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March 18, 1955 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1955-03-18

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

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-21

Friday, March 18, 1955

Danny Raskin's

Mrs. Arnfeld Heads
Women's Pre-Campaign

LISTENING

.

Mrs. Eugene J. Arnfeld has
been named chairman of the
Pre-Campaign Cabinet for the
Women's Division in the 1955
Allied Jewish Campaign, Mrs.
:.!Sidney J. Kar-
bel, chairinan
of the Women's
Division, an-
nounced.
Mrs. A"nfeld,
w h o will co-
or dinate the
fund - raising
activities of the
Pre - Campaign
Division, which
.has the respon-
sibility of ob-
taining initial
Mrs. Arnfeld gifts, named
these women to her cabinet:
Mesdames Ivor J. Kahn, execu-
tive vice-chairman; Sidney J.
Allen, Edward. A. Atlas, Harvey
H. Goldman and George C.
Golanty, vice-chairman; Lewis
B. Daniels, campaign vice-
chairmari, advisor to pre-cam-
paign; Abraham Cooper, chair-
man, pre-campaign fund-rais-
ing event; I. Jerome Hauser,
fund - raising vice - chairman;
Harry Barnett, secretary; Harry
Becker, Max M. Fisher, Samuel
H. Rubiner and Benjamin L.
Silberstein, members-at-large.
`Cabinet members and spon-
sors will meet with pre-cam-
paign workers for a briefing at
1 p.m., Wednesday, at the home
of Mrs. Melville Welt.

•••■•■••■••••■■•••■■■■••■■■■••■■■■■■•■■••■■■••••■•■

ENJOY

LIBERMAN'S

SHORT

SALAMI

89c lb.
12162
DEXTER

TO. 6-9804
TO. 8-9829

WE ARE NOW

CATERING

For WEDDINGS, SHOWERS,
B A R MITZVAHS, SWEET
SIX TEEN S, ETC. Moderate
Prices. Can accommodate from
25 to 125 people. Dance floor
and piano also available.
Serving dinners to the public
on Sundays and Holidays only.
See us in our newly beautifully
remodeled Dining Rooms.

Kormendy's Dining Room
and Catering
114 Pallister

TR. 3-7444 or TR. 1-4485



THE display of the United
States Flag in front of the JWV
Memorial Home on Davison has
by now become a regular oc-
currence . . taken for
granted by the thousands who
pass the building . . The con-
sternation of one of the- passing
motorists who rushed into the
building office a n d excitedly
asked office secretary Ruth
Schwartz, "What's the matter?",
'therefore is understAndable . .
Sure enough . through an
inadvertence . . . the first one
in all these years . . . Old Glory
was upside down in the position
of the traditional distress signal.
* * *
MANY NEEDY FOLKS who
require dental aid in so many
forms. but can't afford to pay
for it, will be the beneficiaries
of the dinner-dance fund-rais-
tug affair by Detroit Women of
Alpha. Omega Dental Fraternity
. . Wednesday evening, March
30, at Elmwood Casino . •. . The
men are donating their time in
various phases of dentistry and
orthodontist work . . . with labo-
ratory bills being the only thing
paid for .. . The Israel. Dental
School, sponsored on a nation-
wide scale by Alpha Omega, will
receive some of the proteeds . .
Sarah Davis is chairman of the
affair . . . Eunice Beal is presi-
dent of the dental auxiliary.
* *
IN A SMALL hotel in King-
ston, Ontario, so reports re-
turned traveler Martin Broder-
man, there is a yellowing sign
tacked to the dingy wall be-
hind the desk on which the pro-
prietor proclaims his fixed in-
bred skepticism of all humanity
. . . It reads, "No checks cashed.
Not even good ones."
• * *
DURING HIS_ engagement at
the Elmwood Casino, comedian
Georgie Jessel walked up to a
little, old lady sitting at a ring-
side table • . . swooped her up
in his arms . showered her
with hugs and kisses . .. Then
he announced to the audience
that this was "Mom" Ettinger
. . . whose lap he frequented of-
ten as a six-year-old boy . .
"Mom" Ettinger, a friendly,
young lady in her 80's is a resi-
dent of the Home for Aged .. .

