r 1 5% OFF At The Movies All Take-Outs over $25 Monday - Thursday only. One coupon per customer. After 3:00 p.m. Not good with any other offer. Expires 9/30/02. I L ;Buy One Dinner Get The 1 Second Dinner 1/2 Off! 1 I of equal or lesser value I I Monday - Thursday Dine In Only. One Coupon Per Table. Not Good With Any Other Offer. Expires 9/30/02. `The Power Of Good' I 1 1 a LUNCH SPECIALS $495 Don't Forget...The Sheik caters all occasions Film honors the heroism of Holocaust rescuer. kio West Bloomfield 4189 ORCHARD LAKE AT PONTIAC TRAIL IN WEST BLOOMFIELD (248) 865-0000 Open 7 Days a Week for Lunch & Dinner 607110 SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News Fait Harvest Dinner e4e..v1.4,-ae-o Ai, . Food for thought... Crisp, Oven Roast Duckling, chef's selected preparation French Lamb Chops sauteed, with Balsamic red wine mintsauce Thai Spiced Shrimp, stir fried with red curry, coconut milk & fresh vegetables Sirloin Steak Café de Paris, pan seared served with garlic shallot herb butter 10790 Highland Rd. (M-59) between Elizabeth Lake & Teggerdine 248-698-8823 Open Monday-Saturday for Dinner • Reservations Recommended. v OSENTIAro NEW AH WOK MICHIGAN'S FAVORITEANTIQUES SHOW 111111111111e Chinese Restaurant 1 • • • • SOUTHFIELD MUNICIPAL COMPLEX SOUTHFIELD, MI Whitefish & Whole Fish Peking Duck Steak Seafood Casserole on Evergreen Rd at Civic Center Dr (10% Mile) Fri 2.9 • Sat 12.8 • Sun 12.5 $5.00 with ad - Good for all Three Days Dine in • Cocktails • Carryout 80 I OVER 120 MERCHANTS, BIGGER THAN EVER Open 7 Days A Week 9/20 2002 SOUTHFIELD PAVILION ANTIQUES EXPOSITION SEPTEMBER 27, 28 & 29 Excellent Tel. 248.349.9260 41563 W. Ten Mile Road in Novi 638010 *Exit Evergreen Rd South from 1-696. More Info: www.anticinet.com/M&M icholas Winton's late wife, Greta, was looking through the attic when she found a scrapbook containing chil- dren's names, photos and letters writ- ten by their parents. She soon learned her 1988 discov- ery reached back to 1939, the year her husband saved the lives of some 700 Jewish children in Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. He had never, spoken to her about his heroic acts. But there was a lot to tell, and 10 years later, filmmaker Matej Minac, who had read about Winton's acts of courage in a book by Vera Gissing, a youngster from Prague rescued by Winton's efforts, conveyed the infor- mation through cinema. His documentary The Power of Good: Nicholas Winton will be shown 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 25, at the West Bloomfield Jewish Community Center. The presentation is one of the pre- view events for the JCC's fifth annu- al Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival, which will be held April 27- May 6 in Commerce Township, Birmingham and Windsor, and May 4-8 in Ann Arbor. "This is an art movie in itself even though it's a documentary," says David Magidson, festival director, who was instrumental in showing the film last spring as part of the Ann Arbor segment of the festival. N A 7-course dinner featuring selections from our fall harvest menu paired with French wines from the Bordeaux region. § "Seeing this movie would be like seeing a documentary about Oscar Schindler, and it's getting awards all _over the country." Minac, who lost family during the Holocaust, also directed All My Loved Ones, a film about a Czech Jewish family with a Winton child, the family's only Holocaust survivor. "I think it's very important for the public to realize that Nicholas Winton is still among us and to learn things from him," Minac recently told Prague Radio. "His account is incredibly interesting." Winton, a 29-year-old London stockbroker in 1939, was called to Prague by a friend who was con- vinced that war was imminent. With the help of a few volunteers and in the brief time available before the war, Winton arranged to send Jewish children from Czechoslovakia to fam- ilies in Britain. It was a project reminiscent of the Kindertransport, which rescued 10,000 Jewish children from prewar Germany, Austria, Poland and Czechoslovakia, and inspired the Academy Award-winning documen- tary Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport. "I did it merely because it had to be done and nobody else [I knew] was doing it," said Winton, who has volunteered with the elderly and mentally disabled since his retire- ment more than 30 years ago. Winton's parents were born Jewish, according to an article in The New York Times, but he was baptized in