• Arts & Entertainment
S. ero
3426 E. est Maple Rd., at Haggerty Rd.
(248) 926-9555
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dinner special includes I
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Lox Plate for two
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DELI SPECIAL
1 lb. Corned Beef, Deli Rye,
1 pint Coleslaw, 1 pint
Potato Salad
$11 99
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Sharkskin from page 59
BREAKFAST
SPECIAL
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$2.99 FREE COFFEE
Mon-Fri 8am-1 1 am exp 8/23/07
BUY QUART
OF SOUP
2ND FREE!!
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1.
Downhome Dinner Specials!
grab Ifoiatfiligiptipit
Homemade Meatloaf $1 11
Down Home Fried Chicken
Broasted Chicken
2 side items, dessert NW
Sae Ptak MIMS
Harlem Burrito
RACHAEL RAY SAYS 'THE FRIED CHICKEN 15
50 FLAVORFUL!"
29508 NorhilEs[ern
Soinfield
HOUR MAGAZINE'S BEST SOUTHERN
YEARS IN A ROW
COOKING
6
248-208-1680
1288970
SUSHI S INAURt)1
Japanese Restaurant
Pontiac Trail
(C° SUSHI S
• Catering and Carry-out Available
• Gift Certificates Available
IV41Uftail
Ph: 248-737-4408
Fax: 248-737-5032
tone Pine (17 mite)
Business Hours: Mon-Sat 11:30eln - 10:00orn
Sunday 4:30 - 9:00prn
4157 Orchard Lake Road, Orchard Lake, Ml 48323
10% OFF Total Bill
(with ad only) Start 8/09/07 through 8/15/07
y .
10% off
your TOTAL
Dine in only
food bill
Not good with
any other offer
- ANY TIME
expires 8131107
Authentic Korean & Japanese Cuisine
Phone (248) 827-1600
www.newseoutgarden.com
60 August 9 • 2007
Open Daily Catering Available
27566 Northwestern Hwy.
reporting skills, interviewing relatives
and community members, who also
shared stories about her mother and
grandmothers.
In addition, she credits Chabad
of Southampton for inspiring her
to remember. She spends weekends
at her home in Sag Harbor, L.I., and
attends services regularly at Chabad.
When asked if she carries some of her
father's religiosity, she says that she
hopes so. She explains that for Leon,
who always had a prayer book nearby,
religion became all-consuming in
America, when he no longer had the
other pieces of his old life, like the
cafes and casinos.
Now, she can't bear the idea of not
going to shut on Shabbat no matter
where she is; she meets her husband
afterward.
She also interviewed male friends
"who seemed seasoned and interest-
ing" to understand her father's ways
with women. Two of her three siblings
were helpful, in particular her brother
Cesar, who, to her surprise, kept all
sorts of family records including the
canceled checks Leon sent to the many
orphanages and schools he asked to
pray for his daughter's recovery.
Cesar came to her first reading
dressed in a white suit.
Blues Brother from page 53
with different teachers and moved on
to an electric guitar when I was 10:'
Ari's appearances in the usually
adult nightspots came after his par-
ents, Andrea and Robert Teitel of West
Bloomfield, read articles about oppor-
tunities for young newcomers to test
their talents.
During those times at clubs, includ-
ing Nancy Whiskey's in Detroit and
Club Bart in Ferndale, Ari got to know
the other two band members, and they
decided to combine their instrumental
skills. A June booking took the trio to
AJ's Cafe in Ferndale.
Ari's talents have brought him
invitations to jam with well-known
local bands, such as Howling Diablos,
Bump and Nightengale. One of his
most exciting experiences was being
asked to appear with Robert Randolph
and the Family Band at the Michigan
Theater in Ann Arbor, and that is cap-
tured on the MySpace Web site.
"There have been lots of adult musi-
cians who wanted to work with Ari
on a regular basis, but my wife and I
decided it would be better for him to
be part of a band with musicians his
age Robert Teitel says.
Bookings at Pontiac's Arts, Beats &
Eats, held over Labor Day weekend,
and Detroit's Motown Winter Blast
came through Jonathan Witz, who pro-
duces both events. Witz got to know
Ari and his talents at Roeper, where
the local producer is involved in par-
ent activities.
"I practice a lot if I find something
awesome that I really want to play','
says Ari, who has taken along a guitar
and mandolin to Camp Tanuga in
Kalkaska this summer. "Sometimes, I
feel I've just had too much and don't
practice
While Ari's parents have steered
away from playing instruments, his
late great-grandmother, Ethel Toby,
was a concert pianist. Ari's brother,
Levi, 11, takes piano lessons but has
more interest in theater and dance.
The showmanship of Bob Marley,
Bob Dylan, John Hiatt and the Police
serves as inspiration for Ari, but he
has no intention of working as a pro-
fessional musician as an adult. His
career goal is to become a doctor.
Art, who also enjoys playing bas-
ketball and hanging out with friends,
can look back on the celebration of
his 13th birthday as another way to
celebrate his musical flair. After his bar
mitzvah service at Temple Israel, he
was joined by his friends for a party at
the Club Inferno in Walled Lake.
"We mostly played our usual
music;' says Art, owner of five guitars
and a mandolin and student of Rob
Bourassa, who directs music programs
at Greenfield Village. "We also played a
hora." [1
Ari Teitel performs as part of
the Jam Society 11:30-1:30 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 13, at Campus
Martius Park, 800 Woodward
Ave., in Detroit. Admission is free.
(313) 962-0101.