64•■•■••10•407 The synagogues listed below have announced their arrange- ments for the High Holy Days. Worshippers are advised to con- tact their respective congrega- tions for individual time sched- ules on Rosh Hashanah, which begins sundown Sept. 18 and ends sundown Sept. 20, and Yom Kippur, which begins sun- down Sept. 27 and ends sun- down Sept. 28. CONG. DAVID BEN NUCHIM services will be conducted by Rabbi Chaskel Grubner at the synagogue. He will be assisted by Rabbi Eugene Greenfield, who will be the Bal. Tefilah for the Rosh Hashanah and part of the Yom Kippur services. They will be accompanied by a choir. Tickets can be obtained from the synagogue 4-8 p.m. daily. Rabbi Grubner will give free tickets to persons unable to pay, in tribute to Mr. and Mrs. David Rott and Harry Rott, who do- nated the synagogue building for the use of regular services. SEPHARDIC COMMUNITY OF GREATER DETROIT will conduct its High Holy Day services at the Oak Park High School. Selichot services at mid- night on Sept. 14 will be pre- ceded by a social hour 9 p.m. Sept. 14 at the home of Mrs. Louis Papo, 24021 Marlowe, Oak Park. For information, call LI 7-2379. CONG. BETH ABRAHAM in- vites neighbors of the congrega- tion to worship at the auxiliary services in the synagogue, ac- cording to Dr. Harry Newman, president: Cantor Shimon Ber- ris will chant the services. Rab- bi Israel I. Halpern, spiritual leader of the congregation, who officiates with Cantor Shabtai Ackerman and Israel Fuchs, directing the • choirs, will par- ticipate, with Dr. Robert S'chlaff, a vice-president of the congre- gation in the auxiliary services. Seats for the main sanctuary as well may be obtained at the synagogue office 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 - 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday. ISAAC AGREE DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE will conduct Rosh Hashanah services in the Banquet Hall of the Veterans Memorial Building. The services will be chanted by Cantor Sid- ney Surlin of Chicago. Rabbi Noah M. Gamze will officiate. Adas Shalom School Opens Semester; Enrollment Accepted The Adas Shalom Religious School has announced its staff with the opening of the new semester on Sunday. Registra- tion will also be accepted on that day. Maxwell Nadis will instruct the ninth and 10th grade Sun- day classes. Deborah Wolok is the kindergarten instructress and Mrs. Ruth Pesselnick and Mrs. Myrna Schlafer will teach first and second grades, re- spectively. Both the Confirmation De- partment — whose midweek courses, are taught by Rabbi Jacob E. Segal and by the new youth education director, Rabbi Pesach Sobel — and the Pri- mary Department are under the auspices of Adas Shalom Syna- gogue. When children reach the age of eight, they enroll in the school's combined educational program under the joint aus- pices of the United Hebrew Schools and the synagogue. Rabbi Joseph Hirsch is the newly assigned principal to the Adas Shalom Synagogue School of the United Hebrew Schools. Non-members of- the congreg- ation are invited to register. For information, call UN 4-7474. Rabbis in Freedom March Placards bearing Biblical sayings in Hebrew and English were carried by 2,000 Reform laymen and rabbis of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations participating in the Wash- ington March for Jobs and Freedom. Looking at the signs are, from the left: Whitney Young, executive director of the Nat- tional Urban League; Sue Greenwald, Bethesda, Md.; Mark Winer, Dallas, Tex.; Bishop Stephen Gill Spottswood, chairman, N.A.A.C.P. board; and Rabbi Richard G. Hirsch, director, U.A.H.C, Religious Action Center, Washington, D.C. TEMPLE BETH EL announces Polish Town Restores 16th Century Shule Rabbi Paul M. Steinberg will officiate and preach the ser- LONDON, (JTA)—Authorities cant tombstones in the Jewish mons at the supplementary High of Leshko, a Polish town in cemetery. Both the synagogue Holy Day services in the Brown and the cemetery have been the Carpathians, have restored Chapel. Rabbi Steinberg is ex- designated as historical monu- the town's 16th century syna- ments. Restoration of the syna- ecutive dean of the New, York gogue in every detail, it was gogue was accomplished by School of the Hebrew Union reported from Warsaw. There Polish architects and descrip- College-Jewish Institute