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"Hair is everywhere — my comb, floor, drain, clothes ... is this normal?"
"I think I can actually see through my hair."
Suzanne Tedesco, a certified laser therapist, has been hearing these con-
cerns from men and women for 5 years when they first call or visit Michi-
gan Hair and Skin Center in Troy. Many are frustrated because they can diet
and exercise to help control their shape, and they can keep their smiles
healthy with regular dental care, but they feel a total loss of control over
their thinning hair."All of our clients have stopped losing hair and experi-
enced regrowth,"she says.
The Michigan Hair and Skin Center uses an FDA-approved system of
low-level laser therapy (LLLT) to reverse hair loss, and make thin weak hair
thicker and healthier. Most importantly, LLLT actually re-grows hair with-
out surgery, implants, drugs, or invasive practices.
LLLT is medically tested and proven to be safe and effective. A study
published in the International Journal of Cosmetic Surgery and Aesthetic
Dermatology showed a 93 percent increase in hair among the respon-
dents using the laser."Thinning hair occurs when the follicles are stran-
gled by excessive DHT (di hydrotestoserone),"Tedesco explains."The laser
breaks away the DHT, allowing the hair follicles to get the nutrients nec-
essary to re-grow hair."
In fact, she says,"Anyone who still has active hair follicles can benefit
from laser therapy. Even where hair isn't visible, active follicles may still be
present, making re-growth a possibility. Of course, follicles die after a few
years, so the sooner someone seeks treatment, the better."
LLLT isn't a fad or gim mick. It has been used in Europe for more than 20
years, and has been featured on Dateline, the ABC news, MSNBC, and in
Women's Health and Men's Health magazines. Recently, there was a laser
hair therapy segment on CBS-TV's The Doctors, and Barbara Walters of
The View called it a "hot new product."
The Michigan Hair and Skin Center in Troy uses Michigan's only pre-
mium LLLT machine.The machine's 451 lasers are housed in a salon hair
dryer-like cap, and they stimulate hair growth over the entire scalp."Simi-
lar to how sunlight stimulates the body to produce melanin, resulting in
a tan, the laser light stimulates the follicles to re-grow hair,"Tedesco says.
"It simply helps the body heal itself."
STOP HAIR LOSS TODAY!
Call for a FREE consultation at 248-678-3633
Michigan Hair & Skin Center
312 Town Center Troy, MI • 248.678.3633 • 248.250.7640
www.hairandskincenter.com
10 January 26 m 2012
Cumulus Media Inc. in Ann Arbor has
announced the appointment of Ira
Weintraub as program director for
Sports Talk 1050 WTKA. He had been
the assistant program director and
morning show producer since March
2009.
David K. Page, part-
ner at Honigman
Miller Schwartz and
Cohn LLP, has been
named chairman of
the Children's
Hospital of Michigan
Foundation Board of
Page
Trustees. The CHM
Foundation was
established in 2003 to make a signifi-
cant and lasting positive impact on
children's health — both locally and
around the world. Page was appointed
to the CHM Foundation Board of
Trustees in 2010 after serving on the
Children's Hospital of Michigan Board
for 38 years (chairing that board for
nine of those years).
A siyum on Shas was
held for a student
who completed Shas
after 10 years, and
got smichah during
that time as well.
Binyomin Radner
from Detroit says it
Radner
was inspiration he
got from the Mir Rosh Hayeshivah Rav
Nosson Tzvi Finkel Zatzal, which gave
him the push to continue with the
major undertaking.
Adat Shalom
Synagogue has
awarded this year's
Jay Yoskowitz Israel
Scholarship to Max
Farkas, a junior at
the University of
Michigan. The schol-
Farkas
arship, which honors
the memory of Jay Yoskowitz, was cre-
ated to enable a student to study in
Israel. A history major, Farkas is the
son of Susan and Stephen Feldman of
West Bloomfield. He grew up at Adat
Shalom, beginning as a preschooler.
The Holocaust
Memorial Center
Zekelman Family
Campus in
Farmington Hills
announced the pro-
motion of Rebecca
Swindler of Novi to
Swindler
director of pro-
grams. She will be responsible for the
HOlocaust Memorial Center's exhibit,
educational and historical programs,
including exhibit openings, member/
donor programs and cultural/film
events. She also serves as the organiza-
tion's social media and webmaster,
database manager and internship
coordinator. Additionally, she is the
interim director of education.
Berl Falbaum, a
Detroit-area veteran
journalist and
author, has ghost-
written a mobster
thriller, which focus-
es on the principle of
"omerta" — the code
Falbaum
of silence — for
Giovanni Gambino of Brooklyn, N.Y.
The novel, Prince of Omerta, has been
published as an e-book by Club
Lighthouse Publishing of Toronto,
Canada. It is available through the fol-
lowing sites: clublighthousepublishing.
com; amazon.com; fictionwise.com;
itunes.apple.com; and
barnesandnoble.com.
University of
Michigan Professor
of History Deborah
Dash Moore has
been named recipi-
ent of the National
Jewish Book Award
for Gender 6' Jewish
Moore
History (Indiana
University Press,
2011) in the category of Anthologies
and Collections.
The book, co-edited by Marion
Kaplan, is a collection of essays from
such noted scholars of Jewish history
as Beth Wenger, Deborah Lipstadt,
Rebecca Korbrin and Marsha
Rozenblit.
Moore is director of the Jean &
Samuel Frankel Center for Judaic
Studies and the Frederick G.L.
Huetwell professor of history. Award
winners will be honored March 14 at
a ceremony at-the Center for Jewish
History in Manhattan.
Author To Address
Beth Shalom Sisterhood
Beth Shalom Sisterhood welcomes
author Karen Tintori Katz for a book
talk 7 p.m. Feb. 6, at the synagogue in
Oak Park.
Katz, who writes under her maiden
name of Tintori, authored The
Illumination, The Book of Names, Unto
the Daughters and Trapped: The 1909
Cherry Mine Disaster.
Tickets are $5 in advance and $6 at
the door. To register, mail your check
to the Sisterhood of Beth Shalom,
14601 Lincoln, Oak Park, MI 48237.