Wayne State University's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
and The Guy Stern Endowment in Exile and Holocaust Studies present

Event Sponsors

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11 a.m. • Sunday, April 26, 2015

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Holocaust Memorial Center
28123 Orchard Lake Rd. • Farmington Hills, MI 48334

College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences

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Free admission - please join us for bagels and coffee at 10:15 a.m.
Please RSVP to specialevents.wayne.edu/guystern-2015 or 313-577-2679.

The Guy Stern Endowment
in Exile and Holocaust Studies

The Media Today — And Why the Holocaust Still Matters

Though history has witnessed
many unspeakable horrors,
only once has a highly cultured,
highly technological nation
attempted the "scientific"
murder of an entire people —
and nearly succeeded. Though
what happened is still in the living memory
of millions today, millions of others are
growing up with only a vague idea of what
occurred, jeopardizing humanity's vow of
"never again." Jack Lessenberry, head of
the journalism program at Wayne State
University, examines the media's role.

Among his many titles and accomplishments,
Lessenberry is WUOM-FM's senior political
analyst and delivers daily essays and
commentary on important Michigan issues.

He won an Emmy in 1995 for one of two
Frontline documentaries on Dr. Jack Kevorkian
that he helped report and produce.

Lessenberry has written for Vanity Fair,
Esquire, the New York Times, Washington
Post and more. He is currently a contributing
editor and columnist for the Metro Times,
the Traverse City Record Eagle, Dome
Magazine and the Toledo Blade.

DETROIT
JEWISH NEWS

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Lessenberry has worked as foreign
correspondent for and executive national
editor of The Detroit News, during which
time he reported from more than 40
countries. In 2002, The Metropolitan
Detroit Chapter of the Society of
Professional Journalists named him
Journalist of the Year.

Cohn-Haddow

Center for Judaic Studies

Nittta_

of metro detrolt

Richard Goode

Sunday, April 26, 4:00 pm
Hill Auditorium

"[Richard] Goode makes the familiar sound unexpectedly fresh,"
proclaimed the Financial Times in reviewing his 2009 recording of the
complete Beethoven piano concertos. Goode has won a large and
devoted following for music-making of tremendous emotional power,
depth, and expressiveness, and is acknowledged worldwide as one of
today's leading interpreters of Classical and Romantic music.

PROGRAM
Mozart
Beethoven
Brahms
Dubussy
Schumann

Adagio in b minor, K. 540
Sonata No. 24 in F-sharp Major, Op. 78
Eight Piano Pieces, Op. 76
Children's Corner
Humoreske, Op. 20

SUPPORTED BY
Natalie Matovinovk and Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Morelock

MEDIA PARTNER
WGTE 91.3 FM

BE PRESENT

TICKETS ON SALE NOW
734.764.2538 ums.org

1936030

April 23 • 2015

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