Jewish Post, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1968 — Page 2

THE JEWISH POST & OPINION

Friday, April 19, 1968

Concertmaster Due On Symphony Seminar

Gregory S. Sacks To Be Bar Mitzvah

Arthur Tabachnick will appear on the Symphony Seminar of the Jewish Community Center, 6701 Hoover Road on Wednesday, April 24 at 8 p.m. Mrs. Dorothy Minyer will be chairman for the evening. Tickets for members are 75 cents and others $1 and will be available at the door. Tabachnick, who is concertmaster of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, will talk on the Hindemith Violin Concerto which he will perform with the orchestra on April 25^26. Arthur Tabachnick displayed an intense interest in playing the violin by the time he was four, and his formal musical training was begun shortly thereafter. In 1935, he won two of the most coveted awards in violin competition, the National High School contest and the famed Interlochen National Music Camp scholarship. He remained in the midwest studying and concertizing until 1939 when he won the Julliard scholarship and became a pupil of Mischa Mischakoff. While continuing his studies in New York, he was a member of the National Symphony Orchestra under Leon Barzin. Upon his return to Chicago, Tabachnick appeared with the Pro-Arte Quartette and the Saidenberg Sinfonietta before

becoming concertmaster of the Illinois Symphony Orchestra which, incidentally, was then under the direction of Izler Solomon. Tabachnick was a staff violinist on WGN Radio and Television, Chicago, for 20 years. He was associate concertmaster of the Chicago Lyric Opera Orchestra and the Grant Park Orchestra and concertmaster of the Chicago Chamber Orchestra and of the Clebanoff Strings. He also founded and performed with the Lyric Trio and Chicago Chamber Guild Quartet before accepting the position of concertmaster of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra effective with the 1966-67 season. Tabachnick received his B.M.E. and his M.M. from Roosevelt University in Chicago where he studied with Morris Gomberg. He has been a member of the music faculty of Northwestern University and is currently on the faculty of the National Music Camp at Interlochen during the summer months and Indiana Central College during the regular school year. Tabachnick’s wife, Shirley Evans Tabachnick, is principal cellist with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.

Troubled Family Discussion Due

Potemkin And The Game On

in Final Film Program

GREuORY

Gregory Steven Sacks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Sacks, 9166 Compton Avenue, will be bar mitzvah at 9 a.m. April 28 at Beth El Zedeck. A reception will follow at the temple. Gregory is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. David Greenberg of Miami Beach, Fla., Mrs. Esther A. Sacks of Long Beach, Calif, and Ed Sacks of Ind i a n a p o 1 i s . Mrs. Jennie Friedman is the great - grandmother. Out of town relatives who plan to attend include Henry, Clara and Larry Green of Baltimore, Md., and Mr. and Mrs. Morris Levine of Kansas City, Mo. Hostesses will be Mrs. Meyer Nahmias, Mrs. Ben Sacks, Mrs. Charles Sachs, Mrs. Harry Sacks, Mrs. Amon Park, Mrs. David Abraham and Mrs. Blanche Krous.

“The Troubled Family ... _ , ,. , ^ These Changing Times” discus- Potemkin and The Game will sion group will continue with Dr. shown on the final program Roger Coulson as the leader at of th ‘ s s e as ° n s ^' , ' lsh II Com - the Jewish Community Center !I lun ‘ ty 67 J 1 Association on Monday, April 22 ^ oad on Tuesday, April 23 at

and 29 from 1-3 p.m. at 6701 8

Hoover Road. A free baby sitter . Pot< ; mk t in * one of the m ° st will be available. important films ever made. Dr. Coulson, Psychological ^ isC [ lst ^j n uses incidents aboard Consultant and Counselor, and ^^ es ^ 11 P .* otemkin during Professor at Butler University t ^ e .uprising in Russia to in special education, will a pPty prophetic theories of discuss parents being unpre- £ ln .®!^ tic _. art ; . A ong . . w * th pared in psychological sense, 9^!^! Klsen stein created the lack of communication and how foundation and vocabulary, o the family from which we come, ^ making to which little of differs from those we raise. e t ^ a \ significance was added Admission is $1 per lecture. or decades , .° IJ™The series is co-sponsored by ta ^.’ a PP eaI , 0 the # inteIIect J the Center, Indiana^lis Section bnlhant hand,,n g f of r cr “

of Council of Jewish Women and scc ues gives a feeling

Indianapolis Chapter of m ^ ernd y to P ° tern !“P . „ Hadassah. The public is invited. Tbe ^ aaie » directed by Ro-

r berta Hodes was adapted by

Roberta Hodes from a play by

George Houston Bass.

It is a film of the New York City ghetto, acted by Negro and Puerto Rican teenagers, who relive their lives in the shadows

—_ « . . . . , of their tenements. Neither Robert Brian Aprison, son of sen tj men tal nor overtly angry,

M c. H ' . Apr lf. ni the film has the impact of 5810 N Dearborn Street will be unadorned rcaHsm

bar mitzvah April 27 at Beth-El “Amazing talent is displayed ZedecicA reception will follow by thcsc amateur actors and Grandparents are Mr. and ac t resseg as they maverick

v-''*— and Mrs.

crowd

of

Robert B. Aprison To Be Bar Mitzvah

Mrs. Jack Reder

Ethel Aprison.

Out of town relatives who

Today and every day, interest is added and compounded on AFNB 5% Maximum Interest Time Passbooks. Look

their own society against a background. . .of New York

. . , settings. . .the neighborhood plan to attend include Mr. and schoolyard, tenement stoops and Mrs. Bernard Reder and family demolitk)n sitra . ^ Game of Chicago; Mrs. Bessie js haunting, frightening. . .ter*

Selnerstem of Milwaukee and rif j c altogether”

the grandparents, also from — 1

Milwaukee.

Hostesses incl'- M.:. Bernard Malin, Mrr>. Benjamin Ashkenaz and Mrs. Martin

Grossman.

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Maternal grandparents

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