Winter & Fall 1997
HOLIDAY & JUBILEE
FANTASY & ECSTASY
3, 4 & 7 Day Cruises
From Los Angeles
For selected sailings:
3 and 4 DAY CRUISES
From Port Canaveral & Miami
For selected sailings:
JUBLIEE A
January 3 • June 9
January • March 23
September 1- December 19, 1997
From $589
From $229.5°
Per guest, cruise-only
From $244 • 50
Per guest, cruise-only
3rd & 4th Guest
cruise for $129
3rd & 4th Guest cruise for $99
3rd & 4th Guest
cruise for $69
."
CELEBRATION IMAGINATION
& SENSATION
Per guest, cruise only
MIAMI
From $544•50
From $569."
Per guest, cruise-only
Per guest, cruise-only
% I
ROSE KLEINER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS
FASCINATION & INSPIRATION
7 DAY SOUTHERN
CARIBBEAN CRUISES
From San Juan
From selected sailings:
January 4 - March 23
August 30 - December 14, 1997
From $649 50
7 DAY EASTERN & WESTERN
CARIBBEAN CRUISES
From Miami, Tampa, New Orleans
For selected sailings:
January 3 - March 23
August 29 - December 14, 1997
TAMPAINEW ORLEANS
New York Arts:
Open-Air Delights
January 2 - March 23
September 4 - December 19, 1997
•
Per guest, cruise only
3rd & 4th Guest cruise for $129
V
Il Carnival.
division
(810) 932-1188
* Restrictions apply
CADILLAC TRAVEL
PRESENTS
ABERCROMBIE S KENT
A VERY SPECIAL VALUE ABOARD
THE
&immit Travel)
FRENCH HOTEL BARGE
L'ABERCROM
CRUISING SOUTHERN BURGANDY AND
EASTERN LOIRE FOR 6 NIGHTS
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STARTING AT $ 1,990. PER
PERSON DBL. OCC.
AUGUST 7, 14 (FAMILY
DEPARTURE) & 21, '96 ONLY
Give every
RESTRICTIONS APPLY
LIMITED AVAILABILITY
awn
NEWBORN
CALL
810-358-5330
%sawCADILLAC TRAVEL
COLONY
FREE
DESIGN SERVICE
6215 Orchard Lake Road
Add a few finishing touches, or redecorate your
INTERIORS BY
West Bloomfield
entire home
or office. Whether your home is a
showplace, worksapce or sanctuary, we'll help
Mon. - Sat. 10am - 5:30pm
And by appointment
SUGARTREE PLAZA
transform it into your dream home.
To schedule a consultation, call 810 - 626 - 1999
the
advantage
I
n summer, New York's arts at-
tractions take to the open air.
There is music, dance and art
and all sorts of walking tours.
Many popular walking tours
are organized by the 92nd Street
Y. On Aug. 8, the tour goes to the
Writers' Upper West Side, the
former home of Edgar Allen Poe,
Saul Bellow, Dorothy Parker and
Herman Wouk. A tour to the
Brooklyn Bridge on Aug. 11 in-
cludes a walk across the bridge
and a chamber music concert
aboard a floating concert hall
barge with breathtaking views of
Manhattan.
Midtown Public Spaces is a
useful tour for out-of-town visi-
tors. The tour strolls through a
redwood grove, restaurants un-
der bamboo trees and near wa-
terfalls in 'vest-pocket' parks,
gardens, atriums and arcades.
Starting at the newly designed
Bryant Park (next to the New
York Public Library), the tour fol-
lows an indoor-outdoor urban
trail of greenery, water and sculp-
ture.
The Y also lists a Hudson Riv-
er cruise on Aug. 1 aboard a
riverboat, stopping at Woodstock
and visiting Opus 40, Harvey
Fite's monumental six-acre en-
vironmental sculpture which took
35 years to construct.
During August there is out-
door theater and music in differ-
ent parts of the city. Shakespeare
in the Park is at the Delacort
Theater in Central Park to the
end of August.
The Summer Stage in Central
Park schedules theater, dance,
readings, music and concerts dur-
ing August. The CenterStage
Summer Series, at the World
Trade Plaza, presents live music
concerts in August; and the New
York Philharmonic gives free con-
certs in the city's parks in August.
Free concerts at Brooklyn's
Prospect Park celebrate the bor-
ough until Aug. 31.
Among the many shows run-
ning on Broadway are Rent at the
Nederlander Theatre; Jackie Ma-
son in Love Thy Neighbor at the
Booth Theatre; and the Tony
Award-winning revival of Ed-
ward Albee's A Delicate Balance
with Rosemary Harris at the Ply-
mouth Theatre. Actor Joel Grey
and the Klezmer Conservatory
Band will be part of the 23rd An-
nual Theatre Benefit Concert at
the Bialystoker Center Sept. 8,
at Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher
Hall.
The Lincoln Center Festival
`96 is presenting over 200 per-
formances of music, theater and
cyberants. The center's Mostly
Mozart Festival is in its 30th
year. There is also the Lincoln
Center out-of-doors, month-long,
free festival for the whole family.
It begins Aug. 13 with programs
held mostly at the Fountain
Plaza. On Aug. 22, the Just For
Kids program features folksinger
Rachel Buchman in the daytime
and Anna Sokolow's Players in
the evening.
For exhibits in the city this
summer, visitors have many
choices. An exhibit of "Biblical
Women in Art" from a book by
Beth Haber is at the American
Bible Society through Aug. 30.
The Brooklyn Children's Muse-
urn has exhibits for children
through high-school age. It is lo-
cated in Crown Heights, five
blocks from the Lubavitch head-
quarters.
The Jewish Museum has an
exhibit of early works of Marc
Chagall until Aug. 4. The Asia
Society is showing "Worlds With-
in Worlds: The Richard Rosen-
blum Collection of Chinese
Scholars' Rocks" through Aug. 18.
NEW YO RK CONVENTION AND VISI TORS BU REAU.
HOLIDAY
March of Dimes
ISRAEL
from
'790
(roundtrip from Windsor)
METRO DETROIT
ISRAEL EXPERT
810-FLY EL-AL
Lincoln Center hosts one of many summer festivals.