' 40—EMPLOYMENT NEWLY remodeled 1,-`2, duplex. Schaf- BOOKKEEPER, experienced, part- time. 7 Mile-Greenfield area. Write er-Curtis area. Excellent condition Box 588. The Jewish News. 17100 inside and out. Carpeting, drapes, 'W. 7 Mile. Detroit 35, Michigan. stov e, refrig.. air-conditioner. $11,300. Owner. UN 4-8677. 18077 WORKING woman will share home Schaefer. in Southfield with same in ex- change for cooking. Must have W. Outer Drive transportation. Call Sunday, EL betw. Margareta. & Curtis 6-3747. 3 bed. cust. face br. Col. with every convenience. 1st. fl. 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED scr. rear porch, Rec. Rm. 2?•', cr. gar., Ige. freezer incl.. Asking $23,500. Goldie Katanick. PART-TIME job wanted by experi- enced cigar counter man. UN 1-2496. Certified HOME SALES KE 8-5400 LEAVING STATE NEXT MONTH 3-bedroom brick ranch paneled den, pass hall. Air-conditioner, dishwasher and other built-ins. Carpeting, drapes. Tiled base- ment. Patio, rock garden, beau- tiful landscaping. Close to school. Best offer will be accepted. No Sabbath calls. LI 2-7731 STA.NBURY NR. CURTIS RELIABLE TEENAGER wants baby sitting job in Northwest area. Any afternoon or evening. UN 4-5705. 45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Woodland Lake Trailer Court Full permit for 44 more recrea- tion building Laundromat. 478 feet. Grand River and Hacker Road frontage for shopping center. 1.000 families within mile circle. 900 ft. beatiful lake front- age ($50,000.) home. 4 car garage. 3 BEDRM., PAN. DEN MUST SELL Spacious face br. bung. cust. blt. 1946, by one of Detroit's foremost Bldrs. for his own home. Loaded with extras. Bldr. moving to Ann Arbor. immed. poss. OWNER, GEORGE ALMASHY 8005 WEST GRAND RIVER VE 8-3880 HOMER DETROIT GOLF CLUB French Chateau. Finest of its type. 3 bedrms.. 3 baths, maid's qtrs., dream kitchen, all blt.-ins. Home entirely remodeled. New carpeting, paneled front libr. Plus Rec. Rm. & Games Rm. Attach. 2 cr. gar. Prime location 100' on the Course. LAUDER 19372 Cust. quality ranch. 2 Mast. bed- rms., pan. libr. din. rm. service hall, break. rm. complete air- conditioning, spinkler syst. Be- tween 7 Mi. & Vasser Dr. CALL RALPH SIMPSON CORNER HACKER ROAD BRIGHTON DRY CLEANING PLANT AND REAL ESTATE Schoolcraft-Southfield area. Do- ing good business. It will pay you to look into his right away. SCHOOLCRAFT REALTY CO. EVENINGS MR. IGRISAN VE 8-4300 BR 2-1424 50—BUSINESS CARDS TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? EDMUND C. RISDON New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. REAL ESTATE JO 6-3859, MI 6-0700 UN 1-5075 By Appt. — OAK PK. I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work, no job too big or small. BR 3-4826. LI 5-4035. 22131 WHITI%IORE NR. 9 Ml. 3 bedrm. ranch, new carpeting, drapes, beautiful Rec. Rm. All paneled. Nr. Dewey School. $16,500. Goldie Katanick will be there. CERTIFIED HOME SALES — KE 8.5400 FREELAND-PEMBROKE SEC. ULTIMATE FOR THE MONEY! 3 bed. br . lge. rms., rec. rm.. gas ht., many fine ftrs. nr . school, bus, Syn. Shopp. Homer VE 8-3880 17-A—LOTS FOR SALE ATTENTION BUILDERS Five choice building sites in beautiful Lake Angelus Golf View Estates on Walton Blvd. just beyond Silver Lake Road. Lots average 80 to 100 ft. in width. Surrounded by two lakes and a golf course. Paved roads, water and gas. Private beach for residents. Priced for quick sale. Call Otto Schultz. GORDON WILLIAMSON 19180 GRAND RIVER KE 2-3400 DESIRABLE Southfield lot. 150x150, on S.E. corner Mulberry and 10 Mile. 3 blocks West of Lahser. Reasonable. M. Ratner. TW 2-5550. 19—OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 4 ROOM basement suite, private en- trance, formerly doctor's office, corner 7 Mile and Prairie, reason- able rent. Phone DI 1-0455 between 9 and 5. 30-A—INSTRUCTION HEBREW tutoring. Beginners and advanced. LI 8-8914 after 4 or all day Sunday. No Sabbath calls. BIOLOGY, c h e m i s t r y, algebra, mathematics, remedial reading. Certified teachers. LI 3-0629. No sabbath calls. TUTORING. Mathematics. sciences. I All grades. Reasonable rates. 