As they celebrate 25 years with Congrega- tion Beth Shalom, Alicia and David Nelson are poised for great times ahead. JULIE EDGAR News Editor fter David Nelson proposed to her, Alicia Rhodes leapt the steps of her Greenwich Village apartment and shut the bedroom door behind her. Standing in front of a mirror, she asked herself if her fate was truly to be a rabbi's wife. The answer didn't come. Her deep ambivalence led her to the late Rabbi Morris Adler of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, who told her that she "wasn't marry- ing a job, she was marrying a man." "He was lying through his teeth," Alicia laughs, 33 years later. Today, she might be sitting in the front row of the sanctuary at Congregation Beth Shalom signalling her husband that his ser- mon is dragging, or encouraging someone to stand up and share his good news with the congregation, or acting as usher in the sanc- tuary. She is also a paid teacher in the syna- gogue's religious school. The Nelsons' partnership comes so natu- rally to them, any discussion of what appears as their co-leadership of Oak Park's only Conservative shul causes them to pause and look at each other for help. "It's really more of a reflection of who we are as a couple," Alicia says finally. "We oper- ate very much as a team." "Alicia is my friendly, live-in critic," Rabbi Nelson quips. He always gets her input on his sermons, and defers to her if she tells him to cut it short or skip it altogether. "Our marriage survives because of the way we encounter problems in life," she says. "We have an advantage most of our friends don't have, because we can work and exercise together (the Nelsons do aerobics together every morning)." This weekend, Beth Shalom will celebrate a quarter-century with the Nelsons and its first major expansion and renovation. The "Rededication and Dedication" ceremonies begin tomorrow, with a special Shabbat ser- vice in which the Nelsons will be called to read from the Torah and the youth choir will perform. Kiddush will be a stand-up lunch at the shul. A dinner dance will be held in the newly-renovated social hall of Beth Shalom tomorrow night. Rabbi Henry Sosland, Rabbi Nelson's brother-in-law, will be the guest speaker and the Ann Arbor-based Klezmer Fusion Band will perform. Liz Schubiner, the co-chairperson of the event, expects a turnout of around 300. The festivities mark a new era in Beth Shalom's history. Close to 70 percent of the congregation contributed to the capital fund- raising campaign — a phenomenal response, Schubiner says — and today, the synagogue is only $160,000 away from the $2 million 12/ 5 1997 67