ENTERTAINMENT 1
SHOP TILL YOU DROP ,N
$59
INCLUDES THE FOLLOWING:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Map highlighting area shopping.
Jumbo shopping bag for each shopper.
Hosted cocktail reception.
Late night snacks.
Deluxe accommodations.
Full cooked-to-order breakfast.
Use of indoor pool & health club.
Valid Seven Days A Week (based on availability)
Phone 357-1100
Ask For Shopper's Package
Additional $10 for each person per room
Gobble Gobble Up
A Sweet Deal At (Compri)
$5
per room, plus tax
single occupancy
$10 per person additional
Wed., H-21 through Sun., 11-25, 1990
If you have friends and family coming in for Thanksgiving,
the (Compri) Hotel of Southfield is a wonderful place to send
your Guests. We offer all the comforts of home and more.
Rate Includes:
* Full cooked-to-order breakfast
* Daily manager's reception with hors d'oeuvres
* Free late night snacks
* Indoor pool, sauna, whirlpool and
exercise room
* Cable TV-HBO, CNN, ESPN
Dance members in character for "Peter and the Wolf."
Advance reservations required
For further information or reservations
Call
JCC Festival Dancers
Plan Anniversary
3571100
(CompriY Hotel
26000 AMERICAN DRIVE
SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 48034
(E
Fine Catering p
for all occasions
IT H E A T R
El
Presents
' " . ',
.,.,,f,N''' e'). II
1!
'LCCill
..
._
.4.1
' t • %
..
.
.
i
One of Metropolitan Detroit's Most
Beautiful and Exciting Restaurants
Wonderfully Prepared Catering
in Your Home, Office or at Our Restaurant
Fine Dining and Live Entertainment
LOVING CUP
Tuesday Through Saturday Evenings
BILLY ROSE
Monday Evenings
28875 FRANKLIN RD. at Northwestern Hwy. & 12 Mile
Southfield
358 3355
-
76
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1990
I I
. 1...ft
1...t1 ==
=
=
ili uu n a 1=--
--
4-1,
III Hui
:in
—
n
n
An Intimate Love Story
byTERRENCE McNALLY
Directed by
LAVINIA MOYER
with
MARY BREMER
DAVID REGAL
A Love Story of the '90s
Boy Meets Girl,
Boy Beds Girl, Then What!
NOW APPEARING
THRU DEC. 9
Performances Wed.-Sun
Call for times
and ticket information
875 - 8284
THIRD AVENUE AT
WEST GRAND BLVD.
The Festival Dancers of the
Maple-Drake Jewish Corn-
munity Center will celebrate
their 25th anniversary with a
production of Peter and the
Wolf 1 p.m. Dec. 2 at the
Maple-Drake building. In this
version, Peter will be
transformed into a girl and
Grandfather will become
Grandmother.
The choreography for Peter
and the Wolf was created by
Bennington and University of
Michigan graduate, Cathy
Lichtman. Melinda Pacha,
designer of University of
Detroit's Theatre Company,
has given a Russian folk-
inspired look to the costumes
and set.
Members of the Detroit
Chamber Winds will provide
the live instruments and jazz
pianist Gary Shunk will per-
form on the keyboard and
synthesizer. Senator Jack
Faxon will narrate.
Members of the company
are Patty Ceresnie as Petra;
Margo Cohen, the cat;
Michelle Millman, the wolf;
Rosevelyn Leiberman, the
grandmother; Linda Sher-
man, the duck; Chayala Pesis,
leader of the Hunters; and
guest dancer Suzanne Jonna
as the bird. The program will
open with a selection of
original songs by former
Festival Dancer, Elaine
Serling.
To mark this occasion, a
bronze sculpture by Michigan
artist Morris Brose will be
dedicated at the reception
following the performance.
The piece, titled Dancers, was
presented to the Jewish Com-
munity Center by Maurice
and Margo Cohen honoring
Harriet Berg's 30 years of
teaching at the Center.
Tickets are available at
Ticketmaster and the Jewish
Community Center's ticket
office. For information, call
the Center, 661-1000, Ext.
335.
Kaleidoscopes
At Science Center
"Kaleidoscopes: Reflections
of Science and Art," is an ex-
hibition which gives a look at
the creativity, design and
mathematics of kaleido-
scopes, Nov.17-Dec. 30 at the
Detroit Science Center.
The exhibit was organized
by the Smithsonian Institu-
tion Traveling Exhibition
Service (SITES) and the
Willamette Science and
Technology Center.
Along with over 20 interac-
tive displays, the exhibition
includes four antique scopes,
21 over-sized kaleidoscopes
and a teleidoscope which
turns the world into a
kaleidoscope. Hand-held
prisms, mirrors and pyramid
forms are used to explain the
scientific principles behind
kaleidoscopes.