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January 29, 1960 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1960-01-29

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

to Appear

Here on Feb. 14

Theodore Bikel, who is prob-
ably the most talked-about folk
singer in America today, will
appear in Detroit on Feb. 14,
at the Ford Auditorium.
His appearance is under the
sponsorship of Dave Lewis, an
entrepreneur who is responsible
for bringing to the city some
of the finest—albeit not always
well known—talents, particular.-
ly among. folk singers.
Bikel will be making his only
appearance in Detroit this year,
since he is already tied up with
commitments, including h i s
current starring role on Broad-
way with Mary Martin in
"Sound of Music."
He first won fame as a folk
singer. and has recorded three
long playing records for Elek-
tra. He sings in 15 languages.
and is a master of the Israeli
and Yiddish folk song.
Vienna-born Bikel received
his secondary education in
Israel. where today his father
is director of the Public Health
Service. In 1944. Theo co-
founded the Israel Chamber
Theater. left it two years later
to study at the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Art in London.
His first major role in the
U.S. was a supporting actor to
Julie Harris. the lead in The
Lark."
Tickets for the Bikel pro-
gram are available at Grin. 11's.

Labor Zionist Official
to Speak Here Monday

-1

Jacob Katzman. executive sec-
retary of the Labor Zionist Or-
ganization of America. will ad-
dress a city-wide meeting of the
movement at 8:30 p.m.. Monday.
in the Ilayim Greenberg Center.
19161 Schaefer.
He has just returned from
Jerusalem. Israel, where he at-
tended the meetings of the Ac-
tion Committee of the World
Zionist Organization.
All members of the LZO.
Farband and Pioneer Women
are urged to attend Monday's
meeting. which will open prep-
arations for the next World
Zionist Congress. to be held in
Jerusalem at the end of the
year.

SE NEW MKT
BIGGEST IIIT!

ORDER NOW BY MAIL

(AVOID

DISAPPOINTMENT)

A FABULOUS and ENCHANT,* PLAY!"

—All
TIMES
5,66f4 L A47suR C4 ,0011 pr•>ert

PADDY CHAYEFSKY's NEW HET

the

tenth man

D.•..-fire b. TYRONE GUTHRIE

tr., Thurs. (Yes 56 90, 5.75, 4.10. 3 6C.
300. Fri I Sat Ens $750. S•. 5 75. 4 to.
3 60, 3 (4 0. *K. a SAL Kits , A4 10. 4 3C.
3 60. 3 00,
5.0 !Tax In, • Erre:. ittf-aCtIrpssed.
IIAmpol et. anti s,Atest 3 etemAte

BOOTH TREATEE,

45 Si W. of Dway..14. T.36

First Time
In America •

to Plant Freedom Forest
Danny Raskin's JNF Women Get $45,000
which he is president, and said, Sima and Arnold Miller,

LISTENING

0
S

Heaven is not reached
at a single bound.
But we build the ladder
by which we rise
From the lowly earth
to the vaulted skies

And we mount to its summit

round by round.
OUR UNCLE. Sam Raskin,
built that same ladder. and
when he passed away last week.
had reached the highest rung
of his Heavenly ascent . . . He
was quite a man . . truly one
whom God is proud to have
in His houSe.
UNCLE SAM'S great philoso-
phies will never he forgotten
. . . They came straight from
the heart. and the many people
who looked to him for advice
were better persons because of
them.
THE CREDO by which he
lived was to be rich in ad-
miration and free from envy
. . . to rejoice greatly in the
good of others . . . to love
with such generosity of heart
that your love is still a dear
possession in absence or un-
kindness.
AS A PUBLIC speaker. Uncle
Sam had few peers . . . He
could talk on just about any
topic and make it so interesting
as to make the ears of his lis-
teners tingle with delight.
7 \.' Ills SERV/C'E as deputy
supreme
grand
chancellor
of the Knights • of Pythias. in
the Masonic order, in Bnai
Brith and so ma-nu of his
other communal activities. lie
u- as highly revered for h i s
depth of knowledge which he
readily passed on to others
for whatever good it would
do . . . He teas the founder
and first president of the
Hannah Schloss Old Timers
Club. and president emeritus
at his passing . .
When we
visited with him at Sinai Hos-
pital, he remarked that this
'CGS
one group that could
never hare any >sew 771 CM hers
. . . and would only prom

smaller.

