Selihot, Rosh Hashana Services Scheduled Traditional Selihot services, with their prayers for forgiveness, will provide the prelude to the High Holy Day period, midnight Satur- day. Four nights later, the New Year of 5731 will be ushered in throughout the world. Synagogues and temples which •• indicated special Selihot serv- and gatherings for this week- -id are as follows, with Rosh Has- hana schedules listed further on. The entire community is welcome at Selihot services. Adas Shalom Synagouge's mid: night services will be held at the new Hillel Day School building on Middlebelt. Rd., Farmington. A social hour, at which Rabbis Jacob E. Segal and Jonas Goldberg will lead a discussion of the significance and meaning of the High Holy Days, will begin at 10:30 p.m. Can- tor Nicholas Fenakel and the Syn- agogue Choir will render specially prepared liturgical selections at the Selihot service. Young Israel Center of Oak- Woods will hold a pre-Selihot social hour at 10 p.m. Saturday under the sponsorship of the sisterhood. Rab- bi James I. Gordon will deliver a message at 11:40, and Cantor Da- vid Greenbaum will lead the open- ing Selihot prayers. (Rabbi Gordon will deliver his annual Sabbath Shuva lecture 5 p.m. Saturday. It will be devoted to "Repentance.") quartet, led by Assoc. Cantor Is- rael Fuchs, will conduct 10 p.m. Selihot services. Cong. Bnai Israel of Pontiac will hold midnight services Saturday after a social hour and discussion of the observance of the High Holy Days, led by Rabbi Leonard Ber- man. Cong. Beth Achim will hold a so- cial fellowship hour preceding the midnight service at its Southfield building.. Cantor Simon Bermanis, assisted by the synagogue's holi- day choir conducted by Charles Weiner, will officiate. Cong. Beth Jacob of Pontiac will hold Selihot services 11 p.m. Sat- urday. Rabbi H. Philip Berkowitz will speak on "At the Threshold of the High Holy Days." • • • Rosh Hashana services will be held Wednesday and Thursday evenings and Thursday and Friday mornings in Orthodox and Conserv- ative synagogues. Reform temples hold Rosh Hashana services Wed- nesday evening and Thursday mor- ning only. Those synagogues that have list- ed holiday schedules are as fol- lows: Cong. Beth Achim, in both De- troit and Southfield, will hold eve- ning services at 6. Rabbi Benjamin Gorrelick and Cantor Joseph Birn- holtz will officiate in the Schaefer Temple Beth Am's new board building's main sanctuary, with of directors will be installed by Rabbi Herbert Eskin and Cantor ' Rabbi David Chester at 10 p.m., Naftali Frankel of Cincinnati lead- with a reception following. At Set. ing parallel services in the social ihot services, Rabbi Chester will hall. Rabbi Milton Arm and Cantor speak on "The Jewish Concept of Simon Bermanis will conduct serv- Sin, Guilt and Atonement." ices at the Southfield building. Mor- Beth Abraham Synagogue will ning services Thursday and Friday hold a reception and reunion for are scheduled at 7:30. members at 9 p.m. Saturday. Rabbi Young Israel Center of Oak- Israel Halpern, Cantor Shabtai Woods will usher in the holidays Ackerman and the synagogue at 6 p.m. Wednesday. Services Progress Report Due at Breakfast of Beth Abraham Membership 7:30 a.m. Thursday and Friday will be led by Menahem Landau and Cantor David Greenbaum. Rabbi James I. Gordon will speak the first day on "Is Mo- therhood BeComing a Myth?" and the second day on "Tbe Stat. us of Man." Temple Beth Jacob of Pontiac will hold services 8:30 p.m. Wed- nesday, when Rabbi H. Philip Ber- kowitz will speak on "What Brings Us Here?" and at 10 a.m. Thurs- day, when the sermon topic will be "The Past Speaks the Present." Religious school services will be held at 2 p.m. Birmingham Temple services will be held 8:30 p.m. Wednesday and 10:30 a.m. Thursday. Rabbi Sher- win Wine will discuss "Living With Anxiety." Adas Shalom Synagogue will hold evening services at 6 and morning services at 7:30 both days. Parallel serivces will be held in main sanc- tuary and social hall, with Rabbis Jacob E. Segal and Jonas Goldberg alternating pulpits. Rabbi Segal's sermon will be on "The Key to Renewal—Are Your Values Holding Up:" Rabbi Goldberg will speak on "Jewish Education—Education for What?" Cantor Nicholas Fenakel and Assoc. Cantor Larry Vieder will chant the liturgy, assisted by the synagogue choirs directed by Cantor Fenakel and Dr. Maurice Lax. Members of United Synagogue Youth, Matthew Rose, Robert Schostak, Jeremy Segal and Philip Wolok, will chant Torah readings. Youth services, supervised by youth education director Barry Bank, will be held in three sec- tions: 9th graders to college-age in the synagogue chapel; 6th-8th grades in the school building; and 3rd-5th grades in the board room. - Temple Beth El will hold two evening services Wednesday, one at 7 and the other at 9, both with Dr. Richard C. Hertz preaching. At 10 a.m. services Thursday, Rabbi Morton Kanter will speak. Childien's and youth serivces will be held 2:30 p.m. Thursday. Men and women in the armed forces are invited, with no admission cards required. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 24—Friday, September 25, 1970 Cong. Shaarey Shomayim serv- Libersons to Host ices are set for 6 p.m. and 8 a.m. both days. Rabbi Leo Y. Goldman Beth Achim Gathering will speak on "The Beginning of Mr. and Mrs. William I. Liberson Life" the first day and "A Year to will host a leadership reception on Remember" thg,, second day. behalf of Cong. Beth Achim and in honor of Rabbi Benjamin H. Gorre- Cong. Shaarey Zedek will hold lick 8:20 p.m. Oct. 6 at their new services at 6 p.m. and 7:45 a.m. home, 28509 Rivercrest, Southfield. both days. Rabbi Irwin Groner will The reception is being held in ad- preach on "Do We Still Love Life?" and "How to Educate Parents." vance of the Beth Achim testimon- Youth services, -supervised by Rab- ial dinner, which will honor Rabbi bi Gerald Teller, director of edu- Gorrelick on his nearly 40 years cation and youth, will be held on in the rabbinate and his 21 years various levels, with junior congre- of service to Detroit Jewry. Liberson, com- gation (grades 9-12) led by Gary munal leader and Stern, adviser; and Tikva, inter- attorney, is a for- mediate congregation (4-6), kinder- mer president of garten, and lst-3rd grades in sepa- Beth Achim. He rate rooms. is chairman of Cong. Beth Hillel services are t Is e testimonial set for 6 p.m. and 7:45 a.m. both dinner. days. Rabbi Joel Like will preach Dr. Arieh Plot- on "The Sanctity of Man" and "The kin, who served Sanctity of the Jew." Michael Trai- as an intelligence son will conduct youth services officer in the Is- both days. la/wain rael Defense Temple Kol Ami will open serv- Forces, will be guest speaker. The testimonial dinner for Rabbi ices Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. Rabbi Ernst Conrad will speak on "Turn- ing the Hearts of Parents to Their Children." At 10 a.m. services Thursday, he will speak on "Keep Your Voice From Weeping." The Temple Youth Group will conduct children's services at 3 p.m. Mrs. Natalie Conrad, pianist; Mrs. Dora- lene McNelly Davis, soprano; and Dr. Irving Friedman, tenor, will provide High Holy Day music. Cong. Beth Moses services are scheduled to bee)) 6105 p.m. and 8 a.m. both days. Gorrelick will be held Oct. 18 at the Jewish Center. The dinner is being given prior to his departure on a year's sabbatical, most of which will be spent in Israel. Ticket chairmen are Mr. Manuel Feldman and Max Nosanchuk. David Silver is coordinator. For reservations, call Israel Bonds, 352-6770. The wise does at once what the fool does at last.—Baltasar Gra- cian. NORTHLAND FORD WHERE PRICE SELLS SO DOES GEORGE RUSKIN NORTHLAND FORD 10 MILE & GREENFIELD Pictured during ground-breaking exercises at the West Bloom- field Township site of Cong. Beth Abraham are (from left) front: Dr. Anthony Witham, superintendent of schools, West Bloomfield Township; Judge Nathan J. Kaufman, groundbreaking toastmaster; Louis Ellenbogen, honorary lifetime president of the congregation; and Irving Adler, president of the congregation. At rear are William Genser past president of the congregation; Dr. Robert Schlaff, co- chairman of the new synagogue building organization; and Mrs. Philip Rubinoff, executive director of the congregation. • Members of Beth Abraham Con- gregation will have breakfast with Judge Nathan Kaufman 10 a.m. Sunday in the synagogue. Judge Kaufman, who serves with Dr. Robert Schlaff as co-chairman of the new synagogue building cab- inet, will present a pictorial review of the ground breaking, which took place Sept. 13 on the site of Beth Abraham's new synagogue and school on Maple Rd. between Ink- • ster and Middlebelt in West Bloom- field Township. A model of the new synagogue complex will be on exhibit. A de- tailed progress report and further plans will be presented. Questions will be answered by Seymour Mandell, architect, and the building committee, Herman Rader, William Genser, Jack Schon, Dr. Schlaff and chairman Nelson Dembs. Interfaith Workshops Study Youth Violence NEW YORK--"We are trying to make the leadership of the country aware that there is no point in kid- ding themselves that Kent State is over," says Dr. James M. Eagan, National Conference of Christians and'Jews vice president for youth. root" reactions and develop rec- ommendations for the agenda of the 1970 White House Conference on Children and Youth. Very subtly the idea is to pre- vent young people from direct Con- frontation with law enforcement "You have to trust the kids," officials. (- says Dr. Eagan, "and part of that "Violence," says Eagan, "is not trust is being willing to listen." confined to the big cities, the whole This year, the NCCJ sponsored area is boiling. eight national workshops on the "Individuals, however, leave the theme of "Effects of War and Vio- workshops with a commitment to lence Upon Children and Youth." effect some change within their The workshops obtain "gr ass community," Eagan says, all you nee to get out of town in a hurry Dial your long distance calls direct and get somewhere the easy way. Just dial 1; the area code ( if different from ydur own) then the phone number, and you'll go a long way. Fast. Dial your long distance calls direct. And get out of town, on time. Michigan Bell vrorliVw.ro-arar • •• t's. • mg:. - • •