JWB Arranges High Holy Day Observances for Jewish. Personnel in Military Services Abroad NEW YORK — In Taiwan, Thailand, Italy and Spain— wherever American Jewish military personnel and their families are stationed—civil- ian rabbis will join Jewish military chaplains and mili- tary lay leaders in conduct- ing High Holy Day services for their military congrega- tions. The commission on Jewish chaplaincy of the National Jewish Welfare Board has arranged for the civilian rabbis to visit many bases where no full-time Jewish chaplain is stationed, it was announced by Rabbi Eman- uel Rackman, chairman of the commission. Civilian Rabbi Jacob T. Hoenig will go to Taiwan un- der the auspices of the Air Force. There has never been a permanent Jewish chaplain on Taiwan; Jewish personnel there have been served by chaplains from the Philip- pines and Okinawa. Chaplain (Capt.) Joshua Goldberg, U.S. Navy, Ret., will journey to Naples, Italy, to conduct High Holy Day services there. Chaplain (Maj.) Nathan M. Landman of Wright-Patterson AFB' near Dayton, 0., will hold services at a U.S. base in Thailand. Chaplain Herman E. Gross- man of the Veterans Admin- istration, who is an Air Force reservist, will conduct Rosh Hashana services at Torrejon AFB in Spain and Yom Kippur services at a base in Amano, Italy. Rabbi Seeks to Exhume Graves Left in Vilna Jewish Cemetery ELIZABETH, N.J. (JTA)— Rabbi Pinhas Teitz said he had requested permission to exhume t h e six remaining graves in the ancient Jewish cemetery in Radin, near Vil- na, which is being leveled along with five _ non-Jewish cemeteries, for shipment to the United States for re- burial. Rabbi Teitz, a former mem- ber of the presidium of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the United States and Cana- da, said he had made the request through Ephraim Kaplun, head of the Moscow Jewish community. The remaining graves in- clude that of t h e Chofetz Chaim, regarded as the great- est talmudic scholar of •od- ern times, who died in 1933. Rabbi Teitz made contact with Kaplun by telephone on Aug. 20 to inform him of the report. Kaplun subsequently informed Rabbi Teitz that, at Kaplun's request, the Soviet Ministry of Cults had sent a commission to Radin to in- vestigate the reported de-1 s true tion Rabbi Teitz said he had received a telephone report of the findings of the com- mission which said that the Jewish cemetery h a d not been in use since 1942 and the Radin government de- cided to liquidate it and the five other burial grounds. Kaplun told Rabbi Teitz that the commission was in- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 10—Friday, Sept. 6, 1974 It's Nice To Deal With Joe Slatkin's DEXTER CHEVROLET 20811 W. 8 Mile between Southfield S Telegraph 534-1400 Our Promise To You: BETTER SERVIM formed that a notice had been placed in the local press in Radin on May 12, announc- ing plans for the cemetery liquidation a n d requesting friends -and relatives to come to the cemeteries and ex- hume bodies for re-burial. However, Rabbi Teitz said, the announcement attracted little attention and no per- sons came to the cemeteries to reclaim any bodies, and the Radin city government b e g a n the leveling of the cemeteries. UJA Body to Discuss Yom Kippur War NEW YORK — The Tarry- town, N.Y. Conference Cen- ter will host the first meet- ing of the 1975 Young Lead- ership Cabinet of the United Jewish Appeal, as members gather this weekend to focus on the theme "The Yom Kip- pur War—One Year Later." Participants will share in- sight into the political, so- cial and economic issues af- fecting the relationship be- tween the people of Israel and world Jewry nearly a year following the Yom Kip- pur War, and will evaluate their ongoing commitments to meet the humanitarian needs of a people beset by -many problems. Highlights of the retreat will be the keynote address "The Yom Kippur War: Israel and the Jewish Peo- ple," delivered by Moshe Davis, head of the Institute of Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University; and the presentation of Donald S. Gould of Albany as the in- coming 1975 chairman of the Young Leadership Cabinet. KKK Has Candidate for U.S. Presidency NEW YORK — Dale Reusch, Ohio grand dragon of the National Knights of the Ku Khix Klan, was sel- ected to run as a presiden- tial candidate in 1976. Scott -Nelson, imperial wizard of the Texas Fiery Knights, will be his vice presidential candidate, according to an announcement made at the end of the group's annual Labor Day convention in At- lanta. Three civilian rabbis have been slated to hold services at Air Force Bases in the U.S. Rabbi Israel Weisfeld will be at Vandenberg AFB, Calif.; Rabbi Harry Essrig is going to Ft. Huachuca, Ariz.; and Rabbi David Greenberg will conduct serv- ices at Castle AFB, Calif. Full-time and part-time Jewish chaplains and mili- tary lay leaders will conduct Rosh Hashana and Yom Kip- pur services at more than 550 domestic military installations and at many overseas points, on Army transports and Navy vessels on the high seas, and for patients in VA hospitals. Jewish military personnel and their families stationed far from the friends and community they left behind are assisted to keep the High Holy Days "Jewishly" mean- ingful through a variety of special holiday provisions sent by JWB. These provi- sions, which include the tra- ditional kosher foods, prayer books and prayer shawls, yarmulkes, Torah scrolls, ram's thorns, Jewish calen- dars and inspirational litera- ture, are sent to military in- stallations throughout the world. JWB also provides religious materials for U.S. service- men on duty at embassies overseas, for U.S. foreign service personnel, and for Peace Corpsmen serving. in remote areas. Three cassettes, produced by JWB's commission on Jewish chaplaincy, are avail- able for the fall holiday period. These include Selihot prayers and descriptions and liturgical melodies of the High Holy Days and Sukkot. The cassettes can be used as guides to the services or to help train military lay lead- ers'. They are often played over VA hospital networks so that bedridden Jewish pa- tients can take part in the holiday observances. Ambu- latory patients usually attend hospital services. At some military posts, Jewish personnel are granted leave so they can travel home for the High Holy Days. A number of servicemen will be offered home hospitality by Jewish residents of the local communities where they are stationed. 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