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K

who offers pizza, falafel, soups,
salads and sandwiches. "A lot of
our customers have an allegiance
to Israel and suggest we make
the foods they have there."
A recent addition to the menu
is hummus, ground chickpeas
made into a paste and then
cooked.
Hours for New York Pizza
World are 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sundays-Thursdays, and 11:30
a.m. to just before sundown on
Fridays.
Martin Lerner and Ari Lern-
er, father and son, have brought
a variety of Chinese and Mexican
meals to customers at their Lake-
wood Specialty Food Center,
25250 Greenfield, Oak Park. In
the grocery business for 13 years,
they began offering carry-outs a
year ago.
"There already were take-outs
that had more traditional food,
so we wanted to do something
that was a little different," said
Ari Lerner, who offers burritos
and fajitas among many ethnic
items.
"I try to get to as many restau-
rants as I can when I travel, and
I read cookbooks and watch the
cable shows so I can come up with
new items," Mr. Lerner said.
Lakewood, which also offers tra-
ditional Jewish foods, is open 9
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Sundays, 9 a.m.
to 7 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays,
and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fridays.

Sperber's North, located at the
Maple/Drake Jewish Communi-
ty Center in West Bloomfield, can
provide a variety of carry-out op-
tions so long as requests are
called in early. Walk-in cus-
tomers can get items prepared for
cafeteria customers, such as stir-
fried chicken and Oriental cab-
bage soup.
"We're very service-oriented,
and we are careful about prepar-
ing what customers order," said
Alan Linker, who joined his Sper-
ber in-laws in their 25-year food
service business. Staff members
are trained to pay particular at-
tention to requests for fat-free
and salt-free entrees.
During cafeteria hours, items
can be picked up in that area. Af-
ter the cafeteria is closed, cus-
tomers must go into the kitchen.
Carry-out hours are 8:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. Mondays- Thursdays,
and 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Fri-
days.
Unique, Bloom's and Sara's
have printed carry-out menus
which can be kept at home as re-
minders of available foods and
prices.
Customers who plan to invite
others for that special at-home
meal — and thereby assure larg-
er-volume orders — can get de-
livery service from Unique,
Bloom, Lakewood and Sperber's,
taking out more of the work when
serving take-out meals.

❑

Apple Picked

Computer company's Israeli representative
is contributing to the Hebrew University's
new multimedia center.

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JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

M

ultimedia
— the mix-
ture of
video pic-
tures, sound and
computer data —
will be an everyday
part of learning dur-
ing the coming
decade.
Not only will pre-
schoolers be taught
colors, shapes and let-
ters on multimedia
screens, but medical school stu-
dents will use multimedia to
"explore" the human
body and watch the
course of diseases.
Many professionals
will get their basic
training by interacting with mul-
timedia programs. It will proba-
bly even be adopted by traditional
yeshivot in helping explain ab-
struse issues in the Talmud.
The Hebrew University in Is-
rael has decided to get in on the
action, not only by following what

is being developed in the coun-
try's private sector, but by acting
as a catalyst in the development
of multimedia tools for formal and
informal education.
After several years of prepa-
ration, the university's new Cen-
ter for Multimedia-Assisted

