BOOKS I ■ WHY YOUR PARTY PLANS SHOULD INCLUDE US. presents Fall List IT H E A T R El s capita Performing your political musical favorites including: Whatever occasion you're planning, well customize all our banquet services to meet your needs and budget. Ask us for more information. nsus ll "You Fill Out "Who'll Put a Bom$ on..addam Sad BUSINESS MEETINGS SPORTS BANQUETS er of the PAC” REHEARSAL DINNERS A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR TO OUR CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS HOLIDAY BANQUETS SPECIAL OCCASIONS. SEPT 6 at 7:30 & 10:00 PM SEPT 7 at 7:00 •& 10. CUSTOMIZED BANQUET SPECIALISTS "The best musical satire on Washington ever seen" - The Washington Times - Call . „ . „ 875-8284 for tickets. Visa & MasterCard • • IVIAINTAIN accepted. Or call ''gztjii7....m.‘ at 645-6666. CICS , PRIME RIB • CHOICE STEAKS 26855 Greenfield Road Southfield 557-0570 rrbOVIT S infrinN SKOP Proudly Presents NIN RISTORANTE RATED 4 STARS &torten & Friends for a By MOLLY ABRAHAM Detroit Free Press Restaurant. Critic & HaPPY:a40, Year VISIT OUR AUTHENTIC ENOTECA (Wine Library) WITH OVER 40 CHOICE WINES BY THE GLASS HOMEMADE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING TO • FRESH PASTAS • ITALIAN SPECIALTIES • PROVIMI VEAL • CHICKEN • LAMB • BEEF • FRESH SEAFOOD NORMA JEAN BELL Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m.-12 Mid. Sat. 12 noon-12 Mid., Sun. 12 noon-9 p.m. 14 MILE ROAD I 13 MILE ROAD 12 MILE ROAD ,k_ NINO'S 4' 0 '49 1 AND THE ALLATARS Thursdays 9 p.m. • Fri. & Sat. 9:45 p.m. ki k A HEALTHY & HAPPY NEW YEAR TO OUR CUSTOMERS & FRIENDS 22061 Woodward, Between 8 & 9 39841940/ 15015 13 MILE RD., O West Of Hayes Warren 1-696 ROAST CHICKEN $ DINNER 2 -2800 26 CHOICE OF SOUP OR SALAD HAPPY NEW YEAR We are pleased to announce that our hotel is now known as Southfield Hilton Gorden Inn. This change will bring about updated services with even more emphasis on gracious hospitality and meticulous attention to your travel needs. We appreciate your business, and be assured that we will give you the same high quality of service that you have come to expect from HILTON. Please direct any question or concerns that you may have to the Hotel Soles Department or Reservations at (313) 357-1100. Southfield Hilton Garden Inn ][ 122 57 lo0 Dr.,Sou eo l d, o L 4 T8 0 N 3zt s (2 3 61030 ) 0 3American 1-8 00-H I LT O NS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1991 DELI and RESTAURANT We Will Close Mon. & Tues., Sept. 9 & 10 And Reopen Wed., Sept. 11 at 7 a.m. We Will Close Tues., Sept. 17 at 3 p.m. And Reopen Thurs., Sept. 19 at 7 a.m. I SHIVA DINNERS & PARTY TRAYS ... Free Delivery I Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner ... Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-8 p.m.. Sat. 7 a.m.-3 p.m. 21754 W. 11 MILE AT LAHSER • HARVARD ROW 352 - 4940 Continued from preceding page For history buffs, Dreyfus: A Family Affair 1789-1945 (Harper Collins, September), looks like a heavyweight en- try. Michael Burns traces the French Jewish dynasty from the .days of Danton and Robespierre through the famous trial of Alfred Dreyfus to the death of Alfred's favorite granddaughter in Auschwitz. Journalist Ruth Gruber, author of Raquela: A Woman of Israel, has a splendid history-memoir of her early life called Ahead of Time (Wynwood Press, available now). Gruber describes her precocious childhood — she attended NYU at 15 — and the love of German that led her to Cologne in 1932. She also evokes the bygone world of Williamsburg in Brooklyn: "Moore Street smelled of pickles in big bar- rels, of roasted chestnuts and sweet potatoes, of jelly apples and knishes and haisse arbes. Each morning a man who looked like the giant in 'Jack the Giant-killer,' with sweat dampening his shirt, carried a huge mound of ice in iron claws from his ice wagon up the stairs to our flat over the liquor store that Papa owned." Two other books focus on more recent history. The Secret Alliance (Farrar Straus & Giroux, November) by Tad Szulc, the New York Times reporter, looks at the rescue of Jews in Eastern Europe, North Africa and the Middle East since World War II. Given access to secret ar- chives and extensive inter- views, Szulc links the success of several operations to a secret pact between the Mossad, Israel's secret ser- vice, and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. In the Sewers of Lvov by Robert Marshall (Schribner's, September) is a story of courage and survival during World War II. In May of 1943, during a German pogrom in Poland, a small group of Jews fled to the underground sewers in the city, where they managed to survive for 14 months, emerging, emaciated and nearly blind, only after the Russians liberated the city. Not only a must-read but a must-see for the fall is Per- sonal Witness by Abba Eban (Putnam, October). A compa- nion volume to a new PBS series, Personal Witness traces the state of Israel's for- tunes with a perspective on world leaders that only an in- sider like Eban can provide. No season is complete without some ruminations of