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August 24, 1979 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-08-24

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

30 Friday, August 24, 1919

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Israeli TV, Yadin at Odds
Over Hosting Song Contest

Danny Raskin's

LISTENING
POST

USED
BIGGEST
BOOK sale of them all in
Michigan . . . over 100,000
volumes . . . starts next
Thursday and runs through
Sept. 4 . . . during regular
hours at Tel-12 Mall.
One never knows what
will be found . . . a copy of
your old high school annual,
back issues of Architectural
Digest, a Hemingway first
edition, a 50-year-old cook-
book, etc. etc.
This is the 18th annual
Brandeis Used Book Sale
. . . put on by the Greater
Detroit Chapter of Brandeis
University Women.
A special preview sale
will be held Wednesday
evening from 9:30 p.m.
until midnight ... with
advance tickets being
sold at the mall by Bran-
deis volunteers Wednes-
day afternoon prior to
the sale.
Admission to the remain-
der of the sale is free.
Proceeds support and
maintain the Brandeis
University libraries . . .
funds used for materials,
staff and library operation
of the non-sectarian, non-
profit educational institu-
tion in Waltham, Mass.
Getting 100,000 books to-
gether is a year-long.job .. .
Work on the 1979 sale
began in September 1978
with volunteers gathering
books from all sources for
the Brandeis Book Store,
actually just a storehouse
and workroom.
The used books ...
many valuable ones, too
... will be sorted into
more than 50 categories
... There'll also be
paperbacks, specialized
magazines and comic
books.
Greater Detroit Brandeis
Women president is Shirley
Weiner . . . Book Sale
chairman is Eleanor
Roberts and Book Sale vice
president is Dorothy Kauf-
man.
This is a big big chore .. .
and everybody is happy,
seller, buyer and proceeds
recipient . . . You'd be sur-
prised how cheap some of
the Brandeis book goodies
are.
So many gals instrumen-
tal in helping in this big
project . . . Too bad everyone
can't be listed with a great
big star on their foreheads.
WITH DAUGHTER
Bonnie Romanowsky and
her children, Jonathan and
Diana, visiting from Mexico
City, Bebe and Irving Field
are referred to by the chil-
dren as Mama Bebe and
Papa Guero, which in
Spanish means "Blonde
Grandpa."
Birthday party for the
youngsters was at
McDonald's in Orchard
Lake with a family reunion
of 17 people . . . Irving and
brother Elliott Field won-
dered what their sensitive
stomachs could take . . . and

Bonnie packed a lunch of
cheese sandwiches and
hard-boiled eggs for them
while the others all had
hamburgers and fries.
True brotherly love since
it was Jonathan's eighth
birthday, Aug. 5 . . . but he
shared the festivities, with
four-year-old sister Diana.
MAIL DEPT. ... "In
August 1929, two friends,
George and Selma Keil
were married, and are now
celebrating their 50th an-
niversary.
"Both were very active at
the Jewish Center then lo-
cated at 89 Rowena. George
was president of the very
popular Phalanx Club, and
with the help of an old ros-
ter, I would like to list the
names of the members:
"Ben Shapiro, Al Wolf,
Ted Masserman, David Sla-
vin, George Victor, Paul
Marks, Cecil and Larry
Bornstein, Sidney and
Larry Dean, Jack Cooper,
Harry Ambromowitz, Iz
Wuntner and the writer. I
regret to say some of the
members are no longer with
us, but their progeny are
dentists, doctors, lawyers,
teachers and business
people.
"The Keils have two
children, Robert and
Milfred, plus five
grandchildren. May their
tribe continue to in-
crease.
"The Center on Rowena
(now Mack Ave.) was in the
charge of Mary Kaplan. Her
assistant was Leah
Adamsky who was courted
by Walter Field. I believe
they were also married in
1929.
"Selma Keil is a sister to
Joe Deutch and the late
Paul of Paul's Drugs."
--, Alfred Keats
WOULD YOU ' BE-
LIEVE the National
Jewish Hospital and Re-
search Center at Denver,
Colo., does not have kosher
food available for its
patients? . . . According to a
letter sent by local attorney
Jack Kraisman, a recent
out-patient there, to
Richard Bluestein,
president, persons who
want kosher food would
"have to make a special re-
quest and that some items
might be prepared for that
patient in the same non-
kosher kitchen."

Concert Planned

Renaissance Concerts,
Inc., will present a Nightcap
With Mozart concert 11:30
p.m. today at the Birming-
ham Unitarian Church, 651
Woodward, Bloomfield
Hills.
Soprano Caroline Rogers,
violinist Misha Rachlevsky
and pianist Fedora
Horowitz will perform
works by Mozart and
Wieniawsky. There is a
charge. Refreshments will
be served.
For information, call the
concert office, 851-8934.

