Laymen Special For Plan Events Beth Hillel to Greet Education Director, Hear New Yorker Speak at Breakfast Members of Wilmette's Beth Turkey from 1959 to 61; and chief sion to the Brussels World Fair Hillel Congregation will officially administrative officer of the mis- from 1957 to 59. welcome Mayer Markowitz as its new educational director Friday and will hear a talk by a prominent lecturer at their Sunday Breakfast Forum. The Sunday speaker will be Louis Bohmrich of New York, a member of the International Relations Committee o fthe Council for Christian Social Action. C H R I S T I A N SCIENCE RADIO SERIES Mr. Markowitz, a native of Romania, assumed his new post at the start of the school year. Previously he was director of education for SUNDAY Congregation K. I. N. S. of West WEEF (1430 k.c.) 7:45 a.m. WEEF-FM (103,1 m.c.) Rogers Park. WLS (890 k.c.) 8:00 a.m. He is a graduate of Roosevelt WAIT (820 k.c.) 9:30 a.m. University and the College of Jewish Studies in Chicago. In his new job he will be in charge of the congregation's Hebrew School, oneday-a-week department; Hebrew High School; and Nursery School. Those taking part in the 8 p.m. welcome service will include Rabbi William Frankel; Cantor Irving Stone; Gerald B. Rivlin, congregation president; and Merle Matin the tenson, congregation vice president and school chairman. "China, DeGaulle and the United Nations," will be Mr. Bohmrich's topic at the 9:45 a.m. Sunday now located at its new breakfast, to which the public is address invited. He is a graduate of Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., and George Washington University, Washington, D. C. Mr. Bohmrich was chief administrator, division of overseas missions, U. S. Office of Lend-Lease Administration from 1942 to 45; chief administrative officer of the U. S. Mission to the United Nations from 1945-55; first secretary of the First Church of Christ, U. S. Embassy to Djakarta, IndoScientist, Wilmette nesia, from 1955 to 57 and to Ankra, Weekend The Wilmette Baptist Church will observe Layman's Sunday this weekend with a . breakfast, special ^x>' service, and conference on misH sions. The breakfast will feature a talk by William Browder, Wilmette attorney and director of the Chicago Crime CommisMr. Browder sion, who will speak on "Critical Crime in Chicago." The 1941 University of Illinois graduate is a member of the University of Illinois Law Forum's advisory committee. He has been on the crime commission since 1956 and is serving his second one-year term as its president. Mr. Browder is also secretary, director, and general counsel of the Union Tank Car Co. in Chicago. He lives at 1442 Lake Av. Scheduled to take part in the 11 a.m. Layman's Sunday services are Dr. Homer Groves, Frank F. Jaeger, and Dr. Elliot Clifton, all of Wilmette; and John Montroy of Highland Park. Dr. Marian 0. Boehr of Portland, Ore., will be the speaker at the 7 p.m. conference on missions, which will feature slides of Dr. Boehr's work as a medical missionary to India. Presently she is on a one-year furlough doing post graduate work at the Cook County Hospital. She is a graduate of the University of Washington and Northwestern University Medical School and served her internship and residencies in surgery at Cook County Hospital and Emmanuel Hospital in Portland. r .vs^rp*\ k wk "Getting Along With Others In Business" M in this quiet place... You are invited to an poirn H Christian Science Reading Room 1111 Central Ave. Saturday, Oct. 22 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. a book may be read that can increase your capabilities You may have passed by this quiet place many times--but nave never entered it.Yet here in this peaceful room, ready for you to read, is a book that has developed the capacities of thousands of men and women--has enabled them to think clearly and constructively as they have learned to turn to God as the source of their intelligence. It can do this for you. The place is the Christian Science Reading Room; the book, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. Stop at a Christian Science Reading Room soon; read the Bible and Science and Health in the quiet, undisturbed atmosphere provided for you. Borrow this book, free of charge. Or buy it for yourself. Library Edition $4. Paperback Edition $1.95. Civil Rights to Be Professors' Topic At Public Forum The civil rights movement will be discussed by two university professors at the first 20th Century Forum public lecture of the season ^at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in Temple Jeremiah Center, 860 Oak St., Winnetka. The program, "Crisis in Protest," will feature Harry Kalven and Richard Flatham, professors at the University of Chicago. Prof. Kalven, of the law school, is a specialist on the impact of the civil rights movement on freedom of speech and association. An expert in constitutional law and civil liberties, he has written extensively on the subject. His latest book is "The American Jury." Prof. Flatham, of the political science department, has done much writing and lecturing on the subject of the Negro in America. The author of "The Public Interest," he is currently studying the theory and practice of a citizen's political obligation. Other speakers scheduled for the 1966-67 season are Abner .Mikva, Nov. 18; Dr. Jacob Petuchowski, Jan. 27; Dr. Jacob Weinstein, Feb. 24; Dr. Rolf A. Weil, Dr. Erwin Angres and Dr. Alan Tarshish, Mar. 17; and Carter Davidson, Apr. 21. October 20, 1966 You and your friends are cordially invited to hear this free CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURE to be given by Ralph W. Cessna, C.S.B. "Is there B p.m. Saturday October GDD >> Christian Science READING ROOMS 29 First Church of Christ, Scientist Central Avenue at Tenth Street Wilmette 121