868- 3526. REMEDIAL Reading Specialist. In- dividualized instruction. By ap- pointment. KE 7-9115. MATHEMATICS Chemistry, P h y s- ics Tutor High School, College. All methods. Expert, effective. LI • 1-2645—UN 1-9173. 40—EMPLOYMENT EXPERIENCED saleslady for lamp and gift shop. Full or part- time. Must qualify. Write Box 589 The Jewish News 17100 W. 7 Mile Detroit 35, Mich. LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing. Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable. Free estimates. UN 4-3339, VE 5-7453. LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY SERVICE Also Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 4-4587 Sprinkler Systems Installed and Repaired. Reasonable rates. All work guaranteed. References. NOTTINGHAM SPRINKLERS 527-5044 FURNr1URE repairs and refinishing. Free estimates. Call UN 4-3547. DRESSMAKING All Kinds of Alterations Call for Appointments UN 3-8283 17175 ROSELAWN FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day _service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. A-1 PAINTING. paperhanging, in- terior, exterior. Immediate serv- •ice. Guaranteed.. Reasonable. UN 4-0326. ALL CARPENTER work. Porch railings, steps, floors, partitions, front doors. Kitchen cabinets and broken furniture repairs. Work myself. 342-1880. 55—MISCELLANEOUS TURN YOUR old suits - shoes into cash. DI 2-3717. 91—COUNTRY CLUB MEMBERSHIP FOR SALE HOT AND STICKY? You and family swim right now at exclusive beautiful country club nearby. Selling membership immediately, at fraction of ori- ginal cost. INTERESTED? Write Box 590. THE JEWISH NEWS 17100 W. 7 MILE DETROIT 35, MICH. Sale Is Postponed of American Israel Mutual Fund Shares •NEW YORK, (JTA)—A previ- ously announced offering of 2,750,000 shares of the First American Israel Mutual Fund, which was to have been sold in the United States at $10 a share, has been "indefinitely , postponed." Kay Boyle's 'The Smoking Mountain,' Its Foreword by Shirer, Expose Nazi Hatreds; German Woman Indicts Her Otvn People In 1951, the noted novelist and short story writer, Kay Boyle, published a series of stories about Germany during the American occupation. When she moved to Germany in 1948, she was asked by the New York- er to write her impressions of post-war Germany, and these stories were the results of the compilation of 1951. Since then she has written another out- standing novel, about post-war Germany, under the title "Gen- eration Without Farewell." Her stories for the New York- er are now again available in a new collection published by Alfred A. Knopf under the title "The Smoking Mountain." It is significant not only for the deeply moving stories about Germans after the war and Americans who played a role in the occupation, but especially for her lengthy introduction in which she described her impres- sions of a trial of a Nazi crimi- nal—Heinrich Boob—who was charged with personal participa- tion in the murder of 56 vic- tims of Hitlerism. "The Smoking Mountain" also gains historical signifi- cance with the foreword to Miss Boyle's stories by Wil- liam L. Shirer. Shirer found the stories suf- ficiently moving and important to write a 12-page foreword in which he evaluated Miss Boyle's status as a writer, declaring that "her powers of description are the envy of an old reporter." He takes occasion to issue an added warning against those in Germany who knew what was happening but who are feigning lack of knowledge. He states in his foreword: "Many Germans argue that the people didn't know what was really going on and that this fact accounts for the lack of strong protest. No doubt millions didn't know exactly, though they were aware of the concentration camps and the deportation or the Jews, and this knowledge might have given them pause for thought. "But a lot of Germans did know. The officers and sol- diers of the army knew .. . "The German bureaucracy knew. Thousands of its offi- cials were busy organizing the slaughter. It was, after all, a big project . "Many businessmen knew. Some of them were bidding spiritedly for contracts to sup- ply the gas chambers, the gas, and the ovens. Krupp and I. G. Farben, two of Ger- many's greatest business con- cerns, whose directors had long been among