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November 30, 1934 - Image 11

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1934-11-30

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

Timpentorrjaisii

itONICLE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

STAGE A N D SCREEN ,Julian
WednesdayTown a
"Russia
_
As It Is"

is

111., Is 0 Picture for the
Million. (1,01 1.01rd
.•I.Ittle %%omen -
L. 31. Montt ttttt ro's
Immurni

Et Monte Carlo Ballet Russe at the
Masonic Auditorium Dec. 3 5

"Anne of Green
Gables"

E

*Rh

Anne Shirley as
"Anne"
A CALA 110121tAt

WFALE 511011
Meet from the Casino
de Parse
THE SAXON SIMI- PIP:
Estrendlnary bingstere
The Intentelionstly Famed
SKEGE FLAs11
World's Created' dein' ,
Per Rod Leughter
JON PEANETS and his
SIMIAN 1.16012p4
Mild sold Oooly
Wrodenorn-
MADIE A RAY
FRANK CONNORS
In Senn
KAIT31AN and his 31,41.
Thome Deliehtful Itentro
VIE 1,1,Milii4Ls TOIRNEY

11;

ARABIAN

HOTEL TULLER

Fri., Sat., & Sunday Only

P. M. Till Clooing
Three wonderful nights, for folk•
who eri.S4 delightful enterteln•
meld, dun, .11)On
end nee food.

When the Monte Carlo Ballet
Russe comes to the Masonic Aud-
itorium, Detroit, for three eve-
ning performances, Dec. 3, 4 and
5, as well as a Wednesday mat-
inee, audiences will see the glam-
orous result of a rare collabora-
tion of numerous temperamental
artists.
Each of the seven complete bal-
let productions to be presented
represents the efforts of at least
four creative' masters: the libret-
tist, the composer, the choreog-
rapher, the scene and costume
designer. Serge Diaghilev, late
genius of the ballet, excelled in
bringing such men as Stravinsky,

Bakst, Fokine and Nijinsky to-
gether without any of them com-
nutting murder or even mayhem.
This art is dramatically dem-
onstrated in the sensational new
American ballet, "Union Pacific,"
which will have its Detroit pre-
miere Monday night. Col. W.
de Basil, guiding spirit of the
company, brought together for its
creation Archibald MacLiesh, the
poet, as librettist; Albert John-
son, the scenic designer; Nicholas
Nabokoff, the composer; Irene
Sharer, costume designer; and
Leonide Massine, the Monte Car-
lo's own maitre de ballet.

PHONE TE. 2-9770

NIGHTCLUBS

BILL WALKER

EASTERN STAR CAFE
The Eastern Star Cafe con-
tinues with Madame Etienne, who
presents her all-star revue featur-
ing Diane Tani from the World's
Fair and Mabel Habbair, Queen
of Blues, and the Seven Ador-
ables. Music is furnished by Rex
Hanlon and his famous orchestra.
The Eastern Star is located at
6515 Grand River at Grand Blvd.,
and there is no cover and no
minimum charge at any time.

Sally Fields Column to Start
Next Week

TIM perfaet dunes Iron, I.rewenting

new and Intricate routine

Karl Spaeth's
Orchestra at-rs

AND OTHER CLEI Elt

eat

3 SHOWS NIGHTLY

10e1

DELICIOUS COCKTAILS
25, 30 and 35 Cents

rat

RESEMVATIONS-471. 5200

No

COVER ANY TIME

Always

PACKS THEM IN

It's His Latest
and Greatest of All Spots

The
Chocolate Bar

WNW
1.25

ER

432 LIVINGSTONE

Now tit. Antoine

WHAT A SHOWI

sent
411 S{M

10 BIG ACTS

FAST! SNAPPY! GAY!
Featuring

SLICK WHIT E

LNIA
INEI

and the H uman Seal

PAULINE BRYANT

Fenton -Chant of the needs"
Dance

Bunnie's Chocolettes

D.C.
0.95

A Sextette of Mod Dentilul
Kepi. Dewitt,

Guest Artist Nite

EVERY SUNDAY

Featuring

VISITING STARS

IS p. ra.

