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November 25, 1966 - Image 33

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-11-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

MOVIE GUIDE

ADAMS

Grand Circus Park
OPEN 11:00 A.M.

WO 1-8525

GRAND CIRCUS

Dean Martin and Joey Bishop

"TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER"

"FANTASTIC VOYAGE"

"FANTASTIC VOYAGE" takes you
where no other film has been before.

MON. THRU FRI. AND SUN.: 11:40, 1:45,
3:50, 5:55, 8:00, 10:05.
SAT. 11:45, 2:06, 4:14, 6:22, 8:30, 10:38
Wed.-Ladies' Day, 50c; till 6

CAMELOT

W. Warren aT Miller Road
581-5040

"THE WRONG BOX"

DAILY Open 6:15; Shown 6:45, 11:15.
SAT. and SUN.: Open 1:00. Shown 4:10,
8:40.

"LORD JIM"

DAILY: 8:40 Only-
SAT., SUN.: 1:25, 5:55, 10:25

FOX . . .

2211 Woodward-WO 1-9494
A SHOCKER! The film that uncovers
small town talk.

"THE GIRL ON A CHAIN GANG"

& Tony Curtis & Sidney Poitier

At Grand Circus
Park. WO 1-3240

DAILY & SUN. 11:05, 2:55, 6:45, 10:35.

"CHARADE"

SUN. and WK. 12:55, 4:45, 8:35.
Wed., Ladies' Day: 50c till 6:00

MAI KM

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

"THE PROFESSIONALS"

DAILY & FRI., SAT. EVE. Open 5:45.
Shown 6:05, 8:15, 10:25.
SUN. Open 1:00. Shown 1:25, 3:35, 5:45,
7:55, 10:05.
• • •
Sat. Matinee all seats 50c. Open 11:30.
"Santa Visits the Magic Land of
Mother Goose." 12 & 3.
"The Night of the Grisley." 1:20 Only.

Royal Oak-Main St. at
11 Mile Rd.
LI 2-0180
Ann Margaret ans Tony Franciosa

MAIN

"THE DEFIANT ONES"

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

"THE SWINGER"

Elvis Presley in

"PARADISE, HAWAIIAN STYLE"

Detroit-Warren Sheraton Motor Inn
Debuts This Month; Theatrical Theme

The luxurious $2,500,000 Detroit- needs of travelers to Detroit for
Warren Sheraton Motor Inn, on such industries as General Motors
East Eight Mile Rd. and Groesbeck ' Technical Center, Ford Motor Co.,
Highway, Warren, will open the Chrysler and Selfridge Air Force
end of this month. Base.
Maynard Worth Fine, president
Features include two convention-
of the Groesbeck-Eight Mile Motel banquet rooms designed with a 300-
Corp., operating corporation for person capacity each, that can be
the Detroit-Warren Motor Inn, said subdivided into smaller meeting
every effort and expense was rooms; color television; parking
exerted to make this motor inn for almost 400 cars; a large swim-
project the finest of its kind in the ming pool; and a twenty-four hour
telephone service.
state.
The location was chosen because
The main dining room, the
it is ideally situated to serve the Players Balcony, serving 175, will
business, convention and vacationer feature a gourmet-type menu. Live
entertainment nightly will be fea-
tured in the Jesters Lounge.
Architect is Seymour J. Levine.
i In contrast to the outside modern
architecture, the interior decor is
executed in an old English atmos-
phere. The entire interior decorat-
ing concept was conceived around
a theatrical plan.

gethrigtia&U
The ENDLESS
SUMMER

In Color
Fri. and Sat.: 3:20, 5:10, 7:00,
8:55, 10:50.

STUDIO NEW CENTER

3.1311
the
Blv d .

Textile Technologist
Michel Alcan, a nineteenth cen-
tury French-Jewish engineer and
inventor is credited with develop-
ing much of the early French tex-
tile technology.

free Parking • Entrance On 3rd • M. 4 0025

Michael Caine

ALFIL

Kr.(EN • . , '01 ,,,nts

711111H E
IB LIM
MAX

In Color
Fri.: 6:30, 8:35, 10:40
Sat.: 7:00, 9:05, 11:10

STUDIO-8

Acres el Free Parting

Greenfield at LI..< • LI. 2-5E27

ci.scoptc,.cr, 5,11701

Complete and Uncut

LE BONHEUR

Fri., Sat. & Daily open 6:45

"BLUE MAX" 7:00, 9:40
Sun. open 1:00
Sun. open 1:00 "BLUE MAX"
1:20, 4:00, 6:45, 9:25
* * *
FRI., SAT. SPECIAL MATINEE
ALL SEATS 50c
Hans Christen Andersen's
"The Day Dreamer"
1:20 Over 4:00

In Color
Fri. and Sat.: 7:05, 8:45, 10:40

STUDIO

ti,erno, at Dansa.

