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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 27, 1968 - Image 25

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-09-27

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

g ewry

SPECIAL
Time: 8:30 a.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 7
and
Time: 7:30 p.m. Thursday
Station: Channel 56
Feature: A contemporary drama
written for the Jewish Community
Council by Esther Broner, which
deals with the generational con-
flict viewed within the perspective
of the teachings of Judaism (See
story at right).
* * *
SPECIAL
Time: 8:30 V.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 56
Feature: "After the Miracle,"
an Intertel documentary produced
by the Australian Broadcasting
Co., which deals with the nature
of the Israeli people, especially the
young, in five aspects of life:
defense, religion, integration, de-
velopment and the Arab minority.
* * * fi
SPECIAL
Time: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
Station: WJR
Feature: Rabbi Richard C.
Hertz and the Temple Beth El
Choir will be heard with Jason
H. Tickton directing.
s * *
COMMUNITY CURRENTS
Time: 9:30 a.m. Sunday
Station: WJBK
Feature: "Martin Buber — a
Modern Encounter with Hasidism,"
a dramatic vignette written by
Penina Frankel, presented by
Center Theater actors with Rabbi
Morton M. Kanter as host.
s * *
HIGHLIGHTS
Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 2
Feature: "Sukkot—the Fruit of
the Harvest," Rabbi Milton Arm
will moderate a discussion on the
contemporary validity of Sukkot.
Participating will be Cantor Simon
Bermanis, Rabbi James I. Gordon,-
Rabbi Milton Rosenbaum and
David Syme, as accompanist.
* * *
ETERNAL LIGHT
Time: -10:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WWJ
Feature: "Jerusalem: Bride of
Kings, Mother of Prophets," last
in a summer series of dialogues
on the Bible, between Mark van
Doren, professor emeritus of Co-
lumbia University and Maurice
Samuel, author and lecturer, as
they discuss the city as a state of
mind, and a symbol of peace in
the world.

the Ar ir

Miss Linda Lee Frankel
to Wed Lt. Larry. Weil

HEAR OUR VOICE
Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WCAR
Feature: The music of the High
Holy Days will be presented and
discussed by Cantor Harold Or-
bach.

Esther Broner Writes
Holiday TV Special

A television special for the holi-
day, a modern drama written for
the Jewish Community Council by
Esther Broner, in cooperation with
WXYZ-TV, will be presented 8:30
a.m. Sunday on Channel 7 and re-
play 7:30 p.m. Thursday on chan-
nel 56.
The play deals with the genera-
tion gap and relation to Jewish
teachings. The role of the father
is played by. D avid Azar. The son
will be played by Don Dailey, who
performs in Wayne State Univer-
sity's Bonstelle Theater.
Playwright Esther Broner, win-
ner of the O'Henry Award for her
book, "The New Nobility" is about
to publish her second book, "Jour-
nal Nocturnal and Seven Stories."
Her . first play, "Summer Is a
Foreign Land," based on her iden-
tification with Judaism, was pub-
lished by the Wayne State Uni-
versity Press in 1966.
Mrs. Broner teaches creative
playwriting at WSU. She is mar-
ried to Robert Broner, associate
professor of the art department
at Wayne, and has four children.
Dramatic production is by Eve-
lyn Orbach, with Chuck Snead as
television director.

_

Business
Brevities -

SAMUEL L. KASTNER, Massa
chusetts Mutual Life Insurance
was awarded the Chartered Life
Underwriter designation at na-
tional conferment exercises of the
American College of Life Under-
writers in Philadelphia recently.
Kastner, a graduate of Walsh In-
stitute of Accountancy, and is
there as an instructor of advanced
accounting. He received his certifi-
cate as a certified public account-
ant in 1953 and is a member of
the ethical committee of the Michi-
gan Association of Certified Public
Accountants. He is past president
of Eddie Jacobson Lodge, Bnai
Brith, and was a charter member
of the Covenant Credit Union.

Try and Stop Me

By BENNETT CERr

MOST
MOST PEOPLE who walk for exercise, asserts Aaron
whose lively book, "The Magic of Walking"
is the last word on the subject, "should stretch. their stride
a little." Speed depends
upon height. The relay
tively short Harry Tru-
man trudged along at
about three miles an
hour; the taller Lyndon
Johnson averages to=
• • •
The Russian tempera-
ment is peculiarly malted to
the game at chess. They
say that a Moscovite named
Droskycharnoff Invented
tha greatest defense in the
history of the game. He
grew whiskers so long they
hid all sixteen of his pieces.

living in 1850, theref ,re, you could have sat soaking peacefully
the bathtub for 25 years without the phone ringing once!
1958, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features OrndlostS.

