11%1INUTCUI I IID
Cy
dinin g room, carry-out and trays
ghEfl
(BAS
T'
• breakfast • lunch • dinner
• after-theater • kiddie menu
10 a.m. to 11 p.m.
T'axut, -44 Rae,
-
gi
ri
e
968-0022
Since 1934
inin9 aid C. - ocidt<ii3
Fred Bayne at the organ nightly
1128 E. Nine Mile Road (1 1/2 Mile East of I-75))
1128
Recommended by AAA & Mobile Guides
(313) 541-2132
P S
FUNG L
.
SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN
Mon.-Thurs. 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11 Sun. 12-10
CARRY. OUT • - CATERING
BANQUET FACILITIES]
8410 W. NINE MILE, W of Livernois
544-1021
,
GOLDEN BOWL
Restaurant
22106 COOLIDGE AT 9.1ILE In A & P Shopping Center
DINE IN & CARRY-OUT
398-5502 or 398-5503
SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN CUISINE
OPEN 1 DAYS—Mon.-Thurs. 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Sun. & Holidays 1 p.m. to 10 p.m.
• Banquet Fatilities
Your Chef: FRANK ENG
THE
t
% ,E;
40
44 .:11 21 1,
. GOLD
COIN
OPEN 7 DAYS — YOUR HOST: HOWARD LEW
SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE
*-
COMPLETE
AND AMERICAN FOOD
CARRY-OU _
24480
W.
10 MILE (iN TEL-EX PLAZA)
AVAILABLE
West of Telegraph
353 7848
-
TNE G- rEAT V.I1V.C.
.
SERVING YOUR FAVORITE EXOTIC
DRINKS & CHOICE COCKTAILS
I
•
PRIVATE DINING ROOM
BANQUETS • PARTIES • BUSINESS MEETINGS
I
Your host . . . HENRY LUM
Businessmen's Luncheons • Carry outs • Catering
35135 Grand River, Farmington
476-9181
(Drakeshire Shopping Center)
.................. ■ .*
HOA KOW INN
Specializing In Cantonese, Szechuan & Mandarin Foods
Open Daily 11 to 10:30, Sat. 11 to 12 Mid., Sun. 12 to 10:30
— Carry-Out Service —
.
13715 W. 9 MILE, W. of Coolidge • Oak Park
--.
KING LIM'S GARDEN
Mandarin, Szechuan & Cantonese Food
26196 GREENFIELD, LINCOLN CENTER, OAK PARK
Mon.-Thurs. 11 to 10:30
Fri. 11 to 11. Sat. 11 to 12
Sun. 12 noon to 10
968-3040
547-4663
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
NEW KING
LIM'S
3305 Auburn Rd
Carry - Out Service
852-8280
Exotic Cocktails
Catering To Parties Available
FLOWN IN FRESH
EXPRESSLY FOR YOUR DINING
at
the
ENGLISH DOVER SOLE
KINGSLEY INN 642-0100
KOW KOW INN
, , 1 i
, • Famous Chop Suey • Cantonese Food.• Steaks • Chops f• Sea, . Fopd;
!
OPEN Mon.-Sat' 11'a.m.:12:30 a.m.. Sun: & Holidays 12 Noon:1 . 2i303,im. 1!
)
/
CARRY - 60' SERVICE - - "
' EASY PARKING ' --. •
32-2-W.-Mc-Nichols Bet.- Woodward-&-Second -.____
68
Works Of Art
Continued from Page 59
open tuesdays thru sundays
lincoln shopping center, 101/2 mile & greenfield. oak park
ENTERTAINMENT
_._ _ ___868-3550_ _
Friday, November 21, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
While the more than 80 in-
tists Market. She is on the
vited artists will provide to-
board of the Birmingham
night's visitors with visual
Society of Women Painters
treats, "A Reasonable Fac-
and has completed a suite of
simile," a husband and wife
ten, paintings commissioned
duo from Rochester, Mich.,
for the new AT&T Building
will entertain them with the
in Kansas City. She is a na-
street and popular music of
tionally known artist who
the Renaissance period and a
paints in water color and ac-
little later. Dressed in cos-
rylics, and does monoprints
tume, Anne and Rob Burns
and constructions.
play anonymous ballads on
"It is crucial that our ar-
authentic reproductions of
tists produce quality work in
such period instruments as
a good price range," she said.
recorders, flutes, three-hole
"We do feature crafts, but not
pipes, shawms and viola da
artsy craftsy pieces. In addi-
gamba.
tion to being functional the
Ethnic stitchery from Laos,
crafts pieces must be made
paintings, watercolors,
well and have artistic merits
sculpture, jewelry, ceramics,
also.
cloissone, glass, weaving, soft
"Jewelry runs the gamut,"
sculpture, basketry, metal
she added. "We feature pieces
art, and more will fill the
from $5 to $1,000 — from
spacious building. All art ob-
funky, plastic glitzy stuff to
jects for sale will be on dis-
beautiful silver and gold
play, with none hidden for
pieces. And the jewelers show
"later."
all their own pieces through-
Show chairman Sharon
out the show."
