MOVIE GUIDE
NEIGHBORHOOD
DOWNTOWN
Grand Circus Park
WO 1.8524 Open Daily 11 a.m.
Wk — THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY
BROWN, Debbie' Reynolds, at 11:15,
1:35, 3:56, 6:15, 8:35, 10:45.
WED.: Ladies Day 50c
ADAMS
2211 Woodward—WO 1-9494
Free Parking
Doors Open 10:45 a.m.
FOX
She was too much for one man
"LORNA" Plus Hilarious! Funny! Sexy!
"WHAT'S UP FRONT" (in color)
Story of a Traveling Salesman
Every Wed. Ladies Day Adm. 50c
Late SHOW Friday and Saturday
For schedule information call
• WO 1-7917
141
ART THEATRES
CORONET
15635 Mack nr. Alter, TU 2-5291
Open Daily 6:45, Sun. 3:45
NOW PLAYING
"THE ORGANIZER" with Marcello
Monastroiani, 8:25 only daily. SUN.
5:35, 9:20.
"CARRY ON TEACHER" wtih Kenneth
Connor ("Carry on Gang")
Daily 7:00 & 10:30, SUN. 4:10, 7:50
Starting Sept. 23 "THE BALCONY"
13325 Livernois
STUDIO THEATRE
WE 3-0070
Students Si every Mon.
Now Playing
"NOTHING BUT THE BEST"
Tues. through Thurs. 7:30 & 9:30
Fri. 8:00 & 10:00; Sat. 6:00,
8:00 & 10:00. Sun. 5:30, 7:30 8. 9:30.
Reduced adm. up to 6 p.m. Sat. & Sun .
STUDIO NORTH THEATRE
22920 Woodward-1 blk. No. 9 Mlle
LI
1-5168
Annie Girardot in
"HOW TO MAKE A FRENCH DISH"
("La Bonne Soupe")
NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED.
College Students $1 every Mon. Mon-
Tues., Thurs.: 7:30, 9:30. Fri. 8:00,
10:00. Sat.: 6, 8, 10. Sun.: 5:30, 7:30,
9:30. Reduced adm. up to 6 p.m. Sat.
& Sun.
STUDIO 8 THEATRE
Greenfield 8. 8 Mile Shop Ctr. LI 24827
ABANDONED"
"SEDUCED &
Produced by Pietro Germi
Students Si every Tues. Mon.-Thurs.:
7:30, 9:30. Fri.: 8, 10. Saturday, 6, 8, 10.
Sunday 5:30, 7:30, 9:30. Reduced adm.
up to 6 p.m. Sat., Sun. Opens at 3:45.
SURF
MAI KAI
Plymouth Rd. at Farmington Rd.
GA 7-0400 & KE 4-6400
Open Daily 6:15. Sat. & Sun. 12:45.
Continuous
WORLD PREMIERE
—Now Playing—
Gina Lollobridgida & Sean Connery
"WOMAN OF STRAW"
16850 Schaefer, UN 24100
Peter Sellers & Elke Sommer in
Panavision and Color in
A SHOT IN THE DARK
Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 6:00, 8:10, 10:20
Plus Cinemascope Color Featurette
2 ON A PASS
5:45, 7:55, 10:00
Wed., Sat. & Sun.
"A SHOT IN THE DARK"
1:40, 3:50, 6:00, 8:10, 10:20
"2 ON A PASS"
3:35, 5:45, 7:55, 10:00
Sun. Only Sept. 20.
Top Type Hollywood Sneak Preview
Richard Burton's "HAMLET" Sept. 23
8. 24. Tickets now on sale.
-
-
MERCURY
17630 Grand River
VE 8-1030
Open Mon. thru Thurs. 6:15. Fri. 6:45
NORWEST
Sat. 12:30 (continuous) Sun. 12:15
Now Playing: "LILLIES OF THE FIELD"
Award Winning Sidney Poitier.
Weekdays 6:30, 11:00. Sat. 4:00, 8:45
Sun. 3:35, 8:15
"THE CARDINAL" Academy Award
Winner (in color) Tom Tryon, Romy
Schneider. Weekdays 8:00 only.
