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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

June 09, 1978 - Image 35

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-06-09

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

Friday, June 9, 1978 35 _

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

CHINA
GATE

IS OPEN AT
Pine Lake Mall

4343 ORCHARD LAKE RD.
BET. LONG LAKE
& LONE PINE

Detroiter Named

NOT HUNGRY?
DON'T COME TO

OLD TIME DEL!

27701 Orchard Lake Read
Near 12 Mil.
553-2191
OPEN

24HOuRS

c THE YAN - N
ROADHOUSE

Relax,

enjoy good
food and drink
at moderate cost

851-5540

MON.-THURS.
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
FRI. & SAT.
11 a.m. to 12 Mid.
SUN. & HOLIDAYS,
12 noon to 11 p.m.•

At the Ryon Roadhouse, you will
relax !nth. comfortable surround-
ings of • contemporary roadhouse
end enjoy honest portions of
hearty food, honest drinks and
greet entertainment without
cover charge or Increased prices.
Any way you look at it. we're one of
the best values around. Come, find
out 16, yourself!

LUNCHEON SPECIALS

3950 14 Mb Rd.
2 Wes I d bided Ibll

COMPLETE CARRY-OUT
AVAILABLE

239-11IN

No,

in Sall-2m imt.les.

‘al 5 v s i9FPriel:' ,.)
DINNER SPECIALS MON. THRU SAT

(1 J9 u721 5

.

• BEEF KABOB • FRESH FISH • CHOPS
YOUR CHOICE

INCLUDES: TOSSED SALAD,
VEGETABLE OR POTATO

$5

Happy Hour In The Lounge
4 to 7 p.m.

BANQUET FACILITIES

AMAMI AP TO 225

95

NOW FEATURING

JERRY LIBBY

JAZZ TRIO
WED.-SAT. 8 p.m. to 1 a.m.

SPECIALIZING IN
.
• BARBEQUED SPARE RIBS
• BARBEQUED CHICKEN
• FRESH SEA FOOD
• COMPLETE MENU
• CHOICE COCKTAILS
FAMILY DINING AT ITS BEST

CARRY OUT
946-7960

11180 TELEGRAPH

Id., Wei L

STEPHENSON

---

Cu m

24931 N. CHRYSLER R. ( 1-75 at 10 Mkt)

Hazel Park

PRIVATE BANOUET FACILITIES

FOR 25 TO 300

542-9198

• Anniversaries
• Weddings ,....
• Bar Mitivas'
• Parties For All
• Showers
• Bat Mitzvas.
Occasions
• Reunions
• Banquets
Open Mon. Thru Sat.. featuring Fine Steaks. Noble Wines, Casual

Elegance, Gourmet Salad Bar, (over 37 items, incl. creamed her-
ring, deviled eggs. etc.) House Specialties: Chateaubriand. Fresh

Seafood Daily. Roast Long Island Duck-
ling...Prepared By Chef Richard Lavoie.

BRING THIS AD

FREE
SHRIMP COCKTAIL
with
tiptoe.

Entertainment
Hours: Mon.-Fri.. 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.

Sa1.4p.m.to2a.m.

OP131 SUNDAYS FOR PRIVATE FAMES OM.Y

LUNCH & DINER

SPECIALS

MOW THRU FRI.

DAILY HOURS:
MOM TitRU THURS.,

11 sm. roll Ism.

ITALIAN RESTAURANT

Pizza rated No. 1 by
Channel 7 News
BEER & WINE

FRI, 11 am. to 2 tuo.
SAT., 4 p.a. to 2 UAL
SUN., 4 p.oL to 11 p.m.

CARRY-OUTS AVAILABLE



NORTHWESTERN HGWY. Al 12 MILE FRANKUN
IN FRANKUN SHOMANG PLAZA

PHILADELPHIA — Dr.
Edward B. Shils was elected
president of the Jewish Pub-
lication Society of America
at the Society's 90th annual
meeting. He succeeds A. Leo
Levin, who served as presi-
dent of JPS for the past
three years.
Dr. Shils is professor of
management and director of
the Wharton School's En-
trepreneurial Center,
which he established in
1974.
The following vice presi-
dents were also elected:
Robert P. Abrams of
Philadelphia, chairman of
the March of Dimes; Robert
P. Frankel,• a Philadelphia
attorney; Max M. Kampel-
man, an attorney from
Washington, D.C., and past
president of the American
Friends of the Hebrew Uni-
versity; and Irwin T.
Holtzman of Detroit,
businessman and collector
of books of Jewish interest,
specializing in modern Heb-
rew literature.
Dr. Muriel Berman was
elected treasurer of JPS,
and Norma F. Furst, dean of
student affairs at Temple
University was elected sec-
retary.
New trustees include:
Stuart Eizenstat, who heads
the domestic policy staff at

Broadcast Strike
in Israel — Again

Mon. thm Fn.. 11 to 12
OPEN 7 DAYS
Sat.. 5 to 12 Sun .12 to 12



357-3280,

Specializing in Authentic
Italian-American Dining
Lunches and Dinners

JPS Elects New Officers

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Radio and television broad-
casts were suspended for 24
hours last week except for
hourly newscasts, as
employees of the Broadcast
Authority staged a protest
strike over wages.
It was the second broad-
cast black out in less than
two months and the issue
was the same — the gov-
ernment's refusal to go
along with a wage agree-
ment reached earlier bet-
ween the newspaper pub-
lishers and the journalists
union.
The Broadcast Authority
is a public agency controlled
by the state and its
employees are civil ser-
vants. The privately
employed journalists won a
temporary 75 percent wage
increase, spread over three
months, pending conclusion
of a final wage agreement,
but the government has re-
fused to grant the same in-
crease to the broadcast
journalists for fear that it
would create a precedent for
similar wage demands by
other government
employees.
Prof. Reuven Yaron,
chairman of the Broadcast
Authority, charged that the
gOvernment's position pre-
judiced the authority's free-
dom of action with its own
employees. Yitzhak Livni,
director general of the
Broadcast Authority, added
that the government's re-
fusal to grant broadcast
journalists the same treat-
ment as print journalists
would endanger the inde-
pendence of the Broadcast
Authority.

