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January 06, 1967 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-01-06

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

32-Friday, January 6, 1967

VIE

ADAMS

Grand Circus Park

WO 1-8525

OPEN 11:00 A.M.

"ANY WEDNESDAY"

11:30, 3:06, 6:42, 10:18

"THE WRONG BOX"

1:21, 4:57, 8:33

W. Warren at Miller Road
581-5040

CAMELT.
"MURDERER'S ROW"

FRI. & WK. DAYS. Open 6:15. "Mur-
derer's Row," 7:15, 9:35. (short subj..
6:45, 9:00).
SAT. AND SUN.: Open 1:00. "Murderer's

Row," 1:25, 3:40, 6:00, 8:20, 10:35.

Chief Military Chaplain
Eyed for Rabbinate Post

FOX . . .

2211 Woodward-WO 1-9494

"Clouds Over Israel," the wide-'
ly acclaimed film with the Sinai
Campaign as the factual back-
"ADAM & EVE"
ground, is now being shown at
"The Shame of the Sabine Women!" the Westown Theater.
Doors Open 10:45' a.m. Free Parking
The poignant war film, with
LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday
For schedule information call
Yiftach Spector, El-Or, Dina Dor-
WO 1-7917
ronne, Hadera Azulai and Shimon
WED. LADIES DAY, 50c
Israeli in the cast, deals with an
1% ri G crar c, C l irLu tis , incident in the 1956 conflict, with
GRAND CIRCUS
an Israeli pilot's predicament when
"FUNERAL IN BERLIN"
he is faced with danger but places
FRI. AND SAT.: 12:55, 4:20, 7:45, 11:05 human needs above his own
SUN. AND WEEK DAYS: 12:40, 3:45,
safety; with ensuing bitterness
7:00, 10:15.
"WACO"

Held Over 2nd Big Week

Together, 2 sizzlers in fiery color

FRI. AND SAT.: 11:20, 2:45, 6:10, 9:35
SUN. AND WEEK: 11:00, 2:15, 5:30, 8:45

TEL AVIV (ZINS) - The can-
didacy of the chief military chap- MAI KAI
Plymouth Rd. at Farmington Rd.
lain, Colonel Shlome Goren, for
GA 7-0400 & KE 4-6400
the post of Ashkenazic chief rabbi
"FANTASTIC VOYAGE"
of Tel Aviv is being supported by
"FANTASTIC VOYAGE" takes you
Mapai and Hapoel Hamizrachi, where no other film has been before.
Running as opposition candidate FRI. & WK. DAYS. Open 6:15. "Fan-
for this post is Rabbi Yedidiya tastic Voyage, 7:25, 9:50. Short Subj.,
Frankel, with the endorsement of 6 S :A5 T ' . 9:1 )5. SUN. Open 12:00. "Fantastic
the Agudath Yisrael and non- Voyage" 1:05, 3:30, 5:50, 8:05, 10:40.
partisan factions.
Royal Oak-Main St. at

MAIN

11 Mile Rd.
LI 2-0180

HELD OVER

"FANTASTIC VOYAGE"

& Don Knotts in

gala&

Marcello Mastroianni

Shoot Loud, Louder .
I Don't Understand

plus Julie Christie
(Academy Award Winner)

Darling

Fri: Sneak Preview 8:45

STUDIO-

11

Live

'it*

t

73-0070"

Free attendant Parkin, next to Theatre

N.Y. Film Critics Award:
Lynn Redgrave
"Best Actress"

Georgy Girl

Fri.: 6:00, 8:00, 10:00
Sat. & Sun. 2:00, 4:00„
6:00, 8:00, 10:00

UMW-NORTH

I

W cod
ward at 9
ILI-5168

Meter Parkin, lot front of Theatre

Exclusive Premiere
Engagement

The Endless Summer

in color
Fri.: 7:00, 8:55, 10:50
Sat.: 3:20, 5:10, 7:00
8:55, 10:50

3rd ail
the
Ethd.
Free Parking • Entrance on 3rd • TR. 1-0025

STUDIO NEW CENTER

Michael Caine
Shelley Winters
Alfie -
in color
Fri.: 6:30, 8:35, 10:40
Sat.: 7:00, 9:05, 11:10

S T8818.8 I

freenTetd at

Peres of Free Parkin,



Lt. 24827

"THE GHOST & MR. CHICKEN"

rd-= ilifilE5 COBURN
-01:1HERTokb
9.
0
II 'aigY-GO-ROU°
EASTMAN COLOR

Presents

FRI. & WEEKDAYS Open 6:45.
_ Shown 7:00, 10:45
SAT. EVE.: Open 6:45, Shown 9:05
SUN.: Open 12:45, Shown 1:00,
4:50, 8:40

THE

PROFISSi01111113

A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE

PANAVISIONt TECHNICOLOR'

FRI. AND WEEK DAYS 8:50 Only
SAT. EVE.: 7:00, 10:50
SUN.: 2:55, 6:40, 10:20
* * *

Sat. Spec. Children's Matinee

Open 1:00. Starts 1:20, over 4:45
Both in color. "The Little Shepherd"
and "Tiko the Shark"

,BERK LEY !THEATRE
,LI 2-0330
LE- AT COO L I D GE

The Detroit Institute of Arts Concert Series

Edith J. Freeman, Chairman

The Manhattan Consort-Baroque Ensemble

LeNoue Davenport, Musical Director
Wednesday, January 11-8:30 p.m., Auditorium
Tickets: S5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.50 at Institute Ticket Office (832-2730),
Grinnell's downtown, J. L. Hudson ticket services.

