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April 22, 1960 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1960-04-22

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, April 22, 1960

111111111111•01 ■ 1•. -

News Brevities

DETROIT THEATER ARTS,
now in its second season, will
present `!SHOWCASE NO. 2,"
for five nights April 27 through
May 1, at Hotel Fort Wayne.
* a.*
ROGER WILLIAMS, who will
appear at the Masonic Temple
at 8:20 p.m., April 29, is not
only a master of the keyboard
but also a master showman.
Williams' artistry as a recording
star, which is evidenced in
renditions like his three-million-
copy-best-selling record, "Au-
tumn Leaves," gives no indica-
tion of the showmanship and
wit he exhibits when entertain-
ing in a theater or from a con-
cert or auditorium stage.
* * *
ROSNER FAMILY CLUB
will meet Sunday evening, in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Bindes, of 21650 Parklawn,
Oak Park.
* * *
The combined and consider-
able talents of Carol Channing
and writer - director, Charles
Gaynor (of "Lend An Ear"
fame), having been brought to
b ear on the
new musical: .
entertainment,
"Show Busi-
ness," the
Shubert Thea-
ter will be host
to the Charles
Lowe produc-
tion beginning
Monday, for
two weeks.
Miss Channing Carol
Charming
is the star,
while Gaynor has written all of
the music, lyrics and sketches
and is also the stager of this
unique presentation in which
various forms of comedy are
chronicled and satirized.
* * *
Dr. NORMAN DRACHLER,
executive administrative assist-
ant of the Detroit Public
Schools, will speak on "Equal
Educational Opportunity — The
Years Ahead" at the third ses-
sion of the 1959-60 Leadership
Clinic at 7:30 p.m., May 2, in
the Rackham Memorial Bldg.
Theme of the evening will be
"Toward Equal Opportunity in
Education."
* * *
BODZIN FAMILY CLUB will
meet Sunday evening, in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. M. Du-
°Iran, 19339 Mendota.
• * *
MATTATHIAS TENT HIVE
of the Maccabees will hold a
games night this Thursday, at
the Hayim Greenberg Center,
19161 Schaefer. All proceeds
will go to charity.
• * *
15TH DISTRICT DEMO-
CRATIC ORGANIZATION has
planned a business and profes-
sional luncheon at 12 noon,
Tuesday, at the Wayne Supper
Club, under the chairmanship
of Walter Goodman. Charles
F. Rosen, executive vice-presi-
dent of the W. B. Doner &
Co., will speak on "The Impact
of Madison Avenue on the Na-
tional Election."
• * *
MUMFORD PARENTS CLUB
will be addressed by Prof. Wil-
liam Evraiff, of Wayne -State
University, *D epartment of
Guidance and Counseling, on
the subject, "Developing Self-
Concept of the Adolescent,"
Thursday, 8:15 p.m., in room
101, Mumford High School.
Mrs. Bertha Brotman and Ned
Smokier are co-chairmen of
this project.
* * *
MICHIGAN CANCER FOUN-
FOUN-
DATION volunteers will be on
the streets in all main shopping
areas Tuesday, tagging pedes-
trians and shoppers with lapel
tags bearing the Foundation's
cancer crusade slogan, "Don't
Just Hope—Be Sure. Get a
Cancer Check-up," and the
seven warning symptoms of

cancer. The Tag Day promotion,
between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
climaxes the Foundation's
month-long educational crusade
to alert the public to the im-
portance of early detection,
prompt treatment and recog-
nition of early symptoms of
the disease. The Michigan Can-
cer Foundation, which carries
out a program of cancer re-
search, education and service in
Oakland, Wayne and Macomb
counties, is an agency dedicated
to the Give Once for All fund-
raising principle and will not
accept any money during this
campaign. Tags will be distrib-
uted only on the streets of
shopping areas. No door-to-door
solicitations will be made.

