The World

Order Complete, Ready-To-Screw PadcloPer Dinnerd or Select tfadt Yuri. Special Fayorite(i.

Complete Dinners

FROM PAUL KOHN &
QUALITY
KOSHER
CALERING

(5 DINNER MINIMUM)

inetude, , Entree. chicken Soup ,ilb,ihazah Ball, Carrot Tzimme,,
Potato Kugel and Fruit Comp*.
OTY TOTAL
PRICE
Grilled Chicken Dinner
$13.95
$14.95
Roast Chicken Dinner
$15.95
Breast of' Chicken Dinner
$16.95
Roast Beef Brisket Dinner
Prime Rib Dinner
$18.95

Please Place Orders By
Monday, March 30, 1998

Alia Carte ("'Per Serving)

Gefilte Fish *
(Fresh Lake Superior White Fish & Pickerel) .$ 3.95
1/2 Lb. Chopped Liver (Serves 2)
$ 3.95
$ 7.95
1/2 Gal. Chicken Soup
Matzah Balls (Each)
$ .75
1/2 Roasted Chicken
$ 8.95
Stuffed Chicken Breast (Vegetable StuflIng)$ 9.95
$10.95
Roast Beef Brisket*
$12.95
Prime Ribs of Beef*
Portabello Mushroom Spinach Souffle
. $12.95
$54.95
Turkey NY/Gravy (Serves 8 to 10)
$17.95
Matzah Kugel (Serves 12)
$ 1.50
Broccoli*
Roasted Redskin Potatoes*
$ 1.50
$ 1.50
Carrot Tzimmes*
$.1.50
Potato Kugel*
Fruit Compote*
$ 1.50
$ 4.95
1/2 Pint Charoses

Dessert

Please Mail Orders To:
QUALITY KOSHER CATERING
27375 Bell Road • Southfield, MI 48034
Phone: 248.352.7758
or please fax your order to

248.352.9118

Name

Address

City

State

ZIP

Home Phone

Lemon Almond Chiffon (Serves 8 to 10)
Seven Layer Cake (Serves 8 to 10)
Chocolate Oblivion (Serves 16 to 22)
Mocha Torte (Serves•16 to 22)
Cookie Tray (4 dozen cookies total)
Eclairs (2 dozen)
Brownies (2 dozen)
Thumb Print Cookies (2 dozen)
Chocolate Chip Cookies (2 dozen)
Shankbone Available

$17.95
$19.95
$27.95
$29.95
$35.95
$14.95
$14.95
$14.95
$14.95

Business Phone

YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY ON
FRIDAY, APRIL 10, FROM
10 A.M. TO 3 P.M. AT
CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK
27375 BELL ROAD • SOUTHFIELD

N C

Sub Total S

Sales Tax (6%)

TOTAL S

45 Years in Business and
We're Still Developing.

VISITEd ISRAEL RECENTly2

JN is pREpARiNg

THE

50Th

WE ARE

SpECiAL COVERAqE CELEbRATiNq

ANNIVERSARY Of ISRAEL'S STATE1100d.

lookiNg FOR ThE bEST pLACES

ThiNgS TO

do whitE

ON A VISIT TO

TO SEE ANd

ThE Holy

Please send your travel tips, typewritten,
double-spaced and no more than a half page
( 8 1 /2 X 1 1" sheet of paper) to:

ISRAEIt s

SOTII , TRAVE1

Tips-DETROIT JEWiSli NEWS

27676 FRANkliN RoAd-SourlifiEld, MI 480M

FAX:

248-354-6069-EmAil: djN@Aol.com

Photos welcome. Names and hometown of
everyone (ages of children), a description of The
photo and its location should be attached to the
back.

Please include a daytime phone number in case we have questions.

3/27
1998

40

Deadline: April 3, 1998
Thanks

phorociRAphy

Metro Detroit's Longest Standing
Family-owned Studio.

• Superior Quality • Competitively Priced
• State-of-the-art techniques

32731 Franklin Rd. • Franklin, MI • 48025

(248) 626-3666

has to be something the two sides
can live with."
Ross said that the administration
has not yet decided how publicly to
pursue its proposals.

Yeltsin Bombshell

The decision by Russian President
Boris Yeltsin to dismiss his entire gov-
ernment, including Prime Minister
Viktor Chernomyrdin, caught the
Clinton administration by surprise.
The Kremlin bombshell came just as
Jewish leaders were debating whether
to press ahead with efforts on behalf
of pending legislation mandating
tough new sanctions on foreign com-
panies — and Russian companies, in `--\
particular — that contribute to Iran's
nuclear and missile programs.
For weeks, Jewish groups had
joined congressional leaders in holding
off on the legislation, which already
passed the House, while Vice Presi-
dent Al Gore met with the prime min-
ister.
After the recent Gore-Chernomyrdin
talks in Washington, Jewish groups were
getting restive.
"There was a feeling that it was just
talk, without any real likelihood of
changing things on the ground," said
the leader of one major pro-Israel
group.
Jewish organizations had planned
meetings for this week on the subject;
insiders expected growing support for
immediate congressional legislation,
despite strong administration resis-
tance.
But on Monday, Chernomyrdin
was history, and Jewish leaders were
scrambling for a response.
"It puts everything into question,"
said Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice
chair of the Conference of Presidents
of Major American Jewish Organiza-
tions. "Before this happened, we were
worried because we weren't convinced
there was real progress from the Gore-
Chernomyrdin talks; we haven't seen
evidence that the missile program was
being brought to a halt. This week's
developments make it even less certain
that the Russians are taking real
action."
Jewish groups, he said, would
decide this week whether to resume
the fight for tough sanctions legisla-
tion.
Soviet Jewry groups also were con-
cerned.
"We had a very open and direct
relationship with Chernomyrdin," said
Mark Levin, executive director of the
National Conference on Soviet Jewry.

