32 Friday, November 4, 1E3 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS `From Russia With Love' Concert at Temple Israel Temple Israel will pre- sent its Jonathan P. Miller Memorial Concert, this year entitled "From Russia With Love," at 8 p.m. Nov. 13 at the temple. Guest artists include Oxana Yablonskaya, pianist, and Dmitry Yab- lonsky, cellist. Cantor Harold Orbach of the tem- ple, also will appear in the program. Tickets are available, free of charge, by calling the temple office, 661-5700. Ms. Yablonskaya emi- grated to the U.S. in June 1977. Her first U.S. tour took her to New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Washington, Detroit, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Ms. Yablonskaya makes regular concert tours of the United States and Europe and in the 1983-1984 season she will make her first tours of both South America and South Africa. She has also been heard in Japan, the Philippines, Taiwan, Ko- rea, India and Hong Kong. In September 1981, Ms. Yablonskaya was awarded the Grand Prix du Disque from the International Liszt Society. Although a prize winner of three international competitions (the Marguer- ite Long-Jacques Thibaud Competition in Paris, the Rio de Janeiro Competition and the Vienna Beethoven Competition), Ms. Yab- lonskaya was never AL HARRISON LUGGAGE OUTLET SKYWAY Reg $55-$60 ATTACHES . Factory Seconds 3" Attache $22.50, 4" Attache $25.00 AL 3116 HARRISON LUGGAGE OUTLET W. 12 Mile, Berkley (between Coolidge & Greenfield) M-S 9-5, open til 9 Thurs. DIE F Get into shape before the holidays Lose 17 to 25 lbs. in just .6 weeks That same year he was , accepted at the Juilliard School of Music where he studied with the princi- pal cellist of the New York Philharmonic, Lorne Munroe. In the summer of 1979, Yab- lonsky was a participant at the Marlboro Festival of Music where he met David Soyer. The follow- ing September he went to the Curtis Institute of Music where David Soyer was his teacher. Diet one week FREE With pre-paid 5 week program Stabilization and Maintenance included at no extra cost. Private Daily Counseling NO SHOTS • NO DRUGS • NO CONTRACTS CALL US TODAY In 1980 he started to study with Aldo Parisot and in 1981 was accepted at the Yale School of Music where he is presently studying. In 1982, he was a top prize winner at the Third Inter- national Aldo Parisot cello Competition in Brazil. In November 1982, He per- formed at the Kaufmann Concert Hall at the 92nd Street Y in New York City as a winner of the 'Young Musicians Competition sponsored by the American Jewish Congress and the Pepsi Cola Co. for a free, introductory consultation. ROYAL OAK 13 Mile & Woodward SOUTHFIELD 13 Mile & Southfield Rd. TROY 15 Mile & Coolidge W. BLOOMFIELD 15 Mile & Farmington Rd. 435-SLIM 642-5665 435 5555 855 3430 - - LIMITED OFFER • • • ‘' A In 1975, when she applied for a visa to emi- grate from the Soviet Union to join her sister Marina and Marina's husband, noted violinist Albert Markov, who had already left for New York, she immediately lost her post as a full pro- fessor at the Moscow Conservatory, a post she had held since 1965, and she was deprived of all concert engagements. Two years later she re- ceived an exit visa. Born in Moscow in De- cember 1941, Ms. Yab- lonskaya began to play the piano at age 5 and at age 6 she was accepted at the Moscow Central School for Gifted Children. There she studied with Anaida Sum- batyan (who also taught Ashkenazy) until she was 16. From age 16 to 21, she worked at the Moscow Con- servatory with Aleksandre Goldenweiser. Ms. Yablonskaya makes her home half the year in Cologne, Germany with her husband who is a violist with the famous Gurzenich Orchestra in that city, and half in Connecticut where her son Dmitry, a prize- winning cellist, studies with Aldo Parisot at the Yale School of Music. Yablonsky was born in Moscow in 1962, and at the age of 6 began to study cello at Moscow Central Music School. At 9 he made his orchestral debut. In Russia, he studied cello with Stefan Kalianov until he emi- grated to the United States in 1977. 110 in stock Come In Early For Best Selection 545-7393 ted to play further afield than in the Eastern-bloc countries. In the Soviet Union she appeared everywhere, and held the prestigious title of "Soloist of the Moscow Philhar- monic" along with such famous names as David Ois- trakh, Richter, Gilels and Rostropovich, among others. A .1 , ? , 3 4 ,. 9i5%13. S t. r New AJCommittee Institute to Aid Interreligious Affairs NEW YORK — Plans to establish the Ruth U. Samuel Institute for Inter- national Programs in Inter- religious Relations have been announced by the American Jewish Commit- tee. The new institute will be named in honor of the late Mrs. Samuel, who was an active member of the Inter- religious Affairs Commis- sion of the AJCommittee. The institute will serve as a guide for programming in Jewish-Christian relations throughout Europe, Latin America, Israel, Asia and Africa. Dr. Marc H. Tanen- baum, AJCommittee direc- tor of inter-religious affairs, will head the institute. The eyes of other people are the eyes that ruin us. If all but myself were blind, I should want neither fine clothes, fine houses, nor fine furniture. "I have leased many cars from Jim Fresard Pontiac. We have always been treated with the utmost courtesy and efficient service." Arnold Shifman Prominent Royal Oak Attorney LEASING NEW & USED Front Wheel Drive PONTIAC 6000 $139 Per Month 6000 wagons also available (ORDER NOW) 400 N. MAIN N. of 11 MILE RD. ROYAL OAK 547-6100 See Richard Rosenbaum for Special Savings on Lease Cars. - WHERE NICE THINGS HAPPEN" Observing Religion Together The Michigan Region of WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT invites the community to celebrate ORT Sabbath with us on Friday, November 11, 1983 and Saturday, November 12, 1983 at Shaarey Zedek & Temple Israel ORT schools have helped hundreds and thousands of children and adults to live productive lives, to fulfill their thirst for knowledge and to keep their pride in their Jewish heritage. In any language, in every language, ORT symbolized hope, opportunity and freedom.