THE DETROIT JEWIS H NEWS — Fr iday, October 3, 1958- 1 4 Holiday Season Ends with Simhat Torah, Shemini Atzeret Services Dr. Leon Fram will speak on "The Meaning of Sukkot," at services tonight. The Bar Mitz- vah of Mark Leslie Shook will be observed. Rabbi M. Robert Syme will preach at Saturday morning services, when the Bar Mitzvah of Marc Leslie Berman will take place. At Shemini Atzeret services Monday, at 10:30 a.m., 100 chil- dren will parade down the Tem- ple's sanctuary aisle. The chil- dren, entering the religious school for the first time this year, will be blessed by the Rabbis. Dr. Fram will deliver the sermon. Yizkor prayers will be recited at the service. Temple Beth El Sabbath services at 5:30 p.m., today. Rabbi David A. Baylin- sorn will preach on "The Burial Place of Moses" at 11:35 a.m. services Saturday. Consecration service for chil- dren newly enrolled in the re- ligious school will be held at 11 a.m., Sunday. At Shemini Atzeret services at 10:30 a.m., Monday, Rabbi Baylinson will preach on "Let There Be Light." Late Friday evening services will resume at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 17. Cong. Ahavas Achim Sabbath services at 5:30 p.m., today. At 8:45 a.m. services Saturday, the Bar Mitzvah of Robert Bruce Cohen will be ob- served. Cong. Bnai David Sabbath services at 6:15 p.m., today and at 8:45 a.m., Satur- day, at both synagogues. Cong. Bnai Moshe Sabbath services at 5:35 a.m., today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Moses Lehrman will preach the sermons and Cantor Louis Klein will chant the lit- urgy at Simhat Torah and She- mini Atzeret services at 5:45 p.m. and 8:30 a.m. both days. Hakofoth will begin at 6:30 p.m., Monday. Adas Shalom Synagogue Sabbath services at 6 p.m., to- day and at 8:45 a.m.. Saturday. The Bar Mitzvahs of Daniel Ed- ward Hubert and Evan Egrin will be observed. Shemini Atzeret services at 6 p.m., and 8:30 a.m., Monday. A Yizkor sermon will be—de- livered at 10:30 a.m. at Mon- day's services by Rabbi Jacob E. Segal. Simhat Torah services for children under the age of 10 will be held at 5 p.m., Mon- day in the social hall. Regular Simhat Torah services will be in the main sanctuary at 6 p.m. Monday and 8:30 a.m., Tuesday. Cong. Shaarey Zedek Sabbath services at 6 p.m., today and 8:45 a.m., Saturday. The Bar Mitzvahs of Stephen A. Fellows and Jeremy Rose will be observed. Final days' services will be held at 6 p.m., Sunday. Monday and Tuesday. and 8:45 a.m., Monday and Tuesday. Beth Aaron Synagogue Services Sunday at 5:50 p.m. Shemini Atzeret services begin at 8:30 a.m., with the sermon by Rabbi Benjamin H. Gorre- lick at 10:15 a.m. and Yizkor at 10:45 a.m. Simhat. Torah ser- vices at 6:30 p.m., Monday and 8:30 a.m., Tuesday. A party for children will be held at 3:45 p.m., Monday. Evergreen Jewish Cong. Sabbath services at 6 p.m., to- day and at 9 a.m., Saturday, at 19911 Heyden. Holiday services at 6 p.m., Sunday and Monday and 9 a.m., Monday, at the Cam- bridge Social Hall, Evergreen and Cambridge. A Children's Israelis to Appear on Ed Sullivan Show Torah festival will be included in Monday evening's service. After being without a perma- borhood, the project was aban- nent home for two years, the doned, but shortly afterward Downtown Synagogue this week the Downtown Synagogue came moved into its new permanent into being. The synagogue's last spiritual quarters on the second floor of the Frederic Collin Bldg., 1442 leader was Rabbi Leo Stein- Griswold. houser, who died two years Yizkor services will be re- ago. Still searching for a rabbi cited there at regular intervals to serve as spiritual leader, on Shemini Atzeret, between 9 services are presently being con- a.m. and 1 p.m., with Rev. Mor- ducted by Cantor Cooper. The Agree Society is headed. ris Cooper officiating. Cong. Beth Joseph Sabbath services at 6 p.m., today and at 9 a.m., Saturday. Rev. M. Neiman will speak on "The Feast of Tabernacles." Young Israel of NW Sabbath services at 5:50 p.m., today and at 9 a.m., Saturday. Shemini Atzeret will be ob- served at services at 6 p.m., Sunday and 9 a.m., Monday, with Yizkor services at 10:30 a.m. A children's party will be held at 5 p.m., Monday, fol- lowed by the Hakofoth at 7 p.m. Cong. Gemiluth Chassodim "Use Determines Values" is the sermon topic of Rabbi Joel J. Litke at 9 a.m. services Sat- urday. Today's services begin at 6 p.m. Shemini Atzeret evening serv- ices will begin at 6 p.m., and morning services will be at 8:45 a.m. The same schedule will fol- low on Simhat Torah. Rabbi Litke will preach on "A Clue to Immortality" at Yizkor services on Shemini Atzeret. Jewish Soldiers Denied Holiday Observance, Complaint Charges Charges that U.S. Army offi- cers refused Jewish soldiers of the 1st Battle Group, 30th U.S. Infantry, stationed at the Schweinfurt Army Post in Ger- many, were denied religious coverage during Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, were leveled in a letter to Sen. Charles E. Potter from the directors of Jewish affairs at the post. The letter, signed by Abram J. Landau and George A. Mason, directors of Jewish affairs in the absence of a Jewish chap- lain, charged that routine man- euvers were given as the excuse for refusing religious coverage to the Jewish servicemen. This action, the letter said, was con- trary to army directives asking that Jewish soldiers be given the opportunity to observe the solemnity of the high holidays. Mason and Landau expressed the hope that Potter would take action to prevent the recurrence of such an incident. A number of Detroit Jewish