Marcia Spevakow to
Wed Dr. M. M. Dolnick

MISS MARCIA SPEVAKOW

Mrs. Nathan Spevakow, 20003
Renfrew, announces the engage-
ment of her daughter Marcia Eliza-
beth to Dr. Marshall M. Dolnick,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Meyer E. Dol-
nick of Chicago. Miss Spevakow
is the daughter of the late Mr. Na-
than SpevakoW.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of
Michigan State University. Dr. Dol-
nick is a graduate of the University
of Illinois Dental School and is af-
filiated with Phi Sigma Delta and
Alpha Omega fraternities.
A June 26 wedding is planned.

Council Delegates
to Elect Officers

Early Deadline for May 27 Issue

g3ritii Activities

DOWNTOWN FOX CHAPTER
will have as guest speaker Dr. Al-
fred Golden, chief of staff at Blain
Hospital speaking on "The Nature
of Cancer" at the meeting 9 p.m.
Alei-
Wednesday at the
chem Institute. Dr. Golden
Golden is also
pathologist for Blain and Jennings
Hospitals and does research work
on cancer. Before coming to De-
troit 12 years ago, Dr. Golden was
professor of pathology at the Uni-
versity of Buffalo. The Michigan
State Medical Society made ar-
rangements for the presentation of
this program, says Mrs. Nathan
Marcus, program chairman.
*
*
LOUIS MARSHALL BENEVO-
LENT FUND elected as new of-
ficers Harry Kaufman, president;
Mrs. Karl Berg, vice president;
Mrs. Ludwig Boraks, secretary:
Carl Pearl ; treasurer.
* *
GEORGE GERSHWIN CHAP-
TER will hold a reunion birthday
party 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Oak Park Community Center. All
past, present and new members as
well as guests are invited. There
will be music and refreshments.
* * *
BRANDEIS CHAPTER will
have a paid-up membership lunch-
eon noon Wednesday at the
Shole.m Aleichem Institute. Mrs.
Alfred Laikin, Bnai Brith Youth
Organization national commis-
sioner, will be the guest, and a
color film will be shown. Prospec-
tive members welcome.
* * *
. ALBERT EINSTEIN LODGE
will install officers at a dinner-
dance 8:30 p.m. May 14 at Mayfair

The election and installation of
Jewish Community Council officers
and executive committee members
will highlight the season's final
delegate assembly 8:30 p.m. May
18 at the Jewish Center.
Selection of persons to fill vacan- Blood Bank Rally
cies on the executive committee
will be made from a list submitted Monday and Tuesday
by the nominating committee and
The Metropolitan Detroit Bnai
from nominating petitions received Brith Men's and Women's Councils
after the last delegate assembly. will hold their final Blood Bank
Persons nominated by the commit- Rally of the year Monday at Pep-
tee for a three-year term expiring per School, Oak Park and Tuesday
May 1969 are Judge Benjamin D. at Beth Aaron Synagogue.
Burdick, Lawrence W. Crohn,
Registration both nights is 5
Mitchell Feldman, Mrs. Arnold p.m. to 11 p.m.
Frank, Lawrence Gubow, Rabbi
Mrs. Ira Albion and David Bitt-
Max Kapustin, Jack Malamud, Mrs. ker, co-chairmen, announce that
Marshall Miller, Dr. Irving Posner, prizes will be awarded to donors.
Martin Rose, Rabbi Milton Rosen- All members and their families
baum, Hyman Safran, Hubert J. are asked to donate to help assure
Sidlow, Erwin S. Simon, Rabbi M. a full supply of blood until the next
Robert Syme and Stanley J. Win- rally in September.
* * *
kelman.

David Teitielbaum has been
nominated to serve a two-year
term, and Jerome Kelman has
been nominated for a one-year
term. In addition, the name of
Aaron Bornstein, delegate from
the Labor Zionist Organization
2, has been submitted by nomi-
nating petition.

Morris Adler -Institutes
of Judaism Scheduled

Caterers. For reservations, call
Sam Freedman, 356.-6171, or Felix
Rosenzweig, LI 3-1735.

