CHOOSING A COLLEGE CAN BE LIKE GOING ON BLIND DATE... ••t ative writing at the University of British Columbia. In The Old Brown Suitcase, she addresses a teen's problem of immigration: peers and language, parents with a different culture, religious and ethnic identity, memories of the past. It was May 14, 1948, and Is- rael was celebrating its forth- coming independence. We all huddled over the radio to hear the news. There were only two families in the apartment, yet our living room seemed to be filled with people. I felt the presence of shadows from the (Warsaw) Ghetto hovering about, listening. It felt as if all of them had gathered here with us. Grandfather, Mrs. Solomon, Sal- lye, the young teachers, Hala and Fela; and behind them, all the people who died in the concen- tration camps and on typhus-rid- den streets of the Ghetto. I wo new books focus on the Holocaust, but their mes- sages are not ones of de- spair. In Against All Hope: Resis- tance in the Nazi Concentra- tion Camps (Paragon House), Hermann Langbein tells the sto- ry of resistance at Auschwitz — the sabotages, the escapes and the uprisings. Himself a prisoner and a leader of resistance at Auschwitz, Mr. Langbein writes of the polit- ical prisoners, the Jews, the con- victed criminals, the Gypsies and the Jehovah's Witnesses who united to fight the Nazis. "In all camps, many people who were subject to boundless terror, with no hope of help from the outside, did try to resist and were not discouraged by repeat- ed disappointments," Mr. Lang- bein says. "The fact that there was such resistance is convinc- ing proof that while an inhuman regime can murder people, it can- not completely stamp out human impulses on the part of those al- lowed to live." In Heroes of the Holocaust (Londonbooks, Miami, Fla.), Arnold Geier writes of the men and women who, in unthinkable times, performed remarkable, equally incomprehensible, acts of courage. Among those of whom he writes: the German general who saved a Jewish family; the two brothers who, after years of sep- aration, meet in Dachau and help each other survive; the ship cap- tain who dumps his cargo to make room for 600 Jews. Mr. Geier was born and raised in Germany and served in the U.S. Army's counterintelligence branch during World War II. ❑ .frier \A/c:ilks enjoy I .) and 'eel *is 1037 y . 113 ro- ne,nt, qaa e :ere in ,in and !onest, truly e th :gh this e ex- *hand. it: walk , \Nith nave tters. 39A7 ilALE • r tinidn THIS COULD BE THE START OF SOME- THING BIG...Business-minded males and females looking for long-term c ' ent from 72 year old (looks er ege. Known for itS on. Well built, conveniently locafied, non-smoking campuses (Troy, Novi, Clinton Town- ship, Port Huron). Not into music, fine arts or sports, but ready to offer studious-types a in account- ing, computer inWriTTion systems, finance, general business, manage- ment or marketing. Also interested in kzQr„,==degreed) for commit- ment to ai aaaltgr's degree in finance, mana eme t, professional accountancy (non-business types welcome) and taxation (accoun- tants and lawyers a plus), age and race not a factor. Available days, evenings and Saturdays for intelli- gent discussions on principles of accounting, international finance, behavorial management and the like leading to a career. LET'S GET 4-1E IF WE WOULD BE A GOOD MATCH! OUR PLACE... H e c Id do lunch... 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. or get together after work... 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Visit either our Troy or Novi campuses. Give us a call to let us know if you'll be there ir (810) 689-8282. Walsh College is the best business decision you'll ever make! WALSH 1 ARE YOU OUT THERE? I'm here just frors'" • (4 • --) u are and s(. afar, n dining in(.3 physic;- fi non-st: twe en Z., ude 554:: LIFE IS Sharin; ✓ orrion turesor health smok n; similar ties. 'm bui d, al and no right lac 2'1-44 ( e-rnr-, ,,r. • spond, 7 A IMO& attract moie, experiE Cr haired. a •,,,vomr.. both kcc The more you know, the better. ct 1994 CUTLAS S per %Month 1995 SONATA 1994 SAAB 9000 CSE Was $33,505 mo. Lease ...$27,670 LIEBMAN LEMAN LIESMIIN ladsmoble 70math dodgy:lbw repprood old Lome nospanebb hr. OptIcel to Furthest 61mTslmd si Imo hectors. To, Me, datindim & . • he Wm LW min perywili2:0 cap osst Wean Mk chirp cliOt Fermis ow 15,. • es "ZZ=4)11==== sic 4" OLDSMOBILE L_ On Telegraph at the Tel-12 Mall. Southfield A monument to the heroes and martyrs of the Warsaw Ghetto. 354-3300 '36 mo. closed end lease. $1500 cap cost reduction pkis 1st mo. pymt.. sec. dep. tax, title, ;cense & • tiyuND On Teleuraph at the T Mall, Southfield 35 4-3300 SAAB On Telegraph at the Tel-12 Mall. Southfield 35 4-33001 0) r-- CC w CO CD CD CD 10: