MOVIE GUIDE
NEIGHBORHOOD
DOWNTOWN
ADAMS
Grand Circus Park
WO 1-8524 Open Daily
Day
WED.: Ladies
50c
2211 Woodward—WO 1-9494
FOX
a.m.
Doors Open 10:45
Free Parking
HELD OVER 3RD BIG WEEK
one man
too much
Stn•
"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
Starting Tues., Oct. 6, Shirley Clark's
"THE COOL WORLD"
For schedule information call
WO 1-7917
ART THEATRES
15635 Mack nr. Alter, TU 2-5291
Open Daily & Sat. 6:45., Sun. 3:45
RADIO CITY
NOW PLAYING
Sat. 7:00,
8.
"THE SILENCE" Daily
10:05. SUN. 4:00, 7:05, 10:10.
"2 WAY STRETCH" Peter Sellers.
Daily & Sat. 8:30. SUN. 5:35, 8:45
SURF 13135 Fenkell BR 3-8866
Open Wed., Thur., Mon., Tues. 7:45;
Fri. & Sat. 6:45; Sun. 3:45
"THE SILENCE" Daily & Sat. 7:00,
10:20. SUN. 4:00, 7:20, 10:45.
"JULES 8. JIM" Daily & Sat. 8:35.
SUN. 5:35, 9:00.
KRIM THEATRE
TRANS - LUX
16473 Woodward TO 84300
THE NIGHT OF THE IGUANA
at
1 p.m.
Ftrs. at 1:35, 3:50, 6:10, 8:25, 10:45
Ftrs. at 1:00, 3:10, 5:10, 7:25, 9:40.
--
-
2990-12 Mile Rd. LI 2-0330
BERKLEY
Award Winning Picture of 1963
Exclusive Showing
Albert Finney & Sussanna York
(in color)
Tom Jones
at
8. SAT. Open 7:00, Starts
DAILY
7:15 & 9:40.
SUN. Open 1:10. Shown at 1:48, 4:17,
6:46, and 9:15.
SAT.: Children's Matinee Open at 1:00
Gd. River at Oakman
BEVERLY
WE 3.6380
"GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" Jack Lemmon
and Romy Schneider. "RIDE THE
WILD SURF" Fabian and Tab Hunter
FRI., MON., TUES.: Open 6 "GOOD
NEIGHBOR SAM" shown at 6:25,
10:28. SAT. Opens 12:30, shown at
2:45, 6:50, 10:50. SUN. opens 1:30,
shown at 2:05, 6:08, 10:21.
FRI., MON., TUES. "RIDE THE WILD
SURF" 8:47 only, SAT. 5:09, 9:12.
•• 7, 8-40
SUN. ' SPEC.: Kiddies Kartoons
SAT.
5746
Schaefer near Ford
LU 21610
Open Daily 6:45. Sat. 5:00,
Sun. 12:45
"GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" Jack Lemmon
and Romy Schneider.
"RIDE THE WILD SURF" Fabian
and Tab Hunter.
14832 Grand River
GREAT LAKES VE 6.3643
Open Daily 6:45. Sat. 12:45 Continuous
Sun. 12.45. Continuous
NOW PLAYING
"THE LIVELY SET" Pamela Tiffin and
James Darin.
"ENSIGN PULVER" Robert Walker,
Burl Ives, Tommy Sands.
RIVIERA
TE 4.1810
9222 Grand River
Open Daily 5:30, Sat. 12:45, Sun. 12:45
By Popular Demand—Award Winners
"LILLIES OF THE FIELD" and "THE
CARDINAL"
KRAMER
-
5743 Michigan TA 5-3565
"GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" Jack Lemmon
and Romy Schneider and "RIDE
THE WILD SURF" Fabian and Tab
Hunter.
Open Fri., Mon., Tues. 6:45
"GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" shown at 9:00
Sat. Re-open at 4:45, shown at 6:40,
10:45. SUN. Open at 12:45, shown
at 1:40, 6:00, 10:10.
"RIDE THE WILD SURF". Shown daily
7:05, 11:11, SAT. 2:45, 5:00, 9:05.
SUN. 4:08, 8:32.
Sat. Mat. also "BLACK ZOE" at 1:05.
MAI KAI
Plymouth Rd. at
Farmington Rd.
GA 7-0400 & KE 4-6400
Open Fri., Sat., Mon., Tues 4:45.
Wed. & Sun. 12:45. Continuous.
