1970-71 Schedule
for Meadow Brook
Theater Impressive

Kosher Food Co. Opens
Branch in Miami Airport

The Best of Everything

MIAMI—Mada'n Kosher foods of
Los Angeles has opened an affil-
iated branch at Miami Interna-
tional Airport to service the kosher
dining needs of the Miami and
East Coast areas.
Mada'n's entrees and dinners are
used by more than 100 restaurants,
hotels hospitals and institutions.
In addition, Mada'n dinners are
served by 39 scheduled airlines
and steamship companies in 21
states and 11 countries.

By Danny Raskin

By Guest Columnist
Dr. Jack Jackman
I am sure that every purveyor
of food services sincerely feels
that his is the best, so when I
chanced upon a menu at one res-
taurant emblazoned with large
print on the back, "It isn't WHAT
you eat, but WHERE you eat,"
I was rather taken aback . . .
There must have been many corn-

diitn: Nazdak FOOD
TO CO

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(Choice of Following)
• White Fish
• Fish IL Chips
• Bar-B-Q Ribs
• Fried Chicken
• Bcu-9-Q Lamb
• Fried Shrimp

I With Purchase of 1 Bar-B-0 Ribs Dinners

All Orders Include Choice of Two—
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Mon.-Toes.-Wed.-Thurs. & Sun.
12 Noon -10 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 12 Noon-12 p.m.

PICK-UP PARKING
IN REAR

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LIMITED ENGAGEMENT THRU SAT.

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PIANO BAR

Dinners—$3.50 up

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1

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DANCING TO

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Entertainment

Nites Weekly

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Entertain Your Guests or Enjoy A

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Served Every Sunday Morning — 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
An indescribably Delicious Variety
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Special Full Course Dinner

Served from 2 p.m. Every Sunday
Children's Portions Available

Bountiful Buffet Nights

Dinner Music from

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Tuesday and Thursday

p.m. and for dancing after 9:30 nightly

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AT NORTHWOOD INN We Can Handle from 20 to 500 People In Our
Own Banquet Rooms with Ample Parking Available

SWEET SIXTEEN PARTIES, SHOWERS,
WEDDING RECEPTIONS, BAR MITZVAS
We Also Do Outside Catering to Your Home, Office or Plant

RESERVATIONS JO 4-6688 OR LI 1-2577

Woodward Ave. at 111/2 Mile Road

I.

C

plaints about it because when I
dropped in a couple of weeks
later a fresh batch of menus were
on hand.
You've probably heard the story
of the traveling salesman who al-
ways seemed to stay in flea-bitten
hotels, but was left rocking on
his heels on one occasion when
he was signing the register and
a roach walked across the page
. . "Now," said the salesman
"they're so brazen they send out
spies to find out my room num-
ber" . .. Well, it wasn't so funny
when a patron at a well-known
restaurant was served a steak and
saw one of the little fellows scamp-
ering across the well-done filet.
A very fine establishment for
the connoisseur is Chuck Joseph's
Place For Steak . . . Located on
Grand River near Outer Drive, the
host himself oversees nearly every
order that comes into the kitchen
. . . and the prices remind one
of days gone by.
It is hard to believe that many
of the so-called "bars" serve a
delicious hamburger between the
top and bottom of a steamed bun
. . . It took me an awfully long
time to figure out what "Ground
Round" was as I saw the sign
on the facade of the building but
I soon learned that it was good
old hamburger.
OVERHEARD: ALVARO'S: A
staid gentleman was upset at the
dress of some young people on
the street . . . "Just look at that
one," he barked at a bystander,
"Is it a boy or girl?" . . . "It's
a girl—she's my daughter" . .
"Oh, forgive me, madam" apologiz-
ed the gentleman, "I didn't know
you were her mother" . . . "I'm
her father" . . . CLAM SHOP: "A
girl with a well-developed sense of
fashion realizes that bare skin
never clashes with anything she's
wearing" . . . HOA KOW INN:
"No matter how bad the movie at
a drive-in theater is, most patrons
manage to love every minute of it.
Call it the New Center area,
Midtown, Uptown, or anything
else, but if you should ever hap-
pen around there at noon-time
stop in at Abe Chaben's Uncle
Abe's Tavern at 59 Seward, near
Woodward Avenue, for a good,
hearty and substantial lunch . . .
Served cafeteria style, the food is
both palatable and filling . .
You'll recognize Uncle Abe when
you see him—he's been around
for a while.
TIP TO RESTAURANT OWN-
ERS: Immediately after seating a
patron, be sure he is served with
a glass of water and a menu at
a clean table . . . This will serve
his immediate need and he won't
mind waiting a few more minutes
for a waiter or waitress to appear
for his order . . . the early set-
ting helps sell him on the meal.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, August 21, 1970-29

