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April 07, 1961 - Image 23

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1961-04-07

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

DHOW

BY HENRY LEONARD

LISTENING

O
S

LITTLE ANDREA GOLD-
MAN, sweet, polite five-year-
old daughter of Sam and Ruth
Goldman, was with the family
on the first Seder .night at the
home of her grandmother, Mrs.
Anne Sellman . . . Everything
at the table was well served
. . Mrs. Sellman, in fact, has
quite a reputation for her ex-
cellent food .. . On this occa-
sion,. however, -little A
thought she found a
in the
ma,"
gefilte fish
she said
a ind of sh is
this
e fro, . . . Told white
fish
tle A ea replied, "Oh,
ought maybe it was from
ermaid."
BEST BET OF We
Dinner-dan by it
Cancer F hte
Holiday
still avai
by
eon-
ducat chair
Gor-
ard, LI 6-
, or
bach; UN 3-0532.
ING . . -
POSTAL P
y to read ' in your
`We were
out Dr. Earl Rud-
ner, a medical health officer,
stationed on Okinawa, regard-
ing the reunion of the 1951
class' of Central High School.
I am an adopted uncle of Dr.
Earl Rudner, and you might
also like to know that he is an
Eagle Scout now active on the
island with Okinawa scouts. As
a matter of fact, I just re-
ceived a letter from Earl in-
forming us that his major's son,
Ronnie Gould, - was presented
I with
i the Ner Tamid Award, it
being the first time this has
been awarded in Okinawa. Dr.
Rudner also informs us that
he was just elected to the
District CounCil of the Okinaw-
an Scouts."
DAVE WEISBERG, bowling
last week in the Israel. Lodge,
Bnai Brith League, at Oak
Park Lanes, wound up his sec-
ond game with a booming 290
score . . . Dave missed a per-
fect 300 game by tossing a
spare in the first frame . .
From then on it was 11 strikes
in a row.. . ; When he got home
and told wife Sylvia, about it,
plus all the gifts he would have
gotten for a 300 score, includ-
ing $1,000 from the bowling
shirt manufacturer, she cried
out, "What! And you missed
a measly 10 pins?"

Jan Peerce packs every hall, I Each of t
ower,
regardless of size, when he is preted
a fascina-
scheduled to appear there in con- tion
is cert.:' to hold the
er within hearing n
cert. He has . . become known 1 li
cert.
the
as the outstanding interpreter of
tire se 'es is h d.
ere is
so mu
Jewish liturgical music and fo
blessed
voice
songs.

hat pos-
i xj ,
The latest recording o his sessor
e certa.
Hebrew and Yiddish m
ies to t
to
again
ag
his joy d inspiration.
provides added reason f
popularity.
His new LP record,
y
Peerce Sings Hebrew Melodies,
issued by RCA Victor, is an en-
tertainment treat not to be over-
looked 'by loVers of music. .
BRING YOUR EMPTIES TO
• Whether it is his "Zemerl" or
"Kol Nidre," Peerce enchants
the listener.
The 11 selections in this long
playing record start with !A Plea
to God" and conclude with "A
Cantor for the Sabbath." Sand-
wiched in, on both sides, are:
"Rozhinkes mit Mandlen," "A
Shepherd, A Dreamer," "Morn-e-
4693 COOLIDGE NEAR TEN Mil-
e," "A Dudele," "Meyerke, Mein
OAK PARK
" "Eili, Eili," and "Shiroh."

Apologize?

T LAKES

35 DEALERS






PACKAGE LIQUOR STORE
CHAMPAGNE • WINE
BEER
• FINE FOODS
UNIQUE GIFT ITEMS

CPEN SUN. THRU
FRE. 'TEL 11 P.M.
SAT,. `TIL MIDNIGHT

PROMPT FREE DELIVERY

.

LINCOLN 1-4428

April 6, 'I, 8, 9, — 12-10:30 p.m.
(last eve. 9 p.m.)
75c Adm. Detroit Masonic Temple

REAR PARKING and SERVICE .

WHERE TO DINE

Paradiso Cafe

Fine Ameri
Open daily
CLOS
Banquet

COCKTA11. BAR
17632 WOODWARD — North of 6 Mile

TO 9-

Lavish SMORGASBORD with finest
Steek.h01111 inated and smoked fish zens of
cold dishes. Comple
in
—steaks, chops, lobsters, duck, etc. Beautiful priva
parties. Home and business catering. Lunch from $1.
FREE PARKING
1014 E. JEFFERSON

CARL'S
CHOP HOUSE

3020 GRAND RIVER. Free Parking. TE 3-0
vate Banquet Rooms for
g p
the World's Finest Steaks. io and
more than 26 years. All Be

MARIA'S PIZZERIA

CHDICE LIQUORS
BANQUET FACILIT

Fishhein's Sentinel
Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famou
Parking Facilities . . . Carry Out
Honored with Story
of Jews of Chicago 7101 PURITAN—Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.
CHICAGO, (JTA)—A history
of the Jewish community of CLAM SHOP and BAR

lia

-

'

