LLmat himaericc Choose one item from the Red list, one item from the White list and two iterns from the Blue list BBQ Beef Ribs Slow Roasted Beef Ribs . Chargrilled and basted with Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ Sauce Served with your -choice of two side dishes (Blue List) ,ff MICHIGAN'S Th. axratt Finger Licking BBQ Side Dish Red - pick *1 Blue pick 2 `Shalom Salaam' Baby Back Ribs Vinegar and Oil Top Sirloin Steak Cole Slaw Mashed Red Skin KentuckyJack Potatoes salmon Fresh Vegetable of the day White - pick 4 1 Coconut Shrimp Corn on the Cob Snow Crab Legs French Fries Rice Pilaf Grilled Santa Fe Baked Beans Shrimp Baked Potato Lemon Pepper Chicken WhIgs Side of Spaghetti Featuring Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ Sauce BABrp,.. Entree Ribs Reggae musician Ziggy Marley pleads for peace in Mideast. RICK HELLMAN Kansas City Jewish Chronicle Soup or House Salad $2.95 extra • Greek or Caesar Salad $3.95 extra • Sorry, no substitutions 6066 W. Maple Rd. • W. Bloomfield • 248-851-0805 Open 7 Days A Week for Lunch & Dinner Plymouth • 734-434-6400 745060 ANNINNININr 10 %0FF Total Bill Expires 8/31/03 Not good with any other offer. Not available on lunch or dinner specials. ..... I ..... Appetizer Way Complete Dinners as low as $9 95 ($25- Value) With any catering order of $125 I I Expires 8/31/03 Not • ood with an other offer. Voted Best Middle Eastern Restaurant by the Jewish News Readers! a ... • III ■ • m. o s o s m s U m 111 • III II In• ESE II II El • NI • I• NEM II II II IN • NI II • • IN IN MI NI Open/ ■ ■ ■ ■ II • MI • • II • El El II Bagels Homemade Cream Cheese - Deli - Sandwiches • • ■ - t4OW ■ ■ ■ .4tv Premium Deli! Bagel Trays! ce tra +IP (!. AtS)A Ge\-- "Pc', Elfoorrefieo Bagel Tuesday ■ Fabulous breakfast and lunch sandwiches! Located on the Southwest corner of Telegraph and Long Lake Roads in the heart of Bloomfield! $4.25/doz Salads - Fresh Ground Coffees - Muffins - Cookies ■ —r Int 8/15 2003 60 50% OFF! Any lunch sandwich! With purchase of any regular lunch sandwich. With coupon - Exp. 8/31/03 One coupon per visit IM FREE! 1/2 dozen bagels! With purchase of 1 doz. With coupon - Exp. 8/31103 One coupon per visit MIN= FREE! Huge coffee! With purchase of any breakfast sandwich. With coupon - Exp. 8/31/03 One coupon per visit I= MI OM= El II 1M% II 735000 ■ 011 hile it may be defined in the American imagination by sunny Jamaican climes and longhaired, pot- smoking musicians, reggae music has always had serious political undertones. Back in the 1970s, while he was making the form popular worldwide, Bob Marley and the Wailers sang songs alternately urging action ("Revolution," "Africa Unite") and tranquility ("Simmer Down," "Fussing and Fighting"). Now, after nearly three years of ter- ror and counter-terror in the Mideast, Bob's son, -David "Ziggy" Marley, has issued an eloquent musi- cal plea for peace between Israel and the Palestinians. That plea, "Shalom Salaam," is one of the highlights of Dragonfly, Ziggy Marley's new release on the Private Music label. Marley is playing the song on tour this summer (there is cur- rently no scheduled stop in Detroit). Friends and fans have reacted in an overwhelmingly positive fashion to the heartfelt message of "Shalom Salaam," Marley said in a recent phone interview. He said there was no specific inci- dent that gave rise to the song. "I remember when I wrote that song I was in Jamaica, and the news was going on about what's going on there, and I was so tired of the loss of life between the Jewish people and Palestinian people," said Marley, who is in favor of a two-state solution. "For me, it is just time to live together and solve the problems together. The only solution to the problem is to live together in peace. Let's have human rights for everyone; let's have equal opportunity and jus- tice for everyone of that region." Marley said he had been to Israel once several years ago, to play a con- cert in the Negev desert. "Just the whole history of that place is very special," he said. "I went to the Wailing Wall and I went into that cave there, and I felt a very strong spiritual connection to that place. "My name is David. So I have a very strong connection to Israel and the history of Israel. It's very close to the African struggle." The experience of slavery and the identification of the African people with the biblical Israelites is a theme in the Rastafarian philosophy, of which the elder Marley was the best- known exponent. Ziggy Marley said he, too, is a Rasta. "The good thing about me being Rasta is that it is not an organized reli- "My name is David. So I have a very strong connection to Israel and the history of Israel." — David 7iggy" Marley gion," Marley said. "It's not a religion but a philosophy of life. The main focus of this philosophy is love, peace, nature and that's it, really — just living natural, loving each other, living a spiritual life." But not one tied to the strictures of a religion. Marley decries the dark side of faith in another song on Dragonfly, tided "In the Name of God." Marley said the song was written, at least at first, in response to the terror- ist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. "This is not the way of God. Religion has served as a way to divide the human family. Killing children in His name is not the way of God. Religion, to me, is a disservice to the human family. It's not being used to bring people together. "If we love each other, that is the best way we can change people, not by trying to instigate your belief on another person. Love is the answer. Love is God." I