20—Friday, June 2S, 1971 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS SYNAGOGUE L.. SERVICES TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8:15 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Rosenbaum will discuss "How Rabbis See Jews." Harry Zolkower, Bar Mitzva today. CONG. MISHKAN ISRAEL: Services 8 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Kranz will speak on the "Hasidic Viewpoint of Korakh." TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today and 11 a.m. Saturday. Guest Rabbi Daniel Fogel's sermon will be "Whom Do You Trust? Moses and Korakh—an Analysis of Leadership Styles." Steven Harwood, Bar Mitzva today. Robert Vernick and Craig Fox, Bnai Mitzva Saturday. CONG. BNAI JACOB: Services 7:53 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Isaac will speak on "Korakh—the Prototype of the New Bnai David Elects M. M. Silverman as Its President Dr. Maurice M. Silverman was elected president of Cong. Bnai David at the recent annual meeting of the congregation. He succeeds Max Sosin, who completed two years in that post. Elected with Dr. Silverman were Meyer Must, Jack Wolf and Dr. Maier Belen, vice presidents; Alan Weiner, treasurer; and Philip Bol- ton, secretary. Dr. Silverman, a physician and surgeon, received his MD degree from Wayne Medical College in 1930. He has served on the sur- Left." YOUNG ISRAEL OF GREENFIELD: Services 7 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Prero will speak on "How Not to Rebel." Leib Seligson, Bar Mitzva. sky and Mark Wodika, Bnai Mitzva. urday. David London and Paul Hamburger, Bnai Mitzva. CONG. BETH MOSES: Services 6:15 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Satur- day. Gary Epstein and Scott Bodner, Bnai Mitzva. CONG. BETH SHALOM: Services 6 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Mark Golden, Bar Mitzva. YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-WOODS: Services 7:30 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Robert Solomon, Bar Mitzva. CONG. BNAI DAVID: Services 7:15 p.m. today and 8:30 a.m. Satur- day. Eric King, Bar Mitzva. CONG. BETH HILLEL: Services 7:30 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Raymond Jackson, Bar Mitzva. Regular services will be held at Adas Shalom Synagogue, Temple Beth El, Birmingham Temple, Livonia Jewish Congregation, Cong. Beth Achim, Cong. Bnai Israel-Beth Yehudah, Cong. Bnai Israel of Pontiac, Temple Beth Jacob of Pontiac and Downtown Synagogue. Alpena Student Rabbi Invites Temple Worship Edward Paul Cohn, student rabbi at Temple Beth-El on White St. in ..412ena, invites all who will be in the area this summer to worship at the temple. Services at 8:15 p.m. Fridays feature the - Union Prayerbook liturgy, sermon and Torah reading. An oneg Shabat follows services. Morton Fivensen is congregation president. The temple has been serving the Jewish community of Alpena and vicinity since 1876. Cohn, of Baltimore, is a third year student at the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati. For informa- tion on temple services, call him at 356-1103. Griffin Greets Beth El s Rabbi PITTSBURGH (JTA)—The presi- dent of the Radical Zionist Alli- ance, an umbrella organization for leftwing student Zionist groups, has reported that maintenance of I the year-old group and its pro- grams is being made difficult by the fact that its best leaders practice what they preach and "go to Israel the soonest." David Mandel disclosed the "good but frustrating" successful aliya phase of the program in a letter to the Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle. Rabbi Morton M. Kanter (left) of Temple Beth El was greeted by Senator Robert P. Griffin at the U.S. Senate where, on June 9, the Detroit rabbi delivered the opening prayer. Senator Griffin paid honor to Rabbi Kanter and to Temple Beth El during that session of the Senate. A bad man is the sort who weeps CCAR to Honor Fram every time he speaks of a good In recognition of his 50 years of woman.—H. L. Mencken. service to the rabbinical profes- sion, Rabbi Leon Fram was to be elected honorary life member of Early Deadlines the Central Conference of Amer- ican Rabbis at its annual conven- for July 3 Holiday tion in St. Louis this week. Because Monday, July 5, The Temple Israel rabbi has is now a national holiday, served on the executive board of The Jewish News office will the CCAR, has chaired a number be closed that day. Copy of its committees and has collabo- for the issue of Friday, July rated in the writing of its history 9, must be in our hands by in the volume, "Retrospect and Friday, July 2, or it will be Prospect." considered too late for pub- lication. From Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver's "Therefore Choose Life," a spe- cial responsive, reading has been arranged entitled "I Was With Abraham." Saul , Tschernichovsky's "Smile Away My Dreams" poem has been appended in Hebrew with an Eng- lish translation to a "We Believe in Tomorrow" prayer. There are selections from Anne Frank's Diary and prayers by DR. MAURICE SILVERMAN Rabbis Riemer and Kushner. The gical staff of Mt. Carmel Mercy works of Aaron Zeitlin, S. Y. Ag- Hospital since its opening in 1934, non, Herbert Wiener, Abraham J. and he taught anatomy and physi- Heschel and others have been ology at the Mercy College Nursing utilized. School for 23 years. Deeply moving is a prayer in Dr. Silverman has served on the Selective Service Examining Board since Pearl Harbor. He is the recipient of certificates of recognition from presidents Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson, and a medal of honor from the Selec- tive Service Board. He was the first president of De- troit Louis Marshall Lodge of Bnai Brith. In 1968, he was honored as Bnai David's man of the year by Israel Bonds. He is married to the former Helen Whitman and has two daugh- ters, Mrs. William Schussler and Mrs. Harvey Zalesin, and 4 grand- children. The following were appointed to the board of trustees for a one- year term: Radical Zionist Youth Lose Leaders to Israel tion, by President Zalman Sha- zar of Israel. Supplementary prayers now are regular additions to religious serv- ices, especially in Conservative and Reform synagogues. While prayerbooks in use in these synagogues already contain accepted supplementary Sabbath and holiday selections, a newly- collected set of prayers, edited by Rabbi Jack Riemer, serves a good purpose for rabbis and con- gregants. "New Prayers for the High Holy Days," published by Media Ju- daica and Hartmore House Prayer Book Press of Bridgeport, Conn., contains important selections, some in Hebrew. In addition to the editorship of Rabbi Riemer, the second edition was co-edited by Rabbi Harold Kushner. Traditional texts also are used in this work and the totality of the collected themes adds to the impressiveness of the selections. —P.S. Be virtuous and you will be ec- centric.--Mark Twain. Rabbi Leizer Levin Is Now The value of the suggested ad- ditions lies in their sources and in the variety of texts and sub- jects covered. There is timeli- ness to many. For example, the editors made use of Eli Wiesel's "The Jews of Silence" and de- voted a two-page suggested read- ing to this passage. CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 7 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Lehrman's sermon will be "Beyond Criticism." Mark Kowal- TEMPLE KOL AMI: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Scott Gitlin, Bar Mitzva today, will deliver a sermonette "An Ancient Protest Movement." CONG. BETH ABRAHAM: Services 6:45 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Satur- day. Rabbi Halpern's sermon will be "Controversies: the Right Kind and the Other Kind." CONG. SHAAREY SHOMAYIM: Services 7:50 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Goldman will speak on "The Trouble Makers." CONG SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 6 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Sat- Classics Supplement Religious Prayer Maurice Betman, Irving Belinsky, Mrs. Philip Bolton, Philip Bricker, Marvin Canner, Arthur Chaims, Peter Chodoroff, Hy Cohen, Albert I. Fill, Edward Fishman, Leonard Goodman, Joe Gorman, Robert Gottlieb, Hadar Granader, Neil M. Kalef, Israel Kaner and Marvin Kaufman. Also Harry Keltonow, Jack J. Kraiz- man, Jerry Liebman, Leonard Nagel, Donald Nitzkin, Dr. Martin Norton, Burton J. Platt, Dr. Morton Plotnick, Dr. Jay Richman, Mel Richman, Norton Rosin, Mendel Shifman, Jerome Soble, Harvey Sosin, Dr. Harvey Zalesin and Dr. Arnold Zuroff. Conference of Cantors to Meet in Washington WASHINGTON, D. C. — T h e American Conference of Cantors will hold its 18th annual conven- tion Monday through Thursday at the Washington Hilton Hotel here. According to conference chair- man Cantor Paul Kwartin, the music presented during the con- vention will be a coupling of the old and the new: 19th Century classics plus six world premieres. Attendance will be about 1,000 from the United States, Canada, Israel and South America. The Bnai Brith National Mem- bership Award was given to HER- MAN J. NUDELMAN of Miami Beach who personally enrolled 273 members during the past year A winner for the third consecutive Attena no auctions if thou hast year, Nudelman will be cited at no money.—Talmud. the triennial convention. Residing at 15558 Geroge Washington Southfield 557-6828 BETH YEHUDAH TRAVELS 15751 W. 10 1/2 MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD, MICH. 557-6750-862-0963 Eve. Call us for all your traveling needs: 1. Domestic—Plane, train, bus 2. Overseas—Plane, ship 3. Hotel Reservations, every- where 4. Car Rentals, everywhere 5. Chartered buses HUNDREDS OF GROUP FLIGHTS TO ISRAEL. Yiddish, with an English transla- POTTER MOVING & STORAGE CO. One of Allied Van Lines Largest Haulers 1300 N. Campbell Road Royal Oak 2253 Cole Street Birmingham LI 1-3313 MI 4-4613 FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Space available suitable for school, Professional Office , Nursery. Total of 4,000 sq. ft. will divide to suit. YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-WOODS 398-1177 SUMMER FUN FOR CHILDREN AND YOUTH Session II — July 26-August 20 for 18 mos.-3 years Summer Mother-toddler **for preschoolers Playland, Jr. *for kindergartners Playland * for 1st-6th graders Mini-Camp *for lst-3rd graders Funtime * 1st graders-101/2 yr. olds Day Camp *101/2-12 yr. olds (fish, swim, boat & travel) *for 5th, 6th & 7th grade boys *for 6th-11th graders Safari, Jr. Sports Skills Camp Camp of the Arts *7th, 8th & 9th graders (a trave program) Safari, '71 OPEN TO MEMBERS AND NON-MEMBERS JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER Call DI 1-4200 — Group Services Division Home transportation provided to this area. "Morning transportation provided. Registration closes for Session it on July 19, 1971. I