FINE ARTS
The new Chuck Muer restaurants...
Sacred Art
A place where friends and family gather for great times
" A winner with its wide ranging menu
and its lively but not over powering piano bar."
Molly Abraham - Detroit Free Press
West Bloomfield, MI (313) 855-5584
Continued from preceding page
4 Mimes Seafood & Magnum's Steaks
Chuck Muer's seafood and Johnny Magnum's beef
" Generous portions, delicious, and a good value for the money.
Service is in the true Muer tradition of excellence."
Danny Raskin - Jewish News
Farmington Hills, MI (313) 478-2010
BIG FISH
A CHUCK MUER RESTAURANT
Number one for socializing, entertaining
and special occasion dining.
" Best of all I like being treated like a big fish
in a not so small pond."
Jane Rayburn - Detroit News
Dearborn, MI (313) 336-6350
Membership
Has Its Privileges®
•
CHARLEY'S CRAB
MERIWETHER'S
RIVER CRAB
TROY, MI
SOUTHFIELD, MI
ST. CLAIR, MI
(313) 879-2060
(313) 358-1310
(313) 329-2261
3112
ft.1
95006
_ •
like are ornate, delicate,
complex designs."
And no repetition, please.
"I have no set designs that I
use over and over," she says.
"It's less boring that way."
She draws inspiration
from old ketubot, from
greeting cards, from maga-
zines and from artists'
studios in Israel, where she
lived for a year with an aunt.
Even an advertisement for a
bank in India gave her an
idea for designs on a
ketubah.
Usually, Mrs. Schwartz
first creates the ketubah's
art work, then does the
calligraphy for the marriage
text. Even one mistake in
the text renders a ketubah
void.
In addition to ketubot, she
has designed art for an
Eyshet Chayil, a Book of
Proverbs chapter in praise of
the wife, and a Mizrach,
placed on an eastern wall to
remind those praying the
direction of Jerusalem.
Mrs. Schwartz's favorite
medium is gouache, a honey-
based paint which produces
a watercolor feel, but with-
brighter colors. And while
today she uses professional '-
fountain and calligraphy
pens, for many years she
preferred a set she received
from her mother.
The set includes a gold
pen, a tiny penknife and a
lead pencil, once used by J
Mrs. Horowitz herself. As a
girl, Rachel had admired the
set and dreamed of owning
it.
Thelkla Horowitz con-
tinues to be her daughter's
greatest fan.
"I remember when I sold
my first piece," she says.
"My mother was so excited
— she almost started cry-
ing." ❑
Don't leave home without it
" The Friends of Chuck Muer Restaurants" receive
SPECIAL TREATMENT AND FREE MEALS. Ask your server for details.
dew
Executive Chef Remy
c.?
SUMMER DE-LIGHT MENU
DELICATESSEN
RESTAURANT
Finally, A Good Deli
On the West Side
'10.9 5
From
• Brook Trout wrapped in Romaine Lettuce, Stuffed
with Spinach, Mushroom Duxelle.
• Fresh Amish Breast of Chicken en Croute
Plus Tapas Menu Items
l omb
Not Valid With
Discounts or Coupons
Join Us For
Brunch On
Father's Day
This Sunday 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Kings[ep Inn
Woodward at Long Lake Road • Bloomfield Hills •
-
642-0100
1/11XEFATYPETIMRATTER7
(Tabouli, Baba Ganush & Hummus)
With 2 Or More Entrees
Sun. Thru Thurs. From 4 .2.m.
L
Open 7 Days:
Mon.-Thurs. 11-11
Fri. & Sat. 11-12
Sun. 4-10
Fashion Show
with Denice
Every Wed. 12-2
DADY SPARE RIDS
Mondays & Tuesdays
RACK OF LAMB
With Madeira Wine Sauce
dteeZt
Mideastern Cuisine
32425 Northwestern Hwy. Bet. Middlebelt & 14 Mile • 932-2540
62
FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1992
With
Coupon
Expires
7.31-92
Only I coupon necessary per table
SEAFOOD PLATTER . .$7.95
Icelandic Cod, Clams & Shrimp, Reg. $8.95
FISH & CHIPS
Artist Peter Max donated an original oil and acrylic painting of a
heart to Sinai Hospital during his one-man show at the Danielle
Peleg Gallery in West Bloomfield. Sinai Hospital President and CEO
Phillip Schaengold and Chief of Staff Norman Bolton are shown
with the artwork.
$5.95
Friday Only — All You Can Eat
BROILED WHITEFISH . $5.95
ENTERTAINMENT I
Reg. S7.95
PERCH DINNER
$6.95
Reg. $7.95
STUFFED CABBAGE . . .$5.95
Includes Soup or Salad, Potato, Vegetable
and Fresh-Baked Rye Bread.
35572 Grand River
Farmington Hills, MI 48335
At Drake Rd.
In The Muirtvood Square
Shopping Center
476-1190
HOURS:
Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Friday 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sunday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
We are winning.
i'
AMERICAN
SOGETY
CANCER '
Satire In Song
With A Jewish Beat
MICHAEL ELKIN
Special to The Jewish News
F
unny, he doesn't sound
Jewish.
"Oh, yes I do," says
Allan Lieberman with a
chuckle.
Indeed, it is the sound that
is funny, adds Evanston, Ill.,
resident Lieberman, proud
of his album of parodies all
done to a Jewish beat.
•
Mr. Lieberman recorded
"Thank God I'm a Jewish
Boy" as a thank you to the
history of his people.
Indeed, the album title is a --
comical send-up of John
Denver's "Thank God I'm a
Country Boy."
Of course, Allan Lieber-
man's idea of a country song
runs more to "Romania,
Romania." "There has been
a void in Jewish song
parodies since the end of
Mickey Katz's career," says
Mr. Lieberman of the late
legendary Yiddish yukster. j
"I'm hoping to help fill
that void."
Will they see oy-to-oy with
his renditions of "Justin
Stein," a take-off of "Just in