Friday, September 20, 1968-33 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Joseph Cantor Honored on 75th Year Beth El Presents as Pioneer Shaarey Zedek Synagogue Archives to Burton Social Security Beneficiaries Invited History Collection to Report Change of Address, Status Choir Member • and as an Organizer When he marks his 75th birth- day on Sept. 27, Joseph Cantor, who has been active in the furni- ture business here for 55 years, will be honored for dedicated serv- ice to Detroit congregations and for his 37 years as a participant in the Shaarey Zedek choir which he helped organize. Born in Lithuania, he was brought to the United States by his parents in 1907. Their first home was in New York, then his His present home is at 27600 Berkshire, Southfield. His majbr interest is music. In 1928, he and his brother conduct- ed High Holy Day services at Gong Adas Yeshurun as volunteers, when shortly before Rosh Hashana, the synagogue was deprived of a cantor due to illness. He per- formed at the Home for the Aged and at other synagogues and par- ticipated in choir concerts. He suffered a stroke while at Shaarey Zedek services, on a week- day last June, but upon his re- covery he immediately returned to his tasks as a member of the Shaarey Zedek choir. He continues as a choir member and is active again in current High Holy Day services. Cantor is a member of the Zion- ist Organization, has been active in a number of movements here, and was an active Allied Jewish Campaign worker in early drives. Merger Agreement Binds Beth Akron and Ahavas Achim JOSEPH CANTOR father went to Laurence, Mass., where he was a shohet and cantor. Because of his father's illness, they then moved to Denver. Joseph Cantor came to Detroit in 1912 and was associated with the late Max Lieberman in the furniture business until 1920, when, together with Rudolph Zuieback, he formed a partner- ship in the furniture business on Oakland Ave. They retained that business until 1929, when Can- tor formed his own furniture establishment. He retired two The merger agreement of years ago. Ahavas Achim and Beth Aaron He was married to Miriam Zuie- synagogues is signed by the pres- back in 1919. She passed away on idents, Max Nosanchuk (right) Jan. 9, 1968, shortly before they and Dr. Manuel Feldman, while would have celebrated their 49th Rabbis Benjamin H. Gorrelick (right) and Milton Arm look on wedding anniversary. He has two daughters, Mrs. Members of both congregations Leonard (June) Stein and Mrs. ratified the agreement recently. Seymour (Riat) Dunitz and three grandchildren. Rabbi Borowitz Writes of 'New Jewish Theology' Westminster Press of Philadel- phia announces publication of "A New Jewish Theology in the Mak- ing" by Rabbi Eugene B. Borowitz. Publication date is Oct. 14. Rabbi Borowitz diagnoses the condition of the Jewish people in our time from a historical, soci- ological and theological point of view. He details the way in which previous Jewish thinkers have shaped their Judaism, examining particularly the theological op- tions of Leo Baeck, Kaplan, Buber, Heschel and Soloveitchik. D . , . 1 1 formation having an effect on pay- ment of monthly benefits. The change is prompted by the in- creased capacity of social security district offices to transmit the in- formation over high-speed com- munications circuits to record offices. , Presentation of the archives of Temple Beth El to the Burton Historical Collection of the De- troit Public Library is formalized by Rabbi Richard C. Hertz (left, seated), temple executive secre- tary, and Dr. Irving I. Edgar, president of the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan. Mrs. Alice Dalligan, manuscript specialist for the Burton collection, looks over a Temple Beth El manu- script with Dr. Hertz. * * * The archives of Temple Beth El, Michigan's oldest Jewish congrega- tion, have been deposited in 'the Burton Historical Collection of the Detroit Public Library this week. Dr. Richard C. Hertz, senior rab- bi, presented the materials to Mrs. Alice Dalligan, the library's manu- script specialist. Dr. Irving I. Ed- gar, president of the Jewish His- torical Society of Michigan, who was instrumental in the arrange- ment for the deposit, and Irving I. Katz, executive secretary and his- torian of Temple Beth El, were present. • Temple Beth El, organized in 1850 by 12 families, now has a membership of 1,800. The archives, which its board of trustees decided to deposit with the library, include manuscript minute books, financial records, constitutions and bylaws, yearbooks, the weekly temple bul- letin and religious school publica- tions, programs, records of temple affiliates, biographical materials on the rabbis who have served at the temple and photographs. , , The library's Burton Historical Collection, designated as the cen- tral depository of . the archives of the state's Jewish community by the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, also contains the rec- ords of the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion and the Jewish Community Council. 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