VIV ENTERTAINMENT T wo ways to enjoy Book Fair Continued from preceding page a home-cooked Thanksgiving dinner without doing the home cooking. At Our Place. Join us for our delicious Thanksgiving Day Buffet. You'll find a bounty of traditional holiday favorites and some tasty surprises from country pate and carved roast tom turkey to pumpkin pie, crepes suzettes and everything in between. Served 12 noon to 5 pm., adults $17.95, children 5-12 $8.95, children 4 and under free. Reservations required. At Your Place. Or serve our Thanksgiving Day Feast To Go in the privacy of your own home. We'll prepare an exquisite traditional turkey dinner with all the trimmings. You're spared the work, but get all the pleasure. Suitable for 8-10 people, $150 00. Place your order no later than November 20. Pick up November 21 or 22. NOVI HILTON For dinner reservations or to order your turkey feast Call 349-4000 Ext. 1052 1-275 at 8 Mile Road Novi/Metropolitan Detroit Experience West Coast sophistication without the pretention. Go against the grain. Cut down on salt. Adding salt to your food could subtract years from your life. Because in some people salt contributes to high blood pressure, a con- dition that increases your risk of heart disease. RESTAURANT Featuring: Homemade breads, chargrilled specialties, fresh seafood, sandwiches, salads & irresistible desserts. Present this invitation to your waitperson for 10% OFF YOUR GUEST CHECK (excluding alcoholic beverages) 112 east third street royal oak 398-2777 2 blocks south of 11 mile, 1/2 block east of main By your request we are now open for dinner Sunday 6:00-9:30 p.m. 88 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1990 I • American Heart Association the Israeli intelligence com- munity, from the Mossad, responsible for foreign opera- tions, to the Shin Bet, the agency in charge of internal security, comparable to the FBI. The book provides in- sights into such exploits of Israeli intelligence as the Eichmann capture and the raid on the Iraqi nuclear reac- tor. Mr. Raviv will speak at 7:30 p.m. Pre-schoolers, grade school children and their parents will participate in programs and presentations starting at 9:30 a.m. Activities will in- clude listening to books on tape, browsing and buying books, book binding, book- mark making and the follow- ing presentations: "A Journey Through the Jewish Holidays" by children's entertainer and puppeteer Maureen Schiff- man will be at 10 a.m. With the help of her puppet monkey "Coco," Ms. Schiff- man will use stories, move- ment and original songs to teach young people about the cycle of Jewish holidays. "Hand-Me-Down Tales" by professional story teller Laura Pershin, children's librarian for the Ann Arbor Public Library, will be at 11 a.m. Ms. Pershin will present Jewish folk tales for the youngest members of her au- dience and also tell personal stories of her family's im- migration from Russia to the United States. A talk for fifth and sixth graders on the craft of writing children's books will be given by Charlotte Herman, at 11:30 a.m. Ms. Herman's most recent Jewish children's book is The House on Walen- ska Street about an eight- year-old Jewish girl's journey from a small Russian town to America, based on the ex- perience of Ms. Herman's mother in the early 20th century. For information, call Merle Goldman, 971-0990. `One Monkey' At Music Hall Don Evan's One Monkey Don't Stop No Show starring Kim Fields, Chip Fields and Ted Lange and directed by Ron Milner will open its na- tional tour at Detroit's Music Hall Center Nov. 20-25. One Monkey Don't Stop No Show is a peek into all three rings of a domestic circus. In Ring #1 we find the Rev. Avery Harrison (Ted Lange) heading full-speed into a mid- life crisis with his wife (Chip Fields) riding upward mobili- ty in high gear. In Ring #2 is their son Felix (Patrick Malone), the dentist-to-be who has just discovered girls. Unfortunately the girl he has chosen doesn't quite meet his parents' expectations. And finally, in Ring #3 we have the minister's niece, Beverly (Kim Fields), a wild girl from the "wrong side of the tracks" who arrives just in time to totally disrupt the household, and the object of her affection — Caleb (Lewis Dix), a somewhat disreputable nightclub owner. Only families can drive each other this crazy — but somehow everything works out as it should be! Tickets are on sale at the Music Hall Center Box Office and all TicketMaster Outlets. For information, call the Music Hall, 963-7600. Musicians League Sets Recital The Detroit Musicians League will present its adult student recital 2 p.m. Nov. 11, at Marygrove College. The program is being chaired and arranged by Betty Kowalsky Stasson. The teachers who will pre- sent their students are: piano, Roger Jamison, Glenn LeClair, Patricia Lobbestael, Irene Muse, Isabelle Tulk, Ar- vi Sinka, and Betty Kowalsky Stasson; voice, Mary George Livingston, Virginia Smith; violin, Jerome Stasson. The program is open to the public at no charge. Warren Symphony Hosts Pianist Warren Symphony, The Mi- chigan Orchestra, will open its 18th concert season 7:30 p.m. Nov. 11 at the Warren Woods Community Theater. Soviet pianist Mykola Suk will play the Third Piano Concerto of Beethoven. Mr. Suk was born in Kiev to a family of musicians. He studied at the Kiev Special Music School and later at the Moscow Conservatory where he now teaches. He was awarded Laureate of the First Prize at the International Liszt and Bartok Competition. Mykola Suk's Warren Sym- phony debut is made possible through the assistance of the Ukrainian Arts Society of Michigan. This concert will be the first in a series of five. For ticket information, call the Warren Symphony, 754-2950.