18—Friday, November 8, 1968

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

TEMPLE BETH JACOB of Pontiac: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi
Berkowitz will speak on "The Tabernacle of Peace."
ADAS SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 5:15 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Segal will speak on "Everyman's Moriah."
CONG. BNAI DAVID: Services 5 p.m. today and 8:30 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Braverman will speak on "Sinai and Moriah: Two Sum-
mits—Two Views." Bruce Bolton and Sheldon Finkelstein, Bnai
Mitzva.
THE NEW TEMPLE: Services 8:30 p.m. today at Birmingham Uni-
tarian Church. Rabbi Conrad will speak on "Rescue From Den-
mark."
CONG. BNAI JACOB: Services 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Isaac will speak on "Sodom, Ancient and Modern."
TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 8 p.m. today. Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld
will speak on "A Jewish Response to the God Is Dead Thinkers."
(See Story) Services 11:15 a.m. Saturday. Dr. Hertz will preach
on "About the Hospitable Abraham." Richard Milgrim, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Syme will speak
on "How We Voted." Joanne Traurig, Bat Mitzva. Services 11 a.m.
Saturday. Steven Silver, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. SHAAREY SIIOMAYIM: Services 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Goldman will speak on "Hospitality as a Tradi-
tional Jewish Virtue."
CONG. 111ISHKAN ISRAEL: Services 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Kranz will discuss "Revelation of the Soul." David Fried-
man, Bar Mitzva.
YOUNG ISRAEL OF GREENFIELD: Services 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Prero will speak on "Why We Should Read Books
on Jewish Subjects."
TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8:15 p.m. today. Rabbi Rosenbaum
will speak on "Reflections on Masada." Robert Ross and Carl
Scarbnick, Bnai Mitzva.
BETH AARON SYNAGOGUE: Services 5:15 p.m. today and 8:30 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Gorrelick will preach on "Abraham's Plea for
Justice."
BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE: Services 8:30 p.m. today at Frost School.
Rabbi Wine will discuss "The Young People's Revolt ... Radical
or Liberal?" Andrew Fierberg, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. BETH ABRAHAM: Services 5 p.m. today and 8:40 m. Sat-
urday. Rabbi Halpern will speak on "Shall We Legitimize e?"
Sheldon Cowen and Sheldon Harnick, Bnai Mitzva.
CONG. BETH SHALOM: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rev. Hubert G.
Locke, director of the office of religious affairs, Wayne State
University, will speak on "The Agony of the Inner City." Sandra
Bloch and Sharan Schulman, Snot Mitzva. Services 9 a.m. Satur-
day. Howard Genser and Gary Saretsky, Bnai Mitzva.
CONG. BETH HILLEL: Services 5:10 p.m. and 9 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Litke will speak on "Champion of Justice."
CONG. BNAI ISRAEL of Pontiac: Services 8:30 p.m. today and 7:30
a.m. Saturday. Dr. Minkowitch will speak on "Reaching for the
Moon."
CONG. BETH MOSES: Services 5:10 p.m. and 8:15 today. Lissa
Kasmer, Bat Mitzva.
CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 6 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Satur-
day. David Zuppke and Michael Friedman, Bnai Mitzva.
YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-WOODS: Services 5:05 p.m. today and
9 a.m. Saturday. Norman Ribiat, Bar Mitzva. -
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 4:45 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Satur-
day. Bruce Wenokur, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. AHAVAS ACHIM: Services 5 p.m. today and 8:40 a.m. Satur-
day. Sheldon Olshansky and Norman Copper, Bnai Mitzva.
Regular services will be held at Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton,
Downtown Synagogue, Temple Beth Am and Cong. Shomrey Emunah.

Canadian Jewry Hailed as Synagogue Turns 200

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire

to The Jewish News)

MONTREAL—The achievements
of Canadian Jewry in the spheres
of welfare and education were
hailed here by Governor General

STOP! STOP!

The Devil has appeared,
twice before,
Walking alive in
the flesh.
In the Garden of Eden
and as Judas, the nudje
And now, for the third time
a fresh.

He'll sell us a bill of goods
like gold
But the Lord has warned
through the prophets of old,
He'll' break the covenant
he's about to make
With the Children of Israel
the ones at stake.

Be not taen in by this fake
and this fraud
Your very souls he desires
to devour.
He'll seek you out
wherever he would
Turn to the Lord for. now
is the Hour.

—Richard Palmer

Roland Michiner of Canada at a
dinner marking the 200th anniver-
sary of Cong. Shearit Israel — the
Spanish and Portuguese Syangogue
—which is Canada's oldest Jewish
congregation.
The dinner was attended by Sen.
David Omit, representing Prime
Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau,
Bishop Kenneth Maguire, Dr. Solo-
mon Gaon, chief rabbi of Common-
wealth Sephardic Congregations,
and more than 300 guests from the
United States, Great Britain and
Fran.c.e.
Michiner said that the Jewish
community "had translated the
Jewish trait of involvement and
concern for the destiny of hu-
manity at large into concrete
terms through its outstanding
work in the areas of welfare and
education."
He mentioned as examples the
Baron de Hirsch Institute, the
Sayde Bronfman Center and the
Bnai Brith, which is celebrating
its 125th anniversary. Dr. Gaon
presented the congregation with an
antique silver menora from a col-
lection belonging to London's Shaar
Hashamayim Synagogue.