the pillars of German society—and who still are—set up factories at Auschwitz, where Jewish slave labor was employed until it was Worked out and became eligible for the gas chambers nearby. "These Germans knew—in the army, in the bureaucracy, in business. Unlike their counterparts in Fascist Italy, they went along with the grisly business. Some made profits from it. Some of these are back in business today, not in a grisly business, just in business. Krupp and I. G. Farben no longer operate fac- tories manned by expendable Jewish or other slave labor. But they are prospering and their association with the Federal government in Bonn is close and amicable. "And the few surviving Jews in Germany? Are they spared at last of the anti- Semitism which sent • most of their relatives to death, in the gas chambers? In a novelist's way, Miss Boyle raises the question in one of her short stories here—and partly an- swers it. "A Mrs. Furley reaches the meat counter at the American Comissary and chats with the German working behind it. In better times he had been a theater producer and once, he tells her, he had worked with an American director, 'a Jew from New York but a nice Jew.' " 'Why do you say "a nice Jew"?' asked Mrs. Furley. "The narrator steps in to reply: 'But the answer had already been given in the his- tory of the country, and noth- ing that had been said since had been said with power or passion enough to take that answer away.' " Miss Boyle's stories are not filled with anger. There is com- passion in them. She portrays willingness on the part of Americans to help the sufferers. But from time to time there leaks out the hidden feeling which found root in the refer- red-to knowledge of what had occurred without too much atoning. The concluding sentence in her ma s t e r f u l introduction speaks loudly as an admonition to Germany: She quotes a "friend in New York, who was once a German himself," who "would have answered" the questions posed about the emerg- ing obligations: "Until there has been a national upheaval, a cleansing of our house by our own hands, the twilight will remain." Especially disturbing is the story "Cabaret," in which the creators of the Nazi murder plans are presented on the stage, seem to be given a not- too-well-hidden vote of confi- dence by an audience that seems to glory in the Hitlerite-Goeb- bels past. They "close their eyes to the darkness" and their "baa-aa" cries evidence an ap- proval rather than resentment of the cruelties that were only a few years behind them. A preface to Miss Boyle's stories contains this quotation from Theodor Plievier: "Wretched German people, you built cities, built cathe- drals, placed free tillers on a free soil, reached lofty heights in art, in science, in law, in languages. You evolved the Hansa, evolved guilds, evolved free crafts, found manifold modes of expression for your nature. Your military organi- zation can only be considered as one aspect of your com- plex social constitution. That department expanded, grew all - powerful, swallowed up everything else. It broke down all dikes and flooded over the boundaries of other coun- tries, and the tiller had to leave his soil, the workman his work, the priest his par- ish, the teacher his pupils, the youth his companions, the husband his wife; the people ceased to exist as a people and became nothing but fuel for the monstrous smoking mountain, the individual be- came nothing but wood, peat, fuel oil, and finally a black flake spewed up out of the flames." It is from this that Miss Boyle took her title for her book, "The Smoking Mountain." Her 11 stories in this book do not advo- cate hate: on the contrary, she is compassionate. But they re- veal a great deal; and her intro- duction and Shirer's foreword are renewed warnings to man- kind: to be on guard that the Hitler tactics should never be repeated. —P. S. Related Stories on Page 30 BE SURE AND GIVE THE GIFT THAT WILL BE REMEMBERED THE ENTIRE YEAR... CALL TODAY! JEWISH NEWS =MUT 0=2 CI 'I" A Weekly Review Nei i-11 Ca" if Jewish Events YE 8-9364 29 -- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Friday, Jul y 26, 1963 17—HOUSES FOR SALE