a LEDERMAN metro / 61' (se' 4* cl'''et' s. 'c<'\ c e. roc. cb e * e),.. . c . ,(4„,e $ e I e ea r e * ...„4. o'b ,* qo ,, , ,,,i' ,6? 4, 4e' .4' ,§`' . .,h( +2' 4: s t‘ -' I ,. /lerv b b.:: : ,,i:; 0 7 .7:::::::e :::::;,,9 _, \ : . ; `‘1,; ." z., *.z r eYWARTOWITZ 'C' 0* '' e ■ 9 l ■ , Os ,' ■ ,:‘ • is> ' ,z$' 0 <' i4 , 0m) + 0 _,:, v 4' e, • oo ty ,s'(% s) 'C' C.' ' 4. 1 . q' 4 e' ft? q4 44. o 0** o 4, 4;1/4' •.0) 4 t': c) .4 `ca N''' .(:b e.,(c 4' 1), a N? 04 .00 * C. .... ..o ,0 ?, . ,,, 4 s .0 '`''' ... .as- 4-4' ,te c., o'' o . ,1/4'ks 6, 0 . 4 e ? / pe. 425% .1:2' ■ :5 8 ' . 6 .' 4, e,,, , ,,y , Center for Orthopedics & Sports Medicine Get Better Faster Prohibition Connections \gY re ,<. :a c .6 QC 1; 4. i ,:3b c:' ° f' 4- Ncb Sioes, .a "a 'V N cb co ■ ma c ro,, e 1 C ' .7 • V Speakeasy Reveal WSU students celebrate Purple Gang link to speakeasy on Third Street. MLS LASER THERAPY Over 90% Success Rate Treats all Orthopedic Conditions Preferred Treatment By Professional Athletes Find out more at LKorthopedics.com Pediatrics to Geriatrics Compassionate orthopedic care for the entire family. HOUR DETROIT MAGAZINE'S TOP DOCS + 2011, 2012, 2013 Ron Lederman, MD 1 Mark Kwartowitz, DO Lakes Medical Center 2300 Haggerty Rd., Ste. 1110, West Bloomfield 248.669.2000 20 December 19 • 2013 Students involved in the project pose in their 1920s-era finest. T wo hundred people came to Tommy's Bar on Third Street in Downtown Detroit on Thursday, Dec. 5, to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the repeal of Prohibition and for a tour of the 144-year-old bar's basement, where evidence of a Prohibition-era speak- easy connected to the Purple Gang was found this summer. The summer excavation was under- taken by Wayne State University's anthropology department and Preservation Detroit. According to Krysta Ryzewski, Wayne State assistant anthropology professor who oversaw the project and conducted the tour, the speakeasy had posed as an Italian restaurant, where people could secretly drink in the 1920s. "We found everything but the kitch- en sink in there:' she said of the hid- den passageway the team uncovered. "We found artifacts dating back to the 1880s and ceramics from the 1930s:' Students from Wayne State, University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University who worked on the project dressed up in their 1920s finery at the "Speakeasy Project Reveal Party:' where students created an exhibit showcasing their find- ings, which included the discovery of an underground tunnel in the alley behind the bar and numerous artifacts, including bottles, bar stools, antique Attendees got to see the underground passage uncovered in the basement of Tommy's Bar. wrenches and miscellaneous bar trash. The speakeasy was rumored to be a popular hangout of the infamous Jewish-run Purple Gang. The bar at that time was owned by a Russian Jew named Harry Wietzman, who later changed his name to Harry Bianchini and opened Little Harry's on Jefferson. Ryzewski said the anthropology department will likely put on another event in the near future at Tommy's Bar for those who were unable to attend Dec. 5. ❑