JAHUABY 12,1962
THE CANADIAN JEWISH BEV1EW
11
+ associated * hebrew schools
Commencement exercises of the Junior High School, on January 14, at 2.80 p.m., at North Bathurst Talmud: Torah, will include a cantata in English and Hebrew on ''What Is Torah?" Guest speakers will be: Joseph Levthe, president of the Schools; Dr. Joseph Diamond; J. Burke, principal of the Hebrew department; S. Burack, principal of the English department; David E. Newman. Q.CV chairman of the board of education; Wilferd Gordon. Q.C, immediate past president, who will distribute awards and prizes to the students. The graduates are: Ruby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J, Applebaum, 366 Jqicey Boulevard^
Sharon, daughter of Mr. and MFb. S. D. Applebaum, 672 Deloraine Avenue; Michael, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. Blumenthal, 243 Glencairn Avenue; Harry, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. Bornstein, 3194 Yonge Street; Nathan, son of Mrs. S. Brodsky, 40 Wigan Crescent; Serena, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
H. Dessen, 6 York Downs Drive; Heather, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Frankel, 18 Erica Avenue; Marcus, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. Freiman, 306 Hillhurst Boulevard; Anita, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. Fridson, 116 Fairholme Avenue; Irving, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Frisch, 2 Humewood Road; Simcha, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. Gabel, 60 Elm Ridge Drive; Alisa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Gershony, 26 Yeomans Road; Ricky, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Greenberg, 94 Atlas Avenue; Larry, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Grupp, 25 Palm Drive; Esther, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. Katz, 3388 Bathurst Street; Gertrude, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. Kaufman, 26 Nassau Street; Avrom, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. Lebovic, 16 Stratheam Road; Shoshana, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Lerer, 30 Camberwell Road; Samuel, son of Mr. and Mrs.
I. Libicki, 94 Neptune Drive; Mark, son of Mr. and Mrs. A Mandel, 919 Avenue Road; George, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Manson, 123 Palm Drive; Anne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Markowitz, 30 Dalton Road; Irving, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Markus, 154 Glenholme Avenue; George, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Mei8ter, 3 Geddes Court; Esther, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. L. Meyers, 363 Glencairn Avenue; Cynthia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Nurenberger, 780 Briar Hill Avenue; James, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. Orson, 22 Yeomans Road; Risa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Orzech, 3 Stormont Avenue; Ivan, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. Reit-man, 272 Avenue Road; Judith, daughter of Rabbi and Mrs. Erwin Schild, 21 Palm Drive.; Marlene, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. Schmerz, 12 Reddick Court; Marvin, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Shafir, 195 Brunswick Avenue; Marvin, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Sigler, 72 Strathearn Road; Debby, and Samuel, children of Mr. and Mrs. M. Silverberg, 42 Markdale Avenue; Barry, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Walfish, 80 Sultana Avenue; Avrum, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Weisbrod, 108 Brookview Drive; Morton, son of Mrs. L. Weizen-bluth, 531 Fairlawn Avenue; Benjamin, son of Rabbi and Mrs. Walter Wurzburger, 25 Heathdale Road; Randy, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Zalken, 464 Lawrence Avenue West; Ruth, daughter of Mrs. E. Zarzewsky, 128 Huron Street. That evening a dance will honour the graduates, and alumni of the high school, and their friends will be welcome to attend.
