Category: VOLUME IV, No. 4

THE TWO DOORS OF SÁNDOR SCHEIBER

The Scholar Rabbi Born A Hundred Years Ago1 Hungary’s Jewish history is rich in scholar rabbis. Perhaps the first was the Moravian-born Lipót Löw (1811–1875), erudite and dignified, and considered one of the greatest Hungarian orators of all times. As a proud Hungarian Jew, Löw broke with long tradition and

MAKING THE SILENT DEEP SPEAK

On the Danube-Concept of Thomas Kabdebo’s Novel Trilogy Danubius Danubia  As I sat on the bottom step of the wharf,A melon-rind flowed by with the current;Wrapped in my fate I hardly heard the chatterOf the surface, while the deep was silent.As if my own heart had opened its gate:The Danube was

NOTES AND POEMS ABOUT RADIO

THE AGE OF RADIO It was the sinking of the Titanic in April 1912 that made the world fully aware of the vital necessity, the deadly seriousness of radio. The survivors owed their lives to radio; those who perished drowned only because of confusion in the ship’s radio room and