The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 4, 1957 Page: 2 of 12
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THE JEWISH HERALD-VOICE
PAGE TWO
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SYNAGOGUE SERVICES
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minds into a
our country?
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a
co-star with Frank Sinatra, who
• will play the role of the Broad-
way character who eats noth-
ing but kkosher food and his
dog likewise.
After Columbia Pictures had
emerged from a deluge of 5,000
letters and several thousand
telephone calls from points as
far west as Tokyo, nine dogs
made the final for the gusto-
tory audition.
Sinatra disqualified one en-
trant, a huge St. Bernard, com-
plete with brandy keg, altho
the massive entrant looked a-
round expectantly for a second
helping of Broadway’s favorite
tidbit.
“Can’t have a dog bigger
than the star,” said the star.
Bert Morse, chief inspector
for the city’s dog pound, is
Snuffy’s owner. He took poses-
sion of the terrier a day before
he was to have been executed.
sion of “Pal Joey” at $500
week.
Snuffy’s demonstration of
kosher appetite makes him
The
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BETH JACOB CONGREGATION
Friday evening, sundown.
Saturday: Bible class, 8:30 a.m.; morn-
ing service 9 a.m. Study Circle, 5
p.m.; Mincha, 5:30 p.m., followed
by Sholosh Seudes.
Max Stepinoff will be host at the
Sholosh Seudes, Saturday, April 6, in
memory of his late parents.
COMGEEGATION BRITH SHALOM
Sabbath and daily services 7 a.m.
Sunday, 8 a.m., followed by a Lox
and Bagel Breakfast.
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to it that an amendment was
added to the doctrine resolu-
tion to protect Israel.
At the White House meeting
Speaker Sam Rayburn of the
House of Representatives em-
phatically rejected a proposal
that Congress support the Pres-
ident’s stand against Israel.
From the withdrawal battle,
one thing clearly emerged. The
sympathy of the American peo-
ple, through their elected rep-
resentatives, was on the side of
Israel and against Nasser. Am-
ericans, by overwhelming ex-
pressions to their Congressmen,
were for Israel because they
were against Communism and
against appeasement of pro-
Communist collaborators like
Nasser.
YONEADurs
Dr. Martin Day, of United
Nations Relief and Rehabilita-
tion, will be the guest speaker
for the Emanu El Young Adult
meeting Friday evening, April
5. Dr. Day, who appears on a
local television program, will
discuss the Arab-Israeli situa-
tion and the problems involved.
A social hour and refresh-
ments will follow, announces
Martin Yanis, chairman for the
evening, and all young adults
are invited to attend services
and meet for an evening of
good fellowship.
EaSared as second class matter Nov. 20, 1908 at the Peet
Otflee at Heuston, Texas, undez act of March 8. 1879.
A Journal Devoted to the Interest of Southwest Jewry
D. H. WHITE. Editor and Publisher
pattern which runs counter to the rest of
How long can we permit them to shut out
the light of knowledge by their ominous shadow world
of yesterday?
The three books which have become the basis for
policy are but the beginning. If the School Board is per-
mitted to get by with this opening gun of their educa-
tional program, the march will be on and our children
will be returning to the days of the three Rs, the horse
carriage and the outhouses. This is an age of development
—a jet age, not an age of hoops and bustles. This is an
age of international cooperation, not national piracy. This
is an age of sharing our “know-how” with those more
backward, not one of monopoly. Our children are living
in such an age, they must understand such conditions.
We cennot permit, them to go out into a world of chang-
ing colors blinded by ignorance and handicapped by the
lack of knowledge. Our voices must be raised against the
abuse of authority. Have you raised your voice? Do you
care for the future of your children? Let your position be
known. Make your voice one of protest to the return to
yesterday. Do it today—tomorrow may be too late.
Author, Editor At
Beth Yeshurun Cultural
Series Saturday Night
Dr. Trude Weiss-Rosmarin,
distinguished editor, lecturer
and scholar will be the next
speaker at the Beth Yeshurun
Culture Series on Saturday
night, April 6, at 8 o’clock, in
the lounge of Beth Yeshurun,
3501 Southmore. Holders of
season tickets will be admitted
free, and others may purchase
tickets at the door at $1.50
each.
CAPITOL Spotlight ...
Continued from Page 1
menace to the Middle East and
recognized Israel as a valuable
ally of the free world.
Similar transformations took
place in the thinking of many
o.her Senators and Representa-
tives. They could not see sanc-
tions imposed on Israel while
the United Nations avoided
firm action against Russia, the
world’s real aggressor. The Uni-
ted Nations and the United
States had, in effect, abandon-
ed the Hungarian people to
their fate. It was against little
Israel that the State Depart-
ment sought to muster the
wrath of civilization. Egypt’s
transgressions were ignored.
The President feared Con-
gressional expressions were en-
couraging Israel to insist on
tangible security assurances be-
fore withdrawal. Members of
Congress were summoned to a
showdown at the White House.
These leaders reported an open
clash over Israel with Dulles
and Henry Cabot Lodge, U. S.
delegate to the United Nations.
House Majority Leader John
McCormack, of Massachusetts,
suggested that Lodge was ad-
vocating a position favorable to
Egypt on the stationing of UN
forces. One participant later re-
ported that Lodge emerged as
“a virtual spokesman for the
Arab bloc.”
Dulles was charged with hav-
ing so evaded questions involv-
ing Israel’s security that Sen.
Johnson openly accused him of
being unresponsive to simple
requests for information.
