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30 Friday, March 7, 1975

PIZZERIA
RESTAURANT

* Bar B 0 Ribs
* Pizza
* Chicken
* Spaghetti
* Shrimp
* Ravioli
* Sea Food Platter
• Lasagna
HOURS: MON. *it THURS. 4 to 12 MIL
FRI. & SAT. &30-2 e.ni. SUN. 3-12 Mid,

• DINING ROOM

•

BEER
it WINE

C

pining Room or to Ink. Oatt

PRIVATE
BANQUET
FACIUTIES

Berkley

1 4 : h

4.1 '

‘11 ■ 1111RORNIITI

SIL

Ant E. of Grottrtho4d

;

IF

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

• CARRY OUT • DELIVERY

4033 W. 12 MILE

I

548-3650

COME SEE OUR NEW FACE!

MONK'S CELLAR HAS

COMPLETED REMODELING.

vow
CHEAP
DRINKS

DINE 8 DANCE IN A NEW
RELAXED ATMOSPHERE

THE "PRIMO'S" & GARY

DURING THE MONK'S
RETREAT
itst 3:30-6:30 DAILY

APPEARING TUES. THRU SUN.

9 p.m.-2 a.m. (A REALLY GOOD GROUP)

31245 12 MILE RD.

(A T ORCHARD LK. RD.)
FARMINGTON 477-6907

Most Chinese restaurants
offer only one style of cooking.
We specialize in three.

Institute Seeks New Energy

REHOVOT — The energy
of tomorrow will be derived
from a "cold technology"
based on photochemical and
biochemical principles
rather than the "hot tech-
nology" of fuel burning we
use today.
This is the prediction of
Professor Lev Tumerman,
one of the oldest practicing
scientists at the Weizmann
Institute, who is deeply con-
cerned and involved with
one of the youngest areas of
science — Bioenergetics —
which deals with energy
transformation and utiliza-
tion in living organisms.
For more than 20 years,
Prof. Tumerman, a recent
immigrant from the Soviet
Union, worked as an experi-
mental physicist at Lebed-
ev's Institute of Physics in
Moscow. Arrested together
with his wife in 1947 for
Zionist activities, they spent
seven- years in solitary con-
finement in the central pol-
itical prison in Vladimir —
a small town near Moscow.
There, Tumerman used
the prison library to study
extensively, studies that led

Cohan Named VP

Mandarin•Cantones•Szechuen

New York Style Chinese,

BUFFET -

TUES. AND THURS. 5-9 PM
ALL YOU CAN EAT

$ 5.50

Three Happy Hours:
Cocktails served for
HALF-PRICE on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday
from 4-7 pm

AVAVDSCTues.
& Thurs.11 am-10 pm
41563

Fri. & Sat. 11 am-midnight
Sunday — noon to 10 pm
Luncheon —11 am-3 pm
Closed Mondays.

WEST TEN
MILE
NOVI
349-9260

we

16400 J. L. Hudson Dr..

7Southfield
9 mile exit off Lodge Freeway . Across

LEON S. COHAN

Leon S. Cohan has been
elected vice president and
general counsel of the De-
troit Edison Co. Cohan
served as Michigan deputy
attorney general for 11
years. He received his BA
and doctor of law degrees
from Wayne State Univer-
sity.

from Northland Center

Israel Increases
Potash Capacity

\\\44..............)
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' 1

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NEW YORK — Israel re-
cently announced the ex-
pansion of the operations of
the Dead Sea Works, its
largest potash source, to
meet increasing demand.
Israel presently serves seven
percent of the world's po-
tash market.

'

Now appearing
Mariana

Telephone: 559-6500

A WESTERN INTERNATIONAL HOTEL

el/

To exploit the country's
natural resources in the
Dead Sea — 43 billion tons
of potash, bromine and
other materials — Dead Sea
Works, Ltd., a subsidiary of
the ' state-owned Israel
Chemicals, Ltd. is investing
$20 million to increase its
capacity.

