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MDX with Touring Package and optional ski attachment shown. Acura Navigation system with Voice Recognition TM (?) and DVD entertainment system available on Touring Package models. ©2002 Acura Division of American Honda Motor Co., Inc. Acura, MDX and Acura Navigation System with Voice Recognition are trademarks of Honda Motor Co., Ltd. Make an intelligent decision. Fasten your seat belt. 

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The 260-hp Acura MD with electronic 4-wheel drive. We've taken the SUV to even greater heights, giving it a 20-hp boost and an impressive list of new available features. Like a voice-activated navigation system, a DVD entertainment system and a rearview camera. Trek on over to Acura.com or call 1-800-TO-Acura. Acura

On the aisle 
with Harry Haun
[[image- chair]]

Signs of the Broadway Times

The night Hollywood Arms opened on Broadway, there were few dry eyes in the Cort- and those [[image]] 
began to blur when Carol Burnett was pulled onstage at the curtain call by Linda Lavin who plays Burnett's wonderfully idiosyncratic grandmother in the play. As the lights dimmed, Burnett reached up to her ear and gave it a yank-the best-known 'secret' signal in TV history: a hello to her long-gone granny. I lost it...At the party afterward, director Hal Prince read a valentine to the show written by 

[[image]] 

a tenderly touched (!) John Simon. Who knew? For a six-year-old, Chicago looked in great shape at its 2,500th performance, with Charlotte D'Amboise, Caroline O'Connor, Billy Zane, Rob Bartlett and Roz Ryan in the leads. It was their way of saying, 'Bring on your movie version. We'll continue to fight on at the Ambassador [where it moves from the Shubert on Jan. 29].' All of the musical's Tony-winning folks were present at this milestone performance: James Naughton, Bebe Neuwirth, director Walter Bobbie, Choreographer Ann Reinking, lighting designer Ken Billington and producers Barry and Fran Weissler (as well as the egregiously overlooked Mr. Cellophane, Joel Grey). Reinking and Neuwirth remembered their Chicago roots and returned to cap a stellar City Center do recapping the Judith Daykin decade of Encores! musicals. Chicago is the only one of her 27 shows to break into a broadway run, but City Center Encores! 10th Anniversary [[2 images]] Bash reminded us how many more should have followed suit: Call Me Madam; Promises, Promises; Golden Boy. It, too, had a teary curtain call. While a Hirschfeld of the late Adolph Green smiled above, all stars joined hands for Comden & Green & Styne's simple, heartfelt anthem, 'Make Someone Happy.' That's all Encores! does, folks- makes people happy. 

[[Image descriptions footnote]] Left: (top) Hollywood Arms director Harold Prince in deep opening night discussion with his star, Linda Lavin; (bottom) Chicago's Charlotte d'Amboise celebrated the 2,500th show with hubby Terrence Mann. Right: (top) Rob Fisher, Kathleen Marshall and Judith Daykin at the Encores! 10th Anniversary Bash where (bottom) Encores! alumni Tyne Daly and Lewis Cleale performed. 

Photos by Aubrey Reuben 

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Transcription Notes:
I am not sure if I transcribed the images and their descriptions correctly/put them in the correct place. I also was not sure if I needed to superscribe TM or if it is okay to just type it out in regular text.