The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1960 Page: 2 of 14
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PAGE TWO
GHAPTE RAWARDS PRESENTED TO YOUTH CLUBS
THE JEWISH HERALD-VOICE
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NATIONAL MIZRACHI
WOMEN’S OFFICIAL TO
ADDRESS LOCAL GROUP
Mrs. Abraham M. Danzig,
National honorary vice-presi-
dent of the Mizrachi Women
of America, will visit the Texas
Mizrachi Women’s Chapters
during the week of February
18-25.
Mrs. Danzig has for years
been identified as a leader in
many fields of traditional Ju-
daism. She has visited Israel a
number of times, and recently
returned from a trip to Kfar
Battya, a Children’s Village and
Farm School of the Mazad Ali-
yah of Beth Zeiroth, Mizrachi
in Jerusalem.
During her visit in Hous-
ton, Mrs. Danzig will be hon-
ored at an Oneg Shabbat at the
IT IS NOT TOO LATE
TO MAKE YOUR
Contribution To The ’60
United Jewish Campaign
SEND IT IN TODAY I
CONGREGATION ADATH EMETH
SERVICES BEING HELD AT
CONG. ADATH ISRAEL
Friday, 6 p.m.
Saturday:
Morning Service, 9 a.m.
Bible Class, 3:45 p.m.; Mincha,
Seudo Shlishis, Maariv, 4:45 p.m.
Jr. Congregation, 11 a.m., followed
by lunch, at 1828 Arbor St.
Sunday:
Men’s Club services, 10 a.m., at J.C.
Center, followed by breakfast, speaker.
Daily Services, 7 a.m. and 5:15 p.m.
CONGREGATION BRITH SHALOM
Friday, Feb. 19, 8 p.m. Brotherhood
Sabbath.
Saturday, services 7 a.m.
Jr. Congregation, 10 a.m.
Teen-Agers, 11 a.m.
Sunday, services 8:30 a.m., Feb. 21
followed by Breakfast and Discussion
Group on “Would Jerusalem Become a
Jewish Vatican?” Rabbi Cahana, mod-
erator. /
BETH JACOB CONGREGATION
Daily Services—7 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday and Secular Holidays—
8 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Koballah Sabbath (Friday) 5:45 p.m.
Saturday:
Sabbath Service, 9:00 a.m.
Chumesh, Rashi Class led by
Rabbi Geller, 4:30 p.m.
Mincha, 5:15 p.m., followed by
Sholosh Seudes
Adult Torah Study Circle,
Tuesdays, 8:15 p.m.
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
JEWISH HOME FOR THE AGED
Saturday morning service at 9 o’clock.
The public is welcome.
A Journal Devoted to the Interest of Southwest Jewry
a H. WHITE. Editor and PubHshaz
Moslem Pakistan hates Hin-
du India.
Russians and Americans love
each other so much, they are
spending something like 40 per
cent of their income on weap-
ons, to see to it that they may
continue to love each other.
As the Psalmist said: “How
sweet it is for brethren to live
together in unity." Hooray for
brotherhood!
home of Mrs. Harry Sachs,
9206 Bassoon, on Saturday,
Feb. 20, 2:30 p.m. On Monday
morning, 10:30 o’clock, there
will be a workshop meeting at
the home of Mrs. J. J. Gimble,
4838 Waynesboro.
Mrs. Danzig will have a sti-
mulating report from Israel
which will be erf interest to
members and friends. All are
cordially invited to both func-
tions.
Rummage and volunteers are
needed for the rummage sale.
For pick up, call JA 3-1007.
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HOORAY FOR
BROTHERHOOD
By David Schwartz
This is Brotherhood Week.
It goes way back.
Cain killed his brother Abel.
The Romans threw the Chris-
tians to the lions.
The Puritans who came on
the Mayflower were kicked out
of England.
Non-Americans paint signs:
“Yankees Go Home.”
Anti-Semites paint swastikas
on Jewish synagogues.
Austrians say of Hungarians,
if you have Hungarian for a
friend, you don’t need an ene-
my.
Whites hate -blacks, also yel-
lows. Remember “The Yellow
Peril?”
The Nazis hate all the non-
B.B. PROGRAM . . .
Comtinued from Page 1
Mrs. Max Rosen of Houston,
and Hy Weinstein. The coveted
Leadership Award Trophy will
be presented as well as the State
Travel Trophy to the women.
Dancing will follow the dinner
and both the dinner and dance
are open to the Houston public.
Pincus Juran is accepting
reservations for the banquet and
admission to the dance will be
$5.00 per couple at the door.
The dance begins at 8:30 p.m.,
with music by the Robbins
Twins Orchestra until mid-
night.
The B'nai B'rith women of
Houston will be hostesses at a
Hospitality Room, in the hotel’s
Nile Room all Saturday after-
noon.
Dr. Robert I. Kahn, Amer-
ican Legion Chaplain and Rab-
bi of Temple Emanu El will
deliver the invocation at the
banquet. Rabbi Shoulson, visit-
ing from Chicago, will deliver
the benediction. The traditional
banquet will be in tribute to
Richard Fox and Steffi
Schlamme for leadership of the
State’s B’nai B’rith activity dur-
ing the past year.
g
Annette Nirkin and Norman Seigel, presidents of Barn-
ston BBC- and Cyrus Adler AZA receiving trophies on
behalf of their organizations from Alan Westheimer,
Chairman of the Youth Division of the 1960 United Jewish
Campaign, for outstanding work in the One Day Youth
Division Drive, Sunday, February 14th. Also shown is
Mrs. Ann Rabinowitz, director of Youth Activities at the
Jewish Community Center, coordinators of the event.
