18 Friday, December 23, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Clothier , 647-8054 126 S. Woodward, Birmingham "Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat. 10-6 Thurs. & Fri. 10-9 FOR THE ULTIMATE IN FASHION-RIGHT FORMALWEAR RENTALS & SALES Celebrate the occasion with a fresh ap- ach to formalwear. Featuring an exten- sive selection. The newest styles and colors. FEATURING Westwood, Newport, Woodstock, Windsor, Tux Tails, 21 Colored Shirts, Flared Pants, Volare Boots • WEDDINGS PROMS • CRUISES • EVERY IMPORTANT SOCIAL EVENT Synagogue VI VII VIII IX X Ill IV V Services ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Eric Allan, Bar Mitzva. CONG. BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES Detroit : Serv- ices 4:55 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Gordon Faber, Bar Mitzva. CONG. BETH ACHIM: Services 4:45 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Norman Malinas, Bar Mitzva. Felissa Bums, Bat Chayil. TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Schwartz will speak on "The Cruelest Hoax of All." Services 11 a.m. Saturday. Melvern Wilner and Leon Ash will deliver sermonettes on the weekly Torah portion. BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Wine will speak on "1977—What Will the Future Remem- — ber?" TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Syme will speak on "A Father's Blessing." Steven Susser, Bar Mitzva. Services 11 a.m. Saturday. 13'NAI M°SHE Men's Club Cordially Invites You To Our NEW YEARS PARTY 9:30 P.M. Dec. 31st • Gourmet Dinner•Viennese Sweet Table • Entertainment by Sheldon Rott Orchestra featuring Vicki Carroll • Open Bar•Breakfast • Free Favors & Noisemakers ONLY $50 TEMPLE KOL AMI: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Conrad will speak on "The Blessing of Jacob." Seth Gould, Bar Mitzva. CONG. MISHKAN ISRAEL NUSACH H'ARI: Services 4:45 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Gottlieb will speak on "Torah Is Our Life." CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 5 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Benjamin Gordon, Bar Mitzva. Regular services will be held at Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield, Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses—West Bloomfield, Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton, Temple Beth Jacob, Cong. Beth Jacob-Mogain Abraham, Cong. Beth Shalom, Cong. Beth Tefilo Emanuel Tikvah, Cong. Beth Tephilath Moses of Mt. Clemens, Cong. Bnai David, Cong. Bnai Israel of Pontiac, Cong. Bnai Israel-Beth Yehudah, Cong. Bnai Jacob, Cong. Bnai Moshe, Cong. Bnai Zion, Cong. Dovid Ben Nuchim, Downtown Synagogue, Temple Emanu-El, Livonia Jewish Congregation, Cong. Shaarey Shomayim (10 Mile Jewish Center), Shomer Israel (13440 W. Seven Mile), Cong. Shomrey Emunah, Cong. T'Chiyah, Young Israel of Greenfield, Young Israel of Oak-Woods and Young Israel of Southfield. Economics per couple for reservations call B'nai Moshe Office - 54 8-9000 Leon Sears Ticket Chairman - 968-0590 Lou Redmond, Affair Chairman - 968-9131 Better measure 10 times and cut once, instead of measuring once and cutting 10 times. . ANKERS the MAGICIAN SPECIALIZING in Children's Parties 968-0038 AN EVENING OF JEWISH MUSIC Starring The New York School of Jewish Song Boys Choir Accompanied by the Fenby-Carr Orchestra And Featuring "The Kol Yisroel" Oak Park High School Auditorium Sun., Jan. 29, 1978 at 7:30 P.M. Tickets $4, $6, $8 For Information and Reservations Call 399-9140 967-3129 968-1164 967-4016 Presented by the P.T.A. of Yeshivath Beth Yehudah Early Deadline The Jewish News has an early deadline of noon today for local publicity to appear in the issue of Dec. 30, and a deadline of noon, Dec. 30 for local pub- licity to appear Jan. 6. Materials received late will be withheld from publication and pub- lished the following week, if still timely. Beth Achim Men Plan Dinner-Dance Cong. Beth Achim Men's Club will sponsor its annual Winter Ball dinner-dance 9 p.m. Dec. 31 in Wasserman Hall of the synagogue. The evening will include entertainment by Hal Gor- don and his orchestra, with vocalist Donna Watkins; a full-course dinner, set-ups and favors. Breakfast also will be served. Dress is black tie optional. For reservations, call the synagogue, 352-8670, or the men's club president, Stew- art Silverman, 547-2329. Chairman Donald Davis is assisted by Maynard M. Feldman and Silverman. - Guest Cantor David Gutman, who has officiated as .a cantor in Windsor and at Borman Hall—Jewish Home for Aged, will officiate with Rabbi A. Irving Schnipper Saturday and Jan. 7 at Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses—Detroit. Israelis Meet Sadat Relative 0. as Delegation Visits Sites CAIRO (JTA)—Eliahu Ben-Elissar, Israel's chief delegate at the peace con- ference, had an unscheduled encounter with a daughter of President Anwar Sadat. It happened in a museum beside the great pyramid, which Ben-Elissar and other Israeli officials were vis- iting before lunch. Mrs. Rukaya Amin Afifi, the only daughter of Sadat by his first marriage, was also being shown around at the same time with another group of visitors. On being introduced, Mrs. Amin Afifi told Ben-Elissar that he was welcome in Egypt. He ex- pressed Israel's apprecia- tion for Sadat's initiative which had led to the present peace talks. After climbing inside one of the pyramids, the Israeli delegation was taken to the sphinx where a guide ex- plained its history. The Is- raeli delegates posed for photographs beside the fa- mous monuments. In regard for the Jewish Sabbath, which forbids riding, Ben- Elissar refrained from climbing onto a camel for the "Lawrence of Arabia" photographs popular here. Instead, he and his col- leagues stood beside the kneeling beast while the photographers blazed away. Another shot which the cameramen missed was in front of the local souvenir kiosk, bearing the name "Moses Place." "We shall be accused of making a new territorial claim if we stand there," quipped Meir Rosenne, Israel's number two man of the negotie - - team and legal advisek the Israeli Foreign Min istry. Meanwhile, in an inter- view with Israeli television several days earlier, Egypt's First Lady Jehan Sadat promised that she would help the dwindling Jewish community in Egypt trasfer prayer books from synagogues which have closed down to Israel. The wife of President Sadat said the Egyptian Jewish com- munity had __asked her to help them send the books to Israel. In an interview with Yediot Akhronot, Mrs. Sa- dat called on Israeli women to urge the men to conclude peace with the Arabs. Wife of Egyptian Ambassador Meets With Jewish Women NEW YORK (JTA)—In an unprecedented event, Mrs. Samiha Badawi, wife of the Deputy Ambassador of Egypt to the United Na- tions, Abdal Hulim Badawi, broke bread, accepted a gift of a menora and established warm relations with 100 members of the National Board of the Women's League for Conservative Judaism even as she said to them that the Palestinians must have a homeland and that "Israel's security can- not be underwritten by the insecurity of others. - Mrs. Badawi was warmly introduced by Mrs. Ruth Perry, president. of the League, who presented the menora to the visiting Arab dignitary. In her remarks, Mrs. Per- ry, who had invited Mrs. Badawi to address the League, pointed out that the meeting here was taking place on a very significant day, the opening of talks in Cairo that. hopefully, would lead to an ultimate peace. Despite Mrs. Badawi's seemingly hard positions— she also called for Israel to give up territories—her ma- jor thrust and emphasis was on the hopeful side. Several times she stressed the values and affi- nities that Jews and Arabs share "as grandsons of a common prophet, Abra- ham. Decrying the misunder- standings, prejudices and suspicions that had been al- lowed to develop between the two peoples, she ac- cented the positive. "The light seems to glint at long last," she_ said, "at the end of the tunnel," and attributed the new atmos- phere to the courage and .visions of Sadat. The occasion marked the first time that the wife of a high-ranking Arab official was paid a tribute by a major American Jewish or- ganization. The League had also in- vited Mrs. Eglal Esmat Me- guid, wife of the Egyptian Ambassador to the UN. Ah- med Esmat Meguid, but she was unable to attend be- cause she returned to Cairo with her husband where he is Egypt's chief delegate at the Cairo conference. Zionism, Israel Education Gets Boost in U.S. NEW YORK—Work has already begun in choosing a number of -pilot" schools— day, afternoon and commu-\ nity—to deepen and tensify the teaching of ism and Israel, according to Rabbi Israel Miller, chair- man of the new National Commission of the Teaching of Zionism and Israel. Suit- able teaching materials are being developed for these schools and plans are being drawn up for in-service training of teachers. The commission was set up under the joint sponsor- ship of the World Zionist Orgainization's departgients of education and culture and Torah education and the American Association for Jewish Education.