Einstein Leaders Cited for Bond Efforts

At the recent Albert Einstein Lodge and Chapter Israel
Bond dance, $31,300 in Israel Bonds was subscribed. Leaders
awarded scrolls for their efforts are (from left) Mr. Henry Mor-
gan, chapter president; Felix Rosenzweig, lodge preszident; Mrs.
Jerry Zarkin, chapter Israel Bond chairman; Joey Adams, guest ar-
tist; Sol Steinbruck, lodge Israel Bond chairman; Eric Rosenow,
past president; and Alexander Gersuk, Metropolitan Detroit Bnai
Brith Council Israel Bond chairman.

*

Stars to Perform at Culminating Event
of Bnai Brith Fund-Raising Drive

Mrs. Allan Weitzman and Avram
B. Charlip, fund-raising chairmen
for Detroit Bnai Brith Men's and
Women's Councils, have announced
the stars who will headline the
annual Bnai Brith Shows Feb. 15-
17, culminating the city-wide fund-
raising campaign.
Direct from New York's Ameri-
cana Hotel will be Morty Gunty,
who has been seen on the Ed Sulli-
van and Perry Como shows and in
better night clubs throughout the
country.
Larry Best, star of the Borscht-
capades, Bagel & Lox, The Con-
cord Hotel and Grossingers, also
will •appear, along with Sascha

A:ctivities

TIKVAH CHAPTER will meet
12:30 p.m. Tuesday at Cong. Gemi-
luth Chassodim. Mrs. Rose Fish-
man, Bnai Brith council chairman
of adult Jewish education, will be
the guest for the afternoon. Des-
sert luncheon will be served.
Guests invited.

Tormas, Hungarian violinist; Aldo
Monaco, Italian lyric tenor; and
Linda Hopkins, recording star.
Music will be by Hal Gordon's
orchestra. The entire show will be
arranged, produced and supervised
by Lenn Borovoy.
For ticket information, call the
Bnai Brith office, DI 1-0863; Mrs.
Maynard Kalief, UN 4-5762; or
Selma Cohen, 541-7864.

* * *

Bnai Brith to Establish
`Job Corps Canteen'

Bnai Brith, in cooperation with
the Job Corps bureau of the Of-
fice of Economic Opportunity, is
initiating a "Job Corps Canteen"
program to provide social outlets
for youths in conservation and ur-
ban training centers in 37 states
and Puerto Rico.
Job Corps officials will meet
with Bnai Brith leaders to sug-
gest ways Bnai Brith can provide
supplementary activities to t h e
centers' own programs.
Announcement of the project
was made by Solomon Rosenbaum
of Fitchburg, Mass., chairman of
Bnai Brith's commission on com-
munity and veterans services,
which is coordinating the program.

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LEWISTON LO GE
EAST TWIN

•

A suit challenging the consti-
tutionality of Michigan's contro-
versial Auxiliary Services Act was
filed Monday in Federal Court,
naming the Detroit Board of Edu-
cation as defendant.
The suit, brought by 38 plain-
tiffs, charges that the act violates
the US. Constitution by providing
tax aid for the support of religious
schools and institutions and by
compelling individual teachers to
violate their religious beliefs.
Attorneys for the plaintiffs
have petitioned for a three-judge
special court to rule on the con-
stitutionality of the act, and have
requested a temporary injunction
restraining the Board of Educa-
tion from acting under its provi-
sions until there is a constitutional
ruling.
The Auxiliary Services Act
(Act. No. 343 of the Public Acts •
of 1965) was passed in the 1965
legislature. It specifies that any
public school district which pro-
vides auxiliary services to its
own pupils must provide equal
services to elementary and high
school pupils attending private
or parochial schools. Examples
of auxiliary services include vis-
iting teachers, speech correction,
remedial reading, diagnostic and
consulting services for handi-
capped or disturbed children and
health services.

