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KEY LARGO RESTAURANT
INTRODUCES
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50%
OFF
ANY LUNCH OR DINNER ENTREE
WITH PURCHASE OF SECOND ENTREE EQUAL OR GREATER VALUE.
BEARER OF THIS TICKET IS ALSO ENTITLED TO
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AND PLAN YOUR TROPICAL GETAWAY.
0'1 1S MILE RD. (MAPLE)
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LARGO
669-1441
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• s44,6. • Se4aad
14 MILE
WALLED LAKE
13 MILE
TICKET EXPIRES MARCH 30, 1992
RESTAURANT LOCATED
ON NORTH SHORE
O
OF WALLED LAKE
OAKS MALL
1-696
NOT VALID WITH OTHER DISCOUNTS • VALID SUN. THRU THURS. IN
ONE OF A KIND
IS THE PERFECT PLACE FOR YOUR
BAR MITZVAH, BAT MITZVAH OR SPECIAL OCCASION
WE HANDLE EVERY DETAIL SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO!
Let this truly be a time of excitement for you and your
family — not a time to worry over party details!
Featuring Noted Chef John Szegedi
Mr. Sports has 2 locations to better serve you ...
Farmington Hills & Redford.
STONE CRAB
SEASON
IS HERE!
CALL KIM, OUR BANQUET MANAGER
851.2990 or 534.7420
FRESH STONE CLAWS
FLOWN IN DAILY!
COUPON
FAMILY ITALIAN DINING & PIZZA
"RATED #1 BY THE ONES WHO COUNT-OUR CUSTOMERS"
4033 W. 12 MILE, 3 Blks. E. of Greenfield
548-3650
Berkley
DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS
REMADE OAIU BREAD
/4 lb. Stone Claws - $4.00
1
RON) PM
SNARE PEA
'SMALL OR LARK SMALL-184ARri
ON FOOD PURCHASES
OF $6 OR MORE
OF F
/2 lb. Stone Claws - $8.00
/4 Stone Claws - $12.00
1 lb. Stone Claws- $16.00
1
3
AND 50 ON .
INNINGRODM. =MAT
ONLY ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE
COUPON NOT VALID WITH DAILY SPECIALS OR OTHER COUPONS • Expires 1 - 31 -92
• BANQUET ROOMS • BEER • WINE
• COMPLETE CARRY-OUT • COCKTAILS J
L
eoffs
9
r-
Family Dining
25938 Middlebelt Rd. at 11 Mile Rd. in the Mid-11 Plaza
476.1750
Farmington Hills
DINNER FOR 2
FRESH ROAST TURKEY
ALL WHITE MEAT
INCLUDES: • SOUP OR SALAD
• CHOICE OF POTATO
• STUFFING
• MUST
PRESENT • VEGETABLE
COUPON . RICE PUDDING OR JELLO
• COFFEE OR TEA
• NO
SUBSTITUTIONS
52
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1992
$13.99 ` x° 2
OPEN 7 DAYS
MON. 7 a.m. to 2 p.m.
TUES.-SAT. 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
SUN. 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
VISA
Exercise
regularly.
WE'RE FIGHTING FOR
YOUR LIFE
American Heart
Association
Eddie Fisher:
His Life And Loves
RITA CHARLESTON
Special to The Jewish News
H
e was a shy little boy
who grew up in pover-
ty and dreamed of one
day becoming a cantor.
Instead, Eddie Fisher
became a teen-age singing
idol, racking up an im-
pressive list of hit records,
beginning with "Thinking of
You," and continuing through
such memorable tunes as
"Oh, My Papa" and "You've
Gotta Have Heart."
But during those golden
years, Mr. Fisher made the
headlines as much for his
marriages as he did for his
musical abilities. Three times
wed and three times divorced,
he also made news over such
personal problems as bouts
with drug and alcohol addic-
tion — problems he talked
about in his 1981
autobiography, Eddie: My
Life, My Loves.
"But I wrote that book still
under the influence," Mr.
Fisher reveals during a
telephone conversation from
his home in San Francisco. "I
know there's a lot of truth in
the book, but I think I also
tried to be cagey and shy
away from some of it. I didn't
pull out all the stops. I was
straightforward but not all
the time."
Now 62 and out of the
public eye in recent years, Mr.
Fisher is on the comeback
trail. It is a trail, he hopes,
that will take him back to a
career that once burned
bright but, all too soon, burn-
ed out.
Shortly after winning a con-
test sponsored by a local radio
station in his hometown of
Philadelphia, Mr. Fisher be-
came a regular on one of its
shows. But with stars in his
eyes, the youngster soon
headed to New York to make
his mark. Once in the Big Ap-
ple, he met Milton Black-
stone, the man who made the
name Grossinger's synony-
mous with celebrities and the
man who was to play a major
role in Mr. Fisher's life. Mr.
Blackstone got him a job at
the resort hotel in the Cat-
skills that became, Mr. Fisher
says, his second home.
During the next three
years, Mr. Fisher played at
the popular resort, became
the production singer at the
world-famous Copacabana in
New York, and won first place
on Arthur Godfrey's "Talent
Scouts" program. With Mr.
Blackstone's urging, Mr.
Eddie Fisher:
On Comeback Trail.
Fisher then returned to
Grossinger's, a move that
would prove a turning point
in his career, for at Mr. Black-
stone's insistence, Eddie Can-
tor went to the Catskill resort
to hear Mr. Fisher sing. To
this day, Mr. Fisher credits
Eddie Cantor as the man who
discovered him.
With that discovery came
an RCA recording contract
and, after Private Fisher was
released from two years with
The resort hotel in
the Catskills
became his
second home.
the United States Army, his
own show on NBC. Eventual-
ly, Hollywood beckoned, and
Mr. Fisher was introduced to
Debbie Reynolds, the woman
who became his first wife.
After two children (Carrie
and Todd), a scandalous
divorce and charges of "aban-
donment," Mr. Fisher took
bride number two, Elizabeth
Taylor, only to be deserted
himself when Liz began a
notorious affair with Richard
Burton. Connie Stevens
became wife number three, a
union that resulted in two
more children: Tricia and
Joeley.
Besides multiple mar-
riages, throw in extravagant
spending sprees, gambling
and drug addiction, the ad-
vent of rock 'n roll, and Mr.
Fisher says, it's easy to see
why his once blossoming
career crumbled.
"I think my life has had a
million great moments and a
million bad ones," he offers.
"It's been a great journey and
I've had a marvelous time. I
had some bad side trips, too;
but that's all in the past now.
Today I'm surrounded by
wonderful people who are not