Jewish Post, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1972 — Page 7
NAMES IN THE NEWS
Daliah Lavi Blushes Easily
Obituary Rabbi Uri Miller 1 Succumbs At 66 I
With two broken marriages behind her, Israeli movie star McGovern man who respects Sen. Humphrey but admires BALTIMORE — Rabbi Uri J
Daliah Lavi, eschews movies which require her to disrobe. McGovern’s stand on “the war, poverty and tax reform.” w ^° died at the age ft She told David Nathan of The Jewish Chronicle of London He is active in student council and his school ecology club. after a l° n g illness, was > that she hasn’t made a picture in two years because all He is also a member of Temple Beth Emeth and is social beill g mourned here. He had q. the parts she was offered involved showing all her parts, action chairman of Beth Emeth Senior Temple Youth (BESTY). served Beth Jacob Congregation q “They wanted me to be naked and do all kinds of things,” ^ or ll 16 P 35 * 27 years, and was “o. she said. “I know that there are some very good films like , |f a P ast president of the Rab- 2. that, and some of the things I was offered were quality, uino IViSI Win Out binical Council of America and a
I just didn’t want to do them. I don’t criticise the girls who Unless the Soviet officials are more stupid than we imagine, of ^ Synagogue Council of do naked love scenes that are necessary for the script, I they will soon be making it possible for David Markish, the America.
just wouldn’t do them myself, because basically I am very 8011 a we ll'kn° wn Soviet poet, Peretz Markish, Before coming to Baltimore, T shy and I become red very easily. I don’t want to show to leave for Israel. His wife, Irina, walked served a congregation in gl my body to the whole world and have all my friends in onto the 16111118 court at Wimbledon where the Omaha. s<i
Israel point to me and go ‘ho, ho, ho’!” Between films, Daliah Sovie t Star, Alex Metreveli was performing
sings. She has made five long-playing records and six singles. an ^ interrupted the match. Before officials Alfred Schlosser J-
She is top of the pops in Germany, which she visits frequently, escorted her away, she was able to hand HOUSTON — Alfred C
wearing, she said, “Jewish stars all over.” She started her Metreveli a letter, appealing to him to use Schlosser, 48-year-old attorney,^ career as a dancer and now wants to do a musical to bring h* 5 influence as a sportsman on her husband’s died here suddenly as he was _• together all her talents. She also plans a book. “It will be behalf. She said later, “Metreveli was un- checking into a local hospita 5 about myself as a woman, as an actress, as a mother, as derstanding.” Mrs. Markish, who was permitted He was a past president of 10
an Israeli,” she said. “It’s quite a life I have led.” to loave Russia six months ago, underwent District 7 of B’nai B’rith.
Irina a three-day protest fast outside the Soviet Em-
• - bassy in London. Seated in a folding chair and surrounded
The Recount by large signs, proclaiming, “Release My Husband,” “Release Biggest excitement at the District 2 Grand Lodge convention David Markish,” she brought her plight to the attention of Orthodox RobblS
at Kansas City was a recount of ballots in the contest between everyone through the press and TV. Kurt Levi, treasurer of the grand lodge and Kansas City #
banker, and Ted Schneiderman, Akron lawyer, for third vice
president. Gerald Kraft, retiring president of Indianapolis, noted Anothet Gory Player?
