1 The Pike Street Restaurant CHEF BRIAN POLCYN There's Hidden Money In Your Closet! SUMMER SPECIALS Reservations: 334-7878 18 West Pike Street off Wide Track (Woodward) • Pontiac +000.000000000004 L. , HAVING A GRADUATION IP PARTY? CALL US FOR ALL— YOUR NEEDS SELL IT FAST In Our Amazing Marketplace 354-6060 THE JEWISH NEWS "Please, my little girl needs blood'.' Complete Custom Catering Available ALL AREA DELI TRAY COUPONS HONORED WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! • NO OTHER COUPONS• 01 ,1,ER GOOD ONLY AT BREAD BASKET II BR iN EADT, BASK ,Ez T A II Imagine if you had to ask for blood to save the life of someone you love. Next time the American Red Cross asks, give blood, please. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 32839 Northwestern Hwy. S. of 14 Mile 626-6674 000+000•000004.•••••• GIVE BLOOD, PLEASE American Fted Cross Suddenly it's Summer New Menu for Lunch and Dinner including "Heart Smart" Selections • • • • ittarilus ■ . Baked Broiled Scrod Lemon Broiled Chicken Broiled Steak Salad Warm Poulet Salad In addition to our other menu favorites, new salads for spring. 6560 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield 626-1587 Reservations recommended 58 Friday, June 19, 1987 Mon.-Fri. 11:30-10:00 p.m. Sat. 5:00-11:00 p.m., Sun. 4-8 p.m. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Danny Raskin Continued from preceding page invites you to enjoy his innovative cuisine TUES. ..CHEF'S SPECIAL 6-COURSE DINNER WED. . WILD GAME NIGHT FINE DINING ... CATERING ... BANQUET FACILITIES ENTERTAINMENT his n _ eck . . . given to him by Joey Bishop. Buddy Hackett at the Sahara is funniest when he stays clean . . . like telling of a movie role where he played the part of Sit- ting Bull, and was so convinc- ing that six cows asked for his autograph . . . Joan Rivers at the Desert Inn doesn't think her parents appreciated her when she was a kid . . . "On Halloween," recalls Joan, "they used to send me out as is" .. . Joan herself isn't too en- thusiastic about the sex-mad movies of today . . . "I saw one so dirty last week," she said, "that even the couples in the balcony were watching it." Circus Circus is a complete show world in itself . . . outstan- ding acts going on seemingly at all times . . . and so much fun for everyone. The crowds that packed The Frontier's Music Hall to see Wayne Newton whooped it up for this remarkable performer . . . with the showmanship that has made him a box office blockbuster affecting audiences to the point that response to his every note and move sounds like a revival meeting. Story making the rounds of Las Vegas is about an over- enthusiastic booking agent who sold a new crooner to one of the small hotel proprietors for a big weekend on the promise that he was "another Frank Sinatra" . . . Ten days later, the agent called the proprietor again to tell him he just had signed up "another Sammy Davis Jr." .. . "All right," said the owner. "Send him up at once. We just fired Sinatra?' MAIL DEPT. ... "Lowry's Restaurant on Hiller Road has the best waitresses in town. Sweet, helpful and the food is wonderful. So is owner Dan Lowry." Mary Lou Weiss CHILDREN'S ENTER- Company, TAINMENT directed by Henry K. Martin is again at the Jewish Communi- ty Center on Maple and Drake . . . Present production in the popular summer series is Rumplestiltskin. FIRST TIME that a private club opens its doors to the public is jazz series by The University Club on E. Jefferson . . . It's Thursday nights, with next attraction the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band. NO MORE Sunday nights un- til fall . . . at Panache on Wood- ward in Birmingham. DENNIS WOLFBERG, former New York schoolteacher, is the funny gent at Northwood Inn, home of Mark Ridley's Comedy Castle on Woodward and Catalpa (11 1/2 Mile). GAEL GREENE, former localite daughter of the late Nat Greene, authoress and New York Magazine restaurant reviewer, says . . . "My respon- sibility is to get a true sense of a place and to convey the way it feels to be there, to give you an idea of whether you would want to be there, whether it is worth the money, to discover new places, to expose those that are frauds in some way. I don't bother with the small fry, a lit- tle restaurant that is not good and just appears on the scene. It is going to make it because it will suit some need of the neighborhood or it will disap- pear — it doesn't need to be hit with a cannon. But a restaurant that opens with a great deal of publicity and flash, and isn't good, should be commented on." MISS MICHIGAN UNITED 1987 Beauty Pageant . . . is June 24 . . . at Premier Center on Van Dyke in Sterling Heights. Oak Park Has Ethnic Festival Oak Park's fourth annual international ethnic festival will be celebrated June 28 at David Shepherd Park. The event will feature a variety of entertainment, food and ex- hibits. Festival Chairman Charles Knoppow announced that the entertainment will include Jewish, Polynesian, Chinese, Polish, Afro-American, Yugoslavian, East Indian, Chaldean and • Native Ameri- can music and dancing. Among the media per- sonalities will be Byron and Jo Jo MacGregor and Ted Anthony. Radio Series Wins Honors "One People, Many Voices," a National Public Radio series on Jewish music produced by the National Foundation for Jewish Culture,_ has been named the winner of the Arts and Humanities Award from The Corporation for Public Broad- casting (CPB). The radio program, which was narrated by Theodore Bikel, also received top honors for Arts and Humanities in the Ohio State Awards competition sponsored by the Institute for Education by Radio-Television at Ohio State University. Oak Park To Have Three-Mile Race Oak Park Department of Recreation will conduct its 14th annual "Mayor's Three Mile Run" on July 5. The race will be held at the Oak Park Community Center, 14300 Oak Park Blvd., in the parking lot adjacent to the tennis courts. There is an entry fee. For information, call the depart- ment of recreation, 545-6400.