Newspaper Page Text
Friday, Oct. 24, 1969
THE SOUTHBtN I SKA ELITE
Pag* Mm
Atlanta Congregation Schedules
OR VeSHALOM AHAVATH ACHIM
1362 N. Highland Ave., N.R.
Robert Ichay, Rabbi
Joseph Cohen, Rabbi Emeritus
Friday evening 6:30 p.m.
Saturday morning 8:45 a.m.
Saturday evening 7:15 p.m.
Sunday morning 8:45 a.m.
Sunday evening 7:00 p.m.
SHEARITH ISRAEL
1180 University Dr., N. E.
Nissrim Wemlck, Rabbi
Sydney K. Mossman, Rabbi
Emeritus
Tobias Geffen, Rabbi Emeritus
Robert Ungar, Cantor
Daily Morning Ser. 7:00 a.m.
Daily Evening Ser. 5:40 p.m.
Friday Night Ser. 6:30 p.m.
Late Friday Night Ser. 8:15 p.m.
Saturday Morn. Ser. 8:45 a.m.
Junior Congregation 10:00 a.m.
Saturday Eve. Ser. 6:35 p.m.
Sunday Morning Ser. 7:45 a.m.
Talis and Tefilin 8:20 a.m.
600 Peachtree Battle At*., N.W.
Dr. Harry H. Epstein, Rabbi
A. Graubart, Aaaoc. Rabbi
Raphael Gold, Rabbi In charge
of Education
Isaac Goodfriend, Cantor
Daily services 7:15 a.m., 6:00 p.m.
Friday evening 6:00 p.m.
Late Friday evening 8:15 p.m.
Saturday morning 9:00 a.m.
Saturday evening 7:00 p.m.
Sunday morning 8:30 a.m.
Sunday evening 6:00 p.m.
A/VSHI S’FA RD
1324 N. Highland Ave., N.E.
Label Merlin, President
H. Tara toot, Hon. Pres, and Treaa.
Friday evening ...... 7:00 p.m.
Saturday morning 8:45 an.
Saturday evening 6:30 p.m.
Sunday morning 8:80 a.m.
(followed by breakfast
and Bible study)
RETH JACOB
1855 La Vista Rd.. N.E.
Emanuel Feldman, Rabbi
David Radinsky, Asst. Rabbi
Plncus Aloof, Cantor
Dally Minyan 7:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Friday services 6:30 p.m.
Saturday morning 6:30 a.m.
Saturday evening 6:30 p.m.
Sunday morning 8:00 a.m.
Sunday evening 6:30 p.m.
TEMPLE SINAI
Bimey School
3254 Northside Parkway
Richard Lehrman, Rabbi
Friday evening 8:15 p.m.
THE TEMPLE
1589 Peachtree Road
Jacob M. Rothschild, Rabbi
Philip M. Posner, Asst Rabbi
Friday evening 8:00 p.m.
Saturday morning 11:00 a.m.
Atlanta Community Calendar
FRIDAY—5:00 P.M.—is the deadline for items in next week’s
calendar conducted for the convenience of the community.
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE prefers to have these items
in writing at 390 Courtland St., N. E., but will accept them
over TR. 6-8249. Information will be limited to Date, Time,
Organization, Place.
OCTOBER 23, Thursday:
10:00 A.M.—NCJW Fall Study Session, Home of Mrs. James
Smulian, 5144 Trimble Rd., N.E.
1:00 P.M.—Ladies Day Out, AJCC.
8:00 P.M.—Erev Shel Or B’nai B’rith Women, AJCC.
OCTOBER 24, Friday: ’
10:15 A.M.—Atlanta Chapter Hadassah Donor Report Meeting, Home
of Mrs. Jerry Dubrof, 750 Tanglewood Trail, N.W.
OCTOBER 25, Saturday:
7:30 P.M.—City of Hope 14th Anniversary Dinner, Woodlake
Apts. Recreation Room, Briarcliff Rd.
8:30 P.M.—Temple Singles Open House, Friendship Hall.
OCTOBER 26, Sunday:
11:30 A.M.—Ahavath Achim Sunday Morning Forum, Synagogue.
3:00 P.M.—The Singles Set Jam Session, AJCC.
3:00 P.M.—Bat Ami Hadassah, Home of Mrs. K. Sunshine,
1293 Breezy Lane, N. E.
OCTOBER 27, Monday:
10:15 A.M.—Atlanta Hadassah Donor Report Meeting, Home of
Mrs. Montague Davis, 2654 Canna Ridge Cir., N.E.
6:30 P.M.—Atlanta Hadassah Donor Telethon, Piedmont
Development Corp., 1706 Northeast Expressway.
8:15 P.M.—Temple Adult Education Program, Temple.
