100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 13, 1957 - Image 27

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1957-09-13

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

DOW

Danny Raskin's

BY HENRY LEONARD

LISTENING

B-65"

Copr. 1957, Leonard Pritikin

1

Compensation, Restitution Claims
Must Be Filed Before April 1, 1958

The Conference on Jewish
Material Claims Against Ger-
many announces that all ap-
plications under the following-
compensation and restitution
laws promulgated by the West
German Government must be
filed with the competent
authorities before April 1, 1958:
1. Federal Indemnification
law which deals with claims
for deprivation or restriction
of liberty such as the wearing
of the Jewish badge, imprison-
ment in concentration camps,
injuries to health, the loss of
family providers, damages to
property and losses arising
from discriminatory taxes and
vocational and economic pur-
suits.
Eligible are, in addition to

UlA Distributes New
Israel Art Calendar

The new Israel Art Calendar
for the Jewish Year 5718, pub-
lished by the Keren Hayesod-
United Israel Appeal in Jerusa-
lem, has just arrived in this
country. In six full-color repro-
ductions and six black and
white drawings by Marc Cha-
gall, Ludwig Schwerin, Shmuel
Katz and other outstanding Is-
raeli artists, the new calendar
gives a vivid picture of modern
Israel, its land and its people.
Included among the bright, at-
tractive prints are studies of
Safad, Galilee, Haifa Harbor
and Lake Tiberias. The 6"x5"
reproductions are printed on
separate sheets and suitable for
framing.
The calendar gives Jewish
dates and holidays, selected
Biblical quotations and short
references to the achievements
of the Keren Hayesod-United
Israel Appeal which is the ma-
jor beneficiary of the United
Jewish Appeal in the United
States. Space is provided for
the recording of births, wed-
dings and other significant
dates.
The Israel Art Calendar is
distributed in the United States
through the United Israel Ap-
peal.

0,-w Bnai Brith Slates
Stag Party, Blood Bank

Oak-Woods Lodge of Bnai
Brith has scheduled a stag party
and buffet dinner to officially
open its season on Wednesday
evening, in Sammy's Avalon
Room. Guests and prospective
members are welcome.
A day earlier, the Lodge will
sponsor a blood bank drive at
6:30 p.m., Tuesday, in Clinton
School, Parklawn, South of 9
Mile, in Oak Park.
For information, call Chuck
Sherman, VE. 5-7408, or Herb

Weinberg, LI. 7-0918.

present and former residents
of West Germany, roughly i. e.
emigrants from East Germany
(incl. East Berlin); persecutees
who were. in a DP camp in
West Germany on April 1, 1947;
persons of German culture and
language from areas from
which Germans were expelled
after the last war; -- stateless
persons and refugees (including
those who were naturalized
anywhere after the end of the
war).
2. Reich Claims Law (Fed-
eral Restitution Law) which
deals with claims for assets
which cannot be restituted in
natura such as bank accounts,
securities, jewelry, objects
formed of precious metals,
personal valuables, household
goods, etc., confiscated by the
Third Reich.
Claims may also be filed if
the property was confiscated
outside West Germany (inel.
West Berlin) but was there-
after brought to a particular
place in West Germany, to
West Germany as such or to
Greater Berlin or—if the owner
was a resident of West Germany
—the property was confiscated
outside West Germany (or
West Berlin).
Information concerning the
procedure and eligibility re-
garding the filing of claims
may be secured from competent
attorneys and agencies. The re-
sponsible agency in Detroit is
the Resettlement Service, 13327
Linwood, with Mrs. Herta Horn
in charge. It is in the interests
of all potential claimants to
register their claims as soon as
possible.

Alert Police to Watch
for School Children

With more than 350,000 De-
troit youngsters back for their
first full week of school, De-
troit police were ordered to be
doubly alert in patrolling streets
to prevent child accidents.
Deputy Superintendent Miles
Furlong directed all officers of
the department to watch for
motorists who drive too fast or
endanger the lives of young-
sters in any way.
"If you see a child doing a
dangerous act, stop and explain
to him what he has done and
the proper way to cross the
street," Furlong added. "If it is
particularly hazardous, and oth-
er- duties do not interfere, take
the youngsters home to his par-
ents and tell them what he has
done.
"A youngster going to school
for the first time is particularly
vulnerable," he continued.
"Nearly 80 per cent of our child
accidents happen not on our
main arteries, but on residential

or secondary streets."

