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Our new 6000 square foot
showroom is now open
featuring the best in
custom wait units.
factory built home office,
bookcases and cabinetry.
And now •IN-STOCK
wall systems for
immediate delivery.
if's The Grand Reopening Sale
OPTIONS.
At Options. you will find
Wlichigan's largest selection of wall systems.
We can accommodate any size television in vc . Y,ir ChOiCe
STV;t?
finish, Traditional, transitional or contemporary in your choice of mom,
woods and materials with Linlimited style six , and finish options
Grand Opening Specia
Sta ff p hoto by B
Furniture Solutions.
Cantor Sholom Kalib
City: Farmington Hills
Kudos: Preserving Our
Musical Legacy
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Special Savings
This Weekend Only
Save An Additional 0%
Plus
We Will Pay
Your Sales Tax
OPTIONS.
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antor Sholom Kalib is so
passionate about pre-
serving the disappearing
treasury of Eastern European
synagogue music that he has
made it his mission for much of
his professional life.
The culmination of his hard
work and many -years of
research, conducted throughout
the world, is the Jewish Musical
Heritage Project, an ambitious
collection that will ultimately
include a five-volume, 20-book
anthology; approximately 75 CDs
(recorded by a newly formed
men and boys choir); and other
computer-based, multimedia
materials.
Cantor Kalib grew up in a fam-
ily of cantors in Dallas where he
developed his love for the tradi-
tions of synagogue music. His
earliest training came from his
father, who taught him to sing as
\veil as to read and write music
as a pre-adolescent. By the time
he was 10, he was performing
services; and a synagogue news-
paper ad named him as "The
Young Wonder Child Cantor."
Cantor Kalib and his wife,
Goldie, are in the process of relo-
cating from Farmington Hills to
Baltimore, the home of his
daughter and son-in-law, Ruth
and Dr. David Eisenberg, who
have assisted him over the years
in bringing this project to
fruition.
What is unique about the Jewish
Music Heritage Project?
"It will be the world's first and
only selected and centralized col-
lection of this musical-cultural
treasure. Much of this music has
never been published or record-
ed before and was in danger of
being lost forever. I chose the
materials I thought would best
represent the tradition as it was
during its zenith period."
What about the new choir?
"Auditions were held over the
summer, and 60 men and boys
from the Baltimore area were
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