NEW ARR VALS Jewish Book Fair Unconventional Cures Ina Sushin- Andrea Weiss & Wendy Franklin Facialist formerly of Papillon Nail Technicians Author offers guide to alternative medical strategies • Pedicure/manicure studio • Facials featuring DECLEOR products • Japanese hair straightening • Waxing • Full-service hair salon PARIS • Walk-ins welcome //via alon (748 ) 93Z-3180 6595 Orchard Lake Rd. - West Bloomfield 770520 50% OFF FAMILY DINING WITH PURCHASE OF ANOTHER 22921 NORTHWESTERN HWY. ENTREE EQUAL OR GREATER VALUE (Corner of 12 Mite Rd.) ANY ENTREE Southfield 4110 411* 4100 */* THURS. AFTER 3 Rm. Not Good With Any Other Specials or Discounts 248.358-2353 41* i MON. THROUGH Expires 11/30/03 EEI 4* 4* A* 40 4110- 'Prime Ticket Service 410, and explores the new wave of integrative medicine. E JOANNA BRODER Special to the Jewish News fight years ago, Roanne Weisman, a working mother of two, awoke from fairly rou- tine heart surgery to learn she had a stroke during the procedure that rendered the left half of her body paralyzed. Weisman's doctors weren't sure she would ever walk again. Frightened and confused, Weisman began the conventional course of rehabilitation, including physical and occupational therapy. After a few months, although she had some improvement in her left leg, her left arm was still quite weak. Weisman couldn't pick up small items, like coins, and felt unsteady on her feet. Her doctors told her that she had "plateaued," and would probably never get any better. They said she would have to adapt and learn to live within her limitations. Adapting would have meant buying Velcro for her shoes — so that she wouldn't have to tie them — and but- ton-hole fasteners. Because she could no longer type, Weisman might lose her thriving Boston-based communications consulting company. "I was 43, had two young children and a freelance career, and I needed to not be disabled," Weisman said from her home in Newport, Mass. Soon thereafter, as Weisman was practic- ing occupational ther- apy exercises, strug- gling to pick up tiny balls of putty and place them back down 5Ur at specific points on her table, she visual- ized a road that forked in two directions: One road had the label of "Despair, Disability and Invalid"; the other road said, "Fight Back." Roanne "I didn't know where Weisman the 'fight back' road led, but I knew if I went down the other road and gave up, I would become an invalid," Weisman said. "When you're very sick, when you're at the lowest point of despair, you realize that no matter how much people around you love you and want to help you, in the end you are the one who is going to have to take responsibility for what happens." 7> 7 7421 Orchard Lake Road 248-865-6000 www.primeseat.corn 'The Producers Masonic 'UMW 1212 through 11 11 "First 10 Rows" All Concerts, Sports, Theatre 248-865-6000 48k. '100 41* 4110 , 14 lions/ Red wogs. Pistons! W 771 ,180 Ilk Eilt wargmc .11 PRJVATE BANQUET FACILITIES FOR ALL OCCASIONS r S dik LO Fir 10/24 2003 84 group of young doctors w.ha SLAB OF RIBS R OR BBQ CHICKEN FOR TWO ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SALAD OR COLESIAW POTATOES AND GARLIC BREAD Exp. I I/30/2003 XX J Brass PointedAa&-- --0/6, 24234 Orchard Lake Rd., N.E. corner of 10 Mile • 476-1377 found them- selves trapped inside Bosnia- Herzegovina in 1992 during the r s 2C process