THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
750 Jews in Singapore
The Jewish community of Singa-
pore, which dates back to the early
part of the 19th century, today
numbers some 750 persons main-
taining a variety of communal in-
stitutions.
Jews in Sports
By JESSE SILVER
(Copyright, 1966, JTA, Inc.)
Half-miler Rick Herrmann of
San Diego State continues his ter-
rific running. Herrmann's third
place finish at the California Re-
lays in 1:48.0 gives him the Jew-
ish record for both 880-yards and
800-meters, its metric equivalent.
The week prior to the California
relays, Herrmann led his team to
the California Collegiate AA title.
He took the 880 in 1:48.3, and ran
You are cordially
invited to George
and Martha's for an
evening of fun and games*
MOVIE
GUIDE
ADAMS
Grand Circus Park
WO 1-8525
WALT DISNEY Presents
" LT. ROBIN CRUSOE, U.S.N."
Sun., Mon., Tues., Thur., 11:51, 2:45,
5:39, 8:23, 11:07. Wed. and Sat., 9:00,
11:49, 2:43, 5:37, 8:21, 11:05.
Plus
"RUN APPALOOSA, RUN!"
CAMELOT W.
at Miller Road
Warren81-5040
5
Air Cooled by Refrigeration
Something to Offend Everyone
Rod Steiger in
IratAziarammirsil
11111111VILIMIR
"THE LOVED ONE"
rimiciaserizs
Fri. and Daily open 6:15, shown 7:10,
9:45, short subjects 6:45, 9:05; Sat., Sun.,
Mon., open 1:00, shown 1:25, 3:35, 5:45,
7:55, 10:00.
IN ERNEST LEHMAN'S PRODUCTION OF
EDWARD ALBEE'S
FOX . . .
2211 Woodward-WO 1-9494
Thrilling, Spettacular, All Color Show
Jay North, Clint Walker and SAJJID in
Ifireamen
"MAYA"
Plus
ILDIF
"THE SECRET 7"
Doors Open 10:45 a.m. Free Parking
LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday
For schedule information call
WO 1-7917
WED. LADIES DAY, 50c
Viieumanimin
111VersinniuF
al3
•
GRAND CIRCUS partr0 C 1 i - r 3240
0
Open Daily 10:45
(Air Cooled by Refrigeration)
Held Over
* 1.11111111101•11MINEMIPINIMPUNKEMMINII
IMPORTANT EXCEPTION:
NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL
BE ADMITTED UNLESS
ACCOMPANIED BY HIS PARENT.
"STAGECOACH"
12:35, 3:55, 7:15, 10:35
"THE MURDER GAME"
Also Starring
11:20, 2:40, 6:00, 9:20
GEORGE SEGAL. SANDY DENNIS
WARNER BROS.
NOW Showing!
PRESENTED BY
Directed by
a 47.2 leg on the winning mile re-
lay team.
Take off weight and win is Bill
Belfer's formula for victory. Bel-
fer from Seton Hall has been col-
lecting titles in the shot and discus
ever since he lost 15 pounds over
the last few months. Now he is a
6-foot-1, 215 pounder, and it's all
Muscle.
Belfer, a junior, is the Metro-
politan and New Jersey Collegiate
champion in both the shot and
discus, and recently captured the
IC4AA discus crown with a record
178', his all-time best.
* *
Eric Weisbrot of Queens College
of N. Y. is another weightm an
who should be mighty happy. He
captured the shot at the Colle-
giate Track Conference meet with
a record 53'1 1/2", then he placed
fifth in the event at the ICAA
meet to give Queens its first point
ever in the country's oldest colle-
giate track meet . . . Marty Eis-
ner of Kent State tossed the shot
58'73/4" for his all-time best, and
the following week won the event
at the Mid-America Conference
championships . . . Oxford's Amer-
ican Steve Cohen's best so far in
the shot is 54'71/4".
Miler Ray Roseman of England
ran third at the British Games in
4:05.0 . . . British distance man
David Yaffe won the London Uni-
versity three-mile championship
as he ran 14:18.4, a personal best
. . Sprinter Ken Hendler was a
member of the New York team
which competed against Puerto
Rico at San Juan . . . Stu Levitt
of the Grand Street .Boys tossed
the javelin in 213'9 1/2". at a recent
development in New York.
