U.S. Grants to Israel
Aid Social Welfare Study
(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)
TEL AVIV—Social welfare re-
search projects in Israel have re-
ceived United States government
grants totaling 2,000,000 Israeli
pounds ($666,000) in recent years,
Dr. M. Kurz, director-general of
the Israel Social Welfare Ministry
told a press conference here Tues-
day.
Dr. Joseph Burg, the social wel-
fare minister, told the conference
that research has become an im-
portant corollary of social welfare
work in Israel. The rehabilitation
administration of the U.S. Depart-
ment of Health, Education and
Welfare has agreed to continue
participation in various welfare
projects in Israel, particularly
those concerning the blind and
heart patients, Dr. Kurz said.
Ship of Fools' Now Showing at the Krim
Showered with vast critical ac-
claim upon its publication, Kather-
ine Anne Porter's masterful novel,
"Ship of Fools," thereupon pro-
ceeded to dominate the best seller
lists for two years.
Its vast gallery of characters,
inhabiting the turbulent Thirties,
before the vast Nazi juggernaut
was set in motion, seethes with life.
Now this magnificent work has
been transformed into compelling
screen entertainment in Stanley
Kramer's production of "Ship of
Fools," for Columbia Pictures,
now showing at the Trans Lux-Krim
Theater.
Writing with the tremendous
advantage of hindsight, Oscar-
winning scriptwriter Abby Mann,
who skillfully adapted for the
screen Katherine Anne Porter's
rich novel, has captured the tenor
of the times in a way that will
have special meaning for Jewish
audiences.
In fashioning her story of a
score of strangers cast together
by chance for the space of an
ocean voyage, Miss Porter included
in her passenger list the character
of Julius Lowenthal. The time is
1933 and on the SS Vera, steaming
from Mexico to Germany, Lowen-
thal, a German Jew, is snubbed
and ostracized by his fellow na-
tionals. But suffering with stoic
calm, believing in the Germany he
loves, he dismisses as extremist
nonsense the Nazi ideology in the
chatter around him. He is, the
audience perceives with a wrench,
an innocent traveling blindly, of
his own free will, to an oven in
some horrendous Dachau.
Lowenthal is so sentimentally
Thus has the power of hindsight
served the interests of art. Through
the audience's superior knowledge
of what has since happened, the
viewer is caught up in the grip of
an overpowering poignancy.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
24—Friday, October 8, 1965
11111111E2=13e1=111111.
CHECKER BAR-B-C
RIBS • CHICKEN • SHRIMP
au& pavi!
FEATURING OUR DELICIOUS DELMONICO
STEAK SANDWICH
with French Fries & Cole Slaw, $1.35
15600 W. 10 Mile Rd. Nr. Greenfield
NEW ORLEANS MALL
COUNTRY KITCHEN
OPEN DAILY at 6:45 A.M.
ITALIAN FOODS
Specializing in
Cantonese Food
Open Daily 11 a.m.-11 p.m. — Sat. 11 a.m. - 2 a.m.
Carry-Out Service
Free Parking
13715 W. 9 MILE RD., OAK PARK
LI 7-4663
HOUSE of
CHUNG
CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANT
Lunches - Dinners - Carry Out
8926 W. 7 Mile at Wyoming
DI 1-6460
OPEN: SUN., NOON-10:30 P.M.;
MON. thru THURS., 11.10:30 P.M.
FRI., 11-1 A.M.; SAT., 11-3 A.M.
KOW KOW INN
Open 11 a.m. to
3 a.m. Daily
Famous Chop Suey • Cantonese Food • Steaks • Chops • Sea Food
CARRY OUT SERVICE
EASY PARKING
322 W. McNichols, Bet. Woodward & Second
TO 8-7550
C-KfrAl L LOIVN,G,
S ak sey .9 s
SUPPER
CLUB
"D ET RO 11:0 'S O E rragr A A IL T: ROOM"
DE LI CATEISSIENS
188 N. Hunter (Woodward) Birmingham
BOTTLE & BASKET
Lunches • Dinners
• Sandwiches
Complete Carry-Out Dept.
