30 Friday, April 18, 1975
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Get On The Right Track!
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Famous "BIG" Tyme Sandwiches]
SAME NOSTALGIC ATMOSPHERE!
SAME GREAT MENU!
• CHARBURGERS • STEAK 8 EGGS
• DELICATESSEN
DESSERT FANTASIES . . . ALSO CREAM
PASTRIES GALORE — ' BAKED FRESH
DAILY IN OUR OWN BAKERY!
4286 N. WOODWARD
Between 13 & 14 Mile
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• • MANIA zELDAFs • •
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IS
GETTING BIGGER!
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: MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW •
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: • FOR PARTIES STARTING WITH THE
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• MIDDLE OF MAY . . . IN OUR NEW
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• SOON - TO-BE-COMPLETED
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ETC.
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FROM 30 TO 150 PEOPLE
COMPARE OUR PRICES!!
CALL MAMA AT
559-8717
29269 Southfield Rd.
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years.
Stouffer's has played 11 to guests like you
for fifty years now. S4 when we throw a
party, we really know hclw to make it perfect.
And that makes thingsla lot easier for you.
And, a lot more fun. Whether you're having a
breakfast meeting or is birthday. For a
group of 20 or a gang of 300. We'll give you
the best in service, fOod and facilities.
So be a guest at your illext party. Call our
party girl, Ms. Nanc3 Day, at 356-0652.
tau eri
NORTHLAND RESTAURANT
21100 Northwestern Highway
356 - 0452
NEW YORK — Winners
of the 1975 National Jewish
Book Awards, presented
annually by the Jewish
Book Council of ,the Na-
tional Jewish Welfare
Board, have been announced
by Dr. Eugene B. Borowitz,
theologian, author and pres-
ident of JWB's Jewish Book
Council. The National Jew-
ish Book Awards will be
presented May 4 at the Park
Avenue Synagogue.
Given by the JWB Jewish
Book Council to authors of
outstanding works in the
fields of Jewish history,
Jewish fiction, poetry, the
Holocaust, Jewish thought,
Israel, juvenile literature,
and translations of Jewish
classics, the Awards repre-
sent the highest recognition
in American Jewish litera-
ture.
Prof. Solomon Zeitlin was
cited for his cumulative con-
tributions to Jewish history,
including, "Who Crucified
Jesus?" (Bloch Publishing
Co.), "The Rise and Fall of
the Judaean State" (Jewish
Publication Society of
America, Phila.), "Studies
in the Early History of Ju-
daism" (Ktav Publishing
House, N.Y.).
Jean Karsavina won in
the field of•Jewish fiction
for her book, "White a-
gle, Dark Skies" (Charles
Scribner's Sons, N.Y.).
ADAM'S
RIB
the winner in the field of
Hebrew poetry for his,
"Metim ve-Ohavim" (Mas-
sada, Israel).
Dr. Isaiah Trunk, was
cited for a book on the Holo-
caust for his "Judenrat: The
Jewish Councils in Eastern
Europe Under Nazi Occupa-
tion" (Macmillan, N.Y.).
Prof. Eliezer Berkovits
was the winner in the field
of Jewish thought for his
work, "Major Themes in
Modern Philosophies of Ju-
daism" (Ktav Publishing
House, N.Y.).
Bea Stadtler, author of
"The Holocaust: A History
of Courage and Resistance"
(Behrman House, N.Y.), has
been declared the winner of
the award for a Jewish ju-
venile book.
The Rabbi Jacob Freed-
man Award for an English
translation of a Jewish clas-
sic will go to the Jewish
Publication Society's Com-
mittee of Translators of the
Prophets for its translation
of "The Book of Isaiah." The
committee includes: Drs.
Max Arzt, Bernard J. Bam-
berger, Harry Freedman,
H. L. Ginsberg, Solomon\
Grayzel and Harry M. Or-
linsky.
NEW YORK — The charges that the Amnesty
American Committee for International report had ig-
Israeli POW's and MIA's nored medical files submit-
has started a national peti- ted by Israel to the Interna-
tion drive in the U.S. to tional Red Cross, Dr. van
protest last week's report by Vuuren admitted that he
Amnesty International that had not seen such files. En-
equated Israeli and Syrian nals explained that all ma-
abuse of prisoners during • terial submitted to the Red
the Yom Kippur War. Cross was classified and not
Rabbi Rubin R. Dobin, made available.
chairman of the drive, said
the report was blatantly
unfair since Israel allowed U.S.-Saudi Arabia
immediate access to Red
Cross observers, while Syria Bias Is Charged
would not permit the obser-
NEW YORK — The
vers to visit its war prison American Jewish Congress
camps for five months.
charged Sunday that Secre-
Amnesty International tary of the Treasury Wil-
secretary general Martin liam E. Simon had signed
Ennals admitted at a press what amounted to "an
conference in London that agreement to accommodate
the weight of the evidence the religious bias of the
was against Syria.
