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Mrs. Lillie Sunshine
Mrs. Lillie Shemper Sunsnine,
78, of Atlanta, died Thursday, July
Funeral was held Friday, July
14, at Green Lawn Chapel, with
Rabbi David H. Auerbach and
Cantor Isaac Goodfriend
officiating. Burial was in
Greenwood Cemetery.
Mrs. Sunshine was the president
of Sunshine Department Stores,
Inc. A native of Russia, she was a
member of the Atlanta Chamber
of Commerce, B’nai B’rith and
Congregation Ahavath Achim.
She was the widow of Harrv
Sunshine.
Survivors include two
daughters, Mrs. Barron W. Levin
and Mrs. Leonard M. Bernes, both
of Atlanta; a son, Philip Sunshine
of Atlanta; a sister, Mrs. Sarah
Stevenson of New Orleans; a
daughter-in-law, Mrs. Theodore
Kaplan of Atlanta; two sisters-in-
law, Mrs. Faye Shemper and Mrs.
Esther Shemper, both of
Hattiesburg, Miss.; 10 grand
children; and two great
grandchildren.
Jacob Arnovitz
Jacob Arnovitz, 93, of Atlanta,
died Sunday, July 16.
Funeral was held Monday, July
17, at Green Lawn Chapel, with
burial in Greenwood Cemetery.
Rabbi David Auerbach and
Cantor Isaac Goodfriend
officiated.
A native of Poland, Mr.
Arnovitz was a member of
Congregation Ahavath Achim, the
Progressive Club, the Jewish
Home and B’nai B’rith. He was a
retired real estate broker.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Sarah Scott Arnovitz; two sons,
Morris Arnovitz and Harold L.
Arnovitz, both of Atlanta; and 23
grandchildren and great
grandchildren.
Louis S. Stern
Louis Sidney Stem of Miami
Beach died Tuesday, July 18.
Graveside service was held July
20 at Greenwood Cemetery in
Atlanta, with Rabbi David H.
Auerbach and Cantor Isaac
Goodfriend officiating.
Mr. Stem was a retired
manufacturer of women’s apparel.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
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Irene Mutnick Stem of Miami
Beach; son, Martin J. Stern of
Atlanta; sister, Mrs. Sid Cohen of
New York; brother, Alvin Stern of
New York; and two grandsons.
Dr. George S. Kahn
Dr. George S. Kahn, 87, of
Marietta died Monday, July 17.
Funeral was held Wednesday,
July 19, with interment in Oakland
Cemetery. Rabbi Donald Tam
officiated.
Dr. Kahn, an Atlanta
optometrist for over 50 years, was
a native of Birmingham.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Freda Frisch Kahn; daughter,
Mrs. T.L. Kleven of Marietta;
sister, Mrs. Lee Ritter of Atlanta;
brothers, Nathan Kahn of
Birmingham and David E. Kahn
of Atlanta; two grandchildren;
nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Rose G. Klein
Mrs. Rose G. Klein, 74, of
Atlanta died Wednesday, July 12,
in New York.
Funeral was held Friday, July
14, in New York.
An Atlanta resident for 45 years,
Mrs. Klein was a member of
Ahavath Achim Synagogue, B’nai
B’rith Women and Brandeis
Women.
Survivors include a son,
Howard Klein of Atlanta;
daughter, Arline Rubel of New
York; two sisters, Pauline
Goldberg and Esther Baratz, both
of New York; one brother,
Emanuel Goldberg of Atlanta; and
three grandchildren.
Mrs. Rosalie Glass
Mrs. Rosalie Sara Glass, 47, of
Doraville, died Wednesday, July
19.
Graveside service was held
Wednesday at Crest Lawn
Memorial Park with Rabb Marc
Volk officiating.
Mrs. Glass was a member of
Congregation Beth Jacob.
Survivors include her husband,
Marvin A. Glass; daughters. Miss
FeliciaGlass of Doraville and Mrs.
Eileen Strauss of Atlanta; sons,
Michael Glass and David Glass,
both of Doraville; father, Philip
Epstein; and a sister, Mrs. Morton
Pasco, both of Baltimore, Md.,
and two grandsons.
Assembling some of the 1,500 Mogen David armbands made and worn by the Christian
community of Gainesville to protest proposed Nazi march in Skokie.
Students wear Star of David
Georgia (Catholic) Bulletin
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (NC)-
Fifteen hundred Christians on the
University of Florida campus and
other residents of this community
wore armbands bearing the yellow
Star of David to show Christian
solidarity with Jews.
Rabbi Naphpali Rubinger of
Gainesville’s B’nai Israel Jewish
Center, and others of the Jewish
community attending two Masses
at St. Augustine Catholic Student
Center recently, put the yellow
armbands on the Christians in
symbolic gestures of honor to the
Jews. The bands were worn for the
following two days.
The bands, made by students of
the Catholic Student Center as
replicas of the bands Nazi
Germans required Jews to wear
during World War II, were also
A colored talis
in your future
Jewish Po«t and Opinion
A panorama of appealing soft
pastel colors will greet the eyes of
visitors to synagogues whose
worshippers are now wearing the
new colored Ziontalis -prayer
shawls.
Apart from the usual blue on
white, Ziontalis, the leading
manufacturer of prayer shawls in
the United States, is now into its
third weaving of colored taleisim
in brown on tan, light blue on dark
blue, red on white and other
combinations of colors not seen in
synagogues heretofore.
The new line of very popular
taleisim are called the Shavatim-
Tzeve series. It contains the
emblems of the 12 tribes woven
into the talis fabric.
The idea came mostly from the
customers themselves who over the
years have often asked for Taleisim
in colors other than the usual blue
and white. “People seemed ready
for change,” said Steven
Yaroslawitz, the third generation
to enter the talis manufacturing
business started by his grandfather
over 50 years ago.
T “The response has been
electric,” said young Yaroslawitz
being groomed to take over from
his father, Martin, when the latter
retires to live in Israel. “One
religious articles dealer in the
midwest was so enthusiastic,” he
reports, “that he called long
distance just to tell us how he felt
about the new design.” Gift shop
operators in particular seem most
enthusiastic. They are ordering
more taleisim than they usually
stock.
Are there more innovations in
the works for the future?
“Indeed there are," respond the
Ziontalis people, but they would
rather talk about them after they
make their debut.
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distributed by several other
Christian communities, including
Lutherans, Epsicopalians,
Presbyterians, Unitarians and the
Church of Christ.
The symbolic affirmation of
Christian-Jewish dignity was the
idea of a parishioner at the Student
Center. Father Robert Walker,
pastor of the center, said that anti-
Semitism is not Christian, and
added that his center was pleased
to lead the local movement to
protest the American Nazi Party’s
intention to march in Skokie, III.,
an action eventually called off.
“This project undertaken by the
Christian community is a very
hopeful sign that another
holocaust cannot happen in the
United States,” Rabbi Rubinger
said. “It shows the total religious
community accepts the challenge
to utilize their influence to prevent
any kind of genocide.”
Irving M. Galanty
representing
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Page 21 THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE July 21, 197S