I ENTERTAINMENT
SEROS
10%
SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT
29221 NORTHWESTERN HWY. IN FRANKLIN SHOPPING PLAZA • Southfield • 358-2353
SPECIALS FRI., APR. 10 THRU THURS., APR. 16 AFTER 2 p.m.
r
—1 raRECIAN-STYLE1 r
FRESH
BROILED
LAKE SUPERIOR
4
LAMB
CHOPS
WHITEFISH
W/Rice & Veg.
W/Pot. & Veg.
$595
$ 6 95
TH6PIED -1
MARSALA
SIRLOIN
OR
PICCATA W/Fresh STEAK
Mushroom Sauce,
Pot. & Veg.
$ 5a 6 5 $495
CHICKEN -1
ALL ABOVE SPECIALS ALSO INCLUDE SOUP. SALAD
DESSERT (Rice Pudding or Tapioca or Ice Cream) & BREAD BASKET
.
• MUST PRESENT COUPON FOR ABOVE SPECIALS • SORRY. NO DISCOUNTS ON SPECIALS
• ALL COUPONS GOOD FOR ENTIRE PARTY
BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS
Superb Northern Italian Cuisine
Sat. 4-12
Mon.-Fri. 11-11
Sun. 2-11
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DINNER PACKAGES BY MARIO'S & GEM THEATRE
TICKETS FOR 2 & DINNER
$75 *
includes carafe of wine
*No shellfish or tip incl.
FRI. & SAT. NIGHTS
$85 *
Ask For Mark or Vince
4222 Second Blvd. Bet. Willis & Canfield • Valet Parking
832.1616
BEEF SHORT RIBS $ 565
DINNER
CHOICE OF SOUP OR SALAD
1-800-US-BONDS
DELI and RESTAURANT
SHIVA DINNERS & PARTY TRAYS
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Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner ... Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 7 a.m.-3 p.m.
352-4940
21754 W. 11 MILE AT LAHSER • HARVARD ROW Fax: 352-9393
9
MAVERICK'S
4309 N. Woodward
at 131/2 Mile
Royal Oak
Family Dining
25938 Middlebelt Rd. at 11 Mile Rd. in the Mid-11 Plaza
Farmington Hills I WE SERVE BEER & WINE 1 476.1750
DINNER FOR 2
CHICKEN
MARSALA
INCLUDES: • SOUP OR SALAD
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OPEN 7 DAYS
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When an entree of equal or greater
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Offer expires 4/23/92
An Israeli Violinist
Takes Center Stage
MICHAEL ELKIN
Special to The Jewish News
V
iolinist Shlomo Mintz
conducts himself with
an aplomb that comes
from years of experience at
center stage in the musical
world.
Now he gets the chance to
conduct others, too.
Mr. Mintz is listed as con-
ductor and soloist with the
Israel Chamber Orchestra.
The ensemble has been a
star in a country where each
musical group seems to form
a constellation of its own.
It takes considerable pluck
for any musician to put his
stamp on a group nearly 30
years old. But the suave
violinist appears to have
done just that.
"It is a new dimension for
me," says Mr. Mintz of the
role he assumed in 1989.
"And I am always looking
for a challenge."
One is challenged to find a
musical honor or award that
has eluded the violinist vir-
tuoso, who performs all over
the world and has made in-
numerable recordings.
For the record, Mr. Mintz
considers himself a violinist
first and foremost. But stan-
ding on the other end of the
baton has provided an in-
valuable education,
expanding his own musical
horizons, he acknowledges.
Not that Shlomo Mintz
feels that the distance bet-
ween conductor and musi-
cian is an inviolable space.
"I don't regard music as a
case of bosses and slaves,"
he says. "It is a question of
total harmony."
Shlomo Mintz
In a way, the chamber
group seems a perfect home
for Mr. Mintz. Many of the
musicians are Russian
emigres; Mr. Mintz is, too —
although he left Russia for
Israel at the age of 2.
Thirty-one years later —
and 22 years after making
his concerto debut with the
Israel Philharmonic Or-
chestra under the baton of
Zubin Mehta — Shlomo
Mintz has matured into one
of the classical music world's
most prominent performers.
The musician demands -(
much of himself. "I am
challenged by music," says
Mr. Mintz. ❑
Michael Elkin is the enter-
tainment editor of the Jewish
Exponent in Philadelphia.
Southfield Library
Sets Spring Forum
The Southfield Public
Library's annual Spring
Forum will be offered 1 p.m.,
7 p.m. and one Sunday after-
noon at 2 p.m.
All programs are free and
will take place in the Mar-
cotte Room of the library.
• April 27, 1 p.m. — "Dot
Your I's and Cross Your T's"
will be a handwriting
analysis with Andrew Shaw
of Oakland Community
College.
• April 29, 1 p.m. — "How
To Talk To Your Doctor" will
be comic skits and a presen-
tation by Yasmina Bouraoui
and the "Mythbegotten
Players" from the Oakland
County Health Division.
• April 30, 7 p.m. —
"Esperanto: The Interna-
tional Language of Business
and Travel" a demonstration
by author-attorney Sherry
Wells and several Esperanto
students.
• May 3, 2 p.m. — Les
Miserables, a musical book
review by mezzo-soprano Bar-
bara Alexander and accom-
panist Doris Hall.
• May 5, 1 p.m. — "What
Does It Mean?" will be dream
analysis by Virginia Lee-
shock of the Michigan
Metaphysical Society.
• May 12, 1 p.m. — "Grow-
ing Self-Esteem" will provide
hints on feeling good about