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November 27, 1987 - Image 132

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-11-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

ENTERTAINMENT I'

Banquets, Private Parties, Etc. Availabl

DINING ROOM

An Established Tradition Since The '20s . . . Still Serving
Old-Fashioned Home Cooking At Old Fashioned Prices.

Cocktails, Beer

and Wine

Tues. Thru Sat. 11:30-2:30 Lunch ... Dinner 5-8
Sunday 12-8 Dinner

..,4313
.
W. 13 Mile, 2 Blks. E. of Greenfield • 288-6020

arms ,

#09
4 3IS
f

dining room, carry-out and trays

• breakfast • lunch • dinner
• after-theater • kiddie menu

open tuesdays thru Sundays
10 a.m. to 11 p.m.

968-0022

lincoln shopping center, 101/2 mile & greenfield, oak park

Deli Unique

25290 GREENFIELD North of 10 Mile Rd.

Fine Dining

1967-3999

CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS

RESERVATIONS TAKEN FOR NEW YEAR'S EVE

-ate, T axi,/ ...44

20097 W 12 MILE ROAD, SW. CORNER EVERGREEN
For Res: 353-5121
COUNTRY VILLAGE CENTER
Southfield

sin
A T c ra e dlit9 io 3n 4

-gine 2ining and Cd/Ltd: 6

Fred Bayne at the organ nightly

1128 E. Nine Mile Road (1 1/2 Mile East of 1-75)

LEO MERTZ'S KOSHER
CAFE KATON
547•3581

23055 COOLIDGE • Oak Park

FOR PEOPLE CONCERNED
ABOUT KASHRUTH!

CatefOg
• ikestativatlt
• Baked Goods


•• giuirlf
rtne .rat ;L e


Recommended by AAA & Mobile Guides

)484

(313) 541-2132

GOLDEN BOWL

Restaurant

22106 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE In A & P Shopping Center
398-5502 or 398-5503
DINE IN & CARRY-OUT

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.

Your Chef: FRANK ENG

• Banquet Facilities

THE GOLD COIN

e

ss ns

OPEN 7 DAYS — YOUR HOST: HOWARD LEW

SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE
AND AMERICAN FOOD

COMPLETE
CARRY-OUT
AVAILABLE

BANQUET ROOMS
AVAILABLE FOR
ANY OCCASION

From 100 to 400

We Can Assist Your Party Needs With
Everything From Hors d'Oeuvres and
Cocktails To A Sitdown Black Tie Affair

For More Information, Please Call

666-4440

I

FRIDAY, NOV. 27, 1987



MINIM BAG ROOM

BANQUETS • PARTIES • BUSINESS MEETINGS I

Your host . . . HENRY LUM

Businessmen's Luncheons • Carry outs • Catering

35135 Grand River, Fanniagion
(Drakeshire Shopping Center)

475-1111

HOA KOW

Specializing In Cantonese, Szechuan & Mandarin Foods

Open Daily 11 to 10:30, Sat. 11 to 12 Mid., Sun. 12 to 10:30

— Carry-Out S•rvtc• —
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

Carry - Out Service
Catering To Parties Available

547-46$3

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK

NEW KIS
LIM'S

3305 Auburn Rd.

852-82110

Exotic Cocktails

KOW KOW INN

• Famous Chop Suey • Cantonese Food • Steaks • Chops • Sea Food
OPEN Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-12:30 a.m., Sun. & Holidays 12 Noon-12:30 a.m.

CARRY OUT SERVICE

322 W.

68

353-7848

SERVING YOUR FAVORITE EXOTIC
DRINKS & CHOICE COCKTAILS

Your Host: Bill Mitchell
Your Hostess: Juanita

6665 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-59)
Across from Oakland-Pontiac Airport, Pontiac, Mich.

West of Telegraph

TriE GPM VIALE

Under The Supervision of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis

MITCH'S II

24480 W. 10 MILE pN TEL-EX PLAZA)

McNichols Bet. Woodward

EASY PARKING

& Second

868-7550

%Jewish' Plays
At NY Theater

MARLENE GOLDMAN

T

he Mosaic Theater has
developed an inaugu-
ral schedule of original
theater addressing timeless
social aspects of Judaism —
including history, identity
and poetry and music — it
hopes is worthy of its
namesake.
This "theater with adven-
ture," as its artistic director,
Michael Posnick, describes it,
"deals with Jewish ideas and
aspects that haven't appeared
on stage in a long time .. .
Jewish myths, heroes . . .
streams of Jewish life that are
daring and cannot be
politicized."
Operating from a crowded
fourth floor office with three
paper-laden desks, The
Mosaic Theater replaces the
American Jewish Theater,
which has relocated
downtown after seven years
at the 92nd Street Y cultural
and educational center. The
Mosaic Theater will perform
six productions in a 110-seat
Y theater.
Posnick, who will direct two
of them, has directed theater
for two decades at the Yale
Repertory Theater, the
Manhattan Theater Club, the
National Theater of the Deaf,
Playwrights Horizons, the
Long Wharf Theater and the
O'Neill Theater Center, and
has taught at the Yale Drama
School and Hunter College.
He helped to organize the
First International Con-
ference and Festival of Jewish
Theater in 1982 in Tel Aviv,
staged the New York
Chamber Symphony produc-
tion of the Brecht-Weill
"Mahogany Songspiel" in the
1985-1986 season at the Y
and has been a theater con-
sultant for the National

Foundation for Jewish
Culture.
The productions, which run
at intervals from October-
July "can serve as a bridge
between exploring one's own
identity as a Jew and as a be-
ing who lives in America:'
rtiemic.k said. "But they may
just engender more ques-
tions."
Kicking off the season, the
San Francisco-based A
Traveling Jewish Theater
will explore issues &contem-
porary Jewish identity with
music, humor, puppetry and
dramatic images in Berlin,
Jerusalem and the Moon. The
theater group called on
Posnick to direct this New
York premiere of the produc-
tion, which recently drew
praise at Israeli and Euro-

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