THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Danny Raskin's LISTENING POST CHINESE dinners cooked in vegetable oil has it's own clean taste . . . Usually, to make sure you get this type of preparation, tell the manager instead of the waiter . . . and make certain it's before giving your order . . . We enjoyed a recent meal prepared this way at Hoa Kow on 9 Mile Rd. in Oak Park . . . -After bossman Eugene Woo had asked us if we wanted our food with or without starch, son Scott remarked, "Sounds like a Chinese laun- dry." HEALTH LECTURES once a week, "phone reas- surances", visitation, escort service and transportation are among the dignity retai- ners in the Oak Park Senior Citizens Center program . . . based at Einstein School . . . Furnishings for the three rooms used, volun- teers and discounts from merchants are among the necessary needs . . . Con- tact Mollie Pitzak, center supervisor. COMPLETE MENU OF authentic Middle East dishes is now at the Land- mark Restaurant on Green- field and 101/2 Mile . . . along with it's regular foods . . . The new cuisine, made in the Landmark's own kitchen, includes all the fa- vorites that many folks have been going downtown for . . Now they're in the northwest area. MONEY COLLECTED by the bingo of Children Un- limited, April 30, at Oak Park High, will go. to Pen- rickton Nursery for Blind Children. DEFINITION OF a psychologist . . . as given by Tommy Rosenberg . . . "If there are 20 men sitting in a room and a beautiful woman enters, the one who is watching the other men is a psychologist." WOULDN'T IT BE won- derful if organizations hon- ored people who deserved it . . . instead of looking for the big dollar when picking out an honoree regardless of who they are or what they have done? . . . However, charity workings are built upon making money . . . and that's what it's all about . . . Too bad . . . There must be a solution. ANNUAL ICE SHOW, by Oak Park and North Sub- urban Figure Skating Club, number 15, is set for April 19 and 20, at the Oak Park Ice Arena on Oak Park Blvd. . . . with performances both evenings at 8 and a spe- cial attraction for children –on Sunday at 3 . . . Ice show is called "Potpourri on Ice." JOINING THE big price reducing parade on dinners is Angel's Hour Glass, W. McNichols, six blocks west of Southfield . . . Sirloin steak, $4.95, Prime Rib, $4.65, Red Snapper, $4.50, Surf and Turf, $6.75, etc. LOOKING BACK ON AUG. 25, 1967 . . . "Daniel Cooper, state repre- sentative, broke a bone in his foot recently and bor- rowed the crutches used by Oak Park Councilman Mert Colburn a few years ago . . . Dan jokingly asked his law partners, Robert Feld- stein and Henry Baskin, if he had a case — since Mert's crutches broke and Dan re- injured his foot I" SEPT. 12, 1969 . . . "The popular belief that because a man makes a lot of money he has a lot of brains creates a puzzle as this story shows . . . A community gent re- cently won a tidy sum of money in Las Vegas on number 14 . . . When asked how he figured it out, he said, "I had a dream. One night I saw in my dream a big 9, and next I saw in my dream a 6, so I used my brains and figured that 9 and 6 is 14." DO YOU REMEMBER . .. Sandra's Bar on Boston and Dexter in 1939 or 1940? . . . or that Don Hill, now at the Bijou on Southfield wrote "I'm Falling For You" to start Billy Ekstine on the road to fame? . . . Now Don has written, "Come To Me." BONANZA OPERA- TION at 11 Mile and Green- field is high among their top volume getters says Terry Maxwell, vice president of the Metropolitan- Franchise Corp. of Bonanza chain . . . Mark Wilson is manager of the Southfield spot . . . with it's Sunday only fea- ture from 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. of chopped steak, salad, baked potato and toasted roll, $1.09. CAN'T 'FORGET THE fact that there still is a Sheraton downtown . . . the Sheraton Cadillac that is . . . a bit forgotten but still at its Washington Blvd. locale . . . Many whirls of nostalgia came back while attending the recent March of Dimes Walkathon kickoff in the old Book-Casino . . . This is 1975 and the Walk- A-Thon has a newness about it also . . . the name . . . which will be Super- walk . . . with those 20 mile hikes (at a minimum of 10¢ a mile- from oodles of folks per walker . . . Metropoli- tan Detroit March of Dimes head man Max Gurman has done a great job of weaving celebrities and folks from all walks of life to partake in the very fine endeavor . . . Money raised for the unfottunate kiddies is a blessing . . . Superwalk, 1975 takes place May 4, starting at Belle Isle . . . plus other satellite walks at other areas . . . Where 3,- 000 walked the first year (this is number five), 30,000 trod and trotted to the tune of $650,000 for March of Dimes research and medical programs . . . To register, call .864-6000. Canadians Commemorate Warsaw Ghetto Uprising MONTREAL (JTA) — More than 6,500 Canadian Jews attended observances in six major Canadian cities commemorating the 32nd anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising and the 30th anniversary of the lib- eration of the Nazi death camps. The observances, spon- sored by the Canadian Jew- ish Congress, were held in synagogues, community centers, libraries and schools in Montreal, To- ronto, Winnipeg, Vancou- ver, Ottawa and Halifax. Prof. Emile Fackenheim of the University of Toronto delivered the memorial ad- dress to more than 900 peo- ple attending special serv- ices here at the Chevra Kedisha Bnai Jacob Syn- agogue. A teach-in of the Holocaust was held at the Jewish public library where 250 people viewed a film on the Warsaw Ghetto, fol- lowed by a panel discussion. The McGill University Jewish Teachers Training Program presented "Night Words," a midrash of the Holocaust. Pro- grams continued for the entire week at Jewish ele- mentary and high schools. About 250 French Cana- dian Jews attended com- memorative services. TAILIAN AMERICAN CAFE In Winnipeg, 700 people attended services at the Bnai Abram Synagogue. Genia Silkes, who was a teacher in the underground Jewish schools in Poland, spoke on the defense and uprising in the ghetto. She also spoke to students at Jewish schools and at the University of Manitoba. Some 250 people partici- pated in renaming one of the city's main streets, "Avenue of the Warsaw Ghetto Heroes," for the week. Twelve Christian clergy- men joined 400 people in the Jewish Community Center in Vancouver in special serv- ices. A year of Holocaust ac- tivities in Ottawa was cul- minated with services at Cong. Mathzikei Hadas with a program prepared by the youngsters of the commu- nity. More than 300 people attended the services wear- ing black arm bands. Some 500 people visited the Yad Vashem display at the Jew- ish Community Center. About 150 people at- tended special services in the Shaar Shalom Syn- agogue in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation featured some four hours of special programming, in- cluding music; dramas, and readings dealing with the Holocaust period. • LUNCHES • DINNERS • COCKTAILS PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES CLOSED SUNDAYS 17630 WOODWARD (4 Blks. N. of 6 Mile) Defense authorities dis- carded some 20,000 bomb detonators by dumping them into the sea two months ago. Apparently the corro- sive action of salt water fractured the containers and the detonators, lighter than water, floated to the surface and were washed ashore. In an unrelated incident, a woman was slightly in- jured when a bomb exploded Iran-Iraq Accord to Hurt Israel? NEW YORK (ZINS) — Two highly significant de- velopments in recent days are seen as adversely affect- ing Israel's interests. 1) The Iraqis, now relieved of the threat of the Kurdish rebel- lion, will have a free hand to send troops to the Israeli front in case of a new war. 2) Under pressure from the Arab countries Iran may suspend the shipment of oil to Israel in order to extract more unilateral concessions. For Reservations Attendant Parking 869-3988 JAKKS Restaurant and Lounge 25234 GREENFIELD, 1/2 BLK. N. OF 10 MILE IN THE GREENFIELD CENTER 5467 1224 NOW OPEN SUNDAYS 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. FOR COCKTAILS & DINNERS • CHOPS • STEAKS • SEAFOOD • FINE LIQUORS ALL DINNERS ARE COMPLETE, INCLUDING SOUP, SALAD, POTATO OR VEGETABLE, COFFEE, TEA OR SANKA • ENTERTAINMENT AND OUR FAMOUS DELICIOUS BAR-B-Q SPARE RIBS LUNCH SERVED MON.-FRI., 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. DINNER ALSO SERVED MON.-SAT., 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. LATE EVENING MENU Bomb Detonators Washed Ashore TEL AVIV (JTA) — The beaches of Natanya and ad- jacent shores have been closed to the public and placed under guard because thousands of lethal bomb detonators have been washed ashore in recent days. The public has been warned that the small, plas- tic-coated objects which could cause severe injury may be imbedded in sand or floating in the surf over a wide area. Friday, April 18, 1975 25 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. under a car April 10 in San- hedria, a religious quarter on the northern outskirts of Jerusalem. The vehicle had Swiss license plates and be- longs to a physician em- ployed by the government. It was the second explo- sion in a Jerusalem residen- tial area in recent days. The earlier one also involved a bomb placed under a car. PIANO BAR STYLINGS BY BILLY" STEVENSON WED. THRU SAT. 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Your Host Herb Goldberg COCKTAIL HOUR PIANO FUN WITH GEORGE NICHOLLS TUES. THRU FRI. 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. r•q• iie ilfo++ + +++++6110114+++ ++61444443 Teet Tuttet W. B. B. INC. a.m. to 8 p.m. 7 days a week CU 4108 W. Maple Road 42 e. (1 BIk W. of Telegraph) CU U.S.D.A. Choice f Birmingham, Michigan 4111 _t. Phone 626-4767 I; CU ( ROAST BEEF 43 43 sliced to order SPECIAL Every Monday Platter of ROAST BEEF includes choice of Potato Roll & Butter _ Beverage 5 219 4: 4: 4: 4: 4g 41 41