20 Friday, July 15, 1977

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for your party

By

SAM FIELD

Call

399-1320

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Cantor Appointed

Harry Sturm has been ap-
pointed cantor of the Down-
town Synagogue, and will
lead weekly Sabbath serv-
ices. Cantor Sturm has led
High Holy Day services at
the Downtown Synagogue
since 1965.

Jospey Honored by Reform
Movement at Benefit Dinner

LARRY FREEDMAN

Orchestra and Entertainment

647-2367

Synagogue

Services

ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 6 p.m. today and
9 a.m. Saturday. Daniel Halabe, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 5:30 p.m. today and 11 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Hertz will speak on "Amos—Champion
of Justice."
CONG. BETH MOSES: Services 7:15 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. Bruce Frank, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. BNAI DAVID: Services 6:30 p.m. today and 8:30
a.m. Saturday. Joel Kollin, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE EMANU EL: Services 8 p.m. today, conducted
by Mr. and Mrs. Alan Freed.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Syme
will speak on "The Pursuit of Loneliness." Services 11
a.m. Saturday.
CONG. MISHKAN ISRAEL NUSACH H'ARI: _Services 9
a.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Gottlieb will
speak on "The Coins Shone."
Regular services will be held at Cong. Beth Achim,
Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield, Cong. Beth Abra-
ham-Hillel, Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton, Temple Beth
Jacob of Pontiac, Cong. Beth Jacob-Mogain Abraham,
Cong. Beth Shalom, Cong. Beth Tefilo Emanuel Tikvah,
Cong. Beth Tephilath Moses of Mt. Clemens, Cong. Bnai Is-
rael of Pontiac, Cong. Bnai Israel-Beth Yehudah, Cong.
Bnai Jacob, Cong. Bnai Moshe, Cong. Bnai Zion, Cong.
Dovid Ben Nuchim, Downtown Synagogue, Temple Kol
Ami, Livonia Jewish Congregation, Cong. Shaarey Shp-
mayim (10 Mile Jewish Center), Cong. Shaarey Zedek, Sho-
mer Israel (18960 Snowden), Cong. Shomrey Emanuh,
Cong. T'chiyah, Young Israel of Greenfield, Young Israel
of Oak-Woods and Young Israel of Southfield.

-

WELCOME

Maxwell Jospey, left, was the recipient of a specially-de-
signed oriental brass menora at the Reform Jewish Appeal
dinner given recently in his honor by the Metropolitan De-
troit Federation of Reform Synagogues. Participating in
the presentation were, from left: Mr. and Mrs. Jospey,
Mrs. Marshall M. Miller, regional RJA chairman; and Har-
old Somlyo, dinner chairman. A total of $75,000 was raised
during the RJA campaign to benefit the Union of Ameri-
can Hebrew Congregations and the Hebrew Union College-
Jewish Institute of Religion, the two major beneficiaries of
the RJA.

His Excellency,

Menahem Begin

Rabbi J. Goldman Earns U-D Degree

Prime Minister of Israel

We Are Proud of Your Leadership
and Accomplishments
For the Liberation
of Eretz Yisrael

Rabbi Jack Goldman was
awarded a master's degree
in humanities by the Univer-
sity of Detroit last month,
based on his post-graduate
research.

Rabbi Goldman, Jewish
chaplain and English profes-
sor at Macomb County Com-
munity College, as well as

Student Rabbis on World Tour

Zionist-Revisionists
of Greater Detroit-Herut

Join the Zionist-Revisionists
of Greater Detroit
22151 Beverly,
Oak Park, Michigan 48237

NEW YORK (JTA )—
Teams totalling 200 youth
leaders and faculty mem-
bers of the Rabbi Isaac El-
chanan Theological Semi-
nary of Yeshiva University
and of the university are
visiting four continents in

MAGICIAN

Available For All Occasions

968-5575

central states director of
kashrut for the Union of Or-
thodox Jewish Congrega
tions of America, had pre-
viously earned a master's
in English at Wayne State
University and his PhD in
English at U-D. He is a
graduate and received ordi-
nation from Yeshiva Univer-
sity in New York.

