned by the entire club—parhave consisted of Israeli films, paneli ticularly the three members who discussions, ami talk* by famous received scholarships from the SisTo Our Many Friends personalities, [terhood to attend U. S. Y. camp—. Since the chrb h ; « ' a ttiree fold;Bernie DeKoven Justin Lewis, and To Our Many Friends and Patrons and full program, it. offers its] Loui;; Rich. The membership com A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR members a great dis'ersily of mil tee co-chairmaned by Louii wholesome Jewish activitios^ .Nut Rich and Sheila Novak and con' only are there religions and cul-|si.stins of Marty Sneider, Arnic tural discussions, but also there) Weintnxib, Ann Weintroub, and arc social parties. A few of it.s|Heicne Franklin, und thc socia most successful fetes of the pas! c.xnmittec chairtnnned by Ann season have been its "Spring P i c ! Weintroub and coniislms of Bon. nic," "Patio Party," and "Home- nit Freshman, Bob Fellman ant 1819 JA 5244 Camp Night." The "Spring Picnic"iSheiia Novak also assisted in plan.

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Ntw Vssr'i Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Rdifr Haitienah S718—Friday, 5tj>tambar 20,

Federation of Women's Clubs

Mm. II

• r

that approximately 800 woman contributed $1,082.00 for I his fund. The money collected by Ihr nrerilcWork guild is usod for linen :.upulies fur Ihf I">r. I'hili.. Slur Home for Aj-:Pfl.

Flint Vlce-f>r»l<K>nl—Mm. Mike J-'rrrman. Lloyd FrlsdniMn. .Secretary — Mr*. Hurry MH- | man. l'arllmi'nt.&rt.tn — Mr«, Arthur II. (inlitftlrln, ( i

l i v e i i i t h r isrcri-tuM h a l a h IVanUlln

rHO<illAMMIN(i: Till-, is a new .minitlTO uniler'thi- chairmanship f)f Mrs. /'ml! Vcrrl, wlio.,e task I was lo arran;;c to have sevrral different organization., prc'-ml a projects

Mist,

irii'T t , , I K , i l i u n i , f l h , I , illi i l o n - . o ' l i u , h W . M i r n •, C l u l i n i ' i I I I ) -. t . i l i n I h ep . | i | » , ( aii'l rums of t h ' t i i e " | n e 1 ' \ p I-roup T h i s hiinij'lit ,'ilioui ,r l i d I n llllfl'Ts l a n d l l l f ; of f . i r h o l l u r s u o l k

O « i ) i n i l l e , > i n i ,11,1 n l o r I ' n , - , M a i r : B o n d s o f 1 ' i a H Mr- .1 H irry K u l a k c i f ' k > , iculii luliLm,, 1 M r s . .lnKf- W i n e Cn.idiiii' Mi-| iiviiinl M(Kf,ilal, Mi-. N,ni,irr f Cli' Pinaii an«l M i s L l i ^ d Kri/-d, nr-in; CIMI ill fi'n < Mrs Abe '. Bi'iir: c o m m u n i t y ( a l c u r l . i r , M i ' M m l o n I t i c Ii ,i r i K C'omnitinit !

i

its chairmen. Therefore, the K e d - 4 eration of Jewish Women's Clubs progress and accomplishments were achieved because of the complete sincerity ami responsibility • if our chairman. Also my thanks Hi Ihe affiliated organizations who make up our Federation Women. It is their community cooperation I hat marie he success of all these

1*57

SECTION I

Program Chairman—Mrs Harry D. Marks. Table S e t t i n g - Mrs. Abe Krantz. Holiday Teas—Mrs. Phil Snuth ami Mrs. Bernard Schiqn, The past year has lx>en a suci:e.-i,-.fur one for the Bikur Cholim Society'<iu<_' to ihc efforts and coopcrutiun of it.s officers, chairmen Ihr'ir cijminitfi'e.-;, and Ilv im-mlxT.am! friend-- of Bikur Cholirn.