Now Serving Complete Table D'Hote Dinner

SUNDAYS 4P.M. TO 9 P.M.
IN OUR BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOM

SAMMY'S

AVALON ROOM
in OAK PARK

Is Now Accepting Bookings for Your

Showers Engagements - Bar Mitzvahs
and ALL SOCIAL FUNCTIONS

WE SUGGEST
EARLY RESERVATION

CALL MISS FAYE
or MR. HENRY



500 CAR
FREE PARKING

1.1 7-1355



23051 COOLIDGE at 9 MILE ROAD

arate campaigns. Such orderly
and responsible processes are
necessary. to obtain maximum
community support for all Jew-
ish needs.
agreement with the welfare
3. Flexibility should be main-
fund.
tained in the initiation and de-
2. Contributors should check velopMent of worthy new causes.
with the welfare fund before
giving to independent campaign's,
and leaders should check with
it before sponsoring such sep-

Communities Begin Intensive Study
Of Fund-Raising Methods, Timing

NEW YORK, (JTA) — The
Council of Jewish Federations
and Welfare Funds reported that
communities through out the
United States. and Canada are
conducting "the most intensive
review in a number of years" of
their fund-raising methods.
The re-evaluation process, the
report said, is aimed at increas-
ing fund-raising results in 1955
and at laying firm foundations
for long -range campaigning.
Some of the areas under review
are:
1. Primacy of the central cani-
paign—re-emphasis of the fed-
eration as the necessary alterna-
tivek to the "philanthropic jungle"
of independent appeals which
the development of central cam-
paigns was designed to elim-
inate.
2. Have central campaigns
adapted to changing needs and
changing interests in the com-
munity? Also, how can cam-
paigns provide greater satisfac-
tions to workers and contribu-
tors?
3. How effective are current
techniques in securing and in-
spiring key leadership, recruit-
ing and training workers, solici-
ting big gifts, finding new
prospects, getting maximum ben-
efits from tax provisions and
encouraging greater individual
and corporation giving?
Continuing concern over the
rise in multiple appeals and their
possible effects on federation
and welfare fund campaigns has
been expressed by the CJFWF for
several years. The following
suggestions have therefore been
advanced to the communities to
take into consideration when re-
examining fund-raising meth-
ods:
I. Welfare funds should include
all valid Jewish appeals desery-.
ing support of the Jewish com-
munity, except where there is
mutual agreement that the ap-
peal shall conduct its own cam-
paign. In=such exceptions, tim-
ing and other aspects of the
campaign shall be determined in

and when Georgie said he want-
ed to visit her at the Home . .
she invited him to meet her
friends . . all the other resi-
dents . . . And so it was last
Sunday that Jesse' put on one
of his most inspired shows for
residents of the Home . . . He
told stories . . . sang Yiddish
songs ... and provided a warm
afternoon for many people who
remember Georgie from many
years back and appreciated him
that much more last Sunday.
* * *
HOWARD PEARL, United Art-
ists publicity man, tells about
the two agents sitting together
watching a preview of an impor-
tant picture . . . One happened
to be the agent for the male star
of the piece, the other for the
female lead . . . They sat silently
while several reels were un-
wound and then one nudged the
other in the ribs . . "Look at
those two bums up there," he
said With some disgust, "getting
80 percent of our dough."
* * *
REMEMBER THE TIME last
year, when Ernie Goldsmith
stepped up to the tee at Red
Run and drove off . . . the ball
sailing straight down the fair-
way, leaping onto the green and
rolling right into the hole? ..
Ernie threw his club in the air
with wild excitement . . . "What
have you suddenly gone crazy
about?", asked wife Esther, who
was trying to learn something
about the game . . . With a wild
gleam of delight in his eyes,
Ernie yelled that he had just
made a hole in one . . "Did
you?" asked Esther placidly. "Do
it again, dear, I didn't see you."
* * *
FATHER O'CONNOR, dean of
men at University of Detroit,
advised Sheldon Mintz, presi-
dent of Phi Sigma Delta, new
Jewish fraternity at U. of D., of
the procedure he must follow in
order to get the fraternity rec-
ognized on the campus . . . that
of Sheldon appearing before the
faculty committee . . ."- Just
give them the same shpiel you

gave mei" said Father O'Connor.