IT PAYS TO REPEAT a slo-
gan .. . especially if it is
punchy, meaningful and under-
standable . . . All Jewish Com-
munity Council TV and radio
programs commence and end
with singing "Hine Matov," a
psalm proclaiming "B e h o 1 d
how good and pleasant it is for
brethren to dwell together in.
harmony." . . . The Council's
letterheads a n d publications
also carry this inscription . . .
Well, the winning float at De-
troit's Labor Day parade car-
ried a slogan . . yes, you
guessed it ... the Jewish Com-
munity Council slogan . . . bor-
rowed by the Laborers Local
334, AFL . .. Rena Leah Joffe,
12-year-old daughter of Borris
Joffe, the Council's executive
director, was viewing the pa-
rade from the grandstand and
yelled in clear, bell-like fash-
ion, "Daddy, look, the Com-
munity Council theme song on
the float," causing appreciative
smiles of recognition on the
faces of Governor G. Mennen
Williams, Supreme Court jus-
tices, U.S. Senator Pat Mc-
Namara and other dignitaries
on the platform.
*
*
RECORD ALBUM by Neil
Wolfe, piano stylist at the Cau-
cus Club, was released yester-
day on the Vik label (subsidiary
of R.C.A. Victor). . . It's
called "Neil Wolfe for Lazy
Afternoon" and contains 12
tunes with which Neil does a
fine job of rhythmic styling on
some very easy - to - listen - to
melodies . . . Of the dozen
songs, Neil's favorite is "Lazy
Afternoon," which he'll be get-
ting quite a few requests for
at the Caucus Club, among the
others albumized by him.
* * *
TOT TALKS . . . Five-year-
old Arthur Gottleber, went to
school for the first time, re-
turned home and was asked by
his father, Moe Gottleber, how
he liked it . . . "It's all right,
but they ask too many ques-
tions," said little Arthur. "First
they asked me where you were
born and I told them. Then
they asked me where mother
was born and I told them. But
when they asked me where I
was born I had to tell a lie."
. . . Moe asked why, and Ar-
thur said, "I didn't want to say
I was born in the Women's
Hospital and have them think
I was a sissy, so I told them
it was in Briggs Stadium."
* * *
AFTER GOLFING for a good
many years, Harry Saltzman
finally scored the long-sought
after, but elusive hole-in-one.
. . . He aced the 102-yard fourth
hole at South Haven's Glenn
Shores Course while vacation-
ing there . . . making him eli-
gible for the recent Hole-In-One
tournament held in Detroit last
week ... While all of his shots
landed on the green here, they
weren't close enough to the hole
to be scored . .. But Harry is
still a mighty happy individual
and will be telling anyone who
wants to listen about his first
"ace" for a long time to come.

First to Have Negev
Home with Electricity

BEERSHEBA, (JTA) — , The

Masonic Temple Lists '57-58 Program

To celebrate the 25th anniver-
sary of the city's leading con-
cert house, C. W. Van Lopik,
general manager of Masonic
Temple, announced an impres-
sive concert season.
For 1957-58 the Masonic
Temple will offer concertgoers
a distinguished array of the
world's outstanding virtuoso's,
orchestras, and attractions.
The Symphony Series will be
inaugurated Oct. 18 with the
internationally famous Boston
Symphony under the baton of
Charles MunCh. The following
evening, making its initial ap-
pearance in Detroit, will be
Italy's greatest orchestra, the
Florence Symphony. On Nov.
11 George Szell will conduct the
Cleveland Orchestra. The To-
ronto Orchestra with Walter
Susskind as conductor will
make its bow at the Temple
Dec. 10.
Emil Gilels, Russia's greatest
pianist, will appear Feb. 11.
Closing the Symphony Series
on April 19 is the Minneapolis
Symphony under the conductor-
ship of Antal Dorati.
The Concert Series, one of
the oldest in the country, will
debut Nov. 15 with dis-
tinguished violinists, Yehudi
Menuhin. The duo-piano team
of Vronsky and Babin come to