Omaha Chapter Mizrachi Women

possible."

Bikur Cholim Society

I'ri'kld, II|—Mrs

P I I B l l t J I T V i Mrs. Millon Abrahnms, chairman, was n l i , I'rewldcnt—Mm. Juke Wine. ifly and willinc lo publicize any Klml VlcoPrcfildrnt — Mrs. thine our chairmen H.skcd / Chest-Iled C*n*>s Mrs Morn Hurry 8ldman, NKKVICKS TO TIIK AKMK Levey mid Mr1- Max I." Cohen Second Vice-President — Mrs. I'OKCES: Chalrmnn, Mrs. Mo. 'Myer Linda. Goodwill Industries, Mrs Moc Vcngcr and co-chairman Mm. Sai Linsnian, hisliman. Mis. Mriuricf Third Vlce-iTre«Went — Mrs. S Steinberg, reported that durim j Ncu-nian; hospitality, Mis Ilobcrl Harry Llppett. I II. Kooprr, Infantile Paralysis, Harry Schulman, chairman, re- Ihc past year Rosh Ha.shona Trca»or»r—Mrs, Chan. Boos. Mrs. Jake Wine Mis. Harry Schulman; Jewish poru the following was done for Erecting cards were sent to all oi , FloancUl Secretory — M r s . Il.ime for A|;ed, Mrs Sidney Gold the March or pimcs drive: pre- our Omaha boys in service. Han Wm. Kpsteln. proceeds were used to puy up ii beri; and Mrs Julius Katzman pared the envelopes for the .school nukah Rifts were also sent to the Kecording Menrefory — Mrs. full the cost of the installation ol National Confeiencc of Christians collection and delivered and picked boys, y , and for r Passover, ove greetin g Jack Kalman. the elevdtor at the Home for the d were mailed i l d to the Golden cards & Jews AiiMllary, <'rs. Jock them up; s titled boys Corresponding S e c r e t »ry— Aged. Brnmson, Nebraska Tuberculosis Gloves boxing matches and the stationed in the States and a ffood ti Ah Innovation'this year wsc thi Assoclatlim, Mrs. Louis Katz; Nee- boothes In the downtown stores; package and greeting sent \o the Mr». Lonis Siporln. dlework Guild, Mrs. Dave Cohn; helped with the Mothers' Polio boys overseas. A large package The Bikur Cholim Society of Picnic Supjfcr held during thi month of May on the grounds ol Shot« for the Mothers' March: and of requested Items, a Scrve-a- Omaha, organized by a small group proRnimmlnK. Mm. Paul Vcretj had t telephone commlttw Mrv, camp project sponsored by thr of women over thirty years ago to the Home for the Aged. It proved j publicity. Mrs. Milton R. AbraNational Jewish Welfare Board, help the ok),' the side, and the to be a huge' success.financially. 1 hams; services to Armed forces, . J E W I S H HOMtf r<>B THE was shipped to a Jewish chaplain needy of our community has eon- Plans a n being formulated to in Japan to be distributed to serv- tlnued its program o( helping the s p o n s o r another supper next Mr«. Joe Freemun and Mrs. SamAdKUt Mrs. Sidney Goldberg and icemen m Isolated spots in Jspan less fortunate. Many are the proj- spring. Mm. Julius Katzman, ao-chalr• S. Steinberg: telephone, Mrs. Motects undertaken by this dedicated Bikur 1 Cholim celebrates th b for Hannukah, ' ton Hlller, and Veterans Hospital, mefi, arranged for parties at the bjrtbdiy, of the fonts at the Home Home on all special holidays by an TELEPHONE! Mrs. Morton Hil- group of ladies. ' Ufa. Milton Margolin. Periodic vislU to the hospitals with a quarterly party honoring all affiliated organization each time. ler, chairman, faithfully called the The Federation