O

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, September 27, 19611--25

*If ENTERTAINMENT **

* Strollers - Magicians
TV Balloon Mae
jr
" Comedians - Caricatures air
*S eymour Schwartz Agency

BERKLEY, MICHIGAN

*if**

356-8525

vs

**

Classified Ads Get Quick Results

juheit

Suburbans

MISS LINDA FRANKEL

Mrs. Barden Kelly of Crystal
Lake, Ill. and Mr. Herman Frankel
of Bloomfield Shore Dr., Orchard
Lake, announce the engagement of
their daughter Linda Lee Frankel
to Larry Steven Weil, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rolfe Weil of Cedarbrook
Dr., Birmingham.
Miss Frankel and her fiance at-
r tended the University of Rome. The
bride-to-be now attends Michigan
State University. Mr. Weil, a grad-
uate of Officer's Candidate School,
is stationed at Colorado Springs
with the United States Army.
A November wedding is planned.

GREEN-8 CENTER &
BLOOMFIELD COMMONS

BOTH STORES !

.

• A

Community Council
Queries Candidates

A "legislative questionnaire" has
been sent to all Detroit area candi-
dates for national and state legis-
lative positions by the Jewish
Community Council.
Developed by a subcommittee
of the Council's community rela-
tions committee, the questions re-
late to the views of the candidates
on Middle East problems, the
status of East European Jewry,
the urban crisis and equal oppor-
tunities, public aid for religious
education and the United Nations
human rights and genocide treat-
ies. David I. Rosin is chairman of
the subcommittee.
In a letter to the candidates,
Rosin stated that the questions re-
flected areas of public concern
which are of interest to Jewish
voters and that the views of the
candidates would be made known
through appropriate channels of
the Jewish community. The Jewish
Community Council does not sup-
port or endorse candidates, ac-
cording to Rosin. The purpose of
the questionnaire is only to bring
candidate responses, without com-
ment, to the attention of the con-
stituency, he added.

3 Volumes of Fairy Tales
of Joseph Jacobs Printed

Dover Publications, whose pap-
erbacks include Palmer Cox's
Brownies, some of the Oz books,
the stories of the Brothers Grimm
and Andrew Lang's fairy tale
books of many colors, is now re-
printing another, equally timeless
set of children's books, "The
Fairy Tale Collections of Joseph
Jacobs."
The first three volumes in the
series, "English Fairy Tales,"
"More English Fairy Tales" and
"Celtic Fairy Tales" have just been
released in paperback. The last
two volumes, "More Celtic Fairy
Tales" and "Indian Fairy Tales"
will be issued at a later date.

Droakycharnoef got at!
to a pungent start when he debarked from a trans-Atlantic jet
at .7F1t Airport recently. A fresh reporter clapped him on the

back and chortled, "Welcome, Drosky, Old Boyl Let any good
rookie lately?"
• •

All-ttma baseball great Joe DiMaggio defines spaghetti as
"that stuff you wind around a fork and then. drop on the suit
you've just gotten back from the dry cleaner's."
• •

Statistician Arnold Glasgow points out that the bathtub was,
invented about 1850 and the telephone in 1875. Had you been
in

FACTS ABOUT CANCER
Every two minutes an American
dies of cancer. To stop this need-
less waste of human life, the Mich-
igan Cancer Foundation urges ev-
ery person to make it a family
responsibility to learn the facts
of cancer control. For free in-
formation or services, call the
Michigan Cancer Foundation, a
Torch Drive service at 833-0710.

THE NEWEST

IN WEDDING • BAR "ITZSt..H
DONFIRN1ATION AND PARTY

..Accessories

/

CHARGE IT!

Security
Mich. Bankard
Juliet

Both Stores!
Friday Nite!
Saturday!
Sunday 12 Noon to 5 p.m.

GREEN-8 CENTER
GREENFIELD-8-MILE ROADS
&
BLOOMFIELD COMMONS
MAPLE AND LAHSER

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