THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Earle Mostyn's NOSHERIE `The Last Supper' All in the Farnily-Bermant-Styze 75 50 per person person minimum HOME-MADE JEWISH STYLE HOT HORS D'OEUVRES Brought To you In Chafing Dishes & Complete Set-Up For • WEDDINGS • BAR MITZVAS • SHOWERS: . RAlk l o):ALS, C:I lt it Y H tr • ALL SIMCHAS CUTS AND sr ' - 26052. GREENFIELD. ( Lincoln Shopping Center) 968-8666 FOR FURTHER INFO ASK FOR EARLE OR LENNIE HERITAGE BIG BOY r BUDGET PLEASERS •' CHILDREN'S MENU" • MINI BREAKFAST • - FAST EFFICIENT CARRY-OUT OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER SUN.-THURS., 7 a.m.-12 mid. FRI. & SAT. 7 a.m.-1 a.m. 24901 NORTHWESTERN 356-7470 AT EVERGREEN & 10 MILE Enjoy the New and Different Tantalizing Tastes of AH W Now Serving Cocktails, Exotic Drinks and Fine Wines HOURS: Mon. thru Thurs. 11 to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 to 12 midnight Sunday 12 to 10 p.m. 41563 W. 10 MILE off Grand River (In The Novi Plaza) NOVI, MICH. 349-9260 LET US CATER YOUR NEXT PARTY ...OFFICE, HOME, Etc. E PLACE iorkleS ti SilACK it of SOUTHFIELD 24545 W. 12 MILE, 1 /4 Blk. West of Telegraph , 355-2440 WE CARRY: PERCH — SHRIMP — CLAMS — PIZZA — SPAGHETTI — AND RIBS fZ1TUESDAY itvion SPECIAL - 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAK With Buttery $ Baked Potato, II Hot Texas Toast, ill Crisp Tossed Salad 09 '' BONANZA i 15640 W. 11 Mile Rd. 557-3237 . Corner of Greenfield SIL Friday, May 24, 1974-27 . They're the sort of Jews we're not overly fond - of: rich—but philanthropic only toward themselves; cultured —in all but Jewish culture; urbane — but frankly anti- Semitic. This is the Coggan family as it gathers for the opening of shiva week in Chaim Ber- mant's new novel. "The Last Supper" (St. Martin's Press). Oddly enough (for shiva is one of those ethnic traditions for which the Coggans would not - appear to have any use), the complete the period of shiva for Tanya Coggazi- Koch. While so doing, they begin the often painful re- counting of a family's his- tory, from pre-revolutionary Russia to contemporary Eng- land. They appear unfeeling, un- concerned for the wretched conditions of their fellow Jews. Recalls Tanya's bro- ther Alexei, the kibutznik who rejected his privileged station in Russia to make' aliya: "Do you remember that visit I made to London short- ly before the war and you in- vited me to a great family jamboree?" "It wasn't a jamboree but a seder and I didn't invite you, you came." (This from the aristocratic brother Lu- do). "It was in 1936 wasn't it? —or '37? Hitler had recently reoccupied the Rhineland, Jews were persecuted in Ger- many, in Poland, in Roma- nia. There were riots in Pal- estine but none of this en- tered your conversation. It was cousin this and aunt that and who was expecting and who had brought forth, who was poorly and who had died and tales of nannies long ago. The exchange was half in Russian, half in English, with occasional intrusions of French and German, and if 1 shut my eyes I could have been back in St. Peterburgh. I didn't even have to shut my eyes. Tanya was there in her imperial best. The great family samovar was still there, intact and in . use, and all the family silver . . . " "What did you want us to do with the family silver?" growled Ludo, "beat it into plough-shares?" "The whole unreal world of St. Petersburgh carried into exile." "It may have been unreal," said Anna, "but it was beau- tiful. Perhaps all beautiful things are unreal." It remains for the second generation—for Tanya's son Jim, a teacher in an Amer- ican college—to expose the skeletons in the Coggan fam- ily closet, particularly