Sresent were: 'Mesdames William [alus, 5119 Lacombe Avenue: Samuel Borod, 6171 Plantagenet Avenue; Samuel BlanshaV, 6113 Soissons Avenue; all of-Montreal, Que.; Mrs. H. Promislow, of Winnipeg, Man. Galila dinner at 14 Vfewmount Avenue, celebrated their thirteenth' year, and Israel's bar-mitzvah year. The convener, Mrs. D. Greenberg, was assisted by the social committee: Mesdames R. Lontos, J. Silverberg, A. Kushner. Seated at the head table were: Mrs. Saul Einstoss, chairman, and Mr. Einstoss; and Mrs. Mor-, ris Koffman, vice-chairman, and'!, Mr. Koffman. $240 Was raised for '' charity. Council marks the seventy-fifth birthday of Israeli Premier David Ben-Gurion, at a social evening, on Monday, January 16, ^at 8.45 p.m., at 12 Viewmount Avenue. The narrator will be Mrs. Sidney Wax. Songs and . stories will be presented by: the Labour Zionist choir, under the direction of Bernard Papernick; Mesdames I. Fistell, T. Weis, and M. Kaman. Mrs. S. Resnick will be chairman; and the hostesses, serving refresh-ments, will be: Mesdames I. Mir-sky, S. Freeman, N. Prasow, and R. Silverberg.
* holy blossom * temple
Mrs. B. Rosenberg, 2400 Bathurst, past-president of the Sisterhood, was elected to the board of directors of the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, for a term of four years. Mrs. Rosenberg was
Sast-president of Sinai (Service roup; and of Hatikvah Chapter of Wizo; is on the board of New Mount Sinai Hospital; and of the Women's Auxiliary of the Jewish Home for the Aged.
? kiever * synagogue
Samuel Langner, Rabbi: Sisterhood elected: Mesdames Goldie Fienstein, president; P. Balsky, vice-president; A. Sokolsky, H. Brown, secretaries; H. Star, treasurer; B. Stein, social convener; I. Goodman, trustee; A. Brodsky, and Miss Mary Gordon, sick committee; H. Lucatch, and B. Litvak, chairmen of the bond committee. A spring tea was planned for May 6 .
* machzikei bnai * israel �
Synagogue breakfast and board meeting hjfcf' Julius � Marcus � as chairman. Saul Siegler, president; president of the Jewish Immigrant Aid Services; co-chairman of the Central Fund Agency of the Canadian Jewish Congress, was guebt speaker, on the Agency, which will distribute donations directly to all the charitable institutions. Meyer Feldman, chairman of the board, thanked him. 35th annual Chevra Kadisha dinner had fifty guests present. Seated at the head table were: Rabbi Beniamin Hauer, H. Pearlstein, president; J. Parker, vice-president; Samuel Little, founder and past president; Meyer Feldman, immediate past president, and chairman of the board; D. Hernick, treasurer; Julius Marcus, chairman; Samuel Cohen, president of College Memorial Chapel; Cantor I. Hammerman; I. Green, H. Wise, B. Green, representatives of the Yavnah Synagogue. Rabbi Hauer was guest speaker. Cantor I. Hammerman, sang, assisted by Oscar Fleisher, pianist Refreshments were served by: Mesdames E. Wise, I. Hammerman, O. Fleisher.
? pioneer women *
Mrs. Mendel Israelson, 93 Fair-leigh Crescent, Canadian vice-president, attended a policy-making meeting of this organization of the Women's Labor Zionist Organization of America, held in New York. Canadian leaders
* adath israel *
Synagogue Youth Department, Club Tikvah of United Synagogue Youth, are presenting a programme for the Jewish Home for the Aged on January 23. The members are thirteen and fourteen years of
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age. The programme will consist of a monologue, a skit. Israeli dancing, folk songs; and contemporary dancing. The convener is Michael Icholson, assisted by Bonnie Lustig. Those participating will be: Judy Taft, Judy Schild, Bar-bars Shusterman, Barbara Goldberg, -Bonnie Malach, and Tyna Rotman. The honourary advisor is Miss Sheila Taft.
* scopus chapter *
Luncheon meeting and Israeli Art Exhibit, had Mrs. Henry Rolen-berg, president, as chairman. Dr. George-Liban, executive director of the Central Division, Zionist Organization, spoke on "Modern Art In Israel" Mrs. T. L. Granov-sky was. program chairman: and .the hostesses were: Mesdames Joseph Marks and Benjamin Swarts.
