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September 03, 1999 - Image 94

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-09-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

WE NOW SERVE LI [LORE

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/*el'

nififria6 &S%ei% 1/4 Dow/46,04 rbebvd

ilt4ib'e

r

I

I

I ' ALLD1NNERS
OFF

7f,ark-r-1

Mon. Tttru Fri.
I DINE IN & CARRY- OUT
L
with

s

Mitittle-Eafterm

7.92.24.

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4 153'11=

(2

Ordtard Lake Komi. • Soli* of 13 Mk • fansikiltoti Half

www.food.com/desertsands

To
find out
what to
do this
weekend,
I always:

THE GALLERY RESTAURANT

Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful
atmosphere of casual elegance

i t
I

BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER

OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m.
West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313

Visit

Shangtti--La

JN Online

AUTHENTIC
H KONG STYLE COOKING
ONG

my mother

Featuring wonderful, traditional favorites...
a superb variety of dining specialties

www.detroitjewishnews.com

DIM SUM LUNCH SPECIALS!
11 am. to 3 p.m.

The only
Chinese
restaurant
open until

2:00 a.m.

Call

6407 Orchard Lake Rd.
(In The Orchard Mall)

O

(248) 626 8585

American Heart

Associationt

-

Fighting Hear! Disease
and Stroke

Hours: Monday thru Sunday
11 a.m. to 2 a.m.

Make IT Di MoaesTa - Again.

na•e
(Hector

We invire you back TO RISTOMIITe DI MOoeSTCI.
welcome YOU TO a Loin; sTanOtiii; TRa)IT1011
OF Fine OtilinG, Fine wines ant) Fizienos.
Make IT Di ivioaesTa's

WbeRe we

Carel:Inc 1

PRIVaTe PaRTIeS

9/3

1999

94 Detroit Jewish News

(RISTORflrill

giootsirn

SpeCICIL ElfelITS

29410 NORTHWESTERN HIGHWAY / SOUTHFIELD

I

2

S . 3 5

.

0

3 4 4

Control high
blood pressure

Senate, and the impeachment process
in the House. So we had to cover it,
but it seemed like such a terrible
waste that we had to go through.
Specifically, it drained a lot of atten-
tion away from where our focus
should have been. For example, all of
the sudden Kosovo sprung up."

When not on

the job —
and the beeper he wears means that
he's almost always on the job —
Blitzer enjoys reading, playing tennis,
working out "and hanging around
with my wife, daughter and friends. I
have no trouble relaxing. My problem
is getting time to do it.
Sitting on his night table recently
was The Lexus And The Olive Tree, by
New York Times international affairs
columnist Thomas Friedman. "When
I do read now it has to be quick,"
Blitzer says.
His home life has a distinctive
Jewish flavor. "I believe in the tradi-
tions," says the man who watched his
mother light Shabbat candles and
whose father is known as an excellent
Torah reader.
"I think we've tried to instill in our
daughter, Elana, an understanding of
her background and faith, and the his-
tory of her parents and grandparents.
That's very important to us and to
her, but I don't think she appreciates it
as much now as she will down the road.
I can't say we're very observant or any-
thing like that, but it's part of our life."
Rabbi Matthew H. Simon of
Congregation B'nai Israel in
Rockville, Md., where the Blitzers
have a longstanding family member-
ship, sees a commitment.
"What's nice about Wolf is that
he's not a shy Jew in his synagogue,"
says the rabbi " Everybody knows he's
around, and he and his wife have
many personal friends here."
The rabbi points to Elena Blitzer's
bat mitzva a few years ago as reflec-
tive of the family's life and values. "It
was a serious bar mitzva and the fam-
ily were serious participants," he says.
"Their commitment was to make it a
Jewish affair."
Whether it's Jewish, national or
international affairs, by all accounts
Blitzer is making a lasting mark in a
profession measured in seconds, and
enjoying it immensely.
As he says, "They literally pay me
ro have a front-row seat to history and
do fascinating things around the
world. As a boy growing up in Buffalo
I always loved international affairs and
politics. I never in my life dreamed
that I would have a job doing this." Ei

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