ENTERTAINMENT The Management and Staff of THE ORIGINAL Flute, Piano In Concert DELICATESSEN & RESTAURANT 13821 W. 9 MILE RD. • OAK PARK 548-1111 or 541-2888 Extend Wishes For A Healthy & Happy Passover To Our Customers & Friends WE WILL CLOSE WED., APRIL 19 at .3 a.m. AND REOPEN WED., APRIL 26 at 11 a.m. Restaurant IS PROUD TO PRESENT 04 Straight from St. Largo Island The Colorful Sounds Of SHAWN RILEY FRIDAY & SATURDAY EVENINGS IN OUR Bogart Lounge 8 p.m. to 12 Mid. ENJOY OUR SPECIAL WINTER DINNERS I HAPPY & HEALTHY PASSOVER 142 E. Walled Lake Drive Walled Lake Mich. 669-1441 WE SERVE THE BEST! YOU PAY LESS! RIALTO Suffragette Is Musical Feature FAMOUS 2 FOR 1 & SINGLE DINNER FAMILY RESTAURANT 22740 WOODWARD Just S. of Woodward Ferndale • OPEN 7 DAYS • 544-7933 FROM Best Wishes to All.. CHARLIE & FRANK fora Happy Passove r PAPPAS AND OUR ENTIRE STAFF BECAUSE OF YOU, WE ARE ONE OF MICHIGAN'S TOP RESTAURANTS FOR COMPLETE DINING AROUND $5! COMPARE ANYWHERE! . . . IF YOU WANT THE BEST — GIVE US A TEST! CiliG;1\1 1.1:RIBS Es by HAPPY PASSOVER SEAFOOD _ • • I OPEN 7 DAYS-SUN.-THURS 11.10 CHICKEN, RIBS & SHRIMP WE DO BEST! ASTED , FRI-SAT. 11-11 118 SOUTH WOODWARD • ROYAL OAK JUST NORTH OF 10 MILE NEXT TO ZOO 544-1211 90 FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989 QUALITY AND CONSISTENCY IS OUR PRIORITY! A musical based on Susan B. Anthony and the women's suffrage movement, Susan B., plays at the Detroit Youtheatre at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday. The theatre is located in the Detroit In- stitute of Arts, 5200 Wood- ward, Detroit. There is a charge. For information, con- tact the DIA ticket office, 832-2730. Readers Theater Performance COCKTAILS • DIET DISHES • CHILDREN'S MENU • ALL FOOD FRESH & HOMEMADE I DINE IN & CARRY-OUT AVAILABLE Eugenia Zukerman and Andre-Michel Schub will ap- pear at the Jewish Communi- ty Center Maple/Drake Build- ing on April 22 at 9 p.m. Flutist Zukerman has ap- peared with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Minnesota Orchestra, the National Sym- phony, the English Chamber Orchestra, the Israel Chamber Orchestra and the Royal Philharmonic. Festival appearances have included the Aspen Music Festival, Mostly Mozart, Ravinia, Tanglewood, the Edinburgh Festival, London's South Bank Festival, Spoleto Festival in Italy, Yehudi Menuhin's Gstaad Festival (Switzerland), and the Schleswig-Holstein Festival in West Germany. Pianist Schub has ap- peared with the Boston Sym- phony, Bournemouth Sym- phony, Chicago Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, Concer- tgebouw Orchestra, Detroit Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, New York Philharmonic and the Philadelphia Orchestra. He has given recitals in every concert hall and festival, including Blossom, Casals, Mann Music Center, Mostly Mozart, Ravinia, Tanglewood and Wolf Trap. For tickets, call the Center, 661-1000, ext. 293. •a_ C 0 0_ 0 The second performance of the spring series of Readers Theater will be on Sunday at 4 p.m. in the DeRoy Studio Theater at the Maple/ Drake Jewish Community Center. A complimentary pre- theater wine bar will begin at 3:15 p.m. This program is under the sponsorship of the Institute for Retired Professionals at the Jewish . Community Center and supported by an endowment from the Irwin and Sadie Cohn Fund for . Visiting Scholars and Artists in Residence. Works by Jo Sinclair, Henry Roth, Ursula F. Sherman, and Saul Wineman will be presented. Participating ac- tors are: Shirley Benyas, Harry Goldstein, Evelyn Or- bach and Paul Winter. Artistic Director is Yolanda Fleischer. Tickets will be available at the door at 3:15 p.m. or by calling Readers Theater, 967-4030. Movie Runs In iWo Parts The film version of Charles Dickens' novel Little Dorrit will be shown at the Detroit Film Theatre in two parts over the next two weeks. A six-hour screening will be shown at 2:30 p.m. April 30. Little Dorrit, Part One will be shown Friday through Sun- day. Little Dorrit, Part Two will be shown April 21-23. The Theatre is located in the Detroit Institute of Arts, 5200 Woodward, Detroit. There is a charge. For information, con- tact the DIA ticket office, 832-2730. Mason To Play Palace In May Comedian Jackie Mason come to The Palace at 8 p.m. May 24. Mason, who writes all of his own material, has been nominated for a Grammy and has won an Emmy for best writing in a comedy special. His long-running, 'Ibny Award winning, one-man Broadway show, The World According to Me has played to sell-out, standing-room-only crowds. Mason has made numerous television appearances, in- cluding "The rIbnight Show" and "20/20". He has also ap- peared in several motion pic- tures, including Caddyshack II and History Of The World Part I. There is a charge. For infor- mation, contact The Palace box office, 377-8600. Mime Theater Program Set The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will present physical theater actor Leonard Pitt, who will per- form his original work "The Art of Face" on Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Irwin Green Auditorium at Hillel, 1429 Hill, Ann Arbor. Pitt founded the Leonard Pitt School where he taught