Atis errOE17 van_ Atith in E ,t/_ At.rit4 In . a *ditto' way, by means' and the sufferers' immediately a narrative -that stems from the emerge in an apparent form. Polish .expe,riefice ander Nazilm, Rodin, as a member of the in- the curse of lilitlerisin Li exposed vestigating team that was to have. by-Ernest Ellis in his "There Lies been led to believe the best about a Tale.• Auschwitz, soon sees the cruelties Issued_ by oiygliara_B._ Erdinans apd witnesses the mass murders.. Publislibig ,.*Co:: of- Grand Rapids. He sees the Treblinka chimneys, this.novel does not directly con- and it becomes apparent that the demn anti-Semitism, but in its in- truth about the extermination direct fashion, by means of an in- camps is not to be hidden. vestigating committee's visit to The story commences on a bench Auschwitz, brings to light again in Central Park in New York, with the Nazi terror and the -horrors Rodin approaching the author that were imposed on innocent rather rudely with his story. But people. out of the rudeness emerges a A native of Grand Rapids, the tale revealing the crimes of the author studied in Michigan uni- Hitler era. versities, earned the U. of M. Hop- In many respects, Ellis' "There wood Award in drama and con- Lies a Tale" is unique. In a tinues to reside in Grand Rapids At Hadassah's Hospital on splendidly written narration, the where he writes and does farming Michigan author has introduced Mount Scopus, Dr. Charles Klee- "to- rest my eyes." -Ellis un- the background of a brutal regime, man, of Cedars-Sinai Medical doubtedly . has made a thorough the commencement of the ravish- School, Los Angeles, and Dr. Uri study of the concentration camp 'Mass's, director designate of the horrors; the claims that have been ing first of Warsaw then of all Mount Scopus Hospital, consult made through investigating com- Poland and the encirclement of over plans for the new wing of hundreds of thousands of Jews mittees whose views were blinded into a small ghetto. the hospital, which is being re- on their visits to the camps of habilitated. It is the story within the camp horror; and the manner in which he points a finger at the German as witnessed by men who were to crimes, without name-calling, ele- have been led into blindness about vates his work to a major position the conditions, but whose narrating member of the team alludes to the among the expose of Nazism. murderous conditions, that is The chief figure in the cast of especially noteworthy. characters in "There Lies a Tale," "There Lies a Tale" deserves Rudin, relating the story in the "Radical Judaism faces the phar- first person in this novel, also in- an important spot in the literature troduces the story of the valuable about the Holocaust. —P. S. aohs of the modern superstate" is the definition offered on the cover jewel he had purchased from a of Arthur I. Waskow's book, "The Jew in Warsaw who wanted the Bush is Burning." cash to pay for transportation to The Macmillan paperback con- rescue one of his daughters from tains Waskow's plea for a re-ex- the Nazi threat of extermination. amination of the issues involved Jews are not mentioned much in war and peace, for a review of in this novel, but the elderly Jew the halakhic principles affecting who sold the jewel is referred to Pocket Books (a Simon-Schuster Jewish life. as being from the ancient race, subsidiary) has added to its paper- "The new Halakha," he as- ∎ backs a joke book by a famous serts, "muse express in joy and punster. sadness the links of the Jewish "Henney Youngman's Greatest people to the other peoples. We One-Liners" will provide many might, for example, develop laughs. It is -not what the title Tisha b'Av as a memorial not suggests — one-liners. There are only of the Temple in Jerusalem Jan. 20—To Dr. and Mrs. Rob- many multi-lined stories here and but also of the Holocaust and ert S. Levine (Pays Chernikov), the book has the- added merit of Hiroshima—those modern warn- 16986 W. 13 Mile, Birmingham, a containing the illustrations made ings of the destruction of the daughter; Aviva Rebecca. specifically for this book by John temple of mankind. In this and • • a Huehnergarth. similar ways we could join in Jan. 19 — To Mr. and Mrs. the universal experiences of hu- If the reader is in search of a Hershel Eashdan (Debbie Mar- one-liner, -he'll find it in the dedi- manity without abandoning our lowe), 27155 Marshall, Southfield, catory page which reads: "If I'm own selves." a daughter, Jennifer. Leanne. not in bed by 11 at night, I go In thus imagining a new Halakha, • • • • home." In this spirit he keeps the Waskow's idealism