8:15 P.M.—Ahavath Achim Adult Education Registration,
Synagogue.
8:15 P.M.—JWV Ladies Auxiliary; AJCC.
OCTOBER 28, Tuesday:
10:00 A.M.—NCJW Fall Study Session, Home of Mrs. Harold Levin,
113 Valley Rd., N.W.
OCTOBER 29, Wednesday:
8:15 P.M.—Adult Institute of Jewish Learning, AJCC.
OCTOBER 30, Thursday: :
10:15 A.M.—Atlanta Hadassah Donor Report Meeting, Home of
Mrs. Jacob Levin, 3811 Dumbarton Rd., N.W.
NOVEMBER 1, Saturday:
7:30 P.M.—Atlanta Hadassah “Guardian of Hope” Donor Dinner,
Marriott Motor Hotel.
NOVEMBER 2, Sunday:
11:30 A.M.—Ahavath Achim Sunday Morning Forum, Synagogue.
NOVEMBER 3, Monday:
1:00 P.M.—Ahavath Achim Sisterhood Silver Tea, Srochi
Auditorium.
8:15 P.M.—Temple Adult Education Program, Temple.
8:15 P.M.—Ahavath Achim Adult Education Program, Synagogue.
NOVEMBER 4, Tuesday:
2:00 P.M.—Life at 50, AJCC. v
NOVEMBER 5, Wednesday:
8:15 P.M.—Adult Institute of Jewish Learning, AJCC.
NOVEMBER 6, Thursday:
1:00 P.M.—Ladies Day Out, AJCC.
NOVEMBER 9, Sunday:
9:00 A.M.—Single Set Brunch, AJCC.
NOVEMBER 10, Monday:
8:15 P.M.—Temple Adult Education Program.
8:15 P.M.—Ahavath Achim Adult Education Program.
NOVEMBER 11, Tuesday:
8:00 P.M.—Academy Theatre Drama Workshop, AJCC.
NOVEMBER 17, Monday:
8:15 P.M.—Ahavath Achim Adult Education Program.
NOVEMBER 18, Tuesday:
2:00 P.M.—Life at 50, AJCC. —
8:30 P.M.—Nehama Lifschitz Concert, Memorial Arts Center
General Assembly in Boston
Atlantans Eye 75th Anniversary
CelebrationofFederationMovement
The top priorities in American
Jewish communal commitments
— at home, in Israel and abroad
— will make up the agenda of
the 38th General Assembly of
the Council of Jewish Federa
tions and Welfare Funds in Bos
ton, Nov. 12-16.
In addition, the fifteen hun
dred delegates from Jewish com
munities in the United States and
Canada, and several leaders of
Jewish communities in the free
world, will mark the 75th Anni
versary of the Jewish Federation
movement in this country.
The Atlanta delegates include:
Federation president and Mrs.
Abe Goldstein; Mr. and Mrs.
Laurence Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Freedman, Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Rinzler and Mr. and Mrs.
Max Rittenbaum, Mrs. Sam P.
Alterman, Mrs. Leon Frohsin,
Mrs. Israel Wilen. Max M. Cuba,
Dr. Irving Goldstein and Rabbi
Jacob Rothschild. Mr. Frank
and Mrs. Rinzler represent At
lanta as the Abe Schwartz Young
Leadership Award winners. Rab
bi Rothschild was selected as the
community’s rabbinical represen
tative.
First established in Boston —
the Assembly’s host city — in
1895, the Federation movement
has since grown to 223, serving
over 800 communities containing
95 per cent of the Jewish popu
lation of the United States and
Canada. Close to a million Jew
ish families are involved in the
Federations which serve almost
the entire range of Jewish needs
cn local and national levels, as
well as in Israel and other over
seas lands.
Louis J. Fox, of Baltimore,
president of the Council, listed
American Jewish priorities in the
1970’s as:
Meeting the problems of Jew
ish identification and commit
ment, which are basic to
strengthening the American Jew
ish community and Jewish
achievement;
Intensifying, on an unprece
dented scale, social welfare aid
in Israel where defense for sur
vival requires the resources of
the Israelis;
Assuring the highest quality
and excellence in Jewish service;
New directions for effecive
Jewish communal involvement in
finding solutions for the urban
crisis in the United States;
Concentration on priorities, on
the importance of need and pur
poses.
These key issues will be cov
ered through more than two-
score general sessions and work
shops, with specifics to be of
fered through the major addres
ses of outstanding authorities on
programs here, nationally and
other countries abroad.