K. 10070

free Attendant Parldne neat to Theatre

Cannes Grand Prize Winner

A MAN & A WOMAN

In Color
Fr'. and Sat.: 6:00, 8:00. 10:00

STUDIO-NORTHI"7,.̀
7.as',1" I
, „,.

IIEMIXECIEMPATow

Meier Parting lot front of Theatre

:MtLE -AT COOL! DGE

AS OVERHEARD IN CARSON'S LANDING-

"Call me that name
again, white woman,
and kill you!"

IRON A
CHAIN GANG"

-the film that uncovers
the Id of small town hate:

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Danny Raskin's

Friday, November 25, 1966-33

Baseball Awards

LISTENING

Now that Sandy Koufax has won
The following week, on regional
the Cy Young Award for the third TV, against Virginia Tech, Blatt
time they should think about chang- was fabulous. He made tackles
ing the name to the Sandy Kou- all over the field in an attempt
fax Award. At least they should to prevent the 23-21 loss. His
consider it after the great one efforts drew high praise from
retires from baseball.
broadcaster and former All-
Robert Clemente, flashy right America, Jackie Jensen. Blatt is
fielder of the Pittsburgh Pirates,
really a beauty!
was voted Most Valuable Player
* * *
Wednesday, edging Sandy Kou-
Al Greenberg's 1966 varsity foot-
fax of the Dodgers by only 10
ball career didn't last very long.
points.
Greenberg, a sophomore guard
Koufax won the MVP award in at Rutgers, made first string in
IN THE EXCITMENT at becom_
ing a granduncle again, I goofed 1963 and fiinshed second to San the opening game against Prince-
in last week's column
. New Francisco's Willie Mays last year. ton. However, in the fourth contest
In addition to the Cy Young against Army, the 5-9, 200-pounder
grandnephew's birth certificate
name is Brian Howard Gussin, son Award, the Sporting News named from Springfield, N.J., broke a
Koufax the National League pitch-
of Diane and Norm Gussin.
bone in his foot and is feared
* * *
er of the year. It was the fourth lost for the season.
HUGE SUCCESS WAS the re- straight time Koufax took this
Rutgers coaches feel that Green-
cent donor luncheon by Primrose title. Sandy received 175 votes of
Benevolent Society, at Latin Quar- the 224 major league players who berg has a great future, citing his
ter . . . Almost 600 gals put its cast ballots. In the Cy Young strength, agility and aggressive-
goal well over the top
. This is vote, Koufax was the unanimous ness. In Rutgers 17-14 win over
the group that started 35 years choice of the 20 baseball writers Yale, Alan lined up opposite an-
other Greenberg, the Elis' Glenn.
ago with a handful of young mar- who made the selection.
* * *
* * *
ried women banded to help others
less fortunate . . . Membership
Ron Silver is the only Jewish
Mike Epstein was another award
was closed to anyone over 40 .. . winner. He was named the Topps- player on the football squad at
Today they are all grandmothers J. G. Taylor Spink Minor League Northwestern this season. Silver,
and great-grandmothers . . Mon- Player of the Year, and received 6-2, 235 pounds from Cleveland
ies raised by Primrose in sup- the award at a dinner in New Heights, Ohio, is considered the
porting the needs of countless York City. Epstein, who was born key operator in the Wildcats offen-
local charities as well as giving to in the Bronx, was treated as a sive line. Silver, a guard in col-
Israel . . . Freda Neiman is presi- long lost child by the New York lege, was an outstanding fullback
dent of this dedicated group to
sportswriters. They were delighted in high school.
whom "help" 35 years ago was
* * *
to
discover that his grandmother
more of a personal nature with a
End Bruce Weinstein scored his
box of food or clothing . . The lives only three blocks away from
third TD of the year, on a 12-
growth of Primrose Benevolent Yankee Stadium.
Epstein left the Bronx at the yard pass, in Yale's 28-13 loss to
Society in its wide scope of help-
ing the needy is a tribute to the age of five and eventually settled Dartmouth . . . Fullback Neal
wonderful workings of these fine in California. However, he admits Weinstock registered Brown's only
he loves New York. The Yankees score as the Bruins dropped one
women.
would love to pry him loose from to Colgate 48-7.
• •
The late Dr. A. Harry Kallet was
HAROLD GACH, son of Blanche the Baltimore Orioles and reunite
and Herman Gach, recently won him with grandma. But Mike says, one of five "lettermen of distinc-
a $250 scholarship from the Silver- "I'm a professional ballplayer and tion" honored by Syracuse at the
man Post of the Jewish War Vet- I'll play wherever I'm sent, and Syracuse-Navy football game. Dr.
Kallet was an All-American end
erans . . and is now enrolled in do the best job I can."
* *
for the Orangemen back in 1911
Wayne State University as a jour-
Mike Blatt of Florida State con-
nalism major Harold graduated
In a recently published book
as a cum laude student from Ford tinues to do an outstanding job about the history of football at
High.
on defense for the Seminole foot- the U. of Florida, the author names
* * *
ball team. Blatt, a linebacker from Ervine "Goldy" Goldstein at guard
MEMBERS OF THE John F. Key West, was again given the on his pre-1933 all-time Florida
Kennedy Bnai Brith Youth Or- school's defensive award follow- football team. Goldstein played for
ganization, have undertaken ing a 10-0 win over Mississippi the Gators in 1923-25.
a community service project State.
Blatt was credited with seven
Wealth
to assist a Catholic orphanage in
The way to wealth is as plain as
South Vietnam . . . Desperately tackles and eight assists. In addi-
needed items include old or new tion, he forced two fumbles and the way to market. It depends
diapers, old or new sheets (any recovered one that led to the chiefly on two words, industry and
size), and clothing suited for babies winning TD. Three times he drop- frugality; that is, waste neither
and children up to ten years of age ped the Mississippi State quarter- time nor money, but make the
. . . All donations will be picked back for big losses. FSU's head best use of both. Without industry
up . Call Barry Bean, UN 2-5486, coach, Peterson, called Blatt's and frugality nothing will do, and
Marty Goldstein, UN 4-5986, or the performance "as good a game by with them everything.
chapter adviser, Benson Leet, LI a linebacker as we've ever had."
Franklin.
8-4256 .. . The boys will conduct
a house-to-house canvass, Dec. 11,
in Detroit andsuburbs.
* * *
SEEING SIGNS
. by Sam
Norber . . . in the trinket dept. of

