All 22 girls in the 1988-89 Beth Jacob graduating class plan to pursue a higher education. Fifteen of those graduates, he said, received educational awards ranging from Michigan State Com- petitive Scholarships to four- year university scholarships. Dr. Maury Ellenberg and his wife Chana are Yeshiva alumni. Dr. Ellenberg recall- ed that as a Yeshiva student, the emphasis of the school was to keep the students, many of whom were refugees, committed to the Orthodox tradition. Thday, he said, the Yeshiva focuses on a balance between rigorous religious training and a strong secular curriculum. The Ellenberg's two sons at- tend the Yeshiva. Dr. Ellen- berg, a physiatrist at Sinai Hospital, is confident that his children receive a balanced education that will allow them to choose either secular or religious careers. "I want them to be well enough vers- ed that they can go into 'the secular world if they so desire, and well enough versed that they can always be in contact with the Torah world, and if they so desire, head in that direction." In addition to alumni who send their children to the school, the Yeshiva legacy is perpetuated - by graduates who return to become instruc- tors. According to Freedman, - nearly one-third of the teaching staff are Yeshiva alumni. "A lot of our teachers are second generation Yeshiva students. Their parents went to Yeshiva, they went to Yeshiva and now they are our teachers. There's a real continuity here." Rabbi Hershel Klainberg, a 1961 Yeshiva Beth Yehudah graduate and a classmate of Maury Ellenberg, has been an instructor at the Yeshiva for 14 years. Klainberg teaches Talmud, Jewish history and Halachah to sixth grade boys in the Joseph Tan- nenbaum school. He was born in 1947 in the displaced per- sons camp at Bergen Belsen, Germany. His Polish-born parents moved the family to Detroit in 1950. Three years later, he entered the Yeshiva kindergarten. Klainberg recalled being with other children with similar backgrounds. "In my class there were a number of refugee children. I just remember that the rabbis were very, very nice. I really had a good time. They made the whole religious education very, very enjoyable." Klainberg's youngest son is a Yeshiva student; three other sons and two daughters have . Mrs. Chavie Weingarden illustrates a math problem at Sally Allan Alexander Beth Jacob School for Girls. An eighth grade chemistry class at the girls' school checks an experiment. A Talmud class listens intently to Rabbi Zimmerman. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 61