Sunday Dinner $1.25

Ind

NO COVER CHARGE

nda"

A CONFESSION OF FAITH

8.95

I believe in God, who is for me
spirit, love, the principle of all
things,
I believe that God is in me, as
I am in Him.
i believe that the true welfare
of man consists of fulfilling the
will of God.
I believe that from the fulfill-
ment of the will of God there can
that which is
othinganbd
follow nothing
for all m
g ood for me
I believe that the will of God
is that every man should love his
fellowmen, and should act toward
others as he desires they should
act toward him.
I believe that the reason of life
Is for each of us simply to grow
in love.
I believe that this growth in
love will contribute more than any
other force to establish the King-
dom of God on earth..
To replace a social life in which
division, falsehood and violence are
WI-powerful, with a new order in
which humanity, truth and brother-
hood will reign.
From My Religion by
LEO TOLSTOI,

Service

I ce Daily

, Grand
egon

Aerating

;00

MAN
)H EL

w nwo

■ O

Cantor
I Goldin

► anrite

H t L

e t Ca r NO.
triermerki

• sad by

*Innen
Ill nose

-

4 - 5

Triumphant Return—ENTIRE Company

ARABIAN ROOM AT TULLER
The Arabian Room at the Tal-
ler Hotel presents for Friday,
Saturday and Sunday nights an
all-star show featuring Alexan-
der and Swanson, the perfect
dance team, presenting new and
intricate routines. There are rev.
eral other clever acts, while Karl
Spaeth's orchestra supplies the
music. In addition to the ex-
cellent cuisine, cocktails are
served for 25, 30 and 35 cents.
There is no cover charge at any
time. '

WEBSTER HALL COCKTAIL
GRILL
A new and exiting addition to
the floor show at the Webster
Hall Cocktail Grill has been add-
ed this week in charming Ruth
Delmar, "the girl with the bari-
tone voice." Ruth, who hails
from Boston, has recently finished
an engagement at the Fox Thea-
ter where she scored a hit with
her voice, which is of phenomenal
low pitch.
Santora and Polite, talented
ballroom team, continue the sec-
ond week of their engagement,
presenting unusual dance treat-
ments of waltz, bolero and slave
routines. They come directly
from the Congress Hotel in Chi-
cago, where they danced to the
music of Eddie Duchin and his
band. Now their accompaniment
is played by popular Emerson Gill
and his orchestra, which is in the
eleventh week of a record-break-
ing stay. Marian Mann in the
featured soloist with Gill's or-
ganization.

Del-Mar Welcomes
Ina Del Marvin

For the past ten years, the Del-
Mar School of Beauty Culture,
located in the Stormfeltz-Lovely
Bldg., Woodward and E. Grand
Blvd., has brought an added rec-
ognition to the business life of
the new center district by becom-
ing the largest school of its kind
in the Middle West.
Del-Mar is a story of a woman's
devotion to a business career. In
10 years, the student enrollment
has grown from 13 girls to many
hundreds.
The woman responsible for this
growth is Madame N. B. Watt,
who, after 10 years of concen-
trated effort, feels that she has
worked hard enough and that the
There's no door for the buying time is opportune to pass the
tha will shut out the world of school and its various activities to
m.
en
another. The new owner is Ina
Del Marvin, founder of the Ina
Del Marvin Shops in the David
Whitney Bldg.
.
1
"'”-; '.
Characteristic of the whole-
rThe
hearted devotion that built the
Del-Mar is the answer that Ma-
dame Watt gave to the question
of why she should wish to sell a
business that has more than
doubled in volume each year. She
Raid, "For many years I have
wished to retire, to seek a much-
needed rest, and at last, after
careful deliberation and investiga-
tion, I have found someone I
know is capable of not only car-
rying on the work I have started
but one who will have the ambi-
tion and experience to give the
Del-Mar students the bigger and
better Del-Mar we have always
wanted.

