r GOOD ANYDAY! ANY HOUR! FREE I BAGEL & CREAM CHEESE • STAGE page 69 (Excluding Lox Cream Cheese) NO PURCHASE NECESSARY I. One FREE Bagel & Cream Cheese Per Person • With Coupon • Farmington Hills Only I Offer Expires March 30,1995 J N PARTY TRAYS FOR ALL OCCASIONS A g perfect gift... 32431 Northwestern Hwy. (Between Middlebelt & 14 Mile) I 626-4400 Fax: 626-4424 I We Make Our Own Whipped Cream Cheese • Plain • Chive • Vegetable • Strawberry • Lox I I Open 7 Days... Mon.-Sat. 6 a.m.-7 p.m. and Sun. 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Also Visit Our Troy Location, 2850 W. Maple Road • 643-67671 ------- -- • -- KITCHEN 615-1122 • HUNAN • CANTONESE • SZECHAUN BUFFET LUNCH: Every Day $5.50/Children $3.75 BUFFET DINNER: Starting March 28 Tues.-Wed.-Sun. $8.75/Children $5.25 37057 Grand River - Farmington (Grand River & Halsted) (In K-Mart Center) 2 FOR 1 FREE DINNER Buy One Entree At Regular Price Get Second Entree Equal or Lesser Value FREE DINNER • Dine In Only • Any Day • Dinner Menu Only • I Coupon Per Couple Wong's Kitchen • Expires 4-30-94 cs OFF TOTAL RILL FRIDAY & SATURDAY 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Not Good With Other Coupons L Expires 3-30-95 uJ IN CHICKEN CACCIATORE Skinless, boneless chicken breast sauteed with tomatoes and mush- rooms in a wine sauce. MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 21754 W. 11 MILE RD. • HARVARD ROW • 352-4940 FAX: 352-9393 INCLUDES: SIZZLING RICE SOUP, 2 EGG ROLLS, SZECHUAN SHRIMP, MONGOLIAN CHICKEN, BEEF LO MEIN, BEAN SPROUTS FRIED RICE, PEANUT BUTTER SUNDAE. $ 1995 FOR TWO! Play the market right and you could lose it all. POTATO, VEGETABLE & BREAD BASKET DELI AND GOURMET RESTAURANT NOTHING LIKE IT ANYWHERE! 1-810-354-6620 $6 95 Open Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m. - 8 p.m. Closed Sundays GOURMET DINNER FOR 2 THE JEWISH NEWS ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SOUP, SALAD, SHIVA DINNERS and BEAUTIFUL PARTY TRAYS • Free Delivery LUNCHEON BUFFET MON. - FRI. 11 a.m.- 2 p.m. ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT ITEMS GALORE INCLUDING 4 ENTREES! Sc50 $130iHN1244 NMI ADULTS •EXOTIC DRINKS • CHOICE COCKTAILS • PRIVATE DINING ROOM • CATERING • LUNCHES TNE GPM WALE 35135 Grand River (Drakeshire Shopping Center) AM" A subscription to 476-9181 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 You could lose things like extra weight. High blood pressure. And high blood cholesterol levels. The very things that con- tribute to heart attack and stroke. All you have to do is in- vest wisely at the super- market. Buy more in the fresh produce, pasta, breads and cereals sections. And purchase fish, poultry and lean meats instead of fatty or processed meats. Switch to low-fat dairy products and margarine. And check the nutritional listings on food labels. In short, be selective about how you play this market. Because no mat- ter how much you lose, you've got a lot to win. WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE American Heart Association The gnomes in Rip Van Winkle, with Laura Nanes in the white beard. dent is in her sixth role for Paper Bag Productions. "I like performing in front of people, and I'm comfortable with it because of practice and experi- ence," said Laura, who takes on as many shows and theater class- es as she can. Brian Haber, 9, a third-grad- er at Roosevelt, is making his de- but performance with this group, and he has a different approach to feeling comfortable on stage. "I just think I'm performing in front of friends," said Brian, who has acted in Nancy Gurwin Pro- ductions and decided to audition for PBP when he learned a friend was trying out for a role. To learn his lines to portray Derek Van Brummel, Brian kept reading them over and over again. Although he thinks he might like to earn his living as an actor, he also has dreams of be- ing a baseball or basketball play- er. Marissa Shuback, 12, a sev- enth-grader at Hillel Day School, knows about productions in two languages. In addition to playing Henriette Dutcher in Rip Van Winkle, she portrayed the Rev- erend Mother in her school's He- brew version of The Sound of Music. Hoping to be a singer if not an actress, Marissa likes the origi- nal songs that were written for the production by Mr. Nodus for Paper Bag Productions. "I know that theater work is very hard to get, but it would be a lot of fun," said Marissa, who has been part of many com- munity theater groups and is on the sound and light crew at Hil- lel. Mr. Nodus, who also is direc- tor of the West Bloomfield Youtheatre and Dearborn Heights Youtheatre, looks beyond the fun and believes children can learn a lot about the reality of day-to-day living by pretending on stage. "Theater teaches children the discipline of learning, memoriz- ing lines and blocking," said Mr. Nodus. He has an open audition call for the 1995-96 PBP plays — Once Upon a Mattress and Torn Sawyer. "This discipline is the type which can carry over into other studies and is something they can apply during their entire lives." 0 Rip Van Winkle is being per- formed weekends through May 28 at the Players Club, 3321 East Jefferson, Detroit. Lunch is served one hour be- fore the Saturday show time of 1 p.m., and the Sunday show time of 2 p.m. For tick- et or audition information, call (800) 824-8314. Russian Pianist Will Perform Russian pianist Alex Slobodyanik will perform in the Charles Con- cert Series, Sunday, April 2, 4 p.m. at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center. His will be an all-Chopin concert. Mr. Slobodyanik is presently working with Sergi Babayan at the Cleveland Institute of Mu- sic. This season, he performs with the New York Chamber Sym- phony. Tickets can be purchased at the JCC; for information, call 661- 7634 or 661-1008. Local Guitarist Gives Program On March 25, from 8 to 10 p.m., Dan Shere, a West Bloomfield resident, will host the first Saturday evening Artist-in-the- Cafe program at Barnes & No- ble, West Bloomfield. Mr. Shere spent a year in Israel both on a kibbutz and in Jerusalem and found a great passion for the country, its people and music. He is a student at the U-M. The performance will include popular Israeli songs and a seg- ment of the performance will fea- ture original pieces written by Dan and sung in Hebrew. There is no charge for this per- formance and no reservations are required.