ENTERTAINMENT UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT DOMINICO'S RESTAURANT and LOUNGE Homebaked Challah Available Thurs., Fri., Sat. and Holidays (West Bloomfield Only) Val's Veggie We hid a salad in your bread. You can actually see the fresh zucchini, fresh carrots, parsley, celery, spinach and onion in this nutritious loaf. For your soup, salad or sandwich. Baked with organically-grown unbleached flour (and a little love). Enjoy this fresh alternative soon. 2847 COOLIDGE HWY., BERKLEY Between 11 and 12 Mile Roads 541-7670 SUNDAY SPECIAL FRESH ROASTED TURKEY With Mashed Potatoes, Stuffing, Gravy, Squash, Cranberries & Green Beans . . . Salad & Bread $795 per person 15% OFF ENTIRE FOOD BILL! DINE IN OR CARRY-OUT • 1 Coupon Per Check • Not Good With Any Other Coupons GOOD 7 DAYS A WEEK! ANYHOUR! Expires Dec. 8, 1988 JN Rochester West Bloomfield 818 N. Main Street 4301 Orchard Lake Road 652-1280 Crosswinds Mall 737-1959 Hours: Monday-Friday 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Saturday 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Beau Jack's Food & Spirits OUR FULL MENU STANDARD IS COMPLETE QUALITY! Amercan Heart Association Menu Available Dress: Casual, Credit Cards: American Ex- press, Diners Club, Master Card and Visa. Open: 6 days, Lunch and Dinner and Sun- day Dinner 4 p.m. til 9:00 p.m. 4108 W. Maple • BirMingham, MI • 1 block W. of Telegraph We Serve Beer-Wine & Liquor Private Banquet Rooms Complete Carry-Out On All Occasions • • • • • Special to The Jewish News • 626-2630 The Pike Street Restaurant Invites You To Enjoy The Wonderful Cuisine Of It's Award Winning Executive Chef Brian Polcyn FINE DINING . . . CATERING . . . BANQUET FACILITIES 1 \ Let Us Help You Plan Your All-Occasion Parties Call For Further Information & Reservations West . Pike Street off Wide Track (Woodward) • Pontiac 334-7878 Kitchen Hours: Tues.-Thurs. 5 to 10 Fri. &Sat. 5 to 11, Sun. 4 to 8 Reservations Suggested 1990 Hiller Rd. (Old Orchard Rail) Off Pontiac Rail to Old Orchard flail to Hiller Road 92 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1988 OPEN SUN. 4 p.m.- 8 p.m. 682-1347 Weston's 'Rappaport' Role 'Most Challenging' VICTORIA BELYEU DIAZ Alert to Parents! gh Onstage at the Birmingham Theater, veteran actor Jack Weston is playing the most difficult role of his career. When we ask you to please recognize the signs of cystic fibrosis and other lung- damaging diseases, we're not trying to alarm you. Look at it this way. If your child does NOT have C F or another serious lung-damaging disease, he has nothing to lose by checking with a doctor, or taking a simple diagnostic test. If your child DOES have C F, or another 'condition that could damage his lungs, he has a lot to lose by not having the chance for early diagnosis and prompt effective medical care. So, when you look at it like that...we hope you'll look at this and learn the following: SIGNS OF LUNG-DAMAGING DISEASE 1. Recurrent wheezing 2. Persistent coughing/excessive mucus 3. Pneumonia more than once 4. Excessive appetite/poor weight gain 5. Clubbing (enlargement of fingertips) Cystic fibrosis signs also may include: salty taste of the skin; persistent, bulky diarrhea; nasal polyps. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Fighting Children's Lung Diseases I hi. vat, COntribtfied o plihhc •cr, ice S ixty-three-year-old Jack Weston has been acting professionally now for almost 40 years. Beginning his career in 1950 with a role on Broadway in a play called Season in the Sun, the bearish actor with a voice that sounds like something between a growl and a giggle has since appeared. in countless stage, movie, and television roles. Usually cast in comedy roles (such as Stewpot in South Pacific, or Doris Day's cab driver/baby-sitter in Please Don't Eat the Dasies), he's also played parts like the crook-for-hire, opposite Steve McQueen, in The Thomas Crown Affair, and a sinister villain in Wait Until Dark, with Audrey Hepburn. Weston's acting career also includes many TV credits. He appeared in two series, "Rod Brown of the Rocket Ranger" and "The Hathaways." He also has had roles in "The Twilight Zone," "Playhouse 90," "U.S. Steel Hour," "Gunsmoke" and "The Un- touchables." Ask him what's been the most challenging role of his career, though, and he'll I quickly tell you it's the one he's doing right now at the Birmingham Theater — that of the aging, Jewish tale- spinner, Nat, in Herb Gard- ner's comedy-drama, I'm Not Rappaport. Gardner's Tony Award- winning play, set in present- day New York, focuses on the fiery old Socialist, Nat, and his relationship with Midge, another elderly man he meets on a bench in a corner of Cen- tral Park. "In a way, I see Rappaport as a love story between these two men, although it's not sexual,of course," says Weston. "Their friendship is very important. They need each other. I think that's what the play is really about — need. "When they asked me if I wanted to do it, I told them to send (the script) over and I'd read it," he says. "But, when I read it, I thought I could never do it — especially in the short amount of time we had for rehearsal. Ten days! Eighty-two pages! "Then, they convinced me," he adds, smiling, "with money." "It's hard, though, really hard. Every night, before you go on, you get kinda knotted up, thinking 'How am I going to push that play tonight?' Then, when you go on,it's like