FRI. 8:30 only. SAT: 1:00, 5:30, 10:15
SUN. 12:30, 5:00, 9:40
"CLEOPATRA" starts Wed., Sept. 23
17013 Hamilton
UN 2 - 2140
Daily Open 6:45. Sat. 4:45
Sun. Open 1:45 Continuous
NOW PLAYING
Shirley MacLaine in
. "WHAT A WAY TO GO"
Daily 7:30 & 9:45, Sat. 5:30, 7:45, 5:05
Short Sub. starts 5:05.
SUN. 5:10, 7:30, 9:55, Short Sub. starts
2:10
PALMER PARK
----------
22857 Woodward
LI 3 - 5800
RADIO CITY
Open Mon. thru Fri. 6:45, Sat. 12:30,
Sun. 12 Noon
"THE LIVELY SET" Pamela Tiffin and
James Darin.
Mon. Fri. 7:15 and 10:30.
"ENSIGN PULVER" Robert Walker,
Burl Ives, Tommy Sands
Mon.-Fri. 8:50 Only
SAT. "THE LIVELY SET" 1:05, 4:30,
8 - 10 11:35
"ENSIGN PULVER" 2:45, 6:20, 9:45
SUN. "THE LIVELY SET" 12:25, 4:00,
7:30 and 11:00
"ENSIGN PULVER" 2:1 -0, 5:40, 9:15
SAT., Sept. 19, Chrysler Turbine car on
Display, also Sat., 9:00 p.m. Peter
Mann and Carole Wells in person.
"CLEOPATRIA" starting Wed., Sept. 23
13135 Fenkell BR 3-8866
3:45
Open Daily 6:45; Sunday
Now Playing: "IVAN THE TERRIBLE"
Daily—Part 1-7:15 & 10:15. Part 2-
8:50 only
RIVIERA
Sun. Part 1-4:15, 7:15, 10:15
TE 4-1810
9222 Grand River
Part 2-5:50, 8:50. -
Daily 5:30. Sat. 12:45. Sun. 12:45.
APED
Open
SH
L
23 "THE
Starting Sept.
"WHAT A WAY TO GO" (in color) Shr-
ROOM"
ley MacLane. "THE HUSTLER" with
Paul Newman & Jackie Gleason.
Sept. 19 Sat. Mat. "CURSE OF THE
TRANS - LUX KRIM THEATRE
16473 Woodward TO
11 - s3oo
THE NIGHT OF THE IGUANA
Gardner,
Debra Kern 8. Sue Lyon
Weekdays MON. through THURS.
Richard Burton, Ava
Doors Open 6:45 p.m.
Features at 7:30, 9:45 p.m.
FRI. with late show. Doors open 5.45 pm
Features at 6:00, 8:20, 10:40
SAT. with late show, doors open at
1 p.m.
Ftrs. at 1:35, 3:50, 6:10, 8:25, 10:45
SUN. Ftrs. at 1:00, 3:10, 5:10, 7:25, 9:40.
NEIGHBORHOOD
2990-12 Mile Rd. LI 2-0330
BERKLEY
Open Daily 6:45. Sat. Children's Mat.
1:00 & Reopens 6:45. Sun. 1:00
NOW PLAYING
"WHAT A WAY TO GO"
(in color) Shirley MacLaine
"TAKE HER, SHE'S MINE"
James Stewart and Sandra Dee
Sept. 19 SAT MAT. Spook Show "The
Black Zoo and the Day of the Trif-
fids.
BEVERLY
Gd. River at Oakman
WE 3.6380
Wed., Thurs., Fri. also Mon., Tues.
Doors Open 6:45. Sat. 12:45. Sun. 1:30
Continuous
Now Playing
"ENSIGN PULVER" Robert Walker,
Burl Ives, Tommy Sands, starts at
7:05.
"THE LIVELY SET" Pamela Tiffin and
Ja,oes Darin 9:01 only daily.
MAT. SAT. 1:25, Sun. 2:05 (continuous)
CARMEN
5.746 Schaefer near Ford
LU '2-1610
Open Daily 6:45. Sat. 5:00,
Sun. 12:45
"THE CARPETBAGGERS"
Carol! Baker, George Peppard
and "LADY IN A CAGE,"
Olivia DeHaviland
GREAT LAKES
14832 Grand River
VE 6 - 3643
Open Daily 6:45. Sat. 12:45 Continuous
Sun. 12:45. Continuous
NOW PLAYING
"How the West Was Won"
KRAMER
5743 Michigan TA 5-3565
Open Daily: 6:45, Sat. 12:45 (continuous)i
Sun. 12:45 Continuous
NOW PLAYING
"HOW THE WEST WAS WON"
"THE BRASS BOTTLE"
with Tony Randall & Burl Ives
For time schedule please call TA 5-3565
WEREWOLF" and "MONSTER ON
CAMPUS"
ROYAL
UN 4-8800
Wed. ,Thurs., Fri. Also Mon., Tues.
Doors Open 5:45. Opens Sat. 12:30.
Sunday Opens 1:30.
Now Playing (continuous)
"THE LIVELY SET" Pamela Tiffin and
James Darin.
"ENSIGN PULVER" Robt. Walker, Burl
W. 7 Mile-Meyers,
Ives, Tommy Sands
TERRACE
Plymouth Rd. W .of Middlebelt
KE 3.5400 & GA 7-1290
Open Daily 6:30. Fri. 4:45, Sat. 9:45 a.m.
Sunday 10:45 a.m.
NOW PLAYING
Walt Disney's "THE MOON SPINNERS"
plus Featurette "THE AQUANUTS"
"THE MOON SPINNERS" WED., THUR.
MON., TUES. 7:00 and 9:30.
FRI. 5:00, 7:30 & 10:00, SAT. 10:00 a.m.,
12:25, 2:45, 5:15, 7:45, 10:25.
SUN. 11:00 a.m., 1:35, 4:10, 6:45, 9:20.
Richard Burton's "HAMLET" Sept. 23
& 24. Tickets Now on Sale.
VARSITY
Livernois at McNichols
uN
2 - 4252
Daily 6:45, Sat. 1:00.
Sun. 1:00 (continuous)
"HOW THE WEST WAS WON" 7:00
and 10 Daily.
SAT. 8. SUN. 1:20 (continuous)
Open
Wyoming at Fenkel
WESTOWN WE 3-7111
Open Daily 6:45. Sat. 1:00 .Sun. 1:45.
Continuous.
DAILY — "THE CARPETBAGGERS"
Carol! Baker, George Peppard
"WIVES & LOVERS" Janet Leigh,
Martha Hyer, Van Johnson.
Sat. Mat. Sept. 19 "30' BRIDE OF
* CANDY ROCK" and "JASON AND
THE ARGONUTS."
Israeli Professionals
Call Off Strike Plans
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Repre-
sentatives of professionals in Israel
called off a planned, two-hour work
stoppage after a meeting with In-
terior Minister Moshe Shapiro. A
communique issued after the talks
stated there were 11 "reasonable ex-
pectations" of reaching a satis-
factory agreement on the wage
claims of the professionals.
In the Graveyard of European Jews
Impressions of an Iron Curtain Trip
By J. L. FISHBEIN
I
(Copyright, 1964, JTA, Inc-)
would be able to display his "solu-
tion to the Jewish problem."
gathered within it.
Among them are
some 1,200
tapestries made from Torahs he
confiscated. It is preserved today
as a national monument by the.
Czech government.
,
There is freedom today for Czech
Jews, but there is very little hope
of Jewish survival.
No sooner does one step off the
The building still stands, with
plane in Czechoslovakia, than the ornaments from all over Europe
difference between it and the Soviet
Union becomes immediately clear.
Although it, too, lies behind the
V
Iron Curtain, there is an air of
A
freedom and tolerance—so remi-
CAPACIOUS
niscent of the past spirit of this
Monument
little country—that 20 years of
to
rigid Communist rule has not been
Voluptuous
able to completely dampen.
