Th tress tag for a seminar on hotel-room destruction, Yo La Tengo makes a return visit to Detroit, with guest David Kilgour. As Kaplan told The Jewish News, "We're not trying to do anything in that Straight A line; we like to see where our intuition takes us." Use your intuition and see Tengo (pictured are Georgia Hubley, Ira Kaplan and James McNew) Saturday, Sept. 20, at the Blind Pig, 208 S. First, Ann Arbor, doors at 9:30, $10, (313) 996-8555; or Monday, Sept. 22, at the Magic Stick, above the Majestic, 4120 Woodward, Detroit, doors at 9, $10, (313) 833-POOL. scene of new exhibits and light refreshments as the Detroit Art Dealers Association presents a gallery crawl 6-10 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 20. Call (248) 988-1112 for details. Ann Arbor's Detroit Street Gallery hosts its first exhibition, running through Oct. 31, featuring Barry Avedon's paintings and drawings, James Sandall's photographs, and Karen Izenberg's paintings and col- lages. Opening reception 7-11 p.m. Friday, Sept. 26, at the gallery, 417 . Detroit St., Ann Arbor. Call (313) 994-0291. Whatnot The Midwest Antiquarian and Collectible Book Fair will be held 9:30-5:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Sept. 19 and 20, on the first floor of the Main Library, 5201 Woodward Ave., in the University Cultural Center. Call (313) 833-4084. Springfield Oaks County Park hosts the 12th annual Hot Air Balloon Festival Friday-Sunday, Sept. 19-21. Call (248) 8830. Internationally renowned chef and cookbook author Julia Child will sign copies of her cookbook, Baking with Julia, 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 21, at Hudson's Marketplace, Somerset, Troy., Call (248) 816-4736. Margaret Wise Brown's Goodnight Moon turns 50 years old and Barnes & Noble celebrates with a storytime pajama party 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 22, and 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23. 6800 Orchard Lake Road, West Blomfield. (248) 626-6804. "Author, Author," a program for writers, features romance novelists Jill Gregory and Karen Katz on "Writing the Romance Novel." 7-9:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23. $20. Southfield Centre for the Arts, 24350 Southfield Road, Southfield. Call (248) 424- 9042. The Building Industry Association of Southeastern Michigan hosts the Fall Remodeling Show Thursday- Sunday, Sept. 25-28, at the Novi Expo Center, at 1-96 and Novi Road. Call (248) 737-4478. Elayne Boosler Funny Woman Elayne Boosler, a regular on the comedy circuit, has appeared in clubs, in one-woman specials and in numer- ous television appearances with David Letterman, Jay Leno and Larry King. And now, she brings her special brand of humor — much of it poking fun at what it means to be a Jewish woman in the '90s — to a benefit perfor- mance for Kadima, the nonprofit, nonsectarian mental health agency which offers residential, counseling and supported employment services to adults with psychiatric disabilities. Boosler will appear 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept 25, at Orchestra Hall in Detroit. Admission is $75. Other giving categories are available. For more information, call (248) 559- 8235. It Takes Three To Tengo Pamped up by their hilarious new video "Sugarcube," in which Ira Kaplan enthusiastically rips off a mat- Glass Act Les Enfants Terribles, one of renowned composer and performance artist Philip Glass' experimental music pieces based on the work of French avant-garde writer Jean For one night only at the Music Hall, 350 Madison, Detroit. 8 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23. $36.50-$46.50. Call (313) 963-2366. (;okien Years "I don't want knowledge, I want certainty," sings David Bowie, age 50, on "Law (Earthlings of Fire)," a song on this year's Earthling album. Concert goers who attend his Earthling World Tour '97 concert per- formance either Sunday, Sept. 21 (sold out), or Monday, Sept. 22, can be cer- tain to find the consummate musical chameleon in yet another new phase: "I wanted to couple my hard-rock band with a melody-driven jungle subtext," he says. In another change, Bowie's recorded an entirely new acoustic-based version of "I Can't Read" that will appear in the forth- coming film The Ice Storm, set to open the New York Film Festival on Sept. 26. 6:30 doors/show at 8. $32.50. The State Theatre, 2111 Woodward, next to the Fox, Detroit. Call (313) 961-5450. David Bowie Les Enfants Terribles Cocteau, forms the basis of the third installment of the trilogy of music/theater works that began with Orphee and continued with La Belle et la Bete. While in those works, film and opera were combined to create a hybrid form, for Les Enfants, Glass invited choreographer Susan Marshall to create a dance/opera where singers and dancers share the stage. Les Enfants is the story of a young brother and sister caught in a complex and isolated world of their own imaginations. "If Orphee is Cocteau's tale of transcendence and La Belle et la Bete is his romance, then Les Enfants Terribles is his tragedy," explains Glass. Yo La Tengo 9/19 1997 99