Starting with the keynote ad
dress by Mr. Fox, which will de
fine these priorities, and how
Federations can operate more
effectively in dealing with them,
addresses covering these and
other urgent Jewish communal
priorities will be given by:
Robert H. Finch, U.S. Secre
tary of Health, Education and
Welfare;
Daniel P. Moynihan, Executive
Director of t h e President’s Na
tional Urban Affairs Council;
Louis A. Pincus, Chairman,
Jewish Agency for Israel;
Avraham Harman, President,
Hebrew University Jerusalem;
Gordan Zacks, former chair
man, CJF Leadership Develop-
m e n t Committee; currently,
Chairman, UJA Young Leader
ship Cabinet.
The workshops and institutes
include: Federation-Jewish hos
pital relationships, health ser
vices, Jewish education, leader
ship development, campaign
workers training clinic conduc
ted by the CJF National Com
mittees on Fund Raising and the
Committee on Women’s Com
munal Service, development of
Federation endowment fund pro
grams, Jewish community rela
tions, involvement of Jewish
college students and faculty in
Federation programs, social ac
tion issues involved in the urban
crisis, and the finding and rec
ommendations of the Confer
ences on Israel’s Human Needs
over the next decade, held last
June in Jerusalem.
Panel on Youth November 1
At Ahavath Achim Silver Tea
The Ahavath Achim Sisterhood will hold its Annual Silver Tea
in Srochi Auditorium at 1 p. m. Monday, Nov. 3.
The program will be a panel discussion on Jewish Youth Move
ments—Hot Beds of Revolution? Those participating are Howard
Epstein, program director of the Jewish Community Center; Sam
Fisher, regional director of Hashachar (Young Judea); Rabbi Alex
ander Graubart, associate rabbi of the Ahavath Achim Congre
gation, and Jerrold Leeson, youth director of the Ahavath Achim
Congregation.
Sisterhood’s new and 25-year members will be honored at the
Tea.
Reservations can be made by calling Mrs. Davis Abrams 634-
8027 or Mrs. Randolph Moret 634-4049.
In Israel
Atlanta Bond Chairman
Examining Scope of Need
Larry Frank, general chair
man of the Atlanta Committee
for State of Israel Bonds, is cur
rently in Israel with a UJA
Study Mission exploring Israel’s
conditions and its plans for eco
nomic development. This is his
third visit to Israel within a
year, and he will be there for
two weeks accompanied by his
wife, Lois.
In addition to serving as Israel
Bond Chairman, Mr. Frank has
been a key leader in UJA, the
Atlanta Jewish Community Cen
ter, the Hebrew Academy, the
Jewish Children’s Service, the
THE VOICES FOUR, also known by the Hebrew name “Arbaah
Kolote,” will appear at a special concert for the “25 and under”
set at 3:00 p. m., Sunday, Nov. 2, at the Atlanta Jewish Com
munity Center, under the sponsorship of Hadassah and the AJCC.
The four, David Koffman, Ron Isaacs, Marv Rosen and Helen
Moche, are accompanied on lead guitar by Baruch Wolff.
Koffman, Isaacs and Rosen are students at the Jewish Theo
logical Seminary, while Miss Moche, a native of Bagdad who
lived in Kobe, Japan from the age pf two until 1967, came to
this country to attend Stern CoUege. Wolff attended Oberlin
Conservatory of Music and is currently at Teachers College of
Columbia University. The group specializes in a m\yjrrn interpre
tation of Hebrew and Israeli music.
Z.O.A. and numerous other hu
manitarian causes and organiza
tions.
“Each time I visit Israel I am
deeply impressed by the pace of
activity and the rate of growth,”
stated Mr. Frank. “During my
present visit I am meeting with
government leaders and inspect
ing many industrial and agricul
tural facilities that have been
created with the aid of Israel
Bond investments.
“Despite the heavy drain of
defense expenditures, amounting
to some $3,000,000 per day, Israel
continues its drive toward eco
nomic progress. Factories and
farms, roads and railroads are
being built, immigrants are be
ing welcomed, housed and edu
cated, and thus enabled to lead
productive lives.
“However, this calls for great
sacrifice on the part of Israel.
Out of necessity, money for eco
nomic development has been
curtailed to meet defense needs.
The most significant source of
funds to keep the economy on a
steady course of growth and ex
pansion is through Israel Bonds.
“Ze’ev Sharef, Israel’s Minister
of Finance, has pointed out that
Israel needs a minimum of
$200,000,000 in Israel Bond sales
during 1969, to meet economic
development needs and to bol
ster the country’s foreign ex
change reserves, which have
been reduced to a dangerous
level. I know that we in Amer
ica can achieve this goal and
that we in Atlanta will play a
substantial role in doing so.”
JWV Auxiliary
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Jewish War Veterans will meet
a 8:15 p. m., Monday, Oct. 27, at
the Atlanta Jewish Community
Center.
Plans for the coming season
will be discussed.