TAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR*STAR*STAR*STAR TI j IR COMPARE OUR TA •Ti - TA •TI TI * Potato Latkes * Handcut Lox * Our Regular Tuna & Fat-Free Tuna Can't Be Beat! * Vegetarian Chopped Liver. * Homemade Potato Salad & Coleslaw STAR DELI TI Hours: Mon-Sat 7-9:30 Sun 7-8 LOW PRICES WITH ANY IR DELICATESSEN IR IN TOWN! IR IR IR MEAT TRAY 4.49 Per person SALAD TRAY 43.99 Per IR pe SALAD TRAY W/ LOX & CREAM CHEESE IR Ti s11.99 per IR TI DAIRY TRAY IR •Ti $16.99 Per person IR Ti 1 •TAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR R • Ti STAR'S TRAYS CANT BE BEAT FOR QUALITY& PRICE! •TA OFF •Ti T1 T • R R ON STAR'S BEAUTIFUL ALREADY LOW-PRICED MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS Glass With Class Charach Gallery celebrates Glass Month with new works by Janet Kelman and CCS artists. Janet Kelman's Sheltering 3 is about Expres 3/31/09 • One Per Order • Not Good Holidays • 10 Person Minimum WITH TffiS COUPON tertainment 4(4*44,4, creating a home as a sanctuary. R •Ti TAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR*STAR*STAR*STAR ♦ CTitD •-CTAD -4, CTAI:iCTAILIH4CTAD,I,CTAD TRIO 4•CTAD i.CTAD ■ fr CV% D •,CTAD 24555 W. 12 MILE ROAD Just west of Telegraph Road • Southfield 248•352•7377 The Armed Man: A Concert for Peace Elizabeth Applebaum Experience t e power of music and film Special to the Jewish News music by Karl Jenkins with award winning original film 4PM Sunday, April 5 Ford Community & Performing Arts Center, Dearborn Tickets start at $25 313-943-2354 A was blown away. Every child should see this film.P1 Gail Katz, retired teacher founder of student diversity club, STARS-Students Taking a Right Stand www.rackhamchoir.org 150 performers directed by Suzanne Mallare Acton Rackham Symphony Choir Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings Sphinx Competition cellist and 6 soloists 1492310 JOIN US FOR HAPPY NOSHINn Mon.-Thurs. 2pm-6pm ILLAG E 10% off ALACE total bill* *Not valid with any other offer A Family Diner *Expires 4/08/09 Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Fri. • Lamb Chop Dinner, $14.95 Fri • Salmon Tues. • Whitefish 4170 Orchard Lake Rd. Homemade Soups & Desserts (248) 682-3400 . (near Pontiac Trail) Orchard Lake, MI 48323 1491000 C20 March 26 • 2009 L ife would have been much easier for Cinderella had she grown up in Metro Detroit. She could have skipped all that worry about disappearing glass slippers and, instead, simply have stopped at Janet Kelman's Royal Oak studio and ordered a pair. Whether you're a Cinderella in need of slippers (Kelman's newest creations) or simply a fan of glass, it's time to mark your calendar for Michigan Glass Month. The Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit's Janice Charach Gallery in West Bloomfield will celebrate with art by Janet Kelman, along with new works by the students and alumni of the College for Creative Studies in Detroit. "Glass Reunion '09" opens Sunday, March 29, with a reception at 2 p.m. and a lecture at 3 p.m. by Herb Babcock, chairman of the CCS glass department. The exhibit runs through Sunday, May 7, and is free and open to the public. "This is the sixth annual glass show the gallery has done with GCS," said Gallery Director Terri Stearn. "Glass by far is one of our most well-received shows. We love working with the school that Janice Charach called her own!' Kelman's fascination with glass began at the University of Michigan, where her first passions were science and math. Though she became "disen- chanted with chemistry," she was cap- tivated by the sight of a glassblower making equipment for use in the lab. So she began teaching herself how to create glass art — from her famous fish paperweights to architectural glass, including mosaics, windows and the doors of the Janice Charach Gallery, based on a painting made by the gallery's namesake. Among her latest projects is the com- pletion of seven windows she designed for Young Israel of Oak Park, which cel- ebrate the Jewish holidays and incorpo- rate elements Kelman fabricated in her kiln. The synagogue will host a Kiddush to honor the windows on May 2. Kelman's works are as diverse as a sea series (created after she began scuba diving), sculpture and an earlier jewelry collection of "fun cats and dogs that people still tell me they treasure." An artist who says she is "always kind of moving on:' Kelman added glass slippers to her repertoire after taking a class that focused on casting fine objects in a mold, which inspired the completely apropos glass shoes that helped Cinderella and Prince Charming find each other; Kelman recently turned 60 and was married — for the first time. That has promoted her to rethink "my `seafans' as nests:' she said. "The show will be a series of nests with objects in them, such as birds, teacups or eggs:' says the newly married artist. "They are about making a home with my husband." ❑ Elizabeth Applebaum is a marketing specialist with the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. "Glass Reunion '09" runs March 29-May 7 at the Janice Charach Gallery inside the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Gallery hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Mondays- Wednesdays, noon-4 p.m. Sundays and 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Thursdays. Pieces by Kelman and CCS artists will be on sale throughout the show. (248) 432- 5579 or www.jccdet.org .