World Love All Israeli athlete earns respect. New Fall Menu! Alan Hitsky Associate Editor Stop in for lunch, relax in comfort and dine in elegance Venus Williams, left, and Shahar Peer in Dubai in February. Monday you can eat Alaskan King Crab Legs $ 45 16oz Genuine Center Cut New York Strip Steak $ 18 Prime Cut 14oz Boneless Ribeye $ 18 Char rifled Lamb Cho s 28 , Chicken Marsala $15 Colossal Shrimp Scampi $18 Prime Cut 14 oz Boneless Ribeye Broiled Salmon w/ Cilantro Soy Glaze Wednesda) - Herb Roasted C icken Plate $1 5 Whiskey Peppercorn Chicken $15 Broiled Salmon w/ Lobster Cream Sauce $1 sut. Mondays...All you can eat King Crab Legs $45 Fridays 14 oz Slow Roasted Prime Rib Thursday 16oz Bone In Ribeye (Cowboy Steak) $ 2 Pest° Encrusted Salmon $16 Lemon Pepper Chi Freida 14oz Slow • ime *i• Broiled Salmon w/ Lobster Cream Sauc Chicken Piccata $15 Naburetay erb Roasted Chicken Plate Broiled Salmon w/ Cilantro Soy Glaze $ Chargrilled Lamb Chops $28 Five Star Menu Created by Executive Chef Stewart Fox Jr Pest° Encrusted Salmon $16 Chargrilled Chicken Plate $15 16oz. Genuine Center Cut New York Strip Steak $18 20771 W E • ht Mile Rd Detroit NE 313-541-7 30 September 16 • 2010 www.the enthouseclubscom .S. professional tennis star Venus Williams defeated Israeli star Shahar Peer at the U.S. Open in New York earlier this month. It was the fourth and closest match the two have played this year and it perpetuated a bond that started last year in Dubai. Peer was barred from entering Dubai after the tournament started in 2009 because of her nationality. Williams spoke for the World Tennis Association when she said at the time, `All the players support Shahar. We are all athletes and we stand for tennis:' At the 2010 Dubai tournament in February Williams was paired against Peer in an early match away from the main stadium because of tensions follow- ing the assassination of a Hamas official in Dubai in January. Peer told reporters in New York this month that Williams "was really sup- portive of me, and she was always on my side and always stood up. It doesn't mat- ter if it was this year or the year before when I didn't get the visa. She stood up in that final and spoke for me. And when we did play over there and we played on the outside court, she was very humble. She always feels for me. She understands what I feel." Williams told a New York Daily News reporter that she, an African American, and Peer, an Israeli Jew, "have a certain special history together. I know she would have done the same thing for me or any other player. "My parents both came from the South in the '40s and '50s, and just — you know, it was an outrage really. Just like, Are you serious? Can you really exclude someone?' "This is professional tennis in 2010. We are all athletes here. The feeling inside of me was just one of almost rage and dis- content. Like, 'Is this for real?'"