Advertisement Have You Heard? by Feilx Cruz Hearing Aid Specialist I'm Felix Cruz, and I'm delighted to wel- come you to my new column appearing each week in the pages of this newspaper. In the weeks to come we'll be discussing hearing issues of interest to the general public, so stay tuned. If Ws been longer than you can remember since you had your hearing checked, now might be a good time to stop by LUCAS-CRUZ HEARING AID SERVICE fora quick, painless test. Our certified audiologist performs testing and evaluations on all insurance covered clients. Call us at 18899 W. 12 Mile Rd. in Lathrup Village (424-8450). HEAR AND NOW As the hearing instrument industry enters an era of improvements inspired by digi- tal design, the hearing impaired public has more reason than ever to take advantage of devices that will e p it to hear better. Such instruments include those that are rendered nearly invisible by in-the-ear and in-the-canal fit. The hearing impaired may also avail themselves of assistive listening devices that deliver specific speech and sound directly to their ears. There are closed-captioned devices for listening to TV, as well as hearing instrument features that help with telephone listening. The first step in any of these directions involves recognition of a hearing loss. In the weeks and months ahead, this column will pro- vide information that will aid the hearing impaired in taking this first step on the road to better hearing. P.S. Today's advanced hearing instruments work to alleviate the amplification of back- ground noise that plagued earlier models. CO I of Southfield r • PASSPORT • SPECIAL $ 795 1 set "Ir ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSISTANT EDITOR T his was no ordinary family. Their name was Warburg, and they in- cluded a Nobel Prize-winning scientist, a famed cellist, a pres- idential adviser, America's lead- ing Jewish philanthropist and a confidante of former British Prime Minister Harold Wilson. own shortcomings — was to blame for his mistakes. I magine a best-seller that has nothing to do with ro- mance or detectives or spies. Since 1988, Eternal Guilt: Forty Years of German-Jewish- Israeli Relations has been one FILM PROCESSING $3.00 OFF 36 exposures $2.00 OFF 24 exposures $1.00 OFF 12 exposures $1 495 • 358-2333 FRANKLIN PLAZA A Remarkable Family, Eternal Guilt, And The Nuremberg Trials Or 2 Sets "Must Be Done At The Same Time" 2nd set of prints Free 2 Photos per passport (with coupon) Not good with any other offer-C-41 process only. L -I L a 20%-50% off on large selection of frames Restore your old photos with our new in-house computer! We transfer your old movies, prints & slides to video cassette. 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Marriage — with the Schiffs and Loebs of Wall Street — brought them to the United States, where they achieved a kind of royal status and hob- nobbed with such figures as George Gershwin and Albert Einstein. But then the Nazis came to power and charged that the Warburgs were part of an in- ternational banking cartel. Mr. Chernow offers intimate details of generations of War- burgs, such as Siegmund War- burg, a man who considered reading newspapers a waste of time (instead, he read con- densed versions of stories, pre- pared for him at the office); who refused to learn to drive; who wanted to learn Russian, then told his tutor that illogical Russ- ian grammar — and not his own shortcomings — was to of Germany's biggest-selling books. Written by University of Bundesstaat government Pro- fessor Michael Wolffsohn, it has just been published in the Unit- ed States by Columbia Univer- sity Press. In Eternal Guilt, Professor Wolffsohn argues that Ameri- can Jews, Israelis and Germans all cling to their historical lega- cies in an effort to achieve con- temporary political goals. He considers the way in which the Holocaust has shaped German- Jewish relations, how the Holo- caust has replaced religion in defining both Israelis and American Jews, and why Ger- The defendants at the Nuremberg trials. many has shifted from a posi- tion of unwavering support for Israel to one of criticism of the country's treatment of Pales- tinians. Professor Wolffsohn further discusses the marked difference in the way individual Germans and Jews treat each other, ver- sus how relations are conduct- ed on a formal, diplomatic level. Against State (Council on Foreign Relations Press), by Gidon Gottlieb, fo- cuses on conflicts that arise from nationalism and often threaten world peace, while con- sidering such complex and in- tricate issues as self- determination and the respon- sibilities of world powers. Mr. Gottlieb argues that "the dominant norms of interna- tional law and diplomacy are ill adapted to coping with the kind of strife that has erupted in Yu- goslavia and in the Caucasus and that could become common elsewhere in Eurasia." While offering his own solu- tion to dealing with issues of sovereignty and nationhood, Mr. Gottlieb considers crises not only in Yugoslavia but in Ire- land and the Middle East. Mr. Gottlieb is director of the Middle East Peace Project and visiting senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. F ifty years ago, Telford Taylor had the dubious distinction of sitting day after day, hour af- ter hour, in the same room with Hermann Goering, Rudolph Hess and Albert Speer. Now, Mr. Taylor has written