mon Detroit Hasidim Plan Festivities Mid,rasha Lists Groundwork Laid for Israel Bonds, to Mark Lubavitcher Rebbe Release Summer Courses High Holiday Campaign Activities Brooklyn, N. Y., where . the present Lubavitcher R ebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel, lives. Thousands of the movement's followers are expected to join the pilgrimage to visit the Rebbe. Delegations will_ attend from Israel, France, Britain, Australia, South America, Africa and from all parts of the U. S. A number of cars from Detroit will be leaving on Sunday for the celebration. John C. Hopp Chosen Beth El President LUBAVITCHER REBBE There is little of religious Jewry left in Russia today. What remnant there is has often been credited to the late Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok, who was one of the few Jewish religious leaders who remained in Russia during the trying and dangerous period following the Communist revolu- tion. He was practically the only one to stand up_ to the Yevsek- tzia, a powerful council of atheistic Jews (subsequently dis- solved). The Lubavitcher Rebbe was finally imprisoned in Russia and sentenced to death in 1927 for his efforts in the preservation of Jewry in that country. So widely. known and re- spected was the Lubavitcher Rebbe that foreign protests and pleas by statesmen throughout the world forced the Russians to release the rabbi on the day he was to have been executed. His escape is celebrated by Lubavitcher Hassidim each year on the anniversary of his re- lease. In Detroit, several fes- tivities have been planned by disciples of the late rabbi. There will be a gathering at Oak Park Young Israel at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, and on Mon- day evening at the Mogen Av- raham synagogue. In addition, a 15-minute portion of the Saturday night Jewish Hour will he devoted to the com- memoration of the occasion. The main celebration will take place Monday evening in Guest Rabbi to Occupy Shaarey Zedek Pulpit Rabbi Shamai Kanter, a 1955 graduate of the Jewish Theo- logical Seminary, will occupy the pulpit at sabbath services of Cong. Shaarey Zedek this Saturday. Cantors Jacob H. Sonenklar and Reuven Frankel will of- ficiate, together with the choir under the direction of Dan Frohman. The Bar Mitzvahs of Alan Jay Sussman and Ray- mond Weiss will be observed. Rabbi Kanter has served as chaplain at the Randolph Field Air Force base in Texas for two years, and, in the spring of this year, assumed duties as tem- porary rabbi at the West Lon- don Synagogue of British Jews in England. Directors' Council Names Education Award Judges Metropolitan Detroit Reli- ctious Schools Directors' Council appointed Theodore Baruch, Helen Kass, Allan Waller, Walter Farber and Allen War- sen judges of the educational awards. Warsen also was ap- pointed editor of a monograph on the history of Jewish Reli- gious schools in Detroit, to be published by the council. The council announced that a scroll would be presented to Bernard Panush for his efforts on behalf of community Jew- ish religious education. The school calendar for the coming year also was planned. John C. Hopp was elected president of Temple Beth El at the 108th annual meeting of the congregation. Philip R. Marcuse was elected vice- president and Leon S. Way- burn treasurer. • The following were elected to the board of trustees for a three - year term: Leo I. Franklin, Bur- ton J. Fried- man, Charles F. Rosen and Stanley J. Winkelman. The follow- ing remain on the board of trustees: Irv- ing L. Gold- man, Sidney J. C. Hopp J. K ar be 1, Maurice Klein, Mrs. Sanford R. Klein, Lawrence I. Levi, Syd- ney Sarasohn, Emil T. Stern and Dr. Max B. Winslow. Serving as ex-officio board members are: Mrs. Major A. Siegel, president of the Sister- hood; Ben Nathanson, president of the Men's Club; and Arthur L. Goulson, chairman of the cemetery board. ' • ' • ........... The Summer term of Mid- rasha, College of Jewish Stud- ies, will begin Monday and continue through July 31. Classes will be held from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The courses to be offered are: Pentateuch (Humash) with medieval and modern commen- taries, Rambam (Maimonides), Hebrew literature (Bialik's prose), grammar and composi- tion, history, and a special course in education, dealing with the problems of teaching the Hebrew language, Humash and history. The instructors will be Rabbi Milton Arm, Moshe Zirin, Morris Nobel, Joseph Haggai, Menachim Gla- zer, and Mrs. Naomi Floch. These courses are open to teachers and to those who have a fluent speaking knowledge of the Hebrew language, ability to express themselves in writ- ing and who are able to read without vowels. For informa- tion call DI 1-3407. 500 Rabbis Participating in CCAR Chicago Parley CHICAGO (JTA) — Current patterns in religious education, activities among the Jewish youth, religion and science and the impact of environment on the synagogue are among sub- jects being discussed at the five-day annual convention of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, central body of the Reform rabbinate, which opened here Tuesday. More than 500 Reform rabbis from a parts of the United States and Canada will attend the conclave. Sparked by the recent visit of Col. Shoshana Gershom, Com- mander of the Israeli Women's Army, the Religious Council of the Detroit Israel Bond Cam- paign laid the ground work for High Holiday activities to spur - Bond sales. Col. Gershom, who was lun- cheon guest of the Religious Council, congratulated Phillip Stoliman on his re-appointment as chairman of the Council. He will be joined in the 1958 cam- paign by Co-Chairmen Norman Allan, of Adas Shalom, and Erry S. Loewenthal, president, Young Israel, Oak Woods. Rabbi Jacob E. Segal spoke of the vital importance of the Israel Bond High Holiday effort. The enthusiastic group at the opening meeting of the Reli- gious Council included many rabbis and religious lay leaders. Louis E. Levitan, new man- ager of the Detroit Israel Bond Organization, outlined plans for future synagogue-centered ac- tivities. Dr. Davis to Attend Student Center Ground Breaking in Jerusalem Dr. Moshe Davis, provost of the Jewish Theological Semin- ary of America, left for Israel to supervise arrangements for groundbreaking ceremonies in Jerusalem on July 29 for the American Student Center, a project of the Seminary. If You Still Demand the Finest in Food and Service! BEL-AIRE Kosher Catering WE GO ANYWHERE Call TR 3-5800 8231 Woodward The Word Sure Gets Around That HARRY ABRAM is giving the best deal on a 1958 "When the press is free and all men able to read, all is safe." —Thomas Jefferson SHORE CHEVROLET 12240 Jos. 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