Voted Best Challah Bread By the Detroit Jewish Readers! How about showing your child's teacher your appreciation? Send her a (sift basket or cookie tray! Hope Tributes 10% Off Any sweet tray or gift basket or cookie tray Not good with any other offer. 1 coupon per ezistomen Expires June 15.2003 Great for graduations, birthdays and other special occasions! 6879 Orchard Lake Rd. in the Boardwalk Plaza 248-626-9110 711see 55/Lae ,iz`l ad /eo yea/ to 4t eizza‘-. ez/y-a Oakland Press Zany g'ny-leJ nzaAe a camdad _gawlaz Zam " Observer & Eccentric Open 7 days a week! zel :17. mu a Sunday-Wednesday 1 V OFF TOTAL Not Good with any other offer. Expires 5/31/03. Thursday- Saturday 1 V OFF TOTAL Not Good with any other offer. Expires 5/31/03. FRESH SOUPS, SALADS & CREPES 172 N. Old Woodward (NE corner of Maple & N. Old Woodward) (248) 283-0260 5/2 3 2003 70 Read The Detroit Jewish News to know what everyone is talking about! Jons from page 67 JN Tributes and honors are pouring in for comedian Bob Hope on the occasion of his 100th birthday. On May 29, the famous intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine will be named Bob Hope Square. Also that day, the expand- ed Bob Hope Hollywood USO, a "home away from home" facility for American troops and their families traveling to and from over- seas and stateside assign- ments, will be dedicated at Los Angeles International Airport. In Washington, D.C., politicos and entertainers will celebrate at the Bob Hope Gallery of Entertainment at the Library of Congress. Streets in Hope's current home in Toluca Lake, Calif., and boyhood home of Cleveland will be named after the comedian. That night, the Cleveland Indians (Hope was part-owner in the 1950s) celebrate Bob Hope Day at Jacobs Field. Clockwise from top left: Bob Hope and Bing Crosby in "Road to Utopia" "We had a lot offun on the studio sets of his movies, especially the Road' pictures," says Mort Lachman. Hope entertains the troops. "We had a lot of close calls in the battle areas," says Lachman. Hope garnered honorary Oscars and special awards from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences — but never an Oscar for one of his performances. "Oscar time at my house is referred to as Passoven" he once quipped. Movies: The Bob Hope 100th Birthday Tribute Collection, comprising 12 DVDs featuring 17 movies, was recently released. Bob Hope film festivals are planned for this summer and fall in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and England. Books: New in bookstores are William R. Faith's biog- raphy, Bob Hope — A Lift in Comedy (DeCapo Press), and Bob Hope — My Life in Jokes (Hyperion Books), 'by his daughter, Linda Hope. Exhibits: "Bob Hope: American Patriot" is on view at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif, through June 8. The show then will travel to the Dwight Eisenhower, Lyndon Johnson and Gerald Ford presidential libraries (the latter in Grand ' Rapids, Mich.). — Bill Carroll monologue routine, other than updat- ing topical jokes of the day. "He really was a limited comedian in many ways," says Lachman, "but he's the greatest comedy monologist in the history of show business. He would go anywhere and do anything for a laugh. He would even play state fairs in small states. He would have gone to Iraq in a minute to entertain the troops." Mort Lachman knows all this because for many years, he went everywhere and did everything with Bob Hope. Raised In Detroit Lachman, 85, was born in Seattle, but raised on Detroit's east side, up through his attendance at Hutchins Intermediate School. His father, Sol, owned several small jewelry stores in the city, and operated a jewelry counter at the old Russek's Department Store on Woodward Avenue downtown. His mother, Rose, and her father owned a small grocery store in Newberry; in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. "She actually ran the store while my grandfather sat in the back and stud- ied the Torah," Lachman recalls. "But the rest of our family was not very religious. Rose came to Detroit and she met my father." Sol Lachman went bankrupt after the stock market crash of 1929 and the family returned to Seattle, where Mort Lachman attended high school and the University of Washington, obtaining a journalism degree. He was confirmed at a Reform temple in Seattle. After a stint in the U.S. Army, he went to California and got a job as an advertis- ing salesman for a while, then answered an ad for a comedy writer for Jewish comedian/singer Eddie Cantor. "He was another comic with a big ego who just begged for laughs," says Lachman, "and I helped get them for him." Lachman attended a comedy writing