of Re- are no Jews now in Leshko. ligion and associate professor tions. They also have restored a Michigan's rarest bird is the of human relations and educa- number of historically signifi- Want ads get quick results! Jack Pine Warbler. tion at HUC-JIR. Bnai Israel Settlers Continue Protests on Marriage Bias JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Pre- mier Levi Eshkol urged a dele- gation of Bnai Israel settlers from India to be patient on the issue of their claims of discrim- ination in matters of marriage and not to force the issue. After the meeting, the delegation said the Premier's statement was not acceptable and that they inten- ded to continue their struggle. The Premier met with the Bnai Israelites in accordance with a pledge made to them last week in return for which some 25 families ended a month-long squatters strike outside the of- fices of the Jewish Agency. The families had pitched there and remained in them for the month as a protest against rabbinical directives requiring special ex- amination of their Jewish back- grounds by marriage registrars before issuing marriage licenses. The Premier told the dele- gation that Bnai Israel settlers were not regarded as second- class citizens. Expressing "com- plete understanding" of their feelings, the Premier said that the problem did not originate in Israel but arose as a result of the differing backgrounds of various communities in other countries. He urged them not to undertake action likely to "split the.nation" by forcing the issue. The strikers had demanded cancellation of the rabbinical directives or repatriation to In- dia. They contended that inves- tigation of their family histories when members applied for mar- riage to Jews from other com- munities was tantamount to apartheid, a reference tb the separation of colored peoples in South Africa. Following the meeting with the Premier, the families said they could continue their fight until the directives were can- celed and intimated they would raise the issue again when Par- liament is reconvened in Octo- ber. The Jew recognizes that he is made what he is by the his- tory of his fathers, and he feels he is losing his better self so far as he loses his hold on his past history.—JOSEPH JACOBS Champion Of Civil Rights In the controversy that surrounds the civil rights movement today, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that civil rights had many great champions in American his- tory. Such a champion was Louis Marshall . Born in 1856, in Syracuse, New York, Marshall made his mark as a constitutional lawyer early in life. Among the cases he argued before the highest Federal and State courts were those concerned with workmen's compensation, segregation of Negroes, alien immigration, and the aboli- tion of private and parochial schools. In fact, one of his notable legal triumphs in the United States Supreme Court was a decision which* held invalid an Oregon law that denied Catholics the right to send their children to parochial schools. A con- servative Republican, Marshall neverthe- less was always on the side of minority groups. He was a champion of the under- dog in American life. Typical of Marshall's lifelong interest - in American Jewry was his successful fight P. LORILLARD COMPA to persuade Congress to annul the Treaty of 1832 between Russia and the United States. American Jews carrying American passports were not treated the same as any other American citizen by the Russians. Marshall was principally responsible - for having the treaty abrogated. In addition, Marshall was the leading spokesman of the Committee of Jewish Delegations at the post-World War I Peace Conference. It was there that he secured OLD GOLD certain "minority rights" for the helpless, &AV.& harried Jews of Europe. SPPIING Founder and president of both the American Jewish Committee and the American Jewish Relief Committee, Louis Marshall was also the chairman- of The Jewish Theological Seminary and of Dropsie College. Probably, however, he First with the Finest CigaretteS would have enjoyed. this epigrammatical through Lorillard research tribute to his eminence: American Jewry .01963 P. Lorillard Oh "was ruled by Marshall law." - • • — TH E DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Frid ay, Sept. 6, 1963 Congregations Announce Service Arrangements for High Holy Days '"'