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August 27, 1993 - Image 114

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-08-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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page 113

lels between the Jewish
community and CMS.
"I know the synagogues
are working very hard to
attract young members to
their congregations and the
CMS is beginning to do the
same thing for the same
reason," he said.
"I think of chamber music
as a classical combo, but
some young people think of
it as a torture chamber,"
Karl Haas said from his cur-
rent residence in New York.
It's that type of miscon-
ception CMS is out to
change. To dispel stodgy
stereotypes of chamber
music, the group plans to
implement an "Adopt A
School" program. CMS rep-
resentatives will introduce
Detroit schoolchildren to the
music, then offer them free
tickets and transportation
to concerts.
Mrs. Beznos said the
group also aims to empha-
size the S in CMS by featur-
ing soirees and a chance to

meet the performers after
concerts. As CMS enters its
50th season, leaders aim to
, build a sense of society
around chamber music — to
help it survive another five
decades.

"Ithink of
chamber music as
a classical
combo."

Karl Haas

CMS will celebrate its
50th anniversary on Sept. 11
with a gala, "Musical
Chairs," at Orchestra Hall.
The event will feature a din-
ner and an afterglow subse-
quent to performances by
Cleveland Quartet, Beaux
Arts Trio and Guarneri
String Quartet. For more
information, call the
Orchestra Hall Box Office at
833-3700.0

Mandela Receives
Standing Ovation

Johannesburg (JTA) —
African National Congress
President Nelson Mandela
was greeted with a standing
ovation when he delivered
the keynote address at the
37th national congress of the
South African Jewish Board
of Deputies.
The warm welcome he
received when he appeared
before the gathering here
over the weekend was view-
ed as a moment of reconcilia-
tion by many who had re-
peatedly criticized
Mandela's much-publicized
embrace of Palestine Libera-
tion Organization leader
Yassir Arafat shortly after
the ANC president's release
from prison in 1990.
Amid the deafening ap-
plause from the hundreds of
Jewish delegates gathered to
hear his remarks, Mr.
Mandela affectionately em-
braced Israel's ambassador
to South Africa, Alon Liel —
and then had another warm
hug for the South African
Zionist Federation's chair-
man, Abe Abrahamson.
Delegates to the congress
jammed the elevators at
Johannesburg's five-star
Carlton Hotel and climbed
up several flights of stairs to
gain access to the hotel's

ballroom, where the con-
gress was convened.
Tickets to hear Mr.
Mandela's address were sold
out within an hour or two of
when they went on sale, and
hundreds had to be turned
away. And when the event
began, the large ballroom
could not accommodate all
the guests, many of whom
overflowed into adjacent cor-
ridors.
The turnout was far
greater than when President
F.W. de Klerk opened the
board's congress two years
ago.
"I want to state in the
most unequivocal terms that
the African National Con-
gress has stood firm against
anti-Semitism, as it has
stood firmly against all
other forms of racism," Mr.
Mandela told the gathering.
"It is our belief that all
citizens should be protected
against all forms of racism,
including anti-Semitism.
Our track record on this
score is there for anyone to
examine," he said.
Mr. Mandela said that the
ANC supports the granting
of basic civil liberties to all
citizens. He also underscored
his party's determination to
maintain freedom of religion

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