of Jewish Worn- The folks at the Home look for- membership for reservations fo and convalescent homes are made, who have had J. birthday during can's Clutw, composed of rcpre ward to these parties and enjoy each meeting. and when requested, kosher foods that time. Refreshments are served sentatlvcg of sixteen Jewish wom- them thoroughly* VETERANS HOSPITALi Mrs. arc provided for Jewish' patients in and entertainment for the after, en's organizations, unites all. of JEWISH PIIILAMTHBOnES: J. MIHon Margolin, chairman, re- the hospitals. Monthly ' visits to noon is provided. the Jewish women of this com Under the leadership of Mrs. Ed- ported that most of the member the State Hospital in Lincoln are Regular meetings are held Hie munity for the activities in which ward E. Brodkey a\xl her co-chair, organizations has sponsored made. Refreshments and gifts arc second Monday of each month at co-operation and Joint effort are men, Mrs. Edwin E. Brodkey and monthly Bingo party at the Hos presented, lo the inmates at each the Jewish Community Center. An required. Listed below arc the 16 Mrs. Mike Freeman and Hit. Her- pital during the year. In addition, visit. annual Suocottt and Furim Tea is organizations, their presidents and man Bondarin as B. & P. chair- some off th The medical held to celebrate these hc*d»ys. worked representatives respectively: Beth man, the women's division alone volunteers serving ht administra- and efiutpment the Dr. An annual gramlmoUier, mother, ' n Synagogue Sisterhood, Mrs. raised to date $74049.55 from tion, recreation, patient visitation, Philip Sher Home for the Aged is and daughter tea is scheduled in - Abe C. Fellman, Mrs. Harry Wig- !,59O contributors, The extreme and occupational therapy depart- paid for by this organization. May. odsky; Beth Israel Synagogue iceds for this year made It neees- ments. Two regular fund raising events Chairmen for the various comSisterhood, Mrs. Sam Katzman, tary to recruit past chairmen to It Is hoped that this report has arc given during the year, one at Mrs. Stanley Shapiro; Bikur Cho- io this Important campaign which presented >he way the Federation Chanukah time and one in June. mittees arc as follows: llm Society, Mrs. Jake W,liw, Mnr. included • special UJA Kmer- of Jewish Women's qubs united Proceeds ot these luncheons are Hospital Visitations-Mm. Pau Louis Slporin; B'nnl B'rith Ne- gency Rescue Fund. It is because all of the Jewish women of the used to support the medical fund Katzman. s becaue braska Chapter No. 346. Mm. Paul gy Jewish Ifome for Aged Birthday community for the activities In of the Bikur Cholim. For the past Sucks, Mrs. Joe Taustcr: B'nal of their deep feeling for the dns- which co-operation and joint ef- four years, special fund raising af- Parties and State Institution VisiB'rith: Mon^ky Chapter No. 470, peratcly needed funds that the forts arc! required,'and in striving airt have been held during Au1- tation—Mrs. Allan Zalkln. Mrs. Max Krlzelmun. Mrs. Charles chairmen accepted the respon- for closer harmony among the af- tust. Proceeds of the first year Ticket Chairman — Mrs. Harry Stern; Epstein-Morgan Post 260 sibility for another time. It was 'Ulatcd-groups, and in