MOVIE GUIDE

Brecht Satire on Nazism
to Be Staged at Center

A satire on Nazi justice, "The
Elephant Calf," by Bertholt Brecht,
will be performed by Center
Theater 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at
the Jewish Center.
The performance of Brecht's
play, with music and dance, will be
directed by Robert McKee. Appear-
ing in the play will be Hal Adler,
Addie Beckerman, Carol Chase,
Mike Goodman, Leroy Levitt,
Sondra Rubin and Sue Tobin.
The public is invited at a nominal
admission charge for non-members.

Diamond Cutters
The Israel diamond industry em-
ploys a total of 8,000 diamond cut-
ters, more than 25 per cent of the
number of such skilled workers in
the entire world.

ADAMS Grand Circus Park
WO 1-8525 Box office open 12-9 p.m.

Exclusive Area Showing

Jerry Lewis

"THE COLLECTOR"

"BOEING, BOEING"

FRI. NEW YEAR'S EVE. 11:45, 1:54,
4:03, 6:12, 8:15, 10:18, 12:20 Midnight.
SAT. 1150 a.m., 2:00, 4:10, 6:15, 8:25,
10:37. Sun.-Thur. 11:40 a.m., 1:50, 4:00,
6:05, 8:10, 10:15.
(50c Wed. Ladies Day till 5:00)

FOX • • •

2211 Woodward-WO 1-9494

Fantastic - Frightening

-

Boris Karloff, Nick Adams
All in Color

"DIE, MONSTER, DIE"

Plus Barry Sullivan in

"PLANET OF VAMPIRES"

Doors Open 10:45 a.m. Free Parking
LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday
For schedule information call
WO 1-7917
WED. LADIES DAY, 50c

MASONIC AUDITORIUM

12 Mi.-Coolidge, Berkley
LI 2-0330

BERKLEY

SAT. JAN. 8 - 8:20 P.M.

ROBERTA PETE "S

Tickets: $4.50 - $3.50 - $2.50
Grinnell's (Downtown) & Masonic Temple

1,!: ! : 1

FRI. NEW YEAR'S EVE. Open 6:45
"Collector" 7:20, 11:00. SAT. NEW
YEAR'S DAY Matinee 1:20 Re-open
5:00 "Collector" 7:07, 10:40. SUN. Open
1:00 "Collector" 1:24, 5:05, 8:45. MON.-
TUES. "Collector" 8:45.

"CAT BALLOU"

FRI. NEW YEAR'S EVE. 9:25. SAT. 5:25,
9:06. SUN. 3:30, 7:10, 10:45. MON.-TUES.
7:03, 10:40.

SAT. NEW YEAR'S DAY Matinee Open
1:00 Starts 1:20.

"HEY THERE YOGI BEAR" &
"SNOW WHITE & THE 3 STOOGES"

Starting Wed. Jan. 5th

"THE CINCINNATI KID"
& "ONCE A THIEF"

CAMELO1

W. Warren at Miller Road

581-5040
DEARBORN'S FINEST THEATRE

"MY FAIR LADY"

FRI. NEW YEAR'S EVE. Open 6:00.
Starts 6:45 "Fair Lady" 6:55,10:00. SAT.
NEW YEAR'S DAY. Open 12:30. "Fair
Lady" 12:45, 3:50, 6:55, 10:00. MON.-
FRI. Open 6:00 "Fair Lady" 6:55, 10:00.

At Grand Circus
Park, WO 1-3240
Open Daily 10:45
Doris Day & Rod Taylor

GRAND CIRCUS

"DO NOT DISTURB"

FRI. "NEW YEAR'S EVE" 11:25, 1:35
3:44, 5:50, 8:00, 10:00, 12:20
after midnight
NEW YEAR'S DAY SAT. 11:35, 1:55,
4:15, 6:35, 8:55, 11:15 p.m.
SUN.-THUR. 11:25, 1:35, 3:45,
5:55, 8:05, 10:15
Wed. Ladies Day 50c till 6:00

MAIN

Ma pia St. at
Royal I p i alize

LI 2-0180 - Matinee 12:00 Noon
NEW YEAR'S EVE. Open 6:30
Complete Late Show 10:00

"SECRET AGENT FIREBALL"
&"SPY IN YOUR EYE"

Fri. Sat. Sun. Matinee

"PINOCCHIO IN OUTER SPACE"

plus Elvis Presley

"TICKLE ME"

MA 1 KAI

Plymouth Rd. at Farmington Rd.
GA 7-0400 & KE 4-6400

"DO NOT DISTURB"

Doris Day & Rod Taylor
FRI. NEW YEARS EVE open 1 p.m.
Shown 1:50, 3:55, 6:00, 8:05, 10:15, &
12:20 after midnight.
SAT. NEW YEAR'S & SUN. Open 12:30
"Do Not Disturb" 12:45, 2:45, 5:45, 6:45,
8:40, 10:35. MON.-FRI. Open 5:45. Shown
6:05, 8:10, 10:15.

