!MEDIA MONITOR I AIM A HOLIDAY GIFT TO YOU FROM PICKLE BARREL DELI NBC Newsmen Continued from preceding page Authentic Lebanese Food FREE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mondays Thru Thursdays 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays 11 a.m. to 12 Mid. Sundays 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. CHEESECAKE • • WITH ANY DELI TRAY ORDERED THRU DEC. 31 WE WILL BE OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS ONLY Lunch or Dinner CORNISH HEN Stuffed With Lamb, Pine Nuts and Rice Excellent Wine List Special Vegetarian Dishes Cocktails 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. —Open 7 Days— Monday 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday-Friday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.to 9 p.m. Catering And Carry-Out 7295 Orchard Lake Road, South Side of the Robin's Next Shopping Center Reservations Accepted: 737.0168 Your Host: Walid lid EVERGREEN PLAZA 12 MILE AND EVERGREEN The Best in Dining 557.8899 CARL'S .•• CHOP HOUSE 833-0700 3020 Grand River Free Parking Nationally known for serving 4-H Prize Blue Ribbon Steak and Chops. Finest Seafood and Liquors. Private Dining Rooms for Banquets and Parties Serving daily from 11:30 — Sunday from 2 p.m. a All beef aged in our own coolers ROYAL EAGLE DINING IN OLD WORLD ELEGANCE Enjoy European Cuisine Dinners Sunday 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wed. thru Sat. 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. THE ROYAL EAGLE 1415 Parker, 1 Blk. East of Van Dyke & 21/2 Blks. N. of Jefferson 331-8088 In Historic Indian Village Reservations Suggested Closed Mon. and Tues. NM& tie, Tak4A4, -44 04146 J ine c anirzg and Codhai4 A Tradition Since 1934 1128 E. 9 MILE RD., 1/2 Mile East of 1-75 • 541-2132 FRESH $1145 CANADIAN WHITEFISH BRAISED SHORT RIBS OF BEEF $1125 Remember When? INCLUDES: RELISHES, SOUP OR SALAD, POT. OR VEG. & WARM HOMEMADE ROLLS & BUTTER ALL FRESH FRUIT PIES, APPLE STREUDEL, COGNAC TORTES EARLY EVENING SPECIALS MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM $6.50 & $7.75 8635 Cooley Lake Road, 1/2 Mile West of Union Lake Road New Year's Eve Special Italian. American Dining At Its Finest Sat. 4 to 12 Mid. 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sun. 2 to 11 CHAMPAGNE DINNER FOR 2 Roast Prime Rib of Beef or Jumbo Shrimp $25 per couple NEW YEAR'S EVE '50s & '60s PARTY STARTS 9 p.m. For Reservations: 363.9469 Plus Our Great Food and Beautiful Atmosphere, Enjoy Live Entertainment 7 Nights A Week Banquet Facilities Available 4222 Second Blvd. Bet. Willis & Canfield 76 Valet Parking FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1988 ALMA SMITH Songstress & Pianist Downstairs SAT. 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. DUFFY'S ON THE LAKE DETROIT Mon.-Fri. 11 to 11 I 833-9425 THE BRIGHT IDEA 0 send THE JEWISH NEWS as a gift 354-6060 NBC veteran said, "It's inap- propriate for the president of the news division to take stands on politics." NBC Anchor Tom Brokaw, who had favored hiring Gart- ner, had "no comment" on the flap. Gartner had been criticized by the NBC News staff for a September column he wrote for the Journal in which he called then-vice presidential candidate Dan Quayle "medi- ocre." At that time, Gartner agreed to limit himself to press and free-speech issues. Newsweek reports that Gart- ner believes the Arafat issue falls into that category. "It was quite proper," he said, "much like giving a speech on the First Amend- ment." Lenny: Forever Radical Chic In his latest confession, con- ductor /c omposer/aging wunderkind Leonard Bern- stein was quoted in Newsweek's "Overheard" column: "Maybe people do think of me as just another pinko fag- got, a bleeding heart, a do-gooder. "But that's what I am." A Lawyer And His Mouse "Forever let us hold the banner, high, high, high!" went the last chorus of the an- them of the Mickey Mouse Club. And few people have held it higher than Mt. Washington attorney Dick Reische. Reische is featured in Johns Hopkins Magazine fqr "being among the first serious Mickey Mouse aficionados." Reische has acquired Mickeys since the 1930s, "before," said the magazine, the Disney character "was plastered on lunchboxes and T-shirts. Then, Mickey was an angular, multidimensional character that looked more like a ro- dent." Many of Reische's Mickeys were made in Japan between 1934 and 1939 for American toy manufacturers. The lawyer has just about every model: "Mickey playing the accordion, eating with Min- nie and the boys, playing sports, carrying a red um- brella, even skiing down a mountain." Today's Mickeys, said Reische, "are middle-class suburban . . . Early Mickey is a back alley kid who gets into fights. Eternally op- timistic. That's the dream of America: A scrappy underdog makes good."