the in- congruous marriage of Tan- ya the dragon to the simple but wealthy Glasgow Jew, Sol Koch. The Last Supper of the the title refers to the seder which again draws this far-flung family together. By then, Jim has learned a great deal about his parents, not all of it savory. The seder itself provides the setting for family intro- spection, but not necessarily in the traditional sense. Summing up: A Jewish Chekhov this novel is not, but it is an often amusing chron- icle of a small, if atypical, part of the great movement of Jews from the Old Coun- try. —C.D. • PIZZERIA RESTAURANT . CARRY OUT • DELIVERY * Pizza * Bar B Q Ribs * Spaghetti * Chicken * Shrimp * Ravioli • Lasagna * Sea Food Platter HOURS: MON. Oyu THURS. 4 to 12 Mid. FRI. & SAT. 3:30-2 a.m. SUN. 3-12 Mid. 4033 W. 12 MILE Just E. of Greenfield Berkley St-ii^,AE I FREEDOM . - - Savings Bonds' .41- New Freedom Shares . DINING ROOM BEER a WINE C Dining Room or to Take OtH PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES 548-3650 COCKTAILS BEING SERVED JAPANESE TEPPAN STEAK HOUSE Featuring Food Prepared Before You ' • Businessmen's Luncheons • Complete Dinners , 1 a.m. to 2 p.m. 5 p.m. to 10 16825 MIDDLEBELT e .Coca — 427-3170 Closed Mondays Just South of 6 Mile DINING and COCKTAIL LOUNGE FINE ITALIAN-AMERICAN CUISINE Special Businessmen's Luncheons from 11 a.m. COMPLETE DINNERS NIGHTLY LENNIE OPEN MON. THRU SAT., 1 1 a.m. to 2 a.m. SUNDAYS, 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. 1008 N. WOODWARD "The Voice" RANDALL AT 1 1 1/2 MILE RD. at the Piano Bar • 543 2626 Royal Oak - Chosen in Recent Readership Poll by The Jewish News as One of the Best Restaurants in Metropolitan Detroit • Businessmen's Luncheons • • Complete or Ala Carte Dinners • Epicurean Delights • After-Theater Specialties and Unusual Desserts If L I Jnn Cocktails and Exotic Drinks COMPLETE FAMILY DINNERS MON. THOU THURS., 11:30-11:30 PA. - FRI. AND SAT. 11:30- 1:30 A.M. U. S. History and Retailing America's d i s ti nguished businessmen pass in review in an impressively updated and enlarged edition of "The Great Merchants" by Tom Mahoney and Leonard Sloane (Harper and Row). The fascinating stories of the Straus Family, Benjamin Altman, Abraham Abraham, the Bloomingdales, the Berg- dorfs, Lincoln Filene, Julius Rosenwald, the Rothschilds and many others are related here. The Neiman-Marcus firm, the May Co., the Lazaruses, Magnin's are among the firms that nave gained fame and are recorded in this splendid chronicle of merch- andising events in this coun- try. Linked with the stories of these greats in the mercan- tile business are important historic events. The Mahoney-Sloane com- pilation is a marvelous de- scription of America's de- velopment of the retail busi- ness. • In The ORCHARD MALL ORCHARD LAKE N. of MAPLE (15) WestAloomfield For Res.: 851-6400 Private Carry-Out Dept. NOW IN BERKLEY 4075 W. 12 MILE /2 Block East of Greenfield Roumell Invites You to the usabl y Room Featuring international cuisine, tableside salad bar and evening dancing to the Martin-David Orchestra. FOR RESERVATIONS: 557-0100 1 OPEN 24 HOURS I • Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner Featuring HOME-MADE SOUPS & PIES Complete 24-Hour MENU CARRY-OUT SELECTIONS 548-0288 KONEE'S FAMILY RESTAURANT _ "The Finest Food For The Nicest People" S'hiawassee Hotel 9 Mile/Lodge Service Drive. Southfield, Michigan 48075 2150 Woodward, Cor. Square Lake Rd. ton gs:v=1w.) Open 7 Dos A W eek st • Breakfa • Lunch • Dinner • COMPLETE MENU INCLUDES . , . STEAKS, LASAGNA, SEAFOOD, SHISH KABOB, ETC. WE BAKE OUR OWN PASTRIES - - Comple►e Carry- ou► We Cater To parties 3 34-4,2 7