the stage of Masonic Dec. 4.
They will be succeeded by the
Jan. 7-11, engagement of the
Royal Ballet (formerly Sadler's
Wells Ballet). Giving her pre-
miere Detroit recital at the
Temple Feb. 7 will be the so-
prano of the Metropolitan
Opera, Victoria da Los An-
geles.
Other artists of note on the
Concert Series roster include
Dame Myra Hess, the Don Cos-
sack Chorus, Vienna on Parade,
the Russian violinist Leonid
Kogan, English comimedienne
Gracie Fields, Mantovani and
his Orchestra, Little Gaelic
Singers, Andres Segovia and
Anna Russell, the Royal Ballet
the Ballet Russe, Jose Greco
and the Paul Gregory produc-
tion of "The Rivalry," a stage
presentation of the Lincoln-
Douglas debates, starring Ray-
mond Massey, Brian Donlevy
and Agnes Moorehead.

WE ARE NOW

CATERING

For WEDDINGS, SHOWERS,
BAR MITZVAHS, SWrET
SIXTEENS, ETC. Moderate
Prices. C a a 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.

MUSIC! ENTERTAINMENT!

Sammy Woolf

Kormendy's Dining Room
and Catering

And His Orchestra

UN. 4-3174



UN. 3-8982
UN. 3-6501

TR 3-7444 or TR 1-4485
114 Pa [lister

ESKY

Delightfully

Air-Conditioned

Delicatessen • Restaurant • Cocktail Lounge

Famous for Fine Food

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

Businessmen's Lunch 1 i:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

TRAY CATERING A SPECIALTY

12th at Hazelwood

TR. 2-4375

Wair...X::<.:KX.ESS71..i<aaCKX,EgOkaiftWtKi'g.XXCia2eiaW..>EK.:+:174.,,,

Detroit's Finest, Most
Beautiful Chinese- ;..;
American Restaurant

AV

4.

p

r4 Authentic Cantonese Dishes - Chop Suey - Chow Mein 4

N .-;.

Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sun. 11-11; Fri., Sat. 11-3 a.m.

Downtown at



Accommodations for Parties

1530 THIRD ST. at Bagley
WO 1-0250
i.Kx*.xxox::;;,3 e+mK*:;._, ctwK:K.x.xo>;..xw. ,:::i..wz..- Ke+zx.x_g*xx.x.x..g4 r .&

ATTENTION BOWLERS!

For the End of a Perfect Evening
. . . Stop at Liberman's .. .

Where Quality-Courtesy and Generosity Prevail

Take Your Time ....
.. Discuss the Evening's Bowling

2nd CUP OF COFFEE FREE

LIBERMAN'S

12162 DEXTER

TO, 6-9804

WHERE TO DINE

A

Jefferson

r

CARL'S

CHOP HOUSE

at

Beaconsfield

VA. 2-4118
1 :che
E....11. to 030— toDinners

5 td
3020 GRAND RIVER. Free Parking. TE 2-8600. Priv-
ate Banquet Rooms for wedding parties. Serving
the World's Finest Steaks, Chops and Sea Foods
for more 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 Hamburgers.
"Served as you like it."

20176 LIVERNOIS AVE., 1Y2 Blks. So.

8 Mile Rd.

Open 24 Hours

house of Sheikh Suleiman was
MARIA'S PIZZERIA
hooked up this week with a util-
Specializing
in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods
ity line in the western Negev,
Air-Conditioned . . . Parking Facilities . . . Carry-Out Service
making him the first Bedouin
in Israel to have a home with 7107 PURITAN—Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.— UN 1-3929
electricity.
He paid the electric company
TR 2-8800
2,000 pounds to have his house CLAM SHOP and BAR
and two others belonging to his Serving: Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks and Assorted Sea Foods

sons linked to the power line.

Music by Muzak

2675 E. GRAND BLVD.

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan