YOSI S

Deli Delights

UK Z.

Continued from Page 92

GLATT M ART

Fu_ll Service Glatt Kosher Butcher

Tiffany Plaza
32839 Northwestern Highway (1 block southeast of 14 Mile)
855-8830

PLACE YOUR YOM TOV ORDERS EARLY

Featuring

COMING IN OCTOBER

Rotisserie Chicken

Full line of Carryout Deli

All kashrut laws strictly observed
under the supervision of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis

14 Mile

cE

Yossell & Susan (Hollander) Kellman

Better Health at a Better Price

Imported
Non-Carbonated

even
natural spring water

7 HEALTHY LOCATIONS

WEST BLOOMFIELD

DEARBORN
DETROIT
REDFORD

6738 Orchard Lake Road (S. of Maple)
WEST BLOOMFIELD PLAZA
851-4740

ONLY

$

1 • 19

1.5 Liter

AUGUST 31, 1991

Limit 12

WONDERLAND MALL
EASTLAND MALL
LIVONIA (Thrift Store)

MIKE SCHLUSSEL

BRINGING BACK CINNAMON RAISIN
AND RASPBERRY CHOCOLATE CHIP
SCONES FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON
AT STORE LOCATION ONLY!
681-8060

3375 Orchard Lake Road
At Commerce Road
West Bloomfield, MI 48033

94

FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1991

It was still early on an or-
dinary Tuesday evening when
I arrived at the corner
building at No. 17 Rue des
Rosiers, but already there was
a crowd waiting to be seated.
Jo Goldenberg's has been
drawing crowds ever since it
opened over 35 years ago.
Even a bomb attack in 1982
didn't slow down business. In
fact, loyal patrons came in
even greater numbers to show
they couldn't be bullied into
staying away from their
favorite restaurant-deli.
While I waited, I watched
Parisians standing at the
take-out counter ordering
specialties like eggplant
caviar and foie gras.
Patrons were laughing and
talking, and strolling
guitarists were singing
schmaltzy songs. Meanwhile,
waiters strode by briskly, car-
rying heaping portions of
food. The Eastern European
style menu included
everything from borscht to
brisket to strudel.
But it wasn't exactly a taste
of home. For this, after all,
was Paris. The sight of stylish
Parisians, the savoir faire of
the waiters, the sounds of
melodious French — all this
reminded me that delis aren't
the same the world over.
DIscovering their differences
is part of the adventure of
travel. D

NOW THROUGH

116 0%idS

gie S

Bay Area ambiance and so-
phistication. The colors were
soft, the mood relaxed, as
patrons bit into their bagel
bits — an invention of David's
— and sipped California
kosher wine as they talked
about the theater perfor-
mance they'd just seen.
Seated right at the counter,
as he often is, was David, who
talked to a longtime patron as
he ate his cabbage soup.
"I really opened the place
by accident," confessed David.
"I couldn't find a delicatessen
to my liking in San Francisco.
So I started one of my own."
That was over 30 years ago,
in the days when his deli was
just a five-stool counter and
people simply lined up at the
cash register and told David
what they'd eaten.
David's has expanded since
then into a spacious, modern
eatery. Its loyal patrons in-
clude writers, actors, theater-
goers, politicians and other
San Franciscans who enjoy
hearty deli food. David enjoys
feeding them.. "I take special
satisfaction in seeing people
enjoying themselves," he said.
On another continent, Jo
Goldenberg also takes great
delight in feeding his patrons,
as I discovered when my deli
adventures took me to a land-
mark restaurant-deli in Paris,
the unofficial capital of
cuisine.

GUARANTEED!
I WILL BEAT
ANY DEAL!

CAR PHONE AVAILABLE.
ASK FOR DETAILS.

TAMAROFF
DODGE

12 Mile west of Telegraph

354-6600

NEWS

Swastika Graffiti
At Plymouth Rock

Boston (JTA) - The New
England office of the Anti-
Defamation League has
asked the Plymouth County
district attorney to in-
vestigate whether a neo-
Nazi skinhead group active
in Massachusetts may be
connected to the daubing of a
swastika on Plymouth Rock.
The swastika was spray-
painted over a square foot of
the national landmark.
Fisherman discovered the
graffiti at about 4 a.m. and it
was erased the same morning
by the Massachusetts Depart-
ment of Environmental Man-
agement.
The fisherman said they
had seen several youths in
the area of the pavilion that
surrounds the fabled rock,
where the Pilgrims landed
in 1620.

But "police searched the
area and came up empty,"
said Lt. Victor Higgins of the
Plymouth police depart-
ment.
Lt. Higgins said Plymouth

Rock has been defaced in the
past. Vandals have carved
initials into the stone, pelted
it with eggs and sprayed it
with shaving cream.
But he said there are
neither gangs nor skinheads
in Plymouth, a city of 50,000
whose population swells to
100,000 in the summer.
He called the graffiti a
"reverse swastika" because
"the tails are going in the
wrong direction." On that
basis, he deduced that an
organized group had not
done it, because "they would
know how to draw it."
ADL civil rights attorney
Sally Greenberg disagreed.
"It's immaterial that it was
drawn incorrectly. We're not
talking about geniuses."
A spate of hate crimes
began in this area in May,
Ms. Greenberg said. They
include the beating of two
gay men in the Chinatown
section of Boston and threats
by a group of teens against a
black girl at the North At-
tleboro train station.

