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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

January 30, 1976 - Image 29

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1976-01-30

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

january 30,

I Mt UtIKUll nW15rf NtrI3

Get On The Right Track!'

Famous "BIG" Tyme Sandwiches

SAME NOSTALGIC ATMOSPHERE!
SAME GREAT MENU!

• CHARBURGERS • STEAK & EGGS
• DELICATESSEN

DESSERT FANTASIES . . . ALSO CREAM
PASTRIES GALORE — BAKED FRESH
DAILY. IN OUR OWN BAKERY!

4286 N. WOODWARD

Between 13 & 14 Mile

(Enjoy Our Fine Luncheon Menu)
Featuring Such Items As

BEEF TOSKA

Juicy beef dipped in an egg-cheese batter,
then fried. Served with Bordelaise sauce.

Combined With Our Exciting Salad Bar
This Makes An Enjoyable Dinner

0 ll

tAAOL.

18100 W. 10 Mile Rd.,

cor. Southfield Rd.

559-4230

Lunch, Mon.-Fri., 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
Dinner, Mon.-Fri., 5 p.m.-11 p.m.
Dinner, Saturday, 5:30 p.m.-12 Mid.

Late Evening Menu Available

Earle Mostyn's

NOSHERIE

968-8666
LINCOLN SHOPPING CENTER

26052 GREENFIELD

SLASHES BEEF PRICES!

THIS IS NOT A SALE — THESE ARE
OUR REGULAR EVERYDAY PRICES

CORNED BEEF • was $6.00 lb. .
was $6.50 lb..
Lean
PASTRAMI .. . was $6.00 lb. .
PEPPER BEEF . . was $6.50 lb. .
ROAST BRISKET was $6.00 lb.
HOT DOGS .. . was $2.49 lb.
(Sli i ced or unsliced)
(Sl
SALAMI
was $2.49 lb.

NOW $4 80 lb.
NOW $ 525 lb.
NOW $ 480 lb.
NOW $ 525 lb
NOW $480 lb.
NOW 5 1 99 lb.
N
OW $1 99 lb.
Now

OUR NEW HOURS

MON. THRU THURS., 6 a.m. to 11 p.m.
FRI. & SAT., 6 a.m. to 1 a.m.
SUN., 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

HOME-MADE JEWISH STYLE HORS D'OEUVRES

IN CHAFING DISHES & COMPLETE SETUP
50 person minimum $3.75 per person

COMPLETE TRAY CATERING
FOR ALL PURPOSES

19/6' -4 11 7/07
- -

The Best of Everything

(Continued from Page 28)
LobbiBar serves cocktails on
rolling carts in a lobby cock-
tail lounge . . . or tea in the
afternoon . . . or coffee and
desserts in the evening.
CONGRATS . . . to
Rose and Irving Guttman on
their 29th anniversary . . .
The Irving's Deli folks met
at a DP camp in Germany
following World War II .. . .
during which both were in a
German concentration
camp.
MAIL DEPT. . . .
From Irwin Hamburger
. . . "Your very authentic
article about the Broadway
M _et and the Lefkofsky
shop brought back a lot of
memories and prompted me
to- Send you this bit of nos-
talgia. About 1915 when
Lefkofsky's Deli was on
Gratiot near Hastings, my
father's dry goods store was
at St. Aubin and Fort
Streets, about two miles
from the deli. When mother
phoned Lefkofsky she al-
ways got prompt service on
the delivery.
At that time the Jewish
boys, many of whom were
newsboys, had a certain
twang added to their En-
glish and also wore their
caps in a very unusual way.
The peak of the cap was
rather low on the forehead
and the top was pulled back
to form a bag, which hung
at the back of the neck. Lef-
kofsky's delivery boy rode a
very old and dilapidated mo-
torcycle and always an-
nounced his arrival with,
`Yes-SIR, two ponds of
caun-beef for Mrs. Ham-
bickur-Yes-SIR!' . . . The
delivery boy was Sam
Boesky."
IT WAS THE DAY fol-
lowing Christmas . . . we
were on our way to the air-
port and Florida when stop-
ping into Al Balooley's To-
pinka's Country House on
Telegraph- and Seven Mile
. . . YO-t'd think after a
holiday with so much stuff-
ing and leftovers that res-
taurants would be almost
empty . . . But here was To-
pinka's Country House with
an almost packed house for
dinner . . .
Smiling, very polite Mary
Ellen Meklid, three years
there, was the kind of wait-
ress that would normally
make a good meal taste even
better . . . We had an excel-
lent garlic dressing on cold,
crisp salad, and butterfly
shrimp with Topinka's
white sauce which someday
could come close to what
we've been searching for
over 25 years . . . How
would you like three-des-
serts? . . . Al made us try