soldiers are stationed at the Schweinfurt post. Prayer Book for Jews in U.S. Armed Forces Published by Army Publication of a 470-page Jewish prayer book for use in all branches of the U.S. armed forces has been com- pleted by the Department of the Army. according to word received by the Jewish Wel- fare Board Commission on Jew- ish Chaplaincy from the Office of the Chief of Army Chap- lains. Distribution of the new prayer book to Jewish chap- lains throughout the world will begin in October. Entitled "Prayer Book for Jewish Personnel in the Armed Forces of the United States," the prayer book, the latest re- vision of a work distributed to Jewish personnel in the armed forces since World War II. it contains services in Hebrew and English for all occasions in the Hebrew calendar. It was edited by JWB's Commission on Jewish Chaplaincy. Dr. Hertz's Book Was Published by Pageant Press "Prescription for Heartache," the new book of Dr. Richard C. Hertz, of Detroit's Temple Beth El, which has received much attention locally and na- tionally, is published. by Pa- geant Press, 101 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. Agree Society Finds New Griswold Location for Downtown Synagogue Nehama Hendel and Mena- hem Lazarovitch, top Israeli folk singers, are among the five Israeli acts selected by Ed Sullivan to appear on his Nov. 2 television show over CBS-TV (Detroit time is 8 p.m., over channel 2). Miss Hendel is the star of the Israeli film, "Pillar of Fire," scheduled for early release in this country. The appearance of the Israeli stars is under the auspices of the Zionist Organization of America. Sub- sequent to their TV perform- ances, the group will tour the country on behalf of ZOA. Beth El Consecration Service Sunday Morning The annual consecration cere- mony of Temple Beth El for the newly enrolled children in the Kindergarten (four and five- year-olds) and Grades I and II will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday in the Main Temple. The children will be formally inducted into their study of Judaism by Dr. Richard C. Hertz. Each child will receive a miniature Torah- as a gift from the congregation and will be blessed by Dr. Hertz. The beautiful tradition of handing down the Torah from generation to generation will be performed by Dr. Herbert I. Kallet, a past president of the Temple, his son, Dr. Maerit B. Kallet, and his granddaughter, Gail Ann Kal- let. A special program of music will be rendered by the Chil- dren's Choir under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Jason H. Tickton. Four New Day Schools Four new foundation and day schools, providing an in- tegrated program of general and Jewish studies for the elemen- tary grades in the U.S. opened this September, it was an- nounced by Rabbi Josiah Derby, chairman of the committee on day school education of the United Synagogue commission on Jewish education. The new schools bring the network of Conservative founda- tion and day schools throughout the United States and Canada to 14. It includes the Hillel Acad- emy in Detroit. Evergreen Board to Meet A board meeting of Ever- green Jewish Congregation is planned Wednesday evening, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isa- dore Silverman, 25144 Prairie, Southfield. The synagogue, sponsored by by Nathan Agree as honorary the Isaac Agree Memorial So- president and George A. Agree ciety, was forced to abandon as president. The board of di- its previous synagogue, which it rectors includes Morris Canvas- had operated at 1205 Griswold ser, Charles N. Agree, Allan G. since 1937, when the building Agree and Max Kaplan. Com- mittee chairmen include fund- was demolished in 1956. During the interim years, raising, Allan A. Agree; enter- however, the synagogue func- tainment, Jules Meskin; and site tioned at 727 David Stott Bldg., finding, - Norton Rosin. The ladies chapter, known as with High Holy Day services the Rachel Agree Memorial So- held in the Veterans Memorial Bldg. and other festival services ciety, plays a vital role in fur- conducted in the Malcolmson nishing draperies and other fur- nishings for the Downtown Syn- Bldg., also on Griswold. During the years since its agogue. It is headed by Mrs. establishment as a tribute to Florence Geller. the late Isaac Agree, the Down- town Synagogue has maintained daily and sabbath services for businessmen, tourists, transients and residents in the downtown LEADER area. Its history, however, goes CLEANED back to 1921, when the Isaac Agree Memorial Society was RUGS and established on the third day of CARPETS Hanukah by members of the Agree, Canvasser, Kaplan, Ros- ACTUALLY in and Zatkin families. The society , a memorial to the HAVE THE late Mr. Agree, a prominent benefactor in the fields of re- FRAGRANCE ligion, education and philanthro- OF SPRING! py, wanted to "perpetuate the bonds of kinship that link our family together and to emulate the splendid achievement of Isaac Agree." The first move of the Agree Society was to build a syna- gogue and Talmud Torah on Rosedale Ct., in Detroit, to serve, without charge, all Jews TY 5-8400 who lived in the surrounding areas. In 1937, because of the changing character of the neigh- CORNICES Removed by Competent Workmen Complete Building Restoration — Violations Corrected Full Insurance Coverage CALL: BEN ROSENTHAL YE 7-6701 Fidelity Weatherproofing CHARLES WEINSTOCK Formerly with Buick Factory Branch for 30 Years IS NOW ASSOCIATED WITH THE WORLD'S LARGEST BUICK DEALER KRAJENKE BUICK SALES, Inc 11620 Jos. 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