more votes cast than he thought there were eligible delegates The name Gary Player is on in attendance and ordered a new election held the following buff, and another South African may also soon make the support civil marriage in Israel day and Levi won. Larry Poisner and Mrs. Bernice Sandler, headlines, but only in amateur ranks. He is Neville Sundelson, if the rabbis cannot find the both of Kansas City were elected presidents of the men’s who won the South African amateur championship recently, solution for problems of perand v/omen’s grand lodges of District 2. A long ball hitter, Sundelson defeated Robin Gouverneur three S onal status, has led an Or- • up and two, shooting par golf for the final 18 holes. thodox rabbi’ to agree that the y/ijt f • solution should come from the LUA-I , mtt rabbinate. Last year, reports Violet Spevack in the Cleveland Jewish Harold Prince’s Box Score Rabbi Yedidya Frenkel, of News, Gil Savransky’s automobile license plate showed GOY, a box score of Harold Prince’s 19 Broadway productions this city, said that while he which must have been his way of being humorous. This year, since 1954, starting with “The Pajama Game” and moving opposes the bill by Gideon however, he’s shifted to ZOA-1. As national vice president on to “West Side Story” and “Fiddler on The Roof,” and Hausner proposing civil marof the Zionist Organization of America and a former president then “Cabaret” and “Follies” shows 10 hits, according to in- riage for those whom the rabbis of the Cleveland Zionist District, he comes by the designation formation contained in the investor prospectus for his upcoming refuse to wed, that “if the rabquite legitimately. musical, still unnamed, based on the Ingmar Bergman film, bis try hard ’enough they can • “Smiles of a Summer Night.” Biggest money earner is “Fiddler,” find a way out without violating Jews And Catholics which had 147 investors to the tune of $275,000 and as of the halaehah, providing there The full-page advertisement in the New York Times seeking f^Lr'waf “Pajama "oaml” whicT Mm'S nrX'e ^ ° n b0th contributions for the Catholic Inter City Scholarship Fund, Inc., uf^TLestors a halome m’Z cent?rofrt S ‘ deS -
Can Find Solution
TEL AVIV — The assertion
the tongue of every golf by Golda Meir that she would
shows Gus Levy, former president of the for their venture
The Hausner Bill has almost
Federation of New York Philanthropies, in full XV1 ted to a breakup of the size under the heading, “What do Gus Levy, ® Coalition, and would permit civil Mrs. Etha Pickett and Con Edison have in With The Rabbis marriage for those who cannot Common?” What they have in common is that Rabbi Mark N. Goldman, assistant at Temple Emanu-El, marry under halaehah, such as “they are helping to provide quality education New York, has been named spiritual leader of Temple Sinai the Langer brother and sister for New York children who might not otherwise of Lawrence, N.Y. . . . Rabin Ralph Mecklenburger, who was who are listed as mamzerim. ^
get it,” and are “providing the desperately ordained last month, will join the rabbinical staff of Temple needed money to keep alive 37 Catholic elemen- Emanu-El in San Francisco as assistant rabbi. . . Rabbi Edmund
tary schools. . .” Mr. Levy is vice president Winter, assistant at Congregation Beth El, New Rochelle, N.Y., D • _ -j of the Fund, and among the 12 trustees, four has been elected to the pulpit of Temple Beth Shalom, Mahopac, ■ TlVQ10 ViOVTlGS Levy are Jews — Morris Abram, former president N.Y. . . . Rabbi Ronald Goff, of Temple Rodeph Shalom, pi „ lAf^fI of the American Jewish Committee and Brandeis University, Philadelphia, Pa., has been elected to the pulpit of Congregation rian WOrKS ¥¥611 Saul Fromkes, Maxwell M. Rabb and Howard A. Seitz. Anshei Emeth, Peoria, HL . . . Rabbi Kenneth Haim has vrujir AU . , ..
been named spiritual leader of the United Orthodox Synagogues JNAj,w * "T j Although the
# of Houston . . . Rabbi Seymour Rosenbioom, who was ordained ma ^ sac T e a * ?° wa famous Silversmith last month, has been named assistant rabbi of Congregation °? 1 1 ounsm 5 to Is rael, the advent
A first-day cover for an eight-cent U.S. commemorative Adas Shalom, Detroit, stamp of the colonial silversmith that the Postal Service issued • on July 4 memorializes Myer Myers, the first Jewish silversmith Sermon Of The Week
in America. The stamp features a reproduction of the Torah Good, Guilty, Or Goy: How Do You Rate As A Jew? acroll ornaments which Myers created in the late eighteenth _ Rabbi Jordan S. Ofseyer, Temple Beth El, Springfield, Mass,
century for Congregation Shea ith Israel in New York, the
nation’s oldest synagogue. Myers was a contemporary of Paul • Revere, the most prominent silversmith of the Colonial era. Quotation Of The Week
of the peak season is expected to find accommodations at a
premium once again.