the White House; Michael
Greenblatt of Montreal,
chairman of the commercial
law division of the Cana-
dian Bar; Max Frankel of
New York, head of the
editorial department of the
New York Times; Roberta
Levy, an attorney from
Minneapolis; Stanley
Sheerr, of Philadelphia; and
Rabbi Gerald I. Wolpe,
senior rabbi of Har Zion
Temple of Philadelphia.
The JPS has begun a new
program, the JPS Commun-
ity Trust, to provide books
to homes for the aged,
apartment houses for the
elderly, hospitals, new
community centers, Hillel
organizations, college
Jewish study programs,
university libraries, camps
and Israeli institutions.

Open Sundays. a to ern —cloud Mon.

EXCELLENT BANQUET
FACILITIES

a rco ,s

UN 2 11156

7226 W. Iikliteldis (6 blks. W. of Unreels)

-

Restaurant and

Lounge
Located In
Holiday Inn of Farmington

10 Mile & Gd. River 477-4000

At The Inn

NOW
APPEARING
FOR DANCING

HARMONY
SWEET

Complete Catering Facilities
Up To 350
parses
. Werldrngs a Bat Mims
• Complete Diners • Besioessmeres bombes
• Breakfast

Restaurant Open 6 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. 7 Days A Week
Lounge Open Til 2 a.m.

Hebrew U.
Seeking Texts

CHICAGO — The Ameri-
can Friends of Hebrew Uni-
versity are circulating a list
of scientific textbooks and
periodicals urgently needed
by the school.
Financial pressures have
forced the school to forego
urgently needed purchases
of selected English-
language texts and periodi-
cals.
The American Friends
are seeking donations or
complimentary subscrip-
tion grants. For informa-
tion, write David Koren,
American Friends of He-
brew University, 4001 W.
Devon Ave., Suite 208,
Chicago 60646.

Legal, Talmud
Parley in Israel

NEW YORK — Persons
connected with the legal
profession will convene in
Israel Sept. 4-14 at a
seminar-workshop entitled
"Biblical and Talmudic
Sources of 'Contemporary
Law."
The Jerusalem meeting,
open to lawyers, judges,
jurists, legal and Talmud
scholars, is sponsored by the
Reconstructionist Rabbini-
cal College of Philadelphia,
Pa.
For information and tour
details write The Conven-
tions Department of the Is-
- rael Tourism Administra-
tion - North America, 488
Madison Ave., New York
10022.

MID-EASTERN CUISINE

• Diners

• Besilessmee's bombes

Open Mon.-Fn.. 11:30-2 a.m. Sat.. 5 p.m.-2 a.m.

11111-USISIN ESITITAINIFIT MRS., FL L ST.

BANQUET FACILITIES

SUN. ALL DAY AND MON. & TUES.

SULTAN'S
TABLE

25060 SOUTHFIELD RD.

N.E. Comer Of 10 IBM A Southfield

Reservations: 557-5035

Your Host: SAM MICHAEL

/ `11/

N • Y THE NEW

rsP

GOVERNOR'S
HUNGARIAN VILLAG

4 4,

I

TAKE 1-275 SOUTH TO EXIT 5=
TURN LEFT (EAST) TO
TELEGRAPH..-EASY!

GREAT HUNGARIAN FOOD.

I

WINES-1-10UORS-
CHOICE STEAKS—
FRESH SEAFOOD—

a MILE A.O.

I-47

JAY KALLAO

sc

and his famous

GYPSY ORCHESTR

WED.—FRI.—SAT.

LUNCH, MON.-SAT.
DINNER, TUES.-SAT.
For Reservations, Phone

782-356

Complete Dinners

lion.-SeL, 5 to12 teld.

`Danger Twofold
From Arms Sale'

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
Israeli Ambassador Simha
Dinitz said that the U.S. de-
cision to sell advanced
warplanes to Egypt and
Saudi Arabia will affect
both the military and politi-
cal aspects of the Middle
East peace process.
Speaking to reporters at a
luncheon of the Overseas
Writers Press Club, the Is-
raeli envoy noted that with
the addition of Saudi Arabia
to the ranks of the confron-
tation states, Israel will
now have to face five Arab
airforces instead of four.

Restaurant & Lounge
29703 W. 7 MILE RD.

Just West of Livonia Mall

1 Block West of Middlebeft

For Reservations:

477-2686

OUR FABULOUS SUNDAY BRUNCH

Fresh hot bagels
Cream cheese
Chopped Eggs
Smoked salmon
Smoked sable
Smoked chubs
Bantzets
Fresh hubs
Breakfast meats

10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Sciarnialed eggs
Eggs Benedict on request
Pancakes on request
Corned beef hash
Over 20 salad Items
Puddings. tarts. cheesecake, etc.
Asit. breads
Variety of International entrees

$

per pers.

4 95

PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES
940111111111111 NIL 1 .s EL EC

speciazkig

Seas '

Unique Perim

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