them
. . . strawberry
cheese cake, strawberry
parfait and a delicious puff
. . . Tom Kruk, a second-
year student at Henry Ford
Community College, was
another of the excellent bus-
boys at Topinka's . . . Over
a cup of coffee were the
"Men About Town" strolling
trio of accordion, violin and
guita.r, that has been at the
Country House weekends
since it opened 16 or 17
years ago.

TALIAN-AMERICAN CAFE

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS

BRUNCH & DINNER BUFFET

11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

ADULTS $4.75

CHILDREN UNDER 12

30c PER YEAR OF AGE

PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES

1 7630 WOODWARD (4 FBIkRs.N,:ao
s
t t 6 Mile)

Attendant Parking

ions

869.3988

MORE RANDOM
WISHES for 1976 . . .

Announcing a Special Sunday Series of ...

THAT Buddy's Pizza on
Six Mile and Conant
opens its second spot on the
northwest.

Las Vegas Style Dinner Shows

COMING FEB. 8

THE VOGUES

Jewishness

Manifestation and testi-
mony of that eternal Jew-
ishness are conspicuous in
the chronicles of Jerusalem
itself, which, more often
than not, fell into decay
under foreign rule, but,
once Jews were allowed
back, throve again. The his-
torian Flavious Josephus
attests a Jewish population
of 100,000 in the city at the
end of the first Century be-
fore the Common Era. On
the eve of the destruction of
the Second Temple over
1,900 years ago, the popula-
tion was 200,000, but, under
the Byzantines, it was only
80,000, and, after the Arab
irruption in the seventh
Century, it declined to
30,000, and in early Cru-
sader times to as low as
3,000.

Nationally Acclaimed Hit
Recording-Concert Artists

Doors Open at 3:30 p.m. — Dinner at 4 p.m.

Dinner Show at 5:30 p.m. includes

Complete 12 oz. Sirloin Steak
Dinner, Tax and Tip

Cocktail Show $7.50 Doors Open 7:30 p.m.

COMING MARCH 21

FRANK SINATRA, JR. SHOW

Early Reservations Recommended

353-7700

You'll Find It Only at the

HOLIDAY INN

OF SOUTHFIELD

26555 Telegraph at Lodge and 1-696

Bad customs are better
broken than kept up.

ALL
CARRY-OUT

p

% OFF

REGULAR PRICE!

SORRY —
NO SANDWICHES
OR DINNERS

$1750

ALL
DINNERS
$ 1
OFF

OUR REGULAR MENU!

THE ORIGINAL

QUIRE

RESTAURANT & DELICATESSEN

21754 W. 11 MILE RD. AT LAHSER

IN HARVARD ROW MALL

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
7 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.

353-4999

K FOR YOUR NAME YOU MAY BE A WINNER

FIND YOUR NAME IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF
THIS ISSUE AND YOU ARE A WINNER. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

RAtorstiAme4 - '76

1

"THE GOOD BOOK:
MONEYSAVING TWO FOR ONE PASSBOOK
THIS BOOK CONTAINS HUNDREDS OF
COUPONS FOR DINNERS, THEATRES,
SPORTS AND SHOW. THE GOOD BOOK

BRING THE PAGE WITH YOUR NAME ON IT
AND PROPER IDENTIFICATION TO:

THE JEWISH NEWS, 17515 W. 9 Mile, Suite 865

AND RECEIVE YOUR FREE "ENTERTAINMENT '76" BOOK

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