ALTHOUGH HE WAS only
63. the measure of , a man's life
is the 'well spending of it, not
the length . . . He loved to
live . . but only the way he
wanted to live . . . and while
those close to him still can't
realize that he is gone. their
consolation can lay in the fact
that a man like Uncle Sam
never dies.

Heads Israel Bonds
Women's Division

Mrs. William Levin. fund-
raising chairman of the Ladies'
Auxiliary of the Jewish Na-
tional Fund, announced at the
Annual Donor Tea, at Temple
Israel, Tuesday. that the sum
of $45,000 had been raised in
this year's donor campaign.
Mrs. George Lerner, JNF
'Auxiliary president. greeted the
gathering. and Mrs. Max Stoll-
man, program chairman, intro-
, duced former Governor Theo-
dore R. McKeldin. of Maryland
the guest speaker.
In a stirring address. in
which he described his experi-
ence on his several visits in
Israel. McKeldin stated that
without the JNF there might
not have been a foundation for
the State of Israel.
He reported that governors
of the 50 States in the Union
are being mobilized as chair-
men in their states for the
Freedom Forest being planted
near Jerusalem by the .INF. He
told how he had enlisted former
President Harry S. Truman to
be honorary chairman of the
national committee for the
Freedom Forest.
Commending the Detroit
women for their efforts to aid
in planting the Freedom For-
ests—proceeds from this year's
annual donor event going to-
wards this project--McKeldin
expressed the hope that mil-
lions of trees will be planted by
Americans of all faiths in the
proposed large-scale planting
aimed at cementing American-
Israeli friendships.
He told of the activities, of
the America-Israel Society. of

And His Orchestra-

SMORGASBORD BREAKFAST

EVERY

"Only Detroit Appearance"

DAVE LEWIS Presents

THEODORE

BIKEL

Co-Star of Broadway Hit

"Sound of Music"

February 14th

Ford Auditorium

Tickets Available at
Grtnnel's Downtown

CUSTOM INSTALLATION

HI-FI • STEREO

30 Years of Electronics

I., it us show "yOtt our latest designs in

cabinetry and sound arrangements.

We

Maintain a

ITS ANCIENT GLORIES
ITS WONDERS OF TODAY

mei

URIS

AUTHOR OF - EXODUS"

EDWARD G. ROBINSON

',WARNER BROS. in

WARNERSCOPE:-.TECHYCOLOR .

Directed by Sam Zebba • Music Arranged
and Conducted by Ebner Bernstein

operatic tenor, has been

named national chairman of
the Women's Division of Is-

rael Bonds.

Competent AUDIO STAFF

Estimates and Designs at No Obligation

ROBIN HOOD'S serving the finest and most delicious of foods, Steel's,
Chops, Chicken Club Sandwiches. short Orders. Delicious Hamburgers.
"Served as you like it"
Open 24 Hours
20176 LIVERNOIS AVE., 1' 2 blks. S. 8 Mile Rd'.

MARIA'S PIZZERIA

ONE WEEK ONLY !
STARTS THURS., FEB. 4th

TELEMEW5

WOODWARD 0+ 4RD. CIRCUS PK

CHOICE LIQUORS
BANQUET FACILITIES

Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods

Parking Facilities .

. Corry-Out Service

7101 PURITAN—Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.—UN 1-3929

CLAM SHOP and BAR

Serving-

TR 2-8800

Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks and Assorted See Foods

2675 E: GRAND BLVD.

Music by Muzak

4s

L -

r.w.4.4

Mail Orders to Masonic Temple
500 Temple, Detroit 1.

LIBERMAN'S

13821 W. 9 MILE

SPORN'S

111Elc

narrated by

Tickets: $2.20, $3.30, $4.40, 55.50
Masonic Temple and Downtown
Grinnell's

at

SUNDAY

CARL'S

LEON

MRS. JAN PEERCE, of
New York, wife of the noted

8926 W. 7 Mite
11 a.m. - 2 a.m.

UN 3-8982
UN 3-6501

UN 4-3174

BEEF BUFFET

Prime Beet at its Very Best: Pies baked on preen.
ices Special Luncheons and Dinners. Menus rhainsec
daily Open II a.m.-11 p.m.