Open 1:00 daily, "STAGECOACH," 1:25,
3:35, 5:45, 8:00, 10:15.
PUNCH & JUDY
MAIN
Royal Oak-Main St. at
11 Mile Rd.
LI 2-0180
Open daily 6:30. Sat. & Sun. 12:30
Kertheval at Fisher Rd.
TU 5-7010
RADIO CITY
"THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN
IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES"
Woodward near 9 Mile Rd.
LI 3-5800
"RED LINE 7,000"
"A truly adult live story!
It is a beautiful film,
finely made !"
-Judith Crist,
III A Sigma III Release
N. Y. Herald Tribune
STUDIO-8
ACRES OF FREE PARKING!
Greenfield north of 8-Mile LI 2.8827
•-•
STARRING
CLINT WALKER • JAY NORTH
Walter Reade-Sterling proudly presents
ONE OFTHE
MOST
BRILLIANT
FILMS THIS
YEAR!"
"THE ULTIMATE
CANNES FILM
FESTIVAL PRIZE WINNER
IASTAIANGOLOR
-Crowther...
N.Y. Times
-Crist, Tribune
SHOWS:
7:30-9:40
STUDIO I
IN GHOST
STORIES!
A THRILLER!"
FREE PARKING NEXT DOOR!
TECHNICOLORe•PANAVISION®
PLUS:
M-G-M
presents
Fri.: 7:45-9:45
Sat., Sun. &
Mon.: 6:00,
3:00 & 10:00
"IMO
sulermG CAP
Studio NORTH
"The Piano Sport" by Don Asher,
to be published Aug. 24 by Athen-
eum Books, is being hailed by Her-
bert Gold as "a funny and touching
novel in which a rare, old-fashioned
sweetness of spirit is made to work
marvelously again, by a very con-
temporary observant wit. Asher's
musical training is evident in his
delicate orchestration of themes
and language."
The story is about a 21-year-old
pianist with a small town New En-
gland-Jewish background who goes
to San Francisco to become sophis-
ticated and there encounters a
series of affairs that teach him that
life is serious and sometimes dead-
ly.
Walt Disneg4
Bambi
Walt Disney Productions. Inc..
SECRET
TECHN I SCOPE • EASTMANCOLOR
Woodward at 9-Mds
LI 1.5168
(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)
TEL AVIV - Habimah, Israel's
TECHNICOLOR
THE
SIMONE SPINET • YVES MONTANO
Habimah's Latest Play
Goes On Despite Censors
`The Piano Sport'
by Asher Lauded
Plus in Color
Special Matinees Wed. and 4th of July
•
It was then generally believed
here that the Soviets had gone
through one of their frequent
policy switches. Israel Orchestra
officials now believe that Soviet
bureaucracy, rather than a change
of policy, was responsible.
The new agreement provides for
17 concerts by the Israel Orchestra
during a three-week visit, starting
Nov. 12. One of the concerts will
have Oistrakh as a soloist. He
has visited Israel and performed
with the orchestra
nounced it has no intention of
withdrawing "The Good Life,"
which. was scheduled for its Israeli
premiere Tuesday night. "We will
not change our plans," the man-
agernent stated, "since we have
information that Marceau was
cleared four years ago of the
charges of cooperation with the
Nazis."
"STAGECOACH"
Ford & Middlebelt Rd.
GA 1-0210
The agreement for the Phil-
harmonic tour of the USSR is
the second to be signed. The
first one was signed in May, and
then a cable was received here
from Moscow asking for an in-
definite postponement of the
tour because of "technical dif-
ficulties."
years.
The Habimah management an-
Plymouth Rd. at Farmington Rd.
GA 7-0400 & KE 4-6400
(Air Cooled by Refrigeration)
Held Over
LA PARISIEN
JERUSALEM (JTA)-An agree-
ment for a concert tour by the
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
throughout the Soviet Union in
November was signed in Moscow
by the orchestra's director, Itzhak
Heftel, and the Soviet official con-
cert agency.
The agreement also provides for
a Soviet orchestra to make a tour
of Israel starting in November. The
director signed agreements pro-
viding for concerts in Israel by
such noted Soviet artists as violin-
ist David Oistrakn and pianist S.
