Volume XXII, Issue X | www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts
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15 Av 5776 | August 19, 2016
Am David building sold, contents scheduled for public sale BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org Temple Am David, which has been in receivership since November 2015, has sold its temple building to the Rhode Island Hindu Temple Society Inc. The group paid $400,001 and the closing is expected to take place in September. The building will become the fi rst Hindu temple in Rhode Island and will serve more than 300 families across the state. Ted Orson, receiver for Temple Am David, said he was pleased the highest bidder was a religious group. “I’m happy that the building was built for faith and it will remain a building of faith,” he said. A group of congregants from Am David continue to hold Shabbat services in the building and discussions are under-
way that might allow them to continue to use the building to worship on Shabbat and other holidays after the sale, said Orson. Meanwhile, Orson and Giovanni La Terra Bellina, of the Providence law fi rm of Orson and Brusini, said a public sale of the building’s contents is scheduled for Aug. 28. The contents of the building, including eight Torahs, artwork, Judaica, items from the gift shop, furniture, and fi xtures are scheduled to be sold during a fi xed price sale from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on the 28th. Immediately following that sale will be an auction of everything but the Torahs. Also to be sold are two burial plots at Lincoln Park Cemetery, in Warwick. The kitchen items will stay with the building. TEMPLE AM DAVID | 3
SUPER SUNDAY KICKS OFF ANNUAL CAMPAIGN BY HILLARY SCHULMAN September is a busy time. School is starting, people are returning from vacation, football is beginning, and the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island is kicking off its 2017 Annual Campaign. Super Sunday, on Sept. 18, is the Alliance’s biggest fundraising day of the year, raising money for the Annual Campaign, which supports more than 300 programs and services here at home, in Israel and around the world.
During last year’s Super Sunday, Sally Rotenberg consults with David Leach.
SUPER SUNDAY | 26
3 baseball books from some veteran Jewish observers of the game BY HILLEL KUTTLER JTA – For many, summer is all about the three B’s: baseball, beaches and books. With the weather and pennant races sizzling, two journalists and the mayor of baseball’s home village of Cooperstown, New York – all Jewish – have provided their takes about a sport that has captivated them for a long time. The journalists – Hal Bock and Dan Schlossberg – focus on
two National League teams: the Chicago Cubs, well-positioned this season to break a 108-year championship drought some consider a curse, and the Atlanta Braves, who won 14 consecutive division titles through 2005 but now have the worst record in Major League Baseball. Bock covered baseball for The Associated Press for four decades, while Schlossberg also once served on AP’s baseball beat.
Jeff Katz is now serving a second term as mayor of Cooperstown, after moving there to indulge his lifelong love of baseball. In the book, he researches the strike-dividing season of 35 years ago that resulted in fi rstand second-half champions and the majors’ best team, the Cincinnati Reds, missing the playoffs. JTA spent some time talking to the authors, who provide Jewish anecdotes connected to
the books and ruminate about their pasts growing up in the baseball-rich New York City area. “The Last Chicago Cubs Dynasty Before the Curse,” by Hal Bock, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, $36. “The Last Chicago Cubs Dynasty Before the Curse” covers the years 1906 to 1910, when the Cubs reached four World Series and won two of them. It was “a fun book to write,”
said Bock, adding that he enjoys the so-called deadball era in baseball, when home runs BASEBALL | 13
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