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The Association for Continuing Education is a volunteer organization dedicated to providing and supporting continuing education programs in cooperation with the Laura and Alvin Siegal Lifelong Learning Program at Case Western Reserve University.
Membership is open to those who love to learn. ACE independently provides the Grazella Shepherd Lecture Day, Discussion Day, Acclaimed Authors Luncheon and the Annual Book Sale, trips, a semi-annual newsletter and a summer luncheon series featuring local authors. More ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
This course analyzes significant events of the 1950s including the growth of the middle class, the move to suburbia, development of new industries, the emergence of television and creation of the national highway system. Racial events covered include the Montgomery bus boycott, Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Brown school decision and the anti-communist anxiety of the era reflected in the blacklist and McCarthyism. Internationally, we’ll review U.S. assumption of world leadership, the Cold War, the Korean War, nuclear policy, and covert CIA operations in other countries. The politics of the era include the Eisenhower-Stevenson and Kennedy- Nixon contests. Class discussion will compare the 1950s with life today and the impact of that decade on the world in which we live now.
Read: The Fifties, David Halberstam
This course is offered with the generous support of the Association for Continuing Education.
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ChamberFest Cleveland has presented engaging and innovative chamber music programs for more than a decade featuring well-known musicians, along with young Rising Star artists, for a three-week celebration of spectacular artistry. This course will prepare you for a deeper inside look at the music and the festival. The course also includes tickets to two ChamberFest concerts including insightful pre-concert talks. As part of this program, you’ll be invited to mingle with the artists after each performance.
THE ART OF CREATING A CHAMBER MUSIC EXPERIENCE
Thursday, June 22 | 11am ET
Landmark Centre Building - Beachwood
MAKING CHAMBER MUSIC ACCESSIBLE
Friday, June 23 | 11am ET
Landmark Centre Building - Beachwood
CARNIVAL OF THE ANIMALS CONCERT
Saturday, June 24 | 7:30pm ET (Preconcert talk at 6:30pm)
Mixon Hall, Cleveland Institute of Music
VORTEX CONCERT
Sunday, June 25 | 3pm ET (Preconcert talk at 2pm)
Harkness Chapel, Case Western Reserve University
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This course will explore the different habitats available to migrating birds at the university farms. Students should be prepared to walk at a moderate pace over some hilly and possibly wet terrain. Binoculars are recommended. Meet in the Greenhouse parking lot. Listening devices available.
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The Chemistry prize was awarded to 3 scientists, Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Morten Meldal, and K. Barry Sharpless, for developing a way of “snapping molecules together.” They found an ingenious and environmentally cleaner way to build molecules that the Nobel panel said is “already benefiting humankind greatly.”
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Though most famous for Moby Dick, Herman Melville also wrote compelling sketches, short stories, and novels, including: the ten sketches that comprise The Encantadas, or The Enchanted Isles (1854), the novella Benito Cereno (1855), and the novel Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life (1846). As with his magnum opus, Melville’s shorter fiction draws not only on his eighteen-month voyage to the South Seas on whaling and trading vessels but also on historical sources. The mysterious desolation of the Galapagos Islands, the commandeering of a Spanish slave ship off the southern tip of Chile by its enslaved cargo, and the exotic sexual mores and cannibalism on Nuku Hiva are some of the provocative topics in Melville’s ethnographic, historical, and imaginative shorter works. All aboard for Herman Melville’s reconsideration of Romantic notions of the noble savage and the divinity of the natural world!
Read: The Encantadas, or Enchanted Isles, Benito Cereno, and select passages from the novel Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life (1846). All works are in the public domain and available at gutenberg.org. More ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
The 1920s was a unique period in American and world history. In this country, it was characterized by the end of the Progressive period with it significant social and political advances and a return to normalcy. It was an era of eugenics, restrictions on immigration, the Red Scare, prohibition, bootlegging and gangsterism but it was also the era of speakeasies, the Jazz Age, flappers and a roaring stock market. Here, and especially in Europe, there was an underlying sadness and disillusion brought on by the shocking and horrendous devastation of the Great War. In the midst of all this, two remarkable young writers emerged – F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway. This course will address the history of the 1920s and analyze and discuss these authors and the books they wrote in the context of their times.
Read: The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald The Sun Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway This course is offered with the generous support of the Association for Continuing Education. More ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Masada and Tzipori are two archeological sites in Israel that at first glance seem unrelated. The story of the massacre at Masada is well-known, but Tzipori’s story is less familiar to most people. Could it be that the lesser known site of Tzipori shapes Jewish identity far more than the famous site of Masada? And how are the two sites linked together? During two sessions, we will walk through both sites, exploring how the historical events that took place in each of these places shape the story of the Jewish collective and learning how each of the sites continues to impact the Jewish people to this day.
Israel at 75: Untold Stories is generously supported by the Friends of Jewish Lifelong Learning Endowment Fund, Jewish Federation of Cleveland. More ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Classical Hebrew teaches the Hebrew used in the Jewish prayer book and the Bible. More![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
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Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
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Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's native language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
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Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
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Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's native language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
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In this class, we will read and analyze short Hebrew stories by classical and contemporary authors. Students must be able to read original texts in Hebrew (without vowels), and participate in discussions conducted entirely in Hebrew.
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In this class, we will read and analyze short Hebrew stories by classical and contemporary authors. Students must be able to read original texts in Hebrew (without vowels), and participate in discussions conducted entirely in Hebrew.
More
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Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Conversational Hebrew teaches students to communicate in Israel's language to be able to read Israeli newspapers, view Israeli television, and enjoy Hebrew literature, songs, drama and film.
More
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