Richter.
foremost theater, rejected Tues-
day a demand by the board of
film and theater censorship that
it refrain from playing "The Good
What is piety? To avoid in secret Life," a drama by a Belgian play-
that for which we should blush in wright, Felician Marceau, whom
ptiblic.-Arabic proverb.
the board accused of cooperation
with the Nazis over a period of 15
MAI KAI
MIKE NICHOLS
Israel Philharmonic Going
to Russia in November
FOX
Now
Cool!
WO 1-7917
Free Parking
FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT opens
7:00 Fri., Mon., Tues., "Bambi" 7:14,
10:00; Sat. Matinee open 1:00,
"Bambi" 3:10; Sat. Eve. open 7:00,
"Bambi" 9:00; Sun. open 1:00,
"Bambi" 1:25, 4:20, 7:15, 10:10.
Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin in
"LIVING IT UP 55
Fri., Mon., Tues., 8:30 • only. Sat.,
Mat. 1:20; Sat. Eve. 7:13, 10:10; Sun.
2:45, 5:40, 8:40.
R ICLEI Y THE,A+TRE,
12 IMIL114 AT COOLIDGE
'LI 2-0330
Friday, July 1, 1966-33
Danny Raskin's
LISTENING
ORGANIZATION of a chapter
in Oak Park has been started for
perceptually handicapped children
. . . or just plain learning dis-
abilities . . . The parent group,
which itself is only a couple of
years old, is the Michigan Associa-
tion for Children With Learning
Disabilities . .. A very basic and
important aim is gaining recogni-
tion that perceptual development
is necessary for the welfare of so
many youngsters.
* * *
STORY WAKING THE rounds
is told by Harriet Turner of par-
ents with college-age kids-but not
all of them are sure its a joke
. . . The mother of a recently mar-
ried daughter met a friend, who
asked about the newlyweds . . .
"Oh, they're so happy!" exclaimed
the mother. "They just got back
from a month in Bermuda, and
they're moving into a new apart-
ment. She's getting new furniture
for it, and as soon as they're
settled they're buying a car."
. . "My," said the friend, "your
son-in-law certainly must be doing
well." . . . "Indeed he is," said
the mother. "He's getting straight
As."
* *
IF YOUR KIDS are anything
like the normal, they dearly love
receiving presents but hate ever
more having to write thank you
letters . . . Martin Levy, 10-year-
old son of Rose and Carl Levy, got
around to thanking an uncle just
last week for a gift he had re-
ceived in January • . . What he
wrote was, "I'm sorry I didn't
thank you for my present, and it
would serve me right if you forgot
my birthday next Thursday."
a
*
JOE CORNELL tours the United
States and Europe again this year
as an instructor with the Dance
U.S.A. Caravan.
• * *
SEEING SIGNS . . . Over the
counter in a super market,
"F;F-Frozen Foods."
* *
ARNOLD SYKES believes that
salesmanship can be overdone, as
he found while working in a de-
partment store, fresh out of school
. .. His first customer was a lady
. . . He was talking with her when
the boss in passing heard Arnold
saying, "No, ma'am, we haven't
had any in a long time." . . . "The
boy is new here," apologized the
boss. "We can get some for you
from the warehouse, madam, and
if you'll come back tomorrow,
I'm sure you'll find our counters
full of it." . . . The woman smiled
and walked out . . . "Now, there
was an example of salesmanship,"
stormed the boss. "NEVER say
we don't have anything. She'll be
back tomorrow. By the way, what
did she say?" . . . She said, ex-
plained Arnold, "we haven't had
any rain lately."
* *
DISA 'N DATA . . . Sid Cohen
was in town visiting from Florida
. . . Wife, Frances is coming down
to see if she likes it there . .
If not, both will be back living in
Detroit . . . Les Ball is still in
the Air National Guard, but now
stationed at Metropolitan Airport
instead of Amarillo, Texas . .
Ed Wolfe was in town from Chi-
cago . . He, too, may be moving
back to Detroit soon . . . Barrister
Milt Hubert and wife Sylvia are
vacationing in Las Vegas and look-
ing for that sign posted along a
Nevada artery, "Two-to-one you
are now entering Las Vegas."