A SUSPENSEFUL...EXPLOS1VE DRAMA
OF THE ISRAELI-EGYPTIAN CONFLICT...
CORNS WEET
FILMED UNDER
PR 0 D
.
FIRE IN THE
NEGEV!

"Leaves the
Audience
Stunned with
its impact!"

Dorothy Fuldheim.
A.B.C.TV Cleveland

EXCLUSIVE
MICHIGAN
PREMIER!

'Clouds Over Israel,' Film With Sinai
Campaign as Background, Shown;
Hebrew Movie Has English Titles

NOW SHOWING

At The

WESTOWN

Wyoming at Fenkell-WE 3-7111

Aleltzer's Roles,
Swetan's Record

By JESSE SILVER

(Copyright, 1967, JTA, Inc.)

Glen Meltzer caught 91 passes
for Wichita State this past football
season and the sophomore end came
away with the 1966 NCAA major
college pass receiving title. Meltzer,
6-0, 188, made the 91 catches good
for 1,115- yards and four touch-
downs. He speared 16 passes in
Wichita's 37L23 upset of Colorado
State. The runner-up for the re-
ceiving title trailed Meltzer by 15
receptions. Although the Shockers
had only a 2-8 record, Meltzer cap-
tured a spot on the Missouri Val-
ley All-Star squad.
Offensive guard Allen Pepper,
Missouri, was picked for the second
team of the All-Big Eight squad,
while Mike Blatt of Florida State,
linebacker, was named to that
state's All-Star team.
Ron Mix, the San Diego
Chargers' perennial All-Star of-
fensive tackle, did it again. Mix
was chosen to the first team for
the seventh straight year. The
- former Trojan from USC stands
6-4 and weighs 250.
Karl Swetan's final figures for
the Detroit Lions was 157 comple-
tions out of 309 attempts, good
for 1,809 yards and four touch-
downs.
Another rookie, Booth Lusteg of
the Buffalo Bills, tied for second
in AFL scoring with 98 points, on
41 completions and 19 field goals.
It was a good year for Aaron
Rosenberg. The former USC All-
American was inducted into col-
lege football's Hall of Fame, as
well as the Helms Foundation
Hall of Fame. Rosenberg, a Holly-
wood producer, played guard on
the Trojan's great teams of
1931-33.
Steve Tannen, of Miami, may
be the next great all-around ath-
lete at the U. of Florida. Tannen,
whose father is Jewish, is an out-
standing football player and track
and field star. He played on the
frosh football team this season.
Last year Tannen made Miami All-
City teams in both football and
track, and was named Dade
County's Athlete of the Year.

among warriors, the status of
Arabs involved in the struggle and
other elements surrounding the
historic events.
Mati Ras and Harold Cornsweet
produced the movie. The cast
emerges as a skilled group ably
depicting touching presentations
of an- important theme.
"Clouds Over Israel" is a Heb-
rew movie with English explana-
tory titles. It is a remarkably
well produced and deeply mov-
ing story and its appeal is to
compassion, to good relations
among peoples. It is, in effect,
an appeal for amity.
The cast is small - five major
roles - but most effective. The
theme deals with a conflict in at-
titudes. The flier who lands in
Arab territory treats the Bedouin
woman and her children well and
protects them, secures milk for
the infant, aids the wounded lady.
His companion seeks vengeance
but is convinced by his compas-
sionate partner to treat the Arabs
well. There is cooperation in the
effort to rescue the woman and
her children, but in the flight to
safety only the infant remains
alive, and the newly-acquired spirit
of humaneness leads the surviving
Israeli soldier to take the infant
and to lead it out of the war zone.
Running 85 minutes, this film,
with all its tenseness, is certain
to hold the audience spellbound.

Simon and Garfunkel
in U-D Series on Jan. 15

Danny Raskin's

LISTENING

P

SILVER ANNIVERSARY joun
in conjunction with Jewish War
Veterans, Ladies and Mens, "Night
of Stars" this Sunday at Masonic
Temple, is being dedicated to
Rabbi Morris Adler, a World War
II Army chaplain, JWV national
chaplain and organizer of the
Shalom Post . . . A beautiful me-
morial tribute on Rabbi Adler, has
.
been written by Al Rosen .
Goldie Adler, the beloved rab-
bi's widow, supplied much of the
information plus a picture to be
used in the journal . The JWV
fund-raising event by guys 'n gals
Sunday, puts together a couple of
real top-notch performers in Alan
The
King and Totie Fields
joint endeavor by the Ladies and
Mens Department of Michigan in-
clude all the 12 state posts and
auxiliaries in their one joint
money-raising affair of the year
. . . Jack Berman is commander
and Mary Love is department pres-
ident.