DELICATESSEN - CAFETERIA
MI 6 - 6553
Look For The Big
Wheel
Daily 9 to 11 incl. Sun.-Fri.-Sat 9 to 1 a.m.
ANNOUNCING OUR NEW HOURS
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Daily
S
Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods
Parking Facilities . . . Carry - Out Service
7101
LUNCHES - DINNERS
PASTRIES - WAFFLES AND
OUR SPECIAL FRENCH TOAST
C arry-Outs, Distinctive Buffet Tray Catering,
Delicatessen
Ample Parking
19171 Livernois at 7 Mile
EMBERS
Restaurant - Delicatessen
JOEY'S
DELICATESSEN and
TRAY CATERERS
UN 3-3298
OPEN 7 DAYS
17244 W. 7 Mile Rd.
WE LOVE CHILDREN!
Complete Dinners 60-95c
OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 1 a.m.•Sat. to 2 a.m.
• Breakfasts • Lunches •Dinners • Sandwiches
Complete Carry-Out Service
25290 Greenfield, N. of 10 Mi. Rd. LI 7-4533
21174 GREENFIELD RD.
In the Green 8 Shopping Center
Restaurant-Delicatessen
LI 3-0535
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
• Lunches
• Dinners
• After Theater Snacks
• Complete Menu of Marty's
• Try Marty's Special Tray Service
famous sandwiches
11 a.m. • i a.m.
:a 3rea.lni
ta.lia n Food
1
CLOSED SUNDAYS
COCKTAIL BAR
Banquet room available
17632 WOODWARD — North of 6 Mile
TO 9 - 3988
VANNELLI'S
• Luncheons • Dinners
PRIVATE ROOMS FOR
Restaurant & Cocktail Lounge
BANQUETS AND PARTIES
Famous for American & Italian Food
For Over 25 Years
• Steaks • Chops • Seafood
Closed Mondays
18300 Woodward
Free Parking
VILLA
VENIC
TO 9-6040
Detroit's Newest and Most Intimate
Italian-American Restaurant
7630 Woodward
874-2320
Across the street from the Pallister Motel
YOUR HOSTS: Don Bosco, Tony Casas and John Guarisimo
. PANCAKES- AND -WAFFLES
GOLDEN GRIDDLE
• 42 Varleties of Pancakes &
Waffles
• 12 Delicious Varieties of Eggs &
Omelets
• Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
3017 N. WOODWARD, Royal Oak
PANCAKE HOUSE
Home Of The
GOLDEN WONDER WAFFLE
Featuring Parfait Pies"—Key Lime,
etc.
6:30 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sun. thru Thurs.
Fri. 'til 2:30 a.m. Sat. 'til 3:30 p.m.
549-2900
SEA:FOODS
CLAM SHOP
TR 4-2870
Serving Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks and Assorted Sea Foods
Music by Muzak
Finest Corned Beef Sandwiches and
Sandwich Combinations
Restaurant &
n Arge a rliy ca
F
2675 E. GRAND BLVD.
STEAKS; CHOPS, I:MO.1 l
Albert's
DINING ROOM
• Businessmen's Lunches
• Dinners
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Incl. Sun.
15127 W. 7 MILE RD.
(3 Blks. E. of Greenfield)
CARL'S
CHOP HOUSE
3230 PINE
BR 3-9878
3020 GRAND RIVER.
Free Parking.
TE 3.0700
Private Banquet Rooms for wedding parties. Serving
the World's Finest Steaks. Chops and Sea Foods for
more than 26 years. All Beef aged in our cellars.
Anti-It-Oa
COUNTRY INN
LAKE RD.
LISTENING
IN CALIFORNIA, Harry Shapiro(
called old friend Danny Thomas
and had to get through a maze
of secretaries before he could even
say hello to the star . . . Harry's
firm of Sally's Furs sponsored
Danny when the comic was Amos
Jacobs with "Chuck" Stanley on
Detroit's "Happy Hour Club" radio
show . . . Today, Danny leads 19
corporations and after 20 minutes
of lunch together, jumped up and
told Harry he had to get back to
work ... So, says Harry, all is not
gold that glitters ... Danny Thomas
may be a great success, one of the
biggest in show business, but the
pace is very very fast and Danny
is working harder than he ever
has in his life.
