SERVICES

TEMPLE BETH EL: Vesper services at 5:30 p.m. today. At
11:15 a.m. services Saturday, Rabbi David A. Baylinson will
preach on "Prophets and Sages of Today."
TEMPLE ISRAEL: At 8:30 p.m. services today, Dr. Leon Fram
will speak on "The Creation."
BETH AARON SNYAGOGUE: At 8:45 a.m. services Saturday,
the Bar Mitzvah of Gordon Grenn will be observed.
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Sabbath services at 5:15 p.m., today; at
9 a.m., Saturday, the Bar Mitzvah of Richard Canvasser will
be observed.
EVERGREEN JEWISH CONGREGATION: Sabbath services at
8:30.p.m., today, at the home of Dr. and Mrs. David I. Silver,
20078 Kentfield.
CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Sabbath services at 5:30 p.m., today;
at 8:45 a.m., Saturday. The Bar Mitzvah of Alexander Reis-
man will be observed.
CONG. BETH SHMUEL: Sabbath services at 5:20 p.m., today;
at 9 a.m., Saturday, the Bar Mitzvah of Gerald Paul Richman
will be observed.
CONG. BETH YEHUDAH: Sabbath services at 5 p.m., today;
at 9 a.m., Saturday.
CONG. AHAVAS ACHIM: Sabbath services at 5:30 p.m., today;
at 8:45 a.m., Saturday, the Bar Mitzvah of Stephen Schlesin-
ger will be observed.

Synagogue Institute to Present
`Invitation to Jewish Learning'

"Invitation to Jewish Learn-
ing" is the theme of the new
series of studies for adults of-
fered at the Sixth Annual Syna-
gogue Adult Institute, the' co-
operative education project of
the five Conservative syna-
gogues of Detroit, which will
open for registration at 7:30
p.m., Tuesday at the Beth
Aaron Synagogue, ia000 Wyo-
ming, near Curtis.
At 8:30 p.m., that evening,
there will be concurrent classes
in "Guidesposts of the Talmud"
to be conducted by Rabbi
Moses Lehrman; "Profiles of
the Prophets" given by Rabbi
Milton Arm; and a grades
series of classes in Hebrew
reading, writing, conversation,
and modern Hebrew literature.
Rabbi Lehrman's course will
examine Talmud in relation to
modern Jewish living.. The
"Profiles of the Prophlets" will
analyze the contributions of
these men to the understanding
of Jewish history and religious
though.
The 9:30 p.m. classes will
include Rabbi Jacob Segal's
course, "Moments of Prayer in
Personal Life," which will ex-
amine selected Jewish prayers
and their relationship to life
of the contemporary JeW, and
a series of Hebrew courses.
Also offered at the Institute,
which has been functioning in
Detroit for the last five years,
will be special courses in Bibli-
cal studies and Jewish history
and philosophy, including:
"From Ghetto to Statehood,"
a class by Rabbi Benjamin Gor-
relick which will review Jew-
ish history from the Emancipa-
tion to the rebirth of Israel.
Rabbi Jacob Chinitz will con-
duct a course on "Distinctive
Features of Judaism," which
focus on Jewish doctrines and
their relevance to the world of
today.
"Religions of the World," a
course by Rabbi Morris Adler,
will examine various religions
of the world of today and
evaluate their fundamental af-
firmations.

In pointing out the commu-
nity need which the Institute
is meeting, Rabbi Moses Lehr-
man, Institute chairman, stated-
"To appreciate Judaism is to
know it. The great values in
Jewish life cannot be bestowed
upon us nor can they be in-
herited. Each generation of
Jews must acquire for itself
the great experiences of our
past. It is for that reason that
Judaism stresses to emphati-
cally the need for learning."
Both members and non-mem-
bers of the Conservative syna-
gogues are invited to register
for the courses.

Sisterhood to Start
Book Review Series

A series of five book reviews
under auspices of Temple Beth
El Sisterhood will begin at 12
noon, Tuesday, in the Brown
Memorial Chapel of the temple.
The review, to be delivered
by Dr. Leon I. Feuer, of the
Collingwood Avenue Temple in
Toledo, 0., will cover "My Own
Life" by Bernard Baruch.
The books and reviewers
slated for the succeeding four
Tuesday afternoons are "The
Silver Spoon" by Edwin Gil-
bert, TV story teller Frances L.
Brody reviewing on Oct. 29;
"The Unadjusted Man" by Peter
Viereck, Dr. Tracey M. Pullman,
minister of the Unitarian-Uni-
versalist Church of Our Father,
reviewing on Nov. 5; "Letter
from Peking" by Pearl Buck
and "Bridge to the Sun" by
Gwen Harold Terasaki, librarian
Margaret Sodenberg reviewing
on Nov. 12; and "By Love Pos-
sessed" by James Gould Coz-
zens, Dr. Richard C. Hertz re-
viewing on Nov. 19.
Tickets to the lecture series,
which is open to the public, are
available at the temple office.