.

* * *

FAVORITE STORY . . . by
Photog Leo Knight . . about the
boy . who had stolen a transistor
radio . . The police pounced on
him and took him to the station
. He was put in a cell with a
three time loser who asked, "What
are you in here for?" . . "I stole
a transistor radio," said the boy
. "That's small potatoes," said
the man. "If you want to be some-
body in this business, you ought
to do something big, something
important. Why don't you rob a
bank?" . . . "But," replied the boy,
"I don't get out of school until
3 o'clock. "

Urban folk singers, city-bred
youngsters who sing of the unique
joys and trials of life in the mega-
polis-the alienation, the excite-
ment of loneliness, the joys that
are peculiar to and so much a part
of life in the Big Town, are repre-__
sented by two Columbia Recording
stars, Simon and Garfunkel, who
will come to the University of De-
troit Town and Gown Series 8:30
p.m., Jan. 15, in the Memorial
Building on the U. of D. McNichols
Road campus.
In this new and significant trend
* *
to urban-oriented folk music, their
act, first presented on the Colum-
LOOKING BACK ON JAN. 6,
bia LP "Wednesday Morning, 3
A.M." has brought success to the 1966 . .
A MOTORIST ON Greenfield
two young men who have been
stopped to help a woman driver
singing together since sixth grade.
stalled on the corner of 10 Mile
Rd. during the recent big snow
Sarah Vaughan Coming
and ice that ushered in Mr. Winter
in 'Jazz in January'
. . He found' her taking sand
Whether stunning the jazzophiles out of the trunk of her car and
of the world with her magnificent sprinkling it around the front
rendition
of "It's Magic"
or inspir-
ing
the spiritually
included
with wheels . . . "It ought to go under
"The Lord's Pr aye r," Sarah the back wheels," he said .. .
Sneering at his stupidity, she re-
Vaughan, who will be appearing at plied, "The back wheels go
Detroit's Cobo Arena Sunday, Jan. around all right. It's the front
22, 8 p.m., when impresario George wheels that won't turn."
Wein brings "Jazz in January" to
* * *
Detroit, displays her exquisite tal-
FOR HER 14th BIRTHDAY,
ent and fabulous vocal instrument.
"Jazz in January" brings jazz daughter Linda had been promised
greats Dave Brubeck and his Quar- a telephone by parents Alice and
tet, Clark Terry and J. J. Johnson, Merle Goodman Shortly before
famed jazz pianist Thelonius Monk its installation, there were elab-
Chicago Council Resolution and his Quartet, the John Coltrane orate plans afoot among her friend'
Quintet, and the unique Modern . They stashed away pickb
Condemns Arab Raids
sardines and crackers in her roe
Jazz Quartet.
. . And they brought hair curler,„
CHICAGO (JTA)-The Chicago
playing cards and knitting to oc-
City Council adopted 'a resolution
cupy those who would not be on
here condemning recent Arab ter-
the phone . . . Finally the big
rorist raids against Israel as "en-
day arrived . . At 4 o'clock,
dangering the peace of the
Linda thundered in from school
world" and calling on President
with three excited friends, fol-
Johnson, Congress and the State
lowed a few minutes later by four
Department "to use their best ef-
NEW YORK - S'outhpaw pitch-
forts to bring about a peaceful ing ace Sandy Koufax, who re- more .. After a brief lull, three
more arrived . . . Finally the last
solution in the Middle East."
cently announced his retirement youngster dashed upstairs . . . All
The - measure, Which was intro- from baseball, has signed a 10- this confusion was suddenly fol-
duced by Alderman Jack I. Sper- year,. $1,000,000 contract as a radio lowed by a great silence . . . Alice
ling, was adopted unanimously by and television sports announcer went upstairs to investigate and
for the National Broadcasting Co. found a roomful of surprised and
the Chicago City Council.
Koufax, who will be earning wide-eyed faces After a dis-
Stressing the aggressive inten-
tions of both Syria and Jordan, $100,000 a year, will perform. on tressed pause, Linda said softly,
the resolution urged the - U.S. gov- the air, develop new talent for "There's nobody to call - we're
ernment to "use its best efforts NBC, initiate programs and all here."
to secure the peace of the Mid- develop special projects for the
* * *
dle East, solve the many prob- company.
THE VOICE ON THE phone last
Koufax, after pitching the Los
lems that are truly solvable in
the Middle East and convince by Angeles Dodgers to their third week told Irving Chaiken that he
their firm action to the entire National League pennant the last had dialed the wrong number ..
world that the state of Israel has four years, was forced to retire "Are you sure?" said the Atomic
the full: support of the United in November because of an arthri- Wrecking bossman . . The
States to peaceably exist with its tic condition in - ;?is pitching elbow. stranger on the other end replied
He will contimie to live in Los quickly, "Have I ever lied to you
neighbors in the community of na-
before?"
Angeles.
tions of the world."

Koufax Retires'
on $100,000 a Year
Working for NBC

I

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