▪ 54 Friday, July 12, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 'Drake RdESTAITRANT Live Entertainment Fine Dining In An Elegant Atmosphereen dd D Th an ru cin s g at. Closed July 17 For Private Party 5586 Drake Road North of Maple, West Bloomfield OPEN 7 DAYS FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER & TAKEOUT Mon.-Sat. 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 7 a.m.-7 p.m. BREAKFAST SPECIAL — 2 EGGS, KISH MIDIS, SAUSAGE r BACON & BISMITS $1 79 EVERY WEDNESDAY SPAGHETTI $ 395 I 24725 SOUTHFIELD AT 10 MILE 19 Restaurant S (11 Pi 181 174 (formerly Maple House) I • Szechuan I • Hong Kong • Mandarin I • Cantonese I • Japanese 1 7- x 1p:g , 424-8765 ,,,I ...-----_____...•........•.•..----..a I. 2E5 SOUTHFIELD RD. AT 12% MILE IN FARRELL'S SHOPPING CENTER Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 ITALIAN DINING Since 1959 1 1 AND PIZZA I 4033 12 MILE 3 Bibs E. of Cremtfield Berkley 548-3650 I $1 OFF I BANQUET FACILITIES PRE. MI MN MI MI I ' •1 0 •11 INNI ■ 441 •the roman terrace f L1 I 1 ON FOOD PURCHASE OF $6 OR MORE 1 DINING ROOM, CARRY OUT NON.-THURS. 11 a.m.-12 Mid. • 1 Coupon Per Customer o AT 12 noon-2 a.m SUN. 12 noon- 12 Mid • Expires 1-31-85 I I • COCKTAILS • FROM 2p m. 0. C. INCLUDES:MARKET SALAD, POT. & GARLIC BREAD FOR - 1 expires 6-27-85 TWO! 8 THE COUNTRY MARKET GRILLE --I IV I FISH & CHIPS $495 I2 • FRESH BAKED SCROD • LASAGNA le, 12 • CHICKEN CACCIATORI • ROAST BEEF I • EVERY FRIDAY I DINNER FOR 2 CE liol.-fri. 11 LIAM p.m., Sit. 11 a.m.-1000 p.m„ Su. 2 p.m.-10 pm. ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT SPECIALS 630-11 SUNDAY BRUNCH $575 10 a.m.-2 p.m. ( COUPON GOOD 7 DAYS A WEEK I I SENIOR CITIZENS 10% OFF (except specials) HAS OPENED A RESTAURANT IN SOUTHFIELD 27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 12 MILE OFF 6968514094 Mon. to Thurs. 11:30-12 Mid. Fri. & Sat. 11 -30-2 3 m . WHEN ONLY ITALIAN DINING WILL DO JULY SPECIALS Mon. thru Sat. 569-2120 1 COMPLIMENTARY DINNER Purchase any Philippine Entree; Receive a 2nd Philippine Entree of equal or lesser value : . . Tues.-Thurs. only. Appetizer Of The Month: Escargot & Oysters en croute Entrees $6.95 Fettucini and Seafood Mornet '11.95 Veal Saute Maison '13.75 Breast of Chicken Marinara $10.95 Above entrees include: House salad, choice of dressing and chef's garnish Present This Ad To Your Waitperson And Receive A Complimentary . House Cocktail or Glass Of Wine Offer expires July 31, 1985 CIPOS# Featuring International ASIAN CUISINE Hours: Tues.-Thurs. 11-11 p.m. Fri. 11-12 Mid. Sat. 5-12 Mid. Sun. 4-9 p.m. . Of West Bloomfield 11 Al ar en Cat 33010 NORTHWESTERN HWY. at 14 .s 851 - 0394 .767".. "'"""rean• Ni- Cp7e7r1 IT rti!t LUNCH or DINNER West BI With Purchase Of Another Entree old halloo Oily • Does Not trade Beverages Or Extras • With This Coupon • Dining In Only JN NomommomommommimmomommomminissommoomommmommEmmom FREE OFFICE DELIVERY (Lunch Only) 4343 Orchard Lake Rd. W. Bloomfield, MI PINE LAKE MALL 851-5540 • 8 Entree Salads • 10 Sandwich Combinations • Hearty Soups & Entrees THE Banquet Facilities & Catering Service For All Occasions NEWS ALL MENU ITEMS AFTER 4 p.m. (Dine In Only) 661-1920 DWIGHT NEWELL I 20% OFF I I I Chef Heinz Menguser Bob Kimoto Mon.-Thurs. 6 p.m.-10 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m.-11 p.m. Available For Private Parties Formerly Director of Operations Win Schuler's ICOUPON1 I NEW, FEATURE 8 PASTA SPECIALTIES Served From 4 p.m. Includis: Appetizer, Green Salad and Fresh Hot Italian Bread OPEN 7 DAYS 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.-Sun. 1 FDR Aide Criticized London (JTA) — Henry Stim- son, the American Secretary of War in the Administration of President Roosevelt, tried to pre- vent Jewish refugees from Europe from reaching Palestine or the United States and opposed the creation of the State of Israel, ac- cording to a study published by the Institute of Jewish Affairs, the Rearch arm of the World Jewish Congress. Writing in the Institute's jour- nal, Patterns of Prejudice, Ameri- can Jewish historian Harvey Strum said that Stimson re- peatedly urged Roosevelt not to let Jewish war refugees into the U.S., opposed efforts to persuade the British to lift their restric- tions on immigration to Palestine, and viewed a Jewish State as a threat to Anglo-American inter- ests in the Middle East. Under Stimson's leadership, too, the U.S. War Department re- peatedly refused during World War II to disrupt the mass exter- mination of the Jews by bombing the deportation railways leading to Auschwitz or the gas chambers and crematoria at Auschwitz. Strum, who teaches history at Onondaga State College in Syra- cuse, N.Y., and has published other articles on American anti- Semitism, bases his findings on a study of Stimson's diaries and other papers housed in Yale Uni- versity. This article reveals the atti- tudes which, in 1944, prompted Stimson to play a decisive part in dissuading Congress from voting -for a Jewish Palestine, even though he had been a long time friend of Zionist leader, Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter. Strum admits that Stimson "was not a rabid anti-Semite," that he did not belong to any of the anti-Semitic groups active in the U.S. and that he was "appalled" by the Nazi persecutions. Nevertheless, he finds that for over 20 years Stimson had pri- vately opposed Jewishimmigra- tion to the U.S., a prospect which hefound "just as appalling" as the Nazi persecution. With the succession of Harry Truman to the Presidency in April 1945, Stimson also advised Truman about "the problem of our Jewish people here," warning that the "danger was not yet over" of American Jews meddling in the issue of how to deal with post- Hitler Germany. Stimson was against punishing Nazis for the murder of German Jewry, and was anxious lest a protracted de-Nazification pro- gram should drive the Germans into the Soviet camp in the de- veloping cold war. Strum claims that "throughout the debate over the post-war treatment of Germany, Stimson perceived the American Jewish community as a powerful and nefarious special interest group. While "blatant anti-Semitism" offended Stimson's conservative sensibilities, his hostility towards Jews reflected the conservative WASP (White Anglo-Saxon Pro- testant) dislike for Jews common both among the U.S. elite and the general population between 1920 and 1950, Strum concludes.