G ONG HU4 cient Fraer THE COVFP FINE CHINESE DINING Invites You To Art Magnet from page 65 'A wonderful adventure in fine dining" - Danny Raskin Featuring Gourmet Oriental Cuisine Excellent Lunch and Dinner Selections 7 Days a Week I I a.m.- Midnight Complete Menu Carryout • Gift Certificates Available • We Cater To Private Parties 27925 Orchard Lake Road, north of 12 Mile • Farmington Hills 248.489.2280 1121430 COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES WITH ANY ELICATESSEN IN TOWN! S AR ID D . I IS ONE OF THE BEST CARRY OUT ONLY RESTAURANTS IN AMERICA! MEAT TRAY $6.95 Hours: Open 7 days from 7-10 per person SALAD TRAY =iZi.',4,: $ 7 * Handcut Lox * Our Regular Tuna & Fat-Free - Tuna Can't Be Beat! * Vegetarian Chopped Liver * Homemade Potato Salad & Coleslaw .50 per person $14.50 * ....,*- * * , per person WITH THIS COUPON _ ,6,,, Expires 6/30106 • One Per Person • Not Good Hotidas • 10 Person Minimum DELIVERY AVAILABLE 24555 W. 12 MILE ROND Just west of Telegraph Road • Southfield . , ,._ * 248035-2 • 7377 Italian Grill HAPPY HOUR MON. - FRI., 4-7 1/2 off beer, cocktails, a glass of wine, pasta & burgers with a $2.00 drink minimum per person Lounge only $ 1 GIFT CERTIFICATE This certificate entitles bearer to; Redeemable at both locations. 1 .1000 off with minimum purchase of 54000 (excluding tax, tip & alcoholic beverages). Maximum discount $1000 . Offer not valid on Holidays and subject to Rules of Use. Tipping should be 15% to 20% of the total bill before discount. Offer expires 7/2/06. Banquet Facility & Outside Catering Available M arco's 6'ome c6aste tie (fifferenee! restaurants a nti owned:tiff over 50 years. 6480 Orchard Lake Rd. I West Bloomfield I 248-626-6969 70 June 1 • 2006 "I think MOCAD will be a wonderful magnet to attract people into the city." Multimedia ON STAR'S BEAUTIFUL ALREADY ED MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS LOW-PRICED • Barbara Kratchman of ArtServe Michigan: DAIRY TRAY STAR'S TRAYS CAN'T BE BEAT FOR QUALITY & PRICE! O shapes that look like ant hills. He asked us to leave the material so he can build his vision of an oasis. It will be like a desert island, an amaz- ing contrast between where you are and where you can imagine you might want to be." Barbara Kratchman, president of the advo- cacy group ArtServe Michigan, remains very positive about possibili- ties for the museum. "I think MOCAD will be a wonderful magnet to attract people into the city',' says Kratchman, who saw crowds drawn to a recent student show sponsored by the nearby College for Creative Studies. "Because the museum will be on the cutting edge *of art, it can bring new people into the local art scene and lead us toward new sources of funding for the arts. That expression of interest can strength- en the whole cultural landscape in the area." 0 Miro projects that the museum will include many arts disciplines, starting with a local musician as part of the debut show. She also hopes to have a bookstore with arts periodicals and a cafe where visitors can stop and discuss what they have seen and learned. "We're basically a visual arts insti- tution, but we will have dance per- formances and literary. events:' says - Miro, who also hopes the museum can compensate in some measure for the diminishing of arts programs in public schools. "We believe that art speaks on'every level to people, and we hope to expand our membership from little kids to seniors. We want to reach across all the sections of this community, which is so broad, dense and wonderful." MOCAD supporters are exploring ways to increase their base and ask interested people to visit the Web site at www.mocadetroit.org. They also are recruiting- participants for two events. Shades Optical (248-645-0075) in Birmingham is having a special offer- ing 5-9 p.m. Thursday, June 1, and giving the museum 10 percent of its proceeds. The Johanson Charles Gallery (313-483-1158) near Eastern Market has not announced what it will do on July 25 but urges that the date be saved. Ferndale gallery owner Susanne Hilberry, who worked at the Detroit Institute of Arts before going into busi- ness on her own, has been active with Miro in establishing a contemporary museum. "I think there is an urgent need for an ongoing program to connect local artists and people in Michigan with ideas and vocabularies being discussed visually around the world," Hilberry says. "I would hope having a venue of this type would keep serious artists in the area and let them interact with their peers. I also think the museum would be a way to educate people about con- temporary currents in the arts and give them more perspectives on different points of view." ❑ For information on the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, go to www.mocadetroit.org or call (248) 833-1336.