44 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 6, 1984 bd COUNTRY CORNER MALL Continued from. Page 43 30770 SOUTHFIELD ROAD lust South of 13 Mile 647-7037 DINNER FOR 2 MIX OR MATCH ANY ENTREE (excluding strip steak) INCLUDES: SOUP OR SALAD, ENTREE, POT., HOT VEG., BREAD & BUTTER, COFFEE OR TEA $895 FOR TWO! PLUS OUR FABULOUS SPECIALS From 3 p.m. Daily, All Day Sat. & Sun. "FRENCH CONNECTION" "INFLATION FIGHTER" 1 The Best of Everything) DELI-RESTAURANT lb. Hamburger on French Bread, Soup or Juice, French Fries, Cole Slaw and Beverage. Any 'Old Favorite Sandwich, Soup or Juice, Potato Salad or Cole Slaw and Beveraae V3 $ 3 9 5 $ 395 GREEK-AMERICAN RESTAURANT 29267 SOUTHFIELD IN FARRELL'S SHOPPING PLAZA 569-1112 AT 121/2 MILE RD. 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.! 17 DAYS A WEEK SERVING TOP QUALITY FOOD AT LOW PRICES! EVERYTHING WE SERVE IS FRESH AND HOMEMADE! • GREEK SALAD WITH ALL COMPLETE MEALS DAILY SPECIALS OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER AMINO NMI I II I EM I I 4111111mrIMMINIII ■ gm ow/rim! lerrat•e 27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD. • AT 12 MILE OFF 6% 851-4094 Mon. to Thurs. 11:30-12 Mid. Fri. & Sat. 11:30-2 a.m. "APRIL SCROD FESTIVAL" 5-COURSE DINNER INCLUDES: $ • MINESTRONE SOUP • TOSSED SALAD • FETTUCINI ALFREDO • STIR-FRY VEGETABLES • CANOLI 99 5 ' .4 A 41 ( 1 I I r i •C.' , From 4 p.m. Daily Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11-11 Fri.-Sat. tit 12:30 a.m. Sun. from 4 p.m. 1 , I . telt Mood Jim Brady's PARTY PLANNING? From 30-500 Call Mary 352-8782 RI ROW MIMI' "Serving The Best To the Best!" BOOK YOUR HOLIDAY PARTIES NOW! PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE FOR SAT. & SUN. AFTERNOONS PRUDENTIAL TOWN CENTER EVERGREEN AND 10 1/2 MILE Covered Parking 352-8780 HARRY'S Family Dining Restaurant 15600 W. 10 MILE RD. AT GREENFIELD (New Orleans Mall) 559-5080 NOW FEATURING CROISSANTS FROM Le Petit Prince DINNER SPECIALS EVERYDAY 4 p.m. to Closing STUFFED BREAST OF VEAL $425 With Soup & Vegetable. . . 8 OZ. STRIPS FOR TWO With Soup, Salad, Pot. & Veg... . $1 0 95 BROILED WHITEFISH FOR TWO$995 With Soup, Salad, Rice & Veg.. . . LOBSTER TAILS FOR TWO With Soup, Salad, Baked Pot. & Veg .. $ 1 SENIOR CITIZENS - - .1 DIAMOND JIM BRADY'S . MONDAYS THRU THURSDAYS I , FREE POPCORN NOW OPEN SUNDAYS 7 95 10% OFF PHOENIX 23041 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE RESTAURANT 542-2199 OPEN 7 DAYS — MON.-FRI. 6:30 p.m.-9 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. SAT. 7 a.m.-9 p.m. BREAKFAST SPECIALS SERVED ALL DAY ADDITIONAL CHARGE OF 20 CENTS AFTER REGULAR HOURS ALSO DAILY LUNCH AND DINNER SPECIALS COUPON 2 FOR 1. No Carry-Outs After 4 p.m. BUY ONE MEAL BELOW LISTED AND GET SECOND OF ANY BELOW LISTED AT NO CHARGE! I • VEAL CUTLET, Pot. & Veg. I • LIVER & ONIONS, Pot. & Veg. 45 I • BAKED MEAT LOAF, Pot. & Veg. $ I • SPAGHETTI With Meat Sauce I • BAKED CHICKEN, Pot. & Veg. 5 All Include Bread & Butter smile, and is very pleas- antly adept at her work .. . Linda dances American, Arabic and Grecian . . . with most orchestras able to play tunes like "Never On Sun- day," "Miserlou" or "Hava Nagela" . . . So even if she never danced with the band before, they can get to- gether . . . Besides belly dancing and teaching piano . . . Linda is a keyboard stylist and flutist. CLASSIC STORY dept. . . . at one of the first per- formances of "Annie Get Your Gun" in New York, Dick Rodgers, producer, stood in the lobby during in- termission with Irving Be- rlin, composer of the. hit- studded score . . . Berlin moved away, and a stout lady standing nearby obvi- ously recognized him .. . She nudged her husband, and Dick heard her say wonderingly, "Sam, to look at him who would think?" Herzog says Camp David a boon for Palestinians -(JTA) London President Chaim Herzog of Israel said in London that the Camp David accords presents "a golden opportu- nity for the Palestinian Arabs for the first time in their history" to take their own fate into their hands. "Sooner or later" they will, he said in an address to the annual dinner of the Anglo-Israel Association. He said he based his hope on the "growing sense of dis- enchantment" among Arab leaders on the West Bank and Gaza with both Pales- tine Liberation Organiza- tion chief Yasir Arafat and King Hussein of Jordan. Herzog, accompanied by his wife, Aura, was in Lon- don for a five-day visit as guest of the Anglo-Jewish community. In his speech, he paid tribute to Israel's debt to Britain, noting that even at the most bitter mo- ments in their struggle for independence against the British Mandate authorities in Palestine, Is- raelis never lost "the deepest innate respect for the principles and values of British civilization." But the Israeli chief of state was critical of some aspects of British policy in the Middle East. "There is at times a tendency to ig- nore the basic facts of life in the Middle East and an un- willingness to break away from traditional ap- proaches," he said. He suggested that many who deal with the Arab- Israel conflict suffer from a "lack of perspective. Their whole picture is out of focus. The correct proportions are absent." Herzog specifically cited a tendency to over-emphasize the Arab-Israel conflict. If that conflict were resolved, the main centers of bloodshed, warfare and in- stability in the Moslem and Arab worlds would still per- sist, he said. With respect to Camp David, Herzog said it would be tragic for the Arabs to allow that opportunity to slip away as they had with all previous opportunities. Had Jordan and the Palestinian Arabs already entered the autonomy negotiations, provided for by the Camp David agree- ments, "the Palestine Arabs would not have been living in a regime of full autonomy Chaim Herzog . . . and we would by now have been in the phase of negotiations on the final status of the territories," he said. The Israeli president was expected to meet with Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle. He invited the queen to visit Israel. The queen presently is visiting Jordan and there has been comment in the media here that while Jor- dan is the third Arab coun- try she has visited, she has never been to Israel despite the tradition of friendship between that country and Britain. The commission is blamed by some on the tra- ditionally pro-Arab bias of the Foreign Office. Becaun the queen is a constitutional monarch, decisions on, and timing of, her overseas vis- its are made by the govern- ment which attunes them to its foreign policy. The fact that no reigning British monarch has ever visited Israel does not sit well with the Anglo-Jewish community which has strong promonarchist sen- timents. Caution urged for NY plan Albany, N.Y. — Agudat Israel of America has urged caution on the part of the New York Board of Re- gents in adopting a plan to upgrade education in the state. According to Shmuel Prager, Agudat's general counsel, while the Orthodox group feels the plan con- tains many positive aspects, the board of regents must make sure that its require- ments would not harm the unique role played by the state's yeshivot and day schools.