Beginning with next week's is-
sue of The Chronicle, Miss Sally
Fields will contribute a weekly
column entitled "Hitting the
High Spots." This new feature,
which will be run for the pur-
pose of acquainting readers of
The Chronicle with the worth-
while night clubs, restaurants,
shops, etc., will be presented in
the Sally Fields inimitable newsy
and intimate style.

Richard Hale, Famous

Singing Actor, at Cass

Theater

on Friday

Richard II a I e. distinguished
baritone and dramatic interpreter,
will give a program for the De-
troit Town Hall, at the Cass
Theater, Friday, Dec. 7, at 11 a.
Si. This is the last Friday morn-
iffg program before Christmas re-
cess. The lectures will be re-
sumed on Jan. 4 with the appear-
ance of Will Durant.
Mr. Hale, the young American
baritone, who has achieved dis-
tinction in two fields, is merging
his talents in a strikingly indi-
vidual way for the delightful and
versatile program of operatic
scenes, folk songs, characteriza-
tions based on famous plays and
the evolution of Negro songs,
which he Will give. In addition to
his appearances with Stokowski,
Damrosch and Koussevitzky, Mr.
Hale is widely known for his re-
citals In London, Berlin and New
York and for his spectular success
in the title role of Gluck's
"Orpheus," having been the first
man in this country to sing the
role and the first baritone in its
entire history.

UNITED DETROIT THEATERS
Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler
head the cast in "Flirtation
Walk," the spectacular musical
which is now on view at the Mich-
igan Theater in Detroit. The
stage show this week features
Benny Davis and his nationalls
famous revue with Bobby Lane,
Evelyn Farney and Jimmy Byr-
nes, Ruth King, the Winstead
Trio, Edith Mann, Rollo Pickert,
Blanche Lewis, Bobby Bernard,
Jimm'y Shea and Guy Ramond in
the all-star show,
Doug Fairbanks returns to the
screen after an absence of two
years with his appearance in "The
Private Life of Don Juan". which
is now showing at the United Art-
ists Theater.
The first Detroit showing of
"Crimson Romance" with Ben
Lyon, Sari Maritza and Eric von
Stroheim, and Helen Hayes in
"What Every Woman Knows",
are the two big features on the
screens of the State and Fisher
Theaters this week.

FOX THEATER
A new juvenile star, Anne
Shirley, has the leading role in
"Anne of Green Gables," at the
Fox. In the notable cast are
Helen Westley, 0. P. Hegel',
Sara Haden, Charles Grapewin,
Murray Kinnell, Gertrude Mes-
singer and Hilda Vaughn,
The stage show includes the
Saxon Sisters, singers; Serge
Flash, juggler. and Joe Peanuts
and his monkeys.

HOLLYWOOD THEATER
For tour days, starting Friday,
Dec. 7, the Hollywood Theater
will offer "Cleopatra" and "The
Lemon Drop Kid" as a double-
feature program.
Starting Tuesday, Dee. 11, for
three days only. the Hollywood
Theater will offer "The Fountain"
and "One Exciting Adventure" on
the same program.

"What this conference is inter-
ested in in not what a man believes,
but what other people think about
him, and do to him because of what
There is no objection to people's he believes."—Newton D. Baker,
thinking what they like—just so at a seminar of Catholics, Protes.
their thinking isn't done aloud. tants and Jews.

It

AUDI I ORIUM

9. HUROK Presents COL. W. MASI LI

U. S. Jews Urged to Greater
Participation in Land Re-
demption in Zion

LLET RUSSE

de MONTE CARLO •
•• .

DEC. 3—EVE. Union Polito,

tylphin, Igor,
NEW YORK,— A unanimous
DEC. 4—EVE. A•era's Wedding,
vote of the representatives of all
Bodkin, Danube.
DEC. 3—MAT. Sylphidet, Aurora's
Zionist parties and groups in the I
Wedding, Igor.
United States was cast Wednes-
DEC. 3—EVE. Provo Union
BOX OFFICE: GRINNELL'S re. 2.7100
day evening at the annual meet-

Paola*. . Danube.
ing of the board of directors of
the Jewish National Fund of
TEMPLE FORUM
America, to re-elect Dr. Israel
PRESENTS
Goldstein as president of the
American branch of the Keren
Po-Author of "31erchunto of Dthat"
Kayemeth Le'Israel for a second
Lecture: "The International Munitions Industry Exposed"
terni. The meeting, held at Zion-
TEMPLE BETH EL
.1 ;. ■ 7' ..
III
ist headquarters, I11 Fifth Ave.,
AI II:30
listened to an impassioned plea by
Woodward at Gladstone
lirket. 133.-1t lcanple
Dr. Goldstein for expanding the
A
work of the American branch of
011elinTRA
IN PERSON
the Zionist land-redeeming agen-
( MALL
cy, with a view of arousing the
SEATS TODAY
FRIDAY EyE
Priv, 81.23 to •2.30
interest of American Jews to a
hot 001,
DEC. 14
full relaization of the importance
(Willer 705
of the land problem.
Reporting an increase in the
Jascha Heifetz, who ranks as
American receipts of the Fund
one of the truly great violinists of
amounting
to, approximately, 40
the world, comes to Orchestra
MISS CELIA ADLER
per cent as compared with the re-
Hall Friday evening, Dec. 14, for
his first violin recital in some Theater of New York, will appear ceipts for the preceding year, Dr.
years. Heifetz appears as the at- in Detroit on Sunday, Dec. 23, to- I Goldstein warned that the normal
traction in the series offered• by gether with an able assisting cast , growth and development of the
the Detroit Concert Society, Iso- in Maria Stefkofsky'a three-act Jewish National Home will be
Presents Her
bel J. Hurst, manager.
play, "Doctor Monica," in the I thwarted unless greater resources
4r
Featuring
An emotional experience, Scottish Rite auditorium of the Ma are placed at the disposal of the
charged with beauty, rich with sonic Temple.
Jewish National Fund to extend
from the
and
spiritual warmth, is a Heifetz
In addition to this presentation, considerably the National Jewish
concert. A lifetime of playing is a concert will be given following land possessions in Palestine. Ile
Queen of Blues
behind Heifetz today, and several the performance, to include songs, deplored that such resources were
and 7 Adore:files
outgrown careers. He has been recitations from Sholom Aleichem, not available in a year when Pal-
successively an infant prodigy, a Peretz, Reisen, Yeoash and Bialik. estine absorbed 40,000 new Jew-
flax MANION and
III, ra111,011• Orrheotre
boy wonder, an adolescent genius.
This performance is planned un- ish immigrants, 25 per cent of
He passed through the fire of these

