Newspaper Page Text
Friday, September 16, 1966
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Regulations Eased
JERUSALEM (JTA) — New
regulations announced will lib
eralize rules for immigrants seek
ing to bring personal effects into
Israel as part of a current cam-
pagn to encourage immigration
from western countries. New
comers will henceforth have a
month instead of the previous
two weeks to make customs dec
larations on effects they want to
import. They also will have 18
months instead of a year to ac
tually import these possessions.
Cone St. Garage
98 Cone St.
Auto Repairs
Body and Fender
Repair
Harold Willen, Mgr.
522-5645
You Have Tried
The Rest Now-
Try The Rest
Park At The
MEYERS BROS.
TUXEDO
PLUMBING
& HEATING
’ Service • Repair
• Installation
305 Pharr Road N.E.
237-5556
Off The Record
By Nathan Ziprin
(A Seven Arts Feature)
MECHUTONIM ....
On meeting President Zalman
Shazar of Israel on his recent
visit to the United States, Gov
ernor Rockefeller of New York
remarked that their personal
lives were linked by a woman.
When the President raised his
eyebrows in disbelief, the Gov
ernor asked him whether he
remembered “the char m i n g
young Israeli Ostrovsky Ben
Roaz who had been his special
assistant some years ago. Mr.
Shazar nodded yes, obviously
baffled now by the knowledge
the Governor was displaying of
his personal affairs. However,
Mr. Roekfeller quickly put him at
ease. “You see, Mr. President,”
the Governor explained with a
smile, “the young lady who had
been your assistant is now mar
ried to Leslie Slote, my very able
press secretary, an event which
both Les and I regard as an ex
tremely favorable U. S. balance
of trade with Israel.”
*****
THE HASSIDIM REJOICED . . .
When President Shazar alight
ed from his plane on his return
from his triumphal visit to the
Tuition Rise Sought
JERUSALEM (JTA)—Contra
dictory reports about the need
for raising tuition fees at Israel's
schools of higher learning have
been submitted to Israel’s Cab
inet. One of the reports called
for doubling tuition fees from the
present 600 Israeli pounds ($200)
per year to 1,200 pounds ($400).
The other report rejected tuition
increases at the present time.
Mine Explodes;
Seven Injured
TEL AVIV (JTA)—Seven Is
raeli workers were injured when
their tractor detonated a mine
planted near the Syrian border.
They were taken to a hospital
where their condition was re
ported as not serious for five of
the victims. Two were seriously
injured. Israel filed a complaint
at the United Nations against
Syria for planting the mine.
The Jewish National Fund
workers were on their way to a
land reclamation project near
Shear Vashuv when the detona
tion occurred. The blast turned
the tractor over and dumped
them on the ground. Officials
said it was virtually certain the
mine was planted during the
night because the road was used
the previous afternoon.
% - \ ' . • v; . '“-M ,<;>
£WG S gourmet
3707 ROSWELL RD., N.E.
TELEPHONE 231-2596
TOKYE TRIO ,
DANCING NIGHTLY IN
GOLDEN DRAGON LOUNGE
r'JT." u ''
NOBILE BUFFET LUNCHEON
IN GOLDEN DRAGON LOUNGE
MON FRI., 11:30-3:00 $1.50 EA.
-: ....
LUNCHEON
FASHION SHOW
EVERY WEDNESDAY
EVERY MONDAY NIGHT
DINNER-MOVIE
Bn|oy a Oallcioui Dinner and you A your Oueeti
receive Passes at Half Price to the Cherokee Theate
United States and three South
American countries, he was re
ceived by a sizeable contingent
of dancing hassidim, but no
where near the number of has
sidim who came to greet him in
the Brooklyn enclave of New
York when he made a pilgrim
age, in the tradition of genuine
hassidim, to the Lubavitcher
rebbe.
Fellow hassidim, my son among
them, have told me that Presi
dent Shazar’s visit to hassidic
precincts has served to magne
tize many young Americans to
hassidic courts, less out of cu
riosity than of outright intel
lectual and religious motivation.