19371 W. 8 Mile, 1 BIk. E. of Evergreen

DUBBS BEEF BUFFET

• PRIME BEEF • SHRIMP • LOBSTER
• CHICKEN
• DELMONICO STEAK
U N 4-71117
13300 W. 7 M'LE cor. LITTLEFIELD
OPEN DAILY 11 8:30 P.M.; SAT. a SUN. to 1 P.M.

KIM'S

GARDENS

Chicorell's

EMIL GILELS, Pianist
VALERII KLIMOV, Violinist

RESTAURANT &
DELICATESSEN

Sammy Woolf

AL GREEN'S

Wmtten and Prod... b,

2 Soloists:

Encl. SeltAdd., Stamped Env.

MUSIC! ENTERTAINMENT!

WHERE TO DINE

2 Conductors:

MASONIC TEMPLE, DETROIT
FEB. 6 — 8:20 P.M.
FEB. 7 — 2:20 P.M.

WE'RE
OPEN

•Shtetl' Wood Carvings
H. Cr S. HI-F1 SHOP, 8556 W. 9 Mile, Oak Park
at Center Through Monday
Lincoln 8 - 2710
The exhibition of 43 wood
Dave Hoptman — Audici Consultant
carvings — "The Shtetl" — by
Berl Satt. which was acquired
by the Schaver Foundation. for
eventual presentation to Israel
after a tour of leading comMu-
nities. will continue at the Jew-
ish Cent e r. 18100 Meyers.
15301 E. Jeeerson at Beaconsfield
t hrough Monday.
VA 2 - 4118
A number of local organiza-
Luncheons 11 to 3 — Dinners 5:0C
tions arranged visits to the ex-
to 1040. Suppers 10:30 to 2 a.m.
hibition in groups. Interested
3020 GRAND RIVER Free Parkl.ng TE 3-070e. Pri-
organizations are invited to ar-
vate Banquet Rooms for wedding parties. Serving
the World's Finest Steaks. Chops and Sea Foods to;
ang.e for group visits during
more than 26 years. All Beef aged in our cellars.
the remaining days of the ex- CHOP HOUSE
hibit.

MOSCOW
SYMPHONY

KONSTANTIN IVANOV
KIRIL KONDRASHIN

TWO PROGRAMS


of
that 75 per cent of its member- Chicago. provided the musical
ship is Christian—a step, he program. Lois Ack sang the
said, for Christians to atone national anthems, accompanied
for their sins committed against by Bella Goldberg.
-
Jewry.
Describing his visits in Israel
together with Judge Simon
Sobeloff. brother of Detroiter
Isidore Sobeloff, McKeldin
praised the eminent jurist's con-
tributions to America and to
Israel.

Kenwood

16337 W. McNichols bet. Greenfield

8.

Southfield

CHINESE-AMERICAN FOOD - BUSINESSMEN'S
LUNCHEONS - CARRYOUT & DELIVERY SERVICE
BR 3-4332--OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.-11 P.M.;
SUNDAYS—NOON to 1 P.M..

Northwest Detroit's only restaurant featuring danc-
ing 6 nights a week—Monday thru Saturday, Dinners
5 P.M. to 12 M.

Free Parking — OPEN SUNDAYS

FENKELL COR. TELEGRAPH

KE 7-7377

McINERNEY'S FARM and OLD CIDER MILL

29501 NORTHWESTERN HWY. bet. 12 & 13 Mile
Open Daily 10 A.M.-13 P.M. Closed Mondays
Bering Chicken & Turkey Luncheon and Dinner
cARRY OUT SERVICE — PRIVATE ROCOA AVAILABLE
CALL THOMAS McINERNEY — EL 6-9222

The Cundari reach the finest
cuisine in a continental back-
ground with a choice of Amer-
ican and European specialties.

Luncheon 11 a..m-3 p.m.; Din-
ners 6-10 p.m. After-Theatre
Snacks 'till 4 a.m.

20021 W. McNichols cor. Evergreen —

For Reservations — KE 3-2.766

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