THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Holocaust
Essay Contest
•
LOS ANGELES (JTA) —
"Jewish Resistance to
Nazis: 1939-1945" is the
theme of the seventh an-
nual Holocaust essay con-
test announced by the
American Congress of Jews
from Poland and Survivors
of Concentration Camps.
The contest is open to stu-
dents of high schools, col-
leges and other educational
institutions. Each entry
must show independent re-
search afforts. Range of
essay length is 4,000 to
- 7 ,000 words, with the re-
airement that each entry
be submitted in quadrupli-
cate.
Manuscripts must not be
signed but marked by a
code. The same code is to be
placed on a sealed envelope
attached to the manuscript.
The sealed envelope must
contain the name and ad-
dress of the contestant, a
brief biography, the name of
the contestant's school and
a bibliography for the
manuscript.
The contest offers a top
prize of $400 and the dead-
line for entries is Sept. 6.
For information, write Ben-
jamin Grey, 6534 Moore
Dr., Los Angeles, Calif.
90048.
•
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JESNA Creates
School Program
on Holocaust
NEW YORK — The
Jewish Education Service of
North America, Inc.
(JESNA) marked the coin-
-pletion of its Holocaust Cur-
riculum for Jewish Schools
last month.
The curriculum was de-
veloped by JESNA under a
grant from and in coopera-
tion with the Memorial
Foundation for Jewish Cul-
ture. The project began in
1978 and includes curricu-
lar materials incorporating
historical, theological and
literary sources related to
the Holocaust. Some 20
Jewish schools in the Un-
ited States and Canada, as
well as a Catholic junior
high school and public high
school in Rhode Island, pi-
loted the model curriculum
which should soon be ready
for distribution.
AJC Criticizes
Tax Credit Plan
WASHINGTON — In a
statement before the Senate
Finance Committee,
Nathan Z. Dershowitz, di-
rector of the . American
Jewish Committee's com-
mission on law and social
action and head of its legal
staff, said last week that
while the AJCongress rec-
ognizes the importance of
non-public schools, particu-
larly those associated with
religion, the proposed tui-
tion tax credit, which is
backed by the Administra-
tion, would threaten reli-
gious schools with govern-
ment interference.
Moreover, he said, it would
not increase accessibility by
poor and minority students
to non-public schools.
7
Friday, July 23, 1982
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