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January 09, 1987 - Image 60

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-01-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

The Best in Dining

CARL 'S

3020 Grand River

How to live
with someone
who's living
with cancer.

HOUSE

833-0700

'

Free Parking

Nationally known for serving 4-H Prize Blue Ribbon

Steak and Chops. Finest Seafood and Liquors.

Private Dining Rooms for Banquets and Parties

Serving daily from 11:30 — Sunday from 2 p.m

All beet

aged in
our own
coolers

Dinner 4 p.m.-1 a.m. 1 1

Lunch 11 a.m.

Banquet Facilities



NOW APPEARING
TUES. THRU SAT.

T ROY

ATTRACTIONS

Make Your New Year's Eve Reservations Now

Reservations

3 62 -1 2 62

"'hen one person gets
cancer, everyone in the family
suffers.
Nobody knows better than
we do how ill WM help and
understanding is needed. That's
why our service and rehabili-
tation programs emphasize
the whole family, not just the
cancer patient.
Among our regular services
we provide information and
guidance to patients and families,
transport patients to and from
treatment, supply home care
items and assist patients in their
return to everyday life.
Life is what concerns us. The
life of cancer patients. The lives of
their families. So you can see we
are even more than the research
organization we are so well
known to be.
No one faces cancer alone.

tie AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY'

Concourse. Top of Troy • 755 W. Big Beaver

ANIIIIIM



a

■ 111111.

al

inntrif s Chop House

SUNDAYS NOW!

Greek, Italian,

American & Seafood
Cuisine

SUNDAYS NOW!

OUR GREAT MON. KITE ITALIAN BUFFET IS NOW ON SUNDAYS!

4 p.m. to 9 p.m.

FEATURING 10 ENTREES PLUS ROUND OF BEEF CARVED AT BUFFET TABLE

$ 1 I 95 Adults

I ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT

I

$ 795 10 and Under

SUN. BRUNCH ALSO FEATURES ROUND OF BEEF CARVED AT BRUNCH TABLE

$995

Adults

I ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

$

495 10 and Under

ILIVE MUSIC & DANCING BEGINS WED. THRU SAT. ON JAN. 211

2 5080 Southfield Road at 10 Mile

ENTERTAINMENT

569 08

-

UNION

SOVET
*-

NC

Phantom West, comprised of from left, Hankus Netsky, Rosalie
Gerut, Jeff Warshauer and Merryl Goldberg, will perform in
Detroit Jan. 20.

Hadassah Fund Raiser
To Feature Quartet

Greater Detroit Chapter of
Hadassah will present a pro-
gram of music and discussion
to benefit the Hadassah Israel
Education Services at 12:30
p.m. Jan. 20 at Temple Beth El.
Phantom West, a group from
the Klezmer Conservatory
Band, will perform. The pro-
ceeds from the concert will be
used to establish a Detroit
Chapter Hadassah scholarship
fund for an Israeli student who
wishes to attend the Hadassah
Community College in Israel.
Phantom West, a Boston-
based group consisting of four
members, was expelled from
the Soviet Union in May 1985
for meeting and playing with
the Phantom Orchestra, a
group of Jewish and non-
Jewish refuseniks in Tblisi,

Georgia.
The group is comprised of
Rosalie Gerut, singer and
guitarist, who was a lead
singer with the Klezmer Con-
servatory Band; Hankus
Netsky, director of the
Klezmer Band; Merryl
Goldberg, recipient of the
Zamir Young Composer
Award; and Jeff Warschauer,
solo guitar arranger and a
teacher at the New England
conservatory.
The group will also describe
it's experiences in the Soviet
Union.
The program is open to the
entire community. Dessert and
coffee will be served. There is a
charge. For reservations and
information, call Hadassah,
683-5030 or 357-2920.

Uri Zvi Greenberg:
Prophesy In Poetry

.

ZEV GOLAN

Special to The Jewish News

THE TRADITION CONTINUES!

NOW OPEN FOR DINNER

TUES.-THURS. 5 p.m.-10 p.m. FRI. & SAT. 5:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m.
SUNDAY 5 p.m.-9:30 p.m.

20097 W. 12 MILE RD. CORNER EVERGREEN (COUNTRY VILLAGE CENTER), SOUTHFIELD

60

Friday, January 9, 1987

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

353-5121

he underground war
for Israel's indepen-
dence, the Holocaust,
and the Six Day War all appear
in the songs of Uri Zvi Green-
berg (1896-1981). Nothing un-
usual about that, except that
each of them appeared in
Greenberg's poetry 20 or more
years before they actually took
place!
The great Hebrew poet
Chaim Nachman Bialik once
asked Greenberg how he was
able to write of the Holocaust
and to describe the murder of
millions of Jews — in 1922.
Greenberg answered that this
was simply "what I saw before
my eyes." A more startling
secret is revealed by Uri Zvi's
widow, Aliza: "Many of the
poems in Rehovot Hanahar, a
1951 volume describing in de-
tail the atrocities of the

Holocaust, were written the
previous decade before Uri Zvi
had read the grim news reports
from Europe. Yet all the facts <
we know today correspond to
the poems."
Greenberg, however, does
more than prophesy, notes
philosopher Dr. Israel Eldad, a
student of Greenberg's work. •---\
In Holy of Holies, he imagines )
he has carried his mortally
wounded mother to the land of
Israel. She speaks:
Let me touch your body.. .
your garments are rough,
my son, soldier's clothes
and a rifle on your
shoulder. . . good for you my
son. . .
Once I wished to see you
robed only in silk.
This is no longer what I
wish.
While other Hebrew poets --\/
accompanied the Jewish )
people on its way and gave ex- —`
pression to the struggle for

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