BIRTHS
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Nye Levy (nee Cecelia Shain), of Langstaff, Ont., on December 80, at the New Mount Sinai Hospital, a daughter. Ellen; sister, of Sari Lynn, aged five and one-half years; and Harold, three and one-naif.
Bom, to Mr. and Mrs, Frank Pearlman (nee Renee Wagman), of Meaford, Ont., on December 81, at New Mount Sinai Hospital, a son, Anthony Robert; brother of Holly, aged six years; Ronnie, five; and Mark, three; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wagman, 69 Elm Ridge Drive; of Louis Perlman, 1516 Bathurst Street, and the late Mrs. Anne Pearlman; great-grandson of Jacob Gluckstein, of Parry Sound, Ont.
DEATHS
Louis Rotenberg, 10 Benvenuto Place, died on December 24, at St. Michael's Hospital, at the age of seventy-three years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Minnie Rotenberg; three daughters: Mrs. M. Kurtz (Laya), of Paris, France; Mrs. A. Gallander (Myra), 37 Hawarden Crescent; and Mrs. K. K. Ahuja (Radha), 43 Pheasant Lane; a sister, Mrs. M. Samuel (Hilda), 4 Austin Crescent; a brother, Hertzel Rotenberg, of Jersey City, N.J.; and nine grandchildren. Funeral service was held at Shomrai Shabos Synagogue, Rabbi G. Felder officiating. Interment was at Roselawn Avenue Cemetery. Mr. Rotenberg came to Canada at' the age of five years, and was educated in Toronto. He was in the insurance business for fifty years, and was president of his own insurance ana real estate business. He was a member of Shomrai Shabos Synagogue; and Bnai Brith.
Max Nefsky, 143 Bowie Avenue, died on December 29, at Toronto General Hospital, at the age of sixty-one years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ida Nefsky; two sons: Ronald, 64 Grangemill Crescent; and Bernard; and two grandchildren, Shelley and Brenda, chil: dren of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Nefsky. Rabbi G. Felder officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Mount Sinai Memorial Park. Shiva was at 64 Grangemill Crescent.
David Galin, 22 Melville Street, died on December 16, at Baycrest Hospital, at the age of forty-seven years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Sylvia Galin; a daughter, Gay; and two sons, Martin, and Brian; his father, Louis Galin, 144 Dennison Avenue, two sisters: Mrs. B. Koffman (Rose), 119 Sultana Avenue; Mrs. JL Swinkin (Sonia), of Detroit, Mich.; and three brothers: Alex Calin, 1430 King Street West; William Galin, of London, Ont.; Murray Galin, 388 St. Clements Avenue. Rabbi Walter Wurzburger officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Bathurst Lawn Cemetery. Shiva was at 388 St. Clements Avenue, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Murray Galin.
Irving Wagman died on Wednesday, December 27, at the Bay-crest Hospital, at the *ge of fifty-five years. He was the widower of Mrs. Gertrude Wagman; and is survived by his father, Jacob Wagman, 6 Ross Street; two sons: Dr. George Wagman, of Brant-ford, Ont; and Sydney, 40 Arlstan Drive; five grandchildren: Gloria and Phillip, children of Dr. and Mrs. George Wagman; and Jeffrey, David, and Gayle, children of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Wagman; and six brothers: Allen, 618 Rush-ton Road; Louis, and William, 5 Ross Street; Samuel, 8 Purdom Drive; Saul, 66 Artreeva Drive; and Dr. Murray Wagman, of Me-tuchen, N. J. Rabbi Joseph Kel-
cxassified
BATHURST-WILSON district: Nicely famished room in bungalow; ME. 8-1878. .
ROOM AND BOARD in friendly horns for business girl; Bath-utst-Eflinton district; call RU. 2-8061 from 6 to 8 p.m.
BATHURST - EG LINTON District: Mature woman required as companion-housekeeper to lady in apartment boflding: live-in: re-nowrmtha; CeH RU. 84137.
man officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Dawes Road*
Semetery. Shiva was at 40 Arlstan rive, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Wagman, son and daughter-in-law.