NOW

Information
WO 1-7917
Free Parking

'ONE
OF THE GREAT ONES•••
one of the rarest and .tenderest explorations of a

Woman's emotions ever 'screened!".- COOK, DetkEvas Press

"A FELLINI WONDERLAND
viewers are likely to quiver with
sensuous (and sensual) ecstasy!"

- Crowther, N. Y. Times

FEDERICO FELLINI

-L

JULIET
go( OF THE
ZPIRITS

IN DAZZLING COLOR

GIULIETTA MASINA.
SANDRA MILO .

DUAL PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT NOW AT 2 THEATRES

Trans Lux KRIM

Studio NORTH

Woodward at 9 Mile-LI 1-5168

Woodward at 6 Mile-TO 8-8300

the OflOtiON PIM:LIRE
With SOMEChiNG ZO
OFFEND EVERYONE!!

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Filmways present
Martin Ransohoff's Production

The Loved ne

tollERT MORSE JONATHAN WINTERS • ANJANETTE COMER

r

anaTrews • Milton Berle • James Coburn • John Gielgud • Tab Hunter • Margaret Leighton
Liberate • Roddy McDowall • Robert Morley • Barbara Nichols- Lionel Stander
ROD STEIGERN4'Avar. Screenplay by Terry Southern and Christopher Isherwood
Directed by Tony Richardson • PIVilled by John Galley and Haskell Wexler

NOW

SHOWING

•

STUDIO-8

UN 2-4252
VARSITY CINEMA
Livernois at McNichols
Starts Xmas Day "NEW ANGELS"
Sat. & Wk. 7:00, 10:10 Sun. 4:00, 7:05,
10:15. "LOVE ALA CARTE" 8:34
only. Sun. 5:34, 8:39

Jewish Hospital Finance
Explored in Boston Study

Ghetto Massacre
Survivors Found
by WJCongress

Action by the World Jewish Con-
gress in finding witnesses for more
than 250 investigations into Nazi
crimes has brought to light sur-
vivors of a bloody ghetto episode
from which no one was thought to
have escaped, according to Samuel
Bronfman, chairman of the North
American Executive of the World
Jewish Congress.
This is the story of the grim
episode. Nazi troopers descended
upon the ghetto of Pawliniki and
systematically, ruthlessly rounded
up the inmates. Into the night they
disappeared; into the slaughter-
house from which there had been
no return. They knew their fate
and they crumpled together as the
weaponry of their bestial wardens
ripped into their shabby ranks.
None, it seemed, survived.
But, hours later, a stealthy
movement revealed the stubborn-
ness of life. In incredible pain,
driven by desperation, a woman
crawled from amongst the bodies
of her fellow Jews and stumbled
into an adjacent wood. The little
daughter beside her had slipped,
dead, from her arms. There the
woman lay until, hours later, an-
other phantom figure, bloodied and
almost nude, sunk down beside
her.
They gave each other some corn-
fort and whatever care was pos-
sible to salvage their battered
bodies. Stealthily, slowly, they
crawled away from the scene of
diabolical death.
Miraculously, those two women
escaped the Nazi death penalty.
And lived. Later, when liberation
came to Europe they left -forever,
desiring only to sever themselves
from the scene of their grim
escape.
Twenty years later, in justice's
slow progress, the government of
West Germany began an investiga-
tion into the crimes of Pawliniski.
But how, asked the investigating
attorneys, could they proceed, if
no one had survived that merciless
massacre?
But the case of Pawliniski seem-
ed impossible until minute re-
search revealed that two persons
were reported to have escaped. No
one knew thier names, no one
knew whether they had indeed
survived or where they were today.
Mobilizing its global organization,
the World Jewish Congress set in
motion a world-wide search. From
its New York offices the appeal
went out. Within a matter of days
the two women who had miracu-
lously survived Pawliniski were
located; one in Israel, and the
other-right in the heart of New
York itself.
The women must remain un-
identified until the investigation
into the crimes is completed.

