16 Friday, November 11, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 32nd Annual Jewish Book Fair The 32nd annual Book Fair at the Jewish Commu- nity Center will open 8 p.m. Saturday with author Stephen Birmingham. Author of The Auerbach Will," Birmingham will lead off the eight-day series of Book Fair events with "Confessions of a Social His- torian." Some 24 authors will cover a variety of topics at Book Fair. Most events are free, and all are open to the public. CHAYYM ZELDIS will be the featured speaker at 1 p.m. Sunday. Zeldis, author of "A For- bidden Love," was born in Buffalo, N.Y. in 1927. He For those who , want the finest custom furniture at... AFFORDABLE PRICES The simplest cube to the most intricate wall unit built to your specifications by meticulous craftsmen. Selections for every room in your home or office in fine woods, laminates, marble, glass and specializing in... OUTSTANDING LUCITE DESIGNS Withilittfi 354 -4126 can attended the University of Michigan on a creative writ- ing scholarship for two years, and while there, he won an Avery Hopwood Award in poetry. He worked briefly at The Jewish News. In 1948, during the War of Independence, he settled in Israel, where he lived on kibutzim. Zeldis served in the Israeli armed forces in the Sinai Campaign of 1956. He returned to the United States in 1958 and was graduated from the New School for Social Research, winning the John Day Novel Award there. The author of four prev- ious novels, including "Gol- gotha" and "Brothers," and a volume of verse, "Seek Haven," he is director of public relations for Women's American ORT. JUDAH STAMPFER will be the Book Fair speaker at 8 p.m. Thursday. Born in Jerusalem, the grandson of the chief rabbi, Stampfer was a Hillel direc- tor at Harvard and Bran- deis. Currently a professor of English at State Univer- sity of New York at Stony Brook he is the author of "Sol Meyers: Jerusalem Has Many Faces" and three other books. His "Father and Chil- dren" is a novel written as a chronicle, a portrayal of Jewish life on both sides of the Atlantic through the 19th and early 20th Cen- turies. Co-sponsored by the De- partment of Michigan, Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A., Department of Michigan Ladies Auxiliary and American Jewish Con- gress, Stampfer will be speaking on "From the ALLON SCHOENER Word to Talk: The De- velopment of American Jewish Fiction." ALLON SCHOENER, author of "The American Jewish Album," will speak at 10:30 a.m. Nov. 20. His appearance will be co- sponsored by Jewish Par- ents Institute and Jewish Historical Society of Michi- gan. His talk is entitled "In- timate Portraits of the Jewish Experience," an illustrated lecture. "The American Jewish Album" recounts the growth of the Jewish com- munity in the United States. This lavishly illustrated narrative provides an his- torical odyssey of American Jewish life from 1654, when 23 Spanish and Por- tuguese colonists sought refuge in New Amsterdam, to the present decade. MICHAEL KOREN- BLIT, as a boy in Okla- homa, didn't question his parents about the tattoos on their forearms, and they never volunteered in- formation about what hap- pened during the war. In 1980, prompted by his wife, Korenblit initiated a dialogue with them about their experiences in the Holocaust and promised to record their stories. His de- termination intensified when the Institute for His- torical Review attempted to deny that the Holocaust had occurred. As the writing pro- gressed, Michael convinced his parents, who had not left the United States since their emigration, to accom- pany him on research trips to Israel and Europe. They returned to the village of Hrubieszow where Meyer and Manya had met, fallen in love and 'said goodbye, forever, to their families. At Dachau and other concen- tration camps they faced the barbed wire and relived the horror of incarceration. On their second visit to Israel, Manya contacted a cousin who had been living in Palestine before the war. The cousin casually re- marked that he had re- ceived a letter, postmarked Scotland, from Manya's brother Chaim after the war. Manya was stunned' For 39 years she believed Chaim had died in the gas chambers at Auschwitz. The Korenblits returned immediately to America. Several days later Michael was at the British Embassy in Washington pouring frantically through tele- phone books for the name "Nagelsztajn." By the end of the day he had located his uncle in Newcastle, England. Korenblit will speak at Book Fair at 1 p.m. Nov. 20. (Continued on Page 17) Book Fair Schedule SATURDAY 8 p.m. — Stephen Birmingham will speak on "Confessions of a Social Historian." Brilliant! SUNDAY A gift of diamonds and gold will dazzle your senses. SELECT A GIFT FROM TAPPERS. We've got style! RETAIL SPECIAL AT A 656.63 525.30\ B 747.35 597.88 c 922.25 737.80 D 1655.00 1324.00 RETAIL SPECIAL AT t 4, 57.00 45.60 Stud 80.00 64.00 F 322.50 258.00 G 10742.25 8593.00 357-5578 . H 123.75 I J 618.31 890.62 * Jacket only 411. Layaways Invited Tapper's Cash Refunds • Free Gift wrap 7 7 SPECIAL AT 99.00 494.65 712.50 HOLIDAY HOURS (Starting Nov. 25th) Mon.-Fri. 10-8:45 Sat. 10-5:45 Sun. 12-4:45 26400 West Twelve Mile Road in Southfield's Racquetime Mall Northeast corner of 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy. IBY .rONE RETAIL 1 p.m. — Chayym Zeldis will speak on "Born and Reborn." 2 p.m. — David Barg will tell children's stories and sing. There is a charge. 2 p.m. — Amos Oz will speak on "Israel Today." 3 p.m. — Yehuda Amichai will read his poetry in Hebrew. 8 p.m. — Robert Slater, "Sports and Politics." MONDAY - SISTERHOOD DAY 10 a.m. — Gloria Kurian and Bill Broder, "Reliving Our History." Noon — Luncheon, Reservation re- quired; there is a charge. 1 p.m. — Dennis Prager, "From Pharoah to "Anti-Zionism: The Reason for the World's Greatest Hatred." 8 p.m. — Dr. Roman Vishniac, "A World to Remember" with slide presenta- tion. TUESDAY - HADASSAH EDUCATION DAY 10 a.m. — Hoag Levins, "The Arab Global Financial Offensive." Noon — Luncheon. Reservation re- quired; there is a charge. 1 p.m. — Julie Ellis, "The Jews of the Far East." 8 p.m. — Dennis Jones and Brenda Les- ley Segal, "Survival Then and Now." WEDNESDAY 10 a.m. — Dan Kurzman, "The Prophet and the Man." Noon — Luncheon. Reservations re- quired; there is a charge. 1 p.m. — Dr. Ruth Gruber, "War and Peace, Life and Death: A Personal History." 8 p.m. — Dr. Abram Sachar, "Is Suffer- ance Still the Badge?" THURSDAY 10 a.m. — Eugene Boe, "Shanghai: World War II." Noon — Luncheon. Reservations re- quired; there is a charge. 1 p.m. — Norman Garbo, "Jewishness, Communication and the Lone For- tress." 8 p.m. — Judah Stampfer, "From the Word to Talk: The Development of American Jewish Fiction." SATURDAY, NOV. 19 8 p.m. — English-Yiddish Theater with Mike Burstyn. There is a charge. SUNDAY, NOV. 20 10:30 a.m. — Allon Schoener, "Intimate Portraits of the Jewish Experi- ence." 1 p.m. — Michael Korenblit, "Mommy, What Art Those Numbers on Your Arm?" 2 p.m. — Howard Schwartz, "On Jewish Fairy Tales." 3 p.m. — Rabbi Jack Riemer, "Windows Into a People's Soul." 4 p.m. — Michael Stanislawski will speak in Yiddish on "Jewish Life in Eastern Europe: Myth and Reality." -