GRATIFICATIO
This is evident also in the treat-
ment of its Jews.
fanned
Only 4,000 Jews remain in
Prague out of the 36,000 pre-war
total. There are an estimated 12,-
by
the
ENGULFING
Flames
of
Wanton
DESIRE,
HATE,
JEALOUSY
and
Luxurious
FULFILLMENT
000 in the entire country, the rem ,
nants of a community of 260,000
that existed in 1938. Many of them,
warned of the onrushing Nazi tide,
fled the border towns. The rest
were deported to the concentra-
tion camp at Terezin, and even-
tually to Auschwitz. Eighty thou-
sand Czech Jews fell victim to
Eichmann who visited Slovakia in
1938 and who then first conceived
the plans for "the final solution of
the Jewish problem." Today, 44
Jewish communities are scattered
throughout the country of a pre-
war 150.
One cannot be long in the
"graveyard of European Jewry"
without being extremely conscious
of the depth of our people's
martyrdom.
At Terezin, for example,
the
government has established a na-
tional monument as a perpetual
reminder of what the Nazis did
to the Jews. Here 15,000 Jewish
children met death. Only 102 sur-
vived. We were told that the
trickery of the Nazis was beyond
belief.
In one instance, a famous Czech
Jewish partisan escaped from
Auschwitz and deliberately entered
Terezin. He told the Jews of the
horrors he had seen—of the gas
chambers and crematorium. They
refused to believe his tale, scoffing
at him as if he were insane. He
managed to escape and went into
hiding only to find that his con-
science would not let him rest.
Once again he re-entered Terezin
pleading with the Jews to break
out while time remained. They re-
fused to listen and eventually
ended up at the death camp.
One big difference between the
attitude of this government toward
its Jews and that of the USSR is
reflected in its concern for ackow-
ledging Jewish martyrdom. When
we visited Kiev in 1961 and asked
to see Babiyar, the Russian guides
refused to take us.
Not so in Czechoslovakia.
Every tourist who visits Prague-
is taken to three points of special
Jewish interest: the "Old-New
Synagogue" built in 1270, the cld
Jewish cemetery containing the
graves of world renown Jewish
sages and scholars, and the Pinkas
Synagogue—no longer in use. On
its walls one finds the names of
77,297 victims of the Nazi extermi-
nation of Czech Jewry.
The community has its own pub-
lishing house, printing a monthly
in the Czech and Slovakian lan-
guage, a quarterly in German and
an almanac containing articles by
both Czech as well as Jewish writ-
ers. They also print a luach
(Hebrew calendar) — something
unheard of in the USSR.
Hebrew, we were informed,, can
be studied in the regular schools,
and children can even be given a
religious education if their parents
request it, "but few do."
oo Much
S tarving LORNA MAITLAND
_
incredibly .voluptuous
SHE TRIED TO BE A WIFE . . .
BUT SHE WAS LEFT ALONE
TOO MUCH!
FOX
NOW
PLUS
The Story of A
Traveling Salesman
"WHAT'S UP FRONT"
FREE
PARKING
Starts WED., Sept. 16
—
One Week
FIRST RUN
.
EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING
ROYAL An BEVERLY
7 Mile-Meyers-UN 4-8800
Gr. River-001(mm - WE 3-6300
111111101111MMAI ROMANCE AND RACING ARE IN THEIR BLOODIRAWAWAIINAMMII
JAMES
PAMELA
DARREN .,TIFFIN
DOUG
JOANIE
Mc URE•SOMMERS
producbse d
o s RT BURL VSAI
KAY LEDFORD
ER.IVES.MATEHAU. NDS IHW
at Rake!!
WE 3-7111
WYg
WESTOWN
STARTS WED., SEPT. 16-0NE WEEK
GEORGE
PEPPARD
CAROLL
BAKER
The few remaining Jews face
IMIET
VAR
LEIGH
-JOHNSON
MARTHA
EMMY
WIN ERS a HYER
no discrimination today. Most of
them are older people or those
who came back after the war.
There is much intermarriage and
as in the case in every commu-
nity country, the process of as-
similation moves naturally for-
ward. It is only a question of
time before this ancient Jewish
community becomes merely
Museum piece.
a
One is reminded that Hitler in
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS tended to build an elaborate Jew-
ish museum in Prague where he
30—Friday, September 18, 1964
JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents
1111ECARPHBAGGERS
WiNeS
LiPtierS
Pae6a-AHALWAIIIS,c,
cii WALSTON .JEREMYSLATE