imagines also Jan. 9—To Mr. and Mrs. Jerry reader in a good mood. the emergence of a new Sinai Pollack (Marilyn ,Altus), 6911 St. Many of the stories are old -- "The day is short," Waskow James, Birmingham, a daughter, when you've heard Youngman warns, "the task is enormous, Lori Shawn. you've heard many of his puns workers are exhausted, but the • •• • and stories. But there are enough reward is great . . . Many of us Jan. 7—To Mr. and Mrs. Law- special ones and extra good ones may not live to complete the task, rence Millman (Barbara Remick), that deserve repetition. all of us are free to evade it. But 22170 Stratford, Oak. Park, a son, Therefore, Henry Youngman's shall we?" Andrew Lee. "Greatest One-Liners" is among • • • the better class books written in Jan. 4—To Dr. and Mrs. Gerald lighter vein. And because it is History's Inspiration Berner (Sylvia Neuman), a son, available in paperback the pub- By SIMON DUBNOW Jason Andrew. lishers can await growth in its The first part of Jewish history, • • • sales. the Biblical part, is a source from To Mr. and Mrs. James D. Wil- which for many centuries, millions lenberg (Natalie Cohn), 303 Cov- of human beings have derived in- Jews and the Bible ington, a daughter, Jeniffer Paige. struction, solace, and inspiration. By ABRAHAM J. HESCHEL Its heroes have long ago become In "God in Search of Man" types, incarnations of great ideals. There are no words in the world The events it relates serve as liv- more knowing, more disclosing and ing ethical formulae. But a time more indispensable, words both will come—perhaps it is not very irvert-lifoliei . stern and graceful, heart-rending far off—when the second half of Serving Hospitals lad Home* ' - and healing; AK so universal: Jewish history, that people's life LI 2 4444 LI 1-•9769 God is One. A thought so consol- after the Biblical period, will be ing: He is with us in distress. A accorded the same treatment. The responsibility so overwhelming: thousand years' martyrdom of the His name can be desecrated. A Jewish people, its unbroken pil- map of time: from creation to re- grimage, its tragic fate, its teach- demption. Guideposts along the ers of religion, its martyrs, philo- way: The Sabbath. An offering; sophers, champions — this whole contrition of the heart. A utopia: epic will, in days to come, sink Would that all people were pro- deep into the memory of men. It phets. The insight: man lives by will speak to the heart and con- his faithfulness: his home is in science of men, and secure respect time and his substance in deeds. for the silvery hair of the Jewish A standard so bold: ye shall be People. hol y. A commandment so- daring: love thy neighbor as thyself. A fact so sublime: human and divine The secret of being miserable pathos can be in accord. And a is to have leisure to bother about gift_ so undeserved: the ability to whether you are happy or not.— repent. George Bernard Shaw. Waskow's Appeal for New Halakha on War and Peace Youngman Draws Numerous Laughs in a Paperback t ,wwlottwi!, roma, Hada st. :". iiiii:Progtess Remembering Zion The oath which the brit exiles pronounced at the streams of Babylon . . . Jew* did not forget! Eras came and went, civilizations grew and decayed, empires rose and fell, historic trends flowed and ebbed, but Jerusalem was yet prized above all joys and re- membered in all sorrows. Under the hupa (the wedding canopy) when two hearts are beating in unison, when joy reigns supreme, there comes from the depth of the soul the prayer, "May there soon be heard in the cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem the voice of gladness, the voice of bridegroom and the voice of bride." And when in the house of mourning sorrow oppresses the heart and longing tests faith, the lips murmur, "He who fills the world, comfort ye together with all those that mourn for Zion and Jerusalem .. ." And when death claimed the Jew and the cold earth opened its mouth . . . the head (of the Jew) rested on a bag of Palestinian soil.—Solomon Goldman, in "A Rabbi Takes Stock." 1111111011 JEW= MEWS */#tir 2B..3,172-41 ) Shoran/oak e xam, ' Club Planning a Bar Mitzva, Bat Mitzva-, Wedding or Sweet Sixteen? Call Our Banquet Manager at 6824300. We Cater All Occasions. Seating for 400. Birt4 .Zznotincernents . i4sei ;LEO 1 - FINE FURNITURE TO LIVE WITH 20% OFF STORE!! CERTAIN SELECT GROUPS OF ODDS & ENDS, DISCON- TINUED ITEMS AND SPECIALLY SELECTED ITEMS UP TO 50% OFF OR MORE. ON EVERYTHING IN THE • Name Brands Such as • Mosland Carpets • American of Martinsville • Silvercraft • Weiman • Hill • Stifle! 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