Newspaper Page Text
1976
OBITUARIES
^ Karl Oldstein
g Karl Oldstein, 62, of Atlan-
yi ta died Saturday, Oct. 16.
O Funeral was held Monday,
2 Oct. 18, with Rabbi Harvey
3 Winokur officiating. Inter-
M ment was in Crest Lawn
* Cemetery.
_ Mr. Oldstein, a native of
22 New Orleans, was president
£ of Oldstein Custom House
M Brokers, Inc. As a jazz musi-
3 cian he toured the country in
3 the 1930s. In 1949, Mr. Olds-
' tein moved to Atlanta, where
? he was co-owner of A&K
o Paint and Hardware.
T Mr. Oldstein was a member
^ Charles Rubin
Charles Rubin, 64, of Spr
ing Glen, N.Y., died Monday,
Oct. 4. He was the father of
Martin H. Rubin of Atlanta.
Funeral was held in Mon-
ticello, N.Y., with interment
at Glen Wild Cemetery, Glen
Wild, N.Y.
In addition to Mr. Rubin's
son, other survivors are his
wife, Shirley Manpel Rubin;
another son, Leonard R.
Rubin of Norman, Okla.;
daughter, Fern L. Rubin of
Long Branch, N.J., and six
grandchildren.
Contributions may be sent
to the Spring Glen
Synagogue, Spring Glen, N.Y.
12483.
Jacob A. Blumberg
Jacob A. Blumberg, 87, of
Atlanta, died Oct. 13.
Graveside services were held
in Greenwood Cemetery, Thurs
day, Oct. 14, with Rabbi Harry
H. Epstein officiating.
Mr. Blumberg was a retired
partner of Briarcliff Mills and
had been a salesman for 55
years. He was a member of the
Scottish Rite Masons, the
Shriners and the King Solomon
Lodge No. 460 in Birmingham.
Survivors include his wife, the
former Miriam Saul; daughters,
Mrs. Irving Litt of Lauderdale
Lakes, Fla., and Mrs. Paul Teplis
of Atlanta; son, Marvin W.
Blumberg of Atlanta. ^
of the U. S. Coast Guard Aux
iliary, where he was a divi
sion captain. He was the first
of eleven people in the
United States to complete
the Coast Guard’s A.U.X.O.P.
program at that time.
Survivors include his wife,
the former June Thiberville;
daughters, Mrs. Joan A. (Ja)
Rich of Atlanta, Mrs.June D.
(Judi) Jacobson of
Gainesville, Fla., Mrs. Karol
Lynn Leonard of New
Orleans; son, Sgt. Larry Karl
Oldstein of Ft. Meade, Md.;
and sister, Mrs. Beryl Piel of
Atlanta.
Jacob Cohen
Jacob Cohen, 83, of
Gainesville, Fla., formerly of
Atlanta, died Monday, Oct.
18.
Funeral was held Tuesday,
Oct. 19, in Atlanta, with Rab
bi Harvey Winokur of
ficiating. Interment was in
Westview Cemetery.
Mr. Cohen was a retired
clothing sales representative.
He was a Marine veteran of
World War II.
Survivors include his wife,
the former Lucille Rivers;
daughter^, Mrs. Robert
Peppel of' Mableton, Mrs.
John Wade of Gaineaville,
Fla.; sister, Mrs. Dora Levy,
and brother, Louis Cohen,
both of Detroit.
Mrs. Minnie Weinrib
Mrs. Minnie Weinrib, 84, of
Atlanta died October 12.
Graveside services were held
in Greenwood Cemetery, Thurs
day, Oct. 14, with Rabbi David
Auerbach officiating.
Mrs. Weinrib was a member
of Ahavath Achim Synagogue.
Survivors include her husband
Herman Weinrib of Atlanta;
daughters, Mrs. Beverlee Soloff
of Atlanta and Mrs. Sydell
Krissoff of New York City; a
son, Edward Auerbach of New
York City; eight grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren.