"Disdain reservations and
subterfuges, evasions and
sharp practices. Woe to him
who builds his house upon
them."
— Moses Maimonides

him to shift his scientific
field of interest from pure
physics to the biological
sciences. Released and reha-
bilitated in 1954, after Stal-
in's death, he was appointed
head of the Bioenergetics
Laboratory of Moscow's
newly organized Institute of
Molecular Biology, working
on the problem of how en-
ergy is stored in Photosyn-
thesis.
Now in the Weizmann
Institute's chemical physics
department, Prof. Turner-
man is concerned with find-
ing a solution to the world's
food and energy crises. He is
hopeful that Bioenergetics,
recognized only in the last
20 years as a separate disci-
pline, will lead to the devel-
opment of engineering dev-
ices capable of simulating
the principles nature uses in
producing food and energy
from living organisms.
"Nature has found mirac-
ulous ways of transforming
one kind of 'free energy' into
another in plant and animal
life, thus producing the driv-
ing force for all life proc-
esses," he explains.

Removal of Nazi
`Reminders' Urged

BONN (JTA) — Wilfried
Helstaedter, a member of
the Baden-Wuerttemberg
Parliament, has called upon
the provincial government
to exclude letter combina-
tions such as "NS," "SA,"
"SS," and "KZ" which are
reminders of Nazi-tyranny,
from car registration num-
bers.
He said that a number of
car registration offices had
already withdrawn such let-
ters on their own initiative,
particularly as foreigners
from countries which were
occupied by German forces
during World War II often
take offense at such "re-
minders."

`Russia Exchanged
Arms for Oil in
Yom Kippur War'

HONG KONG (ZINS) —
The Chinese press agency,
Hsinhua, said that the So-
viet Union had made stag-
gering profits by exchang-
ing arms for oil during the
October War in 1973. The
agency, monitored here,
said that while the Arab oil
embargo was imposed on
many capitalist countries,
"The Russians were covertly
exporting oil to these coun-
tries, including the United
States, to make profits."

Earle Mostyn's

NOSHERIE
J$ 3

HOME-MADE JEWISH STYLE
HOT HORS D'OEUVRES

minimum j

brought To you In Chafing Dishes 8 Complete Set-Up For

.

• WEDDINGS • BAR MITZVAS • SHOWERS
RSLD AL e SO4AKEN VI II RY HT RAMEALS,
• ALL SIMCHAS ORDE

er)
Cent

26052, GREENFIELD (lIncoln
c Lincoln

968-8666

FOR FURTHER INFO
ASK FOR EARLE OR LENNIE

Jack Freed & Ray Bresler

--‘11it 16'44lb*.
4 ■ 11011116,10,

IPT:dbr,4

You Hosts At the

RID CEDARS

'■ 3 Ia 0 t, ti

Invite You For Fine

RACK OF
LAMB

ENTERTAINMENT MON. THRU SAT.

Including

TOM KING

ALA MAISON

AT THE PIANO, TUES. THRU SAT.

PRIVATE BANQUET
ROOMS

From 15 to 125

23055 TELEGRAPH Al 9 MILE RD.

LATE EVENING
MENU
•

353-5170

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• Since 1960 . . . Good friends get together at . .
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r,

TRY OUR
FAMOUS

DINING and COCKTAILS

. •

SCOUR it SIMI!! •

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Something new at this old favorite. Menus that
feature even better eating for a whole

lot less than you would expect

Sing along at the

Piano Bar and

enjoy the spirit.

e

•

iorvevEcr, s•••100011100.

SCOTCH'N SIRLOIN

•oe•••• •••••••••

•

•

THURS. 8 FRI.
LOBSTER
BOIL $8.95

20480 James Couzens (the Lodge Expressway service drive) at

the corner of Greenfield Road_ Call 342-5660 for reservations.

•

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zokfi&r.

' -

tud

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.

Your host —
Gus Kokas

Restaurateur

The Chambertin .
22900 Michigan Ave.
In front of the Holiday Inn
Dearborn — 278-6900

't t.,ft.10

.,

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;es-S.

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Swedes Urge Cut
in UNESCO Aid

COPENHAGEN (JTA) —
Swedish members of Parlia-
ment have sent a request to
the Parliament's central
committee to cut down
Swedish support of
UNESCO.
A group of about 50 au-
thors and well-known Swed-
ish cultural figures have
also sent a petition to the
Swedish government re-
questing that there be "no
cooperation with UNESCO
as long as Israel is discrimi-
nated against."

75 per person
n

