One simple blood test may prevent
a tragedy to future generations

Single people of marriageable age should be tested in order to prevent
Tay-Sachs and other genetic diseases from striking the next generation,
in accordance with the directives of Gedolei Hador.

Partners In Love
Make Interesting Brew

TIM COHAN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

Sinai Hospital

in conjunction with

Chevra Dor Yeshorim- •

will provide low cost

Tay-Sachs and other genetic screenings
May 14

Girls: Beth Jacob School
Ten Mile and Church Streets
Oak Park, MI
9 to 10 a.m.

Roslyn Wyman and David Comisar filled their collective cup with Bucky's Coffee in
Pontiac.

W

Boys: Yeshiva Gedola
Ten Mile and Greenfield Roads
Oak Park, MI
10:30 to 11:30 a.m.

For more information about this screening
or the Dor Yeshorim method, please contact
Sinai Genetics Counselor Robin Gold at 313-493-6060
or Riva Rivlin at 810-968-3981

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hat possessed Roslyn
Wyman and David
Comisar to call their
coffeehouse Bucky's?
Ms. Wyman laughs.
"David loves country music,"
she says. "His friends nick-
named him `Bucky Goldstein'
because he's the only Jew they
know who's into country. Since
the coffeehouse was pretty much
David's baby, Bucky's just. kind
of felt right, even though
we don't play country music
there."
Ms. Wyman, 26, and Mr.
Comisar, her fiance, opened
Bucky's Coffee in September at
18 N. Saginaw in Pontiac, about
a half-block from the popular
dance club, Industry.
"We chose Pontiac for two rea-
sons," she says. "First, I have a
lot of ties to Pontiac, personally
speaking. My grandfather
owned Wyman furniture there.
So I wanted to continue the fam-
ily tradition in the area. Second,
there weren't any coffee shops
in Pontiac when we opened, so
we saw a real need. Another cof-
fee shop, Gargoyles, did open at
about the same time we did, but
we welcome the competition."
Although Ms. Wyman's cho-
sen vocation is teaching, she
says she "always had a secret
dream of opening a sweet shop.
David wanted to do coffee. So we
combined our ideas and it's
worked out pretty well."
To fulfill Ms. Wyman's dream,
Bucky's serves pastries in addi-
tion to numerous coffees, teas
and juices. The menu includes
about 15 specialty drinks, a wide
variety of decaffeinated coffees
and a popular house blend,

which Ms. Wyman identifies as
a "French roast aristocrat."
Bucky's may start up its sand-
wich menu again in the spring.
Business has been "wonder-
ful," says Ms. Wyman. Week-
days bring in attorneys from the
district courthouse and doctors
from Pontiac Osteopathic Hos-
pital. On weekends, the under-
21 set crowds the place to hear
the alternative bands Bucky's
brings in on Friday and Satur-
day nights.
The response to these week-
end musical showcases has been
so positive that Ms. Wyman and
Mr. Comisar, 28, are planning
a battle of the bands competi-
tion for this spring, which will
offer prizes to the winning
groups.
Another popular feature has
been Cigar Night, a monthly
event that invites cigar smokers
to light up.
"That's been very successful,"
Ms. Wyman says. "But it's quite
a job to air out the place after-
ward."
Bucky's, replete with ceiling
murals by local artists, is
stocked with java and journals
of all kinds for people who like
to relax with a good read.
Bucky's also does a thriving
business delivering to major
businesses in the immediate
area.
Ms. Wyman, a resident of
West Bloomfield, says she can
often be found at Bucky's on
weekends and some weeknights,
but her weekdays are usually
spent teaching in the Bloomfield
Hills, Birmingham and Walled
Lake school districts as a sub-
stitute high-school teacher. She