streamlin- •vere used to purchase an oxygen Sldman. Ladlm' Auxiliary JWV. Mrs. Del-a tremendous task to set-up the ing all of the community activities :cnt for the Home. The second Gray Ladies Service and Pubmar Klein; Hndassah Chapter of campaign , a well attended, suc- through i:se of past experience. rear, the funds were used to pur- licity—Mrs. Harry D. Marks .. Omaha,.; Mm. Meyer N. Rubin*; cessful meeting at the Beth Israel base air conditioners for t h e ' Flower Chairman—Mrs. William ; Mr«. Hymen Bclmun: HadB.isah SyriaRoguo sparked c a m p a i g n "An organization is only as fame. The proceeds of last year's Epstein. Oiapter of Council Bluffs, Klnn activities. The campaign showed strong as Its membership, and August affair were used for payMonthly Luncheons-Mre PhilAlbert Kr;nno; Ladle* Free Loan the value of their efforts and past hat »he key to the success of ncnt of the elevator. This year's lip H. Batt. Society, Mm. Sr>m Klavcr; Miz- experiences-the hard and often nny venture Is the leadership of December ai)d June Luncheons-*chl Women, Mrs. Irvjnf; Stern. tedious work which made a sue Mrs. Cecil Izenstat. M r s . B m Handler; Nntlonnl Coun- ccssful campaign and the satisHostess Chairmen—Hrs. Harry cil of Jewish Women, Mrs. Joe faction they derived from knmv. Sldman and Mrs. Jak e Goodbindir. Horuieh, Mrs. I^xii.s Sogolow; Ing that they RRVC their very best Membership a n d Reservation National Women'* Committee of to an important and life-saving Calling—Mrs. Paul Katzman Brnndetx University. M n liern- job lurdt L. Wolf, Mrs. Jaeoh KITCHEN) Mre. Jake Wine, Friedman; Pioneer Women No chairman, (supervised and spent Mrs. Sam Novak. Mrs. Harry many tlrinc hours m?clns that Richlin; Pioneer Women, Kndimnh everylhlnR was properly done. Chapter, Mrs. Sam Kpstcin, Mrs NATIONAL CONFKRKNCE OP Richard Spipgnl; Temple Jir.-iel rilRIHTIANR AXD .IKWS: Mrs. . .Sisterhood. M>-;. Kdward Gilbert .lack Bramsijn, ehnirm.in, helped Mrs. Julius N."v-m«n, and Work- plnn the anntml cllyvvldc Brothermen's Circle Auxiliary, Mrs. Snmhood ten held in Ihe spring II. Hinder, Mrs. Yettn Oronsieln NKDRASKA Tt BKKCI1I.O8IS Mrs, Henry A. Newninn, presi- ASSOCIATION: Oinlrmnn, Mrs. dent of the Federation of Jewish Abe C Fellmnn, reported that pur Women's Clubs, makes the fo|. orientation staffod the T BII Jou-inp .comprehensive report for mobile unit once a month. Work-II the pnsl fear, Knowing- Its' ac- •rs were also supplied' to stuff AT 2400 HA W45 complishments nnd Indicating the he envelopes for the T. B. drive.II scope of the activities. NEEDLEWORK 'OUH,Di Mm. I Have Cohn,, chairmnn. renorfcdl| BONDS OK IKRAKI,: Mrs!' J Harry Ktilakofsky, our liajson with the Bond Office, reports that 46!) purchnsers bought $176,100 worth of Bonds In 19.V5 In Omaha. Of thin, the women's division sold 1 $123,000 of Ihc total amount TTtere were If) women sponsors i and 45 men guardian* (purchased $1,000 or more in Bonds). The following women spenrheHrierl the drive: Mrs. Samuel N. Wolf, chairman, Mrs. Islrior «5-ehairman; Mrr(. Nnthan N o c c Sponsor chairman, and Mrs Morris Clro^mnn and Mrs. Her man Rnndnrin, Chen rhnirmen »nd their workers wrt-e reenilted from nur Nariou.s orpTnlzatloTis,

