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May 23, 1975 - Image 31

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-05-23

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

._.. . . . .

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

THE SUSSEX IIOITSE



19701 W. 12 Mile Rd. (Just East of Evergreen)
Open Mon.-Sat. from 11:30 a.m.
559-3377

• Businessmen's Luncheons • Complete Dinners

FASHION SHOW EVERY WED.— MARGO'S BOUTIQUE

. I— OPEN MON. - SAT. FROM 11:30 A.M.

BANQUET FACILITIES FOR UP TO 275

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

I •



.1

■ 11111•11111=1•

• ■ /III ■■



•••■■

Jack Freed & Ray Bresler

Your Hosts At the

RID CEDARS

8
cE11)

11

m4.....
. 0 4*
3

1.);

(1 0 11

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%asa)

Invite You For Fine

Dining, Cocktails & Dancing

Song Stylings By

JOSE ROIJAS

MON. THRU SAT.

PRIVATE BANQUET
ROOMS

From 15 to 125

23055 TELEGRAPH AT 9 MILE RD.

onslv

House
Specialties
include
Selected
Seafood,
Steaks,
Prime Rib and
Rack of Lamb

LATE EVENING
MENU


353-5170

SUNDAYS, 12:30 to 8:30 p.m. and
TUES., WED. & THURS., 5:30 to 10 p.m.

MICHIGAN'S MOST ELABORATE

BUFFET

$ 95

Everything From A to Z!

per
person
Children Under 5 Free

DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT IN OUR LOUNGE TUES.-SAT.

DRAWBRIDGE TRIO:

Drawbridge

Open Tues. - Fri.
1 1:30 to 2:00 a.m.
Sat. 5:30 to 2 a.m.
Sun. 2 to 9 p.m.

145 SHELDON RD.

( Take 8 Mile to Sheldon,
Turn Left 2 Blocks)
Northville

349-48 8 5

Rose and Irving Guttman
Invite You
To See Why

We Are #1

In The Metropolitan
Detroit Area

XeSSe

‘CP• BREAKFAST
• LUNCH
• DINNER
• CARRY-OUT

INEW HOURS FOR OUR FAMOUS

BREAKFAST SPECIAL

MON. THRU FRI. 'TIL 11 a.m.
SAT. & SUN. 'TIL 10 a.m.

ORANGE JUICE,
2 EGGS (YOUR CHOICE)
ROLL OR TOAST,
TEA OR COFFEE

27165 GREENFIELD

1 BIk. N. of 11 Mile

Next to Great Scott Market

559-13g0



99'

HOURS:

TUES., WED., THURS. & FRI.,
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
SATURDAY, 7 a.m.-1 a.m.

SIINMAY 7 n m. - 10 a.m.

Friday, May 23, 1975 31

Warsaw Ghetto Survivors Meet President Ford

WASHINGTON (JTA)-
President Ford told a group
of 10 survivors of the War-
saw Ghetto uprising that
"as long as I am President, I
will not allow anything to
happen to the state of Is-
rael." The leaders of the
Warsaw Ghetto Resistance
Organization (WAGRO) had
been invited to the White
House to commemorate the
30th anniversary of the
freeing of Europe from Nazi
tyranny.
The survivors, led by Ben-
jamin Meed, president of
WAGRO, presented the
President with a "Memo-
randum for History" that
called on the United States
to "remain ever vigilant in

the defense of freedom and
human dignity wherever it
stands endangered" so that
the tragedy of the Holocaust
"never happens again."
They also urged Ford to
"insure Israel's survival as
the homeland we didn't have
when the world rejected us
and as the homeland we
wish to have in the future."

The group met at the
headquarters here of Bnai
Brith International prior
to meeting with Ford "to
be among Jews as we
prepare to carry one
thought to the White
House: don't forget what
happened," Meed said.

During that meeting the
group appealed to Poland to

JDC Aids Tunisian Jews

NEW YORK — Yosef A.
complained that the damp-
ness bothered his arthritis
and asked that he be trans-
ferred to a home for aged in
Tunis. Yosef was one of
more than 100 elderly Jews
living in four homes that the
Joint Distribution Commit-
tee helped the Tunisian Jew-
ish community set up over
the past eight years.
Until recently there was
little need for institutional
placement of elderly Jews in
Tunisia. It was traditional
in North Africa for old peo-
ple to live out their lives
with their families. How-
ever, emigration has
changed this.
As the younger people
left, more and more of the
elderly people remained be-
hind. Many were very poor
and alone and needed a
place to live and someone to
look after them, and so the

`Israel Intelligence
Erred in 2 Wars'

TEL AVIV (ZINS) — Is-
rael's intelligence evaluation
was just as mistaken to the
Six-Day War as on the eve
of the Yom Kippur conflict
— according to General Is-
rael Tal.
The government believed,
General Tal said, the Egyp-
tian president Abdul Nasser
would never act against Is-
rael as long as his forces
were at war in Yemen. Is-
rael finally anticipated
Arab attack with a massive
move of its own in 1967.
Tal partly attributed Is-
rael's incorrect reactions to
intelligence reports in 1973
to the feeling of security
provided by the country's
greater territorial depth as
compared to the borders of
June 1967.

