HOMEMADE IS OUR
SECOND
NAME*
OUR CARRYOUT
arcatiour
Metropolitan Detroit's Most Beautiful
and Exciting Restaurant-Catering Facility
Will- Be Open
ALREAR•ROUND
ALSO INCLUDES DELICIOUS
HOMEMADE
•MATZAH BALL SOUP • CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP
•CHOPPED LIVER • KISHKE • ETC. ETC. ETC.
NOBODY IS BETTER THAN STAR;
other's
IM ■ 1
Order Now: 810-358-3355
Pick-Up Between 8 a.m. &
3 p.m. on Mother's Day
BILLY ROSE TRIO
358-3355
28875 Franklin Rd. at Northwestern & 12 Mile
Southfield, MI
$5 OFF!
r
1
$2
OFF
B-B•Q CHICKEN FOR 2
$2
OFF
SLAB FOR 2
ON OUR BEAUTIFUL
ALREADY LOW-PRICED
MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS
SPECIALLY-TRIMMED RIBS
GOOD 7 DAYS!
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SALAD OR COLE
SLAW, POTATOES AND GARLIC BREAD
Expires 5-15-97
With This Coupon
DELIVERY • Not Good Holidays
AVAILABLE • 1 0 Person MinimuriLi
Ems MI= NMI
Includes: Mixed organic greens, pasta
salad, fresh broccoli and carrots,
whipped potatoes, rice pilaf, rolls,
cherry and apple pies
'Appearing Mon.-Sat.
, MEAT TRAYS . . .$5.65 per person
I DAIRY TRAYS ..5 10.25 per person
• Expires 12-31-97
Lone Per Person
NEN NNE mum
Sliced Ham
Includes
Complimentary Glass of
Champagne To Adults
SERVING DINNER FROM
3 P.M. TO 8 P.M.
r
OUR TRAYS CAN'T BE BEAT
I FOR QUALITY & PRICE!
1•11111 MEM MIN MIMI MIME MIME
ay
Sunday, May 11, 1997
Champagne Brunch
Complete Mother's
Day Dinner To Go,
11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
$
110 (For 6 to 8 People)
$ 19.95 Adults
Your Choice of:
9 3.95 Children
• Roasted Turkey
• Prime Rib
8 to 14
• Baked Spiral
Children Under 8 Free
EVERYBODY KNOWS WE HAVE
THE BEST HOMEMADE TUNA IN TOWN!
OUR HOMEMADE FAT FREE TUNA ALSO
CANT BE BEAT!
WE CUT OUR LOX BY HAND!
THERE IS
A REASON
WHY WE ARE
RATED ONE
OF THE BEST
CARRY-OUT
ONLY DELIS
IN AMERICA!
1.
I
T,A11- 101p 4o , , w, i
STAR DELI
24555 W. 12 MILE, Just West of Telegraph, Southfield
352-7377
L
BOTH
COUPONS
GOOD ANY
HOUR OR DAY
N J
WITH OR WITHOUT SKIN
GOOD 7 DAYS!
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SALAD OR COLE
SLAW, POTATOES & GARLIC BREAD
Expires 5-15-97
JN
a- 4
.4e ss Pohlif
DINE IN OR
CARRY-OUT
co
PRIVATE
BANQUET
FACILITIES
FOR ALL
OCCASIONS
24234 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 10 MILE (810) 476-1377
Let Us Cater
Your Next Affair
. "T re rAW
r
BROASTED
• Dine In Only
OPEN 7 DAYS
SUN,-THURS. 11-10
FRI. & SAT. 11-11
WHOLE SLAB
OF RIBS &
BROASTED OR
BAR-B-0 CHICKEN
FOR 2!
•
gi
118 SOUTH WOODWARD • ROYAL OAK
JUST NORTH OF 10 MILE NEXT TO ZOO
544-1211
• One Coupon Per Person
QUALITY IS OUR PRIORITY! j
VISIT US AT
OUR NEW LOCATION
Enjoy Fine Cuisine anO Courteous
7 Days a week!
Service
EARLY DINNERS
Mon? aN - Sunray 4:3o p.m to 6:0o p.m
116
4108 West Maple • Bloomfield Hills • 111101 626-2630
2 DOORS DOWN IN THE PARK PLACE PLAZA
22120 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE • 398 - 5502 or 398 5503
Oak Park
Dine In and Carry-Out
-
GOLDEN BOWL
Szechuan • Mandarin • Cantonese
OPEN 7 DAYS: Mon.-Thurs. 11-9:30, Fri. & Sat. 11-10:30, Sun. & Holidays 1-9:30
• Banquet Facilities
• Your Chef: FRANK ENG
B'nai B'rith Scare:
Old Memories
JAMES D. BESSER
WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT
The terrorism scare at the 16th
Street headquarters of B'nai B'rith
was an especially potent experi-
ence for the group's executive vice
president, Sidney Clearfield.
Twenty years ago, Mr.
Clearfield, then assistant director
of the B'nai B'rith Youth Organi-
zation, was one of 100 hostages
held for 39 hours by a group of
Hanafi Muslims who invaded
B'nai B'rith and two other sites in
downtown Washington, killing
one person in the process. Mr.
Clearfield spent much of the or-
deal tied up in the eighth-floor con-
ference room.
Recently, Mr. Clearfield par-
ticipated in an impromptu
Passover dinner in the same room
as more than 100 employees of the
Jewish service organization and
other groups with offices in the
building were quarantined while
federal officials and scientists at
the Naval Medical Research In-
stitute tried to identify the gooey
red substance in a petri dish, de-
livered to B'nai B'rith the day be-
fore along with a threatening
letter.
Mr. Clearfield said that his new
responsibilities and his earlier ex-
perience with terrorism produced
a different reaction this time
around.
'1 became very calm when it be-
gan," he said in an interview. "I
knew I had to take whatever steps
were necessary to keep the staff
calm. Actually, that wasn't too dif-
ficult; over the years, we've had
periodic threats, and I usually
have to make the decision
whether to deal with the police
and the FBI or to disregard it. So
I knew what had to be done."
Mr. Clearfield said he didn't
have flashbacks to the Hanafi
siege in March 1977.
"The only moment when it
came back to me was at the very
end, when we were gathered in
the conference room," he said.
"One of the police sa id that the last
time he was in that room was with
the hostages; then I thought about
it and remembered."
Mr. Clearfield and other B'nai
B'rith officials expressed concern
about some aspects of the han-
dling of the emergency by local au-
thorities.
"Several of the police and fire
officials indicated to us that they
were not really trained and pre-
pared to deal with this kind of bi-
ological or chemical threat," he
said. "And we were concerned that
there weren't proper facilities for
decontamination; the people who
went through the decontamina-
OLD MEMORIES page 124
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