Towering Reflections BRUNCH BUFFET: Sundays 11:00 - 2:00 Adults $16.95 Children 6-12 $11yr. • Children 5 and Under FREE LUNCH: - Thurs. 11 00 2:00 DINNER: y Evening AVI MACHLIS Jewish Telegraphic Agency Jerusalem Sun. - Thurs. 5:00 - 9.00 7295 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield, Michigan • Robins Nest Plaza 248-932-8934 Reservations Suggested VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT: www.ladifference.com Lelli' s of Auburn Hills & Detroit FINE DINING RESTAURANTS Catering Services Provided For Your Special.Occasion Or Company Celebration. Our Location Or Yours. Becky Lelli's of Auburn Hills • 248 373 4440 - Andre Lelli's of Detroit • 3 1 3 87 1 1 590 - - Detroit Now Open Mondays NE- yAND BARB ir,1 _1\I Lr Family Restaurant >l< RI IsS I r SLAB FOR 2 r BBQ CHICKEN FOR 2 $2 OFF $2 OFF L • 1 Coupon Per Order • Dine In or Carry-Out • Expires 11-11-99 JN With or Without Skin Includes: 2 Potatoes, 2 Slaws and 2 Garlic Breads Includes: 2 PotatoeS, 2 Slaws and 2 Garlic Breads L • 1 Coupon Per Order • Dine In or Carry-Out • Expires 11-11-99 JN ORCHARD LAKE RD. SOUTH OF 14 • Farm. Hills • 851-7000 LA OVAOTPOONIti 1W) 41301eTrit. OUR GREAT DINNER SPECIALS! MONDAY .. TUESDAY. . . WEDNESDAY THURSDAY.. FRIDAY FILET MIGNON TIPS W/Burgundy Wine Sauce CHOPPED SIRLOIN W/onions, green peppers, mushrooms SHORT-R1BS or WHITE FISH SICILIAN° SAUTEED SCALLOPS over rice WHITE FISH (Duratee, Broiled or Siciliano) CHICKEN MARSALA SATURDAY. . VEAL MARSALA ROAST CHICKEN p129 999 92 Detroit Jewish News y DELI & GOURMET RESTARANT 21754 E. 11 Mile Rd. • Harvard Row 248-352-4940 Fax: 248-352-9393 1 erusalem may be a perpetually fragile city, but in recent months, American artist Dale Chihuly has been trying to bring people together around a spec- tacular display of colorful glass sculpture. He'll focus on the F`- project, as well as speak about his life and other work, Nov. 2 -4 , 9 at Rackham Auditorium in :=. Ann Arbor. Since July, Chihuly, a world- renowned Seattle-based glass f- artist, has displayed a special exhibition at the Tower of David Museum at the Jaffa Gate in the Old City of Jerusalem. In the first two months alone, 200,000 people visited the Citadel to see the creations of Chihuly's glass- blowing teams. Made of 10,000 pieces and 42 tons of glass, the sculptures will be on display through next spring. Among the 15 installations on display in the courtyard of the ancient fortress are a 40- foot-high tower made of 2,000 blue and white snakelike pro- trusions, a triangular construc- tion of blood-red spears and the Crystal Mountain, a huge structure made of pink candy- like extensions. "The idea hopefully is that this will bring a lot of joy to people and will make people feel good," said Chihuly in a telephone interview. "Not all art does that." Indeed, Deborah Lipson, spokes- woman for the museum, says throngs of Israelis have been swept away. "It has captured the imagination. It is largely a celebration of beauty and joy of color of a material that has never been pushed to these bound- aries," she said. "People constantly come in and just say, 'Wow!'" Chihuly has fond memories of Israel from a stint on a kibbutz in 1962, but he first thought of bringing his work to Israel when Izzika Gaon, the late cura- tor of the Israel Museum, visited him 13 after Shabbat - Artist Dale Chihuly has transformed Jerusalem into a city of glass. He'll speak about his yearlong project Tuesday in Ann Arbor. $9.95 $6.95 $7.95 $8.95 $7.95 $7.25 $8.95 $6.95 SHIVA DINNERS AND PARTY TRAYS FREE DELIVERY in Seattle in 1997• Gaon died later that year, and when Chihuly returned to Israel for Gaon's memorial service, he followed up on Gaon's recommenda- tion to look at the Citadel site. He was completely overwhelmed by the location. In time, Chihuly's pro- ject became increasingly ambitious, even for a man who has strung glass Dale Chihuly, right, directs his team of glassblowers. over the canals of Venice and whose work is displayed in the world's most famous museums. "Each time I came back to Jerusalem my ideas got a little bigger, Chihuly said. Although Chihuly, 57, was profes- sionally trained in glassblowing and is privy to the secrets of the Venetian masters, he no longer blows glass him- self since he lost his left eye — and his depth perception — in a 1976 car accident. Instead, Chihuly directs teams of glassblowers, a method that has drawn fire from some critics but has also allowed him to create the enormous sculptures on display in Jerusalem today