OAKLAND COUNTY'S PREMIER LIFESTYLE & FASHION MAGAZINE hoping to put as much distance as possible between them and anyone who can recognize and denounce them. Here, Klemperer's entries undergo a profound shift in character. They become long, almost surreal narratives of a harrowing journey through a strange, strange land. His description of the destruction of Dresden, of the chaos and numbing terror, is strobo- scopic. The Klemperers make their way to Munich and eventually witness the collapse of the Third Reich. Suddenly, everyone begins to reinvent the past: "To what extent are coats now being turned," he notes bitterly, "to what extent can one trust? Now everyone here was always an enemy of the [Nazi] Party." Klemperer has this wry assessment of one of the occupying armies: " the Americans make neither a vindic- tive nor an arrogant impression. They are not soldiers in the Prussian sense at all ... they do not carry a bayonet, only a short rifle or a long revolver ready at hand; the steel helmet is worn as comfortably as a hat, pushed forward or back, as it suits them." At this point, a certain odd coinci- dence pleads for attention: Klemperer was a cousin of the renounced con- ductor Otto Klemperer. Otto's son, Werner, became an actor, starring in the impossibly silly '60s American sit- corn Hogans Heroes, in which he played the commandant of a POW camp housing a gaggle of irrepressibly sneaky Allied soldiers. The closing shot, over which the credits were flashed, showed one of those old-fashioned German helmets with a preposterous spike attached to the top, onto which a well-broken-in American Army officer's cap had been hung at a jaunty angle. And, serious as I Will Bear Witness may be, it will be the exceptional reader who does not flash to that shot from Hogan's Heroes. The tale is not over, though. By train, milk truck and donkey cart, but mostly on foot, Victor and Eva slowly make their way through an anarchic postwar Germany, back finally in Dresden, in the newly established Russian zone. Their house in the suburbs — which had been appropriated years ago — was untouched in the bomb- ing. Red tape? Why, no — no red tape at all, a polite local official assures them. Just walk right in. And, in Victor's final entry, so they do. is a new glossy, full color section be appearing monthly in The Jewish News! Style magazine at The Jewish News will combine lifestyle, fashion, home design, local personalities, the arts and more! You will reach Oakland county's most affluent readers with an average income of over $140,300* a year. Style Magazine and The Jewish News — the perfect an upscale buying audience in an ideal, glossy editorial For advertising information, please contact your account executive or Kristen Komlen at (248) 354-6060, ext. 209. *1998 Simmons Jewish News Study.