,

Ir-.inu fsli'rii.

.s^c< finil ^ if t'-prt slilr nl—Vir* Third ii<('-|iriM<l<nl — Wrt.

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TreHfitirer—Mrs. S.ini ( olii U. Ki-Mirdmi; M ( rr-l.trirs — Mrsi Urn. Kintiln, Mrs. Iliirrj ly<«ls. .Mcfnhrrhiiip sci r< l.irit s—Mm. llarr\ l'askowit/, Mrs. Ilf-rmiin Frieillanclcr. Corresponding wrretAry—Mr*».

Frunk Seknr. Ml/ra(.'hi Wnnon's OrR,im/,ition if America, the oithodox branch 'f the Zionist Orgdm/atirm, has or its motto, "The Land of Israel, the People of Israel, According o the Torah of. Israel." In Israel the Organization has 60 projects, including orphanages, boarding schools, social centers, and farm schools Members of the. local chapter take part and assist in civic and Jewish communal affairs. The monthly meetings are usually preceded by a dessert luncheon, enabling the members to enjoy a

fleers was held in Hay, They w e n Installed in June, Ihe last meeting of the season. The board members are comprised of the chairmen of the tot' lowing committees: Mrs. J. Goodbiiidcr, Children's Village; Mrs. H. Brandsteller, program; Mrs. M. M. Poliakoff, memlx'r.ship; Mines. M. Arbitman, Ii. Bonn, B. Grossman, A. Lipsman, Sol NOKS, dessert luncheons; wis Gerdick, Iwkc sale; Mrs. Ruth Ackorman. donor iuncheon reservations; Mini's. Bon Eisenfr, lien Handler, Prank Sckar, publKilv, Mi- 1-r.ink Sckar, deeirations; Mi's. Herman Franklin, JiN'P ho\ lollfrlmn^; Mmev Mary k, Id i J]rown, .svnaf;o£ue colli r 1 ion-.. Mr-, Bm Il.mdler, JNK tiers, Mis KI>-( I-'oKel, door a4nissions; Mmos. II. Franklin, Sol Mm. Irving Stern N'OfjR. nimmnRe sale; Mmcs. L, .•KMI hour The thief source of P.iperny, M. Ro-onstcin, members at l.irge, Mmos M Arbitmnn, Wil•i!vcnu<; IK from the donor lunch- liam Epstein, telephone and Mrs. 1 eon held in June. Kleetion of of- Benjamin Groner,. advisor.

SEASON'S GREETINGS frotn -

ENGDAHL TOP & BODY COMPANY. INC. v JOHN S. ENGDAHL. PrmU»«

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CIIII.IIRKN'S HOSr-STAI, BA TAAIt: tinder the chnlrmenship of Mrs. Isadore Chapman and Mm Mrifsl. A. NORC and Iheir cornmil I<T, our women contributed ea',h and merchandise nmountlnB to ifl,5ri7.',o. This was our third year lo have our own booth *nd to remain top booth at the bajaar Tlie bazaar committee commeniled our achievement. The clfywlde chairman for the 1!T>7 Maznar Ls Mrs. Harold P. Knrber. COMMUNITY C A I. K N D A R: With Mrs. Morton Richards nx chairman, efficiency has been nrl.ileved in settling dates. All of the nrcanlzntlons have cooperated, nii'.l there has l»en a minimum of cinfllct. COMMUNITY CIIKST- RKI> >«S CAMrAKiNi Under the e\v rnianshlp of Mrs. Mike Freslier co-chairmen; Mrs. Alfred V ilt. Mrs. Alfred Sophlr and M- . .Nalhnn Turnrr, S2,169.06 raisrd Ihru n corp of volunle-;- women recnilted from the affti' 't"d nrgnni/.'itlnns. <•' O O I) *V I I, I. INIHIHTBIKS: Mr- Jloe. Lliiiman represented Fcdcrnllon of Ihe auxiliary of Ibis project. HHtorl m.STOItlAN: '(Tie clinlrmiin Mrs. Mnurice Newman, has been Kerjilnc nil the .Important events pronerly recorded In Hie )>ook for posterity. HOSPITALITY: Our chairman I Wri flob"rt If KIIO[IPI, in r.in—cill foi all of Ihp lunches for nipctin;'s.l *nd under her dlicrtion the v.in.'1 ous orKHiil/iiilons h'ive bren icrerlerflllon foi J(«isli .S.nirc li.id' ;» icecptiiin frilln»|itK i|., ,innii,,| ii"i-linR Hi «|ilch time Mis Kn,i» ' T ,iir,iii'.'ed Ihr |,. . i.d,!,. •IM-ANTH-K rAltAl.t>,|s. M l , -

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Second Unttmnn. Sr«:rflar\—I-^sly Smith. Treasurer—Beverly !>UM Treasurer — Ba rbara BrrtitL S — Phyllis Kntrman, I>fanc Rejmrtrr—Carolyn l>olj;off. —-Nanry Rrod Ury. C'ounctl Kiiprrsrntati\ r —Marlyi Iw.

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Bwrbara Brodkry nd visited the Nebra:-k rr-n.s' Home. This >e,tr'b many Cfunniuilitv prujrct.s (in lieir oiAn. They made collars for he Cliildri'ns llnspilal Ba/i. ir. orked at the fled Cross Bi Jrfnk. .sent wash-rag dolls to ael. and m u\r nut rup-. for the 'reclic Children's Home. On Kebiu.ii} 10, the I->el> Israeli

daea Contention at Tel Yehudah tillANT MADE M»ry Yager attended Camp Herzl Nc» York <WNS)—Total grants m Webster Wisconsin n e w e r wwwnwn 591100 for Israel <tf»d AmerA 'shipwreck part> , July 1* , , , , .. Je w n our ru«h *ea»on for the '=•"« « ' - h educational inat.tucoming year. It was followed b lions ha\e been made by the a "dune ranch party.on August Kockrfellcr Foundation, The Isr,-; f>si portion of thr £ r ; i n ' ' I£62,000 In September, 'Debka Dobs l>c- went to (h^ Ishnrli Foundation* gan a nev, year with their tea forTrustees in .Jrru.s-ilrni for conin-coming freshmen. linuod r r :c o M r *: h in th^ Vini^ COK.VKHSTO.NK l.AIII l.aboratorv of the Israr'i Minictry Tel Aviv, iJTAi - T h e corner-1 ,, , " . • , stone of the Pinchas (^.ir-old C u l - " r " r : i " h " " ( r i ' n ; - | 1 "' : i '" 1 > M ' •" sponsored by thejvini-.-s by inserts. The second Zionist Onicr »f | I;,i7''-I trt.int -was to the YMAmerica v\as laid al It.i uian.i, YWHA I>o"try Center in Greater 'ar here. . \ r w York Citv.

