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May 03, 1996 - Image 120

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-05-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

N

WHERE LUXURY
BLENDS WITH INFORMALITY

The New'

al
c50.7k 6/

(

Not just another hotel

ROSE KLEINER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

The Dan Eilat on Israel's Red Sea with 380 rooms
all facing the sea, 7 places to dine and drink,
2 pools, health & beauty spa, shopping bazaar
and Danyland for the children.

Enjoy the ideal
combination of the
DAN EILAT and the

Per person
in double room
including breakfast
+ 15% service charge

famous ICING DAVID
for as low as $103 per
night or combine any
of these hotels with the

DAN TEL AVIV, DAN

CARMEL or DAN

ACCADIA.

A wonderful value
when you combine
two or more of these

Per person
in double room
including breakfast
+ 15% service charge

Starting at

superb hotels:
DAN PANORAMA,
TEL AVIV, DAN
PANORAMA, HAIFA,

DAN PEARL,
JERUSALEM and
DAN CAESAREA.

Effective March 1,1996-November 17,1996 standard grade rooms.
Minimum 7 nights combination of 2 or more hotels.
Rates not applicable during Jewish holidays and peak seasons.

Israel Hotel Representatives

_chew ,76;tek •qwetel

EL-AL
FLIES FROM

1 9 075

(roundtrip w/land booking)

METRO DETROIT
ISRAEL EXPERT

810-FLY EL-AL

EXPERIENCE A SUMMER OF A LIFETIME!

12

UNIQUE PROGRAMS - GROUPED BY AGES 13-23

CALL ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA
(810) 569-1515
FOR FREE BROCHURE

Scholarships Available

■ ,.../.416511, :WAINER.

91.0a, //

18451

w. . io
_ m

ROAD • SOUTHFIELD, MI 48075

wo theater festivals, con-
certs and exhibits all make
visiting Toronto exciting
and rewarding.
The two festivals to enjoy an-
nually are both outside the city,
providing the added benefit of a
beautiful country setting along
with fine theater.
At the Stratford Festival, pa-
trons can enjoy picnics by the
Avon River, steps from the the-
ater, and visits to nearby Men-
nonite towns. From the Shaw
Festival, in Niagra-on-the-Lake,
they can drive along one of the
country's most scenic parkways
and visit Niagra Falls, which is
only 22 mile away.
The spring season at Stratford
starts with King Lear, The Music
Man and Amacleus , at the Festi-
val Theatre. The Avon Theatre be-
gins its season with The Merchant
ofVenice,A Fitting Conclusion and

CLASSIFIED
GET RESULTS!
Call The Jewish News

354-5959

Christie's The Mousetrap is now
in its 19th year at the Toronto
Thick Theatre.
The National Ballet of Canada
will present the Canadian pre-
miere of Kenneth MacMillan's
drama Manon. The ballet is based
on the novel Manon Lescaut and
set to music by Jules Massenet.
There will be a repeat perfor-
mance of the Don Quixote ballet.
A concert with the Klezmer
Conservatory Band from Boston,
sponsored by Beit Halochem
Canada, will take place June 3 at
the Ford Centre for the Perform-
ing Arts. The Toronto Symphony
Orchestra will bring music by
Stravinsky, Prokofiev and
Tchaikovsky with Bramwell
Tovey conducting on June 1, 2.
Jacques Lsraelovitch will play with
the Toronto Symphony on June
15, 16.
The world's longest street (Gui-

Alice Through the Looking Glass,
As You Like It and Sweet Bird of
Youth will run at the Tom Patter-

son Theatre. Among the plays to
follow in the summer are Barry-
more with Christopher Plummer
and The Little Foxes. The festival
also offers post-performance dis-
cussions, lectures and warehouse
and backstage tours. For savings
on tickets, visitors should inquire
about preview specials, family spe-
cials and two-for-one tickets on
Tuesdays and Thursdays.
The season at the Shaw Festi-
val includes The Devil's

Disciple, Mr. Cinders,
An Ideal Husband,
Rashomon and Hob-
son's Choice. There

For information and reservations,
please call your travel agent or

(212) 752-6120 or outside New York
State Toll Free: 800-223-7773/4
or FAX: (212) 759-7495

Visit Toronto:
Glorious For The Arts

will be special
rates for families
and groups.
Several pack-
ages combining
theater tickets and
hotel accommoda-
tions are available
at the Shaw Festival.
The informal White
Oaks Inn and Raquet Club
has a package which combines
accommodation and theater tick-
ets.
cal Ficklier on the Roof
The musical
with Theodore Bikel comes to the
O'Keefe Centre in Toronto June
18-23. The Diary of Anne Frank,
directed by Leah Cherniak, con-
tinues at the Young People's The-
atre until June 6.
Phantom of the Opera is now in
its seventh year at the Pantages
Theatre; and Sunset Boulevard,
with Diahann Carroll, is at the
Ford Theatre for the Performing
Arts. Stomp, the percussion group,
is at the Elgin Theatre. Agatha

ness Book of World Records),

Yonge Street, will celebrate its
200th birthday. A community par-
ty, starting at Toronto's water-
front, is planned for June 8. There
will be free walking tours to his-
toric sites, lunchtime lectures and
a historical exhibit.
The Beth Tzedec Synagogue's
Jewish Museum is showing "Beta
Israel" an exhibit on Jews of
Ethiopia. The Royal Ontario Mu-
seum's Judaica Gallery has re-
opened this year with a new
installation of Jewish ceremonial
art. Over 60 objects reflect
the religious culture of
European Jewry from
the 1500s to the pre-
sent.
'Diamonds in the
Rough" is a massive
survey of the works
and lives of Thom
Thompson and the
Group of Seven,
with over 800 art
works, letters, pho-
tographs and other
items at the McMichael
Canadian Art Collection in
Kleinburg just outside Toronto.
The strict rules of fashion for
women in the Victorian era are
the subject of "Corsets to Calling
Cards," an exhibit at the Royal
Ontario Museum. Also at this
museum, 'The Centre of Attrac-
tion: Centerpieces for the Table"
is an exhibit containing ceramic,
glass and silver pieces from Eu-
ropean collections.
The first exhibit of Meissen
porcelain ever mounted in Cana-
da is at the Gardiner Museum of
Ceramic Art. Among the over 60
outstanding examples are many
items on view for the first time. ❑

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