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January 16, 1970 - Image 29

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-01-16

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

'

Friday, January 16, 1970-29
Summer Iredding Set THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Israeli
Publishers
Open
Office,
Warehouse in N. Y.
by Miss Rands* B. Katz

News Brevities

William Needles, a 12-year vet-
eran of the Stratford Festival,
Canada, plays the role of Judge
Brack in Ibsen's .HEDDA GAB-
LER at Meadow Brook Theater on
the Oakland University campus.
Tickets are available at Hudson's,
the Meadow Brook Theater box
office or call 962-0353, 377-2700.
"Hedda Gabler" will play a seven-
performance run at the Detroit In-
stitute of Arts beginning Feb. I.
Tickets are available at the Insti-
tute, Hudson's or call 832-2730.
• • •
British actor JAMES DONALD
will play Sir Peter Teazle in the
Stratford National Theater of Can-
ada production of "The School for
Scandal" when the company goes
on tour in February. Portia in
"The Merchant of Venice" will be
played by another newcomer to the
Stratford Company MAUREEN
O'BRIEN, who comes to Canada
via London. PAT GALLOWAY,
who portrayed Dorine in Strat-
ford's production of "Tartuffe" last
year, returns to play Lady Sneer-
well in "The School for Scandal."
* a a
All the gear needed for enjoying
wintertime camping or trailering
will be on display at the third an-
nual DETROIT CAMPER AND
TRAVEL SHOW, Feb. 14-22 at the
Detroit Artillery Armory.
• • a
Acrylic and oil paintings by
DEANNA SPERKA are now on ex-
hibit at the University of Michigan
Dearborn Campus Library. The
one-woman show, entitled "Earth
and Those of Earth" is made up of
landscaped and figure paintings
using organic forms in geometric
organization. It includes a new
acrylic series called "Genesis"
which develops mystical themes in
the creation narrative. A graduate
of New York's Cooper Union and
the Brooklyn Museum Art School,
she attended Bezalel Art School of
Jerusalem and was artist-in-resi-
dence at a kibutz before marry-
ing and settling in Detroit eight
years ago.
a a *
"Hospitality Plus" is the pro-
gram planned for HARPER HOS-
PITAL AUXILIANS 10:45 a.m.
Monday in the auditorium of the
Michigan Consolidated Gas Co.
Members will bring a sandwich,
and dessert and coffee will be pro-
vided. A cooking demonstration
will begin after lunch. For reserva-
tions, call Mrs. Wayne Alberts, 647-
5247, Mrs. Leslie Fiske, 821-7822.
or Mrs. Chester Gerisch, WA 8-
2132.

.

Aliss A-eller, .11 r..S'itron
1)1a,,
Cer,immv

A letter to a world-famed concert
pianist can be addressed to his
own street — CLAUDIO ARRAU,
Cafe Claudio Arrau, Chillan, Chili.
However, the great Chilean mu-
sician, who comes to the Masonic
Auditorium Jan. 24, doesn't live
there. When he is at home from
his world travels, his address is a
street on the Long Island shore in
New York. With one street already
named in his honor in Santiago as
long ago as 1940, Arrau saw the
renaming of the street on which he
was horn in Chillan in 1959. Today,
Arrau Is one of the great living
interpretors of Beethoven. Recent-
ly, he was heard in most of the 32
Beethoven sonatas in four major
cities in four different cycles—
Berlin, Hamburg, Zurich and Lon
don.
• a a'
DAVID HOY, the bearded. "pro-
phet," starts the Detroit Town Hall
lecture series for 1970, 11 a.m.
Wednesday at the Fisher Theater.
Hoy, a youngish Peter Ustinov,
strikes a blow for the occult in his
lecture-demonstration, "ESP and-
You-Is There a Possibility? A
celebrity luncheon at Howard John-
son New Center Motor Lodge will
follow the lecture.
• • •
OTTAVIO DE ROSA, who picked
up his baton three seasons ago as
a guest conductor with the Nation-
al Ballet, is now conductor of the
National Ballet Orchestra, which
plays both for the season series in
the nation's capital and on tour.
The company comes to the Mason-
ic Auditorium 8:20 p.m. Jan. 23 to
perform the full-length ballet,
"Giselle."
* E *
MITCH MILLER, who brings a
75-piece orchestra to the Masonic
Auditorium 8:20 p.m. Jan. 31 for
an evening of semi-classical, pop
and singalong music, was a re-
spected classical musician who got
into the popular music industry by
chance. Miller was one of the
country's leading players of the
oboe. lie had played with the CBS
Symphony Orchestra and many
other renowned groups, and had
mastered every known oboe piece.
Miller began searching for another
meaningful means of expression
when a friend asked him to super-
vise popular recordings for Mer-
cury Records, a small company
reorganized.
s
which had just t bee:

Television star ROBERT HOR-
coN, star of "Wagon Train" and
The Man From Shenandoah" will
ieadline a top Broadway cast 'n
Jerome Kern's immortal musical
lassie "Showboat," coming to the
Masonic Auditorium 8:20 p.m. Feb.
14. "Showboat," the musical that
%kon lasting fame for Kern and
()scar Hammerstein II, and set a
new standard for American mu-
sicals, comes alive in a spectacular
revival produced by theater veter-
an Frank Kenley.
a a a
ANDRES SEGOVIA will be fea-
tured in two groups of guitar solos
at a special Detroit Symphony
Orchestra concert 3:30 p.m. Sun-
day in Ford Auditorium to benefit
the symphony's pension and main-
tenance funds.

