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Oak Park
West Bloomfield
Bingham Farms
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SEBASTIAN S
orels
Extends Best Wishes
To All
For A Healthy and Happy
Passover
00,0
eft IC.
plaza
is deli
West Bloomfield
Orchard Lake Rd. S. of 15
737-3890
Will Be Closed at 3 p.m. Friday, March 29,
And Reopen Sunday Morning, March 31 at 9 a.m.
Southfield
Northwestern at 12
356-2310
Will Be Closed at 3 p.m. Friday, March 29,
And Reopen Saturday Morning, March 30 at 7 a.m.
Keego Harbor author Barry Rudner with Lone Pine Elementary student
Holly Haffner.
and
Oak Park
Greenfield N. of 10
967-3999
Bingham Farms
Telegraph Bet. 12 & 13
645-5288
Will Be Closed at 3 p.m., Friday, March 29,
And Reopen Monday, April 1 at 11 a.m.
CARLA JEAN SCHWARTZ
Local Columnist
All Deli Locations Will Be Serving Traditional
Passover Cakes and Fried Matzoh
Alias
FAMILY DINING
WE WISH OUR
CUSTOMERS AND
FRIENDS A HEALTHY
AND HAPPY PASSOVER
Homemade From Natural Ingredients
Dania and Ed Farah Invite You To Enjoy
American and Lebanese Cuisine
2 FOR 1 SPECIALS
10 °A
DISCOUNT ,,Op.SinENI
. to OR aLreZENS
(Not Good On 2 For 1 or Early Bird)
CARRY-OUT & CATERING AVAILABLE
27167 Greenfield, Just N. of 11 Mile
559.8222
S
TO OUR
FRIENDS and
CUSTOMERS
Best Wishes
For A Healthy
and Happy
Passover
CHUCK
JOSEPH'S
PLACE FOR STEAK
2555 W. 12 Mile Rd. at Coolidge
399-6750
PETER'S
Restaurant
25920 GREENFIELD at Lincoln
Oak Park
968-4060
WISHES ITS
FRIENDS &
CUSTOMERS
Jack & Gary
Cochran
and Their
Staff
Heartily
Extend
4108 W. Maple • Birminaham. MI • • t cc, 1 6
6
FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1991
A HEALTHY
AND HAPPY
PASSOVE Fti
ec•cr •
626.2630
Local Author Sends
Self-Esteem Message
tudents at Lone Pine
Elementary School in
West Bloomfield met
author Barry Rudner on
March 18 as part of author
week and reading month.
First grade students listened
attentively as Mr. Rudner
read his book The Littlest
Tall Fellow, published by
Tiny Thought Press. The
children then asked Mr.
Rudner several questions,
including how he became an
author. Mr. Rudner explain-
ed that he decided to write
children's books after
reading The Giving Tree by
Shel Silverstein.
Mr. Rudner has four
published books and six
waiting to be published.
Many of his books convey
self-esteem messages. The
Handstand deals with a
child in a wheelchair and the
sense of belonging and
treating everyone as an
equal.
Mr. Rudner's messages are
universal. The theme in The
Littlest Tall Fellow clearly
builds character. "Reaching
for dreams isn't measured by
far, the length of your reach,
or the size that you are. For
all the matters is the
strength of your heart. The
size of your heart will set
you apart." Mr. Rudner, 37,
lives in Keego Harbor and is
a 1972 graduate of North
Farmington High School.
His parents, Theodore and
Evelyn Rudner, still reside
in Farmington Hills. It took
Mr. Rudner twelve years to
become published. He was
writing by night and work-
ing by day in the family
business, Great Lakes Prin-
ting.
DSOH COUNCIL
The Detroit Symphony Or-
chestra Hall Volunteer
Council and Saks Fifth
Avenue presented a fashion
show March 19 at the
Westin Hotel for 800 guests.
Marjorie Saulson
and Zandra Rhodes.
Patrons and benefactors were
invited to a preview party to
meet fashion designer Zan-
dra Rhodes.
British textile designer
Zandra Rhodes is famous for
her fantastic, theatrical
clothes with luxurious fab-
rics that she designs. Her
spring collection begins at
$1,200 and runs up to
$11,000. She lived up to her
reputation of wearing fan-
ciful face makeup and rain-
bow-tinted hair.