▪ MOVIE GUIDE ATLAS DOWNTOWN FOX On Plymouth Rd., VE 5-0630 3 blks. W. of Greenfield 1-9494 2211 Woodward—WO All color adult entertainment open at 2:00, adults $1 until 6 WK. NIGHTS 7:00 & 9:30. SAT. 5:00, 7:30, 10:10. SUN. 2:30 5:00, 7:30, 10:10. "SOUL TO SOUL" "CAGED DESIRES" Also Joan Crawford in "BERSERK" Also Music festival in 4 track stereo phonic sound PLUS The Three Stooges in "MUMMIES DUMMIES" WK. NIGHTS 8:15, 10:45. SAT. 6:20, 8:55. SUN. 3:50, 6:20, 8:55. Metro Entertainment Coupons Accepted BERKLEY Every WEDNESDAY Ladles' Day Late Show FRIDAY and SATURDAY For Schedule Information Call WO 1-7917 12 Mile-Coolidge, LI 2-0330 Held Over 4th Big Week Woody Allen Comedy 9 Mi. & Greenfieldd Rd. AMERICANA 444-8 676 8-3920 High Adventure Steve McQueen in WK. NIGHTS Open 7:00, shown 7:20 10:15. SAT. 7:35 & 10:30 SUN. Open 2:30, shown 3:05 Plus George Segal, Ruth Gordon in "WHERE'S POPPA?" (R) "SAND PEBBLES" Ninety-six per cent of Detroit's 1,322,300 housing units are occu- pied. Of this amount, 72 per cent of the dwellings are occupied by their owners. A Cinerama Production Every Wed. Matinees 1-5, $1 "BILLY JACK" (GP) TUES., THUR. & FRI. 9:10 only. WED., SAT., SUN. & LABOR DAY 2:15, 5:45, 9:20 Plus "VALDEZ IS COMING" TUES., THUR. & FRI. 7:30. WED., SAT., SUN. & LABOR DAY 4:15, 7:50 2 blks. S. 15 Mi. WK. NIGHTS, 8:45 only, SAT. 6:10, 9:00, SUN. 4:25, 7:20, 10:10. Starts Sept. 15th "WINDJAMMER" 3RD BIG WEEK Tom Loughlin & Delores Taylor in war BLOOMFIELD W' MI. 4-6006 "BANANAS" (Zi?) NEIGHBORHOOD S.Woodward at Maple 4.3533 Birmingham MI Matinee every Wednesday. Doors "ALL ABOUT SEX" (X) Held Over 3rd Week World Premiere—Exclusive Showing Bar-Ilan Composer Seeks Jewish Outlet in Hasidic Music NOW APPEARING A Rob. Wise Production "THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN" (G) Science Fiction—Suspense Mon. thru Fri. at 7:00 & 9:30 Wed. Sat. & Sun. at 2:05, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 No one will be seated during last 10 minutes. WED. MATINEE—Adults admission $1 Until 5:00. cAmEL0T w. Warren at Miller Road 5 81-5040 "SUMMER OF '42" (R) WED., SAT. SUN. & LABOR DAY 2:45, 10:00. THUR., FRI., MON., TUES. 6:25, 10:00. "WAIT UNTIL DARK" MEL TORME WED., SAT., SUN. & LABOR DAY 1:00, 4:40, 8:10. THUR. FRI., MON., TUES 8:15 only Wed. Si until 5:00 Mon. thru Thurs. Special Dinner & Cover Included $7 50 First Show $4.50 2nd Show MAIN, ROYAL OAK Ile MaiLla20180 "THE ANDERSON TAPES" 42390 ANN ARBOR RD. IN PLYMOUTH. GL 3-6400, GL 3-6401 Plus SEPT. 9-18 Banquet Facilities. Special rates on Banquet in Pavillion Room. Ask Marion. KAY STEVENS "I NEVER SANG FOR MY FATHER" SAT. & SUN. SPEC. CHILDREN'S Matinee. All seats 75 cents. Open 12:30. RAMAT GAN — Andre Hajdu, senior music instructor at Bar- Ilan University, is a transplanted Hungarian whose newly awakened interest in his Jewish heritage has resulted in a search for an authen- tic musical expression drawing upon the early Jewish tradition in music. Recently he caught the public eye with a play "Ludus Pascalis" based on original Medieval Passion Plays with telts from the Mishna and Talmud. It was performed for the special pair of concerts called "Testimonium," which presented new works based on Jewish sub- jects drawn from the Middle Ages. After he come to Israel in 1963, he turned his attention to the study of the music of the Hasidim. He began to make spe- cial arrangements of Hasidic music for the festivals of Habad Hasidim. Recently he composed a suite for string quartet using Hasidic melodies, and in portions of his "Ludus Pascali s" he tried to imitate the music of Gemara study. Hajdu's first contribution to music education in Israel in an anthology of 100 Hasidic dance tunes, which he has compiled together with Yaakov Mazor, with whom he is conducting his research on Hasi- dic music. New Yiddish Theater to Open in November NEW YORK (JTA) — A new Yiddish Repertory Theater will be Plymouth Rd. inaugurated in November by Ben 15 E. KIRBY at Farmington Rd. I I MAI KAI Bonus at the Anderson Theater on 937-0001 Second Ave. Suspense—Science Fiction • I "THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN" Bonus, a producer and actor of 5:30, 7:45, 10:00. SAT., SUN. & classical and folk Yiddish theater I IN THE PARK SHELTON HOTEL 875 - 8920 I I FRI. LABOR .DY A 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:40, in this country and abroad, is i 10:00 TUES. & THUR. 7:05, 9:30. WED. lining up a group of actors to join 1:00, 3:10 5:30, 7:45, 10:00. I Wed. Mat. '1 unt;I 5:00 with him in this venture. Already involved are: Joseph i m PIETRO'S Cordially Invites You to Enjoy An Italian Dinner With Us. I Royal Oak, Mich. II Second Dinner $4.50 Off. (Except Thursdays) Closed Sundays. I WASHINGTON LI 1 - 0082 Buloff, Mina Bern, Raisel Bozyk, Summer of '42 H:t of '71 This Offer Expires Sept. 15, 1971. BRING COUPON WITH YOU. I Smulik Goldstein, Bernard Sauer I Jennifer O'Neill & Gary Grimes in and Eli Rubinstein. I Introducing I "SUMMER OF '42" (R) Bonus will create his Yiddish Your New Host ... George Raimondi I Also Anthony Quinn & Ann Margret in Art I and Repertory Theater in the "R.P.M." (R) au.........I.V RsisImiga a.= =mom= = no no I tradition of •the Yiddish art and Li 0 repertory theaters that have his- CI 10' CI torically flourished in New York. Bonus said his aim is to present classical Yiddish works which Fine Dining and Cocktails have consistently appealed to a 19701 W. 12 Mile Rd. (Just East of Evergreen) Detroit's Masonic Auditorium theater-going audience. El 352-2233 The goal is to present at least again will present a variety of attractions during the 1971-1972 three shows a season in New York, BANQUET FACILITIES FOR UP TO 275 concert season. Three subscrip- and in addition, to tour them for • WEDDINGS • SHOWERS • 'BAR MITZVAHS several months in all major cities. tion series are featured. 0 • PARTIES FOR ALL OCCASIONS The plays will be updated and The 39th annual concert series presented with music. All will be headlines Margot Fonteyn with the OPEN PIANO ENTERTAINMENT National Ballet in a performance presented in Yiddish, with English MON. THRU SAT. MODERN of "Cinderella" on Nov. 26. Other narrative. o FROM 11:30 A.M. AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT attractions on the seven-event piETRors ( A F Trwol o...,,AR„..,,, 1 0 OFF r Ida ■ ■ o Variety of Events THE SUSSEX HOUSE in Masonic Series 0f 101 101. Io immommoimmmome************************0•01 ! • SAMUELS BROS. CAFETERIA • • IS FAMOUS FOR • • • THE WONDERFUL FOOD YOU LOVE' ; • • I • WHOLE • WHOLE COOKED BRISKETS: STUFFED WHITE FISH I • GEFILTE FISH a 4 PICKLED FISH We Serve Fried Matzo All Year! ,Complete Lane of Sandwich Carry-out • SAMUELS BROS. CAFETERIA I • i • Open Daily 3 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. — Closed Sunday 2493 RUSSELL Corner Winder, Eastern Market • WO 3-91 99 • ii. Other events on the series of • ININHINDINIM41.1,000110111111111•••••••••••••••••••••••• SEPT. 11-8:30 to 11 P.M. SEPT. 12-11 A.M. to 9 P.M. rurs lattulinz series are Roger Wagner and the Westminster Chorale, Oct. 16; Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet, Nov. 14; Pirin, Bulgaria's national dance group, Dec. 5; John Lill, English pianist, Jan. 22; the Vien- na Opera production of "Die Fle- dermaus," Feb. 14; and the Na- tional Orchestra of Belgium, Feb. 12. Masonic Auditorium's "Pop" Series will feature Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians, Nov. 5, and Ferrante and Teicher, Mar2h Buy Blue White I Buy Israel's Products ISRAEL FASHION & FOOD FAIR Zionist Cultural Center 18451 W. 10 Mile Rd. No Admission Charge five concerts are Tyrolerfest, Sol Hurok's outstanding group of Austrian ententainers, Oct. 9; Young Americans, national tele- vision stars, Feb. 13, and a Skitch Henderson Show, Nov. 21. An International Dance Series will consist of five dance attrac- tions from five different countries. Yugoslavia's Frula Dance Co. re- turns Oct. 17. A new company from Mexico, Ballet Aztlan, makes its first appearance here Nov. 6. On Dec. 3, the Broln Co. from Czechoslovakia makes its Detroit debut and the Osipov balalaikas and Bolshoi dancers return Feb. 6. The Netherlands Dance Theater makes its