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22—F
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2 5, 19 72

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Ilnai Israel to Register Students for Classes

Cong. Bnai Israel of Pontiac will
hold registration for Hebrew school
and Sunday religious school 9 30-
I I 30 a.m. Sunday.
Hebrew classes commence Sept
5. and religious school begins Oct

R. Festival programs will he held
Sept 24 and Oct. 1.
Ralph Mercovitz is chairman of
the
education committee, and
Rabbi Leonard Berman is educa-
tional director.

BETH SHALOM
RELIGIOUS SCHOOL

The School Board is pleased to announce that in response to
community demand a select number of students whose parents
are non-members of the congregation will be permitted to
enroll in our school -

Primary Division — Kdg. - 2
Elementary Division — 3 - 6
Junior High Division — 7 - 9
Senior High Division — 10 - 12

Bar 'Bat Mitzvah Preparation, Modern Hebrew Language
Programs and Graduation.

For school information call 547-7972 3 or visit

14601 W. LINCOLN, Oak Park, Mich. 48237

The over 1,300 participants in the 1972
Jewish Community Center summer pro-
grams thank the staff for a wonderful
summer together. Thanks to:

MOTHER-TODDLER Bessie Levin, S
lavin
PLAYLAND, JR.
Julie Carmel, Joyce Fields , Sheree Freedman, Julie
Landau, Susan Miller. Debbie Platt
PLAYLAND
Linda Berg, Susie Cantor, Gail Keller, Debbie LipsItt,

Sandra Silver, Marlene Swartn, Jam. Ziegelmut
FUNTIME Kenneth Altsholer, Jody Friedman, Veronica Geran.
( harlene Gordon, Susie Leach, Kathy Montgomery,
Clifford Vitas
fill t %me
tvac:ne Applebaum, Nava Atlas, Sara Bra•erman,

Judy Elsenshtadt, Harold Friedman, Denise Goldman,
Ralph Goren, Rick Herman, Sandra Jaffa, Roth
Kahn, Diane Hoonan, Miriam )(solar., Joel Kaplan,
Alan Reiman, Charles Kinzer, Maurice Klein, A•i
Krtechman, Ned Krlpke, Robert Leider, Janice Le-
,ne, Joel Marwil, Janice Needle, Nina NovetSky,
Celine Paster, Alan Pessin, Fran Pfeffer, Debbie
Pollack, Gail Pollack, Sherry Rosenberg, Jeremy
Segal, Rebecca Segal, Roy Shelef, Jack Shenkman.
Merle Sherman.

S %I SRI.

Joyce Elk. Ruth Goodman, Steven Goodman, John
Jaffa, 1.1 Singer.

JR.

SPORTS SKILLS
David Basch, Barry Bershad, Martin ('chin- sicirn
CAMP FOR BOYS Feldman, Alan Kaczander, Peter Winston
( LMr OF THE ARTSSandy Berman, David Einstein,
Lee A Dyament,
Drbbie Krastoff, Rachel Jacobs, Jacob Lascu. Moshe
Last, Vicki, Sedman. slebbie Weinberg, Mana Rowe
51- SRI '72
Paul Benson. Beth Raderman, Mitchell Sherman.
Lynn Tarnoff
DIREcTOR, GROUP Allan Geifond
SERVICES DIVISION
PROGRAM
Abraham Ften.feei William Franks. thrril tinier.

St PERV1SORS

Jerry Kohro, 'Marty Rabinowitz Fred Rose. Gordon
-111 1
TRANSPORTATION George Pettis

DISPATCHER

E STAFF

Sadie Andrews, Ulysses Brown, Mary Davis, Edward
:: Vernon (loins. William Gray, Wiliam Jack-
son. Feltz Martin, Harold Malbok Hugh Muller, tar..
Roberg
Natalie Flarlsh, Shirley Indenbaum, Marilyn Metier,
Hann.. Morrison, Rita Sitron

ARE YOU UNDER 35?

B'NAI DAVID SYNAGOGUE

HAS RECENTLY AMENDED ITS BY-LAWS

TO PROVIDE A REDUCED MEMBERSHIP RATE

FOR PERSONS UNDER THE AGE OF 35.

2-I-

Shahn Lithograph.;

at Shaarey Zedek

The fine arts division of the cul-
ture commission of Cong. Stiaarey
Zedek announces an exhibit of 24
original lithographs by the late
Ben Shahn.

This suite, struck on hand-made
paper and all hand signed in paint-
and-brush is from the collection
of Mr. and Mrs. I. Irving Feld-
man.

consideration had been

extended only to those whose parents were

members This consideration

is now -e

tended to all

he always was con-
cerned with the defense of the in-
nocent and the persecuted. This
is seen in his many posters, in his
famous Ilagada and in his Drey-
fus and Sacco and Vanzetti series.
Shahn died two years ago.

The exhibit is being displayed
in the main foyer of Shaarey
Zedek. The public is invited.

Hippies, Love,
Speeches, Sleep

is the desire of the congregation to

make it possible for more younger couples

and families to become

with the synagogue.

actively associated

Your inquires are invited. Please call the

Synagogue office Monday-Thursday 9-5 p.m.

and Sunday 10-1 p.m. 557-8210.

Canada Zionists Protest
PLO Office in Britain

MONTREAL (JTA) — The
Canadian Zionist Revisionist move-
ment reported that it had made a
direct protest to Jeremy Jasper,
the British trade commissioner,

over plans of the British govern-
ment to allow the Palestine Lib-
eration Organization to open an
office in London.

Ben Milner, acting president,
and Rabbi Solomon Spiro met with
the British official and handed
him a formal statement.

Congregation B'nai Israel

143 Oneida Road — Pontiac, Michigan

teonaro

H

Berman. Robb.

