° 34 Friday, July 20, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS VINCENZO'S COUNTRY\ INN B-B RIBS • B-B CHICKEN • • ITALIAN DISHES Italian-American Cuisine —BEER & WINE- 45199 CASS, UTICA 731-4440 "In Th. Big Rod House" 1821 1 JOHN R Bet. 6'& 7 Mile Rds. 869-5674 STEPHENSON CLUB , 24931N. CHRYSLER DR. (1-75 at 10 Mile) Hazel Park .PRIVATE BANOUET FACILITIES FOR 25 TO 300 542-9196 • Bar Mitzvas' • Weddings • Anniversaries • Bat Mitzvas. • Showers • Parties For All • Banquets • Reunions Occasions Open Mon. Thru Sat., fdaturing Fine Steaks, Noble Wines, Casual Elegance, Gourmet Salad Bar, (over 37 items, incl. creamed herd• . .ring, deviled eggs, eta.) House Specialties: Chateaubriand, Fresh . COMPLIMENTARY . RUM TORTE DESSERT . SAT. . EVE ONLY Entertainment - Hours: Mon.-Fri., 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Sat., 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. OPEN SUNDAYS FOR MATE PARTIES ONLY SPAGHETTI WITH ITALIAN SAUSAGE SPECIAL INCLUDES: $ SALAD, GARLIC BREAD & BUTTER 500 CIRO'S Children'S Portions Available 1535 CASS LAKE RD. OF ORCHARD LAKE RD. 681-3440 Y4 _MILE . NORTH Beau jacks Serving GREAT FOOD AND COCKTAILS AT MODERATE PRICES OPEN MON.-SAT. FOR • LUNCHES • DINNERS • AFTER THEATER SNACKS & SANDWICHES • MON.-THURS., 11:30 a.m. til 11 p.m. FRI. &SAT. til 12 Mid. COCKTAILS TIL 2 a.m. Your Hosts: JACK & GARY COCHRAN 4108 W. MAPLE RD.. . 626 2630 1 BLK. WEST OF TELEGRAPH - the swman le•raee 27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 12 MILE OFF 696 851-4094 thru Sat. 1 1:30 a.m.-2:30 a.m. IS COOKING UP SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR THE SUMMER MONTHS O F JULY AND AUGUST SPECIAL DINNERS FOR TWO MON. & TUES. EVENINGS UNTIL 11 p.m. WED. THRU SAT. BEFORE 7 p.m. VEAL SCALLOPINI • VEAL FRANCESCO •VEAL PARMESA 15 per couple Includes: Antipasto & 1/2 Liter of House Wine Ask about our complimentary leach drawhig • The Best of Everything ) (Continued from Page 33) have a large bust of Joe . . donated- by his friend Sid "Hudosh" Hudson, former Detroiter now living these many years in Las Vegas, Nev., where like Joe Louis, he too has become an in- stitution. NOW OPEN IN the Pine Lake Mall on Orchard Lake Rd. is Friday's, seating 75 for lunch or dinner . . . serving soup, salads, bar-b-q ribs, pizza, sand- wiches . . . with kitchen open til 11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. and 12 midnight Fri. and Sat. Greg Skory, general manager, is one of a few that can go into a kitchen and cook if needed . . . a very valuable asset. It's a most interesting place . . . stained glass windows, straw matted walls, wooden booths, whirling fans on the ceiling. A bar seats 14 . . . and the large room of 100- capacity houses the Comedy Castle of standup comics . . . Wednesday and Thursday is amateur night, and Friday and 'Saturday you never know who's going to be there giving with the jokes. OVERHEARD . . . at Milano in Windsor, "I've spent so much on my girl, I've decided to marry her for my money" . . . at Ryan Roadhouse, 14 Mile at Ryan, gal to gal, "I know he likes me a lot — today he looked into my eyes, the same way he looks into the refrigerator." . . . At Doug's Body Shop, Woodward between Eight and Nine Mile, "I don't know what the movie was about. I couldn't get my glasses on over my false eyelashes." . . . at Country Inn, Cass Rd. in Utica, "I hate golf. The only reason I play is to make it easy for my family-to think of some- thing to give me for my birthday." . . . At Nifty Norman's, S. Commerce, Walled Lake, "Did you ever haie one of those days when everybody calls you Dad except your own children?" . . . at the Farm House, E. Nine Mile, "When my ship comes in, there'll probably be a dock strike on." MEW-- tions, taking a bribe and stealing state property on a large scale. The Soviet news media report about 25 to 30 death sentences every year. How- ever, Amnesty Interna- tional said the total number was almeist certainly many times higher than that re- ported publicly. Soviet human rights ac- tivists have recently come out strongly against the continued use of the death penalty. Academician An- drei Sakharov has described it as "a savage and immoral institution which under- mines the moral and legal foundations of the world." Amnesty International refrained from comment- ing on the fact that the four facing death penal- ties are Jews, and did not report the ethnic back- ground of those given a lesser sentence. In a related development, Isaak Shkolnik, a 43-year- old prisoner of conscience, has been released after serving a seven-year term on trumped up charges of espionage. A semi-skilled laborer, Shkolnik was initially ac- cused of industrial espion- age on behalf of British firms that were building factories, under Soviet con- tract, in his native town of Vinnitsa. After Western protests, the procurator changed the charges to spy- ing for Israel. GNYCSJ noted that so little incriminating mate- rial was found that the pro- curator was forced to claim that Shkolnik had a photo- graphic memory and memorized Soviet docu- ments for transmittal to Is- rael. 111111 j1 0 a 1 g 111111•1•11-- ■ — DIANN TNEINTRE detroir's ORIGWAt dinner Meet's! Alf 11 ■ 10-- ■ 1•11110111—, presents Jimmy 1c:since's 411•11 ■ —, 1=1111=11— RESTAURANT —0=1 ■ •• • DINNER AND CAKE FREE • Call For Further Details 643-8865 Somerset Mall Troy SINNEF-• Reservations a MUST 1111••••--, 643-8865 fr•IgtrowE PROdudicor Fri.& Sat. • , Soviets Uphold Prison Term of Jewish Student Refusnik NEW YORK (JTA) — A high court in the Soviet Union has upheld the two- year jail sentence of Lenin- grad refusnik Boris Kalen- derov, the Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry reported. Kalenderov, a 22-year- old student, has been in prison since last May on charges of draft evasion. He had been faced with the prospect of spending two to three years in the army followed by an additional waiting period of at least . five years before obtaining a visa. Kalenderov and his parents first applied to emigrate to Israel in 1973. - Meanwhile, Amnesty In- ternational has cabled Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev appealing to him to commute the death sen- tences passed against four Jews in the Ukraine. Two weeks ago the Uk- rainian Republic's Supreme Court upheld the death sen- tence passed on Aug. 28, 1978, by the Donetsk regional court against Rafael Adjiakivili, Elia Mikhailishvili, Gabriel Spiashvili and a Mr. Abas- sov. They were among 50 perople convicted bf steal- ing surplus textiles from a factory and selling them for private gain. Amnesty International said the case highlighted the fact that Soviet citi- zens can be sentenced to death for crimes not in- volving violence. Under Soviet law the death penalty may be im- posed for 18 different of- fenses, including counter- feiting money, violating the rules for currency transac- celebrate your birthday at EVERYBODY'S TALKING ABOUT THE BEST RIBS IN TOWN! Also . . . Chicken — Shrimp — Fish — Pizza CARRY-OUT & DELIVERY CATERING ON ALL OCCASIONS RIB SHACK [ the place for ribs 355 -2440 n3-2440 24545 W. 12 MILE Just W. of Telegraph TRY OUR DINNER SPECIALS 7 DAYS A WEEK 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. YOUR CHOICE OF 21 DIFFERENT ENTREES TWO PRICES ONLY '3 95 & '4.95 Includes: Soup, Salad, Ve . & Pot. FAMILY-STYLE BRU (31 SUNDAYS 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. $3.50 per pers. Includes: Nova Lox, Smoked Sable, Smoked Chubs, Creamed Herring, Sliced Tomato and Onions, Olives, Bagels or Rolls. I — POINT AFTER DELI 26401W. 12 MILE AT NORTHWESTERN al 355-3733 Rametime Ve€04 ReCdotor-Ceidd BIG "D" ( For the dieter, broiled 8 oz. chopped steak, cottage cheese and tomato 10 Mile at Southfield Rd. 559-423J 4••••••I NOW AT CAFE FIOR Mexic. an and Italian Food Savor the best of two worlds in a garden atmosphere Great Exotic Drinks and Cocktails Complete NEW Carry-Out Facility Spior Citizens 20% Disc. In Our Dining Room- HOURS: Mon. thru Thurs. 11 to 11 Fri. 11 to 12 — Sat. 12 to 12 — Sun. 2 to 10 OUR PIZZA VOTED #1 BY WXYZ-TV 29155 NORTHWESTERN AT 12 MILE IN FRANKLIN SHOPPING PLAZA 357-3280 .. I