TRAVEL
PASSOVER '91
RESORT CLASSICS, INC.
presents
RESORTS OF CHOICE
FOR THE PASSOVER CONNOISSEUR
Resort Classics, Inc. is the newest and
most exciting event in Passover touring.
All our resorts are 4 or 5 Star rated.
At Resort Classics, we select resorts
with spacious grounds, a magnificent setting
and outstanding facilities and amenities.
Our food is the finest
our service incomparable
and our programming is first rate.
DETROIT'S
HIGHEST
RATES
Minimum Deposit of $500
12 MOO CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
All programs are coordinated by
Jeanne Litvin and Mel Teitelbaum
noted for coordinating
the most elegant and classic
Kosher events.
For Passover 1991,
choose from the following:
THE ARIZONA BILTMORE
INNISBROOK
LA COSTA
THE OJAI VALLEY INN
HYATT REGENCY BEAVER CREEK
(A Passover Ski Vacation in Colorado!)
RATES BEGIN AT
Adults: $1359
Teens: $1075
Children: $675
RESORT CLASSICS, INC.
We set the standard for
style and elegance in Kosher events
6.850%
1.018°Ii
Effective Annual Yield
Compounded Quarterly.
(800) 727-6837
-.
assover e 5
TAHTE
1991
751
Diamond K
Glatt Kosher
r
This is a fixed rate account that
is insured to $100,000 by the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. (FDIC). Substantial In-
terest Penalty for early
withdrawal from certificate
accounts. Rates subject to
change without notice.
HOTEL
BEACH &
TENNIS
CLUB
Deauvi
ON THE OCEAN AT 67TH STREET • MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA
Our 9th Year
8 - 9 & 10
NIGHT PACKAGES
One of Miami Beach's
Largest and Most
Luxurious Hotels.
FIRST
SECURITY
SAVINGS
BANK
SEDURIM & SERVICES
WILL BE CONDUCTED
BY CANTOR
ASHER SCHARF
from
• 600 Beautifully Refur-
$795*
bished Accommodations
• Wide Ocean Beach
• 2 Pools • Children's
Recreation Room • On-
Premises Tennis
per person double occ
• Dancing • Enter-
Plus Tax & Tips
ainment & Shows
STRICTLY GLATT KOSHER
• Delicious Cuisine
Religious & Cultural Services & Programs
• Complimentary Tea
Conducted by Rabbis Jerome & Hersch Markowitz
Room
L
INCLUDING
3 MEALS DAILY
MAIN OFFICE
4=1 ■ 110
For Information & Reservations Call
TOLL FREE: 1-800-327-3734 or 305-531-3446
2600 lelegfaph Rd.
Bloomfield Hills
(Jusl South or
Square lake)
or write Passover '90 Deauville P.O. Box 402868, Miami Beach, Florida 33140
.......
IN DETROIT, CALL BOB TORGOW: DAYS: 961-4330 - EVES 355-5645
PHONE
338.1100
352.7700
HOURS:
MON.-THURS.
9:30-4:30
FRI.
1
9:30-6:00
.
.01.11•PC
!
OP Is OR tuPtiTy
58
FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1991
FSB
Arts In New York
Cure Winter Blahs
ROSE KLEINER
Special to The Jewish News
A
few good plays, con-
certs, exhibits, and
even free Torah
classes, in New York, can
often be the right antidote for
winter blues. There are also
two large expositions schedul-
ed for February, and the
number of kosher restaurants
continues to grow. For singles,
there are opportunities to en-
joy the city and to meet
people.
Neil Simon's comedy I
Ought To Be In Pictures, an
American Jewish Theatre
production, is at the Susan
Bloch Theatre. Spinoza,
about the Dutch Jewish
philosopher, Baruch de
Spinoza, is at the Jewish
Repertory Theatre. The
musical Grand Hotel con-
tinues at the Martin Beck
Theatre, and Fiddler On The
Roof, with Topol, is at the
Gershwin Theatre.
Jackie Mason, Brand New,
is featured at the Neil Simon
Theatre, and The Rothschilds
is running at the Circle in the
Square Theatre.
The Mensch, a comedy
about a young man trying to
be a mensch, is at the Judith
Anderson.
Two plays for lovers of Yid-
dish (who need not necessari-
ly know the language) are
now running in New York,
one of them on Broadway.
Those Were The Days, a new
English-Yiddish musical
review, is at the Edison
Theatre.
Father's Inheritance, a Yid-
dish musical (simultaneous
English translation is
available), based on Jacob
Gordin's The Charlatan, is at
the Folksbiene Theatre.
On the musical scene, Lin-
coln Center's Mozart
Bicentennial opens this
winter and continues through
August 1992. All of Mozart's
835 compositions will be per-
formed, and more than 500
events will be presented.
The Metropolitan Opera
has lined up for February
works by Mozart (Don
Giovanni, Die Zauberflote),
Beethoven (Fidelio), and Ver-
di (Luisa Miller), to name but
a few.
The Great Performers at
Lincoln Center series, at
Alice Tully Hall, has schedul-
ed an all-Mozart concert, by
the Juilliard Quartet, for Feb.
13. Between Feb. 1 and 27,
the Juilliard School will give
a series of ten fascinating free
concerts at Alice Tully Hall.
For accommodation in the
city, near all the action, the
New York Hilton's All That
Jazz special weekend package
comes with Sunday brun-
cheon and the option for an
additional night. They also
feature a Bounce Back Week-
end package and a Romance
package.
For visitors who come to
New York with children there
is a new program at the
Drake Swissotel. The pro-
gram makes it easier for
business travelers to have
their families join them on
weekends. Amenities for the
young set include a 10-page
coloring book, with crayons, a
child's handbook to New
York, with games and puzzles,
and various other treats.
Several weekend packages
are available at the Hotel
Inter-Continental. All of
them can be supplemented
with the Good Health option,
which gives visitors special
privileges at the hotel's new
million dollar health club.
An exciting new exhibit at
the Yeshiva University
Museum is part of the world-
wide commemoration of the
500th anniversary of the ex-
pulsion of Jews from Spain,
during the Inquisition. The
Sephardic Journey:
1492-1992, contains more
than 1,000 items, from
ceremonial objects to
costumes and books.
Sholem Aleichem in
America, a celebration of the
great Yiddish writer (on
whose work Fiddler on the
Roof is based), is on display at
the YIVO Institute.
The Museum of Stony
Brook, Long Island, is show-
ing Jews in American
Cinema: 1898-1990, which
traces the portrayal of Jews in
film, and their impact on the
film industry.
Although the Jewish
Museum is closed for two
years, for renovations, it is
holding exhibits at the New
York Historical Society. Its
first show is Jacques Lipsitz:
A Life in Sculpture.
The Jewish Family Expo, a
hands-on experience, will be
held at the Jacob Javits Con-
vention Center from Jan.
26-Feb. 3. Visitors can watch
Jewish craftsmen making
shofars, wine, olive oil, and
tefillin, as part of the expo.
The International Jewish
Expo '90 (Feb. 16-18), at Pier
88 (55th St. and 12th Ave.)
will have a variety of enter-
tainment, food and gift
displays, and much more. ❑