a local five and ten . "No need
By BENNETT CERF
for shoplifting at our prices !"
T
A COUNTRY CLUB, a member came over to the owner
ESTHER GLUKLICK has been
of the city's most prosperous newspaper and told him,
doing china painting for a long
time as a hobby . giving away
"Say, I owe you a vote of thanks. Your paper proved just
the thing to stop my kids
beautiful gifts of her own handi-
craft . Someone from an organi-
from raising a racket
zation came over and had her do
while I was trying to
a dozen dinner plates and
sleep a little longer Sat-
Esther's friends kept asking why
urday morning." "I'm
she didn't go into business . . .
glad to hear that," boom-
They became so persistent in the
ed the publisher, highly
same question that Esther has
pleased. "Which particu-
convinced hubby Irving, and she
lar story or feature did
now has a showroom in their
the trick?"
Southfield home.
"Oh, it was nothing IN
DINNER - DANCE HONORING
the paper," the member
the newly elected officers for 1967
of Knights of Pythias, Det. 55,
hastened to explain. "I
and Pythian Sisters, is set
just rolled it up and
for Feb. 4, at Calvert Catering
whacked them with it."
*
*
*
Hal Gordon will do the musical
honors.
On New Year's Day,
THE OL' SARGE, Herman Gach
1945, recalls Stanley Weintraub, W. Somerset Maugham, then on
of the Sgt. Morton A. Silverman
the eve of his seventy-first birthday (but destined to live an- -
Post, JWV, is starting his 16th
other full score years) listened reluctantly to a chorus of merry-
year collecting clothing for the
makers singing "Auld Lang Syne." When they chorused the line
patients at Veterans hospitals . . .
"Should old acquaintance be forgot," Maugham snarled,
can
Items can be dropped off to Miss
only tell you that my own answer is in the affirmative."
*
*
*
Kole, JWV office, Zionist Bldg.,
7 Mile and Schaefer.
P. G. Wodehouse has dug up from the Talmud a passage that
NOTE TO FOLKS living in
should cheer those worthy souls whose aim in life it to make
Southfield . If you haven't as
people laugh:
yet done so, it is imperative that
".. . • and Elijah said to R. Berokah, these two will also share
in the world to come, R. Berokah then asked them, 'What is your
you register to vote in the coming
election . . A great many folks
occupation?' We are merry-makers. When we see a person
who is downcast, we cheer him up.' .... These two were of the
not able to cast a ballot can mean
the difference between victory and
very select few who would inherit the Kingdom of Heaven."
defeat where it counts.
1966, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate

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