The tallest trees are most in the
power of the winds, and ambitous
men of the blasts of fortune.
—William Penn

Tokyo Jewish CommunityDedicates New Synagogue
TOKYO (JTA) — The Jewish dedicated were a new library, din-
community of Tokyo dedicated a ing room, recreation room, youth
new synagogue Nov. 2 and accept- lounge and classrooms.
ed a new Sefer Tora from Israel The synagogue has a Star of
mb e d wdi tthhe
given by its president, Shoal N. David embedded
the scyem
ilibnog, ls an
o
emarble with the
cegs.
Michael LeBurkien and Steven Eissee rnvbier
in the 160-family syna- the 12 tribes on each side and

Beth Am Names
Yoimo- Commuters
to Pulpit Positions

Chester are putting on the mileage
during their tenure as spiritual
leaders of Temple Beth Am. The
two rabbinical students, newly ap-
pointed by the temple, commute

seats

gogue were conducted by Rabbi 175 people. .
Marvin Tokayer, formerly of New
Let thepeople think they govern
York, and Cantor Harold Plonchak,
formerly of Philadelphia. Also and they will be governed.

TRAVELING

ANYWHERE

EVERYWHERE

Call

YESHIVATH BETH YEHUDAH

Specially

Conducted & Chaperoned

Tours To Israel

For Senior Citizens

353-6750

Eve. 862-0963

Chester

LeBurkien

on alternate weekends between
Livonia and Cincinnati, where they
attend Hebrew Union College.
The two men have some experi-
ences in common although LeBur-
kien is several years Chester's
senior. They worked together last
summer conducting a youth camp.
Both have studied in Israel, Ches-
ter having just returned from a
year's study at Hebrew University
and Hebrew Union College-Jerusa-
lem. LeBurkien was studying at
the latter school when Israel began
to mobilize for the Six-Day War.
He immediately was drafted — to
teach French in a high school
whose teachers had been called up
—and stayed on for the duration of
the war.
A Detroiter for part of his boy-
hood, LeBurkien grew up in Indi-
ana, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in
1958 from Indiana University. He
has studied international relations
at the University of Wisconsin and
Johns Hopkins University Foreign
Service School in Bologna, Italy,
and French civilization at the Uni-
versity of Paris.
In Israel, LeBurkien attended the
Biblical and Archaeological School
of Hebrew Union College. Two
summers ago, he was a worker
for the poverty program in Gary,
Ind., and he has been director of
Hillel Foundation at the University
of Illinois. An army veteran, he is
a major in the reserves chap-
laincy corps.

Chester was born in St. Paul
in 1943, but has lived in the Los
Angeles area for the past 16
years. He completed his under-
graduate studies at UCLA, re-
ceiving a BA in history in 1965.
Upon graduation, he entered
Hebrew Union College — Jewish
Institute of Religion, Los Angeles
branch, and received a bachelor
of Hebrew letters degree in 1967.

He served as the college student
body president in 1966-67 and was
a co-winner of the Faculty Award
for Academic Excellence upon
graduation. His 1967-68 year was
spent in Israel, where his major
fields of study were archaeology
and Bible.
Chester has served two congre-
gations as student rabbi in South-
ern California. He is in his third
year of rabbinic studies and plans
to be ordained in 1971.

A group of Detroit Industrialists Planning to start a plant

in Israel to manufacture precision parts, vital to Israels

economy; the following skilled people are needed.

TOOL MAKERS
TURETH LATHE HAND
MILL HAND
THREAD GRINDERS

O.D. I.D. GRINDERS
SURFACE GRINDERS
BENCH HAND

People selected must be familiar with close tolerances and willing
to settle in Israel for at least 3 years.

All transportation and expenses paid;
after 6 p.m. except Fridays.

For

information,

call 358-3138

LABOR ZIONIST MOVEMENT
honors

on the occasion of the

publication of her book

"A Shtedtl Beim Bug" on

Wednesday evening,

November 20, 8:30 P.M.

in the

LABOR ZIONIST
INSTITUE

19161 Schaefer Hwy.

Program:
Readings of portions of the book by Sarah Friedman
Rendition of Hebrew and Yiddish songs by Bella Goldberg
Admission is free.
Refreshments will be served.
Arranged by: Detroit Council of Pioneer Women—Shirlee Katz-
man, President; Labor Zionist Council of Detroit
Morris A. Lifshay, Chairman; Farband City Com-
mittee—Joseph Katz, President

V••■■■■■•■••■■••■ 0•Moo

I B'nai Moshe School of Adult Study

"Judaism — Basis for Stability in Troubled Times"
Opening Lecture Tuesday, November 12, 8:30 p.m.

Dr. Bernard Mandelbaum

President, Jewish Theological Seminary

Open to Community at large

Admission free

Courses of Study on Successive Tuesdays:

MAKING

YOUR

WILL?

REMEMBER

YESHIVA

BETH

YEHUDA

A. Beginners Hebrew—Mark Eichner

B. Intermediate Conversational Hebrew—Hannan Weizman

Klein
D. Rebelliousness and Social Protests—Dr. Benjamin Yapko
E.The Bible—Guide to Modem Living—Morris Nobel

C. Liturgy and Prayer—Cantor Louis

LECTURE HOUR

F. Explosive Issues Affecting the Jew—Robbi -Lehrman

G. Famous Jewish Personalities—Seymour

Kaplan

H. Journey to Israel

Congregation B'nai Moshe

Classified Ads Get Quick Results

14390 W.

TEN MILE RD.

OAK PARK

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