Miss Michigan Returns Engaged RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER Pageant, says she feels lucky to have participated in the Atlantic City gala, though she's somewhat deflated about not being named one of the 10 final- ists. "It's always disappointing whenever you don't get as far as you wanted to go," she said. "But I was one of the lucky 50 who was there. To go is such an honor, real- ly a privilege." Ms. Heisler won the $2,000 Quality of Life Award for being first run- ner-up in a pageant compe- tition that judges level of community service. The 23- year-old University of Michigan graduate attribut- es this success to her long- time involvement with the Miss Michigan M iss Michigan Stacey Heisler, who ap- peared last week in the Miss America ! , i t, w , a vaint,f,6 Girl Scouts. She said she was pleas- antly surprised when a Jewish newspaper in Atlantic City, N.J., pub- lished a short article about her. She was asked to respond to the fact that pageant week coincided with Rosh Hashanah. "(Pageant organizers) can only do so much as far as working around the holi- days," she said. With so much time invested in the event, Ms. Heisler did not want to miss out. She met her rivals dur- ing the first week of September. "Everybody was a little nervous and hesistant at first, but we got to know each other. They were really friendly. These are young ladies that have been through the same things I've been through," she said. Accommodations at Trump Castle and elegant dinner excursions made Ms. Heisler feel like royalty: "They really roll out the red carpet." A reception at the Atlantic City train station, where the women arrived to begin rehearsals, "really made us feel special." Rehearsals lasted from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. Lunch breaks were filled with a flurry of photo shoots and press interviews. "It was so much fun for me because I really enjoy that kind of work," she said. But Ms. Heisler now says, "That's it for pageantry." She has returned home with different plans for the future: "I'll be getting mar- ried (to Kevin Mason of Birmingham)." At home in Livonia, Miss Michigan will remain busy juggling wedding prepara- tions with work and upcom- ing violin performances with her band. CORRECTION A Sept. 17 feature in- correctly quoted author Barry Rudner. His cor- rect statement was, "I'd rather be well read than well known." In a Sept. 17 article on a job awareness cam- paign, Leonard Nagel was inaccurately identi- fied as an agent of the Internal Revenue Ser- vice. He is licensed as an enrolled agent who can represent clients who have problems with the IRS. The caption under the page 1 photograph Sept. 17 should have identified Israeli For- eign Minister Shimon Peres signing the peace agreement. ❑ aple-Drake JCC th Expanded Selections RUTH LITT'MANN STAFF WRITER With a re and demeanore, Detroiter Mirjana read a A Modern Love Story by Diane Levenberg. Ms. Urosev was one of four thespians who participated in this month's Readers Theatre performance, held Sept. 12 in the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center's DeRoy Theatre. It was host- ed by David Magidson. The show — a series of four sometimes funny, some- times haunting — short sto- ries, marks the beginning of Readers Theater's seventh season. Readers Theater was founded in 1987 at the Jewish Community Center by former JCC Executive Director Irwin Shaw and a number of Jewish actors and actresses. Since its inception, the program has grown to include a total of 36 Jews and gentiles who have pre- sented 144 stories, essays, novellas and poems. This year, for the first time, shows will include sto- four Mirjana Urosev A A beam of light splin- tered the auditorium's darkness, revealing a barren stage and a black-haired actress. No props. The actress sat poised on a bar stool. She held copies of a short story in front of her. es by gentile authors, like thick Russian accent, the during the late 1980s and eat by Joyce Carol Oates. next with whiny New York- early 1990s. He also partici- hit Yolanda Fleischer, artis- tic director for Readers Theatre, says all readings have something in common: universal themes. "If its really good writing, there's a universal applica- tion of the story, whether its about a Vietnam vet or a woman looking back on her "It's an active listening process." childhood," said Ms. Fleischer, who also teaches at the University of Detroit- Mercy and Wayne State University. "People can see themselves in the stories and the stories in themselves." Individuals who partici- pate in Readers Theatre are faced with a tougher chal- lenge than many who act from scripts, Ms. Fleischer said. Readers juggle prose with dialogue. They punctu- ate one paragraph with a ese. They must verbalize the thoughts, hopes and frustra- tions of men, women, chil- dren. "They have to be every thing," Ms. Fleischer said Sitting on the barstool, bathed in the yellow light, Mary Bremer, an adult, recounted the memories of a little girl, speaking in a little girl's voice. David Regal and David Fox changed personas in a similar manner. But the effectiveness of Readers Theatre is not con- tingent on the artists' talent or repertoire. "It requires a personal investment from the audi- ence," Ms. Fleischer said. "It's an active listening process." At 3:30 p.m. Oct. 10, Readers Theatre will present this season's second show, dedicated to Jewish actor Alan Harvey, who died of AIDS last spring. Mr. Harvey performed with Wayne State's Hilberry Company pated in Readers Theater and loved its Jewish connec- tion. "His Judaism meant a whole lot to him," said Ms. Fleischer. "He was a man of great personal dignity." During next month's show, Readers Theatre will present five stories by gay Jewish writers, including The Life You Have by Lev Raphael of Okemos. "We all think we know everything and that we're all open-minded," Ms. Fleischer said. "But so many of us sit here in our private little lives and we push people out...I found out (from reading these stories) that if you're pushed out of your communi- ty and family, your Judaism becomes so central. "Maybe October's program will soften people's hearts, soften or touch them in some way. The show is really for Alan, but if it does heighten awareness, that's a bonus," she said. U