"DANCE WITH
ME, HENRY"

N 0 R TH LAND

TO THE
MUSIC OF

DRIVER TRAINING

SAMMY
-WOOLF

• AAA Driver Training Institute
Graduate
• Professional Certified Teacher
• - Dual-Control Training Car

Saul H. Sinkoff LI. 7-3313

Personal instruction

And His Band

TE. 4-7730 or WE. 4-0879

Sunday and Evenings Included

BOESKY'S

Delicatesse-K



Restaurant



Famous for Fine Faod

Delightfully
Air-Conditioned

Cocktail Lounge

DINNERS 4:30 to 9:30 • AFTER THEATRE SNACKS

Businessmen's Lunch 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

TRAY CATERING A SPECIALTY

12th at Hazelwood

TR. 2-4375

For BEST ITALIAN FOODS—there is no comparison to

CAESAR'S PIZZERIA

(Air-Conditioned)

We invite you to be your own judge.
One try will convince you!

OUR PIZZA? Crispy and delieloasl
We make our own Ravioli.
Our Spaghetti sauces. can't be beat!

• STEAKS • CHICKEN • FROG LEGS
• SHRIMP
• FISH

OPEN: Week days 3 P.M. to 3 A.M.; Sundays 1 P.M. to 1 A.M.
CLOSED MONDAYS
-

18140 W. 7 MILE RD.
at SOUTHFIELD

For Fast Carry-Outs
Call KE. 4-9290

WHERE TO DINE

BOESKY'S SID'S CAFE

ALWAYS THE FINEST—
DINING, DANCING, ENTERTAINMENT. Complete dinners,
luncheons. After-Theater dining. Sunday dinners from 12 noon.

We Cater to Parties and Banquets

15241 E. Warren at Barham TU. 2-3883

For An Early Breakfast or Midnight Snack.
Fora Light Lunch or Complete Dinner Stop At

STAFFORD'S FINE moos 8333 LINWOOD
TR. 2-8500
BUDDY'S BAR-13-Q
Take Out and Delivery

Service Our Specialty . . . Ribs & Chicken right off the fire.
Cor. 12th & Clairmount
Open 4 p.m. to 4 a.m., Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 a.rn.

L GREEN'S

C

CHOP
HOUSE

15301 E. Jefferson, at Beaconsfield

VA. 2-4118

Luncheons 11 to 3 — Dinners 5 SO
10:30. Suppers 10:30 to 2 a.m.

g I niga . riTieEs..02-11s6ai
Is V EfR
o.r F rzedd Pia nrk

360a2n0q
3020
Banquet

Servi ng

than 26 years. All Beef aged in our own cellars.

ROBIN HOOD'S

serving the finest and most delicious of foods,
Steaks, Chops, Chicken Club Sandwiches. Short Orders. Delicious
UN. 1-9802
Hamburgers. "Served as you like it."
201'76 LIVERNOIS AVE., 1% Blks. So, 8 Mile Rd. Open 24 Hours

MARIA'S PIZZERIA

Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods

Air - Conditioned . . . Parking Facilities

. . Carry Out Service

7107 PURITAN . Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m. . . UN. 1-3929

Vi/E. PIZZERIA

18246 WYOMING at Curtis

UNIVERSITY 2-2520
Italian-American Dish Our Specialty
Carry-Out Service
Complete Dinners Served from 5 to i p.m.
Hours: Open weekdays, Tues., Wed., Thurs., 11:30 a.m. to 12 midnight;
Fri., Sat., 11:30 a.m. to 3 a.m.; Sun. 2 p.m. to 1 a.m. Closed Monday.

SAVOIA RESTAURANT

Chicken, Steaks, Frog Legs, Dinners, Spaghetti is Ravioli;
We Cater to Families and Parties
Full Course Dinner: $1.50 up
15508 Livernois
UN. 2-9775
Open Sun.

CLAM SHOP and BAR

TR. 2-8800

Serving: Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks end Assorted Sea Foods
Music by Muzak
2675 E. GRAND BLVD.

DE'ANGELOS PIZZA

Pizza, Spaghetti, Ravioli, Coffee

21640 John R, Hazel Park
Carry-Out Service Only

Sunday
Weekdays
Open at 4 p.m. Open at 2 n.m.

We Deliver



LI. 7 - 1711

DUNLEAVY'S HORSESHOE BAR & RESTAURANT

Businessmen's Lunch-11 A. M. to 2 P. M.
Roast Beef and Chops. Friday Special—Fish and Chips. Saturday Special—Spaghetti
and Meat Balls. Home made Ravioli. Your Chef—TED GEHRKEY.

14168 WYOMING

CARRY-OUTS •

TE. 4-4551

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