?I:1
Friday, September 17, 1976
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Heroes of '65 High School
Class; Their Roles Today
TALIIAN•AMERICAN CAFE
MONDAYS THRU THURSDAYS, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.,
FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS, 11 a.m. to 12 Mid.
SUNDAY BUFFET
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Adults . . . $4.75
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THE ORIGINAL
ESQUIRE
Miss Universe At
Technion Dinner
Delicatessen-Restaurant
11 MILE & LAHSER IN HARVARD ROW
353-4999
asuutsasumsts jujuksumstss jus juLUSSAS1319._
15640 W. 11 MILE RD., Corner Greenfield
Southfield
557-3237
SALAD BAR
SERVED AT NO EXTRA CHARGE
TUESDAYS, 4 p.m.-9 p.m.
RIB EYE STEAK .......$1 89
CHOPPED STEAK .....$1 69
INCLUDES
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WED. & THURS., 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
VEAL CUTLET • • • • • • • • $1 • 59
INCLUDES:
A remarkable social
history is recorded in an
unusual compilation of
experiences in an inevit-
able change of guard re-
lated in "What Really
Happened to the Class of
'65" (Random House).
It is the story of 30
members of the Palisades
High School Class of 1965,
their school and youth
glories and how they were
transformed.
Two members of that
class, Michael Medved
and David Wallechinsky
(Wallace) chronicled the
factual occurrences, the
experiences of the young
people, how they had
been judged and what
they did in school and
what their roles are now.
Medved, who was voted
"Most Intellectual" of his
class, has an interesting
Salad Bar, Hot Baked
Potato & Texas Toast
We Also Have Available
• CHICKEN • FISH • SHRIMP
NEW YORK — Miss
Universe, Rina Mes-
singer, will be one of the
distinguished particip-
ants at the 1976 national
dinner of the American
Technion Society, Oct. 10
at the Hotel Pierre in
New York City.
Joseph J. Sisco, former
Under Secretary of State
for Political Affairs and
now President of Ameri-
can University, will ad-
dress the gathering on
the current situation in
the Middle East.
The dinner will honor
Henry Taub, who ends his
three-year term as Presi-
dent of the American
Technion Society, and
President - Designate
Samuel Neaman.
Neaman is a well-known
philanthropist and foun-
der of the Samuel
Neaman Institute of Ad-
vanced Studies in Science
and Technology at the
Technion.
Meanwhile, it was an-
nounced in Israel that the
Haim Reiskin Prom-
enade, a tree-lined walk
near the entrance to the
Technion was dedicated
Sept. 1.
Reiskin first came to
Palestine in 1917 to serve
with the "Jewish Leg-
ion". After spending
much of his life in
Washington, D.C., he set-
tled in Natanya several
years ago.
PONTIAC BLOOMFIELD SHERATON
2 Hour Musical
OPENS
Comedy— 4 .1 ( .>: „4
8
2nd Big Week
Cast of 14
1.<4.44..eak, CCriteft
A FUNNY THI
, THE 1
HIT-28 Months on Broadway
422,‘
HAPPENED ON THE WAY To THE foRUI4 41"
• Admission S4 50
• Cocktail service available before
show & during intermission
• In The-Round seating
• Fridays & Saturdays — 8 15
• Please specify Cafe Theatre when
phoning in reservations
• Vaiet Parking
BITRTSHEYELOVILARRYGELBART
STEWEN .SONDHE1M
Curtain Time 8:15 p.
RESERVATIONS:
338-6131
COCKTAIL DINNER •PLAYHOUSE
•
career of writing, teaching
in Jewish schools and TV
work to his credit. Wal-
lechinsky, son of novelists
Irving and Sylvia Wallace,
has authored.a number of
books.
The careers of those de-
scribed in the book, whose
story first was sen-
sationalized by Time
magazine, include such a
variety that the
Medved - Wallechinsky
book instructs the reader
in the social aspects of
changes in people's lives
during the differing eras
of '65 and '75, and enter-
tains the reader with the
humor with which the
book is replete.
The intellectual turned
Bircher, the football
player who now is a mas-
seur, the variety includes
those turned writers,
merchants, religious fad-
dists, one even became a
farmer.
All faiths, all types of
individualists who have
become rooted in new so-
cial aspects as part of their
environment, the contem-
poraries of the two au-
thors, are portrayed in the
realistic reunion of many
kinds of the one high
school class of 1965.
The stories are fas-
cinating, the characters
are challenging, the au-
thors have captured the
realities of life's changes
with so much humor that
this book will hold the
reader glued to the nar-
ratives, even encourag-
ing some re-reading. The
photos of some of the re-
captured heroes of the
book, then as now, add in-
terest to the delightful
stories.
Mrs. Hollander
Art Show Slated
Jean Hollander has
been elected chairman for
the Southfield Arts
Council Auction.
A founding member of
the council, Mrs. Hollan-
der will oversee all ar-
rangements and ac-
tivities leading up to the
Nov. 12 event.
Odyssey International
will present an art show
6-9:30 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday in the Hampshire
House Condominiums,
31925 W. 14 Mile, Far-
mington. Water color ar-
tist Jim Gray will be fea-
tured.
Norm KePagr's
*quirt's Oat*
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at Maple/1 5 & Pontiac Trail)
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ag
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an d mark Showing
For ORT TV Film
NEW YORK — The
landmark, award-
winning documentary,
"L'chaim — to Life!,"
produced and directed by
Harold Mayer for Wo-
men's American ORT,
has been scheduled for its
100th airing on televiglon
in the United States.
When the film is shown in
South Bend, Ind. late in
September it will have
been seen by an audience
estimated at some 75-80
million people.
"L'chaim!" traces the
history of the Russian
Jewish community from
the 19th century through
the establishment of the
state of Israel. A juror at
the 1974 American Film
Festival, where the film
was awarded a first prize,
called it, "The most de-
finitive film on the plight'
of the Jew since `I\light
and Fog'. -
Widely acclaimed by
newspaper and magazine
critics and television au-
diences wherever it has
been aired from coast to
coast, "L'chaim!" is also a
recipient of a Cine Golden
Eagle, a Silver Plaque at
the 1974 Chicago Inter-
national Film Festival
and was honored by its
inclusion in the Festival
di Populi in Florence.
Woe to the ship that has.
lost its pilot:— The Talmud
19460 W. 10 Mile Rd. (1 Mk. E. of Evergreen
352-7466
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