S NGLE DOES FOOD CONTROL YOU? DO YOU LIVE TO EAT? IT'S TIME TO TAKE CONTROL! HEALTHY OPTIONS, INC. offers • Individualized Dietary Program • Individualized Weekly Counseling • Group Sessions Weekly To take control of yourself now, call for your Free Consultation DEA FARRAH, MSW, ACSW — Weight Control Therapist HEALTHY OPTIONS, INC. (313) 647-5540 BINGHAM CENTER • 30800 TELEGRAPH • SUITE 2960 • BIRMINGHAM, MI 48010 YOU ALONE CAN DO IT, BUT YOU CAN'T DO IT ALONE! THINK SPRING! • ONLY $ YOU'VE WAITED LONG ENOUGH SO DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER! AT $99 YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO WAIT! CALL TODAY 626-9880 f. **FOR SINGLE OR FAMILY MEMBERS *LIMITED MEMBERSHIP AT THIS PRICE. MONTHLY DUES APPLY ONE El ONE ATHLETIC CLUB ON 6343 FARMINGTON ROAD • JUST NORTH OF MAPLE IN WEST BLOOMFIELD 86 Friday, February 27, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS * * Positive Aspects To Single Living Douglas Tanger finds opportunities in being single HEIDI PRESS Local News Editor ouglas Tanger looks at single life in a positive way. Rather than vie- wing it as a transitory state, Tanger finds being single has a lot of good points. "I look at single life as a life of opportunities, that there are things you can do as a single individual that, perhaps, aren't quite as easy when you're married," such as traveling or working, both of which he admits he does "quite a bit." The 33-year-old Tanger, owner and operator of classical music station WQRS-FM (105.1), acts as a consultant to other radio stations and often has to leave town on a mo- ment's notice. He also analyzes radio station deals on weekends and finds, that that too is time consuming. But, after work, Tanger finds time to work out on Nautilus equipment or playing tennis. In addition, he relaxes by reading anything historical or political and listens to news. "I'm a news devotee. I listen and read the news constantly." Tanger came to Detroit from Boston in December 1985, after he, his father and brother, bought the radio sta- tion. A graduate of Boston Col- lege with a degree in market- ing, Tanger had a lot of broad- cast experience behind him be- fore settling into WQRS. At 17, he got his first paid broadcast job, performing engineering and announcing functions. In college, he worked at the campus station, rising through the ranks from sales manager to general man- ager. During his junior year of col- lege, Tanger joined a group of journalists in the Middle East, and brought back to the college a four-part radio series, "Is Peace a Realistic Possibility in the Middle East?" Among his interview subjects were Anwar Sadat's press secretary, Israel Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan's King Hussein. Since college, he has been with stations in Philadelphia, Washington, D.C. and in Bos- ton. He also taught a course in broadcast sales at Boston Col- lege. In 1985, he began a proc-