I ENTERTAINMENT I

Restaurant

IS PROUD TO PRESENT

Oa Straight from
St. Largo Island
The Colorful
Sounds Of

SHAWN RILEY

FRIDAY & SATURDAY EVENINGS
IN OUR

Bogart Lounge

8 p.m. to 12 Mid.

ENJOY OUR SPECIAL
WINTER DINNERS

142 E. Walled Lake Drive
Walled Lake Mich.

669-1441

101•4 P17

THE GREATEST RIBS! PIE BEST CHICKEN! THE FINEST PIZZA.AND MORE!

MON.-FRI. 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., SAT & SUN. 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
r"
1

CARRYOUT

WHOLE BAR-B-Q
CHICKEN
FOR TWO

Includes:
2 Potatoes, 2 Cole $
Slaws and 2 Rolls

L

WHOLE SLAB
BAR-B-Q RIBS
FOR TWO

and

7 95 I JN

DELIVERY

Includes:
2 Potatoes, 2 Cole $995
Slaws and 2 Rolls

29,
I
rail 24273 Middlebe
It Rd.
"Just
North
of
10
Mile"
Ca&477-2772

COUPON EXPIRES JAN.

I COUPON EXPIRES JAN. 29, 1989

COUPON

FAMILY ITALIAN DINING & PIZZA

4033 W. 12 MILE, 3 Blks. E. of Greenfield
548-3650
Berkley

PM-MOS-FISH
HOMEMADE GARLIC BREAD

1

1989

I JNj

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR
YOUR LIFE

American Heart
Association

ROHR PEA
'SMALL OR LARK SMALL-48-URGE

ON FOOD PURCHASES
OF $6 OR MORE

DINING ROOM, CARRY-OUT

Expires Jan. 31, 1989

• BANQUET ROOMS • BEER • WINE
COMPLETE CARRY-OUT • COCKTAILS

L

You'll Love Our Many Varieties
of Homemade Bread

Home Baked Challah
Available Fri., Sat., Sun.
and Holidays

(W. Bloomfield Store
Only)

Come home to the natural taste of handmade breads

Rochester
West Bloomfield
818 N. Main Street
4301 Orchard Lake Road
652-1280
Crosswinds Mall
737-1959
Hours: Monday-Friday 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Saturday 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

74

FIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1989

Friedman Spreads Gift
Of Music In Her Concerts

HEIDI PRESS

SQUARE PUIA

$1 OFF

Debbie Friedman will entertain at Sunday's community-wide
Tu B'Shevat seder.

WE TAKE EXCEPTION
TO WHAT YOUR
MOTHER TAUGHT
YOU.

YOU SHOULDN'T EAT
EVERYTHING PUT IN
FRONT OF YOU.

You should avoid foods high in
cholesterol. It's a fact, a high
blood cholesterol level sub-
stantially increases your
chances of developing heart
disease. By cutting down on
fatty, rich foods, you can do
yourself a big favor. You could
lower your blood cholesterol
level and reduce your risk of
heart disease.

For more information about a
planned and balanced diet,
contact your American Heart
Association. We'll give you
some free advice on how to
plan a diet good for life.

News Editor

D

ebbie Friedman takes
the advice of an ad-
vertising slogan — she
gives the gift of music.
However, it's not record
albums, cassettes or CDs that
she gives. It is original com-
positions that have earned
her acclaim throughout
Jewish America and across
the Atlantic.
"Everyone has their own
gift," said the singer, com-
poser, guitarist. "I'm for-
tunate to have this gift and so
I do with it as much as I can
in this life!'
The daughter of a former
New York kosher butcher,
Friedman will be in Detroit
Sunday to perform in concert
at the community-wide Tu
B'Shevat celebration at 2 p.m.
at the Maple/Drake Jewish
Community Center. The
celebration is co-sponsored by
the Labor Zionist Institute
and Alliance, Na'amat USA,
Habonim/Dror, the L'Chayim
section of The Jewish News,
Jewish Experiences For
Families and the Jewish Na-
tional Fund.
Friedman had no formal
guitar training; she is self-
taught. "I had a friend at
summer camp (who played
guitar) and wanted to be like
her," Friedman explained. "I
picked up the guitar and just
did (learned) it."

But she must have known
that she was getting into a
good thing. Three months
later she began to perform.
She has appeared in concert
since the mid-1970s, and has
played before Jewish com-
munities throughout the U.S.
and recently returned from
an engagement in London,
England. Although she's
never been to the Soviet
Union, Russian Jews "are
singing my music!'
After learning to play she
began to compose songs and
liturgical music. Since she
can't read music, she tapes
her compositions and has
them transcribed. She is a
member of the professional
society, ASCAP, the
American Society for Com-
posers and Publishers.
She said she believes her
music is popular — the
"Aleph-Bet Song" is taught
all over the U.S. — because of
its Jewish flavor and "its ac-
cessibility, its timelessness
and its agelessness." "Jewish
music is universal," Fried-
man said. "It has universal
values and a message. It has
the basic values which I ap-
preciate and love."
Friedman had no formal
study of Ibrah or Bible. Just
like with the guitar, she
"picked it up and did it."
What she does, she explained,
is "read from the Torah a lot"
and spends Shabbat after-
noons studying.

