Newspaper Page Text
Friday, February 21, 1958
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Pace Thirteen
“We hope that during Brotherhood Week people will
begin to get to know and appreciate each other—to
make Brotherhood a year round practice.”
E. B. RICE & CO.
161 SPRING ST., N. W.
Has not God borne with you these many years?
Be ye tolerant to others.
—HOSEA BALLOU
Brown-Wright Hotel Supply Corp
TR. 6-1041
512 W. Peachtree St., N. W.
Complete Supplies
and Equipment
For the Preparation
and Serving of Food
Lithographers — Printers — Stationers
655 Lambert Dr., N. E. TR.
The spontaneous feeling of brotherhood is a mark
of human maturity.
—OVETA CULP HOBBY
JOHN H. HARLAND CO.
213 McDonough blvd., s.e.
Common to all Christians and Jews and any
creature created by God is the great Command
ment of Love . . . True charity admits of no sub
stitute. If we prostitute out love by admitting some
and excluding others from our affections because
they differ from us in race, religion, color politi
cal beliefs, then we are counterfeit religionists
and traitorous Americans.
—Bishop Mark K. Carroll
Progressive Binding
JA. 4-5450
Wheelers Peachtree
Pharmacy
557 Peachtree St., N.E.
The great secret is not
having bad manners or
good manners or any other
particular sort of manners,
but having the same man
ners for all human souls.
George Bernard Shaw
TR. 4-3854
Rabbi Warns Against
"Over - Popularizing"
Adult Education
We have committed the golden rule to memory;
let us now commit it to life.
—EDWIN MARKHAM
NEW YORK — A prominent
Jewish scholar warned this week
that programs of adult Jewish
education may lose their intellec-
tural effectiveness because of
“over-popularization.”
The warning came from Rabbi
Ira Eisenstein, author and spirit
ual leader of Anshe Emeth Syna
gogue in Chicago.
Rabbi Eisenstein told the B’nai
B’rith Committee on Adult Jew
ish Education, meeting here at a
two-day conference, that adult
educators “are debasing their own
currency” when they alldw” any
thing and everything to be call
ed ‘education and culture.’ ”
He said: “We cannot hope to
lure the people out of the bowling
alleys and swimming pools by
merely ‘popularizing’ Jewish stu
dy.”
Yet, he added, programs such
as those undertaken throughout
the nation by B’nai B’rith pro
vide an important opportunity
“to bring some of our intellec
tuals back into Jefish life.”
Dr. Horace M. Kallen, social
philosopher and a member of the
faculty of the New School for
Social Research, told the con
ference that adult education pro
grams must emphasize integra
tion of the Jewish past with the
present.
“To be meaningful the tradi
tion must become part of the
living present,” Dr. Kallen said.
“To be a Jew means to be part
of a free modern society, not
isolated from but rather an
orchestrated part of the total
human society. To be a Jew in
this modern age is to affirm the
principles of democracy and ap
ply them to oneself.”
Dr. Mordecai Kaplan, noted
Jewish philosopher and author,
held that the danger of inter
national global war gives new
and dramatic meaning to the
Jewish way of life.
“Every Jew,” Dr. Kaplan told
the B’nai B’rith conference, “is
morally responsible for making
belonging to the Jewish people a
means of saving and serving
mankind.”
This kind of responsibility, he
added, calls for a study of Jew
ish sources. Without familarity
with what Judaism stands for,
Dr. Kaplan said, it is impossible
to act as a Jew.
Fifty Jewish educators and lay
leaders participated in the con
ference, called to explore meth
ods of stimulating B’nai B’rith’s
adult Jewish education program.
Discussions concerned areas of
expansion and development of
new educational materials. Maur
ice A. Weinstein of Charlotte,
N. C., chairman of the B’nai
B’rith Committee on Adult 'Jew
ish Education, presided over the
meeting.
. . . On Brotherhood
If you want to live the
American way, speak up
for brotherhood, speak out
against prejudice. — Bob
Hope.
Today you are betting
life on this country you live
in. If we want to win the
prize of national strength
and security we’ve got to
work together. Let’s respect
each other’s race and color
and creed. Let’s make Bro
therhood Week last all
year. — Groucho Marx.
¥ ★
HILLARD HEATING & PLUMBING CO.
PLUMBING AND HEATING SPECIALISTS
287 NORTH AVE., N. E. TR. 2-9454
I shall pass through this world but once.
Any good, therefore, that I can do
Or any kindness that I can show
To any human being
Let me do it now. Let me
Not defer it or neglect it for
I shall not pass this way again.
—A Quaker Prayer
♦ ♦
MARVEL Cleaners
2231 Cheshire Bridge Road, N. E.
MElrose 6-1681
You’ll learn to accept or reject a person strictly on his
merits as a human being and not because he happens
to bo '^ferent from you. We hope that during Brother
hood Week people will get together
with people they know, with people
they don’t know, and with people they
wish to know.
—Dr. Everett R. Clinchy
41.
Jl
Marsh
Business College
322 Ivy St., N. E.
JAckson 5-6813
4. - gs
DOMCO
<£
4f)
*
o
’4.
Greetings
★
Ckajage’s Furs
220 Peachtree, N. W.
JA. 1-2302
“DIXIE’S
PIONEER
FURRIER”
-¥■
1. Highly Refined
2. Easily Digested
3. Keeps Indefinitely
Without Refrigeration
4. Very Digestible
Product
of
Dothan Oil Mill Co.
Dothan, Ala.