l
.
ESSEX MOUSE
Mile Rd. (just East of Evergreen)
559-3377
-
sstmen's Luncheons • Complete Dinner
I OPEN MON.- SAT. FROM 11:30 A.M.
BANQUET. FACILITIES FOR UP TO 275
• WEDDINGS • SHOWERS • BAR MITZVAS
• PARTIES FOR ALL OCCASIONS
OPEN 24 OURS
7 DAYS A WEEK
AMERICANA
Restaurant
18338 PLYMOUTH RD. (1 BIk.W. of Soijthfield)
837-8940
• BREAKFAST •LUNCH •DINNER
COMPLETE CARRY-OUT MENU
Also Featuring
THE AMERICAN
CONEY ISLAND
HERITAGE
BIG BOY
BUDGET PLEASERS
•` CHILDREN'S MENU
1.--
• MINI BREAKFAST
FAST EFFICIENT CARRY OUT
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
-
Gelbard Leaves Argentina Post
NEW YORK (JTA)—Jose
Gelbard, economic minister
in Argentina, resigned last
week, according to reports
reaching here from Buenos
Aires.
The 56-year-old Polish-born
Jewish immigrant and the
team of experts who worked
with him to fashion 17
months of Peronist economic
policy resigned hours before
talks were due to begin on
wage hikes that Gelbard
warned would be inflationary.
President Isabel Peron ac-
cepted the resignation and
replaced Gelbard with Al-
fredo Gomez Morales, a for-
mer economy minister who
resigned as president of the
'4901 NORTHWESTERN
356-7470
-'GREEN .& 10 MILE
New and Different
'ilizing Tastes
4
Now
Serving
oektails,
Exotic
rinks
and
Fine
Wines
41563
WEST TEN
MILE
NOVI
MICHIGAN
48050
349-9260
HOURS:
Tues. thru Thurs.
11 to 10 p.m.
Fri. & Sat.
11 to 12 midnight-
Sunday
12 to 10 p.m.
Closed Mon.
Businessmen's Luncheons
11 a.m.- 3 p.m.
••:
Enjoy a truly great dining
experience in the elegant
Chambertin 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.
host —
(okas
urateur
•The Chambertin
22900 Michigan Ave.
In front of the Holiday Inn 44'
Dearbom —278-6900
•—•4! ?
. .. • ,
,
•
•
. •
•ei:"1
.Bukhara Jews History Compiled
Gelbard had been under
attack for some time by Wel-
fare Minister Jose Lopez
Rega and some of the attacks
had been viewed as anti-
Semitic. There was no imme-
diate indication as to whether
Gelbard's resignation was in
any way also connected with
these attacks.
Gelbard was reportedly re-
garded as the chief spokes-
man for the "National Busi-
nessmen," a group of old-line
Peronists who were often at
odds with more conservative
businessmen and especially
with local subsidiaries of
multinational corporations.
ADL Guide Fights Textbook Bias
NEW YORK—The Anti-De-
fa•ation League of Bnai
Brith launched a new teach-
ing tool designed to overcome
deficiencies and stereotypes
in the treatment of Jews in
American :history texts.
Entitled "Jews in Ameri-
can History:. A Teacher's
Guide," it offers social stu-
dies teachers a complete
plan for integrating the Jew-
ish experience and contribu-
tions in building this nation
with the overall history cur-
riculum.
,
Written by Jerome L. Ru-
derman, head of the social
studies department at Simon
Gratz High School, Philadel-
• BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER
SUN.-TRURS., 7 am.-12 mid. FRI. & SAT. 7 a.m. !"
Argentine Central Bank on
Sept. 2 in a dispute with
Gelbard.
34—Friday, November 1, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
UJA Mission Sets
$750 Million Goal
phia, and a member of the
advisory board of Scholastic
Search , magazine, the guide
was devised in response to
a 1970 ADL study which
found that despite minor im-
provement in the preceding
decade, texts continued to
slight the role of Jews in
American history, primarily
by omission.
The study also faulted
those textbooks which identi-
fied Jews indiscriminately or
merely listed Jewish contri-
butions.
Industry Mission
to Exclude Israel
WASHINGTON (JTA) —
The National Association. of
Manufacturers is sending 15
top corporate executives
Nov. 16-27 to five Arab coun-
tries, but not to Jordan or
Israel, to look for mutually
beneficial comni_icial - rela-
tions.
ivlary S. Yeber, speaking
for NAM, said that the
group's steering committee
for international economic af-
fairs selected the five coun-
tries on the basiS of the com-
mittee's interest and of the
participants who felt that
they had specific interests in
those countries.
NAM president E. Douglas
Kenna will head the mission
to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Ku-
wait, Iran and Algeria.
The members have already
met with 10 Saudi Arabian
delegates to the working
group on industry of the U.S.-
Saudi joint commercial com-
mission.