Religion among the young is on
the decline, we hear it said over
and again, but you can’t prove
this thesis by what is happening
in the hassidic shtiblach of
America today.
Obviously, religion must have
more than an intellectual ration
ale to attract the young. A house
of worship that is cold and
formal is for the frigid, but the
warm of heart and imagination
seek radiance in worship and in
their religious commitment, and
when they can’t find it in the
temples of their fathers they seek
it in the shtiblach of the has
sidim whose language they often
do not understand, I was recent
ly told by a young Jewish hab
itue of hassidic courts who holds
one of the highest teaching posts
on the university level.
The path of the hassidim at
this stage in human progress
seems incomprehensible to many
of us. Not so the path to has-
sidism, for in essence the has
sidic idea is a sublimation of
the esthetic quest. In an age
when all problems are being
solved by computer machines, it
is all the more understandable
why the rebellious against ma
terialism should turn to mystic
ism, to areas of thought that deal
with creativity rather than with
creating.
If this sounds like an apologia
for hassidism, let me confess—I
have always been a hassid but
without kaftans, sans beard and
peoth, minus the trimmings that
make that tribe identifiable and,
sorrowfully, without its exacting
piety. There have been many
paths in hassidism. Mine rests on
acceptance of the idea more than
on the meticulous observance of
its precepts. In the path to God,
each man seeks nis own rod.
HERE NOW!
The new 1967 Alpine Sport Tourer with
Chrysler’s 5 year or 50,000 mile warranty.
SEE IRVING SILVER
LANDER AUTO MARTS INC.
637 Spring St., N.W. — 3153 Peachtree Rd., N.E.
876-8194 261-4994
To One and All
Gracious New
Year Greetings
ELLIOTT GOLDBERG REALTY CO.
223 Ponce de Leon Ave., N.E.
875-8194
Atlanta, Ga. 30308
IN THE HEART OF BUCKHEAD
3213 Roswell Road, N.E. 237-8293
FOSTER’S of ATLANTA INC.
Visit our Show room of Antique Lighting
Fixtures and Home Furnishings.
• EXPERT WORK SHOP FACILITIES TO REDESIGN, RESTORE,
REPAIR, REWIRE AND ELECTRIFY YOUR CHANDELIERS.
LANTERNS. LAMPS, ETC
• CONVENIENT LOCATION • FREE PARKING
TUXEDO CAFETERIA
(Formerly MR. “M” CAFETERIA)
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP
Featuring the best prepared meats,
vegetables, salads and desserts.
S K
I L LET
F
RIED
CH
I C KEN
OUR
s r e
Cl ALT Y
THURSDAY
NIGHT
FAMILY
NIGHT
FREE
DESSERTS
W ITH ALL
DINNERS
EVERY DAY: Meat and veg
etable, choice of another veg
etable — 59c HOURS Week
days: 11 to 2 — 5 to 8, Sun
days: 11 to 2:15 — 5 to 8.
Roswell Rd. - Powers Ferry Rd.
3750 Roswell Rd. Phone 233-4394
MRS. VIVIAN DUFFY WARREN — EUGENE HUGHES
(OWNERS)
WEEKLY
SPECIALTIES
,59c
Fri., Sept. 16 — Stuffed
deviled crab, creamed pota
toes & choice of one
vegetable .59c
Sat., Sept. 17 — Baked
Ravioli with meat sauce &
choice of one vege-
tabie .59C
Sun., Sept. 18 — Hambur
ger steaks, creamed pota
toes & choice of one
vegetable .59c
Mon., Sept. 19 — Breaded
veal cutlet—creole maca
roni & choice of one
vegetable .59c
Tues., Sept. 20 — Country
fried steak with rice &
choice of one vege-
table .59C
Wed., Sept. 21 — Broiled
calves liver with onions
& choice of one vege
table .59c
Thurs., Sept. 22 — 1/4
golden fried chicken with
rice & choice of one vege
table .59c
TWO DINING
ROOMS FOR
PRIVATE PARTIES