16 FridayOctober 20, 1918 r THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Detroit Authors on Jewish Book Fair Agenda wilaillm~samszrress Hy's Cider Mill 6350 W. 37 Mile Rd., Romeo Take Van Dyke to 37 Mile Rd. O WNED BY RUBY & HY GOLDSTEIN Apples— Pick if you like Two authors with deep roots in Detroit will be among the featured speak- ers during the 27th annual Jewish Book Fair at the Jewish Community Center next month. At 10:00 a.m. Nov. 13, David Rosenberg, author of "Lightworks," "Blues of the Sky," "Job Speaks" will speak on "Who's Afraid of the Bible (and Its Jewish Poetry)? The first contemporary American poet to interpret ADOLFO the confident look of easy elegance We urge you to see the superb Adolfo Collection well in the forefront of today's new wave of European perfectly- design proportioned, refined, understated, and resolutely urbane. the Bible, Rosenberg has been a book and magazine editor as well as a teacher of writing at York University in Toronto and at the City University of New York. Rosenberg gives many readings from his work (which includes 10 books) across the country and has often been a visiting poet- in-residence. He has been a Graduate Fellow in Poetry at Syracuse University and at the University of Esses in England. Rosenberg is orig- inally from Detroit and now lives in New York City. Esther Broner will speak at 8 p.m. Nov. 14 on the topic "In the Begin- ning There Was Woman." Her latest novel, "A Weave of Women," is a weave of tales, and the tales. are those of a commune of Jewish women in Israel. They share a stone house in the Old City, they come to- gether from everywhere, they share much more than the house. They create new cere- monies for themselves: ceremonies of birth, mar- riage and death; of exor- cism, excommunication, and exodus. As they speak to each other of the rituals of their lives, so the novel speaks to everyone of the exultation of human exist- ence. Prof. Broner is a playw- right and novelist, author of "Her Mothers." She teaches English at Wayne State University. Her Book Fair talk will be co-sponsored by the Ameri- can Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress, and the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith. Belva Plain will speak at Book Fair 1 p.m. Nov. 13. Ms. Plain is the author of "Evergreen," a best- selling novel about Anna Friedman who comes to New York at the turn of , CLOTHES of West Bloomfield in the Orchard Mall on Orchard Lake Road just 1/2 block north of Maple Road • 851-9080 om MON. TUE. WED. SAT. 10 to 6 p.m. THURS. FRI. 10 to 9 p.m. SUN 12 to 5 p.m. J 25% OFF EVERYTHING! CASH ONLY this week only, Monday, October 23 thru Saturday, October 28, 1978. Because you helped us during our first year in \ business, we're \ doing something \ nice for you. \ A Special Thanks \ to all our "Special People. Wptmeirtind People" Northgate Plaza Oak Park, Greenfield, N. of 10 Mile o 968-3338 Hours: Monday — Saturday 10-5:30, Thursday 10-8:30 ESTHER BRONER DAVID ROSENBERG RUTH GRUBER BELVA PLAIN the century from a Polish shtetl. Belva Plain has pub- lished many stories in na- tional magazines. The title of her talk is "The Myth of the Jewish Mother." Ruth Gruber's topic at Book Fair will be "What Does It Mean to Be A Woman of Israel?" Her latest book is "Raquela: A Woman of Israel." In researching her book, Ms. Gruber spent nine months in Israel getting to know Raquela Prywes, a ninth-generation Jeru- salemite. But more than that, she learned from those who were intimately involved in the establish- ment of the state of Israel and are the leaders of today. Thus Raquela mirrors the life of her country, its triumphs and tragedies from birth to maturity. Like her country, Raquela's own history is marked by love, joy, and sorrow. Ruth Gruber is the author of five books on Israel and has been a correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune. In that capacity she covered the story of Exodus 1947. Ruth has made 29 trips to Israel and is well acquainted with all the places in which Raquela has lived and worked, living through some of the same experiences herself. Ms. Gruber will be speak- ing at 10 a.m. Nov. 14 as part of Hadassah Education Day. The afternoon speaker that day will be Joseph Borkin, author of "The Crime and Punishment of I.G. Farben." He will speak at p.m., and the title of his speech will be "Hitler, Carter, Israel and Oil." One of the most unusual and startling stories of the Third Reich — and one of JOSEPH BORKIN the strangest corporate his- tories of all time is the true account of the unholy al- liance of Adolph Hitler and I.G. Farbenindustrie, Ger- many's great chemical com- bine — an alarining look at the military-industrial complex run wild. It is a little-known tale of industrial evil. - Borkin was the chief of the patent and cartel sec- tion of the Anti-Trust Di- vision of the Department of Justice and was responsible for the wartime investiga- tion and prosecution of the Farben dominated cartels. He has since maintained a private law practice in Washington, D.C. Borkin is the author of numerous books and arti- cles, the chairman of the Federal Bar Association's Committee on Standards of Judicial Behavior, and a lecturer at the Catholic University Law School. He is also director of The Drew Pearson Foundation. Golda Improves JERUSALEM (JTA) — A "considerable improve- ment" was reported in the condition of former Premier Golda Meir, hospitalized in Hadassah Medical Center. A chicken can't be slaughtered without blood being shed. •