ON SALE TODAY! LL SPECIAL LIMITED HOLIDAY ENGAGEMENT Les Miz 4 WEEKS ONLY! DECEMBER 9 - JANUARY 4 CALL TICKETMASTER: (248) 645-6666 Tickets also available at The Fisher Theatre Box Office, all ticketmaster outlets or at tim.ticketmaster.com . Groups (20+): (313) 871-1132 or visit wumnederlanderdetroit.corn Vgag FISHER THEATRE www.lesmis.com New Hours: DELI AND GOURMET RESTAURANT Mon Sat 7 8 - - Closed Sundays Arts Life On The Bookshelf READING from page 125 Wednesday, Nov. 12, at the West Bloomfield JCC, writes about the power of the 23rd Psalm. In 15 chapters, one for each line of the Psalm, Rabbi Kushner gives his insights into what he calls "this corn- pact spiritual masterpiece" and "this masterpiece of faith and comfort." Rabbi Kushner summarizes the power of this Psalm in this way: "In a mere 57 words of Hebrew and just about twice that number in English translation, the author of the 23rd Psalm gives us an entire theolo- gy, a more practical theology than we can find in many books. He teaches us to look at the world and see it as God would have us see it." Rabbi Kushner, who has spent many years studying the Book of Psalms (he wrote his doctoral disser- tation on its history), shares his insights through stories. This, togeth- er with his accessible, warm writing style, result in a book that readers can turn to again and again, as they do the Psalm itself. They will find the world of those 15 lines enriched by the wisdom of Rabbi Kushner. r ORDER YOUR BREAK-THE-FAST TRAYS EARLY I FOR YOM KIPPOR FROM GATEWAY DELI I I I I 1 . FREE I I 1 per person 1 Not good with clay other offer $ Expires 10/,' 0/03 ... .. ai; 21754 W. 11 MILE RD. • HARVARD ROW • 248-352-4940 FAX: 352-9393 Coffee Cake or Noodle Kugel with order . ' 1 3.25 * ** * *STAIRWAY LIFTS* * * * * THE CAREFREE WAY TO CLIMB STAIRS When you're disabled, or just not able to move around as freely as you once could, stairs can be a real problem. But there is a simple answer. The powered stairway lift. Easily installed to fit curved or straight stairs. They give you back the ability to move around your own home. Folds back-gets in nobody's way. CALL OR STOP BY FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION I love my Stairway Lift! It takes me up and down the stairs with the push of a but- ton. Call for details! ACTON RENTAL & SALES LARRY ARONOFF (31 3) 891 -6500 - Learn in your spare time and at your own pace One on One Teacher student interaction To 9/26 2003 126 (248) 540-5550 625740 Attend For teen LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR PROGRAM GO TO We appreciate your business! The understanding of evil is often considered the purview of the theolo- gian or the philosopher, but has also been addressed by writers throughout the ages. The word, and even the concept, had pretty much fallen into disuse outside a religious context, until recently revived by President Bush. Now, a new series will approach the subject through contemporary scholars and writers, although not from the president's perspective. The series will cover the seven deadly sins, sin by sin, with the first book just out. Envy by Joseph Epstein (Oxford University Press; $17.95) is an essay, with cartoons, in Epstein's lucid, lit- erate prose. It encompasses the per- sonal, the literary, the philosophical and the scholarly (a great deal in a mere 100+ pages). It doesn't lack for humor, either. Envy, Epstein writes, is pos- sibly the most endemic of the seven deadly sins. "Apart from Socrates, Jesus, Marcus Aurelius, Saint Francis, Mother Teresa and only a few others, at one time or another, we have all felt flashes of envy." As he goes through different kinds of envy, much of it with a light touch, Epstein concludes, in all seri- ousness, that feeling and expressing envy "is above all a great waste of mental energy" for with envy, "judg- ment is coarsened and cheapened. Envy clouds thought, clobbers gen- erosity, precludes any hope of sereni- ty and ends in shriveling the heart." As it says in Pirkei Avot ("Ethics of the Fathers"): "Who is rich? One who is content with what one has" — or, as Epstein might see it, one without envy. A scholar and a playwright begin as teacher and student but move past that to become study partners, dis- cussing different biblical texts, meet- ing each week not at a yeshiva or synagogue, but at a delicatessen out- side of Boston. The result is Five Cities of Refuge by Lawrence Kushner and David Mamet (Schocken; $21). The five cities of the title refer to the Five Books of the Bible, with sev- eral passages from each one up for discussion. The format is to quote the passage in Hebrew and English, then give each man's brief reaction to it. Not surpris- ingly, the reac- tions of Rabbi Kushner, a teacher and author of books on Jewish spiritu- ality and mys- ticism, refer to the Midrash, quote the Chasidic mas- ters and inter- pret the Hebrew in seeking contemporary understanding of the ancient pas- sages, while those of Mamet draw more on outside sources. This chevruta, this learning part- nership, may not be of much interest to the strict traditionalist, who would not be pleased to see short shrift given to complex biblical pas- sages. But others will enjoy the thinking of two agile minds as they approach the ancient text, in their own way, but still learning together, as Jews have done for thousands of years. `z•