Newspaper Page Text
Friday, August 6, 1965
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
rvt Sera
BEGINNER’S LUCK AT JEKYLL — Displaying happy smiles and a day’s catch of 19 trophies,
including eleven Spanish mackerel, are Gle in McCullough (left), manager of the Georgia
Press Association, and Fred Zapico, manager of the Carriage Inn, Corsair and Wanderer Motels on
Jekyll Island. It was the first deep-sea fishing experience for both. The mackerel they’re holding
weighed in at 30 pounds, the record catch in July at the Jekyll Marina. A regularly scheduled boat
sails daily from the marina and charter boats are also available. The two newly converted Isaac
Waltonians were on a post-convention trip following the departure of some 500 Georgia newsmen,
their families and friends. During the final awards luncheon, Norman Shavin, Atlanta Constitution
columnist, won two "Presidential” plaques for hi. role in writing the script of the annual GPA
“Cracker Crumble” and for editing “The Century” newspaper page recapitulating the “War Between
the States.”
dally H' HOTEL
V | •cCMp«ncy
June ?9 W> Sept 7
INCLUDING MEALS
•30 o( 133 rooms
©STRICTLY KOSHER CUISINE
arm a Far COLOR RROCHURI or call
MIAMI BEACH JE. 8-5731
BzniiEgninEnajHJESHa
Silver L
ining
By DR. SAMUEL SILVER
4975 ROSWELL RD. AT
BELLE ISLE—255-2922
2421 PIEDMONT RD, N.E.
CE. 3-5064
231-4444
(giffi)
OPEN FROM 11 A.M. DAILY
(A Seven Arts Feature)
To appreciate something we
must often know its contrast.
My parents, for example, are
somewhat more sensitive Amer
icans than I for
they lived in less
enli g h t e n e d
countries and
they savor the
freedom of this
country morel
than one who
never lived
where freedom
was limited.
So with Juda
ism. Non-Jews who discover Jew
ish ideas and ceremonies and
forms are often more enraptured
by them than Jews who take
them for granted.
So even with Yiddish. The
language is regarded by some
Jews as a jargon, which it is not.
It is associated in the minds of
some Jews with old people, des
pite the fact that many young
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exhibit of Yiddish books and per
iodicals in an Albuquerque syn
agogue. Chances are that that
synagogue had little to do with
Yiddish before being affected by
Mrs. Rosenthal’s ardor.
Of course, on Broadway, the
success of the Sholom Aleichem
play, though presented in Eng
lish, has also given new prestige
to the language in which the
original of "Fiddler on the Roof”
was written. And* there’s even
a Harry Golden quip to the ef
fect that on Madison Avenue the
slogan is, “Dress British. Think
Yiddish.”
But it is intriguing that the
delicious Yiddish language is
being re-appraised and re-ap-
preciated in our nation from New
Mexico to New York.
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the
MAIDS'
QUARTERS
restaurant
874-9156
Beef Stroganoff
or
Beef Kabob
14 peachtree place, n.e.
atlanta, ga. 30309
people love it and use it.
An interesting love affair with
both Judaism and Yiddish is that
of Mrs. Morris Rosenthal, of
Alameda, a suburb of Albuquer
que, New Mexico.
FYom her name you would ga
ther that Mrs. Rosenthal is Jew
ish. She is, but originally she was
Lutheran. She converted to her
husband’s faith before marrying
him.
After their marriage, Mrs.
Rosenthal discovered Yiddish.
Her husband, a third-generation
American, hardly knew it. But
his wife became enamored of it.
As a Yiddish proverb has it, a
fremder bleibt far a veil and
zeht a meil, that is, a stranger
remains for a while and sees a
mile.
Mrs. Rosenthal’s love for Yid
dish resulted in her learning the
language. Her appreciation of it
rubbed off on her spouse, who
also mastered it.
Then this zealous convert car
ried her Yiddishophilia over into
the city of Albuquerque. Soon
she organized a Yiddish club,
comprising young couples who
picked up the language and began
talking in it and relaying it to
their children.
For years the Yiddish Club has
functioned and now a larger band
of zealots has been created. Re
cently, the group sponsored an
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