From All Of Us At Audette Cadillac We Wish You A Happy and Healthy New Year 7100 ORCHARD LAKE RD. at the CIld Of NOrthWCtiterll Highway . WEST BLOOMFIELD 851-7200 OPEN MON. & THURS. 'til 9 P.M. To Our Friends & Customers Happy New Year Our Best Wishes For A Happy New Year! DOLL Ruthie & Marlene G HOSPITAL ('' 3947BV:r.klle2yMile (conveniently located near 1-696) 543-3115 Franklin Plaza 358-4085 29107 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield (2nd entrance from 12 Mile in rear) Happy New Year To All Our Friends And Customers ... SOLDIER Mon.-Sat. SHOP walti#tf. ¢U 0444 cwilooneia and Priench dE New at the Claymoor 358-1234 29260 Franklin Rd. Suite 125 Southfield, MI 48034 10 - 5:30 Fri. 10-8 gl ea4! HARPER FURNITURE 545-3600 Dance Company Has Smash Year DORA SOWDEN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS E ach week kibbutzniks from all over the coun- try abandon their jobs in the cowsheds, in the orchards, in the kitchen and in the nursery, and make their way to Kibbutz Ga'aton in Western Galilee. What, you might ask, are they doing there? The answer is, rehear- sing — they are members of the Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company. Of Israel's numerous dance companies, the Kibbutz Con- temporary Dance Company has to be the most unusual and one of the most popular. Complimentary and even en- thusiastic press reviews have created a growing demand for the company's services both at home and abroad. Made up entirely of kib- butzniks, only an occasional guest dancer joins, fascinated by the lifestyle of the mem- bers and envigored by the discipline of the company. Two such visitors currently at Kibbutz Ga'aton, the corn- pany headquarters, are Igor Vejsada of the New Ballet Brno, who saw the company when it came to Czechoslo- vakia on tour, and Gideon Obrarzanek, an Australian who has set one of his choreographic works for the company. Kibbutzniks of all ages get their training at the Ga'aton studios, but only the best can qualify for the company. "The standard of performance is as high and as demanding as any professional company anywhere in the world," says founder and artistic director Yehudit Arnon. "This is especially important as the company often goes abroad." Tours have testified that this is indeed the case. The company recently visited Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Germany and Austria. They have also been invited to Australia to perform for both adults and children at the Melbourne International Festival. Also on the agenda is a trip to China. It was the stubborn in- sistence of Ms. Arnon that led to the company's founding, and it was her work as teacher, choreographer, direc- tor and mentor that made the company what it is today. Born in Czechoslovakia and a survivor of the concentra- tion camps, Ms. Arnon travel- ed to Budapest after the war in the hope of finding her brother (which she did). She also furthered her studies in dance. In 1946 she married, and together with her hus- band went to Italy to await transport to Israel. Mean- while the Arnons took care of orphan children also waiting for transport and to pass the time began teaching them to dance. A founder member of Kib- butz Ga'aton, Ms. Arnon be- came preoccupied with the idea of dance education. "Nobody thought about it at the time," says Yehudit. "They were more concerned with folk dancing." Ms. Arnon persevered and eventually opened a studio in a disused tobacco shed. "The kibbutz had given up growing to- Kibbutzniks of all ages get their training at the Ga'aton studios. bacco," she says, "but one could still smell the leaves." Other kibbutzim began to express interest and in 1970 a small company was formed. Other regional authorities started promoting dance, but the Ga'aton studio, rebuilt and renovated, remains the Kibbutz Dance Company's professional headquarters. The company continually strives to improve its artistic and technical standards and so encourages the working contribution of well known dance teachers and choreog- raphers from Europe and America. These have in- cluded Jiri Kylian from the Netherlands, Mats Ek from Sweden, and Anna Sokolow from the United States. Dancer/choreographer Daniel Ezralow, who has lost count of his working visits to Israel, returned in September 1992 to choreograph Read My Hips for the company, set to original music by American composer Michel Colombier. "I did it first for the Hub- bard Street (Chicago) com- pany in 1989," said Mr. Ezralow over the telephone in between rehearsals. "I like working with these dancers. It's a serious company and I hope to do more work for it.- Yet the company's greatest achievement is its own