N„Z17.1 ° :,,;`( . 1,„,, ..
der the auspices of the Jewish Na- which were refugees from Ger-
dangerous periods to emerge a
many, whose primary need is land
tional Workers Alliance.
great and mature artist. He has
Miss Adler is the daughter of on which they may gain a foot-
circlealt heglobe four times.
hold in the Jewish National Home,
Tickets are on sale at Grinnells the late Jacob Adler. Critics hail
The first section of a George
her
acting as among the ablest of
Music Store.
this day. She has been triumphant Washington Forest, a tribute
on the English „aeon the Jewish snonsored by the Jewish National
'he
stage.
Fund of America on the occasion
of the bi-centennial anniversary
.
of the birth of George Washing-
bach said. Tht school will be ton, was planted in Palestine, ac-
opened in the fall of 1935.
cording to Dr. Goldstein's report.
Dr. Dushkin will hold the post
ONE
Dr. Alexander M. Dushkin of Chi-
The Washington trees consti-
SUNDAY,
of
Associate
Professor
in
Educa-
DAY
cago has been unanimously chosen
tute an important section of ex-
DEC.
ONLY
by the executive council of the He- tional Method and Administration tensive aforestration work car-
(Scottish Rite Cathedral)
23rd
in
the
newly
formed
department
of
brew University as the first pro-
ried out in the Holy land near
fessor in the new department of education which will be established Kfar Hahoresh, in the Valley of
THEATER PERFORMANCE AND CONCERT
as
part
of
the
faculty
of
humani-
education at the University in Jeru-
Jezrael, a site contributed for the
by the Well Known Artist
salem, according to word received ties, for the purpose of providing Washington Memorial by the Jew-
opportunities for graduate studies
ish National Fund, the instrumen-
in pedagogy by teachers employed
in the public and private schools of tality of the Zionist movement,
Palestine. The department will which acquires land in Palestine
ith • Celebrated Artist Ensembl e presenting
specialize in the training of teach. as the property of the Jewish
people. More than 76,000 trees,
ers for secondary schools.
the
majority
of
which
are
pine
Dr. Dushkin, who is at present
executive director of the Board of trees, have been planted in this
JeWish Education in Chicago, was area. The project was carried out
IN THREE ACTS
the first Jewish inspector of schools with the aid of contributions by
By Mari• Stefkofsky
Staged by Jacob Cohen
appointed by the Government of American Jews, raised during the
Arranged by th e Jewish National Workers
Palestine during Sir Herbert Sam- Washington bi-centennial year.
Alliance
A resolution passed by the
uel's administration, He lived in
Palestine from 1919 to 1921, dur- meeting expressed tribute to the
ing which time he was associated memory of Baron Edmond de
with the Zionist Board of Educa- Rothschild as a great benefactor
tion, and taught in the Hebrew of Palestine who has, single-hand-
Teachers' Seminary in Jerusalem. edly, redeemed for Jewish settle-
"Better training of teachers is an ments hundreds of thousands of
outstanding need of the education- dunams of land upon which the $ 12TH AT SEWARD
TRINITY 2.3488
al - system of Palestine," said Dr. first Zionist colonies were estab.
FRIDAY NICHT, NOV. 30
Roaenbach. "At present the Pales- lished. The meeting authorized
SUNDAY,
Matinee
and
tinian teacher's seminaries are in the Administrative Committee of
Evening, DEC. 2
reality nothing more than second- the Jewish National Fund to work
ary schools, modeled on the Euro- out plans for a public memorial
pean gymnasia. For years educa- and for a nation-wide effort to in-
tors and parents in Palestine have scribe the name of the great Ba-
been
pleading for more adequately ron Edmond in the Golden Book
DR. ALEXANDER M. DUSHKIN
Three Acts - 7 Entire Cast
trained teachers, as well as oppor- of the Jewish National Fund.
by Dr. A. S. W, Rosenbach, presi-
Lyric, by I. Rosenberg — Writte n
tunities for post-graduate training
Other officers elected were: Rev.
dent of the American F riends
by 1. Friedman
training for teachers already in
Music by B. Blank
the Hebrew University. Dr. Dush-
Zvi H. Masliansky, honorary pres-
service. It is only natural that the
OA
kin is expected to arrive in New
P r i eesl E;•--35c, 50c, 75c, $1.00,
Hebrew University , at the head of ident; Louis Rjmsky, treasurer;
Plus Tax
York in December and will proceed
associate treas-
Matinee-25c, 354 60c, 75c, Plus
the educational system in Palestine, I. 11.*Kowalsky,
Tax
immediately to Palestine, to begin
urer; L. Segal, honorary secreta-
10
should supply this need."
alalK
V1K4 KM 10101\11. 100 I.' 1 LI III Kg
work at e th
U i y.
it He
H will

