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May 07, 1965 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-05-07

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SERVICES

SYNAGOGUE

CONG. SHAAREY SHOMAYIM: Services 7:20 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Goldman will speak on "The Jewish Concept of
Holiness," and the Bar Mitzvah of Lawrence Goldstick will be
observed.
CONG. BETH SHALOM: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Halpern will
speak on "Moments of Truth," and Bnot Mitzvah of Marcia Garland
and Ruth Moss will be observed. At 9 a.m. services Saturday, Bnai
Mitzvah of Ted Bernstein and Warren Zussman will be observed.
TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8:15 p.m. today. Rabbi Rosenbaum will
speak on "If Israel Should Fall," and the Bar Mitzvah of Ronald
J. Hirsch will be observed.
YOUNG ISRAEL OF NORTHWEST: -Services 7:30 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Prero will speak on "The Joy That Children Bring."
TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Dr. Hertz will speak on
"The Marian Anderson Story and Mother's Day." At 11:15 p.m.
services Saturday, Rabbi Kanter will speak on "Boris D. Bogen's
Search for Eternal Values," and the Bar Mitzvah of David Ira Horn-
stein will be observed.
CONG. BETH YEHUDAH: Services 7:15 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Satur-
day. Rabbi Spiro will speak on "Righteousness and Holiness."
CONG. GEMILUTH CHASSODIUM: Services 7:25 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Litke will speak on "Holiness Is Not an Archaic
Concept," and the Bar Mitzvah of Michael Bauer will be observed.
CONG. BETH TEFILO EMANUEL TIKVAH: Services 7:30 p.m. today
and 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Levin will speak on "Fundamental
Moral Laws," and the Bar Mitzvah of Michael Freedman will be
observed.
CONG. BETH ABRAHAM: Services 7:10 p.m. today and 8:40 a.m. Sat-
urday. Rabbi Halpern will speak on "The Understanding Heart,"
and the Bar Mitzvah of Howard Rosen will be observed.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: Independence Day services 8:30 p.m. today. (See
story.) Bnai Mitzvah of David Louis Hiller and Paul Rodney Marks
will be observed. At 11 a.m. services Saturday, Bnai Mitzvah of
Mitchel Klein and Gary Izadore Stone will be observed.
CONG. BETH AARON: Services 6:30 p.m. today and 8:30 a.m. Saturday.
Bnai Mitzvah of Stewart Schulman and Yale Silverman will be
observed.
CONG. ADAS SHALOM: Services 6 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday.
The Bar Mitzvah of Charles Nakeli will be observed.
CONG. BETH MOSES: Services 6:45 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday.
Bnai Mitzvah of Bruce Allen Hoffrichter and Mark Kinzer will be
observed.
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 7 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday.
The Bar Mitzvah of David Goss will be observed.
CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 6 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday.
Bnai Mitzvah of Paul E. Siman and Johathan Linden will be ob-
served.
CONG. AHAVAS ACHDI: Services 7:20 p.m. today and 8:40 a.m. Sat-
urday. Bnai Mitzvah of Steven Harry Goldstein and Robert Larry
Glass will be observed.
CONG. BNAI JACOB: Services 7:20 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday.
The Bar Mitzvah of Erick Bolokofsky will be observed.
CONG. MISHKAN ISRAEL: Services 7:15 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Satur-
day. The Bar Mitzvah of David Kolb will be observed.
Regular services will be held at Cong. Bnai Israel of Pontiac,
Livonia Jewish Congregation, Downtown Synagogue, Cong. Bnai David
Cong. Beth Joseph and Temple Beth Jacob Pontiac, where the annual
sisterhood service will begin at 8 p.m. today, instead of 8:30 p.m.

New Chajes Work Will Be Presented

Two works by Julius Chajes, one
specially revised and the other to I
be performed for the first time
here, will be presented at the
Jewish Music Festival of Adas
Shalom Synagogue 8 p.m., May 20.
Chajes, director of the Jewish

WANTED
Part-Time
YOUTH DIRECTOR

Sun. and evening work
for local synagogue.
Write qualifications to:

Box 707
The Jewish News
17100 W. 7 Mite
Detroit, Mich. 48235 -

Center Symphony Orchestra, will
lead a synagogue chamber or-
chestra in the six-part "Palestinian
Melodies for Strings," including
songs of the Well, Pioneers,
Nights, Desert, Canaan, and
Galilee.
For the first time in Detroit,
Chajes' "Hebrew Suite for Clari-
net, Strings and Piano" will be
presented. Marius Fossenkemper,
formerly a soloist with the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra, will be fea-
tured in the four parts: Prayer,
Galil, Hora and Walls of Zion.
Cantor Nicholas Fenakel is di-
recting the festival. For tickets,
call the Adas Shalom office,
UN 4-7474.