fine Tamtk CMUMU fcrtnMiitht —Larry Koba. Alteraato Youth Council RepMMWtative—Atria Newter*. *"pr the Rayim Fraternity the year 1936-57 was one of success Youth CotinHI Alternate— and fulfillment B Bt^om. During the past year Rd\im Votlth Ouncit Krjxyrirr— held a p**nny auctio* <*nd carn<\al Marlv* I»nrL. at the Jewish Community Centei Mhich netted $45000. The aflair tonce Croup fKri-formcd for the vat launched M a fund raisin; it—ra Regional Central rropramiilg "estiva! of Nations which welproject. The carnival featured Vic«-I*re»ldnit.—Martin Lipp. Chairman—llarhura nrrcntt. comed Ihc Hungarian refugees to such booths as a rin^; toes t»>th. Sf^rctarj-Treasurer — KobOmaha. This progri.m was tele ADMSKItS a balloon breaking booth, a penny rrt I-'rllman, vised. The group al.so danced at a Mn, P»ul \frft pitching booth, etc. Hadassiih meeting. lirporti-ni — M«rly» l»ick, Chvllls Kuhinow The Fraternity bsd many ar Stanley (irttdfitld. Debka Debt, besan Hi n.nth Debka Dei* annual style »how tivitied in connect,i.n «-irb a, •',' was held May 9 at Brandojs store. point program of religious nil- Thr Jewish Youth Counml spon- year by siwnij their annual tea The proceeds of this event were tural, social, athletic, brother- •i<rnd by tho Federation for Jew-for all in-coming freshmen at the sent as a donation to Hava, the hood and community :-ervicc c m t-h .Services has climaxed another | home of Miss Joan Mayer, In Jany, twenty-right girls ttere for national Young Judaea project. mittces. At each of the meeting.-, year of .success. Several delegates from Debs at' tt prayer was recited after adtended Senior Judaea South-Wrtt journment. Various religious fiisRegional Conclave in Kansas City, the publishing of its roMer, a nraNions were held in connect This year for the first time, with Jewish Holidays and the mechanic:; cl'i.'i*;, a speed reading mother's committee was formed. April 18-21. Barbara Brodkey u-as elected regional treasurer for the three phases of ud-'uMn, Orthoin,^ an introdox, Con::on alivr anri Reformed. fluetton to college, a radio station Three mothers attended each Debcoming year, and Barbara Bermeeting. Their main purpose was Ttayim? cultur.il committee ob- that broadcasted for a month in j to guide the club by giving advice cutt was elected Central Programming Chairman. tained thr sr of many pro- the Jewish Community Center, whenever necessary. Each Deb will always rememfMsional men who discussed their many other activities, The Big SMer program * ber the •lumber party at Camp various professions at their meettroufthout Ihc year many once again very successful. Each Brewjtex and the senior farewell in!^ along with other cultural meetings wore held conee-rninc. events. th» ntshins policy, unaffiliates, iledge selected an upperdastman picnic at Elmwood Park. o be the one from whom «he Highlighting Debs social season The athletic committee piiper- calendar, etc, nficd all of Rayi.m's various ath- A track e\ent was held during could seek help during her first was the winter open vice, "A ear In high school. In February Knight to Remember", at which y Jetic activities. Rayim placed sec-the year alon^ with many other he freshmen gave » party for Steve Silver was eelcled "Knight." ond in Youth Council bowline and sp-.)rts activities. A closed dinner-dance Held at the first in ping pone and badminton. In November tlv Yotjth Cotmcil heir big sisters. During the pant year, the mem-Highland Country Club In May Community service projects held held its annual Thanksgiving D bers of Debka Debs have particiended another successful Deb, during the year included working services at the Beth Kl -Synaat the. blood bank, TI! center1and :or;ue. At the service, the par-pated in many community service year. This summer Barbara Bercutt rntortaining at the llatti' I). icipiili'in of all of the Youth projects. In November two needy 3\funroe Home, an institution for Council Clubs helped to make it amilles receiied Thanksgiving attended Tel Yehudah. the nationdinner*—one from the pledge clan* al Young Judaea senior camp In hindicappod childten. ;i success. Has'im's social calenrlnr indu'i- t.ater on in the year the High and one from the club aj a whole. Barryville. ]*cw York, where she Dobs also sent a monthly quota participated in n. leadership traine^l the "haunted house" patty, School Philanthropies drive was masquerade event nnd a party at held. A total of .^873 was collected <t milk to the Child* Saving In- ing course. August 26, Barbara' titute. planted a garden of tree* Bercult and Barbara Brodkey atHummel park and others. being $12.) short of the anticipatin Israel, sold tag* for the blind. ended the National Senior JuA winter formal in Deeemlier. ed ijoal set prior to the drive.

the annual collci'i-it^ honi^comin™ dince at the Jilnckstone hotel, was highlighted by the n;itnin£ of new officers and the presentation of the "Most Outstanding Senior" trophy to Larry Zachana. The yenr's activities also Included the sixth annual formal al the Highland Country Club, later in the season. On that occasion announcement was made of the following nward-: most outstanding freshman, Ronnie Green: most outstanding sophomore, Ri>ix-rt Fellman and best athlete. Boh Oberman. Kdie Singer was Felected as Rayim's "fifth dre.im ^irl." Master of ceremonies was Robert Joseph and Kucst ."fpe<tker, Rich»rd Fellman.

The Youth Council held a leadrship training course which was ttended by many of the young men and women later rccruiied as Jewish Community Center camp counselors. Throughout the year various speakers spoke before the Youth Council. Among the headliners were Otto Nathan, outstanding oono-jiiSt and finance ad> ;-or to irmcr President Harry S. Truman and Robert Arden. n nr'v; correspondent, who reported happenings in the near and far East. The organization will go forward towards the future with the hope of always continuing to fulfill the purpose for which it was originally established.

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