34 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 30, 1986 • Bloom soo, Bloom • • Registered Electrologists • Come and let us remove your unwanted hair problem and improve your appearance. Near 12 Mile Rd. bet. Evergreen & Southfield 559-1969 COATS UNLIMITED Troy Troy Commons, 16 Mile (Big Beaver) at Rochester, 2 miles east of Somerset off 1-75 • 689-4860 Oak Park Lincoln Center, Greenfield at 10 , 2 Mile 968-2060 Appt. OnlyAsk For Shirlee or Debby. West Bloomfield Orchard Mall, Orchard Lake at Maple (15 Mile) • 855-9955 FROM CONCEPT TO REALITY .. • IN ALL YOUR CUSTOM LAMINATE NEEDS bedrooms . . . kitchens . . . bathrooms . . . entertainment units . . . offices . . . closets . . . tables . . . buffets (313) 624-7300 3149-B Haggerty Road • Walled. Lake, Michigan F. PAUL PEARSALL, Ph.D. NEWS Cantor's Assembly Proposes Special Fund Kiamesha Lake, N.Y. (JTA) — A one million dollar fund to alleviate the shortage of trained cantors and to combat Jewish il- literacy in congregational wor- ship was proposed as the Can- tor's Assembly opened its 39th annual meeting here last week. Noting the critical shortage of trained cantors — only on stu- dent will be graduated this year from the Cantors Institute Can- tor Samuel Rosenbaum, execu- tive vice president of the world's largest body of cantors, urged the group to commit funds to underwrite scholarships that would help train 150 to 200 qualified centors in the next decade. Rosembaum told the 300 delegates that 60 Conservative synagogues were currently seek- ing full-time cantors, adding, "If our generation of chazzanim (cantors) is to have meaning and significance beyond the mo- ment, we must not allow what we have created and nurtured to wither." He called on the Can- tors Assembly to "make a leap of faith" and provide the fund- ing that would permit the train- ing of a new generation of cantors. At the same time, the Conser- vative leader challenged Juda- ism's other cantorial rabbinical and congregational bodies to "unite in a common effort to im- plement this fund." A portion of the fund, said Cantor Saul Hammerman of Baltimore, president of the Can- tors Assembly, would be utilized to combat "Jewish illiteracy" by producing video tapes of high holiday services to help syna- gogue-goers familiarize them- selves with the Rosh Hashanah and Yon Kippur liturgy. He sug- gested that these video casset- tes be sent on loan to members of congregations "so that they may more readily understand and follow high holiday syna- gogue ritual." Decrying the "spiritual corn- alancency" of contemporary American life, Hammerman declared, "We lead prayers for a generation of illiterate Jews — not ignorant or stupid, mind you, but simply untutored in the glories of our heritage. Thus, new approaches must be devised to bring our people to the level of appreciation that they — and we — need for a Jewish survival in the synagogue." Cantors of the Detroit corn- munity who participated in the convention included Israel Fuchs, Israel Idelsohn, Chaim Najman, Sidney Rube, Max Shimansky and Larry Vieder. Cantor Shabtai Ackerman, formerly of Cong. Beth Ab- raham Hillel Moses and pre- sently of Deerfield Beach, Fl. was the recipient of the Kavod Award. The convention was also attended by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Deutch and Mr. and Mrs. Danny Knopper of Farmington Hills. The Knoppers established a scholarship fund in honor of Cantor Vieder, and the Laker family established an endow- ment in memory of Harry Laker for recruitment and programm- ing. Chief of Problems of Daily Living Clinic Sinai Hospital Detroit, Michigan will speak on KEY CRISES IN LIFE CAN WE COPE BETTER? at the COMBINED ANNUAL MEETING of JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE and RESETTLEMENT SERVICE WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 11, 1986 7:45 P.M. Congrebation Shaarey Zedek, 27375 Bell Road, Southfield, MI THE PUBLIC IS INVITED NO CHARGE Rabbi Leon Fram, rabbi emeritus of Temple Israel and past president of the Metro Detroit District, Zionist Organization of America, received a special ZOA citation on his 90th birthday from Mrs. I. Walter Silver, vice president of Detroit ZOA.