Friday, May 19, 1918 41
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
The
SHEL ROTT
ORCHESTRA
Featuring
T.V. & Recording Artist
VICKIE CARROLL
PtoItteslonel Etteartaktmont"
354-17111
255-1599
-
Israeli Novelist Oz Fascinates
Audience in Story-Telling Event
For the more than 250
attendees who welcomed an
invitation from Irwin Toby
Holtzman, in a matter of a
few days, to meet with the
Mysteries of the Mind
Exciting entertainment for your club or organization. An
amazing demonstration of ESP and mind reading with audi-
ence participation.
1
547-2464
Mel Eisenberg
BAD CHECKS!!
DELINQUENT ACCOUNTS!!
"As long as everyone
else in the neighborhood
is going to have a lock on
his door, bars on his win-
dows, guns, airplanes
and what not, I am going
to have the same and
even more. I am deter-
In his newest collection of mined to play the bloody
short stories, "The Hill of game according to its
Evil Counsel," (Harcourt, bloody rules.
FOX & ASSOCIATES
23777 Greenfield, Suite 277
Southfield, Mich. 48075
1-313-559-9600 Mr. Elias
DISCO FEVER?
small classes for singles & couples
preschool to advanced
Harriet Vickery
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I
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BARNA BEE
356-6468
CC
CHILDREN
'NORTHLAND, EASTLAND, WESTLAND
OAKLAND MALL, UNIVERSAL MALL
Kids here it all together when M comes lo
having fun In the sunl Mary just put on thee
molest. comfiest. care-freest looks from cur
new group ... pans. tees, tennis loge
shorts! Seel
Europe and ourselves,
Christians and Jews, is
over. My simplistic in-
terpretation of Jewish lib-
eration is this: I would pre-
fer to live in a world with
100 civilizations and not a
single nation-state. In fact,
the Jews have demon-
strated this pattern for
thousands of years. Living
in a little beleaguered
nation-state makes me feel
like an old man in a kinder-
garten. Yet I should stick to'
it for as long as every other
nation does.
Holtzman, in an intro-
ductory speech, consid-
ered the evening also a
celebration of Israel's
30th anniversary and
said the entire year must
be observed as Israel's
30th Anniversary Year.
LET US COLLECT FOR YOU
Ballet-Tap
eminent Israeli author,
Amos Oz, the session at
Cong. Shaarey Zedek on
Tuesday evening was an
evening of fascination.
Oz charmed the gather-
ing with story-telling, with
analyses of life in Israel and
the developments that
emerged there since his
grandfather, a poet, settled
in Jerusalem from Russia.
Oz the kibutznik ex-
plained how he, who is op-
posed to nationalism, must
join in defending his coun-
try which is under attack.
Brace, Jovanovich), Oz has
included three of his very
powerful stories.
In addition to the lead
narrative, which is the title
for his book, there are "Mr.
Levi" and "Longing."
The Levi tale is the mys-
tery of a man who was in the
underground during Is-
rael's war of liberation. It is
a thriller, and it also reveals
the fascination and the sen-
timent that attaches to a
man whose identity is not
revealed but around whom
abounds the concern over
developing events affecting
the emerging state of Israel.
In all of the tales are im-
bedded the experiences of
the struggle for freedom and
the anxieties of a nation re-
born. It is the portrait of a
new nation and the magic of
Amos Oz dominates them.
"The Hill of Evil Coun-
sel" was translated for Oz
by the translator of his
previous works, Nicholas
DeLange.
From 1958 a member of
Kvutsat Hulda, Amos Oz,
who was born in 1939 in
Jerusalem, remains a dedi-
cated kibutz member. He
studied in Jerusalem and at
Oxford, fought in Israel's
1967 and 1973 wars, and is a
dedicated adherent to peace
efforts. He is a defender of
the state, recognizing fully
the difficulties and the
obstructions on the road to
peace.
His ideological ap-
proaches to the nation of
which he is so vital a factor
in advancing its cultural
aspects were told in a Time
magazine article on the oc-
casion of Israel's 30th an-
niversary:
"For me, that long and
sad love affair between
That is as far as my
Zionism goes; beyond that,
holy ancestral tombs mean
very little to me. And yet it
would be stupid to say that
the name of the game is sur-
vival or security: the name
of the game is universal re-
demption.
"For as long as I live, I
shall be thrilled by all those
who came to the Promised
Land to turn it either into a
pastoral paradise of egalita-
rian Tolstoyan communes,
or into a well-educated,
middle-class Central Euro-
pean enclave, a replica of
Austria and Bavaria. Or
those who wanted to raise a
Marxist paradise, who built
kibutzim on biblical sites
and secretly yearned for
Stalin himself to come one
day to admit that 'Bloody
Jews, you have done it bet-
ter than we did. "
WE ACCEPT
(Copyright 1978, JTA, Inc.)
Beef prices are up again.
The use of chicken thus be-
comes even more eco-
nomical than before. This is
a delicious way to prepare
chicken; you might want to
serve it next time you have
guests. Serve over a bed of
hot rice.
2 tbspa. oil
3 lbs. fryer, cut Into 8 pieces
2 chopped onions
114-2 cups Sangria wine
Brown chicken in oil In a
large electric skillet. Fry on-
ions until golden. Add wine
and simmer covered 1 to 11/2
hours or until chicken is very
tender. Add more wine if
necessary. Turn chicken sev-
eral times while cooking so
flavor is absorbed into each
piece.
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Woman Named
to Honorary
Rena Janower, a 1977
graduate of Eastern Michi-
gan University, was re-
cently inducted into the
EMU chapter of Phi Kappa
Phi, a national honor
society. She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Saul Gross
of Livonia.
Chicken in Sangria
By NORMA BARACH
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New Orleans Mall, 10 Mile & Greenfield
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559-4556
Brian
Daily & Sat.: 9:30-5:30 Thurs tll 8:30