Isadore Urowits, 2. Skipton Court, died on Tuesday. December 26, at the Baycrest Hospital, at the age of seventy-four years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Rose Urowitz; three sons: Louis, 2 Skipton Court; Morris, and Gudie, 261 Vaughan Road; five grandchildren: Stanley and Annette, children of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Urowitz; Sharon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Urowitz; and Karen and Cheryl, children of Mr. and Mrs. Gudie Urowitz; and a sister, Mrs. Toba Urowitz, 17 Major Street. Rabbi I. Hurwitz officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Dawes Road Cemetery. Shiva was at the home.
Mrs. Dora Goldman, 160 Combe Avenue, died on Monday, December 26, at her home, at the age of eighty-three years. She was the widow of Frank Goldman; and is survived by two daughters: Mrs. Betty Maldaver, 30 Covington Road; and Mrs. S. Isacoff (Bella), 150 Combe Avenue; two grandchildren: Mrs. Elliott Caplan (Ce-cile), of Detroit, Mich., daughter of Mrs. Betty Maldaver; and Gordon Isacoff; three great-grandchildren: Robert, Janet, and David Caplan; and a brother, B. B. Smith, 66 Park Lane Circle. Rabbi S. Langner and Rabbi Albert Pappenheim officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Dawes Road Cemetery. Shiva was private.
Mrs. Welka Markowitz, of New York, died on December 9, at the age of seventy-eight years. She is survived by two daughters: Mrs. Louis Fingeroff (Ann), 806 Mid-wood, Brooklyn, N.Y.; and Mrs. Harry Failhardt (Yetta), 195 Broome Street, New York; a son, Harry, 55 Sultana Avenue, Toronto; and six grandchildren: Rosalyn Fingeroff; Rosalyn and Seymour Failhardt; and Sidney, Morry, and Charles, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Markowitz. Mrs. Markowitz died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Fingeroff. Burial took place in New York.
Louis Simpson, 32 Laurelcrest Avenue, died at New Mount Sinai Hospital, on December 21, at the age of fifty-nine years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Cissie Simpson; a daughter, Mrs. A. Schwartz (Jacqueline), 32 Laurel-crest Avenue; a son, Stanley, of Hamilton, Ont.; four grandchildren: Marilyn, Mark, Stephen, and Michael Schwartz; and a sister, Mrs. Charles Abrahams, of Manchester, England. Rabbi Albert Pappenheim officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Rose-lawn Cemetery. Shiva was at the home.
ley Road; an& two brothers: Jacob, of Miami Beach, Florida; and Albert, 680 Roselawn Avenue. Rabbi Stuart E. Rosenberg officiated at funeral services at Beth Tzedec Synagogue. Interment was at Dawes Cemetery,
Meyer Mark Routbard, 3869 Bathurst Street, died on January 3, at the Baycrest Hospital, at the age of forty-six years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs, Ada Routbard; three sons: Harvey, Joel, and Lewis; a daughter, Miss Marilyn Routbard, all at home; his mother, Mrs. Leah Routbard, of Kingston, Ont.; two brothers: Nelson, 665 Roselawn Avenue; and Sydney, of Kingston, Ont.; a sister, Mrs. H. Shaffer (Ruth), of Kingston, Ont. He was the son of the late Louis Routbard. Rabbi Aaron Zimmerman officiated at funeral services. Interment was at Bathurst Lawn Cemetery. Shiva was at the home.
THE TIN MENORAH: SYMBOL OF NEGLECT
(Continued from Page Five)
to the problem � to raise the pathetically low standards of artistic achievement in our ritual objects. Something, at any rate, should be done soon. For, in an age when esthetic excellence has established such solid beachheads elsewhere, it is high time that the tin Meno-rah be retired from our homes.
This article is from the American Jewish Congress Bi-Weekly.
