THERE IS A REASON WHY STAR DELI IS ONE OF THE BEST CARRY OUT ONLY RESTAURANTS IN AMERICA! are still people among us whose memories are fresh about the Holocaust, about the role of Wagner's ideas and music as the Nazis used them. When a Holocaust survivor hears Wagner's Ride of the Valkyrie,' he thinks about the gas ovens." But Mordechai Virshubsky, a lib- eral-left politician who chairs the cultural committee of Tel-Aviv city council, dismisses the ban as "stupid" and self-defeating. "If you don't play someone because of what he was, then you're behaving like a totalitari- an regime. This is the worst kind of censorship." Virshubsky, who was born in Germany in 1930 and was brought here as a child refugee in 1939, con- tends that there are other ways to remember the Nazi atrocities. "Why deny ourselves the chance to hear this great, dramatic, important music? We are the poorer for it. We are punishing ourselves and gaining nothing by it. No one would be forced to go and listen to his music. "After all, we drive German cars, we teach the German language, we even translated 'Mein Kampf' into Hebrew. There are no taboos any more. We are making a mockery of ourselves." Many prominent Israelis musi- cians would like to play Wagner here. One of the most eminent, the pianist-conductor Daniel Barenboim, once tried, but was booed off the stage. Zubin Mehta, the Indian-born musical director of the Israel Philharmonic, has failed repeatedly to get the ban dropped. Israel Radio's music channel slips in a snatch of Wagner from time to time — and gets away with it. The ban is anchored in custom and use, not the law. Asher Fisch, musical director of the New Israel Opera, would like to introduce a Wagner opera into its program. He maintains that the deci- sion should be left to the musicians. "It's important," he says, "because everything that was composed after Wagner was influenced by Wagner to some extent. His sound is of a kind that our orchestras do not know. It is important for them to learn it." Yet, sotto voce, the Israeli-born Fisch does not see Wagner topping the charts here, if and when he is performed. "When we play Wagner in Israel," he predicts, "we will real- ize that musically it will not be a great success. I don't think the Israeli audience will go for this music." ❑ OUR HOMEMADE FAT-FREE TUNA ALSO CANT'T BE BEAT! EVERYBODY KNOWS WE HAVE THE BEST HOMEMADE TUNA IN TOWN! OPEN 1 DAYS -SAT. 7 AM TO 10 PM SUN. 7 AM TO 10 PM TRY OUR DELICIOUS HOMEMADE VEGETARIAN CHOPPED LIVER! OUR TRAYS CAN'T BE BEAT FOR QUALITY & PRICE! .$5.75. per person .$10.50 per person ON OUR BEAUTIFUL AUEADY IOW-MED MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS WITH THIS COUPON DELIVERY • Not Good Holidays • 10 Person Minimum 24555 W. 12 MILE Just west of Tele ra • h • Southfield Under Fire, Roth Resigns From U.S. Holocaust Museum Post JAMES D. BESSER Special to The Jewish News T he U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington has suffered another embarrass- ing public relations setback that supporters say could leave the institution more vulnerable to political control. John K. Roth, the Claremont McKenna College philosopher whose appointment as head of a new academ- ic arm of the 'museum generated fero- cious attacks from the right and unease among some mainstream Jewish lead- ers, resigned from the post on Monday before taking up his duties. The Museum's governing Council will not immediately select a new direc- tor for the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, created this year to enhance the Museum's stature as a world center for serious Holocaust scholarship. Museum sources say the focus will shift to finding a replacement for Walter Reich, the former Museum director who was ousted early this year. Roth's resignation represented a big victory for critics who charged that in a number of articles and essays he had made casual comparisons between cur- rent events and the Holocaust and that he had maligned Israel. But supporters say the successful campaign against Roth will damage the academic credibility of the Museum and lead to a new susceptibility to political pressure that will make it harder to attract serious scholars to the institution. In a letter last week orchestrated by supporters, 42 leading Holocaust schol- ars said that "none of us could conceive having academic involvement with the Center should any other criteria than scholarly excellence and administrative competence be imposed on the appointment of the director." But this week, a key signer, Hebrew (Oetroit's Original Discounter LEVIN'S BEAUTY SUPPLY WO011oomfield 851 7323 - Orchard Lake Road In The West Bloomfield Plaza eatca 74e Best 1 Meigic Reviews in ,A , 7N eNtertaimattent 7/3 1998 33