"----- !LISTENING POST y .., ... _,,, ,, - -----is -_\, ? - 4 , , RESTAURANT Taking A Back Seat To Nobody's Couch CELEBRATES "FATHER'S DAY" BRING DAD OVER FOR AN ISLAND HOLIDAY DINNER SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE: • PRIME RIB • SEAFOOD • STEAK • PASTAS AND MANY OTHER EXCITING ENTREES 142 E. WALLED LAKE DR. WALLED LAKE RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED: 669-1441 SUNDAY NOON-9 P.M. KEY LARGO DAILY EVENTS DECKSIDE MONDAY MARGARITA MONDAYS: VARIOUS TROPICAL BLENDS AT SPECIAL PRICES TUESDAY RUM HOPPING DECKSIDE: AN EXCESSIVE HAUL OF CARIBBEAN RUM DICTATED SPECIAL RUM DRINKS AT FUN PRICES SUNSET DECK JAMBOREE: SHAWN RILEY, LIVE BUCKETS OF WEDNESDAY BEER/SHARKBITE DRINKS W NE EC EK KLY N I G HFT6RVN2 IOSHFEFDOBNY DFIENCI KOAFPTy PETEIZLvEERSO. AFAK S HmA IONLL THURSDAY SHOW FRIDAY EXPERIENCE THE CARIBBEAN STEEL DRUM SOUND OF THE SATURDAY LARGO DECK BAND 7 p.m.-11 p.m. SUNDAY SPECIAL LUNCHEON MENU NOON-4 p.m. COMPARE ANYWHERE! . . . IF YOU WANT THE BEST - GIVE US A TEST! OPEN 7 DAYS-SUN -MRS 1110 I DINE IN & CARRY-OUT AVAILABLE ASTED I FRI:SAT. 1141 I 118 SOUTH WOODWARD • ROYAL OAK JUST NORTH OF 10 WILE NEXT TO ZOO 544-1211 QUALITY AND CONSISTENCY IS OUR PRIORITY! / A # 29566 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Co up on Exp ire s 6-23-89 HAPPY HOUR MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, 3 RM.-7 P.M. Cafe Just N. of 13 Mile • Farm. Hills • 626.0804 Home-Style Family Dining • High Quality • Reasonable Prices I — !BREAKFAST COUPON 1 7 FREE WAFFLE OR REGULAR BELGIAN --I DINNER COUPON I 1 FREE SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH PURCHASE OF A WITH PURCHASE OF ANY REGULAR DINNER ON MENU SECOND WAFFLE MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FROM 2 p.m. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY UN j JN_J L Expires 6-23-89 L Expires 6-23-89 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 6:30-9, Sat. 6:30-4, Sun. 6:30-3 70 I FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1989 Eat less saturated fats. WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE American Heart Association DANNY RASKIN Local Columnist B ack in 1957, when Bill Wolf was creating fur- niture lease depart- ments in the then discount Arlan's and Shoppers Fair, he had a dream . . . and in 1974, after his lease departments numbered 12, Bill decided to devote full time to an 8,000-square-foot store in Dearborn . . . This gave way to a 12,000-square-foot free- standing one in Sterling Heights . . . and his beautiful 28,000-square-food Livonia store. Bill's dream had come true, but one thing was still miss- ing . . . He wanted something more . . . a store within a store . . . a gallery to show off complete rooms of furniture by his excellent, no-charge, in- terior design experts. It recently happened with almost one-third of Bill's 12-Oaks Newton Furniture operation devoted to his creativity and that of his staff . . . About 6,000-square-feet of the 20,000 has been directed solely to a quarter-of-a- million dollar gallery of rooms featuring fine Ber- nhardt furniture. The idea-packed Bernhardt Gallery shows people com- plete room settings . . . with every matching piece. He is already southeast Michigan's largest Norwalk retailer . . . with the line of top-quality furniture boasting a lifetime guarantee . . . plus the fine Hekman, Lane, Stanley and Stiffel brands .. . In Norwalk, customers are given a choice of over 400 sofa designs in nearly a thousand fabrics. As Newton Furniture looks forward to another new store . . . in Ann Arbor . . . and the opening of Bernhardt galleries there and in Livonia, Bill reflects on his 32-year career in furniture retailing . . . "I play a little golf, when I can get away from a six-day work week, and I love my work. In the furniture business you help make people's dreams a reali- ty and we take the vision of homeowners and make it come true. It's lots of fun." Bernhardt's quality con- struction, beautiful style and broad selection of both upholstered and case goods at good prices make customers happy . . . To Bill, a Variety Club board member and noted humanitarian for many years, making people happy is what it's all about. He is currently involved in aiding the unfortunate with a "Beds for the Homeless" drive . . . donating a group of beds to Mariners' Inn of Detroit and asking others to do the same . . . It is a home for homeless men, located on Ledyard in the Cass Corridor. Time for Bill to have some happiness again in his own life . . . and making someone very special happy too . . . The togetherness of Bill and the former Eleanor Thal is now as man and wife. LOOKING BACK on col- umns of yesteryears .. . NOV. 29, 1974 . . . "Travel Gent Jules Fayne of Hamilton, Miller, Hudson & Fayne, tells of the time he was a social photographer around town and bumped into a chronic gate crasher who went to every wedding recep- tion he could find time for .. . to enjoy the refreshments and conviviality . . . At one affair, Jules, who was wise to the gent's ways, decided to trap him . . . 'Whose side are you on,' asked Jules, 'the hassen's or kaleh's?' . . . The gate crasher, believing he had a 50-50 chance of being right, promptly answered that he was on the kaleh's side .. . `Ah ha,' said Jules, 'this time I've got you. You're at a bar mitzvah, not a wedding!' " "Richard Mosher, 4-year-old son of Harold and Ann Mosher, watched his mother try on a new dress . . . 'You sure are beautiful,' he said. `You look just like Abraham Lincoln!' " ❑ IN ENTERTAINMENT I Gemini Performs In Rochester Gemini, twin brother musi- cians San and Las Slomovits, will present "Growing Up, Together — A Musical Cele- bration for Children and the Whole Family" on July 1 at 11 a.m. at the Meadow Brook Music Festival in Rochester. The duo will showcase original songs from their new album, as well as some of their "greatest hits" from earlier recordings, and even a few brand new songs they've written this winter. Gemini will be accom- panied by "The Good Mischief Band" — Rob Martens on bass, Doug Howell on keyboards and Julian Van Slyke on drums.