NY Rabbis' Board
Names Rabbi Sally

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Rabbi Sally Preisand, the
first woman rabbi in
American Jewish history,
has been accepted as a
member by the New York
Board of Rabbis.
Her application was sub-
mitted, along with other
membership applications, to
the NYBR membership
committee, for action at a
general membership meet

JDC with United Jewish
Appeal funds, helped the
community to open homes
to care for them.

preserve the Jewish ceme-
teries and remaining syn-
agogues, asking that the
Polish government "not let
Hitler make good the 'final
solution' for Poland."
In response, the First Sec-
retary of the Polish Em-
bassy, Wieslaw Bednarczuk,

Israelis Develop
New Wheat Strain

REHOVOT — A new
high-yield type of wheat
characterized by one giant
spike, broad leaves and a
non-branching stalk has
been developed by Dr. Dan
Atzmon and Elchanan Ja-
cobs of the Weizmann Insti-
tute's plant genetics depart-
ment.
The new wheat, derived
from crossing a primitive
African wheat orginating in
the Sahara with a local
strain. has potential for a
higher yield than conven-
tional types of wheat.

The newest of the JDC-
supported institutions in
Tunis is a 22-bed home on
the edge of the "hara," the
old Jewish quarter. It was
formerly an ORT school
and was remodeled to
serve as a home for the
aged. A grant from the
Central British Fund
helped defray the cost of
the renovation.

When the time came for
Yosef to move, the commu-
nity social worker went to
bring him to his new home.
She found him waiting at
the door with a broad smile
on his face, surrounded by
his treasures — hundreds of
family photographs and
dozens of old wooden shoe
forms. Yosef was a shoe-
maker in his younger days
and was still very proud of
his craft.

Hebrew U. Seeks
Entries for Award

HUNGARIAN
FOOD

Toronto hnactc .fives

BOBBIES' BASH

Sunday Concerts

Featuring on May 25

Detroit Symphony
String Quartet

6:30 -9:30p.m.

Dinners/ Cocktails Available

$2.50 per person cover

Reservations 642-3700

30100 Telegraph Road

North of Twelve Mile

OPEN DAILY 11:30-10 p.m.

a

(Monday only for dinner)

BALATON

RESTAURANT
3966 W. 12 Mile



3 Blks. E. of Greenfield



vv

Res. Suggested Weekends
546-1894

111011111EN

4414014++++++444+014+4443
N

42 29269 SOUTHFIELD RD.
4.2 (in the Ferrell's Shopping Center)

559-8717

$ NEW PARTY MENU IN
:LE OUR PRIVATE ROOM

4
43
4
4
4
4

GENEVA — Ryan Marc
Rudolph, 16-month-old, of
Johannesburg, South Af-
rica, has had his claim as
"World's Youngest ORTist"
challanged.
Women's Canadian ORT
— Toronto says one of their
active members enrolled
each of her granddaughters
as a "Life Member" at birth.

Sparkling Spring Sounds

AUTHENTIC HOME-MADE

JERUSALEM — The
Hebrew University of Jeru-
salem is accepting entries
for the Israel Jefroykin 'B
Award, endowed by the 43
Jewish National Fund, for
research on Eastern Euro- 43
pean Jewry.
The $2,000 award will be
made for the best scholarly
research work of 30,000
words or more on any politi-
cal, social, economic, cul-
tural, linguistic or other
aspect of Eastern European
Jewry.
Papers may be submitted
to the Academic Secretary,
the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, Givat Ram cam-
pus, Jerusalem. The dead-
line is July 31.

Toronto Claims
Young ORT Title

who had been invited by
Bnai Brith to hear the survi-
vors, said that the Jewish
sites are being renovated.

4
4
4
4
4

From 20 To 150

FRUIT COCKTAIL SUPREME
ASSORTED RELISH TRAY
HOT GARLIC ROLLS
MAMA ZELDA'S OLD-FASHIONED MINESTRONE SOUP
CHEF'S DINNER SALAD (choice of dressings)
PIZZA (choice of three items)
$4.00
SPAGHETTI (choice of sauces
3.75

*no potatoes or vegetable

4.00

FRIED CHICKEN
FRIED SHRIMP
CHOPPED SIRLOIN PARMIGIANA
TURKEY PARMIGIANA
VEAL PARMIGIANA

4.25
4.25
4.25
5.00
6.00
6.00
5.75
5.75
6.00

BROILED FILET MIGNON
NEW YORK SIRLOIN

DELMONICO STEAK

BROILED WHITE FISH
BROILED RED SNAPPER

CHOICE OF
POTATO OR SPAGHETTI

CHOICE OF
CARROTS & GREEN PEAS OR MUSHROOMS & GREEN PEAS

'B
4

43
43

CHOICE OF
SUNDAE—ICE CREAM—SHERBERT—SPUMONI—CANNOLI
COFFEE—TEA—SANKA—MILK-

(SOFT DRINKS 25a per pers. addit.)

CHILDREN'S PARTIES

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, BEFORE 5 P.M.

HAMBURGER ON A ROLL, SIDE OF SPAGHETTI,
ICE CREAM DESSERT & SOFT DRINK

'2 per
5 °



To the above menu add 4% Michigan Sales To, and 16% Gratuity

(Saturday 8 Sunday, 50c per person additional)

1.

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A'A'A


A• A • A . A A A

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