* * *
FIVE-YEAR-OLD Gordon Miller,
son of Beverly and Miles Miller,
after being reprimanded for inter-
rupting, explained, "But I gotta
interrupt to get started."
* * *
RECORD SALESMAN Art
Canvasser asked the rock 'n roll
fan if he could help him . . . "Sure,
what've you got that's real loud
with a fast beat — something to
relax by?"
•
*
PAUL
PURITAN—Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.—UN 1-3929
WITH IMAGINATION
Leonard Randall at the Piano Bar
18952 WOODWARD 1 BLK. SOUTH OF 7 MILE TO 9-9373 OPEN 7 DAYS
Alban's
CHOICE LIQUORS
BANQUET FACILITIES
PARADISO CAFE
CHINESE FOODS
HOA KOW INN
Open 11:30 a.m.; Sat. 5 p.m.;
Sun. 3-10 p.m.—Closed Monday
MARIA'S PIZZERIA
BEEF Hat.; SE
• Dinners
• Cocktails
19464 LIVERNOIS, 2 blks. N. of 7 Mile — 341-7520
ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY AFTER 2 A.M.
DUBBS
• Lunches
• Fine Wines
FRENCH RESTAURANT
Delivered "HOT" — UN 4-7700
20050 Livernois, Just South of 8 Mile
Danny Raskin's
German that when Jose Ferrer,
playing a Nazi publisher who
regales all and sundry with his
plan for the "extermination of the
unfit" as well as of Jews and other
racial minority groups in Germany,
sings some vintage German songs,
Lowenthal's eyes mist over. Herr
Glocken, the dwarf who has dubbed
the SS Vera, "Ship of Fools," is
moved to observe: "You are Ger-
man, aren't you? Gott, Lowenthal,
you don't see what is going on in
front of your face!"
OPEN 365 DAYS A YEAR
Michigan's Most Fabulous
BUFFET DINNERS
Served Every Evening.
Prices for Children and Adults.
Special Sunday Menu,
12 Noon to 5 P.M.
682-0600
ZUCKERMAN, after
speaking to Conference on Christ-
ians and Jews, remarking, "It al-
ways takes something out of me
when I speak." . . . Paul may be 53
years old, but his physique is still
like a rock! . . . Whatever speak-
ing takes out of Paul, he still looks
the same — handsome, debonnaire
and smiling . . . Those who know
Paul, recognize him as a swell
down-to-earth guy on whom suc-
cess looks real good!
*
*
CIRCUIT JUDGE CHARLES
KAUFMAN has this about a divorce
suit he handled recently . . . "I
think you might as well give your
husband a divorce," he advised the
wife . . . "What!" shouted the lady.
"I have lived with the bum for 20
years and now I should make him
happy?"
* * *
THIS STORY belongs to Sandy
Koufax, ace hurler of the Los
Angeles Dodgers . .. He was in a
game where several of the players
were chewing tobacco . . A nice
old lady stared with disgust an
the spitting players . . . As one,
of the young players approached,
1)
from the dressing room after the'
game, the elderly lady stopped
him . .. "You don't chew tobacco,
do you?" she asked . . . "Heck,
naw," he said. "But I could give
ya's a cigar." _
a
WHILE ON SPORTS, before his
transfer to the New York Giants,
football player Bob Cr e s p i n o
brought his wife to New York on
a visit . . . "Honey,' said Bob, "just
wait until you see Yankee
Stadium!" . . "Baby," said she,
"just wait until you see Saks Fifth
Avenue!"
* * *
BECAUSE OF THE school band's
limited budget, a nun who taught
music scoured every source for
secondhand instruments . . . On
one of the recent hot days, she
entered Bim's Loan Office and
asked to see a small flute that
was on display in the sunlit
window ... When her hand touched
the sun-warmed metal, the sister
exclaimed, "Oh, it's hot!" . Look-
ing alarmed, owner Ben Harrison
managed to gasp, "No it isn't — it's
legit!"