'1 11- 11-1NU r- - DAVE'S DELICATESSEN r $4 0 ° OFF per person $3000 Fr E per person MON. THRU THURS. 681-3537 3258 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon. Thru Thurs. Closed Sun. Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. FRI., SAT. & SUN. SERVING BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER ON ANY OF OUR FRESH FISH, MILK-FED VEAL, STEAK OR CHICKEN DINNERS HOME-MADE COOKING WITH THIS COUPON • Not Including Any Specials • Good 7 Days A Week • Only 1 Coupon Needed JN For Up To 6 People Also Featuring HOMEMADE PASTA, EGGLANT & HOT HOMEMADE BREADSTICKS TRAY CATERING FOR YOUR NEXT AFFAIR OUR SPECIALTY TO GO! us iSCATERING We Do It All! or Deliver Foods To Add To Your Party! • OFFICE PARTY • COMPANY PARTY • RECEPTIONS • ORGANIZATIONS • KOSHER (Cooked In Your Home) • HORS D'OEUVRES • TORTES • PASTRY MINIATURES • ETC. • ETC. • ETC. 425-7705 Kitchen: Home: 1535 CASS LAKE RD.•Keego Harbor BET. ORCHARD LAKE RD. & M-59 5574721 683-2888 L PLAN YOUR NEXT PARTY AT AMERICAN CENTER CAFE SWEET 16 PARTY? BRIDAL SHOWER? • FREE LUNCHEON FOR HOSTESS • FREE GIFT FOR THE BRIDE-TO-BE OR SWEET 16'ER • NO EXTRA ROOM CHARGE • SPECIAL LUNCHEON PRICES AMERICAN CENTER CA Southfield 27777 FRANKLIN RD. CALL 353-8144 or 353-8146 Heart American ASSOCia tiOn Epp YOUR I_IFE WERE FIGHTING YOUR HOST RICHARD b. CARLSON (Formerly with Merrick's)} A TAsTEFUL TRADITION . _ . , _ , Muer res ran have ' C huck Over :, -,rn. -- '- tion for excelithce-Our daffy y ---t4N, '---- - - ,-- ature&the finest fresh f s ,.. :0144 atigin ,2 „, ,...„,- - ce axed a 1 -' 879-20 le lc (3 ""= .. _E 207 Royal Way Palm Beach, FL (305) 659-1440 % ou're ' .. 7 ) es = - . 29-2261 - (3 be , :ion chaRter..(6. cRab 456 South Ocean Blvd. Palm Beach, FL (305) 659-1500 A . 133 et ....) _ -_- r. = - - h•"° c . . 78 --:-,-- . . , III the Mittinl* ptesend I -, w*..,_3. f our res p., , ,._ . __e• , 's eRa . 420 Harding Circle St. Armand's Key Sarasota, FL (813) 388-3964 el .ti chaRtey's cRab 'e' • chaRley's cRab 1000 U.S. 1 Jupiter, FL Opening December 1987 3000 N. East 32nd Ave. Ft. Lauderdale, FL Opening January 1988 e FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1987 — . Key Largo Continued from preceding page dishes. Key Largo's recent seaplane dinner fly-in was a complete success . . . with over a dozen planes from around the state coming in for lunch . . . in- cluding a customer in his Bell Ranger helicopter . . . All in one fun day. NO MORE Red Parrot lounge at Michigan Inn on J.L. Hudson Drive . . . The former Dewey's locale that was turned into a high- frenzied disco operation has been closed . . . It will pro- bably reopen with the previous Dewey's theme of live entertainment and much more class operation . . . The room will also be given a new name. Peter Pappas, general manager at Michigan Inn, and Mike Kralevic, director of sales and marketing, have both previously worked together and are good friends. NORMA JEAN BELL and the All Stars are appear- ing Wednesday through Saturday during October at the Celebrity Showroom in Thomas' Crystal Gardens (former Hillcrest Country Club), S. Groesbeck, Mt. Clemens. CLEANLINESS is always a thing to look for in restaurants . . . and Alia's on - Greenfield north of 11 Mile continues to maintain a high health department rating .. . It'll soar now that there's all new equipment in the kitchen . . . Try the chicken kebob there . . . it's excellent . . . Owner Ed Farah is also prideful of his "fresh boneless, broiled whitefish" and "fresh boneless, broiled rainbow trout" among a new and expanded menu. NORMANDIE on the park, serving restaurant patrons since 1957, has open- ed its new Balcony Cafe overlooking the New Center Park and Music Theater at Second Ave. and West Grand Blvd. The 80-seat cafe is a canopied, second-level out - door restaurant located above the current Normandie Ter- race Cafe (which will remain in operation) and adjacent to the well-known Normandie Restaurant . . . The balcony features small bays that pro- vide intimate seating for in- dividual tables under a fresh green awning extending the length of the cafe . . . Decorative cross-hatch lattice trim under each bay accents the cafe's wood framework. The new cafe has a full- service bar and menu selec- tions from salads and sand- wiches to pasta and steaks . . . It is open through Oc- tober, Monday-Friday, 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., weather permit- ting . . . Hours will be extend- ed to include Saturdays and Sundays during productions at the Fisher Theatre. Henry Warshaw, Norman- die owner with Art Brooks, says recent enhancements to the area's outdoor environ- ment and the New Center's re-emergence as a restaurant and theater district, were key factors in their decision to build the Balcony Cafe. A $4.8 million, federally- funded program to revitalize Grand Boulevard from Wood- ward to the Lodge Ex- pressway is nearing comple- tion . . . Nearly a half-million theaergoers are expected to attend productions this year at the Fisher, Michigan Opera and Attic Theaters, located a block from the Nor- mandie. The Normandie Balcony Cafe is one of three restaurants that opened this month in the New Center area . . . The new Pegasus in the Fisher is in the Fisher Bldg., and Hey Jude's, a Cheers-type pub, is on Baltimore between Second and Third. Other New Center restaurants popular with the theater crowd include: Lelli's, Hotel St. Regis, Fisher's Up- town Cafe, Mr. Mike's, What's on Second? and Gertie's Garden . . . Further down Se- cond is the favorite of many, Mario's. shopping, ONE-DAY sightseeing and dining adventure is on tap by City of Southfield, Cultural Art, Parks and Recreation set for Dec. 4 . . . on its visit to Frankenmuth, Mich. . . . Tour and wine tasting at St. Julian Winery, lunCheon at noted Zehnder's Restaurant with their delicious chicken, and free time for shopping on Main Street . . . Then it's aboard a bus to the Little Red Shoe House and new Market Place Outlets with its many discount stores . . . Last stop is Bronners, where Christmas is celebrated 365 days a year . . . For more info, call Sol Gelbman, 354-4717. NEWS 1"'"''' Jewish Music Conference Set New York — Surviving can- tors and synagogue musi- cians from pre-Nazi Germany and Austria will look back on their lives and their music, highlighting a two-day con- ference, "Varied Voices: A Conference on Jewish Musical Traditions" at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America on Nov. 1-2.