The NAM announcement on
the mission said it "has re-
ceived strong encouragement
from Treasury Secretary Wil-
liam R. Simon and other lead-
ing officials developing joint
U.S.-Saudi and U.S.-Egyptian
commercial relations."
TEL AVIV (JTA)—The 200-
member United Jewish Ap-
peal Study Mission to Israel
pledged an all-out effort to
reach the 1975 target • of
$750,000,000 which is thP
UJA's sharc. c,:f the Jewish
Agency's budget.
The group, headed by UJA
general chairman, Paul Zuc-
kerman, spent two weeks in
Israel meeting with leaders
of the government and the
Jewish Agency, visiting bor-
der settlements and towns
and inspecting the Jewish
Agency's facilities for immi-
grant absorption, education
and other social needs.
The mission members set a
personal example when they
increased their individual
commitments for the coming
year to $11,200,000 compared
to $9,100,000 from the same
donors last year.
In a resolution released be-
fore they departed, the mis-
sion members pledged that
each American community
would -assume its share of re-
sponsibility "with concen-
trated determination, explor-
ing every means, utilizing
every technique and making
every effort to reach out to JNF
to Plan
and commit their fellow Jews
Raising
of
Funds
to fulfill their responsibility"
for absorption, education and
PARIS (JTA) — Jewish
social welfare activities in National Fund representa-
Israel.
tives in 17 West European
countries recently concluded
a week-long series of meet-
Center Branch
ings aimed at increasing con-
Sponsors Lecture
tributions to the JNF in this
Joan Israel, of Jewish Fam- year of repair and land de-
ily and Children Services, velopment.
The meetings, attended by
speak on single parents
and children 8:30 p.m. Sun- JNF Director General Ben
day at the 10 Mile Jewish Shemesh, included one at-
Center. Refreshments will be tended by youth representa-
tives, 'a special seminar of
served.
For information, call the European rabbis and that of
executive officers.
Center, 341-4200.
Meets
NEW YORK — Nineteenth
Century Bukharan Jews in
Central Asia, their history
and customs, are discussed
in a Yeshiva University doc-
toral study by Dr. Baruch
Moshavi.
Dr. Moshavi, principal of
the Israel Community Center
Religious School in Levit-
town, N.Y., was born in the
Uzbekistan city of Tashkent.
He traces. his ancestry to
Rabbi Joseph Maaravi, a
"messenger" from Palestine,
who revived Bukharan's Jew-
ish communal life at the end
of the 18th Century. Dr,.
Moshavi recently received a
doctorate from Bernard Re-
vel Graduate School.
ing with the Spanish-Jewish
culture.
Another major influence
was the immigration and in-
tegration of Jews in Bukhara,
especially the Jews of Persia,
Afghanistan and those who
fled persecution in Mashdad.
According to Dr. Moshavi,
about 60,000 Bukharan Jews
remain in Russian Central
Asia, and from 1968-74 some
5,000 came to Israel, adding
to the nearly 5,000 Jews of
Bukharan descent.
Dr. Moshavi noted that the
Bukharan customs reflected
those of their neighbors the
MOslem Uzbeks and Tadzh-
iks, in addition to the Persian
culture, and taldmudic and
post-talmudic sources blend-
The Israeli Folk Festival
'74 will hold concerts 8 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday at Ford
Auditorium. Yaffa Yarkoni,
The Adler Trio, Gadi Elon,
and the Sabras will be fea-
tured. Tickets are available
at Hudson's, Ford Auditori-
um box office, Borenstein's
and Spitzer's.
CANTONESE-AMERICAN
RESTAURANT
OPEN
7 DAYS .
•
Israeli Folk Fest
Mon.-Fri., 11 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Sat., 11 a.m. - '12 mid. ; '
Sun., 12 Noon - 10
• DAILY LUNCHEONS • FINE DINNERS
• COMPLEXE CARRY OUT
29295 SOUTHFIELD Just North of 12 Mile
424-8765
IN THE FARRELL'S PLAZA
NOW OPEN 7 a.m. to 1 a.m.
SUNDAYS THRU THURSDAYS
24 HOURS ON FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS
FRIDAY SPECIAL ALL DAY,
FRESH FISH & CHIPS
SAT. & SUN.
BRUNCH SPECIALS
No. 1
7 a.m. to 2 p.m.
2 eggs, hashed brown -potatoes, 3 sau-
sages, toast, orange juice
$ 75
and coffee
No. 2 French - toast,
coffee
No. 32
eggs,
coffee
3 sausages,
hotcakes,
$1 75
99‘
Every Day, 7 a-.m. to 1 1 a.m.
FREE ORANGE JUICE
WITH ALL BREAKFAST ORDERS!
NEW LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS
DAILY FROM 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
NEW CHILDREN'S MENU
SPECIAL GROUP PRICES
From 20 Persons up
PRIVATE FACILITIES AVAILABLE
LANDMARK
RESTAURANT
25900 GREENFIELD at Lincoln
N THE GREEN-LINCOLN BLDG., OAK PAR
968-1150