ENGINEERING

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1965 GRADUATES

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ISRAEL

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—Rapid Professional development through on-the-job
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Local interviews will be conducted by Israeli Representative
Call or Rush Resume to Mr. D. Shephatiah

COMMITTEE ON MANPOWER OPPORTUNITIES IN ISRAEL

c/o The Jewish Agency, 220 S. State St., Chicago, Illinois

Israeli's Service
at Temple Israel

Episcopal Bishop Backs Suggestion
That Jews `Missionize' Unaffiliated

In observance of Israel Inde-
pendence Day, Temple Israel will
present a special musical service
-71:30 p.m. today, featuring the
music of Issachar Miron, one of
the Jewish State's leading con-
temporary composers.
The service, "D'ror Yikra" (Pro-
claim Liberty), is the fourth and
final program in the Temple's
Jewish Music Festival, which was
arranged by the music committee
under the chairmanship of Mrs.
Robert Anspach.
The service will be sung by
Cantor Harold Orbach and the
Temple Choir, assisted by Irving
Gelman, flutist, and John Leding-
ham, percussion-
ist, both of the
Detroit Sym-
phony Orchestra.
In "D'ror Yik-
," Miron has
combined artistic
and utilitarian
liturgical expres-
sions, introduc-
ing simple folk-
like melodies
Miron
which capture
the faith and spirit of the Jewish
people. In addition to the usual
responses, there is a group of the
composer's songs based on biblical
themes. These will be interpreted
by Dr. Leon Frain and Rabbi M.
Robert Syme.
The composer, born Isadore
Michrovsky, came to Israel in
1939 from his native Poland. He
joined the Jewish Brigade of the
British Army during World War
II, and composed army songs,
including the popular worldwide
hit, "Tzena, Tzena."
Miron, winner of the coveted
Engel Prize, one of Israel's top
musical awards, is director of the
committee for music programs
operated in new immigrant settle-
ments by the America-Israel Cul-
tural Foundation.
In presenting the Miron service,
as well as the three other Music
Festival programs, Temple Israel
is attempting to acquaint mem-
bers of the congregation and com-
munity with some of the new
work being composed by contem-
porary writers of importance.

Rt. Rev. James A. Pike, bishop religious commitment? I rejoice
of the Episcopal Diocese of Cali- that Rabbi Eisendrath agrees and
fornia, endorsed a proposal that states the matter so persuasively."
American Reform Judaism openly
and actively missionize the re-
ligiously unaffiliated, whether of
Jewish or Christian background.

All schools and synagogues
are requested to submit their
lists of graduates, consecrants
and confirmands by May 21 for
inclusion in the June 4 issue.

Bishop Pike's views are con-
tained in a review of "Can Faith
Survive? — The Thoughts and
Afterthoughts of an American
Rabbi," the recent book by Rabbi

Maurice N. Eisendratth, president
of the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations.

In the current issue of Ameri-
can Judaism, Bishop Pike said:
"It has generally puzzled Chris-
tians, especially those whose un-
derstanding of Judaism is suffi-
cient for them to appreciate the
common theological background
between Judaism and so much of I
sound Christian tradition, why
Judaism has typically not been
missionary-minded. One can un-
derstand . . . a reticence about !
proselytization, b u t especially !
these days with so high a per-
centage of the population actually
secularists . . . why should not
Judaism be seeking to draw into
its community of ethical mono-
theism those who have no active

You are cordially invited to attend

GROUNDBREAKING
CEREMONIES

beginning construction for the new

SCHOOL and SYNAGOGUE of the

YOUNG ISRAEL CENTER OF OAK-WOODS

Sunday, May 16, 11:00

a.m.

24061 Coolidge Hwy., Oak Park

Fountain of
Jewish
Learning

Parents Forego Party,_
Honor Bar Mitzvah Boy
by Naming Scholarship

WALTHAM, Mass—A decision
by a Belmont, Mass., couple to
share the joy of their son's Bar
Mitzvah with others has resulted
in the establishment of a scholar-
ship trust fund which will an-
nually benefit a gifted Brandeis
University student concentrating
in the Romance languages.
In addition, the trust fund, es-
tablished by Dr. and Mrs. Lester
Abelman, honors their son Mark's
grandparents, Brandeis Prof. Em-
eritus Joseph I. Cheskis and his
wife, Esther.
To be known as the Dr. Joseph
I. and Esther Cheskis Scholarship
Trust in the Romance Languages,
the fund was established with the
monies the Abelmans would have
spent on a lavish affair marking
Mark's Bar Mitzvah. Instead, the
couple held a modest celebration
to note the confirmation.

Orthodox Congregations
to Meet in Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH— The convention
of the Great Lakes-Central States
Region of the Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of America
will be held May 16 here.
Representatives of synagogues in
Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan,

Ohio, western Pennsylvania and

West Virginia will take part in
the conclave.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

16—Friday, May 7, 1965

rbvwt

Hebrew• English

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