THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS

Senate OKs 885 Million in Aid
Shaarey Zedek Adult Education Adas Shalom
to Soviet Emigrants in Israel
Program Sets 4-Week Courses
Men to Hear
Cong. Shaarey Zedek an-
WASHINGTON (JTA I—The ; expected to tatol about $8,-
Assistant Rabbi Senate
nounces its adult education
Wednesday afternoon I 000,000.

program will begin 8 p.m.
Oct. 10 and will continue on
successive Tuesday evenings
through Oct. 31. Five concur-
rent courses will be held
I during each two-hour session.
"The Condition of Modern
Jewish Belief' will be exam-
ined by Dr. Max Weine,
formerly of Camden, N. J.
and now a resident of Oak
Park. Rabbi Weine will in-
terpret contemporary Jewish
faith in the light of the
writings of Martin Buber,
Mordecai Kaplan and Abra-
ham Joshua Heschel.
"Jewish Values and Con-
temporary Life," an intro-
ductory course in Jewish
ethics, will be taught by
Rabbi Gerald A. Goldman,
director of the Bnai Brith
Hillel Foundation at the Uni-
ciate director of the Hillel
Foundation at U. of M., will

MIZRACHI
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ISRAEL

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9 Days

1st Class Hotels — Meals
— Sightseeing — via El
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OTHER TRIPS!

• Enjoy a week in Jerusalem.

• 2 Sabbaths in Jerusalem.

• Sight-seeing trips to Sharm
El Sheikh, Eilat, Massada,
Golan Heights, Tombs of
the Patriarchs, Mother
Rachel and other Holy

places.
• First class hotels with 2

meals daily.

• Round trip by El Al.

Travel with the Organiza-
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trips for over 30,000 satis-
fied tourists.
Mizrachi Tours give you
the most for your money.

Tours leaving every Sunday
and Monday. Flights every
day. $414 up.

lairs of town • flights evadable

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f:r.: •

fa: • •

DR.

MAX

WEINE

lecture on "Laughter, Fire
and Night: Studies in Jewish
Mysticism."
'Israel Today'—its socie-
tal and political problems —
will be taught by Prot.
Shmuel Raz, Israeli aca-
demician.
A special program for
parents of first and second
grade students in the congre-
gation's religious school,
"Judaism, the School and the
Home," will be taught by
Rabbis Irwin Groner and
Gerald Teller.
The public is invited with-
out charge.
Shaarey Zedek also pro-
vides an intensive study pro-
gram, "Havurat Limud," in
association with Wayne State
University. This course in
biblical studies, taught by
Dr. Ivan Starr of the uni-
versity's department of Near
Eastern languages and liter-
ature, is entitled "From the
Patriarchal Period to the Era
of Moses." The course, be-
ginning Tuesday evening. ex-
tends for 20 weeks and has a
registration fee.
The fall series is offered
by Cong. Shaarey Zedek's
cultural commission, under
the leadership of Walter L.
Field, chairman, and Max-
well E. Katzen, co-chairman.

Arab League Trying
to Change Its Image?

LONDON (JTA)—The Arab
League opened a major
meeting of its Western Eu-
ropean representatives Wed-
nesday.
The league is said to be at-
tempting to present an image
of moderation and to dissoci-
ate itself from terrorist acts.
The meeting brought to-
gether the League's repre-
sentatives from London,
Paris, Bonn, Rome, Brussels
and Amsterdam.

• 'itif

•

Traverse City Boasts

proudly announces that our newly refurbished

SOCIAL HALL

is now available for your next party!

.

•

Kosher caterer of your selection

•

Many choice dates are available . .

For further information, please call

the Synagogue Office, 547-7970

CONGREGATION BETH SHALOM

14601 W.

Rabbi Seymour Rosen-
bloom was recently named
assistant rabbi of Adas Sha-
lom Synagogue. He serves
together with senior rabbi
Jacob E. Segal.
Rabbi Rosenbloom, 27, is a
native of Rochester, N.Y. A
Phi Beta Kappa graduate of
the University of Rochester,
he spent two years of study
at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem and received his
MHL and ordination as rabbi
from the Jewish Theological
Seminary. He has received
prizes in Talmud, Bible and
homiletics and was named
t h e outstanding seminary
graduate of 1972. In addition,
he was designated by his
classmates to speak on their
behalf following ordination,
Rabbi Rosenbloom has
served on the faculty of Tem-
ple Beth El Religious School
in Rochester, at the Hebrew
High School of Cong. Oheb
Shalom, South Orange, N.J.,
and at the Hebrew High
School of Temple Israel of
Great Neck, L.I.
Rabbi Rosenbloom h a s
spent five summers on the
Camps Ramah staff. While in
Israel in 1971. he was com-
missioned by Ramah to write
a prototype work on prayer
He has recently completed
an expanded and more com-
prehensive edition, "T'filla
(Prayer): Considerations for
Dialogue with Ramah Coon-
senors."

• •

•

Congregation Beth Shalom

-

Rabbi Seymour Rosen-
bloom, new assistant rabbi
of Adas Shalom Synagogue,
will be guest speaker at its
mer.'s club breakfast 9:30
a.m. Oct. 8. A native of
ha.'
he
Rochester, N.Y.,
studied at Hebrew University
was
named
the
outstand-
and
ing 1972 graduate of the Jew-
ish Theological Seminary.
• • •

Lincoln — Oak Park. Michigan 48237

1st .sukka in Years

Traverse City's first sukka
in recent memory was spe-
cial in more Ways than one.
reports M. J. Fivenson,
erected the large booth for
Sukkot.
Sukka decorations came all
the way from Jerusalem, as
a gift from a cousin of Mrs. •
Fivenson. The same decora-
tions had been used in the
main sukka of Jerusalem, '
Fivenson was told.
Services, with lulav and
ethrog, were held in the
sukka, with l'hillip Fischman
conducting. Some 18 mem-
bers of the Traverse City
Jewish community partici-
pated.
Fivenson is convinced that
his was the northernmost
sukka in Michigan "and pos-
sibly- in the whole U.S.A."

