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February 16, 1990 - Image 66

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-02-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



I ENTERTAINMENT

I

Stringing Along

(VIE1=1

(i 3 f1

We have
the cure!

• breakfast • lunch • dinner
• after-theater • kiddie menu

P

open tuesdays thru sundays
10 a.m. to 11 p.m.

968-0022

lincoln shopping center, 101/2 mile & greenfield, oak park

Deli Unique

Get rid of those winter blahs with our wonderful weekend package.
Escape to the hills — Farmington Hills — for a fun-filled
weekend in the Holidome. This winter don't go cuckoo —
go to the phone and call (313) 477-4000 for the sure cure to cabin
fever!
• °tie deluxe guest room for up to 4 people • Magician
-Saturday night • Indoor pool, whirlpool • Billiards,
shuffle-board, putting greens, ping pong, video games •
Free Showtime in room movies • Dining in Maxwells

25290 GREENFIELD North of 10 Mile Rd.

967-3999.{

CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS

per night. per room Fil Sit Sun.

Ask for the Cabin Fever Package.

GOLDEN BOWL

(313) 477-4000

Farmington ;A, Hills

-

dining room, carry-out and trays

\kOkig;

38123 W. Ten Mile Rd., Farmi ngton Hi s, Mi 4024

Easy Access from 1-275 & 1-696.
Reservations required. Otter good through 3/31/90. Subject to availability Does not apply to groups.

Restaurant

22106 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE In A & P Shopping Center
398-5502 or 398-5503
DINE IN & CARRY-OUT

SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN CUISINE

OPEN 1 DAYS-Mon.-Thurs. 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Sun. & Holidays 1 p.m. to 10 p.m.

0

NEW. ZEALAND
ORANGE ROUGHY DINNER

CHOICE OF SOUP OR SALAD

• Banquet Facilities

59 5

Your Chef: FRANK ENG

THE GOLD COIN

A

t

OPEN 7 DAYS — YOUR HOST: HOWARD LEW
SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE

o

COMPLETE
CARRY-OUT
AVAILABLE

NEW A LA CARTE DINNERS UNDER S5

24480 W. 10 MILE ON TEL-EX PLAZA)

West of Telegraph

353-7848

INE Grnr" WALE

SERVING YOUR FAVORITE EXOTIC
DRINKS & CHOICE COCKTAILS

PRIVATE DINING ROOM
• BANQUETS • PARTIES • BUSINESS MEETINGS

DELI and RESTAURANT
SHIVA DINNERS & PARTY TRAYS ... Free Delivery

Your host . . . HENRY LUM

Businessmen's Luncheons • Carry-outs • Catering

476-9181
(Drakeshire Shopping Center) • 35135 Grand River

Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner ... Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 7 a.m.-3 p.m.

21754 W. 11 MILE AT LAHSER • HARVARD ROW

352-4940

KABOB GR LL

99c

Authentic Lebanese Cuisine

CORNED BEEF OR PASTRAMI
SANDWICH

CARRY-OUT & CATERING AVAILABLE

WITH PURCHASE OF ANOTHER AT REGULAR PRICE

29702 SOUTHFIELD AT 121/2 MILE (In Southfield Plaza)

Expires 2.22-90

557-5990

VINEYARD'S

MON.-I HURS. 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. FRI. & SAT. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
CLOSED SUNDAYS

CAFE U DELICATESSEN

HOA KOW INN

• OVER 50 GOURMET SANDWICHES (DOUBLE & TRIPLE DECKERS)
• ALMOST 30 FRESH HOMEMADE SALADS • FRESH HOMEMADE SOUPS
• MIDEASTERN CUISINE • COLOMBO FROZEN LITE YOGURT

32418 NORTHWESTERN, BET, M1DDLEBELT & 14

855.9463

Specializing In Cantonese, Szechuan & Mandarin Foods

Open Daily 11 to 10:30, Sat. 11 to 12 Mid., Sun. 12 to 10:30
— Carry-Out Service —

TRAY CATERING
FOR ALL
OCCASIONS

13715 W. 9 MILE, W. of Coolidge • Oak Park • 547-4663

/

Bangkok
Club

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

66

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1990

569-1400

ENJOY DINNER OUT
AT ONE OF THE
JEWISH NEWS
RESTAURANT ADVERTISERS

Continued from preceding page

there was this viola he had
made for Miriam. She was 3.
He had gotten the wood from
Hungary and the ebony from
Italy. He spent a year making
it and thought she (Miriam)
could play it as a cello. He
wanted to give her something
that was a part of himself."
Because the viola has the
same number of strings as a
cello, the instrument was
modified with the addition of
an end pin. Miriam's parents
bought her a tiny bow and she
began lessons in the Suzuki
Method, a form of training
that stresses the practical use
of the instrument before one
learns to read or "feel" the
music.
"We thought, let's give it a
try," says Dr. Bolkosky. "And
she took to it."
Dr. Bolkosky says that Mar-
vin Bram, himself a
historian, saw something
special in Miriam's eyes,
something that said she had
music in her.
"He claims he saw the kind
of look that he remembered
seeing in the 1940s, in the
eyes of Jewish conductors and
musicians who had come in
flight from the Nazis," says
Dr. Bolkosky. "This strange
look that revealed they were
somehow inclined towards
music. He knew Miriam since
the day she was born. I
remember being in a super-
market with her when she
was just a baby, about 2, and
she started to hum one note.
And I suddenly realized she
was humming the note that
was coming from the freezer
case."
"Marvin Bram instigated
the whole idea of bringing
music into our family," com-
firms Miriam. "When he gave
me the viola, he also gave me
an edition of the Bach unac-
companied cello suite. I still
have that copy, and I have the
recordings he gave me. He
sends me music for my birth-
day."
By the time Gabe was 3, he
had seen Miriam practice on
her viola-cello. The family
had taken him to all kinds of
classical concerts, too. He
took special interest in the
string section.
"On my 2nd or third birth-
day, I was given a pair of
drumsticks and a drum pad
by one of my father's
students," says Gabe. "No one
was very happy that I had
drumsticks. One day my
parents walked in and I was
playing them like a violin,
with one stick under my chin
and one as a bow."
Gabe got his first violin, a
quarter-size instrument, a
year later and started in the
Suzuki Method with Miriam's
teacher.

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