A State Department official
pleaded with one Senator to
support the sanctions threat to
force Israel withdrawal. Other-
wise, the Senator was told, the
Arabs might not welcome the
Eisenhower Doctrine. The Sen-
ator replied that if this was
the way the Administration in-
tended to defend freedom in
the Middle East he would see
SOUTHWESTERN BRANCH
3847 Turnberry Circle
Daily—7 a.m. and sundown.
Sunday and Secular Holidays: 8 a.m.
and sundown.
Friday "Kabollah Shabbath” at 6:15
p.m.
Saturday: morning, 9 a.m.; Mincha,
5:30 p.m., followed by Sholosh
Seudes.
Stephen Golub will chant the Kid-
dush at the Kabboloth Shabboth serv-
ices.
LOX-AND-BAGEL LOVING
TERRIER WINS STAB BOLE
IB "PAL JOEY" MOVIE
Hollywood (JTA)—A Cairn
terrier saved himself from
death in a dog pound this week
when he snapped up a dish of
bagel and lox to win an audi-
tion for a role in the film ver-
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Subscription $3.00 Per Year ________
1711 Caroline St Houston, Texas Pos: Office Box 153
COHCBEGAT1OH EMANU EL
Friday, April 5, 8 p.m. Rabbi Louis
Firestein will preach: “The Most Wast-
ed Hour of the Week.”
Saturday morning service, 11 o’dock.
CONGREEATION ADATH EMETH
Daily—5:30 p-m. and 7 a.m.
Friday evenings— 5:45 and 8:15 p.m.
Saturday morning, 8:30.
Jr. Congregation, 10:30 a.m.; Rab-
bi’s Study Group, 4:30 p.m., followed
by Mincha and Shalosh Seudes.
Sunday morning, 9 a.m., followed by
breakfast.
Friday, April 5, 8 p.m. Special serv-
ices to honor cast of Yiddish play, The
Talmudist. A reception will follow.
CONGREGATON BETH YESEURUN
Daily—7 a.m. and 6:45 p.m.
Friday evening—6:30 and 8 p.m.
Saturday morning—9 and 10:15 a.m.
Saturday afternoon: Talmud 4:00;
Rashi, 5:00; Mincha, Seudah Shlishit
and Maariv, 6:00 p.m.
Sunday morning—8 a.m.
Friday, April 5, 8 p.m. Rabbi Wm.
S. Malev will speak on “The Watch-
word of Israel’s Faith—The Shema”—
the first in a series of sermons on the
traditional Prayer Book.
CONGREGATION ADAT ISEAEL
Friday and daily services at sundown
and 6:30 a.m.
Sabbath morning, 9 a.m.
Sunday morning, 7:30.
COMGEEGATION BETH ISRAEL
Friday, April 5, 8:15 p.m. Dr. Hy-
man J. Schachtel will preach on: “Juda-
ism’s Test for Success.”
Saturday, April 6, 11 a.m. Rabbi
Bernard H. Lavine will preach on: “The
Power of the Tongue.”
BUILDING A WALL FOB OUR CHILDREN
Education is an essential portion of the program for
training our youth. Facing a shrinking world, confronted
with growing competition from new sources, the youth
of the West has a much more difficult future than his
forebears. The youth of today builds on a foundation that
is prepared by his parents and all of civilization living
before his time. He has the ability of new direction only
because the basic acceptances of what is a “normal” life
have been altered to encompass the existing knowledge.
The purposes of education are many-fold. Education
should give the student the ability of reasoning out his
problems. It should provide the tools by which he under-
stands the mechanics of his world. It should give him
vision and understanding and a ready discernment be-
tween right and wrong, what is good and what is bad. It
should teach him to better adapt himself to the world in
which he lives and to understand its strengths and its
weaknesses. It should teach him to appreciate the vast-
ness of the universe and the diverse people which make
it up.
Houston youth is in an unfortunate position. Its elders
voted regimentation of ideas through the election of
school board members who have neither the vision nor
the ability to adjust to the world as it is. They live in the
yesterdays of development and thought. They are at-
tempting to turn back the clock of history and expect a
world of progress to stop. They are afraid of the new
ideas, the developing panorama of a shrinking world.
They would draw a wall about our children and close
their minds to the realities of life.
The nation outside of Houston chuckles at the spec-
tacle of a woman attempting to halt the progress of man-
kind by denying its existence. Here we have judge, jury
and executioner rolled into one. The hatred within this
small mind of one aspect of life transfers itself to other
events. The Houston voters feared non-segregated schools
so they voted for reactionary candidates—and they got
what they voted for—reactionary candidates. These same
candidates may refuse to recognize the progress; they may
close their eyes to what the rest of the world is doing;
they may wave the magic wand and say there is no Unit-
ed Nations or deny its validity—but all the same these
realities will be there.
The United Nations will be there, the Soviet nations
will be there, the world will be there. Only our young-
sters will feel the abuses of these reactionary ideas. The
wall the School Board builds around our children cannot
hold them within the confines of Houston. They read the
newspapers, the megazines. They see the movies and TV
and hear the radio. They are not living on an isolated
island even if these pigmies of intellect on the School
Board have attempted an island position for our children.
It is about time that thinking Houston awakened to
the awesome spectacle of this reaction. How can we per-
mit the warped thinking of one woman or five blind in-
dividuals to continue their corruption of our children?
How long can we permit them to drag our children’s
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White, D. H. The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 4, 1957, newspaper, April 4, 1957; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1527586/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1~1~1~1%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .