SYNAGOGUE SERVICES CONTROL ELECTRONICS, INC. 37450 ENTERPRISE COURT FARMINGTON HILLS, MI PHONE 553.3400 Systems for Business at Affordable Prices 011,..1-La 'Z Imam =ism ' • Complete Line of XT/AT/386 Systems • Choice of Monitors, Hard Drives • 19" CAD & Desk Top Publishing Monitors • Multiuser Systems: Zenix, Novell • Accounting Software-Consulting, Setup • Systems Repair & Upgrade 386-20MHZ From $2,400.00 286-10MHZ From $1,200.00 XT-10MHZ From $ 700.00 DOUBLE YOUR CLOSET SPACE with THE CLOSET SYSTEMS CO. Call Us For • FAIR PRICES • CUSTOM DESIGN • QUALITY INSTALLATION • . Also: Kol Ami and Shir Tikvah. CONSERVATIVE: ADAT SHALOM: Services 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Lori Schram and Deborah Sage, b'not mitzvah. BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES: Ser- vices 6: p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Satur- day. Graham Fishman will chant the haftarah. BETH ACHIM: Services 4:45 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Sid Berman will chant the haftarah. B'NAI ISRAEL OF WEST BLOOM- FIELD: Services 9 a.m. Saturday. Rab- bi Sherman Kirshner will speak on "I Refuse To Worry." Dr. Milton Stern will 50 FREE HANGERS with each order • 1 set per household 356-2830 Special to The Jewish News Call Today (313) 569-3333 Ca JOB HUNTING? Can't seem to get interviews? Changing Careers? Re-entering the workforce? Feel you are too old, inexperienced, not sure of what job you want or should be looking for? Not satisfied with current employment? Phone TODAY for o free informational session LOU ELLMAN ASSOCIATES (313) 737 7252 - FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1988 Also: Beth Isaac of Trenton, Beth Shalom, Beth lephilath Moses of Mount Clemens, Livonia Jewish Congregation and 12 Mile and Pierce (Bais Yoseph). TRADITIONAL: B'NAI DAVID: Services 5 p.m. today and 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Gustav Berenholz will chant the haftarah. RECONSTRUCTIONIST: T'CHIYAH: Services 10 a.m. Saturday con- ducted by Adam Harris and Carol Weisfeld. SECULAR-HUMANIST: BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE: Service 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Sherwin Wine will speak on "The New President: Significance of the Election." ORTHODOX: Bais Chabad of Farmington Hills, Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield, Beth Jacob- Mogain Abraham, Beth lefilo Emanuel Tikvah, B'nai Israel-Beth Yehudah, B'nai Jacob, B'nai Zion, Dovid Ben Nuchim, Mishkan Israel-Nusach H'Ari-Lubavitcher Center, Shaarey Shomayim, Shomrey Emunah, Young Israel of Greenfield, Young Israel of Oak-Woods and Young Israel of Southfield. UNAFFILIATED: Sephardic Community of Greater Detroit. 1 TORAH PORTION SHLOMO RISKIN I've Got LOCATIONS LOCATIONS LOCATIONS JONATHAN BRATEMAN FARBMAN/STEIN - chant the haftarah. B'NAI MOSHE: Services at 4:30 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Adam Weiner will chant the haftarah. DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: Services 8 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Noah Gamze will speak on "Family Ties Still Bind Us." SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 5 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Deborah Orns- tein, bat mitzvah. Never Surrendering The Spirit Of Spirituality OPENING/EXPANDING A BUSINESS??? 34 REFORM: BETH EL: Services 8 p.m. Rabbi Daniel Polish will speak on "lbo Good for Kids: Jewish Living for Adults." Carol Denise Birnkrant, Cynthia Coleman, Terry L. Ellis, Laurel Epstein and Nancy Mor- rison Glass, adult group b'not mitzvah. Services 11 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Julian Cook will speak on "A Family Matters." BETH JACOB: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Richard Weiss will speak on "Was Beethoven a Jew?" EMANU-EL: ARZA Shabbat. Services 8:15 p.m. today. Rabbi Lane Steinger will speak on "Why ARZA?" Services 10:30 a.m. Saturday. TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8 p.m. today. Jacques Torczyner, honorary president of the Zionist Organization of America, will speak on "Israel and the United States After the Election." Robert Meyer and Laurence Rabinowitz, b'nai mitzvah. Rebbe's tish 9:30 a.m. Saturday, services 10:30 a.m. Jared Starr, bar mitzvah. SHIR SHALOM: Services 8 p.m. today. Rab- bi Dannel Schwartz will speak on "Mak- ing time in '89 — Annual Prediction Ser- mon." Rabbi's tish 9:30 a.m. Saturday, services at 11 a.m. (not an employment agency) E frat, Israel — Where do the Jewish people get their guts? Here we are, a nation that ex- periences the terrifying trauma of the Holocaust, a third of our people destroyed, and in the next breath somewhere across the globe a small army of Jews fight a desperate war of in- dependence, a war intended to change forever the status of a nation without land. Others might have cried, "Enough. Let us go quietly into the flames of time and end this cat-and-mouse game with history once and for all." When I was the rabbi of Lincoln Square Synagogue in New York, one of our first gabayim (sexton) was a deep- ly religious man, a gentle man with a probing mind, very involved with Jewish af- fairs. I knew he was from Europe, but only later did I find out he had spent much of the war in a forced labor camp, worse than any prison imaginable. Not only because of the sub-human conditions, but because every guard possessed the godly power of meting out life and death. Mr. Gedalya Klein, whose home is now in Jerusalem, was then the prisoners' representative, and he often was confronted by German overseers exercising their twisted version of justice. What distinguished Gedalya from the other prisoners was a determination to seek justice even in this bastion of injustice. He would look his guards in the eye and in no uncertain terms let them know what he thought of a particular ruling. One day a guard said, "Jew, who do you think you are? Aren't you afraid that any moment I could kill you as easily as a fly?" Klein answered without hesitation, "In your army, the army of the Third Reich, you may be a lieutenant, but in my army, the army of God, I am a general." When I heard the story, my bones trembled. I sensed a profound moment in Klein's life, and a profound one in mine. Not only had he spoken for himself, but he had spoken for all of us, a genera- tion which could not fathom how the Jewish people, after z--