BOOKS I
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WHY YOUR
PARTY PLANS
SHOULD
INCLUDE US.
presents
Fall List
IT H E A T R El
s
capita
Performing your political musical
favorites including:
Whatever occasion
you're planning,
well customize all our
banquet services
to meet your
needs and budget.
Ask us for more
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nsus ll
"You Fill Out
"Who'll Put a Bom$ on..addam
Sad
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er of the PAC”
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"The best musical satire on Washington
ever seen" - The Washington Times -
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Gorden Inn. This change will bring about updated services with even more
emphasis on gracious hospitality and meticulous attention to your travel
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Continued from preceding page
For history buffs, Dreyfus: A
Family Affair 1789-1945
(Harper Collins, September),
looks like a heavyweight en-
try. Michael Burns traces the
French Jewish dynasty from
the .days of Danton and
Robespierre through the
famous trial of Alfred Dreyfus
to the death of Alfred's
favorite granddaughter in
Auschwitz.
Journalist Ruth Gruber,
author of Raquela: A Woman
of Israel, has a splendid
history-memoir of her early
life called Ahead of Time
(Wynwood Press, available
now). Gruber describes her
precocious childhood — she
attended NYU at 15 — and
the love of German that led
her to Cologne in 1932.
She also evokes the bygone
world of Williamsburg in
Brooklyn: "Moore Street
smelled of pickles in big bar-
rels, of roasted chestnuts and
sweet potatoes, of jelly apples
and knishes and haisse arbes.
Each morning a man who
looked like the giant in 'Jack
the Giant-killer,' with sweat
dampening his shirt, carried
a huge mound of ice in iron
claws from his ice wagon up
the stairs to our flat over the
liquor store that Papa
owned."
Two other books focus on
more recent history. The
Secret Alliance (Farrar Straus
& Giroux, November) by Tad
Szulc, the New York Times
reporter, looks at the rescue of
Jews in Eastern Europe,
North Africa and the Middle
East since World War II.
Given access to secret ar-
chives and extensive inter-
views, Szulc links the success
of several operations to a
secret pact between the
Mossad, Israel's secret ser-
vice, and the American
Jewish Joint Distribution
Committee.
In the Sewers of Lvov by
Robert Marshall (Schribner's,
September) is a story of
courage and survival during
World War II. In May of 1943,
during a German pogrom in
Poland, a small group of Jews
fled to the underground
sewers in the city, where they
managed to survive for 14
months, emerging, emaciated
and nearly blind, only after
the Russians liberated the
city.
Not only a must-read but a
must-see for the fall is Per-
sonal Witness by Abba Eban
(Putnam, October). A compa-
nion volume to a new PBS
series, Personal Witness
traces the state of Israel's for-
tunes with a perspective on
world leaders that only an in-
sider like Eban can provide.
No season is complete
without some ruminations of