Accommodations in private homes, under a plan supervised by the Ministry of Tourism, has not only sharply reduced the hotel cost to visitors but is
His Judaic ritual works were crafted for • number of early often times we have all heard sojneoie say, “The good A °_ Ut congregations. His silver coffee urns and tea sets were com- book says so ...” and by this pronouncement, he proves {or d „. “ u..,..,
missioned by some of the country’s most distinguished famiUes his argument. The recipient of these words is pohtely jolted „ in „L ™,.n anr „ "T, VTmiii of that era. The single largest collection of Myer Myers’ into sUence! After all. who can refute the writings of the s‘" n ' silver is on display in the Klutznick Exhibit Hall of the B’nai “good book?” How about this sentence from the Book of 3 Zl !w n no B’rith Building in Washington. Myers was bran in 1723 in Daniel, Chapter 2, verse 21: “And He changeth the times x!” JIT™ thT" rwvu. New York, the son of Dutch Jews who had emigrated from and the seasons. . .” I doubt if there is any doubt in anyone’s i,i a h i. m « inr Holland. His extraordinary workmanship was recognized by his mind that this characteristic was, is, and will be always attributed ^ i ..
peers who in 1786 elected him chairman of the Silversmith’s to the Holy One, Blessed Be He. No problem! Shortly after « « BresWs^k°Bn Society. The first-day covers can be obtained by sending 50 reading the above, I came upon the following written by Habbi ' “ cents and a stamped self-addressed envelope to B’nai B’rith Leon Harrison of St. Louis. “The Tendency of women’s costumes Philatelic Service; 1640 Rhode Island Ave., N.W., Washington, today is likewise in the direction of greater boldness and ■ J!, . , D C - 2<X»6- immodesty. Recent feminine fashions accentuate the appeal ™ • of sex. They are not modest, not bceoming the refinement ? ° ’
Two Who Serve and dignity of true womanhood. We notice also in the conversation ^ PLE * CONG agudas achim Seventeen-year-old Peter Zeftei, son of Dr. and Mrs. Leo of young people an unnecessary freedom of allusion in regard T [J medr^h^ag^do* * S[th A eloh?i! Zeftel of Wilmington, is serving on the Delaware Democratic to subjects that were completely tabooed between young men ishei sfard shplon platform committee and 91-year-old Mrs. Sally N. Ginns, charter an( t women but a very few years ago. These instances reveal : ereth^isf ^anuei
member of the Jewish Federation of Delaware, is serving a tendency that is neither wholesome nor desirable.” I thought gl 80 HP all agree •••
on the Republican committee. “Aunt Sally,” who is the widow immmediately of the verse from Daniel. The author of Daniel Mloh of the late James N. Ginns of Wilmington, has long been would only get 50 per cent for his efforts. I have no doubt ,NG * 7|||IJTA| IQ vedei active in Jewish communal affairs here. She served as chairman that “He changeth the seasons” but I do have some conflict ^ " ii■*¥ I HI l.» sroei
of the Federation’s women’s division for many years. She was with the changing of the times! After all, Rabbi Harrison wrote r atud't* the founder, and first president of the Wilmington Section, his statement on Friday, January 23, 1914! Let’s see ... ns quoiny National Council of Jewish Women. She is a beloved member if I can get my tongue out of my cheek that should be
4SHEI
of Wilmington’s Reform synagogue, Temple Beth Emeth. On just 68 years ago! Who “changeth the times?” — Richard 5ng S aguoath the younger end of the spectrum Peter Zeftel, a sophomore M. Morin, director of education, Congregation Obabei Sholom, £MPLE b nai bkith • ahavath acmhi at Mount Pleasant Senior High School, states that he is a Nashville. emeth • cong. atereth zioi
UHr UglCC • •• ‘VDAI ZIONTAUSfi means quality ^
tflSRAEI
OF ABRy ^TEMPLE IeTH El >GUOATH i#AEL • SINIATEMPLI
