44

Friday, November 8, 1985

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

FOR YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT & SECURITY NEEDS
SAVE ON MODERNIZATION — SUMMER & WINTER

Insulated Steel Door Entry Lock
• 1" dead bolt • Steel Frame
• Magnetic weather stripping
• Energy tax credit

FREE INSTALLATION ON
Vinyl Thermal
Replacement Windows.

• Never need painting.
• Qualify for tax credits.

DC

J

• Roofing
• Steel doors
• Vinyl replacement windows

a Storm windows

• Storm doors
• Awnings

FREE. ESTIMATES • LOWEST PRICES AROUND • FAMILY OWNED • WE DO INSURANCE WORK

PONTIAC.
851-8075

S.G. and SONS
24361 Greenfield Rd. • Southfield, MI 48075

CALL 8 am-9 pm MiiIN-FRI • 9am-5pm SAT 8 SUN

•••••• ,,p4 it t,

•

A New and Unique

DETROIT
531-9824

call

Martin Lattin

t

(313) 354-6356

4 1

Silver & Jewelry Appraisals
ar Reasonable Rates.

11

A Young Man Growing Up In Boro Park
Overcomes An Identity Crisis.

*NEW YORK MAGAZINE

• • •
"A remarkable American documentary ..."

*THE VILLAGE VOICE • • ."

"A sweeping family chronicle ..."

KADDISH

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1985, 9:30 P.M.

THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS

Afterglow immediately following the film presentation.
Donation: $20 per couple
Tickets available at: Cafe Katon
Lakewood Specialty
Sperber's Karry-Out
For Reservations call: 544-4592, 557-3810

presented by:
The Bine' Akiva Fellowship in support of youth activities.

Donations are tax deductible as allowed by law and should be made payable to Bnei Akiva Fellowship.

WERE

BOOKS

• DIAMONDS

*Way to Purchase Diamonds*

From $ 259 installed

EXPERTS IN:

• Siding
• Gutters
• Security products

co t?'

Oats OPEN!!

dry is done and the dishes are
clean and they have a few mo-
ments to think about their col-
lege days and their college
dreams and maybe wonder
where they all went and what
happened to their sorority sis-
ters and that great looking guy
they sat next to in Chemistry
201.
They may be tempted, at such
moments, to think about read-
ing Rona Jaffe's "reunion"
books.
Or they may even be tempted
to attend their next college reu-
nion. But they should know that
even Jaffe herself, the chronicler
of Ivy League get-togethers, was
"too scared" to attend any of her
Radcliffe reunions. After pub-
lishing 12 books and having at
least one of them made into a
film, after hobnobbing with such
stars as Marilyn Monroe and
Paul Newman and Shelly Win-
ters in courses at the Actors'
Studio in New York, after ap-
pearing on every major talk
show in the country, Rona Jaffe
chickened out.
Whenever you go to your reu-
nion," she said, "you go back to
the scene of the crime. They
sent out a questionnaire that
asked me to bring pictures of
my children and husband to put

Book Fair Schedule

The 34th annual Jewish Book
Fair will officially open at 8
p.m. Saturday at the main
Jewish Community Center.
Sportscaster-author Howard
Cosell will be the opening night
speaker. Following is a list of
activities and speakers
scheduled for the book fair,
which runs through Nov. 17.
Unless otherwise noted, all
events are free and open to the
public.

SUNDAY

Looking for a store with panache and pizzazz?
The unusual accessories that no one has?
A sensational purse, a dynamic belt,
Mink checkbook covers that long to be felt.
Jewelry, sweats, many one of a kind,

Our fabulous selection will blow your mind.
Personalized attention with service at its best.
Compare our prices with all the rest.
If you're searching for a Unique Boutique,
Come visit us at SILVER STREAK.

S

Leslie Cody & Judye Glazer

ilver

Streak

ORCHARD MALL

851-3333

mon-Fri. 1 0-9
saturday 10-b

Orchard lake Rd., North of Maple Rd.

them on the bulletin board. I
didn't have any so I said I
couldn't go."
There's an irony somewhere
in there a parable of sorts. Rona
Jaffe, whose books are treasured
by millions of women, is not
that much different from her
readers. As she said of Ameri-
can women, "Everyone thinks
that everyone else is happy."
But if Jaffe had gone to her
class reunion, she probably
would not have been the only
one without a husband or with-
out children. But the fear that
she would stand out in the
crowd that she first joined when
she was a mere 15 years old
kept her far from Cambridge.
"We're all trained to put on a
good show," she said, "Not just
men have been forced to be
macho and pretend that every-
thing is all right. More than
anyone will ever realize or
admit — women have also been
forced to put on a good front."
Even Rona Jaffe, whose books
mirror women's fears, give a
voice to women's dreams, likes
to put on a good show. She, too,
enters into the conspiracy that
everything is O.K. But at least
her books tip us off that there is
a lie being lived in much of
America. ❑

10 a.m. — Arlene Kushner
1 p.m. — Wolf Blitzer
2 p.m. — Young People's
Theatre of Ann Arbor,
"Shtetl Tales," for children,
admission fee
3 p.m. — Rachel Eytan
4 p.m. — Rev. Douglas Huneke
5:30 p.m. — Rabbi Haskel
Lookstein
8 p.m. — Chaim Potok

MONDAY
SISTERHOOD DAY

10 a.m. — Shoshana Kalisch
Noon — Luncheon, admission
fee, reservations required
1 p.m. — Rona Jaffe
8 p.m. — Beate Klarsfeld

TUESDAY
HADASSAH DAY

9 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Riki
Levenson, creative writing
workshop for children
10 a.m. — Joseph Amiel
Noon — Luncheon, admission
fee, reservations required
1 p.m. — Charles Silberman
7 p.m. — Comedian Alan King
8 p.m. — Rabbi Sherwin Wine

WEDNESDAY

10 a.m.
Jehuda Reinharz
Noon — Luncheon, admission
fee, reservations required
1 p.m. — Norman Garbo
8 p.m. — Francine Klagsbrun

—

THURSDAY

10 a.m. — Faye Moskowitz
Noon — Luncheon, admission
fee, reservations required
1 p.m. — Monique High
8 p.m. — Sol Linowitz

NOV. 16

8 p.m.
Mike Burstyn,
English-Yiddish musical pre-
sentation, admission fee

—

NOV. 17

10 a.m.
Ian Shapolsky
11 a.m. — Deborah Lipstadt
1 p.m. — Aranka Siegal
2 p.m. — Young People's
Theatre of Ann Arbor,
"Shtetl Tales," for children,
admission fee
2 p.m. — Sylvia Rothschild
3 p.m. — Irvin Zeitlin

—

Oral lip-reading and sign lan-
guage total communication in-
terpreters will be provided for
the Cosell and Klarsfeld
speeches. For details, call the
Jewish Center, 661-1000, ext.
250; or adviser, Beverly Lois
Eder Mitchell, 541-7218 (TDD/
voice). For reservations to the
luncheons, call the Center.
Transportation to and from
the book fair will be available
from the Jimmy Prentis Morris
Branch of the Jewish Commu-
nity Center on Monday, Wed-
nesday and Thursday, beginning

