• • 40 Friday, July 6, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS [ your advertising dollars do better in... THE JEWISH NEWS .41 Archives of Broadcasting Call Us Today! 424-8833 % gaVVIWNWANWAWANWYCAN $1 ‘ Your new favorite place just opened I In I Eat • • • • • 1. I) Salads Breads Croissants Cookies • 11••• • • CO Sin s • II • II pi • • • • • • • • 'a% • • • • Sandwiches Beverages French Bread Pizza Daily Specials V.I.V .V.11 2 11.•••••elloyelleVe ll oWelle . •• • C roissan i•Croissant •• •• • • a • • Southfield Plaza • • • • 121/2 Mile and Southfield • I •• ••1•11••11• 111 • • • nesasynyo•••••• •II • • • t • 11 11 : • 0 4`. • so.. if t► usamoo ■ • ■ • Continued from Page 64 I Carry-Out I • ••••••••••• na g • • 551-0030 •X. during July & August Fish Chowder, Steamers, Mussels, and Corn on the Cob $7.50 hive staff is only beginning to turn its attention to its public programs: it plans an introductory exhibit in Sep- tember, a second on the Eichmann trial, a lecture by a Rutgers professor who's studied media coverage of the Skokie Nazi demonstration. Beyond that, people have plenty of ideas, but no firm budget or schedule. The operative philosophy seems to be grab the stuff while it's still 'around, worry later about what to do with it. One of the Schreibman & Co.'s smarter moves, however, was to put together a 30-minute tape, snippets of the trove. While budgets circulate and renovation proceeds, the tape tells with surprising eloquence what the archive is about. "It just knocks you out, the scope, the range," ac- knowledges Schreibman, who has obviously learned a thing or two about the emotional impact of edit- ing. Audiences — like the 400 people at the archive's opening ceremony — who see the tape come•to agree that "this is powerful, important mate- rial. And we're making it available to everyone." In half an hour, 30-odd bits of film and tape flicker by: Abba Eban's maiden UN speech for the Israeli delegation in 1949; a campy catfight between the two mothers claiming an infant as "You Are There" dramatizes Solomon's court; Edward R. Murrow chatting with David Ben-Gurion; Sammy Davis Jr. tout- ing Manischewitz ("I dig it, man"); Barbara Walters interviewing Sadat and Begin in Jerusalem; Rhoda and her mom euphemistically bickering about whether Rhoda should please her parents with a "big" wedding. And finally, as Isaac Stern plays and Leontyne Price trills, Zubin Mehta concludes a 30th anniversary of statehood concert, turning from the Israel Philharmonic towards the huge outdoor audience and leading the multitudes in "Hatikvah." When it's over, the viewer can only shrug, reach for a checkbook, and wish the National Jewish Arc- hive of Broadcasting long life. Wher- ever these images belong, whatever eventually becomes of them, they should be salvaged from deteriora- tion and dumpsters. CHEF JAMES LEHANE HE SERVED THE KENNEDYS Wychmere Harbor Club, West Harwich, Mass. HE SERVED PRESIDENTS Pinehurst Hotel, Pinehurst, N.C. You pick the mood for your meal: fine dining in Anthony's, enjoy our skylighted atrium or picnic pool side. HE SERVED WITH OLYMPIC CHEF STURE ANDERSSON Captain U.S. Culinary Olympic Team The cuisine of Mexico, the Caribbean, & Latin America NOW HE SERVES YOU! $8.95 Adults, $7.95 Seniors, $4.95 Children 6-12. Children age 5 or less FREE Fresh Seafood and Creative Specials Daily 362-1262 755 W. Big Beaver, Concourse, Top of Troy Bldg. • Troy 7,4;41 wEl Ito .1.00! ••• ■ ••10..