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November 15, 2007 - Image 96

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2007-11-15

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

Jell( (o...Tigeoday
itevembett 22ild!

Grill
TROY ONLY

Shuttle Service to
All Major Venues.
Theater & Sports.

Arts & Entertainment

Photo by Ezra Stoller/ @ Ezra Stoller/ESTO

THANKSGIVING
BUFFET
10:30-6pm

Reservations Required

Adults

$18.95
Kids 5-11 $9.95
4 & under FREE

er;

Featuring:

Assorted Salads

Roast Turkey

Baked Ham

Bountiful
Sweets Table

Open Thanksgiving
Foot

Individual Full
Turkey Dinner

(313) 832-1616

$17.95

4222 Second St. • Detroit

Shuttle Service In Detroit only.

(248) 588-6000

RESTAURANT

1477 John R at Maple • Troy

since 1948

www.

mariosdetroit.com

1328200

ii

LE JO IE MARWIL

THE RAPE
OF EUROPA

THE CENTER

Robin Cohen finds them at estate sales.
"I love the Saarinen designs and the
fact that they have local inspiration','
Cohen says.
Saarinen furniture designs have
become heirlooms for his relatives
still living in Michigan. Birmingham
architect Robert S. Swanson, the son of
Eero's sister Pipsan Saarinen Swanson
and architect J. Robert F. Swanson, owns
"Tulip" chairs and has passed along a
"Womb" chair to his daughter, Karen
Swanson, a fourth-generation architect.
"I think the exhibit will help advance
the fact that [my uncle] was one of the
great architects of all time,' Swanson
says. "I didn't know Aline very well, but
I know she was an able writer, particu-
larly with her [1958] book The Proud
Possessors, which was about art collec-
tors." Li

"Eero Saarinen: Shaping the
Future" can be seen Nov.17-
March 30 at the Cranbrook Art
Museum, 39221 Woodward, in
Bloomfield Hills. Hours are 11
a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesdays-Sundays
and 11 a.m.-9 p.m. on the fourth
Friday of each month. $10 adults,
$5 teens and students, free for
those 12 and younger accompa-
nied by an adult. (877) 462-7262.
The International Saarinen
Symposium convenes Saturday,
Nov.17. $25-$55, with additional
fees for lunch and shuttle trans-
portation between Cranbrook and
the GM Tech Center. (248) 645-
3312 or www.cranbrook.edu .

Reed Kroloff from page C7

MESMERIZING

OFFICIAL SELECTION

Kroloff opened a private prac-
tice with Casey Jones, his busi-
ness and personal partner and
a University of Michigan gradu-
ate. Jones/Kroloff, established
to advise a range of clients on
architect selection and design
strategy, continues under the
prime management of Jones, relo-
cated to Michigan. Clients have
included the Whitney Museum of
American Art and the University
of Connecticut.
Long before thinking about
moving to Bloomfield Hills, Kroloff
found architects for the Motown
Center, a proposed museum school
planners had hoped to build in
Detroit. Kroloff's first experience
as a competition adviser was for a
Phoenix synagogue.
"I feel quite comfortable, proud
and completely fascinated with
what it means to be Jewish,"
says Kroloff, who did not have a
bar mitzvah because of schedul-
ing conflicts with extracurricular
activities. "I studied religion very
heavily in school.
"I would not call myself reli-
gious, but I Identify as Jewish. I'm

11, 1

V
FULL FAME
W
DOCUMNTART FILM FESTF1
fi kt '

- I /ARIETY

i f

OFFICIAL SELECTION ‘V,,,,t

SA FRANCISCO
IgTERNATIONAL HIM FESTIVAL

V

Presented by the
Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit's
56th Annual Jewish Book Fair &
the Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival

Saturday, November 17, 2007 • 7:30 p.m.

Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit
D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building
Eugene & Marcia Applebaum
Jewish Community Campus
6600 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield
www.jccdet.org

All seats are $10. Purchase at the door or call 248.432.5577 for advance seats.

132250

November 15 2007

.

JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL

IMAGINE THE
WORLD WITHOUT
OUR MASTERPIECES.

C8

.

Miller House, Columbus, Ind., circa 1957
Modernist from page C7

very concerned about issues that
affect Jews, particularly human
rights and equal rights, and I'm an
advocate for those not accorded
those same rights and privileges."
Kroloff, who won the American
Academy in Rome's 2003 Rome
Prize Fellowship and whose work
was profiled in a 2004 New York
Times article, serves on numer-
ous boards and advisory coun-
cils, including a section of the
United States General Services
Administration and the Public
Architecture Foundation.
The new director, whose work in
managing an art museum will pro-
vide a fresh experience, welcomes
the opportunity to be close to a
major city as it looks for new vis-
tas of advancement.
"Detroit is interesting to my
partner and me because of the
continuing [issues] of urban
design, economic vitality and the
strength of the social compact
— in other words, the civic arena,"
he says. "We are fascinated by
that and have devoted our lives to
trying to improve it in one way or
another."

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