n vers
I LI .W4111MIK41
ry. An administrative committee
also head the practice school, to
It doesn't require much pram of fourteen was also chosen.
be established along the lines of tice to acquire the art of being
similar experimental educational i.„
Everybody Will Want to Hear an Address on
Nazis Proscribe 28 Foes
projects in this country, Dr. Rosen-
BERLIN. — Following its re-
Anti-Semitism by
cent official warning that any
German found guilty of treason
on behalf of a foreign govern-
ment would "forfeit his head,"
the Reich Interior Ministry and
Foreign Ministry proclaimed the
Author of Articles in New Masses
forfeiture of German citizenship
by Martin Plettl of New York, a
REVEALING THE EXTENT OF ANTI-SEMITIC
former Socialist • party official,
and 27 others. All are charged
PROPAGANDA IN THE U. S.
with carrying on anti-German
propaganda abroad.
While most of those proscribed
are former Socialist and Commu-
nist leaders who succeeded in get-
ting across Germany's frontiers
when the Nazis came into power,
the official ban includes Leonhard
seven of the entire population will
Frank, pacifist novelist, and Klaus
feel the beneficent touch of life
Mann, son of Thomas Mann, Ger-
insurance during 1934,
man Nobel Prize winner. Both
. "Of the payments during 1934 . ,
are accused of agitation against
A meeting of the Michigan repre- over 800,000 will be by reason sIC
Germany in Prague newspapers
sentatives of the Continental As- the death of the policyholder am
published by fugitives from Ger-
that, as respects all the •deathiti is+
surance Company WAS held .in the the United States and Canada dur-
many.
Others outlawed are Prince Detroit Athletic Club Thursday ing 1934, including men, women
Benny Friedman, successful first-
Max Karl von Hohenlohe-Langen- evening, Nov. 22. Herman A. Beh- and children, approximately six
year coach at the City College
burg, who is charged with work- rens, president of the Continental out of ten had made life insurance
of New York, Is Morris 'Welner's
provision for their dependents"
ing against Germany in the Saar
choice for coach on his All Jew-
Assurance Company and the Con-
D. Miley Phipps, superintendent
Basin territory, and Count liu-
"Illy" Wehtsteek, star halfback
fah eleven. As an All-American
of
agencies, spoke on meeting the
bertus von Loewenstein, author
on the University of Pittsburgh
selling problems which life insur-
quarterback at the University of
of "Germany, the Tragedy of a
eleven,
named
In
that
porition
ance
men are facing under pres-
Michigan, Friedman was one of
Nation."
ent conditions.
and chosen captain of the Jew-
the greatest Jewish football
Erwin Piscator, who produced
R.
B.
Smith, state manager of
ish All-American football team
players of all time.
"Red" plays in Berlin • few years
the Continental Assurance Com-
selected by Morris 1Yelner,
ago, also forfeits his citizenship.
pany, was in charge of the meet-
sports editor.
Hubert Marten, former Separa-
ing.SIusl
Ie introduced Mr. Wiereno,
g
tist agitator in the Rhineland,
of kegon, and Phil Kanter of
who Is now believed to be in
the Ben Tolmich Agency in Detroit,
Fracne, also loses his German
who were the leading producers In
passport, as do a score of former
the state during the last 30 days.
Socialist
writers
Communist
and
Seventy-five representatives of the
Loyal Eren in Sleep
who are working on emigre news-
company were in attendance, Wil-
liam Curtis, president of the Na-
papers in Prague, Paris and
tional Casualty Company of De-
Amsterdam.
troit, was a guest and spoke briefly.
Dr. Otto Straser, brother of
Mr. Behrens was introduced by
Gregor Straser, one of the vic-
George
Corner, who has represented
tims of the June SO Nazi "purg-
Continental Casualty and Assur-
ing," also is on the government's
ance
Companies
for the past 25.
list of outlawed Germans. He is
years.
branded as an "archtraitor" and
charged with plotting in .Prague
to overthrow the Hitler regime.
A newcomer knocks at the por-
tals of Heaven, calling for ad-
mittance. Moses, appearing on the
THE GIVER
scene, asks him: "Well, and her
is the Chosen People doing down
le blind to loore of withered •••
. - an
HERMAN A. BEHRENS
below there?" The new arrival
And deaf to children crying In the
night
tinental Casualty Company, was replies: "I beg your pardon, but
For bread'. Co-h.1, In that rich heri•
which Chosen People do you mean?
tag.—
the featured speaker, Mr. Beh-
Amerb•—th.lre In an equal right
We have two down there now!"
rens made some significant state-
T. Ine an4 laugh, to lat., and to play .
They Sr. the wended tictima of the ments ec",srning the broader as-
Nth,.
He who has no inner nobleness
The guiltier* martyr. of se III.atarred pect of I f insurance in its appli-
cation to present problems. He has nothing, even if be be of noble
They had nn bans In shaping. Theirs stated:
birth. •
the filen
Of 'mono routs In not, where hope
"During 1934 the life insurance
to ton.
Conwi•nc. of mine, naltrl numb companies in the United States and
Think about the misfortunes of
Canada will pay benefits in ap-
deep we h•wt!
apart
Pins re. te
Ton
proximately seven million cases and others, that you slay be satisfied
lo walah Main res smugly walked
with your own lot.
these
benefits
will
render
financial
alone
Tony I reach the crew:road. and I re assistance to _over twenty million
Con4n4.41 done the reed the mutterer,
people. In °the. words, on the The bosoms of the wise are the
tam.
average of one person out of every tombs of secrets.
—1/121hugh L. Ministered*.

