Orthodox Leader, Rabbi Singer,
to Address Rabbin ical Council Event

Twenty synagogues in the De-
troit area, Toledo, Windsor and
Mt. Clemens will be represented
at the 30th aniversary dinner of
the Council of Orthodox Rabbis
and Merkaz to be held 6 p.m.

Anshei Sfard of Boro Park, Brook-
lyn, he is a writer and author who
has lectured extensively through-
out the United States, Canada and
South America. Born in Poland,
he came to this country at age 4,
was educated in Mesivta Tora
Vodaat, and was ordained at the
Rabbinical Seminary of America.
Rabbi Singer serves as vice-presi-
dent of the Union of Orthodox Rab-
bis of the United States and Can-
ada.
Weekly crowds of between 500
and 600 people attend his Sabbath
afternoon discourses.
A scion of one of the most

prominent rabbinical families in
Poland and the United States, he
is currently pubtishing a series
of three volumes of his writings
which he has named in memory
of his father, Rabbi Eliahu.

RABBI DAVID SINGER

Sunday at Cobo Hall, according
to Rabbi Chaskel Grubner, execu-
director of the council.
Rabbi David Singer, a leader
of the younger Orthodox rabbinate,
will be principal speaker at the
dinner. Spiritual leader of Cong.

Rabbi Leizer Levin, Vaad presi-
dent, and Nathan Soberman, din-
ner committee general chairman,
appealed to the community to
participate in this city wide cele-
bration.
Ths is the only fund-raising
affair of the year. when the Vaad
receives material support for its
service including kashrut super-
vision, information on kosher
products, rabbinical court, family
counseling, chaplaincy for the
aged, safe-keeping of vital reli-
gious records, library for refer-
ence and study and publications
of bulletins and brochures.

■ JNF Purim Appeal to Ask

for Reclamation, Trees

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Ex-Yeshiva Director
Beth Hillel Headed
Is Slated. to Speak
by Fred Erlebacher
at Melave Malka Fete At the recent general member-

Rabbi Simcha
S. Wasserman,
head of Yeshiv-
ath Beth Yehuda
in Detroit for 12
years, a n d cur-
rently director of
the West Coast
Talmudical Aca-
demy of Los An-
geles, will speak
8:30 p.m. March
9 at Yeshivath
Beth Yehudah.
The community
is invited to this
benefit for the
academy. For in-
formation, c a I !Rabbi W'sserman
Mrs. Sam Thov, 353-6750.

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Judge McCree
at Adas Shalom'

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Adas Shalom Adult Institute's
next lecture will be held 9 p.m.
Tuesday in the social hall.
Speaker will be Judge Wade H.
McCree Jr.. who will speak on
"A Unitarian Looks at Black
Power."
Judge McCree was admitted to
the Michigan Bar in 1948 and was
in private law practice until 1952,
when he became commissioner
of Michigan's Workmen's Compen-
sation Commission. From 1954 to
1961, he was Circuit Court Judge
for Wayne County and is now
Circuit Court Judge, United States
Court of Appeals. He is a member
of the National Conference of
Christians and Jews.
Judge McCree was awarded the
Boston Latin School Man of the
Year tribute in 1961, the Michi-
gan Citizenship Award in 1963, and
a doctor of law degree from
Wayne State University in 1964.
Two years ago he received the
Amity Award, presented by the
American Jewish Congress, in re-
cognition of his life-long involve-
ment in the cause of civil rights.

The synagogues of Detroit and
out-state are again being called
upon by the Jewish National Fund
to conduct the traditional Purim
appeal for Shalakh Manot to the
JNF for land reclamation and the
planting of trees in Israel.
Sent to the spiritual and lay
leaders of the synogogues, the call
was issued by Phillip Stollman
and Harry Cohen, co-chairmen of
the JNF religious group commit-
tee.
Rabbi Who Found Rare
Purim this year will begin with
the reading of Megilat Esther Books to Talk at Beth El
Rabbi George Lieberman will
Wednesday evening, March 13.
The Megilat reading will be re- be concluding lecturer in the Barg-
man
Memorial Scholar Series of
peated Thursday morning, March
Temple Beth El 7:30 p.m. March
14.
17.
Dinner
will be at 6:30.
"Purim today." said Stollman
R a b b i Lieberman, who will
and Cohen, "must not only be a
holiday of action—action for the speak on "Creators of Jewish Lit-
reclamation of land which also re- erature and the World They Cre-1
ated." is rabbi of the Cent r a I
claims people!"
Synagogue of Nassau County, N.Y.!
He was in the Soviet Union with a
Beth Isaac Square Dance delegation after World War II
Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton when he discovered in the libraries
will hold a square dance 8 p.m. of Moscow and Leningrad sever-
Saturday at the synagogue, with al ancient Hebrew manuscripts
and rare books which were thought
professional caller Ken Crowley.
There is no admission charge.
destroyed during the Revoluaion.
His discoveries were hailed by
scholars everywhere.
A student of comparative liter-
ature, Dr. Lieberman will deal pri-
marily with Yiddish authors who!
have been translated into English. 1
The public is invited to the lecture
without charge.

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ship meeting of Cong. Beth Hillel,
Fred Erlebacher was elected pres-
ident. Elected with him were vice
presidents Larry Nedelman and
Herman Doiny; secretaries Leon-
ard Efros and Max Blum; trea-
surer Moritz Katzman; and board
members Benoit Gorge, Menache
Haar, John Hurtig, Arthur Leiser,
Lou Leserman, Harold Levin, Ber-
nard Lichtenstein, Bernard Ohren-
stein and Herman Strassburger.
Alternates are Walter Siegler and

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