SUMMER
PLEASURES
WAPLE& of Novi
SEAFOOD TAVERN & GRILL
Ls pleased to announce the arrival of our chef Matt Jagusch, formerly of
Chuck Muers Clam Digger & Southfield Charleys
SOME OF OUR FAVORITES:
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• BANQUET FACILITIES serve up to 120 people
• 9 Hole Golf Course •
•
(248) 669-6551 • 31260 WAKEFIELD DRIVE
One mile west of Haggerty on 14 It file in the 111aples of ovi condomimums
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR LUNCH OR DINNER
ONE STOP SUMMER ENTERTAINMENT
ir di ti—s
51
RESTAURANT
Indoor & Outdoor Dining • Fine Wines & Cocktails
Over 100 Bottle Beers Available • 4,000 Sq. Foot Deck
Steak, Seafood, Unique Pasta Dishes, Salads, &
Sandwiches • Available for Private Parties
• Live Entertainment Tues.-Sat.
Two 18 hole Par 54 Putting Courses • Real grass greens the
Under lights at night • 75 Yard pitching Range
Sand Traps, Waterfall and ponds with fish
TM
GAME 4-
GOLF IN MINIATURE...
NOT MINIATURE GOLF '
Exit 84
VII
aft 83
1 Palace 1
Laka
Angelus
(248) 332-9100
313 E WALTON (Between Baldwin & Joslyn)
Closed Mondays
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
Walton Blvd.
r
r
FREE Round of Golf
Buy one menu item - get the second item
loesfseeqru\a,alloure
when a second round is purchased or
Exp. 7/15/97
With coupon • Not valid with any other offer
when a second bucket of balls is purchased
1/2 OFF(
L
FREE Bucket of Balls
Exp. 7/15/97 • With coupon • Not valid with any other offer
L
Visit us on the World Wide Web www.313.com
low in salt and fat and abundant
in fruit and vegetables. To meet
as many people as possible, my
roommate and I kept changing
tables through our stay; but
many of the hostelers preferred
to stay put — and to discourage
interlopers — once they had
found congenial company.
Dr. Peter Malinow, assistant
managing director of Education-
al Alliance, a 105-year-old set-
tlement house community center
on Manhattan's Lower East Side,
conducted the orientation ses-
sion: A bell would signal meal
times, a pre-breakfast walk
around the lake was optional,
smoking was banned indoors,
snacks would be available at 9
p.m., and "Please, please, don't
feed the geese!"
Holder of a doctorate in social
welfare from Yeshiva Universi-
ty, Malinow teaches at New York
University. Two of the three in-
structors were also Yeshiva
alumni: Thomas Friedman, a
novelist and scriptwriter, who
conducted the humor sessions;
and Robert Cohen, an editor,
writer and radio producer whose
specialty is Jewish music. Owen
Shapiro, the movie maven, heads
the department of art media
studies at Syracuse University
and directs its film program.
The "Jewish Experience"
group comprised 50 hostelers
from nine states, including Cal-
ifornia, Arizona and Florida.
There were 19 couples, nine un-
accompanied women and three
mateless men. Malinow asked all
participants to volunteer on "pe-
culiar" fact about him- or herself.
"I'm a retired drug dealer" was
the deadpan confession of a phar-
macist. "I was born in a hospital
to be near my mother," wise-
cracked an aspiring tummier.
a Mother Superior" was the star-
tling revelation of Mrs. Joseph Su-
perior of Malden. Mass.
To my surprise, much of the
subsequent instruction seemed
more closely linked to synagogue
services that box-office fare. Some
of the promotional bait, for in-
stance, never made it into the
course, and the final music ses-
sion— which I hoped would cen-
ter on Jewish-genesis treasures
like Oklahoma! , My Fair Lady,
Guy and Dolls and Gypsy — was
devoted instead to melody-en-
hanced psalms.
And yet I came away content,
well-rested, well-fed, well-taught.
My classmates — including
housewives, businessmen, retired
an still active professionals and
even a judge — were all comp
panionable, especially when
schmoozing on the "campus" or
clustered after the yuk-filled hu-
mor sessions to swap often-
naughty jokes. The movies
—
Zelig, Crimes and Misdemeanors,
The Apprenticeship of Duddy
Kravitz and The Producers — all
merited a second look. A less fa-
miliar film, Lars von Trier's Zen-
tropa, a cryptic post-World War
II indictment of the Nazi mind-
set, triggered lively debate. Au-
diotapes illustrated how Jewish
music infiltrated Christian
churches and how klezmer ap-
peared in New Orleans-style jazz
and even bluegrass.
Although all the classes I at-
tended reflected impeccable re-
search; they were relatively
lightweight intellectually, with
an emphasis on enjoyment. A re-
cent 103-page Elderhostel cata-
log contains many examples of
what more studious truth-seek-
ers might consider frivolous.
Some examples:
"Sing and Speak Mama
Loshen: Whether it's a song, a joke
or chicken soup, Yiddish adds
sparkle and humor to our lives."
"Shmendrik and Kuni Lemel:
The Gantze Migeleh of Gold-
faden: This year is the 120th an-
niversary of the founding of
Yiddish theater by Avrum Gold-
faden. Act out scenes from his
plays, sing his songs, see perfor-
mances on video."
`The Three B's: Benny, Bums
and Berle" from vaudeville and
radio to movies and TV, follow
the careers of three first-genera-
tion Americans. Discover details
of the trademarks: '39 years old,
`Say Goodnight, Gracie,' The
Thief of Badgags."'
"Hoolyeh! (Have a Riotous
Time!): Let there music sweep
you through Jewish history, from
King David's harp, through the
klezmer era, - to the exotic
melodies of the state of Israel."