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February 28, 1975 - Image 23

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-02-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS







THE SUSSEX 11101JSE

W. 12 Mile Rd. (just East of Evergreen)
1 9701
.
559-3377

• Businessmen's Luncheons • Complete Dinners

FASHION SHOW EVERY WED.— MARGO'S BOUTIQUE

OPEN MON.-SAL FROM 11:30 A.M.

BANQUET FACILITIES FOR UP TO 275

• SHOWERS • BAR MITZVAS
.
• WEDDINGS
• PARTIES FOR ALL OCCASIONS

THE SOMETHING DIFFERENT

Restaurant-Delicatessen

EVERYONE IS TALKING
ABOUT...AND GOING TO FOR
• Breakfast
• Lunch
• Dinner
• Carry-
Out
DINING ROOM

AND

TRAY CATERING
STYLISTS

BREAKFAST SPECIAL

7 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Orange Juice, 2 Eggs (your choice),
Roll or Toast, Tea or Coffee

99

ALL OCCASION TRAYS

Corned Beef,
Pastrami, Turkey, Salami,
Pickled Tongue, Chopped
Liver, Swiss Cheese, Pick-
les, Olives, Bread.

INCLUDE:

27167 GREENFIELD

1 Blk. N. of 11 Mile

Next to Great Scott Market

559-1380

25

per
person

OPEN
TUES.,
WED., THURS. &
FRI., 7 A.M.-11
P.M. — SAT., 7
A.M.-1 A.M. —
Sun., 7 A.M.-9
P.M.

Our
All-Day

Buffet.

Join the brunch bunch.

Great food. Casual atmosphere. And it's
here. Every Sunday. From 10:00 to 1:30,
a whole buffet-full of your favorite brunch
items. Like fresh fruit, bagels, eggs,
sausage, bacon, hotcakes, blintz, French
Toast, juices. The works. All you want.
Just $4.95 for adults. $2.50 for kids.

Feast on our dinner buffet.

Heftier, heartier items. Southern Fried
Chicken, Roast Turkey, Steamship Round of
Beef. A selection of super salads. And
cheese boards and fruit. From 1:30 til 8 p.m.
Just $6.95 for adults. $3.25 for kids.
And just sensational.

toufir's
S
Coach G Four

NORTHLAND INN

21000 Northwestern Highway • 357-4700

Friday, February 28, 1975 23

ESCAPE THE
WINTER BLAHS
HAUE DINNER
WITH US

Gloom Seen for Jews If Quebec Economy Fails

in retailing and in urban
real estate.

NEW YORK — Jews in
Quebec, the French-speak-
ing province in Canada, who
have long felt a sense of pol-
itical, economic, social and
cultural isolation, face the
future with a sense of
unease, fearful that a down-
turn in the general economy
may see the revival of
French-Canadian national-
ism and anti-Semitism.
This appraisal of the sta-
tus and outlook for Quebec's
113,000 Jews was expressed
by a young Canadian writer,
Rick Kardonne, in an article
on the history of Jews in the
Canadian province from
1683 to the present. The ar-
ticle is featured in the cur-
rent issue of Present Tense,
The Magazine of World Jew-
ish Affairs, which is pub-
lished by the American Jew-
ish Committee.
The author explores the
strong separatist French
Canadian element in the
province's politics, which
has sometimes encom-
passed anti-Semitic ele-
ments. In addition, there
has long been a sense of iso-
lation among Quebec Jews,
stemming in part from the
legal requirement that all
public schools there must be
affiliated directly with
Catholic or Protestant
churches. As a result, since
all French-language schools
have been Catholic, the Jews
have gravitated toward the
English-speaking popula-
tion and have become iso-
lated from the French-Can-
adian majority in Quebec.

In the political sphere, he
continues, Jewish leaders
such as David Lewis, head
of the New Democratic
Party, have been unable to
penetrate the political fab-
ric of Quebec, although they
have had success in other
parts of Canada.
Turning to an examina-
tion of the cultural realm,
the author describes the
youth music and film scene
in Quebec as being closed to
Jews for the most part
"largely because of xeno-
phobic nationalism."

Summarizing the future
for Jews in Quebec, Kar-
donne terms the attitude of
young Jews as "ambi-
valent." He continues:
"Ambitious, articulate
and sophisticated, they
sense that beyond the
close-knit Jewish commu-
nity their opportunities
are limited.

the lowest in North Amer-

ica. He notes that life in
Montreal has many com-
forts and advantages but
warns that "beneath the
surface there is a nagging
uneasiness. Anti-Semitism
still exists. Pro-Arabism is
becoming fashionable in
some circles."

Up until World War II,
Kardonne explains,
"Quebec Jews continued
to endure the polite but
iron exclusivism of the
English and the open
hatred of some of the
French." Their breakout
from this pattern took a
number of forms, particu-
larly the economic, where
Jews became active in re-
tailing and in urban real
estate.

Honesty is better than ill-got-
ten wealth.
Honesty is to many the cause
of poverty.

M1t E



Quintus Curtius Rufus.

He points out that most
young Jews there "remain
affirmatively Jewish in
identity" and that Mon-
treal's intermarriage rate is

INCLUDES:

OUR GENUINE
S1.79 RIB-EYE STEAK
FOR ONLY

TOSSED
SALAD

28875 FRANKLIN ROAD

Up until World II, Kar-
donne explains, "Quebec
Jews continued to endure
the polite but iron exclu-
sivism of the English and
the open hatred of some of
the French." Their break-
out from this pattern took
a number of forms, partic-
ularly the economic,
where Jews became active

Half a true is often a
great lie. — Benjamin
Franklin.

BAKED
POTATO

Cor. 12 Mile & Northwestern
355-2010

Fine Italian-French Cuisine
BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS
AND CHOICE DINNERS

HEARTHSTONE
TOAST

TUES.-THURS., 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
FRIDAY. II a.m. to Midnight
SA TUMMY. 4:30 p.m. to Midnight

I

.

EVERY THURSDAY EVENING
PASTA & PAGLIACCI NIGHT

TUES. THRU THURS.

PASTA & PIANO

1:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.
BOB "Ask Your Neighbor" ALLISON

YOUR BUCK
BUYS MORE AT ...

EVERY TUESDAY EVENING

PASTA & POTPOURRI

VARIETY REVIEW

OPEN SUNDAY! 4

,.111.1 0WI
,11
OBEEF
°BURGERS
°CHICKEN OFISH FRY

25025 Telegraph Rd. at 10 Mile Rd.
1050 Ann Arbor Rd.—(at Harvey St.)
2 Blocks East of Sheldon Rd.

.

111

.

INIPP-11
10 p.m.

lobster 'Dinner

en

Shrimp Cocktail, Soup, Salad, Potato, S
Vichy Water, Coffee, Tea or Milk 'AJV

That's the most expensive meal of over 52
different seafood dishes . . . prime steaks too!

Ike Ctsift Skop

Lunch from

11:30 a.m. Dinners 'til midnight.

FREE Valet Parking. Limousine service to and from the Fisher Theatre..
Reservations accepted
3077 W. Grand Blvd.
(across from G.M. Bldg).
872 3111

-

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