Terence Kilburn, artistic direc-
tor of Oakland University's Meadow
Brook Theater, announced plans
for the theater's 1970-71 season.
The local, resident, professional
theater will open its fifth season
with Thornton Wilder's comic free-
for-all of the human race. "The
Skin of Our Teeth," Nov. 5.
The eight-play schedule also in-
cludes "Life With Father," which
still holds the record for Broad-
way's longest running comedy.
opening Dec. 3.
Jan. 7 is the date for unveiling
a revival of Arthur Miller's "The
Crucible."
Moliere's classic of satiric wit,
"Tartuffe," will begin its run Feb.
Works of a more contempor-

'Way up on the
25th floor of
THE HOTEL
PONTCHARTRAIN
in Detroit's
most exciting
Cabaret

ary nature will usher in the

spring season with "The Rain-

maker" by N. Richard Nash
opening March 4.

Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid
of Virginia Woolf?" will bow on
April 1 with the now-famous cou-
ple, George and Martha, playing
their cruel games of violent coin-
munciation.
An eccentric Pied Piper leads
his happy band of Manhattan non-
conformists against the system in
Herb Gardner's "A Thousand
Clowns," opening April 29.
Meadow Brook will salute the
spring season and present its first
musical when "The Fantasticks"
opens May 27 as the last offering
of the theater season.
Kilburn also announced that the
Meadow Brook Theater will run
each of its eight productions, at its
home base on the Oakland Univer-
sity campus in Rochester, for three
weeks. The fourth week of each
play will again be performed 'it
the Detroit Institute of Arts.
For the first time Meadow
Brook will offer double-header per-
formances on two Saturday eve-
nings during the run of each play.

Composer-pianist
BRYAN WELLS
and his orchestra
play a suave,
slick version
of Detroit's
MOTOWN SOUND
for dancing.

;,-**************4.*+4-1,4,***•

The

•tt

VINCE MANCE TRIO

SINGS NIGHTLY

*•

Complete Lunches 11 a.m. -4 p.m.*
*• "Happy Hour" Cocktail Time
* 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.

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a.

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LOUNGE

All

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plus FINE FOOD AND

* 18332 W. McNichols

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DRINK, in

531-8877

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MEETINGS ::
PARTIES

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LUNCHEON DINNER COCKT , LS
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Cpe

Reserve a great evening

PHONE 965-0100
Your Host
CHUCK MUER
note!
Pontchartrain

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NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT

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SKAND

20231 James Couzens
345 - 4555

of Greenfield

`Watermelon Man' Here

Columbia Pictures' "Watermelon
Man," starring Godfrey Cambridge
and Estelle Parsons, opens Wed-
nesday at the Studio-8 Theater and
the Fox Theater.
Written by Herman Raucher,
"Watermelon Man" tells the story
of a brash white suburbanite who
awakes one morning to discover he
has turned black.

EMPRESS
GARDEN

Orders To Take Out

OPEN DAILY FROM 11:30 A.M.

LARCO'S

FOOD

• BANQUET FACILITIES

•

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Fine Dining and Cocktails
19701 W. 12 Mile Rd. (Just East of Evergreen)

FEATURING PRIME

Fine Itallan•American Cuisine
Deliciously Prepared for the
Discerning Taste

3544750

THE SUSSEX HOUSE

All that is not pertinent in art
is impertinent.—Samuel Butler.

Now: Open Sunday 12 Noon
752.3 W. McNichols Rd.
UN 2-6455

Specializing in Cantonese Cuisine

In Harvard Row Shopping Center at
11 Mile and Lahser Rd.

Open Mon. through Fri. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m.
Sat. 11 a.m.-11:30 p.m.; Sun. Noon-10:30 p.m.

LANES

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BANQUETS — SHOWERS
WEDDINGS — BAR MITZVAHS

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