Chicago, furnishing a portrait of Serving Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks and
this community of 400,000 Jews Music by Muzak
2675 E.
and reflecting the achievements
Prime Beef at its Very Best?
ba d
of their 123 synagogues, dozens
ises. Special Luncheons and
s. 11
of large institutions and hundreds
daily. Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m.
of smaller groups, is being com- `BEEF BUFFET
19371 W. 8 Mile, 1
piled by a special Golden Jubilee
Committee formed here in honor
new Banque
Chicorels' Beautiful
to 300 For Weddings,
Of the 50th anniversary of the
Dancing Night!
Kellwood
Sentinel, Chicago's weekly Jewish
newspaper founded in 1911.
FENKELL COR. TELEG
The idea of a history of Chi-
cago Jewry was suggested by J. I.
Fishbein, publisher and editor of
the Sentinel, after a group of
• Prime Beet • Shrimp • Lobster • Delmonico
Chicago leaders had proposed the
13300 W. 7 MILE cor. LITTLEFIELD - s
OPEN DAILY 11-8:30 P.M., SAT and SU
organization of a banquet to
RESERVATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTS _
honor the Sentinel's 50th anni-
STAGS. BANQUETS and MEETINGS
versary. "We proposed instead,"
said Fishlein, "that they utilize
ranucci's restaurant & cocktail bar
the occasion to fulfill a dream
Fine Azderican and Italian Food
to benefit the entire community,
Open

cods

IIIERC'S

_BUBB'S -BEE

Z3

"Rabbi, there's a gentleman out here who wants
to know if there's a place in Judaism for the
little man." -
Copr. 1980, Leonard Prim/44 .•

411111•1•2• ■ ••11111NIMINNIMINIIII•Innr

helping us publish a readable,
popular history of Chicago Jewry

covering the past five decades
of our existence."

Daily 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.; Sunday 3 p.m.
Serving Lunches, Dinners, After T'heatr
Banquet room available. Music by Al Nalhl. Amp

7030 W. 7 Mile

T;

g .

DI 1-5445

IPdV — ShAa111 H S

Prof. Eli Ginzberg and Dr. crease the number of • persons
Peter . Rogatz, in the "Report onlholding hospital insurance "in
the Hospitals and Health Agen-1 order to reduce the amount of
cies of the Federation of Jewish I free care; - that Blue Cross rates
Philanthropies in New York," of reimbursement to hospitals be
published by Columbia Univer- increased; and that the functions
sity Press under the title "Plan- of the hospitals be "regionalized"
ning for Better Hospital Care," or "specialized" to improve care
present a thorough review of the and to reduce overlapping and
Federation hospital system, out- duplication of costly services.
line the financial trends and
Dr. Ginzberg noted that
make recommendations to in- average daily costs per patient
corporate the resources of the in Federation hospitals are now
hospitals with non - Federation rapidly approaching $40, the
agencies.
level predicted for 1962 by the
They propose closer affiliation subcominittee. The estimated
between the various hospitals and figure . is almost 50 per cent
suggest the establishment of a more than the 1957 average of
Joint Diseases Hospital as an about $27 per day. He ascribed
orthopedic division of a Federa- rising costs to increases in hos-
tion,hospital center.
pital wages, an increase in the
The researchers also recom- number of services given to
mend that Federation member each patient because of the
hospitals convert their ward rapid expansion of medical
rooms into semi-private rooms in knowledge, and the inflationary
order to decrease their deficits; trend of the nation's economy.
that hospitals reevaluate their
"The only way the rising costs
rates for rooms and services, and can be met," Dr. Ginsberg said,
establish them on a full cost "is by an increase in insurance
basis; that steps be taken to in- payments, notably Blue Cross.
We see no way to keep costs
from rising. Blue Cross reim-
Hebrew Day School
bursement rates must rise, and,
therefore, 'the cost to obtain this
Society Petitions
hospital insurance will increase
We can no longer look to phila
for Federal Aid
thrapy to meet large. hospi
NEW YORK (JTA)—Empha- deficits." •
sizing that more than 50,000
pupils are now attending about
250 elementary and secondary Auschwitz Ex-Inmat
Hebrew Day Schools in 26 File Protest at Pane
states at an annual cost of
PARIS (JTA)—A complai
$25,000,000, the National So-
that the West German Gov-
ciety for Hebrew Day Schools
ernment has failed to consider
—known as Torah Urnesorah---= compensation claims from vic-
asked the United States Sen-
tims of Nazism who are citizens
ate and the House to include of countries with which Ger-
religious schools in the Ken-
many has no diplomatic rela-
nedy Administration bill to tions was made at a conference
provide Federal aid to the na-
of the International_ Auschwitz
tion's public schools.
Committee, held at Warsaw, ac-
The administration measure cording to the French news-
excludes aid to private reli- paper Le Monde.
gious schools on the grounds that
The committee also Com-
such aid would violate the Consti- plained that the Bonn Govern-
tutional principle of separa- ment has "failed to fulfill its
tion of church and state.
promise" to pay a basic in-
The Torah Umesorah state- demnity of 1,200 marks to all
ment, which was submitted to who had been interned at
the Senate Labor and Public Auschwitz. Another grievance
Welfare Committee and the voiced at the conference con-
House Education and Labor cerned difficulties in obtaining
subcommittee, asserted that re-_ compensation from large Ger-
striction of the Federal aid man industrial firms, like I.
program to the public schools G. Farben and Krupp's, which
only, as proposed in the Ad- employed slave labor - during
ministration bill, would be dis- World War- II.
crimination "against religiously
The committee voted to ap-
oriented schools" which have peal to all governments whose
"enriched" the educational sys- citizens had been inmates at
tem in the United States.
the notorious concentration
The statement rejected the camp to contribute money for
argument that Federal • aid to the erection of a monument at
religious schools was contrary the former Auschwitz camp in
to the first amendment of the memory of the Auschwitz vic-
Constitution.
tims.

Danny Raskin's Power of Jan Peerce's Voice in His
New Record, 'Hebrew Melodies'

1961

Rising Hospital. Costs Explained
in Coluinbia U. Federation Study

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