vi(itiotcr40"" -1*
r
Restaurant • Carry-Out • Catering
A New Concept In Restaurant Food.
We Prepare Only The Leanest Meat Available
To Create A More Healthful Menu.
DAILY SPECIALS 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
STARTING FROM $4.95
1/2 OF
I ENTERTAINMENT
Glass Act
SECOND DINNER
Continued from preceding page
EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE (Excluding Iamb chops, liquor and tip)
With This Coupon
GOOD ANY EVENING (Saturdays before 6 or after 8)
• Not Good With Any Other Coupons
• Parties 10 or less
Coupon Expires 1-11-90
JN
LET- US CATER YOUR NEXT AFFAIR
NOW OPEN SUNDAYS
3 p.m. TO 8 p.m.
COUPON
I COUPON I
WHOLE SLAB
BABY BACK RIBS
16 OZ. N.Y.
STRIP STEAK
I
$2°° OFF $1°° OFF
25060 SOUTHFIELD RD. 0
JN j
Expires 1-31-90
JNi
—1
cp
7 Mile
8 6 Mile
I FREE BANQUET ROOM AVAILABLE I
Mexican or American Cuisine
34731 GRAND RIVER, East of Drake Road
473.8400
-
53 7-1450
HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. • SUNDAYS 3 p.m.-8 p.m.
(IN THE WORLDWIDE CENTER)
IN
557 8910
3 BLOCKS WEST
OF TELEGRAPH
I DINNERS INCLUDE: SOUP OR SALAD, POT. OR RICE, ROLLS & BUTTER I
O
Block North of 10 Mile)
24366
GRAND RIVER
Reg. $7.95
Reg. $12.95
!Expires 1-31-90
Of
Southfield
YOU DON'T HAVE
TO GO
DOWNTOWN FOR
AUTHENTIC
MEXICAN FOOD!
WE COOK ONLY
WITH 100%
VEGETABLE OIL
INCLUDING OUR BEANS
r- MEXICAN SAMPLER PLATTER -1
FOR TWO
$9.95
INCLUDES: STEAK FAJITA, 2 TACOS, CHEESE
ENCHILADA, EL PADRE BURRITO, IOSTADA,
GUACAMOLE DIP, RICE AND BEANS.
• Dine in Only
L wi th coupon
I
jt3
• One Coupon Per Visit
• Expires Jan. 31, 1990
Serving Hours: Mon,Thurs. 11 a.m..11 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m..12 Mid.
Sat. 2 p.m -12 Mid., Sun. 4 p.m.41 p.m.
•
•
CONFETTi'S
---
fish • pasta • bar
$5 9 Q OFF ,
ANY DINNER
(Minimum $12, Not
Incl. Liquor or
New Year's Eve
Good 7 Days • Fri, & Sat, Before 7:30 p.m.
• 1 Coupon per visit
p
Expires 1-15-90
6480 ORCHARD LAKE RD N. OF MAPLE
626 3341
-
WE BEAT THE GUN!
LE PEEP GOES IT AGAIN ...
GIVING IT'S CUSTOMERS WHAT THEY ASK FOR!
• AWESOME EGG WHITE OMELETTES
• CHILDREN'S MENU
• ALL-AMERICAN SPECIAL
'GOOD ANYHOUR, ANYTIME, 7 DAYS A WEEK
Bangkok
Club
• 2 EGGS
I • PEASANT POTATOES
2 STRIPS OF BACON
1■ TOAST & JELLY
Serving Authentic Thai Food . . . Cocktails
Lunch 11:30 to 2:30 Mon.-Sat.
Dinner 5:30 to 9:30 Sun.-Thurs..; 5:30-11, Fri. & Sat.
29269 Southfield Road north of 12 Mile
In The Southfield Commons
58
FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1990
569.1400
695
Expires 1-12-90
eeP
Le Breakfast
Le Brunch
Le Lunch
TRY OUR DELICIOUS SOUPS, SALADS & SANDWICHES
Birmingham
West Bloomfield
355 Woodward Ave.
33010 Northwestern Hwy.
at 14 Mile Rd.
358.9678
851-6678
J
boxes stacked everywhere.
Upon closer inspection, one
sees open boxes with stained
glass scraps revealing the
true purpose of the studio.
Katsir estimates that his
glass collection contains 100
different colors. He alo has
ancient Roman glass, almost
2,000 years old, from Israel,
which he occasionally works
into his pictures.
Katsir makes ornate
mezuzot based on photos he _
took of Israeli synagogues.
The mezuzot are miniature
replicas of the windows and
doors of those synagogues.
Although Katsir keeps a
slide of every picture he
makes, he would rather keep
the art. He sells it to support
his family. But money had
nothing to do with his deci-
sion to become a stained glass
artist.
"If you don't have to buy the
bread, you don't want to sell
(the pictures)," he says.
It's difficult for Katsir to
part with his pictures. "Each
of them is in here,"he says,
slapping his chest, above his
heart. "I put, not just craft-
manship but a lot of energy
into the process,"he says. "A
carpenter is working just
with his hands. A craftsman
is working with his hands
and his mind. And the artist
is working with his hands
and his mind and his heart."
RI Israel, Katsir sold his
work to a single owner of
three art galleries in
Jerusalem. Marketing his
product in the United States
takes more work.
"Here is a huge market,
huge competition. And it
takes time until you really
get in . . . until people will
discover you. Marketing is
big. I have no agents. So
basically everything I'm sell-
ing is through shows."
Stained glass is not popular
in Israel. "There is so much
sun there and the light is so
bright, stained glass is not a
medium, not yet. They are
starting to discover it now,"
Katsir explains.
Katsir says he get along
well with fellow artists, but
he will not work with anyone
else. "I'm too much an in-
dividualist. I like my work; I
like my interpretation to my
work, and I like to see art.
But I don't have to see that
through people. I like to go to
museums; I am reading a lot
of articles about art, and less
with people. I'm too much in
a cocoon!'
That he has worked with
religious symbols and created
pictures of biblical scenes is
interesting, Katsir says,
because "I'm really coming
from a secular background."
But, just as he spends long