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PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAT
Bubacription $3.00 Pae Tear
Phono FAirfax 4-1131
1713 CaroBae BL Houatoa. Texas Port Office Boa 1M
Entered as second class matter Nov. 20. 1303 at the Port
CONGREGATION ADATH ISRAEL
Friday and daily services,
sundown and 6:30 a.m.
Sabbath morning, 9 o’clock.
Sunday morning, 7:30 o’clock
CONGREGATION BETN ISRAEL
Friday, Feb. 18, 8:15 p.m. Dr. W.
Kenneth Pope, guest preacher, will
speak on “Bridge Building.”
Saturday morning services, 11 o’clock.
CONGREGATION EMANU EL
Friday, Feb. 19, 8:15 p.m. Brother-
hood Sabbath. Rev. John C. Knowles,
guest preacher.
Sabbath morning services, 11 o’clock.
HOUSTON CONGREGATION
FOR REFORM JUDAISM
Sabbath Worship Service every Fri-
day evening, 8:00 p.m., Chapel of St
John the Divine Church, River Oaks
Blvd, at Westheimer.
Rabbi Louis A. Josephson will preach
the sermon.
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Office at Houston, Texan under art of March & 1373.
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CONGREGATION BETH TESHURUN
Friday, Feb. 19, 8 p.m. Brotherhood
Sabbath. Dr. Walter J. Dickson, Jr.
guest speaker.
Saturday:
Orthodox Service, 8 a.m.
Conservative Service, 10:15 a.m.
Talmud Class, 3:30 p.m.; Rashi
Class, 4:15 p.m.; Mincha, Seudah
Shlisheet and Maariv, 5:15 p.m.
Sunday Morning:
Orthodox Service, 8 a.m.
Minyanaires, 9 a.m.,
breakfast-discussion follows.
Daily Services, 7 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Early Sabbath Eve Service, 5:45 p.m.
CONFERENCE . . .
Continued from Page 1
ters serving as hostesses for the
Convention are: Avodah, hos-
pitality; Magnolia, registration;
Lone Star, arrangements and
meetings; Rose Caplovitz, de-
corations and luncheon; San Ja-
cinto, publicity and afternoon
sessions; and Azalea, Houston
ticket sales.
All sessions of the Conven-
tion are open to the public.
Rabbi Moshe Cahana
Congregation Brith Shalom
BROTHERHOOD UNITY —
NOT UNIFORMITY
A report of the Rockefeller
Foundation made after the War
provides the following signifi-
cant facts:
An American soldier wound-
ed on a battlefield in the Far
East owes his life to the Jap-
anese scientist, Kitasato, who
isolated the bacillus of tetanus.
A Russian soldier saved by a
blood transfusion is indebted to
Levdsteiner, an Austrian. A
German is shielded from ty-
phoid fever with the help of a
Russian, Metchikoff. A Dutch
marine in the East Indies is
protected from malaria because
of the experiments of an Italian,
Grassi; while a British aviator
in North Africa escapes death
from surgical infection because
a Frenchman, Pasteur, and a
German, Koch, elaborated a
new technique for surgery. In
peace, as in war, all of us are
beneficiaries of contributions to
knowledge made by every na-
tion in the world, by men who
never served a lesser loyalty
than the welfare of the general
society beyond the limits of
their own local groups or insti-
tutions.
Saying this does not mean
that we have to strive for a
mono-tonal society, when na-
tional, cultural, religious and
linguistic differences will be
eliminated. Time after time,
when we handle in Adult Edu-
cation courses, the idea of the
messiah and the messianic age,
do we hear the wish that the
multiplicity of religions and the
diversities in the religions
should disappear; they disturb"
the harmonious existence of
people; they are incubators for
swastika smearers; discrimina-
tion, and hostility; and how
wonderful it would be if to-
gether with the fulfillment of
Isaiah’s prophecy that all the
world would acknowledge one
God, there would also be one
way to conceive him, one kind
of shrine as a place to worship
and communicate with him.
Emphatically do they declare,
let us make away with all the
diversities; let us unify our-
selves.
Jewish thought rejects this
theory. A monolithic society
runs counter to the God-given
human instinct for freedom and
self-expression. The Torah tells
us that once the whole earth
was of one language and of one
speech. And of course, such a
unified group could build the
most magnificent edifices, sky-
scrapers, and a tower that could
reach the heavens, (The Tower
of Babel.) But the Lord saw
that this uniformity is a de-
structive force that strengthens
evil. And the Almighty Lord
said, “Come, let us go down,
and there confound their lan-
guage, that they may not un-
derstand one another’s speech.”
Uniformity ended not only with
disunity, but with disaster, ten-
sion, conflict, and hostility.
The society is beautiful, har-
monious and complete when in-
dividuals have the opportunity
of developing to the fullest their
natural proclivities and talents,
when every group gets the pos-
sibility to go his own way and
looks with favor and sympathy
on the other who tries another
way.
Let us live as intelligent
brothers. Let us not try to build
empires, swelling everything
under our own wings. Let us
better stretch out friendly hands
to each other and say, “Good
luck.”
Let us live as intelligent
brothers. Let us not be so much
convinced that we conceived the
ultimate truth, that there is
only one way for man's salva-
tion. Let us not try to build
empires, swelling everything
under our own wings. Let us
better stretch out friendly hands
to each other and say, “Good
luck.”
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White, D. H. The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1960, newspaper, February 18, 1960; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1582759/m1/2/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .