MSC Lunch 11 a.m. Dinner 4 p.m.-1 a.m. Banquet Facilities dining room, carry-out and trays • breakfast • lunch • dinner after-theater • kiddie menu grlEn • BitS I' open tuesdays thru sundays 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. lincoln shopping center, 101/2 mile & greenfield, oak park , -(2 968-0022 ROY NOW APPEARING TUES. THRU SAT. HEAVENN A Tradition take, Twuw 4 4,,,°u46 , 1 Since 1934 -gine anin9 and Lociduili Fred Bayne at the organ nightly 1128 E. Nine Mile Road (1 1/2 Mile East of 1-75) Recommended by AAA & Mobile Guides , (313) 541-2132 FUNG LI 'S Reservations 362-1262 Concourse, Top of Troy • 755 W. Big Beaver SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN Mon.-Thurs. 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Sun. 12-10 CARRY OUT • CATERING 'BANQUET FACILITIES 8410 W. NINE MILE, W of Livernois . 544-1021 ihz/4te°&AA GOLDEN BOWL Lemon Peel Restaurant 22106 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE In A & P . Shopping Center DINE IN & CARRY-OUT 398-5502 or 398-5503 SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN CUISINE OPEN 1 DAYS-Mon.-Thurs. 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Sun. & Holidays 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. • Banquet Facilities Your Chef: FRANK ENG %Lil 14 :Lii 1, THE GOLD Com ,A-, rt • The Best Place to Dine is Also the Best Place to Unwind NEW MENU! • Moderately Priced - Daily Lunch and Dinner Specials NEW DECOR! • Now More Comfortable and Spacious for Your Dining Pleasure -I, if OPEN 7 DAYS — YOUR HOST: HOWARD LEW SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE AND AMERICAN FOOD , COMPLETE CARRY-OUT AVAILABLE 24480 W. 10 MILE (IN TEL-EX PLAZA) West of Telegraph 353 - 7848 TIDE GPEAT WALE SERVING YOUR FAVORITE EXOTIC DRINKS & CHOICE COCKTAILS PRIVATE DINING ROOM I • • BANQUETS • PARTIES • BUSINESS MEETINGS I //z - Zeoroycioeel HOURS: Monday - Saturday 1 1-2 a.m., Closed Sunday 575 S. Hunter (Woodward) • Birmingham • 644-0588 ah, Apt. Is 11. 111 ".47%. =NIP :ST Amit olir ■■■■ • %. NA, Join Us For A Pleasant Surprise and Discover That THERE IS A DIFFERENCE! • Your host . . . HENRY LUM Businessmen's Luncheons • Carry outs • Catering 35135 Grand River, Farmington (Drakeshire Shopping Center) 476-9181 HOA KOW INN Specializing In Cantonese, Szechuan & Mandarin Foods - Open Daily 11 to 10:30, Sat. 11 to 12 Mid., Sun. 12 to 10:30 — Carry-Out Service — 13715 W. 9 MILE, W. of Coolidge • Oak Park KING LIM'S...GARDEN, Mandarin, Szechuan & Cantonese Food 26196 GREENFIELD, LINCOLN CENTER. OAK PARK Mon.-Thurs. 11 to 10:30 Fri. 11 to 11, Sat. 11 to 12 Sun. 12 noon to 10 968-3040 Carry-Out Service Catering To Parties Available 547-4663 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK NEW KING LIM'S 3305 Auburn Rd. 852.8280 Exotic Cocktails FLOWN IN FRESH EXPRESSLY FOR YOUR DINING at the ENGLISH DOVER SOLE KINGSLEY INN 642 0100 - KOW KOW INN • Famous Chop Suey • Cantonese Food • Steaks • Chops • Sea Food OPEN Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-12:30 a.m., Sun. & Holidays 12 Noon-12:30 a.m. CARRY OUT SERVICE EASY PARKING 322 W. McNichols Bet. Woodward & Second 60 Friday, April 17, 1987 868-7550 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ENTERTAINMENT cS 6638 TELEGRAPH AND MAPLE IN THE BLOOMFIELD PLAZA 851-0313 • Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner In the Casual Elegant Atmosphere You Want For Gracious Enjoyable Dining 1 Days a Week Enjoy Our Fine Dinner Specials . Different Each Day — Hours — Mon.-Thurs. 7 a.m.-9:30 p.m: Fri. & Sat. 7 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun. 8 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Danny Raskin Continued from preceding page race, the glass-floored Floren- tine Room of the Addison Hotel and the roof of the Tul- ler Hotel. There were more speakeasies than saloons in Detroit. "Crime was rampant. Gangsters supplied bootleg liquor, and hijacking truckloads of beer and whisky was commonplace. "Richter's saloon on Gris- wold became the rendezvous of the Detroit News staff. It was to 2156 East Jefferson Ave., a 'haunted house,' that Grosse Pointers went after the symphony concert and musicians gathered there to drink various prohibition concoctions. Those were the days of vaudeville. Dancers, singers, monologists and tightrope walkers put on im- promptu shows at 2 a.m. "In the 1920s, restaurateur Charlie Glaser moved into the Frontenac Cafe on Mon- roe Ave. In 1928, the Detroit Zoological Park was opened. The Fisher Building joined the company of the General Motors Building and the Penobscot was completed. Ford's Greenfield Village was opened in 1929. Those were the glory days of Detroit. "Many fads and concepts in the world of dining and drinking have come and gone, attesting to the fickle taste of the American con- sumer, the recession years and the lack of staying power of some investors. "In 1970, for example, the Laugh-In Restaurant opened in Troy, adapted from the TV fun program on which Dan Rowan, Dick Martin and their zany crew had kept America laughing for more than a year. Diners ate at ta- bles with a special graffiti design of clean, wholesome sayings people scrawled on walls. The menu featured the Bippyburger, a deluxe ver- sion of the ever popular ham- burger, the Fickle Finger, a specially prepared variation of the hot dog, The Big Chic- ken Joke and fish and chips called Frix and Frax. But the jokes stopped being funny enough to keep customers coming. "Do you remember the Lion's Den in Southfield's Raleigh House where happy hour drew the office crowd to unwind from 5-7:30 p.m.? It was wall-to-wall people. It was first called the House of Lords with luxury dining and double-digit prices. It re- opened as the Lion's Head with shaved down fares and a make-it-yourself salad bar. But week-day customers stayed away in droves and the lion dropped its head to become the Lion's Den, a favorite spot for singles. From the bandstand came ear-shattering sounds. That was in the mid-1970s when it seemed singles were less ag- <