THE ADVANCE NOSHERIE CATERING IN THE ADVANCE BUILDING 22 — Friday, July 19, 1974 Boris Smolar's 'Between You . . . and Me' Owned and Operated by Ronnie Forman - 557.8060 • REUNIONS • STAGS • SALES MEETINGS •SHOWERS • BOWLING BANQUETS • WEDDING RECEPTIONS vvvvv •,• ■•■ •vv.- , RI SU krRAN `.ete COCKTAILS BEING . SERVED ; JAPANESE TEPPAN STEAK HOUSE Featuring Food Prepared Before You .0 • Businessmen's Luncheons • Complete 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. 1665MIDikEBELT 42 7-31 70 Closed Mondays cost South of 6 Mile - DINING and COCKTAIL LOUNGE FINE MI ITALIAN:AMERICAN Businessmea's Special CUISINE Luncheons from 11 a.m. COMPLETE DINNERS NIGHTLY OPEN MON. THRU SAT., 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. SUNDAYS, 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. 1008 N. WOODWARD LENNIE "The Voice" RANDALL AT 11 1 /2 MILE RD. 543 - 2626 Royal Oak Your Host BUDDY SHERBOW at the Piano Bar • Invites You to SEE OUR COMPLETE BANQUET FACILITIES • DINING ROOMS OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Tuesday thru Sunday A Serving Steaks, Chops, Favorite Cuisines, Including our Famous . .-- Frog Legs and Specialties of the Sea • * * g* * * PETE RARE QUARTET t * ** * ** ♦ **_ WILD GAME ROOM NOW OPEN WITH WILD GAME MENU. ei Our Famous Brunch Every Sunday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. tkid Enjoy a truly great dining experience in the elegant Chamberlin Restaurant. Superior food, fine wines and cocktails served with flair in a continental setting. Entertainment Tuesday — Saturday in The Tavern. Banquet-party rooms for up to 300. Open everyday. Your host — Gus Kokas Restaurateur lef ♦ ♦ INDIFFERENCE TO CABINET: During my present visit to Israel I had the privilege to meet President Ephraim Katzir; also Golda Meir who, despite her retire- ment, continues to be very popular among the people. To many in Israel she is still the "Golden Golda." She looks relaxed and feels relaxed in the hope that the cabinet of her successor Premier Rabin, will do as well as the cabinet over which she presided. I found that many feel that a great injustice has been done to Abba Eban by pushing him out from his post of foreign minister which he held with great distinction for Israel for many years. There is also a great question mark in the minds of many Israelis over the successor to Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir. Sapir was very popular in Israel and in the United States, but his successor, Yehoshua Rabinowitz, is a complete stranger to American Jewry. His name is not even known to many Jewish lead- ers in the U. S. On the whole, I found the average Israeli indifferent to the composition of the new cabinet. Intellectuals, bus- iness people, workers, taxi drivers whose opinions I solicited, all claimed that the new cabinet will yet have to prove itself. They, however, welcomed the fact that younger blood has been injected into the cabinet. TEL AVIV — A sign in a restaurant here state d: "Come in. Let us hospitalize You." The owner said he thought he was using the verb form of hospitality. The Chamberlin 22900 Michigan Ave. In front of the Holiday Inn 4,01. Dearborn — 278-6900 • Roberta M a d or sk y of Bloomfield Hills, scored her second hole-in-one in less than a month on the 17th hole at Shenandoah Golf and Country Club. Hadassah Hospital Prepped for Nixon JERUSALEM — Hadassah Hospital was designated as the medical reference for President Nixon and his en- tourage during their recent trip to Israel. Before the presidential party's arrival, a team of American doctors and secret service men studied Hadas- sah for all aspects of emer- gency, trauma, cardiac and other treatment. OPEN MON., THURS., 9:30 A.M.-II Iv.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY, 9:30 A.M.-2 A.M. SUNDAY, 11 A.M.-11 P.M. I MOODS IN ISRAEL: Revisiting Israel now perhaps for the 40th time—my first visit was in 1929 during the Arab riots of that year—I found the mood of the people more subdued, more humble, more sober to the fact that Israel is not the "Tabur Haaretz," the central point of the globe, but a small country dominated, sometimes gently, sometimes not so gently, by big foreign powers. This new mood does not undermine the feeling of self- assurance of the average person in Israel. It is merely the result of a re-evaluation by the people of Israel's posi- tion in the world and its outlook now, after the Yom Kip- pur War, which resulted in pushing Israel years back from the positions it held on the Arab fronts. The retreat would not have taken place if the United States, pressured by the Soviet Union, would 'not have actually ordered Israel to withdraw. * * * FEARS AND HOPES: The average Israeli is, never- theless, not depressed over the new state of affairs on the fronts. On the contrary, families in Israel, whether they have someone of the family on the front line or not, feel relaxed over the new situation. At least there will be no further shooting, no further killing on the battle-front, no nervousness when opening the radio to listen to the news. Human lives are now more important to the Israelis than gaining or losing a few kilometers of land. There is, however, a good deal of fear among the Israelis over the promise given by the United States to supply the Egyptians with atomic energy. Atomic energy does not necessarily mean producing atom bombs. But it may lead to the production of atomic warheads, and this is the danger Israelis fear. In fact, neither Egypt nor Syria can afford to drop an atom bomb on Israel because they can themselves be destroyed by the effect of the same bomb. This effect would, however, be very much limited to Israel only if atomic warheads are used by the enemy. In this respect, the Israelis have much confidence in the U.S. Congress. They are impressed with the stubborn- ness the House of Representatives and the Senate display in their opposition to the White House and State Depart- ment's willingness to grant trade privileges to the Soviet Union while the Kremlin is hampering emigration from the USSR. They hope that similar sentiments will be dis- played by both houses of Congress in checking that the nuclear energy which the U.S.. will supply to Egypt will not be used for military purposes. Naturally, the feeling in Israel is that American Jewry will have to be on the alert to the conditions under which the U.S. will send atomic power to Egypt or any other Arab country. Editorial Comment KEROS CONEY ISLANDS I Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1974, JTA Inc.) 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ROOM CATERING TO THE SOPHISTICATED SET! 20600 PLYMOUTH SUPPER CLUB 1 Mile West of Evergreen For Reservations: 272-0730 COMPLETE DINNERS INCLUDE • HORS D'OEUVRES • SALAD BAR • SOUP 0 INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL WEDNESDAY NIGHTS ONLY FOR STEAK OR PRIME RIB DINNER WITH SECOND MEAL AT REGULAR PRICE ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING WED., FRI. & SAT. IN THE . V.I.P. ROOM . . . 7 NIGHTS A WEEK IN THE LINE Valet Parking Available • OF SCRIMMAGE ROOM. •••••••••••••••1110111 1111000011100•••••••••Mi l- the meyerson brothers invite you To Join Them For That Better Than Ever Fine Dinner at their SCOTCH N SIRLOIN I I • • • James Couzens at Greenfield / For Reservations ... 342-5660 Closed Sundays July and August ••••••••••.••••.••••.•.•••.•••.•.••••0 •