Men's Clubs

Beth Aaron Men's Club will hold
"A Night With Lou Gordon" 8 p.m.
Jan. 30 in the social hall. Gordon,
political commentator on Station
WXYZ and win- 7g:,';',--
ner of the As-
sociated Press
Award as out-
standing radio
commentator for
1963 - 1964 and
1965, will speak
on "What to Ex-
pect in 1 9 6 6."
Martin Holland-
er, chairman of
the program
committee of the
men's club, in-
vites the entire
community at no
charge.
Gordon

111111M11111111111•11111/

JWV

DI 1-0833

A LEWISTON LODGE
WINTER WEEKEND

LAKES

Suit Filed in Federal Court Charges State Act
Violates Constitutional Separation Princi le

LEWISTON, MICHIGAN

DETROIT POST 135 and AUX-
ILIARY will hold a joint social
evening 8:30 p.M. Thursday at the
Labor Zionist Institute. Dr. Simon
Dolin, chairman of the aliyah
committee of the Zionist Organiza-
tion of Detroit, will give a talk
on "Zionism and Aliyah" after
which thefe will be a showing of
a travel film, refreshments and so-
cial hour. The public and prospec-
tive JWV members are invited.
* * *
POST and AUXILIARY 510 will
hold a Winter Frolic sleighride
and square dance 8:30 p.m. Jan.
29 at Friendly Acres, Livonia.
Guests invited. The Auxiliary will
hold its next business meeting
8:30 p.m. Thursday at the home
of Ilene Gretchko, 25480 Catalina,
Southfield.

DETROIT LADIES AUXILIARY
135 will meet 8:15 p.m. Thursday
at the Labor Zionist institute.
Plans are being formulated for
the annual fund-raising program,
For information, call President
Mrs. Sol Schaap, 836-5731. Re-
freshments will be served.

BLOCH ROSE AUXILIARY will
hold a general membership meet-
ing 8:15 p.m. Tuesday at the Oak
Park Community Center. There
will be a showing of fashions and
a social hour following. For mem-
bership inform ation, call Fern
Seltzer, 546-5875.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26—Friday, January 21, 1966

Attorney-General Kelley has in-
dicated that he would welcome a
court test of the law. Counsel for
the Detroit Board of Education,
George E. Bushnell, Jr., gave an
opinion last September that rules
proposed (by the State Board of
Education) to implement the act
"are in part clearly unconstitution-
al, in part probably unconstitution-
al, and in part in conflict, if not
in violation, of the existing state
law."
The plaintiffs represent a var-
iety of religious faiths, including
Baptist, Episcopalian, Lutheran,
Methodist, Presbyterian, Unitarian-
Universalist, Roman Catholic and
Jewish. They include 10 clergymen
and 12 teachers of special services
employed by the Detroit Board of
Education. The plaintiffs include
parents of children attending pri-
vate schools, both parochial and
non-religious.
Attorneys for the plaintiffs are
Erwin B. Ellman, Reuben M. Wa-
terman and Melvin Nord, and Leo
Pfeffer, of New York, "of coun-
sel."
The court test is supported by
the American Civil Liberties Un-
ion, Americans United for Separa-
tion of Church and State and the
American Jewish Congress, Sup-
port has been expressed by the
Presbytery of. Detroit, Unitarian-
Universalist Churches of Michigan
and the Jewish Community Coun-
cil.
The Executive Board of the
Michigan Education Association
"expressed interest" in the court
test of the constitutionality of the
law and a desire to see it clari-
fied.
The suit contends that the
Auxiliary Services Act will re-
sult in an immediate increased
cost to Detroit taxpayers of more

than $1,000,000 per year for
services the public schools will
be required to provide private
and parochial schools.
The schools to whom the Detroit
Board of Education could be re-
quired to provide auxiliary ser-
vices under terms of the chal-
lenged act are identified in the
complaint as some 1.25 Catholic
schools, 21 Lutheran, two Sev-
enth Day Adventist, two Jewish,
one Quaker, one Black Muslim
(the University of Islam), and four
private non-religious schools.
The list of plaintiffs includes
Rabbis Benjamin H. Gorrelick and
Leon Four, Mollie Tendler, Zeldon
Cohen, Irving Pokempner, Law-
rence Tourkow.

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