THE JEWISH NEWS 30—Friday, September 27, 1968 Amateur Golf Title. Winner By JESS SILVER (Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.) I The Best-of Everything LARCO'S Fine ItsIiin-American Cuisine Deliciously Prepared for the Discerning Taste By Danny Raskin • BANQUET FACILITIES LOT OF FOLKS coming from Detroit don't know that Darbys out of town to the World Series in has burned down . . . We've had several letters from people telling us that they can't wait to get to Darbys after hearing so much about the spot . . . Also, former Detroiters who are eagerly await- ing a return to the home town and Darbys ... Sorry to say, there was only one Darbys! A Now: Open Sunday 12 Noon 7523 W. McNichols Rd. UN 2-6455 ENJOY AN EXCITING EVENING AT THE PRESIDENTIAL INN m STARS! SPECIAL PACKAGE PLAN-- DETROIT'S LUXURIOUS NEW REVUE SUPPER CLUB 1. * Luxurious Room—Color TV Presents * Gourmet Dinner * Dancing and Top Entertainment * Breakfast * Tax and Gratuity $ 12 " THE STRING BROTHERS lathe Lunar Lonna New Cast! New Music! "Salute to Broadway" .Per Person Double Occupancy • 'Stellar Entertainment • Delicious Food and Drink • Charming Moon maids • Reservations, Phone 548-5700 PRESIDENTIAL INN - FOLLOW THIS MOON-CHART TO 22010 N. Chrysler Service Drive to Hazel PIA NOW FEATURES SUNDAY FAMILY-STYLE BUFFET 1 From 1 to 9 p.m. $3.5 Children Under 12 t' $175 1.75 and North line Rd , Southgate Take Southfield Expressway South to 1.75. Get off at Northline Exit. 283-4400 DOWNTOWN Dine in a Serene Oriental Setting Featuring Authentic Cantonese Cusine CARRY OUT AND CATERING SERVICE Open Seven Days a Week . Mon. thru Thurs., 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.; Fri. & Sat., 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.; Sun. & Holidays, 12 Noon to 2 a.m. 3177 CASS AT PETERBORO, 2 Blks. N. of Masonic Temple Free Parking Across Street TE 1-1100 We Honor Diner's and American Express 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 OCTOBER SPECIAL FRIDAY ONLY-5 P.M. TO 8 P.M. FISH DINNER $12 I 1 1 I 1 1 1 .BEN Res. $1.65 15325 W. 8 MILE RD. 1360 SO. WOODWARD 10001 TELEGRAPH BIG SPECIAL during month of October at Uncle John's on Fridays from 5 to 8 p.m., is the Fish Din- ner for $1.29 . . . The fresh fish is excellently flavored and cooked to a tasty goodnest. CHALK UP ONE for Adam Mar- tini of Adam Martini's Restaurant and Lounge on Congress . . . While dining there last week, a popular local- columnist called him over to the table and after raving about a certain dish he was having, asked for the recipe . . . Adam just smiled and answered, "I'm sorry, sir, but we have the same policy as you journaliSts. We never reveal our sauce." JACK. PAGOTO, new owner at Vannelli Restaurant on Woodward, is no stranger to the business . Id fact, he has shown others what to do! .., Jack was director of operations for a restaurateur con- sulting service that pointed its suc- cess to a half-billion dollar yearly billing . . . He is going all-out for something Vannelli's never had be- fore . . . a good solid after-theater setup . . . which should please a lot of people ... Accordionist Tony Orlando is a nightly strolling enter- tainer from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m., and on Sundays from 4 to 11 p.m. THE STRING BROTHERS at The Moon are seven non-stop human dynamos who hail from Latin America . . . The group is led by tenor Hector Casas, whose musical talent has welded violins, bass guitars, drums and piano into o n e of the m ost sophisticated groups in show business . . . Their performances feature split-second stage work revolving around care- fully selected material from the finest European, American and Latin American ballads. EX-ORCHESTRA LEADER and ladies wear boss Harvey Barnett, is now in the restaurant field . . Harvey has the Heap Big Beef Restaurant out Wayne Rd. CHUCK MUER HAS completely revamped his Sund ay Family Smorgasbord in the Cabaret La- Bohome of Hotel Pontchartrain... With new culinary ware and decor, the setting is superb and the food is equal .. - Sunday cocktails are now available after 2 p.m. at the Ponch . . . Sonny Kendis and his orchestra are currently providing top danceable music nightly in the Cabaret . . . He comes directly from Fort Lauderdale's Pier 66 and the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, and has one of the country's truly outstanding dance bands. , Revue in the Velvet Cavern ALSO MAKES A LONG REMEMBERED GIFT FOR OTHERS TO CHERISH Per Person HOWEVER, NORTHWEST De- troit and suburbs are certainly not lacking in eateries • . . Delicates- sens galore, of course, plus very fine Chinese, Italian and steak houses among others . . . The deli- catessens are among the finest in the nation . . . In fact, when it comes to good corned beef, only Chicago gives Detroit a battle for first place! I I I I I I I I The milenium will have been reached when we can have last- 1 ing peace without fighting for it mm am mm me am mm am ma El am am mu ea mu mmdl every generation. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Bruce Fleisher, the first Jew to win a U.S. amateur golf title, has been named to the four-man team that will represent the United States at the World Cup Amateur Golf championships in Melbourne, Australia, Oct. 9-12. A 19-year-old sophomore at Miami-Dade North Junior College, Fleisher captured the 68th 'U.S. men's amateur title on the 6,762-yard Scioto Country Club course in Columbus. He had a 72-hole score of 73-70-71-70- 284, and is the third youngest play- er to gain the crown. Dick Siderwof will join Fleisher on the World Cup squad. He was the low amateur at the U.S. Open. A 31-year-old stockbroker from Westport, Conn., Siderwof was well down on the list in the U.S. Ama- teur with a 72-76-77-79-304 score. Jerry Greenbaum of Atlanta, Ga., did a little better with 73-76-77-75- 301. Best previous effort by a Jew- ish golfer in a U.S. Amateur was recorded by Miss Elaine Rosen- thal of Chicago. She was runner- up at the 1914 women's cham- pionship. Albert Axelrod, 47, of Scarsdale, N.Y., was o n e of five Jewish fencers named to the U.S. Olympic team. An Olympian since 1952 Axelrod won a bronze medal in foil at Rome in 1960. The other foil men are Herb Cohen and Jeff Checkes of New York City. Bob Blum, New York City, will com- pete in saber, and Dave Michanik, Philadelphia. Michanik was a member of the 1960 and 1964 Olympic teams, while Cohen and Blum competed in 1964. Steve Cohen of Philadelphia will lead the U.S. Olympic gymnastic squad at Mexico City. The former Penn State star captured first place at the trials in Los Angeles. Another gymnast from Philadel- phia, Fred Turoff of Temple, joined a U.S. squad that toured South America. Mark Spitz will be in Mexico City with the U.S. Olympic swim- ming team. The Californian won the 100- and 200-meter butterfly events, and placed third in the 100-meter freestyle. He clocked 55.6 in the 100 fly to better his own world record. Mary Kratter sold the NBA champion Boston Celtics to the P. Ballantine & Sons Brewing Co. for $4,000,000. Red Auerbach will re- main as executive vice president and general manager under the new ownership. Kratter, chairman of the board of National Equities, Inc. bought the club for $3,000000 in 1966. ' National Equities was purchased recently by a computer company whose stockholders insisted he sell - the Celtics. Ben Kerner, who sold his NBA St. Louis Hawks, has pledged $30,000 of the profits from the sale of the club for the con- struction of a dormitory at Is- rael's Wingate Physical Educa- tion School through the US. Com- mittee Sports for Israel. Abe Pollin, president of the Bal- timore Bullets, bought out his part- ners Arnold Heft and Earl Fore- man to become sole owner of the NBA team. Foreman remains own- er of the Washington Whips of the North American Soccer League. Rick Weitzman_ has gone on no= tive duty with the Army Reserves, and the backcourt man isn't ex- pected to return to the Boston Cel- tics until January. Hall of Famer Nat Holman, 71, coached the East team at an All- 'Star benefit basketball game 3n New York City. The contest fea- tured pro stars, and was held in memory of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Folkstimme Has New Role; Defends Status of Yiddish (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) LONDON — Poland's only Yid- dish newspaper, Folkstimme, has taken issue with an official of the Polish ministry of education who claimed that the Yiddish language was having a diminishing influ- ence in Jewish life. That was the only item of opinion or comment to appear in the latest edition of the paper which has been reduced to weekly status after having appear- ed four times a week for the last 22 years. The edition of Saturday, Sept. 21, just received here, carried no column of Jewish news from out- side Poland, formerly a regular feature. There was no editorial. The column of excerpts from the Polish press was devoted to re- prints of an article from the Polish magazine Literary Life by Stanis- law Mauesberg, director of the department for minorities educa- tion of the education ministry. Mauersberg dated the beginning of Jewish education in Poland from 1944 when Jewish schools were established as private institutions in Lublin. They were taken over by the government in 1949, he said, at which time there were 18 Jew- ish schools in the country, five with Yiddish as their language of instruction and one with Hebrew. According to the writers, there were only 11 Jewish schools in 1950, none of them employing Yid- dish or Hebrew as the language of instruction, although Yiddish was taught as part of the language curriculum. "This was the result of the dim- inishing influence of Yiddish as even in Israel, the official lan- guage is Hebrew," Mauersberg wrote. Folkstimme said, in com- ment, that Yiddish was "far from being a dead language." The paper expressed surprise that Mauers- berg cited Israel in support of his contention. "There must be other reasons for the abolition of Yid- dish as the teaching language in Jewish schools," Folkstimme said. Soils Sunuel,§ cMasterpiece of Erotica! ALLIED ARTISTS Immo BELLE JOUR CATHERINE DENEUVE WINNER BEST PICTURE VENICE FILM FESTIVAL Exclusive Showing: .