BOSTON (JTA) - The many
facets of trends affecting the plan-
ning, operation and financing of
Jewish hospitals in the United
States-and the role of the Jewish
federations regarding Jewish hospi-
tal support-are outlined in a study
by Dr. Benjamin B. Rosenberg,
executive director of the Combined
Jewish Philanthropies of Greater
Boston, made public here.
Entitled "Financing the Jewish
Hospitals, the Changing Role of Israel Institutions Given
Federations," the study-support-
ed by statistical tables-attempts $750,000 by Foundation
"to review our collective thinking
NEW YORK (JTA)-The Ford
with respect to the rationale of Foundation announced a new
federation concern in this field," grant of $750,000 to the Israel
' Dr. Rosenberg stressed.
Foundation Trustees, bringing the
total given by the Ford group to
the IFT to $2,650,650 since 1958.
The grant continues Ford Founda-
tion support of research by Israeli
institutions on problems related to
the country's social and economic
development.
The Israeli Foundation Trus-
tees, with headquarters in Jeru-
salem, has on its board of directors
representatives of many major
educational and research institu-
tions. Among them are the He-
brew University, Tel Aviv Uni-
versity, Bar-Ilan University, Tech-
nion-Israel Institute of Technology,
the Weizmann Institute of Science,
the Negev Institute for Arid Zone
Research and the Israel Atomic
Energy Commission.

Greenfield North of Eight Mile
in the Green-8 Shopping Center

LI 2-8827

HANUKAH EVENING, Marion
Feldman opened a large box from
husband Max . . . Inside she found
a card that said, "Happy Hanukah"
.. . Under a second wrapper was
a card, "Be My Valentine" . .
More paper and string came off
to reveal "Happy Birthday" and
"Mother's Day" greetings . . .
Finally she worked her way
through "Happy Wedding Anni-
versary" to the gift, a beautiful
mink stole, and the final card
which read, "Gal, you've had it
for this year."
* * *
BERNIE WHITEMAN, adult
Jewish education chairman of
Metro Detroit Bnai Brith Council,
has introduced many distinguished
guests as speakers during BB's
"Time For Torah" programs . .
But his introduction for the De-
cember speaker was really unique
. . . "A young handsome man, one
who has done a lot of work for
Bnai Brith and the community,
a CPA with a successful prac-
tice-" . . . And with that intro,
Bernie himself proceeded to de-
liver an interesting lecture on
taxes and economics in the Torah!
* * *
WIFE BERNICE has been
doing a yeoman job of tooting the
public relations trumpet that
hubby Charlie Robinson is back
in the neighborhood again with
the Shell gas station bearing his
name on W. Eight Mile Rd. and
Mark Twain . . . Lots of their
friends who don't know yet will
be glad to hear the news.
* * *
WHILE VISITING the library
at the Afikim Kibutz in Israel,
Detroiter Harry Weinsaft w a s
thrilled no end when he discovered
a copy of The Detroit Jewish
News and was able to read news
from home . . . Harry is an ex-
security officer of the ship Exodus,
and was in Israel as a technical
adviser for the filming of "Cast A
Giant Shadow" with Kirk Douglas
... He's curator of the art gallery
at Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield
Hills.

HAL GORDON and his fine
musical aggregation will play the
annual Knights of Pythias Detroit
55 installation dinner-dance, Jan.
23, at Imperial Terrace . George
Haar is the new chancellor com-
mander for 1966.

MARCY ROSE, 17, is the first
student of her age ever taken to
study under voice teacher Avery
Crew . . . A lyric soprano with
a well modulated tonal quality and
wide range, Marcy was also
awarded a scholarship by Music
Study Club . . . She is the daughter
of Goldie and Morry Rose, and a
senior at Oak Park High . . . In
1962, at 14, she won the United
States ballroom dancing cham-
pionship under Joe C or net l's
banner.

Toronto Agency to Open
Disturbed Children Home

TORONTO (JTA) - A new pro-
gram for the treatment of emotion-
ally-disturbed children who need
to be separated from their homes
will be started by the Jewish Fam-
ily and Child Service here, it has
been announced by Dr. Arnold A.
Epstein. president of the United
Jewish Welfare Fund.
He said that a 830.000 bequest
No woman sleeps so soundly that for this purpose has been made
the twang of a guitar will not bring from the estate of the late Rebecca
Cohen. of Halifax. At present, Dr.
her to the window.
-Spanish Proverb Epstein said, there is only one
such residential facility under Jew-
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ish auspices in Canada, located in
Friday, December 31, 1965-27 Montreal.