IL;: t.$1.107$ 5 1 . 11$2.2142.7 s ;
SOHN.

H. C. ENGELBRECHT

December 4th

EIFET

EASTERN STAR CAFE

Madame ETIENNE
All Star Revue
DIANE TANI
World's Fair
Mable Hubbair

e f:

ins

ALEXANDER &
SWANSON

r'—

RABBI GOLDSTEIN

* *

ROOM

All-Star Show, f

Celia Adler, celebrated star of
the Yiddish stage, who has also
been widely acclaimed as a great
star of the English stage, former
leading lady of the Jewish Art

Heifetz Concert
Here on Dec. 14

I WISH

ejudice
n at the
It school,
e-year-old
I that at
elebration
them re-
Ilenry, a
wi sh pa r.
ijoyed the
id a little
le of the
h as the
at once
all Henry
mine
ldren, by

Julian Bryan, Princeton '21
author and lecturer, who has just
returned from Soviet Russia with
thousands of feet of motion picture
film and innumerable "stills" taken
by him in the course of a long itine-
rary through that country, will be
the speaker and show movies at
theTown Hall Series in the Fisher
Theater Wednesday morning at 11
o'clock. His subject will be "Russia
As It Is".
The remarkable thing about
these pictures is that they were not
"edited" in any way, or even cut,
so Mr. Bryan says. They were
taken with the full consent of the
soviet authorities and the United
States without the slightest sug-
gestion of any surreptitious action.
Tickets for th
hrilling movie
lecture may be trchased
r
now at
Grinnell's and Jonday, Tuesday
and Wednesday at the Fisher
Theater Box Office.

J N Fr RE-ELECTS ti
1116 PERFORMANCES
MASONIC
DECEMBER 3C
COR4 IININt

*4'

In "Dr. Monica"

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Euclid r'..
2000
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Hebrew University
Professorship For
Dr. A. M. Dushkin

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41101) A :14fr
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6515 GRAND RIVER AT , GRAND BLVD.

Masonic TeMple

CELIA ADLER

W

"Doctor Monica"

•.
• Littman's Peoples 'Theater 9 %

Menashe Shalnik,

"Jonah Seeks a Bride" 01

10



John L. Spivak

Maccabees Auditorium

MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 10

Insurance Benefits
Outlined by Behrens

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