SYNAGOGUE

SERVICES

Fete Goldsteins
at Beth Shimiel
Banquet Dee. 28

CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m., today.
At 9 a.m. services Saturday, Dr. Abraham J. Heschel will
occupy the pulpit. The Bar Mitzvahs of Larry H. Jones and
Kenneth Rosen will be observed.
TEMPLE BETH EL: At 8:30 p.m. services today, Rabbi David
A. Baylinson will preach on "Departmental Religion." At
11:15 a.m. services Saturday, Rabbi Sherwin T. Wine will
speak on "The Jerusalem Talmud."
CONG. BETH JOSEPH: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m., today. At
9 a.m. services Saturday, Rev. Manuel Neiman will speak
on "The Fear of Esau."
CONG. GEMILUTH CHASSODIM: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m..
today. At 9 a.m. services Saturday, Rabbi Joel J. Litke will
speak on "Test of AccOmplishments."
BETH AARON SYNAGOGUE: At 8:30 p.m. late services today,
Rabbi Benjamin H. Gorrelick will preach on "Thanksgiving
to God-A Mark of Human Responsibility." Regular sabbath
services at 4:50 p.m. today, and at 8:45 a.m., Saturday. The
Bar Mitzvahs of Robert Chapnick and Terry Preston will
be served.
YOUNG ISRAEL OF DETROIT: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m.,
today. At 9 a.m. services Saturday, Elijah Stone, national
president of Young Israel, will occupy the pulpit.
BETH ABRAHAM SYNAGOGUE: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m.,
today. At 8:45 a.m. services Saturday, Rabbi Israel I. Hal-
pern will speak on "The Business of Life." The Bar Mitzvah
of Arthur Rothenberg will be observed.
ADAS SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m.,
today; at 8:45 a.m., Saturday. The Bar Mitzvah of Joel
Morganroth will be observed.
CONG. BNAI INIOSHE: Sabbath services at 4:40 and 8:15 p.m.,
today, when past presidents of the congregation will be
honored. The Bas Mitzvah of Jane Feinberg will be observed.
At 9 a.m. services Saturday, the Bar Mitzvah of Frank Wald
will be observed.
CONG. AHAVAS ACHIM: Sabbath services at 4:45 p.m., today;
at 8:45 a.m., Saturday. The Bar Mitzvahs of Robert Paul
Aston and Bruce Selik will be observed.
EVERGREEN JEWISH CONG.: Sabbath services at 4:30 p.m.,
today; at 9 a.m., Saturday, in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
David Simon, 20060 Heyden.
DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: 1442 Griswold: Sabbath and daily
services at 8 a.m. and 5:15 p.m.

Community Groups
to Celebrate Hanukah

Hanukah celebrations are
currently being planned by a
number of community organi-
zations, it was announced this
week.
At the Sholem Aleichem In-
stitute, three separate gather-
ings are planned, beginning
with a Chapter II party at 9
p.m., Dec. 6.
Chapter I will hold their
festivities at 9 p.m., Dec. 9,
while the school celebration
will occur at 4 p.m., Dec. 11.
All three events will be in the
Institute, 19350 Greenfield.
The play "Eight Candles in
Search of a Shammes" will be
presented by the Children's
Theater of the Adas Shalom
Religious School on Dec. 7.
The play, by Charles S. Beck-
er, will be performed by sixth
grade students of Lawrence
Sukenic.
In the United Jewish Folk
Schools, Hanukah will be cele-
brated at 1 p.m., Dec. 14, in
the Hayim Greenberg Center,
19161 Schaefer, according to
Harry Mondry, school board
chairman.

Workmen's Circle Sets
Building Dedication

Center Concert By and
For Youth, Dec. 7

A young people's concert will
be given by the Center Sympho-
ny Orchestra, under the baton
of Julius Chajes, Dec. 7. Six
teen age solo-
ists will be
featured in
the concert
for and by
young people
at 2:30 p.m.,
at the Davison
Jewish Center.
Inez Hullin-
ger, Richard
L u b y, violin-
ists; Mario De
Fiore, cellist;
Susan King,
Marilyn Lucas Marilyn Lucas
and Rita Sloan, pianists, will
be heard in compositions by
Bach, Mozart and Chajes.

Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Gold-
stein, both active in many pha-
ses of Jewish communal life,
will be honored guests at the
annual donor banquet of Cong.
Beth Shmuel.
The event will take place at
6 p.m., Dec. 28, in the syna-
gogue social hall.
Harry E. Citrin, vice-presi-
dent of Beth Shmuel, has been
named banquet chairman. He

Goldstein

Mrs. Goldstein

will be assisted by Mrs. Julius
Beigelman, Isadore Schwartz,
Jacob Berkowitz and Joe Stern,
co-chairmen.
Local attorney Aaron Rosen-
berg, who is one of this com-
munity's most popular masters
of ceremonies, will serve as
toastmaster, and a musical pro-
gram will be presented by Can-
tor Shabtai Ackerman, of Beth
Abraham Synagogue.
Associated with Cong. Beth
Shmuel for many years, Mr. and
Mrs. Goldstein have actively
aided in its growth under the
spiritual leadership of Rabbi
Joseph Rabinowitz.
Prominent in the Israel Bond
campaigns, Goldstein has twice
served as marshal of BIG-Day
locally. The couple is also af-
filiated with Adas Shalom Syn-
agogue, Bar-Ilan University in
Israel, the Jewish Theological
Seminary, Zionist Organization
of Detroit, Labor Zionist Organ-
ization of America, Bnai Brith,
Bereznitzer and Pinsker Pro-
gressive Aid Societies, Hista-
drut, Hadassah and Pioneer
Women.
A forest of the Jewish Na-
tional Fund has been planted
in Israel in honor of the Gold-
steins, whose name is also af-
fixed to the Suburban Hebrew
Academy of the Beth Yehudah
Schools in Oak Park.
Goldstein, who is president of
the Capitol Paper Co., has been
a board member of the Hebrew
Benevolent Society for over 25
years.
The couple has two children,
Albert D. Goldstein and Mrs.
Samuel Simmer, and five grand-
children.

Praise Attorney General Chabad Yud Tes Kislev
for Work on Resort Bias Dinner Set for Sunday

Attorney General Paul L.
Adams and his staff have been
cited by the Michigan Regional
Advisory Board of the Anti-
Defamation League of Bnai
Brith for its work against dis-
criminatory resort advertising
in Michigan.
In a letter from Mrs. Sam-
uel S. Aaron, ADL state chair-
man, the Attorney General's
office is commended for its
"cooperation and techniques,"
which the national ADL "con-
siders to be the most positive
forward step yet taken in any
place in the nation. . . ."

Joseph Bernstein, chairman
of Workmen's Circle education-
al center committee, announces
the dedication of the new Work-
men's Circle Center, at 18340
W. Seven Mile, on Sunday.
The dedication pro-gram will
begin at the Hayim Greenberg
Center, 19161 Schaefer, at 12:30
p.m., with WC general chair-
man Nathan Chanin as guest Cong. Gemiluth Chassodim
speaker. A motorcade will pro- Slates Hanukah Dance
ceed from there - to the new
Cong. Gemiluth Chassodim
building site for additional will hold a Hanukah dance at
dedicatory observances.
8:30 p.m., Dec. 6, at the Beth
Abraham social hall. Fred
Talmudic Lecture Series
Crissey and his orchestra will
Sholem Aleichem Institute provide the music. All proceeds
Chapter One is sponsoring a of the event will go to the
lecture series on "Jewish Liter- synagogue's charity funds, an-
ature of the Talmudic Period," nounced dance chairman Felix
each Monday at 9 p.m. Chaim Sachs. The event is open to the
en_Dor is lecturer.

Rabbi Solomon Hecht, mem-
ber of Chicago Orthodox Rab-
binical Council executive board,
will be featured speaker at the
"Yud Tes Kislev" dinner cel-
ebration of the Detroit office of
Chabad-Lubav itch Merkos
Linyonei Chinuch, at 6:30 p.m.,
Sunday, at Cong. Beth Shmuel
social hall, Dexter at Buena
Vista.
Rabbi Hecht, a native Amer-
ican, has studied in European
yeshivot and is a graduate of
the Lubavitcher Yeshiva in
Brooklyn. He is head of the
Association of C h a b a d and
Affiliated Congregations in
Chicago and conducts a regular
radio series there.
The Yud Tes Kislev celebra-
tion observes the date of the
freeing of the first Lubavitcher
Rebbe, Schneur Zalman, from
Russian captivity in the 18th
century. The present head of
the world-wide Chabad move-
ment is Rabbi Menachem M.
Scheerson.
For further information, or
for tickets, call the De t r o i t
Chabad office, TO 9-7928.

SCHOOLS and DIVISIONS

Accredited by Middle States Association of Colleges
and Secondary Schools; Approved by New York State
-
Education Department.
President-Dr. Samuel Belkin.
Chairman, Board of Trustees-Max J. Etra.

-

Undergraduate Schools
YESHIVA UNIVERSITY HIGH SCHOOLS-Offer com-
plete Jewish and academic program; Grant Regents
diploma.
1. FOR BOYS-Manhattan (1915) (Main Center-Am-
sterdam Avenue and 186th Street, N. Y. 33. LOrraine
8-8400).
2. FOR BOYS-Brooklyn (1945) (2270 Church Avenue,
Brooklyn 26. ULster 6-4006).
3. FOR GIRLS-Brooklyn (1948) (2301 Snyder Avenue,
Brooklyn 26. BUckminster 4-2850).
Colleges of Arts and Sciences
4. YESHIVA COLLEGE FOR MEN (1928) (Main Center)
first liberal arts college under Jewish auspices; grants
Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees.
5. STERN COLLEGE FOR WOMEN (1954) (253 Lex-
ington Avenue, N. Y. 16. MUrray Hill 5-0150). The
nation's only liberal arts college for women under
Jewish auspices; Awards Bachelor of Arts and Bach-
elor of Religious Education degrees.
Teachers Institutes
6. FOR MEN (1917) (Main Center) trains Hebrew teach-
ers and administrators; Awards Teachers Diploma
and Bachelor of Religious Education degree.
7. FOR WOMEN (1952) (253 Lexington Avenue, N. Y.
16. MUrray Hill 5 0150). Trains Hebrew teachers and
administrators; awards Teachers Diploma and Bach-
elor of Religious Education degree.

-

Graduate and Professional Schools
8. RABBI ISAAC ELCHANAN THEOLOGICAL SEM-
INARY (1896) (Main Center) the nation's foremost
training center for orthodox rabbis; confers ordina-
tion (semicha).
9. CANTORIAL TRAINING INSTITUTE (1954) (Main
Center) teachers traditional cantorial functions;
awards Cantorial Diploma and Associate Cantor's
Certificate.
10. BERNARD REVEL GRADUATE SCHOOL (1937)
(Main Center) offers graduate work in Jewish and
Semitic studies; confers Master of Hebrew Literature,
Doctor of Hebrew Literature and Doctor of Philos-
ophy degrees.
11. ISRAEL. INSTITUTE (1954) (Main Center) offers
courses for graduate students and laymen - stressing
the relationship between Israel and the American-
Jewish community; awards certificate in coopera-
tion with the Jewish Agency for Israel.
12. HARRY FISCHEL SCHOOL FOR HIGHER JEWISH
STUDIES (1945) (Main Center) offers summer courses
in Jewish and Semitic studies; awards Master of
Hebrew Literature, Doctor of Hebrew Literature and
Doctor of Philosophy degrees.
13. GRADUATE SCHOOL OF MATHEMATICAL SCI-
ENCES (1945) (Main Center) offers graduate pro-
grams plus special courses for laymen; awards Master
of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees.
14. -SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK (1957) (Main Center)
offers a graduate program in social work; grants
the Master of Science degree in Social Work.
15. GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION (1957) (110
West 57th Street, N. Y. 19. JUdson 2-5200) Offers
graduate programs in elementary education, secon-
dary education, special education, guidance, school
psychology, pupil personnel services, elementary
school administration and supervision, general ad-
ministration and supervision, and religious educa-
tion; grants Master of Science, Master of Religious
Education and Doctor of Philosophy degrees.
16. ALBERT EINSTEIN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
(1955) (Eastchester Rd. and Morris Park Avenue,
Bronx 61. SYcamore 2-2200) the first Medical College
in the United States under Jewish sponsorship;
awards Doctor of Medicine degree.
17. SUE GOLDING GRADUATE DIVISION OF MED-
ICAL SCIENCES (1957) (Albert Einstein College of
Medicine) offers advanced study in anatomy, biochem-
istry, micro-biology and immunology, pathology,
pharmacology and physiology; awards Doctor of
Philosophy degree.

