▪ I ENTERTAINMENT I phizft deli ■ • dell ollmr ■ ■ • • • Invites You To Enjoy OUR OUTDOOR SEATING Is • OFF • • • ANY CARRY-OUT BACK! get second half pound free. Mix or match. Wrth this ad. Coupon must be presented before ordering to be valid. No duplication of coupons. 8 person minimum. 111 ■ ■ a ■ ■ ° II • • III • • ._• : ■ ■ ■ EVERY DAY 7:00 A.M. • to a • JN w Num la • 111 .•• RATED #1 BEST HOT STEAMY CORNED BEEF IN TOW deli 356-2310 ■ ■ Expires Aug. 21. 1989 .411111• Il • • www o (Corner of 12 Mile Rood) 8:00 P.M. PARTY TRAYS (MEAT or FISH) present coupon when placing order. 8 person minimum. FRANKLIN SHOPPING PLAZA 29145 NORTHWESTERN HWY. cm ., OFF • a NOT good DAY before, or DAY of any holiday. Must N Let our Tray Catering, Sandwiches, or Bulk Orders compliment your business or soda function. a ■ • is ■ Ill 111 $ 5 00 ■ 111 a JN ■ BEST PARTY TRAYS IN TOWN 1/ A al••• ■ ••ma•• ■ ••• almmaplaza dell mow. • I1 • 0 4/ #44•In 1 ••• am a a a BIL I• 356 -2310 ■ Expires Aug. 21. 1989 VP ! Order $15 Or More ! seminar, or party carry outs. III • . with purchase of second sandwich of equal or "• greater value. One coupon per customer. Coupon . II must be presented before ordering to be valid. No ■ duplication of coupons. 8 person minimum. ■ ornaplaza deli .... ■ • .■ ■ a ■ a • s ■ a • . • • Call ahead for your: office meeting, OFF E IN Expires Aug 21, 1989 4' •as•awasammoma••• Must Present Coupon Before Ordering. No Phone Orders. No Duplication of Coupon. Expires Aug. 21, 1989 ■ ■ a • ANY JN it :8ANDWICI-0 ■ IP ■ ■ ■ III % ■ or Potato •.• Salad JN ■ : • ■ ■ onompicaa dell ■■•■■ IL ■ i LI C010 SIEIW : ■ Continued from preceding page • FREE :: 111 Buy a half pound of Potato Salad or Cole Slaw and _ So This Guy .. . Mcht.. , COrd V CARRYOUT AND SIT DOWN DINING CHICKEN LOVERS CAN HAVE A FOWL BALL!!! There's a delicious new way to eat chicken. It's better tasting and better for you too! Gregory's Flame-Broiled Chicken is MARINATED (NOT FRIED). It's Indescribably Delicious and LOWER in CALORIES and CHOLESTEROL. — DINNERS Dinners include: salad, baked beans and pita bread with homemade honey butter. ALSO Chicken by the Piece or in Family Paks Ribs — '/2 or full order Chicken Salad Supreme Chicken Pasta Salad Chicken Sandwich Chunky Chicken Soup 2 Minute Service DINE IN (CASUAL) TAKE OUT CHICKEN $3.65 $4.95 RIBS $5.99 - $8.99 the 'Great Gregory' GREGORY'S GRILLE Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. daily 626-8580 OLD ORCHARD CENTER (15 Mile at Orchard Lake Rd.) Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 .6 2 FRIDAY . JULY 28,19$9 , • I4 41 "I'm alive and I'm glad He doesn't want me yet." Give Henny Youngman a se- cond and he could probably recite a few dozen jokes on that subject. In fact, he claims that if you mention any sub- ject at all, he'd be prepared with a joke for it. But even with an arsenal of thousands, Youngman admits he has his own personal favorites: "I take my wife every- where," he says, "but she always finds her way home. "They gave us a waterbed at the hotel. My wife called it the Dead Sea. "My wife's on a diet. She eats nothing but coconuts and bananas. She hasn't lost any weight, but you should see her climb a tree. "My wife says she wants to go somewhere different on vaction this year. I said, 'Try the kitchen.' "My wife and I stayed at the hotel in Chicago where we honeymooned. This time I was the one who went in the bathroom and cried!" Those are , some of the old standards Youngman loves to tell. Of course, like all good comics, he's updated material to include current events: "They removed Tammy Bak- ker's makeup. They found Jimmy Hoffa. "Imelda Marcos says, 'If the shoe fits, buy it.' She's in Israel now planting a shoe tree." Youngman laughs as heart- ily at his own jokes as does his audience. He says he's always been an easy audience for other comics, too. Until recent- ly. "Today, almost nobody makes me laugh. They're not funny. The young comics aren't funny enough for me anyway. I know what they do. They don't come up with anything original. Robin Williams is good sometimes. But nobody's good all the time. You've got to hit a snag now and then. Everybody does." He may have hit some snags in his day too. Still, Youngman admits, he's been very lucky. "I usually make them laugh. I have enough stuff to hit home. I talk about my wife. I talk about my brother-in-law. I talk about my grandson. Yep, I have enough material to make the average person who has a home life laugh. They understand what I say. I don't do dirty jokes. "Although," he interrupts himself, "a lady of the evening walked up to me recently and said, 'Give me $50 and I'll do anything you want.' I told her to paint my house!" After 60 years in the business, the 83-year-old Youngman doesn't show any signs of slowing down. Asked believe there is a God and I'm seeing the results of it every day. I'm alive and I'm glad He doesn't want me yet. if he ever gives any thought to retiring," he quips, "To what? lb where? Oblivion? No. I'm in demand, thank you." And indeed he is. Youngman is starting filming on Wise Guys, a new Martin Scorcese film co-starring Robert DeNiro. And there are always his concert appearances, his one-nighters and his constant search for new comic material. So it's all fallen into place for Youngman. The little boy with the violin and the great sense of humor has finally become a living legend — even if he doesn't see it that way. "What do you mean? What's with titles? I'm just glad to be living," he laughs. "Forget the legend!" ❑ Clarinetist Stoltzman To Appear With DSO Clarinetist Richard Stoltz- man will appear with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. Thursday and Aug. 6 at Meadow Brook. He will appear in concerts featur- ing the music of Mozart, Weber and Dvorak. Stotzman's orchestral engagements have included the Mozart concerto with the New York Philharmonic, a Nielsen Concerto with the Toronto Symphony, and a Rossini in San Francisco. He has also performed with such orchestras as Atlanta, Baltimore, Buffalo, Cincin- Denver, Dallas, nati, Houston, Los Angeles, Louisville, Montreal, Mostly Mozart, National, New Jersey, Ottawa, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and in Europe. Stoltzman was graduated from Ohio State University with a double major in music and mathematics. He earned his Master of Music degree at Yale University while study- ing with Keith Wilson, and later worked toward a doc- toral degree with Kalmen Op- perman at Columbia University. He presented the first