Saudi Arabian government
Ennals said, "It seems and . . . to exclude qualified
that the abuses perpe- Jews" from projects author-
trated against Israeli ized by the U.S.-Saudi Ara-
POWs were generally of a bian Commission on Eco-
more severe character" nomic Cooperation.
than those committed
In a letter to the Secre-
against Syrian POWs in tary, Rabbi Arthur Hertz-
Israel.
berg of Englewood, N.J.,
That view was supported president of the AJCon-
by Dr. Kees van Vuuren, a gress, cited a statement
Dutch physician who was a adopted last June 8 by the
member of the three-man U.S. Saudi-Arabian Com-
Amnesty International mission — and signed by Si-
commission that visited Is- mon for the U.S. — which
rael and Syria last October requires that instructional
to interview former POWs programs to be provided by
and officials of both coun- American experts be "sen-
tries. • sitive to the social, cultural,
Dr. van Vuuren stressed political and religious con-
that the lack of Syrian med- texts of Saudi Arabia."
ical documentation and the
This requirement, Rabbi
commission's inability to Hertzberg said, represented
meet with Syrian doctors an "implicit understanding
who had treated Israeli that the Saudi Arabian gov-
POWs had made its work ernment will not be obliged
"so much more difficult" to deal with, accept or rec-
and reinforced the case ognize American citizens
against Syria. whom it finds objectionable
Referring to Israeli on any of these grounds."
LARCO'S
Fine Italian-American Cuisine
544.1240
1
Deliciously Prepared for the
Discerning Taste
FOR PARTIES
• BANQUET FACILITIES
Now: Open Sunday 12 Noon
7523 W. McNichols Rd. UN 2-6455
,
CAubergerpresents
Seafood Sunday!
That's this and every Sunday—a unique Seafood
Buffet to round out your weekend. You start
with our unusual appetizer buffet that's loaded
with steaming chowder, glazed salmon, shrimps
in the shell and other delicious treats. Then on to
the Fresh Salad Bar for your choice gla tempting
salad that you make yourself. And then, the
crowning touch—platters and chafing dishes
filled with baked fish, french fried fish, filet
de sole, shrimp and other items from the ocean's
larder that defy description. It's something you
won't want to miss, all at only $7.95 per person.
And you can heighten all those glorious flavors
with fine wines from our exclusive cellars. This
Sunday, from 5:30 until 9 PM. Call us now for
reservations, won't you? 643-7474.
Prof. Arnold Karmmer
won for a book on Israel
for his work, "The Forgot-
ten Friendship: Israel and
the Soviet Bloc, 1947-53"
(University of Illinois
Press, Chicago).
•
• • • Reuven Ben-Yosef was
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POW Report Called Unfair
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in the Farrell's Shopping Plaza
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Southfield
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for
JWB Lists Book Prize Winners
Somerset Inn, Big Beaver
Road, east of Coolidge, r
Troy, Michigan 48084
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• • Since 1960 .. Good friends
get together at .. . •
•scaTes siREDIN
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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.
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• • • • • • sccrrct-eni
SIRLOIN
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LOBSTER BOIL
EVERY THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY NIGHT •
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James Couzens (the Lodge Expressway service drive) at
• 20480
the corner of Greenfield Road. Call 342-5660 for reservations.
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• For another great dining experience try the new Meyerson •
• Restaurant, Trio at Franklin Place.
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$8.95
bike
roman
27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD.
At 12 Mile, Just Off U.S. 696
851-4094
Open Mon. thru Sat. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 a.m.
OPEN MOTHER'S DAY 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Specializing in
ITALIAN-AMERICAN FOOD
PRIVATE CATERING AND - BANQUET FACILITIES
• Businessmen's Luncheons • Dinners
DANCING MON.-SAT. FROM 10 p.m.
COCKTAIL HOUR
4 to 7 p.m.
DANNY
STEVENSON
at the piano bar
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