*

*

5 Bnai Brith Lodges
in Tel Aviv Defy Rule
Against Non-Orthodox

TEL AVIV—The congregation
for Progressive Judaism found new
quarters Tuesday in the Bnai Brith
Club in Tel Aviv despite an earlier
refusal by the national Bnai Brith
Hall in Tel Aviv to rent space for
worship to the Reform congrega-
tion.
The five local lodges which oper-
ate the club in Tel Aviv reportedly
offered the club's facilities in a
rebuff to a ruling by the Bnai Brith
National Executive in Israel. The
executive ruled last January that
rental of any Bnai Brith facilities
to a non-Orthodox group of wor-
shippers might offend the sensibili-
ties of some Bnai Brith members.
In Washington, Bnai Brith said
Wednesday that public use of the
facilities of the Bnai Brith build-
ing in Tel Aviv "can include reli-
gious services by any branch of
Judaism."
Dr. William A. Wexler, Bnai
Brith international president, re-
ported that the Bnai Brith admin-
istrative committee has adopted a
resolution instructing "the manage-
ment committee of the Bnai Brith
building in Tel Aviv to make its
rooms and facilities available for
all proper uses, including religious
worship by all branches of
Judaism." -
Dr. Wexler said "this is obvi-
ously not a new policy but a re-
affirmation of Bnai Brith's tradi-
tional non-partisan acceptance of
all religious options in Judaism."
The administration committee
had acted, Dr. Wexler said, to end
a controversy that tad erupted in
late January when Bnai Brith's
Israel District sustained a house
rule that the building would not
be rented for worship. As a result,
the request for such a rental by a
Reform congregation which had
previously conducted Sabbath
service in the building, was turned
down.
Dr. Wexler stressed that the in-
tent of the Israel District was to
Maintain Bnai Brith's nonpartisan
policy, "but its action was mis-
interpreted, and Bnai Brith was
abruptly thrust into the sensitive
controversy involving the status of
religion in Israel."
He said that the Israel District
is in complete agreement with the
policy enunciated by the adminis-
trative committee and disclosed
that prior to the action of the ad-
ministrative committee, the Israel
District at a special meeting, had
recommended that the building be
made available for worship on
religious holidays and festivals.

Several hundred Jewish adults
will gather for a week this summer
on a Massachusetts campus to
examine their religious heritage
with a faculty of the country's
leading Jewish scholars.
The agenda for the assembly
They will be participating in the
also will include a summary of
Council activity during the cur- Morris Adler Institutes of
rent year. Detroit Women of Alpha Judaism, two week-long intensive
Omega Dental Fraternity will study sessions at Brandeis Uni- Bnai Brith Inaugurates
serve as hostesses at a social hour versity organized by Bnai Brith
as part of its adult Jewish educa- First Lodge in Jamaica
following the meeting.
tion program.-
KINGSTON, Jamaica — Bnai
The institutes, which will be Brith expands to a 44th country
Week-Day Draft Test
held June 26 to July 3 and July Thursday when it inaugurates Ja-
Available to Jewish Boys 3-10, are dedicated as a memorial maica Lodge in this capital city.
The newest Bnai Brith unit has
Jewish college students who to Rabbi Morris Adler.
Americans, Canadians, Britons and
have applied for the Selective
Jamaicans — including Sir Neville
Service Qualifications Test will be Shaarey Zedek Day Camp
Ashenheim, Jamaica's Ambassador
the
assigned to the June 3 date,
Taking
Registraticin
to the United States—among its 51
only one of the three test dates
Albert Karbal,
director of founding members.
which is not a Saturday, to avoid
Maurice A. Weinstein of Char-
Shaarey Zedek announces enroll-
violation of the Sabbath.
Selective Service officials in ments are now being accepted for lotte, N.C., chairman of the Bnai
Brith International Council, and
Washington, have given this as- boys and girls, age 4 to 11.
The day camp program in- Juan Plaut of Caracas, Venezuela,
surance to the Synagogue Council
of America, provided religiously cludes swimming and instruction, president of Bnai Brith's Latin
observant applicants who wish to music, arts and crafts, outdoor American District, will speak at
be given this consideration notify camping, overnights, trips to the installation ceremonies.
There are about 1,500 Jews in
test headquarters of their request places of interest, dramatics, hob-
bies and other camp activities. The Jamaica, most of them living in
immediately.
Because test applicants are not camp functions in a synagogue en- Kingston.
Guests at the charter ceremonies
aware of this arrangement, the vironment and features experi-
include Gov. Ralph Paiewonsky of
Synagogue Council of America ences with Jewish living.
The first four-week session of the Virgin Islands; Sir Clifford
issued an appeal to rabbis through-
out the country to make this in- the day camp will be July 5-29th; Campbell, Governor - General of
formation available to Jewish the second session, three weeks, Jamaica; Wilson Beales, U.S. Am-
college students who have re- Aug. 1-19. The day camp meets bassador to Jamaica; and James D.
quested draft deferment and have 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. daily. Trans- Murry and Harry Jay, Commis-
applied for the College Qualifica- portation is available in most sioners to Jamica from Great
Britain and Canada, respectively.
areas.
tion Test.
Judge Stanley Motta, Kingston
For information and application
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS forms, call the camp office, 357- communal leader, will be installed
as Jamaica Lodge's first president.
Friday, May 6, 1966-29 5544.

Because of Memorial Day — May 30 — and Shavuot —
May 25 and 26 — there will be an earlier deadline for all
copy for our issue of May 27.
All copy must be in our hands before noon on Friday,
May 20, for the following week's issue.

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