Richard Burton 8. Elizabeth Taylor
"CLEOPATRA"
TE 4-1810
9222 Grand River
Open Daily 5:30. Sat. 12:45. Sun. 12:45.
FRI. 8. SAT. ONLY
"LILLIES OF THE FIELD"
and "THE CARDINAL"
"THE BLACK PIT
and
W. 7 Mile-Meyers, UN 4-8800
in
MAT. Wed. & Sun. 12:45.
"The Grand Olympics," a two-
hour color documentary on the
1960 Summer Olympiad in Rome,
is being shown at the Telenews
'Theater, Woodward at Grand Cir-
cus Park.
With few exceptions, "Fiddler on
the Roof," which had a sensational
run at the Fisher Theater in De-
troit, was given enthusiastic ac-
claim by New York critics.
Ticket-purchasers are lining up
in the thousand& at the Imperial
Theater to mark the new great
Broadway triumph.
The New York Times critic,
Howard Taubman, gave high praise
to the star, Zero Hostel, and to the
glowing creation based on Sholem
Aleichem's story of "Tevye" and
his daughters.
While Walter Kerr of the N. Y.
Herald-Tribune was critical in his
observation that a great Yiddish
theme goes too far in giving "re-
gards to Broadway' and that "high-
pressure outbursts are merely mar-
ketable," others were full of praise
for the production.
Theater-goers in New York are
as enthusiastic as were those in
Detroit.
The Christian Science Monitor
critic. Louis Chapin, stated in his
review: "Until Broadway dares to
offer music with colors to match
such as this, we can consider 'Fid-
dler on the Roof' a masterly,
whole-bodied musical—and deserv-
ing of its superlatives."
Senator Hits Pigeonholing
of Genocide Convention;
Blames Administration
WASHINGTON (JTA) — Senator
Wed. ,Thurs., Fri. Also Mon.. Tues.
Open 5:30. Open Sat. Kiddies J. Glenn Beall. Maryland Republi-
Mat. 12:30.
Mat.
can. accuses the administration of
Richard Burton & Elizabeth Taylor in
"CLEOPATRA"
failing to press the Senate Fore-
Daily 6:00 & 9:00, Sat. 6:05
ign Relations Committee to act on
S1 until 6 p.m. except Sun.
SUN., Oct. 4, 2nd Game of Detroit, the ratification of the United Na-
Lions, 1:30. "Cleopatra" 5:40.
tions Genocide Convention. He
TERRACE
NEIGHBORHOOD
CARMEN
COLOSSAL BEAST"
RIVIERA
ROYAL
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 •
show, doors open
22857 Woodward
LI 3 - 5800
Open Mon.-Thur. 7:00, Fri. 5:15, Sat.
Mat. 12:00 noon, Reopen 5:30. Sun. 1:15
Richard Burton & Elizabeth Taylor in
"CLEOPATRA"
MON.-THUR. 8:15 only FRI. 5:45 &
9:00, SAT. 6:15 & MO. SUN. 1:45,
5:10, 8:30.
SAT. KIDDIES MAT.—Open at 12 Noon
"ATTACK OF THE PUPPET
PEOPLE" & WAR OF THE
OF DR. M"• "PSYCHOMANIA"
"THE WITCH'S
'
CURSE"
Richard Burton, Ave Gardner,
Debra Kerr 8. Sue Lyon
Weekdays MON. through THURS.
SUN.
17013 mammon
ura 2 - 2140
George Pappard Carol Baker in
"THE CARPETBAGGERS"
Open FRI. 6:45, shown at 7:05 and 9:45
Open SAT. at 4:45, shown at 5:05, 7:45,
and 10:30
Open SUN. at 1:45, shown at 2:05, 4:45,
PALMER PARK
7:30 and 10:00
CORONET
SAT. with late
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
STARTS FRI., Oct. 9th "TOPKAPI"
Melina Mercuori, Peter Ustinov, Max-
imillian Schell, Robt. Morley, & Akim
Tamaroff
MERCURY
14
Wk — THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY
BROWN, Debbie Reynolds, at 11:15,
1:35, 3:56, 6:15, 8:35, 10:45.
`Fiddler on Roof'
Acclaimed by All
Theater Critics
Plymouth Rd. W of Middlebelt
KE 3-5400 & GA 7-1200
"GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" Jack Lemmon
and Romy Schneider
"RIDE THE WILD SURF" Fabian and
Tab Hunter
FRI. Open 5:30. "GOOD NEIGHBOR
SAM" shown 7:25 , 11:30.
SAT. Re-open 5:45, shown at 7:40, 11:45.
SUN. Open 12:45, shown at 2:45, 6:50,
11:00.
MON. & TUES. Open 6:30, shown at
8:40 only
"RIDE THE WILD SURF" shown FRI.
5:40, 9:40, SAT. 6:00, 10:00, SUN.
1:00, 5:00, 9:05., MON. & &TUES.
6:50, 10:50.
SAT.: Kiddies Mat. Doors open 12
noon. "MAN FROM THE DINERS
CLUB" & "DIG THAT URANIUM"
plus Kartoon Karnival
Llvernois at McNichols
VARSITY
UN 2-4252
"THE LIVELY „SET" Pamela Tiffin and
James Daron. Open 6:45 DAILY,
Shown 9:00 only. SAT. continuous
show opens 1:00. Shown 1:15, 5:25,
9:05. SUN. opens 1:45, shown 2:00,
5:25, 8:50.
"ENSIGN PULVER" Robt. Walker, Burl
Ives, Tommy Sands. Shown DAILY
7:10, 10:35, SAT. 3:15, 7:00, 10:40.
SUN. 3:35, 7:00, 10:25.
•
WESTOWN
WE 3-7111
LOOKING FOR LOVE" Connie Francis
and Jim Hutton. Daily 7:00, 10:30,
SAT. 5:40 , 9:20, SUN. 2:00 , 7:20, 11:10 .
"SUNDAY IN NEW YORK" Jane Fonda
and Cliff Robertson. Daily 8:40, SAT.
6:00, 11:10, SUN. 4:20, 8:05.
SAT. Starts at 1:00 out 4:10. Special
Kidides Mat. ADVENTURES OF
MARCO POLO"
"FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON"
NORWEST
17630 Grand River
VE 8-1030
Open Mon. Thur. 7:15, Fri. 4:45 I
Sat. Mat. 12:30, Reopen 5:45. Sun. 1:30
Richard Burton & Elizabeth Taylor in
"CLEOPATRA"
Mon -Thur 8:15 only .
FRI. 5:15 & 8:30, SAT. 6:15 &
9:30,
Sat. KIDDIES Mat. Open 12:30
"JASON & THE ARGONAUTS" &
"STAGE COACH TO DANCER'S
ROCK"
MOST OF PAINTINGS on wall
of Chessrnate Gallery are by Moshe
Migdalowitz, father of Esther Wid-
enhaum, owner Morrie's wife , .
Before his passing, Moshe painted
them all in Israel and did his first
canvas at the age of 52 . . His
works are of Israel landscapes and
landmarks . . . well worth seeing
. . . Esther herself has about four
on the walls . . . Mury Shiner con-
tinues to spotlight the entertain-
ment with his wonderful offerings
of folk songs and ballads . . . We
are partial to Murv's renditions of
the good old standards like "Lucky
Old Sim," "St. Louis Blues" and
others . . . Without a doubt, Mury
ranks among the top as a ballad
master ... His poise and presenta-
tion are ultra-pro.
—D.R.
charged that the genocide pact es-
tablishing that mass murder is an
international crime, has been
"pigeonholed" by the Senate com-
mittee for 15 years.
The Senate quoted Foreign Rela-
tions Chairman J. W. Fulbright as
stating that "to date, the admini-
stration, which following custom,
is reviewing proposals submitted
to the Senate by previous ad-
ministrations, has not made its
wishes known with respect to the
Genocide Convention."
Sen. Beall asked that mem-
bers of the Senate be given an
oppOrtunity "to stand up and be
counted on this moral issue." He
said this is not a Jewish issue, it
is a humanity issue despite the
fact that the treaty was prompted
by Hitler's genocide against the
Jewish people.
Erect Memorial to Chelmno Victims
LONDON (JTA)—A monument liberation of the Lodz Ghetto. The
to the victims of the Chelmno con- committee for the ceremony in-
centration camp, where 350,000 cluded government representatives
Jews were slaughtered, was un-
and Lodz municipality and party
veiled in the Polish city Sunday, it
leaders. David Himmelfarb, chair-
was reported here from Warsaw.
man of the Lodz branch of the
The Chelmno camp was the first Jewish Cultural and Social Asso-
murder camp set up in occupied ciation, and other Lodz Jewish
Poland by the Nazis. Most of the leaders also served on the com-
Jews were from Lodz. Other vic- mittee.
tims were Poles from Zamoszcz,
Czechs from Lidice and Dutch, Bel-
gian and Norwegian prisoners of
war. There is now a Jewish monu-
ment in Chelmno at a mass grave
of a group of Jews who staged a
revolt against the Nazis and were
wiped out in their hopeless fight.
