THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
36—Friday, Dec. 8, 1972
Detroiters ROBERT CAN-
STEWART were elected to
the executive board of the
National Federation of Tem-
ple Brotherhoods at its re-
cent convention in Kansas
City. Canvasser is the presi-
dent of the men's club. Ste-
wart is a member of Temple
Israel.
inset
LONDON, ENGLAND
Zan Gilbert
and His ORCHESTRA
U-M Survey Sees Fewer Students Listing Religious Preference .
As student population in-
creases, organized religious
activity decreases, a recent
"religious census" taken by
the office of religious affairs
at the University of Michi-
gan would seem to indicate.
Each year, the office takes
a census based on religious
preferences that students
voluntarily indicate on their
registration cards.
"This year we received a
total of 29,451 cards," said
A. Theodore Kachel, director
Bar
Mitzvas, Weddings
and special occasions
Garson Zeltzer
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dents indicated a religious
preference, or about 31 per
cent of the total. For the
last three years, the per-
centage has hovered around
one-third of the total." The
university's Ann Arbor cam-
pus this year has 34,620
students.
This year's census shows
that Roman Catholicism leads
the list at U. of M. with 3,053
students, followed by Juda-
ism. 1,752; Lutheran, 689;
Methodist, 680; Presbyterian,
556; and other Protestant
groups, 464.
Kachel noted that "up to
1953, the percentage of the
total number of students re-
porting a religious prefer-
per cent. This declinedUb
ence remained around 85 per
cent. This declined consis-
tently over the next decade
to 46 per cent in 1967. It
steadied there for thr e e
years, then dropped another
12 per cent to 34 per cent in
1970.
"An interesting fact is that
the actual number of those
reporting a preference re-
mained around 13,000 in both
1953 and 1967, although in
1957 this total did rise to
around 16,500," said Kachel.
"In the last five years, we
have experienced the first ab-
solute drop in the number of
students reporting to around
10,000." The Ann Arbor cam-
pus had more than 32,000
Southfield CharnberofCommeree
to Thank Feder for His Serv ice
MILLIE IS BACK
FROM EUROPE!
7...
- •3
I of ORA. "Of these, 9,381 stu-
Southfield Mayor Norman
W. Feder will be honored at
a testimonial luncheon by the
Southfield Chamber of Com-
merce noon Tuesday at the
Raleigh House.
Mayor Feder leaves his
office Jan. 1 to assume judge-
ship of the 46th District
Court, following his election
in November.
Mayor Feder has been the
city's chief executive since ,
1969, when he succeeded
Mayor Clarkson. Ile was re-
elected in 1971.
John J. Hollywood, execu-
tive director of the Southfield
Chamber of Commerce, called
the period of Feder's leader-
ship "the most productive
years in the entire history of
our city's growth and expan-
sion."
According to Irving S.
Cane, chairman of the South-
field Planning Commission
and coordinator of the test-
menial luncheon, "this occa-
sion affords to every person
living or working in South-
field an opportunity to ex•
press his appreciation of the
contributions made to our
city by Mayor Feder."
During his administration,
expansion of the city's recre-
ation and park complex was
highlighted by the ice rink,
r imming pool and golf
iIrse in the Civic ('enter
.1
complex. Road and intersec-
tion improvements, flood
plain preservation, expansion
and modernization of the fire
and police departmedts, ex-
panded library services, for-
mation of the Southfield Arts
Council and major improve-
ments to eliminate poor
drainage and flooding are
other outstanding achieve-
ments of the Feder adminis-
tration, said Cane.
The luncheon is open to
the public, and tickets may
be obtained by calling Holly-
wood, 356-0400, or may be
purhased at the door.
`Milk. Honey'
Fails to Capture
Spirit of Israel
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The theater-goer expecting
a contemporary "Fiddler on
the Roof" will be disappoint-
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reaches none of the heights
that marked the other musi-
cal.
With one or two possible
cxcentions. the music is for-
The promised
warmth and
grmtimentatity
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AND HIS ORCHESTRA
student centers and organ-
ized religious groups," Ka-
chel speculated.
Whatever it is that Israel
is supposedly flowing with
was not apparent at the
opening
MUSIC BY
SAM BARNETT
students in 1967, compared to
some 17,000 In 1953.
Is there an absolute de-
cline in interest or a rise in
the need for a more personal
form for the individual's re-
ligious quest?
"It may be there is a need
for new forms in which re-
ligious resources are offered
to the members of the uni-
versity 'community beyond
cram..•, the tenter Theater
Producti"n urcl r quite slim-
cestes for tI• most ohs' ion,
reason:
finding
amateur
actors who can sing, and
singers who can act (and
dance) is a tough casting as-
signment. Few amateurs can
do both.
One refreshing exception
is Harriet Goldman, in the
role of merry widow Clara
MRS. DAVID WAYNE
Weiss. She and her fellow
Deborah Elaine Weinberg widows touring Israel pro-
recently became the bride of vide the bright spots of the
David Sol Wayne in a cere- evening while they search
mony at the home of the for husbands "somewhere
bride's mother, Mrs. Frances over the horizon."
There are some good
Weinberg of Kingsgate Way,
Farmington. The bride also voices: Irene Pianin, in the
female
lead, and David Gut-
is the daughter of the late
Sidney Weinberg. The bride- man, who sings the cantor's
groom is the son of Mr. and role in the wedding scene.
Mrs. Seymour Wayne of Abby Moran and Larry
Rosedale Ave., Birmingham. Lawrence sing a fine duet.
Rabbi David Nelson offici- But, again, see paragraph 1 .
ated.
One casting incongruity:
I Following a wedding trip to This is the first time we've
Toronto, the couple will live seen
a
fair-complexioned,
in Southfield.
red-haired Yemenite. --CD 1*
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