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Rafael Visits Belfast
Lawrence
Peirez Dead, 61
NEW YORK (JTA) -
Lawrence Peirez, a vice-
president of BnaiB’rith, and
chairman of the civil rights com-"
mittee of the Anti-Defamation
League, died of a heart attack
Friday, Oct. 16, at 61.
He had been a national com
missioner of the ADL, a member
of the B’nai B’rith Board of
Governors and chairman of the
B’nai B’rith personnel policy
committee. Funeral services
were held October 18 in Great
Neck, N.Y., where he resided.
Morris Zeldin, 86
NEW YORK (JTA) - Morris
A. Zeldin, one of the organizers
of the United Jewish Appeal of
New York nearly four decades
ago and a Zionist pioneer, died
October 14 in Long Beach
Memorial Hospital after a brief
illness. He was 86.
A fund-raiser for the UJA
since its start in 1939, Zeldin was
a native of Petrokov, Russia who
came to the United States in
1912.
He was an associate of many
national and international
Jewish leaders, including Chaim
Weizmann whom he aided when
Weizmann came to the United
States in 1927 to raise funds for
the Zionist movement.
NEW YORK (JTA) - A state
ment by William P. Thompson,
president of the National Coun
cil of Churches (NCC), that
Archbishop Valarian Trifa of the
Rumanian Orthodox Episcopate
could not be constitutionally
removed or suspended by the
NCC’s governing board, sparked
two separate actions recently.
Thirty-five members of
Concerned Jewish Youth took
over the executive offices here of
the NCC for more than six hours
and left only after receiving a
promise that their complaint
over the church group’s stand
would be placed on the NCC’s
staff meeting agenda.
In a related action, the Rab
binical Council of America ex
pressed dismay that Trifa, who
has been accused of par
ticipating in the murder of
thousands of Jews and
Christians while a commander
of the Rumanian fascist Iron
Guard in 1941, has not been
removed or suspended.
The CJY demonstrators, un
der the leadership of Rabbi
Avraham Weiss of the Hebrew
Institute of Riverdaly, NY, were
promised that up to eight
members of their group would
be permitted to attend the staff
meeting and that a substantive
response would then be
forthcoming.
The CJY, which is not con
nected with Betar, contrary to a
previous report, disrupted a
meeting pf the governing board
of the NCC earlier and shouted
demands for the removal of
Trifa. That demonstration, at
which the CJY was joined by
members of Betar and at which
the Jewish Defense League also
became involved, and the latest
one were non-violent.
BELFAST, (JTA) - For the
Jews of northern Ireland’9
'capital city, Yom Kippur was
enlivened by the presence of Gi
deon Rafael, Israeli Ambassador
to the United Kingdom, and his
wife. It was the first visit to
Belfast by Rafael since he took
office in London three years ago,
and may well be the last before
his recall to Jerusalem early
next year.
Most of the city’s 240 Jewish
families — depleted from about
double that number before the
present troubles erupted in 1969
— heard Rafael address them in
the large modern synagogue,
now the only one still open.
Speaking immediately after the
memorial prayer, Rafael 9aid
that Israel’s yearning for peace
was universal, extending to trou
ble spots far from her own
borders.
He praised Belfast’s com
munity for its lively involve
ment with Israeli causes and ex
tended to it the greeting of the
Israeli government.
The community now lacks a
minister of its own and the ser
vice was attended by a retired
English Rabbi, Isaac N. Fabri-
cant, of Brighten. Communal
leaders complained to their
visitors that they felt the rest of
British Jewry was neglecting
them. After breaking their fast
The Rabbinical Council stated
in a resolution adopted un
animously by its executive board
that Trifa’s presence on the NCC
governing board “is bound to
weaken whatever moral
leadership the National Council
(of Churches) wishes to exer
cise.”
Thompson, in his statement,
noted that investigations by the
U.S. immigration authorities
and by the Orthodox Church in
America failed to substantiate
war crimes charges against him.
Declaring that the NCC board
was not a court, Thompson said
Trifa must be presumed inno
cent until proved guilty.
with the entire congregation in
the synagogue hall, the Rafaels
were feted by Zionist workers.
In honor of their visit, the
community donated 100 trees
in Israel.
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2.77-11.32
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