THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 34 Friday, December 1, 1818 Specializing in Authentic Italian-American Dining Lunches . and Dinners Jewish Artists Are Prominent on the European Music Scene By MARGUERITE KOZENN CHAJES 7225 W. McNichols (5 Mks. W. of Lhroniols} UN 2-6455 EARLY BIRD SPECIAL cx.FRe pea t biyHPRuop s uAlT ar 4 Rte o 6 Request F MO H . INCLUDING GOURMET SELECTIoNS„ APPETIZERS, DINNERS. ALA CARTE, ETC. Offer Expires Sorry, No Entertainment 78 Coupons or Credit Cards For This Special Dec. 9, 1978 RIKSHAW INN 851-6400 IN THE ORCHARD MALL 6407 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT MAPLE Carry Outs Available PLAN YOUR HOLIDAY PARTY WITH US HOME OR OFFICE BuddO's Pizza RATED. NO. ONE BY DET. FREE PRESS 17125 CONANT CORNER McNICHOLS RD 892-9001 BREAKFAST SPECIAL ALL THE PANCAKES YOU CAN EAT PLUS 2 EGGS, Any Style $ I so • FRIAR TUCK'S INN 6580 ORCHARD LAKE RD.. JUST SOUTH OF 15 MILE FEATURING A DIET MENU AND DESSERTS PLUS COMPLETE NON-DIETER'S MENU •BREAKFAST • LUNCH . DINNER OPEN SUN. THRU THURS., 7 a.m. to 12 Mid. - FRI. & SAT., 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. Outstanding Jewish ar- tistss\and authors are mak- ing headlines in leading European newspapers. First there was the Bu- soni Piano competition in Bolzano, Italy, where 80 pianists from 26 countries participated. Boris Bloch, 26, born in Odessa and pre- sently a resident of New York City, won the coveted first prize. It includes 12 in- ternational engagements in addition to the money award. Bloch -started with piano lessons at the age of four, studied with Russia's foremost teacher and came to this country via Vienna mid Rome four years ago. At the international cAmpetition for singers in Munich, Gerinany, spon- sored by all the radio sta.. tions in Germany, the Is- raeli mezzo ' soprano . Zahava Gal won first prize. It consists of a large financial award and highly interesting and lucrative engagements throughout the continent. During the yearly music festivals in Berlin in Sep- tember, the Berlin Philharmonic orchestra and its permanent conductor Herbert von Karajan are the featired artistic attrac- tion. At one of the rehear- sals von Karajan suffered an accident and had to be hospitalized. His personal and explicit choice as 'sub- stitute was Daniel Baren- boim, formerly of Israel and for the past several years the much-acclaimed con- ductor of the Orchestra of Paris. Manes: Sperber, the prize-winning - Austrian Having An Affair? CARRY-OUT AVAILABLE ON OUR ENTIRE MENUS SEE US AT OLD TIME DELI 851-2950 Our Other Location, 3850 E. 12 Mile • 573-6300 111‘ 21701 Crchard Lake Road Near12 Mile 553-2191 DIMITRI'S DEN 26645 HOOVER, South Of 11 Mile Corner of Hoover-11 Shopping Center 755 - 9200 cSI2Ealafizing ffn AUTHENTIC GREEK DINING and FINE AMERICAN CUISINE With Chef Andrea ONE OF GREEKTOWN'S FAVORITE OWNERS & CHEFS FOR OVER 30 YEARS GREEK ENTERTAINMENT-SIX NIGHTS Mon., - -Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. MUSIC DIRECT FROM ATHENS Hours: Mon., Wed., Thurs., Fri. 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Tues. (no entertainment) 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. author, who lives in Paris, presented an afternoon of recitations at one of Vien- na's foremost state theaters. Outstanding gentile actors were reading excerpts from his books "The Water Car- rier of God" and "Until They \ Will Put Shards on My Eyes." Sperber, who like Isaac Bashevis Singer also describes the "shtetl" in Po- land some 50 years ago, is, unlike Singer, more engaged with political as- pects rather than with mys- tical ones. At the end of the performance Sperber re7 ceived a standing ovation. Also in Vienna in Sep- tember, Friedrich Torberg, the last of the eminent Austrian-Jewish authors such as Arthur Schnitzler (1862-1931), Stefan Zweig (1881-1942), Franz Werfel (1890-1945) and Max Brod (1884-1968), celebrated his 70th birthday. As a brilliant represent- tive of the Austrian litera- ture, as one of their wittiest essayists, theatre-critics, translators and editors, his birthday, life story and-his achievements were written up in all -the newspapers and magazines throughout Germany, Switzerland and Austria. Torberg, who fled from Vienna to Prague and then to Paris on account of the Nazis, came to the United States in 1940; he remained for five years in Los Angeles and for an- other five years in New York City, where he also acquired his American citizenship. He lives permanently and also works in Austria, but he remained an American Restaurateur Has Special Display of Foreign Coins Travelers arriving at Metro Airport often -go to the nearby Elias Brothers Restaurant on Merriman Road. They bring with them not only hearty appetites but a wide assortment of money from countries- all around 'the world. Elias Manager Mike Curis started collecting all the exotic monies two years ago. From his first foreign bill, an English pound note, his collection has grown to 300 different - bills and 400 different coins from nations all over the globe. Three boards in the Elias lobby display the currencies and coins. Every piece of currency has come fro_m customers, either in the course of busi- ness, or as a gift. Many of the bills were given by foreign tourists who, first, saw the display and theh wanted to leave behind an example of their country's money. Americans will have no trouble recognizing at least one bill — the American dollar. Better a little pumpkin in your hand than a big one in the field. citizen "out of loyalty to the country that became his haven clueing the war and the post-war years." Torberg is also the trans- lator of the books of Ep- hraim Kishon, Israel's most popular satirist. These books are heading the best- seller lists in all the German-speaking coun- tires. 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