25

years experience

MAGICAL MEL

547-2464

an out-reach effort to thous-
dands of Jewish younsgers
this summer in the 23rd
summer program for that
purpose, university officials
reported.

Rabbi Appointed

NEW
YORK—Rabbi
Yerahmiel Y. Milstein, of
Brooklyn, has been appoint-
ed director of development
of the Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of
America.

NAZIS READY TO MARCH - WHAT'S NEXT?

Survivors of the Nazi Holocaust invite the public to an
informative meeting

1. Guest speaker -Dave Diles

2. "The Roots of Nazism in the United
States" By Hy Skenkman
3. Our Legal Rights —Attorney W. Sim-
kovitz and E. Chariip

4

- Sun. July 17
7:30 P.M.

at Temple Emanuel

W. Ten Mile Rd.

HY SHENKMAN

Survivor writer
and radio interviewer

No Charge. Come and bring a friend

JERUSALEM (JTA)-
The delicate issue of rela-
tions between the state and
religion and the balance be-
tween individual rights and
the public's right to an or-
derly society were probed
by scholars and jurists at
the 13th annual American-
Israel Dialogue at the Je-
rusalem-Hilton Hotel last
week.
The dialogue, conducted
by the Van Leer Institute,
brought together about 35,
academicians, rabbis, law-
yers, judges and communal
leaders from the U.S. and
Israel.
Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg,
president of -the American
Jewish Congress, in-
troduced the theme of the
1977 dialogue—the rights of
the individual under Ameri-
can, Israeli and halakhic
law.
Hertzberg, a Conserva-
tive rabbi of Englewood,
N.J., said that "In Israel,
what the law must seek is a
balance between the obliga-
tory character of Halakha
and the libertarian nature
of the modern state."
An Orthodox rabbi and tal-

mudic scholar, Rabbi Aha-
ron Lichtenstein, objected
that "The very formulation
of the dialogue is non-halak-
hic, perhaps even anti-ha-
lakhic in character." He
claimed that "rights, natu-
ral or other, are the legacy
of Locke, John Stuart Mill
and Martin Luther King,
Jr. They are not the 'lingua
franca' of the Torah, the
Talmud."
Justice Hayim Cohn of Is-
rael's Supreme Court said
at another session that "Is-
raeli law has failed to
achieve an equitable bal-
ance" between individual
rights and public order. He
referred specifically to the
area of labor law where, he
claimed "the right of the in-
dividual has become and re-
mained well nigh absolute."
He said that "The right to
strike, traditionally re-
garded here by many as
the most fundamental
human right, has been al-
lowed time and again to
paralyze public services,
jeopardize vital state inter-
ests and oust any conflict-
ing rights of the community
at large or of the individ-
uals affected."

Begin Meets NRP's Burg
on Clashes in Bnei Brak

Closing —Martin Rose

between Greenfield and Coolidge
(next to Bnai Moishe)

Scholars, Jurists Probe Ties
Between Jewish State, Religion

Special Guest

DAVE DILES

Radio and television
personality

TEL AVIV (JTA)—The
dispute over a closed street
in the Orthodox township of
Bnei Brak is taking on polit-
ical overtones that have
reached the highest ech-
elons of government.
Premier Menahem Begin,
who is preparing for his
trip to Washington next
week, took time out to meet
on the matter with Interior
Minister Yosef Burg of the
National Religious Party
(NRP).
Burg, whose ministry
now encompasses the Min-
istry of Police, is urging
that steps be taken to re-
store peace in the commu-

nity, especially on the Sab-
bath.
Fighting broke out be-
tween religious and non-re-
ligious elements in Bnei
Brak Friday night after the
latter staged a demonstra-
tion against the closure of
Hashomer Street to traffic
on the Sabbath. The street
runs through both Orthodox
and non-observant neighbor-
hoods.
Never refuse to lend
books to anyone who cannot
afford to purchase them,
but lend books only to those
who can be trusted to re-
turn them.
— Ibn Tibbon

