THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS The Best of Everything (Continued from Page 28) raiser for the school will have its settings in Cran- brook's dining room and outside tents. In addition to complimen- tary wine and champagne, there will be a cash bar and continuous entertainment . . . Tickets, $50 per person, are available by calling Ann Sy h, 646-2119. chairpersons Betty Leitch and Marshall A Loewenstein expect over 1,000 attendance and wisely advise purchasing tickets now. - LORI JACOBS, singer- songwriter, is appearing . through June 2 at the Mayf- lower Hotel on Ann Arbor Tr. in Plymouth. RESTAURANT OP- - ERATION at Hamilton Place, former Town & Country Club on Southfield, - will be leased out to Ted • Richman, one-time right hand man of the late Ben Kasle. HELLO FROM . . . Dave Fekay . . . now living in Ft. • Myers, Fla. THERE'S A SUR- PRISE waiting for ace wai- ter Vic Roth when he re- 2.- turns from Israel . . . No job . . . Bonaventure Restau- rant, which opened only a year ago, April 3, on Big Be- aver in Troy, has been closed. MAIL DEPT. . . . "Three weeks ago, my husband Steve and I went for the first time to the Oscar's night- - club. When we arrived for our 9 p.m. reservation, we paid our $5-each for admis- sion, then one of the gent- lemen at the reservation desk sat us at a table in front of the dance floor. We preferred a. booth, but the man explained we had to sit where he placed us. There was hardly a soul there. "At 10:30 p.m., just when the flow of traffic began to build up, a man came to our table and told us we had to leave, since we were sitting in someone else's seats. We had no idea what he was talking aboUt. He said, `You'll have to leave. These people were trying to be po- lite and you're being rude!' "Steve stood up and said, `We'll leave, but we want a refund.' I then said, Where have those people been for the past one-and-a-half h- -s that we've been sit- t..,here? He again replied, "roil will leave, and since you ordered drinks we will not give a refund.' We stormed out, feeling both humiliated and as if we had snuck through the side door. "Approaching the reser- vation desk, another man- ager came up to us. I pointed out to him that we had done no wrong, but once again we were interrupted when he told us, 'In your. case, the customer is wrong!' "This error was clearly an error on the part of the management. They should merely have been more hos- pitable. Surely managers of these type clubs must be trained in handling seating problems and using proper etiquette. After all, we were very well dressed, looking forward to an enjoyable evening and feel we should not have been treated in such a manner!" — Debra Pollak Zimberg IF ENERGETIC per- sonality and go-to-it ability have anything to do with things (and it does), new general manager at Ramada Inn of Southfield on Telegraph, Dick Au- buchon, will have been brought in by the parent company to do exactly what is intended . . . change a lot of image and make it into a top-rate operation. Names have already been changed . . . Former Cap 'n Goggles Lounge will be Scandals Disco as of June 1 . Soup-er Sweepstakes dining room as of May 15 will be called Summer- field's, an all purpose eatery open 6 a.m. to 12 midnight daily and until 3 a.m. weekends . . . with menu changes -reflecting good things to eat. Even the employees at Ramada of Southfield are thrilled by the effervescent know-how of Dick . . . Seems that he has instilled a lot of dormant confidence. Whether Dick had any- thing to do with it or not, I never was waited on there by such an enthusiastic, smiling and efficient person such as Diane Zinda . . . In four words . . . she knows her stuff. HE'S CALLED ONE of the greatest drummers of all time by Encyclopedia of Jazz . . . and has won numerous awards from Playboy, Downbeat, Met- ronome and Esquire maga- zines. This is J.C. Heard, who'll open with his four-piece group (bass, piano, drums and sax), Wednesday through May 25 . . . 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. at Merrick's in the American Motors Bldg. on Franklin. Jazz pop, blues ballads, Latin-American and standards, have all been part of J..C.'s fine repertoire through the years he played with Count Basie, Duke El- lington, Cab Calloway, Benny Goodman and Woody Herman . . . His soft stick and brush work has been behind singers like Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne, Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Tony Bennett and Billy Eckstine. Try not to miss J.C. . . . he's tops. RIALTO CAFE on Woodward and Nine Mile continues to give so much fine food for the least money possible . . . Those very in- expensive meals are what makes it a family standby . . . While others have diffi- culty getting fish-, Charlie and Frank Pappas continue to fill their menu withlots of good things to eat from the sea .-. . along with meat standbys . . . Rialto Cafe is one of Michigan's oldest res- taurants . . . and is the favorite eating place for (Continued on Page 30) . Emigres Sought in Detroit Area Greater Detroit Section, National Council of Jewish Women, in conjunction with the United HIAS Service, is seeking the whereabouts of immigrants from Eastern Europe believed living in the Detroit area. Persons being sought are: Kopl Preiss of Poland; Toiva Ganzman; Aron Lifshitz of Brest-Litovsk, Russia; Shael Onikel; Israil (Izia) Frenkel of Russia; Joseph Shechtman of Azarichy, Russia; children of Max Kaplan of Yeletz, Russia; and Mihaly Rosman. Anyone with information about the aforementioned should call Donna Slatkin, 851-4840. Friday, April 27, 1919 Detroit's Jewish Corn- _munity Center serves more Schore. A reception hosted than 1,200 senior adults in by Beth Achim Sisterhood - dozens of clubs, classes and will follow the program. special programs. Youth Awards Program Sunday The League of Jewish Women's Organizations of Greater Detroit will present its annual youth awards program 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Cong.. Beth Achim. LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS A total of 34 Jewish high school seniors will be hon- ored "for their outstanding scholastic and religious achievement and for their civic participation." The guest speaker will be Rabbi Milton Arm. The in- vocation will be given by Sharon Leeman, president of the Beth Achim Sister- hood. The League of Jewish Women's Organizations president is Esther Rosenblum. 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