Klein, like previous chairman
Assembling the art show
and artist Suzanne Velick be-
takes most of the year for
fore her, spends the better
chairman Klein and her
part of the year seeking out
committee, which includes a
high quality, unusual art for
base committee and addi-
the show. This year nearly
tional art buyers/collectors/
half the artists are new to
artists. "I'm going to art
the Birmingham Temple
shows all year long seeking
show.
out new artists," she said. "I
"This year's show features
have an insatiable - urge to
artists from Michigan, In-
get new and exciting art for
diana and Ohio," said Klein,
this show."
"with some driving five to six
In May invitations are sent
hours to get here. Five of the'
to artists who are being in-
artists happen to be members
vited back, or to "must have"
of the Birmingham Temple,
new artists. Invitations are
two are art professors, and
also sent to other artists who
several are nationally and in-
then submit slides of their
ternationally known."
work to be juried. In mid-
September the jury reviews
Among the artists repre-
40-50 sets of slides and
sented are: Dorinne Velick,
makes the final selection.
Theresa Ohno, Nina
About 100 volunteers are
Jackman, Mark Chatterly,
needed to run the show. "It
Karnig Dabanian, Stuart
takes 15 people two full days
Shulman, Robert Fisher,
to set up the show," Klein
Eugene Meso, Fritz Olson,
said. "We have an artistic
Meghen Powell, Kath
Lathers.
Also Kay Weprin, Phyllis
Aulph, Ande Roeser, Susan
Moran, Ingrid Dijkers, Eric
Cooper, Barbara Krueger,
Steve Lesse, Hosain Mosavat,•
Joan Ross, Igor Beginin, Neil
Frankenhaudser; Carol Wald,
Suzanne Velick.
HERBERT LUFT
It was Velick, a founding
member of the Birmingham
Temple, who developed this
rnon Milchan, the Is-
art show from simple begin-
raeli industrialist
nings to prominence in ten
turned film producer,
years. Two years ago she
has completed in Lake Como,
stepped down as chairman,
Italy, the film Man on Fire,
but continues to work on the
directed by Elie Chouraqui
show committee. This yea/
and based on a novel by A.J.
she designed 18 display units
Quinnell.
for the show. Made of wood
The current epic from the
and chicken wire, they bolt
man behind films such as
together to form panels on
The King of Comedy, Once
which artwork can be hung.
Upon a Time in America,
"We had a party in June and
Legend and the surprisingly
built the displays from
successful Brazil focusses on
Suzanne's design," said
a subject as timely as today's
Klein.
headlines — terrorism and
Velick is art chairman for
kidnapping.
the Channel 56 auction, and
Man on Fire is the story of
is co-chair of the
a former CIA operative (por- ,
Birmingham-Bloomfield Art
-, ,trayed by ,Scott Glenn) who is ti,
I Association's huge., hglid,a,y
sales show. She in:stew 41-0 I # broken .1)7 ft trauma brought t -i
on - liy. a - terrorist bombing in t!;
_exhibited ill...theinvitational
' collatt 1 ghtiwwiNithieh. tectictly* -- Z -7B-e-ifut:--Thel -atra:oki',Vviii-on,--h-e- .1k.i
was helpless to prevent,
was held at the Detroit Ar-
committee of five people who
decide just where each piece
will go. Then we spend all
day Thursday and Friday
hanging and placing the art."
"In addition, we have about
ten cashiers, plus wrappers
and clerical help," she added.
The show's emphasis on
Midwestern artists and their
works points up Velick's be-
lief that you don't have to go
to New York to find good art.
"Detroit is very underrated
by the people who live here,"
she said. "Yet we have ex-
tremely talented artists here..
For example, Michigan pot-
ters are among the best any-
where.
"Right now there is a WSU
alumni show at Wayne's
Community Arts Building
that could hold its own any-
where," she added.
Many artists ask to be in-
cluded in the temple show,
but only those who attain the
committee's high standards of
excellence are invited. "We
look for artists, also, whb are
growing, changing, doing
something different," Velick
said. "If an artist keeps show-
ing the same thing year after
year and isn't growing, the
artist isn't invited back."
The art show is the major
fund raiser for the Birming-
ham Temple, which will
celebrate its 25th anniver-
sary next year. With a nuc-
leus of eight families and
Rabbi Sherwin Wine,
Humanistic Judaism had its
roots as an alternative way to
observe the cultural heritage
and history of the Jewish
people in a non-theistic man-
ner. The temple, located at
28611 12 Mile, between Inks-
ter and Middlebelt in Far-
mington Hills, has grown to
include hundreds of families.
New Suspense Film
Directed By Israeli
A
caused the death of a number
of innocent children. The
Ex-CIA man withdraws from
life, seeing in his nightmares
the murderous bombing re-
peated over and over again.
He becomes a bodyguard to
a wealthy Italian family
whose 12-year-old daughter
shares his fears and ap-
prehensions, since she had
witnessed the kidnapping of a
school friend. The nightmares-
of both are repeated at Lake
Como, when a Mafia gang
strikes, wounding him and
kidnapping her.
This is the springboard for
a murderous pursuit in which
the hunter becomes the
hunted.
Sharing star billing with
Glenn, are Brooke _Adams,,
Paul „S,henar, Joe PesCi'.,,ansi
Danny „Aiello, the, latter.. p?
traying . the head of the.thug y
British actorJonathan Pryce,
who portrayed the central
-
-