Fourth of French Think_
Jews 'Too Influential'

MISS RITA KELLER

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keller of
Radclift Ave., Oak Park, announce
the engagement of their daughter
Rita Joyce to Edwin David Sitron,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sitrcn
of Ramblewood Dr., Farmington.
The bride-elect is a senior at.
Wayne State University where she
is affiliated with Delta Phi Epsilon
Sorority. Mr. Sitron attends the
college of business administration
at Wayne.
An August wedding is planned.

PARIS (JTA)—Nearly one-quar-
ter of the people of France believe
that Jews exert "too great an in-
fluence" in France, according to a
poll conducted by the French In-
stitute of Public Opinion. The poll
was conducted before the affair of
the five gunboats which evaded
the French embargo and sailed
from Cherbourg for Israel.
Nearly 45 per cent of those inter-
viewed in the poll thought that the
Jewish influence in France was
"normal." But the newspaper,
L'Express, which sponsored the
poll, remarked that there was an
inherent tendency toward anti-
Semitism in France that was not
confined to any specific element
of the population.

NEW YORK, (JTA)—The Massa- lishment of the central warehouse
dah Publishing Company, Israel's would serve to increase the sale of
largest hook publishers, announced hooks in Hebrew in this country.
that it had opened an office and
central warehouse in New York
I for immediate delivery of Hebrew
111 / 0 /Ir
\ \\\
books from its catalog to purchas-
.Q 4 ► o...
ers in the United States. A first
shipment of books has already
been received here and a second
shipment is en route.
Zvi Leiman, executive vice pres-
ident of the Mediterranean Trading
FROM THE
Company, which represents the
rj
Massadah house here, said estab-

SAVE! " SAVE!
BUY DIRECT

IMPORTER

SEYIVICOUER.
KAPLAN
and Co.

44-41-*********************

MISS RANDI KATZ

I Hal Gordon
MUSIC

IMPORTER AND CUTTERS
OF FINE DIAMONDS
15738 LIVERNOIS
DI 1-5515

4e

Mr. and Mrs. Abner J. Katz of * BIG BAND OR SMALL COMBOS 1:
Cumberland Rd., Southfield, an-.
nounce the engagement of their *UN 3-8982 UN 3-5730:
daughter Randi Beth to 2nd Lt.
James Henry Nulty, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Timothy Nulty of Chicago.
Miss Katz received her BA de-
gree in English from the Univer-
sity of Michigan. Sir. Nulty was
graduated from the University of
Detroit with a major in chemical
411111110...hos a better idea
engineering.
The couple plan a summer wed-
Because they have
ding.

RD

I

Torah Schools
for Israel to Begin
Annual Campaign

Sol Nusbaum, chairman of the
Detroit area campaign for Torah
Schools for Israel, known as
Chinuch Atzmai, announced that
the annual campaign will begin
with a parlor meeting 8 p.m. Feb.
2 at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Carmen, 23551 Wildwood,
Oak Park.
Torah Schools for Israel encom-
passes a network of 250 schools
throughout Israel, with an enroll-
ment of 45,000 children and staffed
by 1,800 teachers. An independent
school system based on religious
traditions, it is recognized by the
Israel government as an official
school system and receives a par-
tial subsidy from the ministry of
education .

Chinuch Atzmai was establish-
ed in 1952, although the ground-
work was laid almost imme-
diately following Israel's war of
liberation in late 1949.

Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, presi-
dent of the American committee,
is assisted by Rabbi Eli Koslowitz.
In addition to capital gifts, the
American committee conducts an
annual campaign to help Chinuch
Atzmai meet its ever increasing
budget.

Aliens Advised to Report
to Immigration Service

Walter A. Sahli, district direc-
tor of the Immigration and Nat-
uralization Service in Detroit, ad-
vised that the annual alien address
report program is under way.
According to Sahli, 148,113 aliens
reported their addresses last year
in Michigan. The number this year
is expected to be slightly larger.
Sahli attributes this anticipated
increase to the emphasis placed
on travel to the United States.

IRV KATZ
McDONALD FORD

at

14240 W. 7 Mile Road at the Lodge X-Way
DI 1-3800

SUNDAY 1
I
SALE

Begins a Whole

Week of Fantastic Savings

• Dresses

• Coats

• Sportswear

• Mostly at

/2 OFF

THIS SUNDAY ONLY
JAN. 18th
From 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

and continues thru next week

The immigration official
pointed out that the address re-
ports are required by law and
willful failure to comply with
these requirements may lead to
serious consequences.

Forms with which to make the
reports are available at all post
offices and immigration and nat-
uralization service offices.
Sahli added that trained person-
nel will be on hand in all offices
of the Immigration and Naturali-
zation Service to answer any ques-
tions the reporting aliens may
have regarding immigration and
naturalization matters.

Ten and One Half Mile at Greenfield

• Security

• Mich. Bankat.

• Master Charge

Lincoln Center

Oak Park

Phone 399-2233

• Use Your
Mister
Marvin
Charge

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