PARAGRAPHS OF THE ISRAELI INDICTMENT OF ElCHMANN ENCOMPASS THE CATASTROPHE
Louis Epstein, of Miami Beach, Florida, died on Tuesday, December 26, at Miami Springs, Florida, at the age of sixty-seven years. He was the widower of Mrs. Florence Epstein; and is survived by three sisters: Mrs. J. Ellis (Sophie), and Mrs. S. Ross (Lib-by), both of Miami Beach, Florida; Mrs. J. Shalof (Etta), 105 Waver-
(Continued from Page Nine)
Indeed this crime very deeply concerns the vital interests of the State of Israel, and pursuant to the protective principle this state has the right to punish the criminals.
According to Hitler's murderous racialism the Nazis singled out Jews from all other citizens in all the countries of theif0 domination, and carried the Jews to their death solely because of their racial origin. Even as the Jewish people constituted the object against which the crime was directed, so it is now the competent subject to place on trial those who assailed their existence.
The fact that that people has become after the catastrophe a subject, where it had hitherto been an object, and has turned from the victim of a racial crime to the wielder of authority to punish the criminals is a great historic right that cannot be dismissed.
The State of Israel, the sovereign state of the Jewish people.
performs through itg legislation the task of carrying into effect the right of the Jewish people to punish the criminals who killed their sons with intent to put an end to the survivalof this people.
We are convinced that this power conforms to the principles of the law of nations in force. For all these reasons we have dismissed the first contention of counsel against the jurisdiction of the court.
The second contention of learned counsel was that the trial in Israel of the accused following upon his capture in a foreign land is in conflict with international law, and takes away the jurisdiction of the court.
Counsel pleaded that the accused, who had resided in Argentina under an assumed name, was kidnapped on 11-5-60 by the agent of the State of Israel, and was forcibly brought to Israel. He urged that two witnesses be heard in proof of his contention that the kidnappers of the accused acted on orders they received from the Government of Israel or its representatives, a contention to which learned counsel attached considerable importance in an effort to prove that he was brought to Israel's area of jurisdiction in violation of international law.
He summed up his contentions by submitting that the court ought not to lend its support to an illegal act of the state, and that in these circumstances the court has no jurisdiction to try the accused.
Now that the Governments of Argentina and Israel issued their joint communique of 3-8-60 to the effect that both Governments have decided to view as liquidated the incident whereby the sovereignty of Argentina was violated, the accused in this case can certainly retain no right to base himself on the "violated sovereignty" of the State of Argentina.
The charge sheet in this case has been presented after Argentina had forgiven Israel for that violation of her sovereignty so that there no longer subsisted any. violation of international law. In ' these circumstances the accused cannot presume to be speaking on behalf of Argentina and cannot claim rights which that sovereign state had waived.
Indeed there can be no escaping the conclusion that the violation of international law through the mode of the bringing of the accused into the territory of the country pertains to the international level, namely the relations between the two countries concerned only, and must find its solution at such level. The violation of the international law of this order constitutes an international tort to which the usual rules of current international law apply.
Through the joint decision of the Governments of Argentina and Israel of 3-8-60 to view as settled the incident which was caused through the action of citizens of Israel that has violated the basic rights of the State of Argentina, the country the sovereignty of which was violated, has waived its claims, including the claim for the return of the accused, and any violation of international law which might have been linked with the incident in question has been cured.
(Continued on Page Twelve)
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i
'Blights
E CANADIA
Mtihes
SINCE 1874
At your sabbath table, a decanter of wine is as much at home as a challah.
No, wine is more welcome in Jewish homes in Canada than Mazel Tovf a wine made from Concord grapes grown on the* sunny slopes of the Niagara Peninsula.
Mazel Tov is ruby red in colour, and richly sweet�but not cloying�to the taste. It's a wine you'll "remember", the kind of wine that you used to taste many years ago.
Mazel Tov, made 'Kosher rPesach' under strict rabbinical supervision, is available throughout ^the year for every 'simcha'.
v"r*"� �
TRADITIONAL WIMB
274