* *

A variety of good music will
be offered when the MICHI-
GAN OPERA COMPANY pre-
sents its annual "Scenes and
Highlights from Grand Opera"
at the Detroit Institute of Arts
Auditorium, Saturday, April 30
at 8:20 p.m. Parts of six well-
known operas and a ballet, all
with full costume and scenery,
will be directed and conducted
by Victor Dyni. Singing the role
of Marulio in Act 1, Scene 1
of "Rigoletto" is Seymore
Greenstein, 2640 Richton. Tick-
ets are non-reserved and on sale
at the Institute of Arts, Grin-
nells, or from members of the
cast.
* * *

Senator PHILIP A. HART1
and Senator JACOB JAVITS
took a bi-partisan look at the
1960 Civil Rights legislative ef-
fort in the Congress on Senator
Hart's Washington to Michigan
TV program.

Mrs. LOUIS DIAMOND
(right) drops some coins in a
cannister held by. Mrs. AL-
BERT HERMAN in anticipa-
tion of a successful campaign
for funds in observance of
World Jewish Child Day. The
two women are chairmen of
cannister collections for the
Detroit Council of Pioneer
Women, which is conducting
its cannister appeal this Sun-
day through May 1. The col-
lection is one of three Coun-
cil events to further the pro-
gram of Youth Aliyah in re-
habilitating and rescuing
thousands of youngsters
brought to Israel.

Several women in the com-
munity will participate in an
entourage by the Michigan
Federation of Democratic Wo-
men to the National Women's
Conference in Washington, D.C.,
May 8 to 10.
Mesdames Shirley Schneider
and Lillian Kaufman are making
arrangements for all Democratic
women who wish to go.
A candidates dinner on May
9 will have as special guests
f or met President Truman,
House Speaker Sam Rayburn
and all Presidential aspirants
For details on the trip and
a special chartered bus, which
is being planned, call Mrs. Fred
Reichel, KE. 7-6685.

Scoutmasters, committeemen,
troop leaders and Explorer
Scouts in District Four, Detroit
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
America, will meet for a camp-
ing rally at 7:45 p.m., Monday,
in the Ferris School audito-
rium, 60 Cortland, in Highland
Park.
Plans for the Golden Jubilee
camporee, July 22 to 24, at
Eliza Howell Park, and a dis-
cussion of camping goals and
new help available for campers
will be presented. For informa-
tion, call Robert Pfeiffer, rally
chairman, TW 3-8326.

Dan Frohman Chorus
Watch For Important News

McINERNEY'S

FARM and OLD CIDER MILL

29501 Northwestern Highway

Bet. 12 and 13 Mile Road

Fine Chicken & Turkey Luncheons and Dinners
Served Daily 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Closed Mondays

SQUARE DANCING, with our famous callers, or
HAY RIDES arranged for if desired.

Private Room Available for All Affairs—

Showers, Sweet 16 Parties, Bowling Groups, etc.

The service program of the
Michigan Cancer Foundation
provides loan of hospital beds,
wheelchairs, other sickroom
equipment for the care of can-
cer patients.

With facilities for:
Shuffleboard, Ping Pong and Player Piano

Call Thomas McInerney at EL 6-9222

I



*

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT BUILT-IN

ELECTRIC HEAT

Dr. Drews to Address
Socialites' Forum

Electric heat is an advanced and superior concept of home comfort,
Here are some of the questions we've been asked about it.

Personality problems arising
from the tensions of modern liv-
ing will be discussed at an open
forum of the Detroit Socialites
planned for 8:30 p.m., Wednes-
day, at Beth
Abraham Syn-
agogue.
Dr. Robert
S. Drews, psy-
chiatrist, lec-
turer and
president of
the Michigan
Institute of
Group Psycho-
therapy and
P sychodrama,
will be guest
speaker.
Dr. Drews
According to
Eve Goldberg, executive secre-
tary of the organization, a pro-
gram of popular dancing and
refreshments will follow the dis-
cussion. •

WHAT DOES IT LOOK LIKE?

The most widely used types are
illustrated at right. Because
electric heat is built in, there is
little interference with living
space, each room has its own
heat source.

Baseboard units
are built in any
length.

IS IT EXPENSIVE TO INSTALL?

In general, the original cost of an electric heat-

ing system is less than that of any other type
of quality equipment. Actual installed cost will
vary according to type of heating unit used,
home size, method of home construction and
additional insulation requirements.

CAN I PUT IT IN JUST ONE ROOM?

Yes, and economically, too. Typical examples:
when you're adding a new room, finishing an
upstairs, closing in a porch or breezeway, or
have a hard-to-heat area.

CAN I PUT IT IN THE WHOLE HOUSE?

Yes, you can switch the whole house over to
electric heat. In this case, additional insulation
will be required, plus storm sash and storm
doors all around. For greatest heating economy
and summer comfort, regardless of type of
heating system, good insulation always pays off.

WHAT DOES IT COST TO USE ELECTRIC HEAT?

Various factors, including family living habits,
affect operating cost, so a hard-and-fast answer
is impossible. A rough rule of thumb is 250-280
per square foot of heated space, annually. But
there's little need to guess. An electric heating
contractor can calculate actual first cost and
operating cost quickly and accurately.
Electric heat will cost more—but probably not
as much as you would imagine and you get
more benefits!
In June 1959, Detroit Edison added a new,
lower step to the residential electric rate. Now,
when more than 750 kilowatt-hours of electricity
are used per month, the amount over 750 costs
11 percent reduction.
each instead of 2

DOES IT NEED MUCH SERVICING?

No. There are no moving parts in the electric
heating systems discussed here except in the

. forced air units, where low velocity fans or
blowers are used.

WHAT MAKES ELECTRIC HEAT BETTER?

FLEXIBILITY—Each room has its own ther-
mostat. So each remains at the temperature
you choose without affecting other rooms.
SPEED—Heating response is faster when the

heat source is right in each room—only inches
away instead of many feet.
EVEN HEAT—There will be very little tem-
perature difference between floor and ceiling.
No chilling drafts.
CLEANLINESS—Nothing is burned to make
smoke, soot or fumes. Result: walls, draperies,
furniture and floor coverings stay clean longer.

WHERE CAN I SEE_ ELECTRIC HEAT?

A feature of every Total Electric Gold Medal-

lion Home is its electric heating system. Watch
for announcements of Gold Medallion Home
openings.

WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION?

There's free literature at your
Edison office, or mail the cou-
pon below. Another source,
especially for a cost estimate,
is the electric heating con-
tractor who displays this emblem. He's had
special training in making accurate estimates.
He has also pledged himself to meet industry
standards of installation.

mmommunammumnammummimm

DETROIT EDISON, ROOM 350, 2000 SECOND -AVE,
DETROIT 26, MICHIGAN

Please send your free illustrated booklet, "Electric
Home Heating."

Name

DETROIT EDISON

,

(Please Print)

Address

City

a

Heating cable is Forced air units go
buried in ceiling in walls or Orli-
plaster.

Radiant panels go
in or on walls.

IS IT SAFE?

It's as safe and troublefree as electric light.

Announce Purchase
of Miami Beach Motel

Purchase of the Chateau Re-
sort Motel for $1,500,000 has
been announced by James J.
Navone and Associates, present
owners of the Sahara Resort
Motel. Both properties are on
the ocean in Miami Beach, Fla.
The 165-unit Chateau Motel
is located at 191st St. in the
popular Sunny Isles motel
strip. There are 350 feet of
ocean frontage.
The Chateau features two
swimming pools, a coffee shop,
dining room, spacious lobbies
and gardens, card and meeting
rooms, recreation room, dance
studio, beauty and sundry shops
and a men's and ladies' Turkish
bath and solarium. There is
free parking for guests.
C. H. (Chuck) Thiess, present
manager of the Sahara and
former manager of the Chateau,
will serve as general manager
for both properties, according
to Navone. Low summer rates,
now in effect, continue through
Dec. 20.

District Four Boy sou s
Democratic Women
Plan Washington Trip Schedule Camping Rally •

PW Council Sets
Cannister Drive

Zone

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