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March 04, 1966 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-03-04

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

Meoillah Readiness to Open Purim Weekend

Family fun is the cardinal rule
for Purim, and area synagogues
will carry it out at services this
weekend. The Feast of Lots begins
at sundown Saturday, and there
will be services, with the reading
of the Megillah, that evening and
Sunday morning.
Religious schools and the Jew-
ish Center have scheduled a
number of events for children,
to which parents and friends are
invited. (See Page 29.)
Temple Beth E1 will hold its
Purim Family Service 8:30 p.m.
today. Dr. Richard C. Hertz will
speak on "Facts and Fancy About
the Feast of Lots," and the temple
and religious school choirs will
present a special program of
Purim songs.
Shomrey Emunah Synagogue
will usher in its Purim festivities
with the reading of the Megillah
7:45 p.m. Saturday. Graggers will
be distributed to children, and a
social hour, with refreshments,
will follow. After 8 a.m. services
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Isadore
Levin, presidents of the synagogue
and sisterhood, will host a break-
fast to which families and friends
are invited.
Temple Emanu-El will feature
an original Purim cantata by
Mrs. Albert M. Stutz and Rabbi
Milton Rosenbaum at 7:30 p.m.
services Saturday. Burton Zipser

will direct the temple children's
choir. Refreshments will follow.
The public is invited.
Adas Shalom Synagogue services
will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday
and 7:15 a.m. Sunday. Rabbi
Jacob E. Segal will deliver a
Purim message before the Megil-
lah reading, in which Tommy
Schwartz, Ralph Goren, Jonathan
Kaner, David Marwil and Danny
Shevitz will take part.
Cong. Shaarey Zedek will have a
Bar Mitzvah at its services 9 a.m .
Sunday—Jeffrey Resnick. Saturday
services will be at 6:45 p.m.
Cong. Shaarey Shomayim will
give noisemakers to children who
attend services 7:10 p.m. Saturday
and 8 a.m. Sunday.
Cong. Beth Yehudah will read
the Megillah 7:30 p.m. Saturday;
and Bnai David at 7:15 p.m. Sat-
urday and 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
Cong. Gemiluth Chassodim's
sisterhood will serve Purim re-
freshments after 7:15 p.m. and
8:30 a.m. services.
Cong. Beth Joseph's ladies aux-
lliary will stage .a play and fea-
ture music and refreshments at
a social following 7 p.m. serv-
ices Saturday. The Megillah
reading Sunday morning will be
at 8:30.
The Labor Zionist Council and
all its branches will hold its an-
nual Purim festival 9 p.m. Satur-

day at the Labor Zionist Institute.
Cantor Shabtai Ackerman will pre-
sent holiday songs, and there will
be discotheque dancing, a snack
buffet and Purimagic.

The Jewish Center's Purim
Carnival celebrations will cul-
minate this year in a double en-
tertainment feature, a "Theater
and Carnival Ball."
The Jewish Parents Institute
will present its "Purimusical" 8
p.m. Sunday in the Aaron DeRoy
Theater, after which the Israeli
Students' Organization will hold a
Purim Costume Ball in Shiffman
Hall. There will be dances, games,
surprises, refreshments and con-
tests.
Dressing rooms will be available
for those getting into costume after
the play.
Tickets are on sale at the
Center's cashier's office, Jewish
Parent Institute office . and Israeli
Students Committee.
The Senior Adult group will
convert the Shiffman Hall Sun-
day into a cafeteria restaurant-
snack bar called "Purim Nash-
arae." It will open for bagel and
lox brunch at 11:30 a.m. and
continue through the afternoon.
Everything from corned beef
sandwiches, kishka and knishes to
homemade hamantashen and stru-
del will be available at nominal
prices.

U.S. Rabbis Told to Leave Lectures
at Home; Germans Oppose Tour Plan

FRANKFURT (JTA) — Rabbi
Peter Levinson, of Heidelberg, co-
chairman of the Society for Jew-
ish-Christian Cooperation in Ger-
many, announced Monday that
both Jews and Catholics who are
members of the society oppose
plans announced by Reform rabbis
in the United States to come to this
country to lecture the Germans
about German Jewry and about the
anti-Semitism of the Nazi era.
Naming Dr. Maurice N. Eisen-
drath, president of the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations,
Rabbi Levinson said: "The rabbis
have an incorrect picture, thinking
that insufficient information is

available. Rabbi Eisendrath has
announced that, in West Germany,
people no longer accept the truth
of the Nazi persecutions. Actually
there is no lack of information in
Germany. All German universi-
ties have one lecture chair devoted
to Jewry, and there are available
large numbers of authoritative
books to which all in Germany
have access."

LABOR ZIONISTS

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, March 4, 1966-17

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