A soft heart and hard head
make an unbeatable pair.

•

restored $35,000,000 to its al-
location for Soviet emigrants
in adopting its foreign aid '
authorization bill for the fis-
cal year which began on July
1.
Sen. llugh Scott, the Re-
publican leader in the Sen-
ate, called for the increase in
the authorization from $50,-
000.000 to $85,000,000 as or-
iginally recommended by bi-
partisan soonsors. With bi-
partisan backing again Wed-
nesday, the Scott Amendment
was voted 56-32. The bill as
a whole was passed narrowly
by 46-41.
The Senate action on the
Soviet emigrants creates a
complex legislative tangle.
The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, in preparing new
authorization legislation after
the Senate killed a previous
authorization measure on the
"ictnam issue, had cut the
-mount for the Soviet refu-
---. from $88,000,000 to $80,-
con.o00.
The House. which also had
authorized $85,000,-
000. adopted the 550,000.0o1)
fimire without a floor fight
by the sponsors of the higher
figure.
On Thursday the Senate
Appropriations Committee
was to consider the final ver-
sion of its appropriation
measure, which is required
to fund the provision of the
authorization legislation.
The authorization measure
approved in the Senate Wed-
nesday also contains provi-
sions allocating up to $300,-
000.000 in military sales
credit for Israel and a $50,-
000,000 in economic support
plus an unspecified grant for
American schools and hos- !
pitals in Israel. The latter is

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
President Zalman S'iazar and
Premier Golda Meir joined
hundreds of guests Monday
night at ceremonies rededi-
cating four ancient Sephardi
synagogues in East Jeru
salem.
The rededication was the
first official event opening
Irael's 25th anniversary
year.
synagogues —
The four
Yohanan Ben Zakkai; the
Eliahu Ilanavi: Istambuli:
and Kahal Zion — are more
,hap 400 years old.
! •

RAMAT G.AN -- Forty re-
cent Russian immigrant stu-
dents have completed a five-
month ulpan at Bar4lan Uni-
versity specially designed to
prepare them for their aca-
demic studies and to reduce
their diffictilties with Hebrew
and—English.
The students attended in-
stitutions of higher learning
in Russia but did not finish
their studies there because
of their desire to come to
Israel.

Town House

Available Nov. 1st

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Large Family Room
Garage. Carpeting, • baths,

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Overlooks Wooded lavas.
and Mum Hollow Goff C......

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21191 (Mende — Swum Place

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352-3976, 235-6300

L'CHAYIM LODGE BNAI BRITH

Presents

CONTEMPORARY
ART AUCTION

with Harry

Weinsaft

"Gallery at the Kingsley"

Sunday, Oct. 1st, 1972

Champagne Preview

8-9 p.m.—Auction 9 p.m. sharp

Congregation Beth Achim

21100 W 12 Mile Rd , Southfield, Mich.

Door Prize

Donation 51.50 - Valuable

•

The Newest Convalescent Center
to be opened in Southfield

Lahser Hill
Nursing Center

is centrally

located at

25300 Lahser Rd.

800 ft. N of 10 Mile Rd

.

WE PROVIDE.

delightful meals
planned i, y a diPto1,,,

24 hour, a day

Kosher

prOP,,,,roai nursing core

Pates moderate,

Occupational and atlysica!

care excellent

'he , coy department

For applications and information call immedi-

ately EL 4-3222. 354-0828 or 354-0061

T he Downtown Synagogue

I 157 Gri-....4•1(1.

Sephardi Synagogues

Rededicated in Israel

Soviet Students Study
Hebrew at Bar-Ilan

These provisions are vir-
tually identical to the House
legislation.
The House had approved,
with shouts of aproval, an
amendment to the foreign aid
bill last week which ex-
pressed the opposition of the
House to the huge exit fees
imposed on Jewish academi-
cians.
The amendment, approved
by voice vote, was proposed
by Rep. Charles E. Vanik
(D. Ohio), and would ban as-
sistance from the Export-
Import Bank or the Office of
Government Insurance for
overseas investment to any
country whose emigration
fee is in excess of $50 or the
equivalent of that amount.
Opposition to the Vanik
amendment was expressed
by Republican House leader
Gerald Ford of Michigan and
Rep. Otto Passman (D. La.),
chairman of the House sub-
committee handling the for-
eign aid bill.

Rabbis Ask Guilty
Pleas Withdrawn

NEW YORK—Two 23-year-
old Orthodox rabbis who had
pleadol guilty in federal
court to mail-fraud charges
from their enrollment of stu-
dents in a fictitious univer-
sity, have asked to withdraw
their pleas.
Judge George T. Rosling
will make a decision Oct. 6
on whether to permit the de-
fendants to withdraw the
; plea. A , st L'-S. Attorney
Emanuel A. Moore said
the government would go
before a grand jury to seek
a multicount indictment
against the two men.
The defendants, Rabbi s
Bernard Fuchs and Gershon
Tannenbaum. both of Brook
lyn, contended they didn't
have criminal intent in the
mail order operation of the
"Marlowe University," which
•charged up to $500 for a de-
gree.

Fridley, Sept. 29, 1972-19

Detroit. NIiehigan

triuminces:

.MEMOIIIAI, SERVICES

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begin: 7:30 A.'11.

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