Illtacatbes RESTAURANT & LOUNGE EXCELLENT HUNGARIAN, AND EUROPEAN CUISINE YOUR perfect choice for birthdays, anniversaries, showers, rehearsal parties, re- tirement parties or any special occasion." Ellized Media News &Reviews. Strolling Gypsy Musicians Fridays & Saturdays Closed Mondays 1235 Ottawa Street • Windsor 5 mins. from Tunnel • U.S. Exchange For Reservations 1-800-963-1903 or (519) 252-0246 INE111•11MIM4 .1L 1 alAta Get Results... Advertise in our Entertainment Section! Call The Sales Department (248) 354-7123 Ext. 209 'TN JEW= NEWS Herman Yagoda Invites You To Enjoy The Best Food & Fun In Town! "The lamb chops at Herman Yagoda's McVees continue to draw raves" Danny Raskin The Jewish News GARY ROSE TRIO Every Saturday Evening 2/13 1998 92 MC VEE'S 23380 Telegraph (South of I 0 Mile Rd.) (248) 352-8243 Southfield From "The Illegal Camera": Concealed cameras resulted in photo fragments and strange angles. HANGING AROUND Each picture taken in the Netherlands between 1940 and 1945 represented an act of heroism. During the Nazi occupation, pho- tos were prohibited. Photographers found by the Nazis were arrested. "The Illegal Camera," the exhibit at the Janice Charach Epstein Museum Gallery through March 19, shows the pictures taken with undercover cam- eras by people who wanted to docu- ment everyday life under the Nazi regime. Street scenes with German soldiers and starved people collapsed on the pavement show the horror of the times. The images — whether captured as fragments or at strange angles — are that way because cameras were con- cealed while the shutters were snapped. With lenses partially blocked by pockets or sheets of paper, there could be no full or usual scenes. "Eighty percent of the Jews in the Netherlands were killed," said Professor Sidney Bolkosky, whose gallery lecture will give insight into the atmosphere in the country at the time the pictures were taken. His talk begins at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 1. "After Poland, the Netherlands had the largest number of Jews destroyed, and I think it's important for people to know the routine of the Holocaust, how organized it was. I also will show how the process of hiding people failed. "Fewer than 7,000 of 140,000 Dutch Jews survived." The secret visual documenta- tion gained attention shortly after the liberation of the Netherlands. The pictures are considered important both as a human doc- ument of the war and as a legacy of determined acts of resistance, according to Sylvia Nelson, gallery director. — Suzanne Chessler Israel? Intermarriage? Sex? Read all about it in Schmoozing, a new book by Joshua Halberstam (Perigee Books; $13), in which American Jews sound off about who they are and who they want to be in the century ahead. Halberstam, born into a renowned family of Chasidic rabbis but now a secular academic, was struck "by the similarities in attitudes that I hear when schmoozing in Yiddish with my Chasidic family in Brooklyn and when schmoozing with my totally secular Jewish friends out in the real world." In Schmoozing, Halberstam and Jews from all walks of life take aim at the stereotypes that have defined them for years, dispelling those that are false and pondering those based in truth, to come up with some interesting tidbits. • Jews, per capita, give more to charity than any other group in the U.S., but American Jews continue to be uneasy about their stereotypical relationship to money, and younger Jews are more likely to give money to non-Jewish caus- es. • Jews are experi- encing a revival in religious and communal inter- est, but the per- centage of athe- ists and agnostics among Jews is high- er than in any other religion, and a substantial number of the country's Buddhists are Jews. • According to a major study by University of Chicago researchers, Jews have more sex than any other ethnic group in the United States — despite the image of the undersexed Jewish nebbish made famous in Woody Allen's films. Yet, the book shows, those stats mask the bitter fight lurking beneath the numbers: the "Jewish battle of the sexes." Halberstam best sums up the meaning of his book in the final two lines: "The secret for the long life of 1,MARTS, 11,12,RMARR,A.F. CSE.OLIZ schmoozing GTLRCOTYPE. CMCYIES •TNIC, P4NATT 077114 ,,12.,1r11,1 Joi:hua Nzib,rstant,Ph.D "The Illegal Camera" will be on exhibit through March 19 at the Janice Charach Epstein Museum Gallery at the Maple/Drake Jewish Community Center. Gallery hours are 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Mondays- Wednesdays, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursdays and 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Sundays. (248) 661-7641. BETWEEN THE PAGES American Jews and money? Intelligence? Guilt? Body Image?