Melvin Goldman. Pres.dent

"A Conservative Congregation Affiliated with
The United Synagogue of America"

Announces the offering of a limited number
of
member-
ships, special consideration to young marrieds. Inquiries
cordially invited.

The congregation offers:

By DAVID SCHWARTZ

(Copyright 1972, JTA, Inc.)

An American girl visiting Israel
fell in love with an Israeli yeshiva

bahur. She sent a picture of her
lOrthodox bearded love to her par-
' ents in America and they wrote
back asking did she have to go
to Israel to wed a hippie?

"But mama," the girl wrote
back, "the hippies over here wash '
their faces."

A complete Hebrew School and Sunday Religious School
Program. Daily and Sabbath Services (late Friday
Eve
and Sat
Morn.) High Holy Days Worship (tickets avail-

able to non-members). Youth activities
with United Synagogue youth).

Synagogue 335-1740

Temple Kol Ami

The Hebrew daily, Maariv, tells
a visitor to the Knesset who
complained to one of its members
about the temperature in the Is-
raeli Parliament.

"Well that is gratifying to know,"
replied the Knesset member, "I
had thought the speeches put them
to sleep. -

In that connection, we are re-
minded of the explanation given
by Woodrow Wilson of the verse
in the Psalms, "I had rather be
a door keeper in the House of the
Lord than dwell in the tents of
wickedness." The reason, Wilson

said, is

that when the speeches '
begin, the door keeper can quick-
ly run out.

Israel's 1st Drive-In
Movie to Open Soon

(affiliated

For information please contact Mr. Irving Prizont 334-4602
or Mr. Stanley Elbling 626-2757, Membership Chairmen

of

"You know,"
hc said to the
member of the Knesset, "I could ;
see members of the Knesset fall-
ing asleep on account of the heat."

program

Beautiful Auditorium for social events and "simchos".

All of which perhaps suggests
that as much as the scenery and
institutions, the tourist may find
the Israeli sense of humor worthy '
of his interest.

Ernst J. Conrad, Rabbi

'OUR SABBATH YEAR ...
BUT NOT A TIME TO REST'

Ernst Conrad, our distinguished rabbi, said at the recent
dinner-dance marking the completion of Temple Kol Ami's sixth
year. Sabbaticals ore fine if you can afford the time. But at
Temple Kol Ami, there's lust too much to be done.

For one thing, we want to do some serious thinking about
the construction of our own home We've owned a site on Wal-
nut Lake road in West Bloomfield Township for several years
now But we continue to conduct our regular religious services
in the Birmingham Unitarian Church on Woodward and Lone
Pine. Though we are a liberal, Reform congregation, we are

conservative enough not to undertake a building project until
we are financially able.

Nonetheless, we are understandably eager to discuss the
prospect of our first new home. We don't know whot it will
look like yet. But we do know it will be modest. Temple Kol Amu
has never harbored an edifice complex_ We believe that our

monuments should be those of spirit and deed, not of brick
and mortar. We hold that such monuments are erected by intel-
ligent social action . .
by instilling in our children a true under-
standing of the tenets of Judaism
by cultivating an appre-

curs,

ciation of our 4,000-year-old heritage . . . by following the
principles of righteousness and brotherhood

did, and Nell feature a self -Cr-

year

s iii

erght tomilre. who founded the Temple six summers ago. mew

Inca) officials announced..
The drik e ui will 'be located north
of the Te l As ii Exhibitroti
(iar-

fit P (Mt

It

the oppressive conditions imposed
by Syrian authorities on Syrian
Jews. The Syrian information of-
fice was forced to cancel the press
conference and the TV interview

lir

mentator,

rind- ()CIO her W It h room for 960

this

TEL AVIV (JTA) — A European
tourist who recently visited Syria
reported here Wednesday that a
number of Syrian Jewish youths
prevented the head of the Syrian
Jewish community from appearing
I on a Syrian television interview to
which
he had been invited by
Syrian officials.

The tourist said that Salim Totah
Entitled "For the Sake of a Sin-
''c Vi'rse . .", it was inspired , had been invited to appear before
a group of foreign correspondents
by Rainer Maria Rilke. The phil-
osophy communicated by his words and television crews.
The tourist said that when plans
is that one needs long years
of experience before he should for the scheduled interview be-
make his statement to the world. came known, a number of young
Syrian Jews surrounded the home
Shahn was so struck with the
of the community leader and pre-
depth of feeling in the poem that
vented him from leaving. They re-
he undertook to illuminate them
portedly feared that the Jewish
in the graphic media. ,
leader might make, under duress,
Shahn, born in Lithuania, learned statements which would not reflect
the trades of lettering and type-
setting, from which his artistic
interests were born. A social com-

TEL AVIV (JTA)—Israel's first
drive in movie house will open in

Until now ,

Syrian Jewish Youth Prevent Leader
From Accepting Govt. Bid for TV Talk

.hewn .

stubr tNrr

w ill

he

shows nightly
and a new movi• starting each
v..eck, the officials said. A group
of foreign and Israeli business-
men hav e invested in the enter-
prise

F'rices for admission to the
drive in will be similar to al-
ready existing prices at regular.
mod e houses

Classified Ads Get Quick Results

Another important thing we want

is to

to do in our sabbath
have our congregation continue to grow. From the

bership has increased steadily to nearly

150 families. Three-
hundred families is our goal and also our self•imposed

limit A sense of belonging is one of our most cherished natural
resources, and our by-laws limit membership to 300 in order
to preserve the warm member-to-member and rabbi-to-member
identification and communication the Temple hos always enjoyed.

If you get the feeling we're a unique group and think
you'd like to know more about us, please call us at 851-5350
or 542 3001. We'd love to hove you join us.

Temple Kol Anti

