On The Bookshelf 'Anne Frank: BUY THE FIRST ENTREE AT REGULAR PRICE AND GET TH SECOND ENTREE 25% OFF OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE. Not valid with any other offer. 1 Coupon Per Couple • Expires 3/31/99 CATERING WE CAN DO SOMETHING FABULOUS FOR THAT SPECIAL EVENT DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE A Little Bit Of New York Right Here In Bloomfield Hills LET US TAKE CARE OF THE FOOD! HOME OR OFFICE, ANY OCCASIONS, SHWAS, NO NOTICE NEEDED! 6646 Telegraph at Maple • Bloomfield Plaza • 248-932-0800 Find somepne wh o Your TRAYS DINING ROOM • CARRY-OUT BB BAR-B-QUE HOUSE (Former Checker Bar-B-Q) Is NOW OPEN (248) 968-7427 Lincoln Shopping Center 10-1/2 Mile Road & Greenfield Oak Park ■ (248) 968-0022 Click onto People-Voice Connecter Personals via the Internet. You'll be delighted just how easily our website allows you to read ads, place ads and respond to ads by e-mail. Get updated or new ads before they print in the newspaper. Find your type over the Internet! Try it today! Go to 3/5 1999 Breakfast ■ Lunch ■ Dinner After-Theater ■ Kiddie Menu 78 Detroit Jewish News and dick on Two years into her research on the biography, Muller was shown the new pages by Cornelius Sujik, international director of the Anne Frank Center c— \ U.S.A., who was a close friend of Anne's father, Otto. The pages in Anne's handwriting — three sides of two blue sheets and both sides of a salmon-colored sheet — include sharp descriptions of Anne's mother, Edith, and insights about her parents' difficult relationship. The salmon sheet, intended as a revi- sion of her planned introduc- tion to the book, tells of Anne's intention to keep the diary private. Because the Anne Frank: The Anne Frank Fonds Biography (Holt; $23) (Foundation) in is the first full-scale Basel, holders of biography of Anne, the copyright on written by a 31-year the diary, refused old German journal- to grant Muller ist, Melissa Muller. permission to Newsmaking in its reprint the pages, revelations, the book their contents presents new infor- appear in the mation about the per- book in a para- son responsible for phrased form. (A betraying the family Dutch newspaper in hiding and also recently printed uncovers five addi- the actual pages tional, previously and made them unknown pages of available on the revisions to the diary Internet.) Author Melissa Muller Muller presents According to evidence, based on Muller, Otto police reports and an Frank did not want the public to see investigation after the war, implicat- the 74 lines the remarkably percep- ing a cleaning woman, Lena van tive diarist wrote about her parents' Bladeren Hartog, as having leaked passionless marriage; she viewed information to the Gestapo that there their relationship as tragic because were Jews in a secret annex of Otto Edith loved Otto, and although he c( Frank's warehouse. respected and valued her, the love Hartog, whose husband worked at wasn't returned. the warehouse illegally (having The author writes that Otto Frank ignored a summons for labor ser- put these pages, which were a revi- vice), died in 1963, a few months sion of an earlier entry, along with before the case was reopened by the the new introduction into an enve- Amsterdam police. I n June, had she lived, Anne Frank would be 70 years old. Public interest in the young Anne Frank and in her diary — an account of her 25 months hid- ing from the Nazis in a secret annex in Amsterdam, is unceasing. It has now been translated into 55 lan- guages, with more than 25 million copies sold. Recent years have brought forth new editions of the diary, a revival of the Broadway play, docu- mentary films, chil- dren's books, disserta- tions and critical arti- cles — with frequent contention between the people and organi- zations who claim to represent her interests. A German journalist writes the first full-scale biography of World War Ifs most famous diarist.