THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26 Friday, March 12, 1976
Artur Rubinstein
at Ford Auditorium
Danny Raskin's
LISTENING
POST
SURE BROTHERS
HAVE sued each other . . .
but not when they are as
close as Seymour and Mar-
vin Posner . . . Barrister
Seymour parked in brother
Marvin's lot in back of the
London Chop House . .
slipped in the alley and fell
on the ice . . . broke his arm
in three places.
ERRATA . . . Greek
party as mentioned for Bev-
erly Stone at St_George's
Grecian Center, May 15, is
not a private shindig . . .
Sponsoring it is South Acres
Chapter of Women's Ameri-
can ORT.
SIGHT . SCENE . . .
Sheila and Dick Sloan
"joining the crowd" in ask-
ing everyone for dry ice dur-
ing the power shortage in
West Bloomfield.
LIFE'S BIG CALAMI-
TIES . . . Colleen Rein-
bolt, head waitress at Irv-
ing's, pulled into the
driveway of her daughter's
home a short while back
. . . was greeted by little
granddaughter Shannon,
who pointed to where a
snowman once stood, and
mournfully said, "Grandma,
the only thing left is his
scarf and red hat."
SHOULD BE A LAW
that all dwellings have a
diagram posted someplace
in the basement for electri-
cians, plumbers, ,etc. .
Would save a lot of time and
money for everybody.
RECENT 20-YEAR reu-
nion by 1955 class of Mum-
ford High at Michigan Inn,
made it possible for the al-
umni to present their alma
mater with some audio-vis-
ual equipment and a $500
trust - fund to-.be used over a
five-year period . . . for de-
serving students participat-
ing in culturally-oriented
activities.
CHARLES CANVAS-
SER is now both a Detroit
and Florida business tycoon
. . . Owner of Detroit Lead
Pipe Co. recently purchased
a lead smelting plant in
Florida . . . Nice place to
take a business trek during
the bad weather, wouldn't
you say?
SID HUDSON was ex-
pected back in Detroit from
Las-Vegas where he lives, on
March 10 . . . Might be one
or twodays either way, but
the 10th was the date Sid
gave us . . . And as usual, a
lot of people are looking for-
ward to--h-is visit here.
CORRECTION . . .
Hair stylist Roy Calley
studied Hebrew in Brazil
. . . didn't teach it . . .
Scholars like Rabbi M. Rob-
ert Syme of Temple Israel
who came into the Charter
House Barber Salon on Nine
Mile find him a most -inter-
esting individual in any lan-
guage.
GAS WARS STILL
going on . . . On Eight Mile
and Southfield, last week
Shell station price was 56.9
and across the road a
Mobil station's sign was
52.9.
NINTH ANNUAL dance
concert, "Dance With Me" is
set for March 25 and 26, 8
p.m., by the Oak Park High
Dance Club . . . Plans for
the concert include dances
in modern, mime and jazz
. . . in the Oak Park Audito-
rium.
NO TRUTH TO THE
very false rumor that bar-
rister Joe Cohen is getting
married .. . Too many to
make happy, says Joe . .
"If I do," it'll probably be to
one of these wonderful gals
. . . Joe is high on the list of
most eligible bachelors in
the local community.
LOST & FOUND
DEPT.. . . To the fellow
who lost his upper dental
partial plate, have heart
. . . it wasn't swallowed
. . . The denture is at the
front desk of Darbys Stan-
ley Steamer in Oak Park
. . . (Here's to good eating
again and an open-mouthed
smile.)
A MOTORIST ON
GREENFIELD stopped to
help a woman driver stalled
on the corner of 10 Mile dur-
ing the-recent big snow and
ice storm . . . He found her
taking sand out of the trunk
of her car and sprinkling it
around the front wheels
. . . "It ought to go under
the back wheels," he said
. . . Sneering at his stupid-
ity, she replied, "The back
wheels go around all right.
It's the front wheels that
won't turn."
- A WIFE WHO says she
can read her husband like a
book rarely does . -. . In-
stead of skipping what she
doesn't like, she goes over
and over it.
SEEING SCENES . . .
in front of the Sheraton
Southfield Hotel . . . a par-
cel-laden woman shopper
asking the doorman, "Did
you happen to notice an
angry man in a blue sedan
drive by here a few dozen
times?"
LOOKING BACK ON
COLUMNS OF YESTER-
YEARS. Oct. 28, 1966 . . .
Five 12-year-old youngsters
in Southfield are among the
younger generation starting
out right in this world . .
Laurie Ginsburg, Debbi De
Silvio, Jan De Silvio, Bar-
bara Silverman and Joe
Knox, held a play, sold Kool
Aid and popcorn and raised
$16.68 . . . This they gave to
Eleanor Riseman of Infants
Service Group to help kid-
dies at Penrickton Nursery.
Just Man
If a man be just and hath
not wronged any, but hath
restored his pledge for a
debt, hath taken nought by
robbery, hath given his
bread to the hungry and
hath covered the naked with
a garment, he that hath
withdrawn his hand from
iniquity, hath executed true
justice between man and
man, he shall surely live,
saith the Lord God.
—Ezekiel
Pianist Artur Rubinstein
will play works of Bee-
thoven, Schubert, Schu-
mann and Chopin at a re-
cital 8:30 p.m. March 26 in
Ford Auditorium. The re-
cital, Rubinstein's first ap-
pearance in Detroit for al-
most five years, is for the
benefit of the Detroit Sym-
phony Endowment Fund.
Tickets are available from
the Ford Auditorium box of-
fice. For information, call
the Ford Auditorium,
961-0700.
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