re ENTERTAINMENT tCAtit WAFFLE 1- WAFFLE N' OMELETTE ■ ° OMELETTE BUY ONE PLAIN WAFFLE OR ONE (tb O I' ,>s il , o:e:kkes (. / 01:9 \wa 3 GREAT LOCATIONS: 26505 NORTHWESTERN HWYJSOUTHFIELD 29556 ORCHARD LK.IFARMINGTON HILLS NEAR 13 MILE 6680 ORCHARD MK BLOOMFIELD THE BRASS POINTE r WINTER SPECIALS 2.. $ 11 45 BAR•B-Q CHICKEN FOR 2 $795 BAR-B-Q SLAB FOR I DINE•IN OR CARRY-OUT Expires 4-22-88 JN THE BRASS POINTE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11 a.m. 24234 Orchard Lake Rd. at 10 Mile 478-11377 COUPON FAMILY DINING 29267 SOUTHFIELD (IN FARRELL SHOPPING PLAZA) BET. 12 & 13 569.1112 • • • • • • • • 2 FOR 1 FRESH WHITE FISH BRAISED LAMB BONELESS BREAST OF CHICKEN VEGETARIAN PLATE STUFFED GRAPE LEAVES (Reg. or Meat) FOR CHICKEN KABOB TWO! BROILED SCROD 6 DAYS A WEEK FROM 3 p.m. SHISH KABOB TUES. THRU SUN. • 1/2 MOUSSAKA, 1/2 SPINACH PIE 50 COMPLETE CARRY-OUT AND CATERING ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SOUP OR SALAD, RICE OR POT., VEG. & HOMEMADE PITA BREAD OR GREEK BREAD JN A Favorite Place For Food & Friends dilNre „ t &D ell Resta-ran Featuring Over 400 Fantastic Menu Items - - - _ 20% 0 YOUR ENTIRE BILL AT ANY OF OUR 8 LOCATIONS! • Not More Than 4 Persons Per Coupon JN, Celebrating Opening of Our 8th Location GRAND RIVER & 8 MILE (Next to El Nibble Nook) 473-5441 Also Visit Us At 10 MILE & MEADOWBROOK (Bet. Haggerty & Novi Rd.) 349-2885 Our Other Locations: • Plymouth • Livonia • Westland • Garden City • Taylor • Howell ALL OPEN 24 HOURS EXCEPT NOVI 58 FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1988 Continued from preceding page FREE!! VALID MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FRANCHISES AVAILABLE IN SELECTED AREAS L The Attic PLAIN OMELETTE ONLY WITH TOAST & JELLY . . . GET ONE .. . j film, says Steenburgen. The Attic, perhaps the best telefilm ever made on the Holocaust, left its star drain- ed. But then it elicited similar reactions from even casual visitors to the exterior scenes shot in Amsterdam. "People, who recalled too well the Nazis in control of their city, had tears stream- ing down their faces,” recalls Steenburgen. "When we were shooting a scene of people be- ing pulled from their hiding places, one gentleman nearby said that he had been one of those people himself, that he had been taken away by the Nazis." And he pointed to his jaw, which had been broken during the scuffle some 40 years ago, as evidence of the sad memories he must carry ith him forever. Steenburgen, 35, has her own memories of the diary of Anne Frank. "I read the diary when I was 13," she says. "It was very far away from my life." But as she grew older, the distance narrowed. "If you read it as an adult, it changes, as it did for me," she says. "When you're older, you look at things differently." And, says the Newport, Ark., native who has starred in such films as Ragtime and A Midsummer Night's Corn- Reluctant Heroine Miep Gies does not have to watch The Attic to be remind- ed of the harrowing horrors of the Holocaust. She and her husband, Jan, were responsible for saving — albeit temporarily — the Ot- to Frank family from the Nazis. It is their story that in- spired The Attic: Anne Frank Remembered, the new CBS telefilm to air Sunday night. "It is a memory I live with every day," says Miep Gies. "One I will never forget." But she would rather people forget such "nonsense" as the fact that she is a heroine. "I always say, 'Please, don't see us as heroes. We only did our human duty.' " Dutifully, the Gieses con- tinue their work. "We often go to Germany, to schools, because we came to conclu- sion that young people in Ger- many did not know all things that happened during the war," she says. And the Gieses want to tell them. Don't talk to either Miep or Jan Gies about the fading of the Holocaust from the public's conscience. "It is still real in our thoughts:' says Miep Gies. — M.E. t Mary Steenburgen, as Miep Gies, discovers Anne Frank's diary among the remains of the Frank family's belongings in "The Attic." edy, she knows she will from now on. "Making this film," says Steeburgen, "has chang- ed my life." GOING PLACES Continued from preceding page The Gondoliers, now through Sunday, admission, _ 761-7855. TAP LTD. Novi Hilton, 2111 Haggerty, Novi. An Evening With Oscar, Saturdays through May 11, admission. 349-4000. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN POWER SERIES Power Center, Ann Arbor, On the Town, now through Sunday, admission. 764-0450. HENRY FORD MUSEUM Henry Ford Museum Theater, Dearborn, Peg 0' My Heart, now through May 14, admission. 271-1620. SHAW FESTIVAL Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, You Never Can Tell, now through October 15, admission. 416-468-2172. UNIVERSITY PLAYERS Trueblood Theatre, Ann Arbor, Angel City, now through Sunday, admission. 764-0450. BONSTELLE THEATER 3424 Woodward, Detroit, Kiss of the Spider Woman, today through Sunday and April 22-24, admission. 577-3010. WOODS PLAYERS Oakland Community College Theater, Lincoln and Main, Royal Oak, Cactus Flower, today, Saturday and April 22-23, admission. 545-3983. PERFORMING ARTS THEATER Smith Theater, 27055 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Hills, An Evening With Mark Twain, today and Saturday, admission. 471-7700. FARMINGTON COMMUNITY CENTER 24705 Farmington Road, Farmington Hills, Ann Arbor Goodtime Players, Rumplestiltskin, Thursday, admission. 477-8404. MUSIC SOUTHFIELD CONCERTS-IN-THE- GARDEN — Tel-12 Mall, Southfield, Alexander Zonjic, Sunday, admission. 354-4717. MEADOW BROOK ESTATE Oakland University, Varner Recital Hall, Rochester, spring concert, today and Saturday, admission. 370-3013. CHAMBER MUSIC