I ENTERTAINMENT I 11•111111111 ■ •11 ■ 1111111 UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP IRVING'S 0 4,4zszekvtas Delicatessen-Restaurant LA MIRAGE MALL, 29555 NORTHWESTERN HWY. Bet. 11 Mile & Inkster OPEN TUES. THRU SUN. 7 a.m.•ti p.m., MON. 7 a.m.•3 pan. 352.3840 OPEN FOR DINNER EVERY DAY EXCEPT MONDAY COUPON 11111111111 11111111111 Exp. July 31, 19 -I 1.• • = 89 $ 3 .00 OFF Yards and Yards of BRUNCH Each Sunday 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. $1395 = per person $795 ON ANY TWO DINNER SPECIALS • JN Ns Children 12 and under FROM 3 p.m. TO 8 p.m. MN Reservations Suggested - TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY ONLY Private Parties up to 200 11111111111 COUPON 11111111111 I COUPON BeriE. YAP OPEN 7 DAYS — 11 a.m. 355E2050 BAR Be BAR-B-Q SLAB FOR 2 INCLUDES: 2 POTATOES, 2 COLE SLAWS AND BREAD FOR 2 BAR-B-Q CHICKEN FOR 2 $7.85 POW ,, ! 7! " . ‘ s' ' ::,:tx.4, `'...> ° INCLUDES: 2 POTATOES, 2 COLE SLAWS AND BREAD FOR 2 VW:iZ , 840tIt' ,,,,,,,..-; - ..,...,A ' . . ...: • 1 Coupon 'Per Order • Coupon Expires 6-2-89 JN TRY OUR DAILY SPECIALS MON.-FRI. (Inquire Within) FARMINGTON HILLS — 851-7000 1 LIVONIA — 427-6500 30843 PLYMOUTH RD. .....I L 31006 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 14 Ai Cafe 29566 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Just N. of 13 Mile • Farm. Hills • 626.0804 Home-Style Family Dining • High Quality • Reasonable Prices I COUPON I --- NOW OPEN FOR DINNER INTRODUCTORY OFFER LARGE, DELICIOUS, HEALTHY HOMEMADE MUFFIN WITH ALL DINNER ORDERS MON. THRU FRI. ANYTIME TIL 9 p.m. WE BAKE OUR OWN DINNER ROLLS! I Program Gives Balanced View of Middle East SUITES- HOTEL MORRIE WARSHAWSKI 28100 Franklin Road Southfield r- • Expires 6-2-89 JN j • 1 Coupon Per Person NEW HOURS: MON.-FRI. 6:30-9, SAT. 6:30-4, SUN. 6:30-3 BUY A POUND GET A POUND FREE White Oven-Baked [OM nmi UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT DOMINICO"S RESTAURANT and LOUNGE 2847 COOLIDGE HWY., BERKLEY Between 11 and 12 Mile Roads 541-7670 BUY 1 DINNER GET SECOND AT HALF PRICE! ANYTHING ON THE MENU! ANYHOUR! 7 DAYS A WEEK! DINE IN OR CARRY-OUT AND $2" OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA ANYHOUR! 7 DAYS A WEEK! DINE IN OR CARRY-OUT ease present ceupon with both offers We Serve Beer-Wine & Liquor Private Banquet Rooms JN Complete Carry-Out On All Occasions TURKEY BREAST • Low Cholesterol • Low Sodium • 99% Fat-Free Expires 6-2-89 VINEYARD'S WINE CELLAR AND CAFE • Fresh Bagels • Lox • Smoked Fish • Soups • Salads • Over 50 Sandwiches • Chopped Liver • Houmus • Tahini • Falafel • Etc. 32418 NORTHWESTERN HWY. BET. MIDDLEBELT & 14 MILE Farmington Hills 66 FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1989 855-9463 Our c9 gor, greatest Natural V David K. Shipler's Arab and Jew is the subject of a PBS documentary. EMBASSY to 12 Mid. $10.95 ( 4,Resource P,- tf /11 #11‘ Special to The Jewish News T elevision is known as the "cool"medium — a device that welcomes and then transmits any and all images in an unending and undivided flow of accep- tance. Typically this helps make television an environ- ment that gravitates toward action and emotion while drif- ting away from intellect or ideas in order to grab hold of viewers swimming in a sea of predominantly visual choices. Public television was created to help rectify this im- balance with programs like the new two-hour documen- tary Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land, which airs at 9 p.m. Monday and 2 a.m. Tuesday on Chan- nel 56. The documentary is based on David K. Shipler's 1986 Pulitzer Prize-winning book of the same title. The film, much like the book, makes every attempt to stay neutral and to delve in- to a very complicated subject from a particularly human point of view. Director Robert Gardner, who created The Courage to Care, a documen- tary portraying rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust, takes his camera throughout Israel to meet with every con- ceivable type of participant in the current conflict. The first half of the pro- gram presents a quick primer on the history of the Middle East and the creation of Israel, with the second half focusing on present-day Israel coping with the intifada, the Arab uprising. Garner opts for using a point-counterpoint method to advance the story and to balance people with totally opposite viewpoints against each other. Shipler has written a par- ticularly poetic narration that intertwines a very disparate set of people in- cluding: a West Bank Arab journalist, an Israeli philosopher, an Arab social worker, convicted Arab and Jewish terrorists, Arab sur- vivor of the 1948 Deir Yassin massacre, a right-wing Jewish high school teacher and others. Gardner uses these people and their emotions to paint a complicated and disturbing portrait of Israel — a canvas thick with blood-reds, sharp contrasts and contradictions, and framed by a desperate yearning for peace. The film pays particular at- tention to the set of prejudices and stereotypes that Jews and Arabs have of one another: the Arabs who con- sider Jews "arrogant, authoritarian and greedy;" the Jews who think of Arabs as "disloyal, primitive, dirty and cunning." Everywhere the film turns it is confronted by the clash of feelings and facts, and by relationships with bewilder- ing complexity where emo- tions most often gain the up- per hand. Arab and Jew does not pre- tend to have an answer, nor to point a way out of the dense forest of Middle Eastern politics. But Shipler does argue for an environment that urges tolerance: "Whatever happens in war or diplomacy, whatever ter- ritory is won or lost, whatever accommodations or com- promises are finally made, the future guarantees that Arabs and Jews will remain close neighbors in this weary land, entangled in each other's fears. They will not escape from one another. They will not find peace in treaties or in victories. They will find it, if at all, by look- ing into each other's eyes." 111