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May 23, 1997 - Image 110

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-05-23

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

PLEASURES

Beyond the usual blockbusters await dozens of cool diversions, vm celebrity ianormtc
tS
all 'Cali ontid beach life to remote island-hopping.

SUSAN, R. POUACK Ez7E;

TERRIFIC TORONTO

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LU

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C.)

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D

ipping their
toes in the
fountain at
City Hall when
no one is
i look-
ing. Strolling
hand-in-hand down Queen Street
West, ogling locals with multiple-
pierced body parts and out-

Susan R. Pollack is a freelance

writer based in Huntington
Woods.

landishly-colored hair. Sipping
expensive wines, sharing secrets
and rekindling their romance at
a cozy little bistro named Peter
Pan. Rubbing elbows the next
morning with power-breakfast-
ing movie stars in the classy Stu-
dio Cafe of the Four Seasons
Hotel, a gallery-like setting that
ranks as the city's top celebrity-
watching spot.
For Bruce and Cindy Hillen-
berg of Farmington Hills, Toron-

to evokes all these memories and
more. The couple never tire of
traipsing across the border to
Canada's largest city for a week-
end escape from their hectic dai-
ly routines as a.psychologist,
office manager and parents of
two.
Toronto, Hilleriberg says, "is
where we go to remember that
we're married. It's romantic, it's
cosmopolitan, it's Europe on a
smaller budget."

And, best of all, it's just a four-
hour trip by car or train from De-
troit and Windsor.
The warm months are an es-
pecially good time to chill out in
Toronto, where all kinds of cool
pleasures, literally and trendily-
speaking, await visitors —
whether they're traveling in
pairs, with families or alone.
Toronto's summertime sizzles
with dozens of special events cel-
ebrating everything from kids

(May 26-June 1), international
arts (May 29-June 8) and jazz
(June 20-9) to the Caribbean-
flavored Caribana (July 21-Aug.
4) and Northern Encounters, the
city's first festival showcasing
Arctic music, visual arts, film, sci-
ence and cuisine (June 1-30).
On six nights between June 14
and July 5, an international fire-
works competition, set to music,
will light up the sky over Lake
Ontario. And a worldly crowd of

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