first Detroit appearance April 12. U-M Student Gets NFJC Fellowshi p NEW YORK — Ten pre-doc- toral fellowships to American graduate students in Jewish studies. and five grants-in-aid to faculty members teaching and do- ing research in Jewish studies, have ,been made by the National Foundation for Jewish Culture, it was announced by Rabbi Daniel Jeremy Silver,- president of the foundation. One of the 10 NFJC 1971-72 Fellows named is Leila R. Avrin, a history of art major at the Uni- versity of Michigan, who will write on "Illuminations of the Moshe Ben Asher Codex." The new grants bring to almost $500,000 the grants made by the foundation over the last decade. The awards were recommended by the Foundation's Academic Ad- visory Council, of which Prof. Salo W. Baron of Columbia and Prof. Harry A. Wolfson of Harvard are honorary chairmen. The National Foundation for Jewish Culture was established in 1960 following a national study of cultural services sponsored by the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. It receives al- locations from Detroit's Jewish Welfare Federation. . • • • c • • , - , • c • .y.. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 26 Friday, September 3, 1971 — Danny Raskin's LISTENING WEEKLY MAGAZINE in Israel, LaISha (To the Women), devotes a large section of recent issue to former Detroiter Bella Goldberg who moved to Israel over a year ago on her 62nd birthday . . . Titled Bella shel HaHazanim (The Cantor's Bella) it tells of all the years spent on the piano accomp- anying cantors herd in Detroit . . . One picture has Bella at the piano in accompaniment of Cantor Hy- man Adler of Bnai David and Can- tor Louis Klein of Bnai Moshe . . . Another is taken with all the De- troit cantors at a farewell party given for her at Cong. Beth Abra- ham . . . Bella lives in Natanya . . . Her two daughters, Louise and Eleanor are living in kibutzim. Urim and Gesher Haziv . . . The Lalsha article, written by Erika Ozerman, ends with, "Will the Is- raeli cantors also discover Bella Goldberg?" DATE IS BEING set for the Judge Nathan J. Kaufman testi- monial dinner and library in his name at the new Cong. Beth Abra- ha mon Maple Rd. EVIDENCE OF COMMUNITY cooperation is that of Hyman and Hattie Aronson going to the Red Barn Theater in Saugatuck to bring Center Theater "Fiddler on the Roof" costumes and props used by that amateur group . . . The first-time musical production by Center Theater is a much-talked- about presentation. IT WAS DINNER, and Harrie Garelick had been peOed at the way 5-year-old Gary W:A . Teaching across the table .„eyexrtime_he wanted something -0:iiially in- an irate voice, s*:. silta";4: `-Gary! Stop reaching for. thins.! Haven't you got a tonguen;K. Lookingtip, the youngster replig4 "Yes, mom- my, but my arm is longer." LESLIE AND FRAN BALL, former Detroiters, have left after a two-week visit from New York with 11-month-old son Jason Har- ley . . .,:Sorry kids, for the col- umn typo_ error of Jason being 24 months old. NOTE TO SON SCOTT . . . looks like we don't get the little dog Joe and Fay Braver said would become a new member of our household . . . Their daughter Sharon and her hubby Myron Led- erman are taking Alfie with them to live in Chicago. QUITE A TEAM . . . that of George Steinberger and Jack Ep- stein . . . The Detroit Business- man's Group, City of Hope, mem- bers, are a riot with their verbal laugh-getting encounters. HOW MUCH TIME do you spend cleaning your teeth? . . . Devote just five minutes to that task immediately after every meal and the chances are you'll seldom need a dentist . . . "Put it this way," Dr. Elroy Woolf says, "The blood circulating in your gums is like trains.coming into Grand Cen- tral Terminal . . . The old trains must be shunted back to the yards so that new trains can conic in. And the old blood has to be mas- saged out of the gums so that fresh blood can circulate there. Isn't that clear?" . . . We told him he ought to write a book . . . "Good idea as soon as I get some time," remarked Roy. "I'll call it, 'The Yanks Are Coming.' " .c...y...y.„*.„ e:*: Lic:.ELip: