16 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEW S — Friday, Sept. 11, 1959 — Michigan Sisterhoods to Meet at United Synagogue Parley The Sisterhood of Cong. Aha- vas Israel, Grand Rapids, will be host to the conservative sisterhoods in Michigan, begin- ning Sept. 20, with a reception at Hotel Pantlind, and continu- ing through lunch Sept. 22, an- nounces Mrs. Joseph M. Markel, president of the • Michigan branch of the National Wo- men's League of the United Synagogue of America. Special trains will take the. delegates from the Detroit area, leaving via Chesapeake and Ohio in Union Depot, at 5 p.m., Sept. 20, and will arrive in Grand Rapids at 8:10 p.m. Sisterhood presidents leading delegates from Detroit will in- clude Mesdames Charles H. Charlip, of Adas Shalom; Thomas Partovich, Ahav as Achim; Albert Kaplan, Beth Aaron; Harry Markle, Bnai Moshe; E. Shiovitz, Evergreen; and Joseph Deutch, Shaarey Zedek. Other presidents will include Mesdames Larry Shalit, Ann Arbor; Philip Surath, Bay City; Samuel Laro, Flint; Pete Mey- ers, Grand Rapids; Alfred Thea, Kalamazoo; Zola Mickelson, Li- vonia; Benjamin Rosen, Mt. Clemens;• Sidney Fishman, Oak Park; Irving Koper, Pontiac; and Carl Leib, Saginaw. Workshops in all phases of sisterhood activities will be pre- sented at this first annual con- ference given under "the banner of the Michigan branch of the National Women's League of the United Synagogue of Amer- ica. St. Louis Chief Rabbi Beth •Shmuel Lists to Speak at Installation Holy Day Services At the invitation of the Coun- cil of Orthodox Rabbis of De- troit, Rabbi Menachem H. Eichenstein, Chief Rabbi of St. Louis, will speak at the installation of the Council's newly elected Rabbi officers Tues- Eichenstein day evening at Holiday Manor. Proposal Brings Up Church-State Issue DUMONT, N. J., (JTA)—The Dumont Board of Education, by a vote of 6 to 3, rejected pro- posals by a Protestant group for a released time program in the public schools of this commun- ity. Under this proposal, chil- dren would have been released from school during school hours, to receive outside re- ligious instruction. The proposal was opposed by Rabbi Jerome M. Blass of the Bergenfield-Dumont Jewish Cen- ter, Rabbi Judah Washer of the Teaneck Jewish Community Center, and Sam Brown, re- gional director of the New Jer- sey Region of the American Jewish Congress. Rabbi Blass took the position that the pro- posal was an infringement of the principle of separation of church and state and would create difficult administrative problems. Cantor to Chant for High Holy Days at Tamarack Shehitah Remains Problem in Canada MONTREAL, (JTA)—A dele- gation from the Canadian Jew- ish Congress visited the Minis- ter of Agriculture, Douglas S. Harkness, and placed before him the views of the Jewish community on the protection of Shehitah and pre-slaughter han- dling. A bill enacted recently in Parliament permits the gov- ernment to make regulations on methods of slaughter of food animals. The Minister indicated that Shehitah would be included among the permitted methods of slaughter, but that shackling and hoisting an animal before rendering it unconscious would be considered inhumane. A Congress submission left with the Minister and with his senior departmental officers pointed out that "the recogni- tion of Shehitah as a humane method may be nullified if no safeguards are available to as- sure workable pre-slaughter con- ditions prior to Shehita." The American experierice as gath- ered by representative Jewish institutions in the U. S. was also submitted in the form of a brief to the Minister. In the meantime Canada Packers Corp., is studying changes in the present methods preparing animals for the proc- ess of Shehitah, and several demonstrations in the presence of rabbis and communal leaders have taken place. Rabbi J. B. Soloveitchik of Boston has been consulted on certain problems involved in these experiments. Cantor Sheldon Feinberg re- turns for his sixth consecutive appearance at Tamarack Lodge, Greenfield Park, N. Y., to offi- ciate at Rosh Hashanah serv- ices, announces owner Dave Levinson. Before the closing of the re- sort season, Oct. 5, beauty con- tests, cocktail parties, Broad- way revues, tennis, golf and dancing lessons will be held during the month of Septem- ber. Cong. Beth Shmuel has com- pleted arrangements for serv- ices in its air-conditioned syna- gogue, Dexter and Buena Vista, on the High Holy Days. Services will be conducted on Rosh Hashana, commencing Fri- day evening, Oct. 2, and Satur- day and Sunday, Oct. 3 and 4, by Rabbi Joseph Rabinowitz, spiritual leader of the congre- gation, assisted by Rabbi Mayer Moskowitz, of New York. Kol Nidreh, Sunday evening, Oct. 11, will be led by Rabbi Rabinowitz; Yom Kippur Day, Monday, Oct. 12, both rabbis will alternate in reading the services. The committee in charge of distributing cards meets daily at the synagogue, 9 to 12 noon and 7 to 9 p.m. and all day Sunday. Telephone reservations may be made by calling TE 4-0777 and TU 3-3380. Hebrew U. Develops Fungi Antibiotic JERUSALEM, (JTA)—A new antibiotic against fungi—hep- tamycin—has been developed by scientists at the Hebrew Uni- versity. The new drug is un- dergoing final laboratory tests before being tested on human patients. Current tests are aimed at establishing the exact toxicity index and whether heptamycin can be manufactured in large •quantities at reasonable prices. The search for antibiotics against fungi has increased in importance because the success of numerous antibiotics against bacteria had created an imbal- ance between bacteria and fungi, the latter multiplying to a dangerous extent. Beth Aaron School to Reopen Sept. 20 The Beth Aaron Religious School will reopen Sunday, Sept. 20, Bernard Panush, school director, announces. The school office will be open on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. to Sunday School Classes process registrations. Dr. Mar- vin•Last, educational chairman, Scheduled at Evergreen Evergreen Congregation Sun- •and his committee will be on day school will begin this Sun- hand to take care of all pre- day at the Mettetal Public registration. School. The culminating event And the Lord looked upon of the school term will be the first confirmation exercises in him, and said, GQ in this thy the Evergreen Center, and the might . . . Have not I sent,thee? second such event in the con- . . . Surely I will be with thee. —Judg. 6:14, 16. gregation's history. apan Educators Visit Yeshivah U. Because of their special interest in Yeshiva University's successful integration of Jewish and general studies in its undergraduate schools, four leading Japanese educators recently visited the university's Main Center in New York. They are (1.-r.) Hidekazu Imai, vice president of the Kyoto Girls' Acad- emy; Rev. Ryoga Kondo, delegate of the Japan Education Assn.; Miss June Ito; Sam Hartstein, director of public relations, Yeshiva University; Fujio Ando, principal, Second Technical High School attached to Hosei University, Tokyo; and Chizen Yotsunoya, principal of the Kogyokusha Middle and High Schools, and vice president of the Japan Private Schools Assn. Now at College Park PARKERt964 JOTTERTEN With FREE Coupon for Refill (79c Value) $ 195 Only 41/0"■•••• ••••"%01.1 "04.0.4 PARKER "21" 39c val. Bottle of Ink FREE 50c val. Type. Packet Ail 3 $ CO0 Only air iliftworms„.0041.00%,..0%.001% Northwest Defroit's Largest ARTIST SUPPLY DEALER COLLEGE PARK ARTIST SUPPLY formerly—College Park Camera UN 3-3453 7521 W. McNICHOLS 4 blks. W. of Livernois--FREE PARKING IN REAR CONGREGATION BETH ABRAHAM cordially invites you, your family and friends to reserve seats now for High Holiday Services in its beautiful air-conditioned NUSBAUM HALL I Price per reserved seat $20 Rabbi ISRAEL I. HALPERN will be guest preacher Rabbi BARUCH ULRYCH will officiate as Cantor New Shaarey Zedek Rabbi to Be Introduced at Meeting "Meet the Groners," an eve- ning with the. new associate rabbi of Shaarey Zedek Syna- gogue and his wife, will be held by the Young Married League of Shaarey Zedek at 9 p.m. Sept. 26 in the Syna- gogue social hall. Rabbi Groner recently arrived from Little Rock, Ark. For further informa- tion, call Phyllis Schwartz, LI Reservations at Synagogue Office Daily 9 a.m.-4 p.m., in Synagogue Lobby 7-9 p.m., Sundays 10 a.m.-2 p. Limited number main Sanctuary seats still available. BETH ABRAHAM SYNAGOGUE, WEST SEVEN MILE ROAD AT GREENLAWN For information and arrangements regarding membership affiliation, Religious School, Bar Mitzvahs and Weddings, High Holiday seats, call Synagogue Office at UN 1-6696. .