The Detroit Lions committed
the least number of fumbles-
14—in the National Football
League in 1956.

tIOROWITTMARGARETEN

ATZCOHS

Doom

CINCINNATI (JTA) — The
four-day National Mobilization
of American Reform Judaism
leaders, attended by 600 lay
and rabbinic leaders from .11
parts of the United States, con-
cluded with the adoption of a
resolution expressing concern
over Israel and asking the
United States Government to
assure security for Israel
against Arab hostility "or the
scheming malevolence of Rus-
sia."
The conference adopted a
resolution calling upon all
agencies of the government to
implement by education and
legislation the fundamental
right of all Americans to
equality in public and private
housing, employment and in
exercise of all other civil
rights.
The sum of $455,000 was
contributed here towards the
$2,510,433 goal of the drive,
which supports Union of
American Hebrew Congrega-
tions and Hebrew Union Col-
lege—Jewish Institute of Re-
ligion, the Reform rabbinic
seminary.
At a banquet here, the Re-
form movement honored Dr.
Nelson Glueck on the 10th an-
niversary of his ascension to
the presidency of HUC-JIR.

More than 500 guests are ex-
pected to attend the Beth
Yehudah schools' eighth annual
dinner, set for 6 p.m., Oct. 27,
at the Latin Quarter, 3967 E.
Grand Blvd., according to A.
Howard Bloch, general chair-
man of the dinner committee.
The affair is the major fund-
raising function for the schools.
The estimated attendance was
announced at a meeting of the
dinner committee, on Sunday, at
Bloch's home.
The committee heard a talk
by Wolf Cohen, Yeshivah pres-
ident, who pointed out that the
affairs' proceeds will alleviate
the schools' overstrained finan-
cial position. The schools pre-
sently are operating at an ap-
proximate annual deficit of $200
per student.
Featured at the dinner pro-
gram will be tenor Wilhelm
Silber, comedian Jack Wake-
field and the music of Mickey
Woolf and his orchestra.
For tickets or reservations,
call Daniel A. Laven, treasurer,
UN 2-9517.

wide Mizrachi-Hapoel Hamiz-
rachi membership •committee
will hold its first breakfast
meeting on Oct. 27.
The meeting will take the
form of planning a two-fold
project as one of the goals of
the United Religious Zionist
Organizations. The first step
is the acquisition of 100 char-
ter members to be installed at
the Mizrachi-Hapoel Hamizrachi
annual banquet on Jan. 7.
The first class of members
will be named the Daniel Tern-
chin Membership group, in
tribute to the recently-elected
honorary president of the Miz-
rachi-Hapoel Hamizrachi Or-
ganization of Detroit.
The second phase of the proj-
ect deals with general mem-
bership, with a goal of 1,000
members for the coming year.
Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka,
membership chairman, an-
nounces that a guest speaker
will be present at this break-
fast meeting, at which the city
wide membership drive will of-
ficially begin. -

Red Cochran, Detroit Lions
Michigan State University backfield coach, was a mathe-
was the first land-grant col- matics major at Wake Forest
lege to admit women in 1870. College.

ATTEND THESE SPECIAL EVENTS OF THE
SILVER ANNIVERSARY BALFOUR CELEBRATION !

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22nd
at 8:30 p.m

HEAR

SENATOR
H UMPHREY

HUBERT H.

IN A SPECIAL TALK ON

"ISRAEL AND HER NEIGHBORS"

AND HIS RECENT TRIP TO ISRAEL

at

TEMPLE ISRAEL

NO ADMISSION CHARGE

MARK THESE IMPORTANT DATES ON YOUR CALENDAR

TUES., OCT. 29th — 8:30 P.M.

BALFOUR

Sat. Eve., Nov. 16th, 8:30 p.m.
FORD AUDITORIUM

SILVER ANNIVERSARY

JAN PEERCE

SEE

FAMOUS OPERA AND
CONCERT ARTISTS

FILM NIGHT

KIRK DOUGLAS

In

"THE JUGGLER"

PLUS SPECIAL FILM OF DREW PEARSON
INTERVIEWING BEN GURION
AVALON THEATER
No Admission Charge

And

HERVA NELLI

Phone Diamond 1-8540
NOW FOR RESERVATIONS
TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE
AT ZIONIST HOUSE

BE NUMBERED AMONG THE MANY WHO WORK TOWARD
THE SURVIVAL AND DEVELOPMENT OF ISRAEL
SPONSORED BY,

ZIONIST ORGANIZATION

0

V

A

U S

10424 WEST McNICHOLS

Phone DI, '1-8540

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, October 18, 1957

SYNAGOGUE

Religious Zionists Set
500 Expected
Membership Drive;
for Dinner-Show Breakfast Meeting
Representatives of Detroit
of Beth Yehudah synagogues
serving as a city-

Reform Parley
Asks Israel Aid

