FICTION Little Things Continued from preceding page Remember the 11th Commandment: "And Thou Shalt be Informed" p ft% (-1 e".'N You've read the five books of Moses. Isn't it time to try the Fifty-Two Issues of the Detroit Jewish News? It may not be holy, but it's weekly! And such a bargain. To order your own subscription call 354-6060. True to her word, she never gave up the apartment, even when her winters in Florida ran into spring and then summer. "Why should I come home?" she would ask me on the telephone from Miami on the Fourth of July. "It's not even hot here." However, to her newly-made Floridian friends, "I have a home up north, you know, and I'll probably go for a visit next month." But next month never came and the apartment became a storehouse for possessions and memories that my mother would never give up. And now I have returned to the Bronx, considerably more mellow and minus the hostilities I carried with me when I left. The job of giving up the apart- ment is now mine. The furniture dealer has been contacted, the charitable organizations, always happy for contributions, have been called, and the realtor has been notified that after 40 years, 4B is now for rent. I drive around the block at least six times looking for a place to park. I am luckier than my former boyfriend; someone pulls an old Chevrolet out of a spot not far from my mother's building. I walk down the street I used to roller-skate on and notice the neighborhood is only vaguely familiar; the kosher deli is now a bodega, the candy store where I'd quench my thirst on egg creams is a bar. I pass two little black girls jumping rope as I enter the' front entrance to the apartment house and look around the once elegantly furnished lobby. There is an old stained sofa pushed off to a corner. Its stuffing is falling out. I walk into the mail room where I once played hide-and- seek. My mother's mailbox is crammed full of junk mail ad- dressed to Occupant and Tenant. One envelope is addressed to Our Friendly Neighbor. I laugh. My mother was not a friendly neighbor. The names on the letter boxes have changed. Levy and Goldberg have been replaced by Gomez and Hernadez. I open the elevator door. The walls are covered with obscenities, which I didn't know until I was too old to derive any satisfaction from using them. I feel for the keys in my pocket. There are four, one for each lock on the door of my mother's apartment. The elevator stops at one. A very old lady eyes me suspici- ously, hesitates, and slowly walks in. She looks vaguely familiar. "Mrs. Waxman?" I ask uncertainly. "Yes, who is it?" she asks nervously as though I had rung her doorbell in the middle of the night. "I'm sure you don't remember, but I used to live here." Moving a little closer, she looks up at me and a faint smile crosses her wrinkled face. "Of course, 4B, what a big Roberta Graff is a writer in Woodmere, NY. 38 Friday, July 4, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS beautiful girl you've become," she says appraising all 5 feet 2 inches of me. "I can't believe you remember me, after all these years," I re- ply. "Why, who could forget that white carriage?" ❑ Senate Passes Measure On Israeli Embassy Washington (JTA) — A measure approved by the Senate last week would prohibit the construction of any new em- bassy or consulate in Israel unless it is within five miles of the Knesset. Introduced by Sen. Jesse Helmes (R-NC), the amendment was incorporated into a bill authorizing $1.1 billion for security improvements at U.S. diplomatic facilities abroad before the package was approved by voice vote on the Sentate floor. If included in the final version worked out with the House of Representatives, it would effec- tively force the Administration either to change its policy on not having an embassy in Jerusalem or to refrain from leaving its cur- rent embassy, which is said to have some major security flaws. The measure passed by the Senate earmarks a requested $83 million for construction of a new Israel embassy and $41 million for a consulate only on the condition that they are located within five miles of the Knesset, inside the 1967 boun- daries. The wording thus permits the construction of a new embassy or consulate in West Jerusalem, where the Knesset is located, but not in the eastern part of the city which was captured in the 1967 war. There are currently two diplomatic facilities in Jerusalem — a consulate in the western part and a cultural center and visa office in the Old City. State Department spokesman Charles Redman indirectly criticized the measure approved by the Senate. "Relocating an embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem while the status of Jerusalem remains unresolved would undermine the role of the United States as the principal intermediary in the Arab-Israeli conflict," Redman said. In any case, the State Depart- ment spokesman stressed, no one in the Administration is "up in arms" at this stage, as the provision might well be omitted from the final authorization measure adopted when the two houses of Congress reconcile the packages they have approved. The House version contains no such condition on constructing new facilities in Israel.