Conceri
Benefit Cantors At'i`erittily
The cultural commission of
Cong. Shaarey Zedek will present
a musical evening dedicated to the
support of the Cantors Assembly
scholarship and sustaining funds
8 p.m. Monday in the main
sanctuary.
Featured work will be a world
premiere performance of Judeo-
Hebraic character.
The major presentation will be
Don Frohman's "The Holy Sab-
bath," a service scored for chorus,
orchestra and soloists, with the
Don Frohman Chorale of 30
voices; and the Sinfonletta of 16
members of the Detroit Symphony.
In addition to Cantors Jacob
Barkin and Jacob Sonenklar of
Dedication to Learning
Planned at Bnai Moshe
The annual dedication to Jewish
learning will take place 8:15
p.m. Dec. 11 in Cong. Bnai Moshe.
Over 50 first grade students of
age 6 will present their dedication
program, receive a gift and be
blessed by Rabbi Moses Lehrman
as they leave the bima to enter
the first stage of Jewish learning.
Mrs. Saul Towers, first-grade
teacher, plans to have a group of
songs presented by the first
graders as well as an exhibit of
creative work by the 6-year-olds.
Rabbi Lehrman will speak on
"When Does Education Begin and
When Does It End?" School board
chairman Isadore Mulias will pre-
sent the gifts.
Educators to Hold
`Growth Institutes'
Beth Shalom and Shaarey Zedek
congregational schools will hold
their second annual Winter Pro-
fessional Growth Institutes the
week of Dec. 20.
The seminars will be held on
alternate days at Shaarey Zedek
and Beth Shalom, with the basic
themes of "Prayer," "History,"
"Audio-Visual Media Utilization"
and "Language Techniques and
Classroom Methodology."
These seminars are designed
to introduce new techniques and
methodology in a variety of sub-
jects, presented by leading edu-
cators.
Rabbi Gerald Teller, director
of education at Shaarey Zedek, and
Sidney Selig, director of educa-
tion at Beth Shalom, are joint
program organizers.
• • •
Beth Shalom Teens
Join Center Program
of Hebrew Studies
Marshall Wallace, chairman of
the Beth Shalom Religious School,
announces the commencement of
a joint program of modern Hebrew
studies, utilizing audio-visual tech-
niques for all 10th grade students
of Beth Shalom's senior high
school.
Participants in this elective
program meet twice a week, once
at Beth Shalom and once at the
Jewish Center. The program is in
addition to the regular Beth Sha-
lom senior high school program of
studies.
The joint program is under the
direction of Sidney Selig, director
of education at Beth Shalom, and
Eliav Naharin, associate director
of the Center's Hebrew depart-
ment.
WEE eintoff lEWISiCKEWS
u•tailia
Nearly 1,000,000 Jews in Diaspora Universities
Cantor Taube Cantor Sonenklar
the host coogregation, two lead-
ing American cantors will be
special guest soloists. They are
Moshe Taube of the Beth Shalom
Congregation, Pittsburgh, and
Isaac Goodfriend of Ahavath
Achim Congregation, Atlanta.
Cantor Barkin Cantor_ Goodfriend-
The evening will mark the com-
pletion of Frohman's 25 years'
service as choir director of
Shaarey Zedek.
The cultural commission in-
vites the entire community.
NEW YORK (Z1NS)—A restruc-
turing of the Jewish community
outside Israel is evidenced in the
high percentage of Jewish students
attending institutions of higher
learning.
Nearly 1,000,000 Jewish students
are enrolled in universities through-
out the world. There are 500,000
in the United States and Canada;
200,000 in the USSR, 56,000 in Latin
America, of whom 40,000 are in the
Argentine; 50,000 in France; 40,000
in the United Kingdom and its do-
minions; 10,000 in various Euro-
pean countries; 10,000 in Eastern
Europe; and 5,000 in Turkey and
Iran.
Approximately 250,000 are now
graduate students, including 30,000
in medicine and 25,000 specializing
in various branches of technology.
About 100,000-17 per cent of the
total student population—are erg
rolled in the so-called American
"prestige"' universities. Tens, oat
possibly hundreds, of thousands of .
researchers and fellows occupy
central positions in the science
fields.
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Racism, Polarisation
Target of Rights Groups
Nt'W YORK (JTA) — The Na-
tional Conference of Christians and
Jews, the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-
ple, the National Urban League
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It will create units to raise funds
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