WITH RATES THIS 111116 WHO NEEDS A GIMMICKY HEADLINE? 64J.*: Jewish Book Fair A Memoir For Our Times MONTH CD Local professor's book is a tribute to her mother's moral courage. ■ BIRMINGHAM BRANCH 1732 West Maple Road Birmingham, MI 48009 (248) 723-4800 FAX (248) 723-4848 HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9-6. SAT. 9-12 FARMINGTON HILLS BRANCH 31000 Northwestern Hwy.. Suite 150 Farmington Hills. MI 48334 (248) 538-7600 FAX (248) 538-7580 HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9-6 PARAMOENT BAN K Your Hometown Bank Cr 'Annual Percentage Yield for balances of 5500 minimum. '.Annual Percentage Yield lor balances of 52,500 minimum. LENDER 10.00 OFF WITH THIS AD Wood Rockers tram $98100 $ 168.00 Gliders from Child's Rockers from ... $48.00 Rocker Cushions & Accessories FREE LAYAWAY • WE SHIP ANYWHERE 21325 Telegraph, Southfield (Between 8 & 9 Mile) (248) 948-1060 11 / 3 2000 50 36539 Cratiot Ave., Mt. Clemens 3337 Auburn Rd., Auburn Hills (South of 16 Mk) (Between Adams is Squirrel) (810) 790-3065 (248) 853-7440 nca's mother, Mimi Vlasopolos, graced her daughter's par- ties with a charm and intelligence that guided conversations from philoso- phy and politics to the the- ater. She was the first person I knew who talked about her Holocaust experiences. I now regret my youthful pri- orities, the missed opportunities to meet her more often especially after reading her story. In a compelling and beautifully written memoir No Return Address, A Memoir of Displacement (Columbia University Press, $24.95), Anca Vlasopolos, a literature professor at Wayne State University, writes about her parents, Hermina "Mimi" (nee Grunberg) and Paul Vlasopolos, who both had the moral courage to main- tain their humanity during a most inhumane time. In this coming-of-age story, Anca learns from her parents that humankind is divided not by religion or citizenship alone, but by a willing- ness to be moral. This is sometimes as simple as not doing harm to others, sometimes as difficult as standing by those threatened because of their reli- gion or ethnic background. A decade ago, three years after her mother's death, Anca began to write her parents' story. Many nights she lay awake in her Grosse Pointe home, writing passages of the book in her head. "It came out so quickly," she says, "it was like writing poetry." Anca tells how her mother, a beau- tiful Romanian Jew descended from an Orthodox family of kobanim (high priests), spends her 26th year in A Visit our Birmingham branch and Farmington Hills branch, or call 1 - 800 - 421 - Bank to discover the bank where personal service and BIG RATES are Paramount. INSURED NO RETURN ADDRESS SHARON LUC KERMAN Editorial Assistant MONEY MARKET FDIC da, A YOUR DUTAILIER 0 HEADQUARTERS Anca Vlasopolos German labor and concentration camps, including Auschwitz in Poland. By the time the young woman returns home, family mem- bers, her fiance and former students all have been killed. After the war, Mimi becomes a respected film editor and translator in Bucharest, Romania. She meets and marries Paul Vlasopolos, an econom- ics professor. When Anca is 7, her father has the misfortune of being selected Romania's ambassador to Greece the day his sponsor is arrested by the communist government. A few months later, he is imprisoned for a year. The weakened Vlasopolos suc- cumbs to the flu and dies three years later. When Mimi applies to leave the Romania with Anca, she is blacklisted from all legitimate employment by the government of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. The waiting takes two years. Darkness And Love Like many episodes in this book, alongside periods of darkness are deli-