LOUIS
ARMSTRONG
A mass meeting and special radio
broadcasts marked the commemor-
ation 61 the 20th anniversary of the
Paris Opera Unveils
Ceiling Done by Chagall
PARIS (JTA)—The Paris Opera
unveiled a 600-square-foot painting
on the ceiling of the theater ex-
ecuted by Marc Chagall, -world-
famous French,Jewish artist. The
massive painting, a circular floral
theme, was done by Chagall over
a two - year period. Among the
guests attending the unveiling of
the work in addition to the artist
was Andre Malraux, French minis-
ter of cultural affairs.
and his all sta s
2 Perfornitinces only
Louis (Satchmo) Armstrong, who
will bring his All Stars to the stage
of the Michigan Theater for two
performances at 8 p.m. next Mon-
day and Tuesday, has provided
"Hello, Dolly" with one of the
greatest singing commercials a
musical comedy ever had. Its one
of the many numbers he'll perform
here.
MON. •TUE. OCT. 5-6
RESERVED SEATS
NOW!
5210-5320-54 30
MICHIGAN
Theatre • Detroit
BOX OFFICE OPENS MONDAY, SEPT. 28th
Murdered 'Israeli Agent'
Named in Brazil; Jewish
Newspaper Denies Report
RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA) — The
alleged "Israeli agent" reported re-
cently to have been mu:.clered in
Peru, near the Brazilian border,
while "presumably" engaged in
tracing Josef Mengele, the notorious
Auschwitz selection doctor, was
identified here by Interpol as a
woman, Nora Eldock.
However, the Yiddische Presse,
a Jewish newspaper here, immedi-
ately denied that report, stating
that Nora Eldock died in an acci-
dent in Argentina two years ago.
The newspaper said she was an
Israeli citizen.
The Yiddische Presse severely
criticized the Brazilian branch of
Interpol for the report about Nora
Eldock's alleged involvement as an
"Israeli agent," declaring that re-
port was an illustration of the
"confusion" rampant in police
circles here regarding the Mengele
case. "Such confusion only contri-
butes further to Mengele's ability
to escape arrest," the Yiddische
Presse charged.
Vicki Carroll, Decca recording
artist, is musical attraction at the
Black Knight Supper Club. Hosts
Joe and Lillian Helman feature
the Artie Nelson trio with Billy
Rose nightly.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30—Friday, October 2, 1964
AU ~ REl HEPB.. RN- REX HARRIS:N 'gil HOUMA?
WIlFRI IfiDEVRITE
GUM TM] ARO —1110DORE MEL DI- 6A =- .:ciaL5WCA
ALAT1115ER FREDERICK LOEWE I 'allirRNER • JACK AAP:KR GEOR6E CUKOR
TECHNICOLOr•SUPER PANAVISION 6 10• FROM WARNER BROS,
MICHIGAN PREMIERE UNITED ARTISTS THEATRE, OCT. 28th.
ALL EVENINGS
Evenings
BALC.
L-R
$1.50
$2.00
$2.00
BALC.
A•K
$2.00
$2.50
$2.50
ORCH.
LOGE
$2.50
$3.00
$3-00
ADMISSION
PRICES
MATS.: WED. & SAT.
MATS.: SUN. & HOLIDAYS
8:30 P.M. Except Sunday Evenings 8:00 P.M. All Matinees 2:00 P.M.
NAME
1
I ADDRESS
I NO. OF SEATS et $ Mat 0
ALTERNATE DATES
I DATE REQUESTED
1
Eve. ❑ $
1
Send check or ;noney order payable to UNITED ARTISTS
THEATRE and enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope.
aim
ax.• am ••••
. ■ ••
omr
EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE SOLO OUT* OCT. 28-29-31 and NOV. 1
RESERVATIONS
AT ALL
SEARS STORES
ii vp.
• 44, PHONE:
962-7135
962-2767
K
GRAND
CIRCUS
PARK
140 BAGLEY AVE. at
O
ALL RESERVED SEATS
MAIL ORDERS NOW
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October 02, 1964 - Image 30
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1964-10-02
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