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February 28, 2003 - Image 58

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2003-02-28

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

40:

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on Saline Road,

North Farmington Hills,

or West Bloomfield by

2/28/03 and receive

one month free rent!

Sunrise 0 ers a f u ll spectrum of supportive care to meet the challenges of advanced age in a warm and comforting environment.

At Sunrise Assisted Living, It's about Care.
It's about Value...It's about Choice

is no secret that happy families are close
I families.
Sunrise is helping to keep families





individuality of each resident, compassionate
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alternative to an institutional setting—competitive
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nursing home.

together—in their neighborhoods and in their
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to home. Here, cherished relationships continue
to flourish, and new friendships are forged.
Sunrise offers seniors a warm and comforting
living environment. With great regard for the

Call today to discover the value of
assisted living by Sunrise!

SUNRISE
ASSISTED LIVING®

Ask about our innovative
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mm.sunriseassistediiving.com
Ann Arbor / 734 327 1350 • Clarkston / 248 625 0500 • North Ann Arbor / 734 741 9500
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Our advertisers are

Ask about
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thrilled with the results

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Detroit Jewish News

36

Illf litilS

S2,()5()

.x x'+.4,71W

#1 In Sales & Service 6 Years Running
49251 Grand River .AVe. at Wixom nd.

LINCOLN

2/28
2003

. 60

Mercury

248-305-5300

WWW.Vft rsi

t yii nemere, eolii
Opc.'n Saturdays 8:30-5:00
Pius tax :Ind nit rebott,

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ttLS 10). 'thy

rt.Nutvs, 36,o0o

clost,!d-t: ttct #k3 5e

"Thanks to the
loyal readership of
the Jewish News,
which is our only
means of regular
advertising, we are
proud to have

become one of the
finest little carry-

out delicatessens in
the nation."

Sid and Harry Neuman

Co-owners

Star Deii

TASTE OF LIFE from page 59

Wine List

The event will be 1-5 p.m. March 9
and will include wine tasting, a
strollinc, lunch, entertainment, and
both a silent and live auction.
The food will be provided by local
restaurants: Opus One, Caucus Club,
Carl's Chophouse, La Dolce Vita,
Mario's, Steve & Rocky's, Shiraz and
Small Plates. Ten wine stations will
offer samples from France, Italy,
Australia, and California.
Representatives from each company
will discuss the wines being served.
The live and silent auctions will
showcase wines and wine-related mer-
chandise. Rothenberg is excited about
many of the auction items, which
include: a six liter bottle of Joseph
Phelps Insignia, from Napa Valley,
which retails at $1,220; a series of bot-
tles of Sauterne from Chateau d' qem
— one from each decade, ranging
from 1939 to 1983; and his first
acquisition, a "vertical" set of Silver
Oak Cabernet from the Alexander
Valley in California, vintage 1995,
1996, 1997 and 1998, donated by
Demorest Wine and retailing for $350.
Expo Design Centers donated a
wine refrigerator. Rothenberg donated
an antique wine/fruit press he restored
many years ago and had kept on dis-
play in his store. Doug Dalton of the
Frank H. Boos Gallery in Bloomfield
Hills will conduct the live auction.
Rothenberg is upbeat and excited
about the fund-raiser. "I'm hoping to
have over 500 people and would love
to raise at least $100,000," he says.
Since being diagnosed, Rothenberg
has become even closer to his wife,
Sheila and his sons, Noah and Dane,
both students at Michigan State
University.
"We were always close, but my sons
now call me a few times a week
instead of a few times a month."
"The people with ALS before me
made this difficult journey a little easi-
er for me," he says. "It's my turn to
make this journey easier for the ones
who follow. Hopefully, we find a cure
so no one has to face this awful dis-
ease."



Tickets for the Friends of Wine
Tasting and Auction, 1-5 p.m.
Sunday, March 9, at the
Atheneum Hotel in Greektown
are $75. Call the ALS
Association, (800) 882-5764.

I

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