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Deputy Premier Yigael
Yadin has rejected a deci-
sion , by the Israel Broad-
casting Authority (IBA) not
to hold the Eurovision song
contest in Israel next year.
The IBA board of direc-
tors decided last week that
television must devote all
its resources to prepara-
tions for color broadcasting.
Israel is the only country
in this part of the Mideast
which still broadcasts in
black and white.
The Eurovision song con-
test was held this year in
Jerusalem and by Israel
winning the first prize it is
entitled to host the contest
once again.
Yosef Lapid, IBA direc-
tor general, argued that
in its present state, Isiael
TV could not both switch
over to color and under-
take another Eurovision
special without causing
harm to programming.
"Television has not yet
recovered from this
year's contest," Lapid
said. According to IBA,
the Eurovision budget
would have amounted to
IL 20 million ($800,000).

Meadow Brook
Hosts Antique
Car Competition

Meadow Brook Hall will
be the scene of the day-long
Concours d'Elegance an-
tique car show Sunday.
Nearly 100 classic cars
will be on display and there
will be competition in the
following categories: an-
tiques through 1915, vin-
tage 1916-1925, American
classic 1925-1932, Ameri-
can classic 1933-1942,
European classic 1925-1942
and competition cars
through 1942.
The public is invited, and
there is a charge. Proceeds
will benefit Meadow Brook
Hall.

But Yadin sent a cable to
Education Minister Zevu-
lun Hammer, who is in
charge of implementing the
IBA law, and declared that
the government and not the
IBA should make the deci-
sion.
The main argument in
favor of holding the contest
here is the opportunity for
international exposure. In a
reaction, Prof. Reuven
Yaron, chairman of the
IBA, said it was fully within
the IBA's competence to
make such a decision.

TRY OUR DINNER SPECIALS

7 DAYS A WEEK 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.

YOUR CHOICE OF 21 DIFFERENT ENTREES

Includes: Soup, Salad, Ve . & Pot.
FAMILY-STYLE BRUNCH SUNDAYS 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

$195

per pers. Includes: Nova Lox, Smoked Sable,
Smoked Chubs, Creamed Herring, Sliced Tomato and Onions,
Olives, Bagels or Rolls.

POINT AFTER DELI

26400 W. 12 MILE AT NORTHWESTERN us

355-3733

the
1•0111fill
leriwee

Jewish News
Foreman Aids
Champion Team

Curtis DeLoye, foreman
of The Jewish News compos-
ing room, helped the Detroit
Printers baseball team de-
fend their championship
last week in the 71st Union
Printers International
League baseball tourna-
ment.
Detroit
defeated
Pittsburgh 14-9 in the
championship game to
finish with a 5-1 record. De-
Loye had a key sacrifice fly
in the eighth to drive in a
km.
It was Detroit's fourth
title in the 14st six years.
DeLoye has been an outfiel-
der on the team for 14 years.

Rambo, Bldg.)

27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD.
AT 12 MILE OFF 696 851-4094

Open—Wri7fhru Sat.
11:30 a.m.-2:30 a.m.

IS COOKING UP SOMETHING
SPECIAL FOR THE
SUMMER MONTHS OF
JULY AND AUGUST

SPECIAL DINNERS FOR TWO
MON. & TUES. EVENINGS UNTIL 11 p.m
WED. THU SAT. BEFORE 1 p.m.

VEAL SCALLOPINI • VEAL FRANCESCO
• VEAL PARMESAN

$1 5 couple

Includes:
Antipasto &
1/2 Liter of
House Wine

Ask about our
complimentary
lunch drawing

Class Reunion
Locale Corrected

The Mumford High
School Class of 1959 will
hold its 20-year reunion 8
p.m. Nov. 24 at the Michi-
gan Inn, and not the school
as originally reported.
For information, call Sue
Ross, 851-9976; or Arlene
Weiss, 851-7791.

Free Concert

The Tailgate Ramblers
Dixieland Band will give a
free concert 7 p.m. Sunday
at the Prudential Town
Center, Southfield. In case
of rain, the concert will be
held in the Southfield Civic
Center Ice Arena.

Anti-Semites Hit
Danish Cemetery

COPENHAGEN (JTA) —
The Jewish cemetery in
Fredericia, a small town
some 60 miles from the
German border, was desec-
rated last week.
Tombstones were over-
turned, the fence broken
and anti-Semitic slogans
daubed on the graves.

Weekend special!
A Sheraton showplace for 830!

$30 per night, single or double occupancy, weekends
only, means the lap of luxury here at the Sheraton-
Southfield Hotel. Beautiful showplace guest rooms
feature oak paneling, extra-large beds, and every conven-
ience. Plus L.J. Loophole's Restaurant and Bar, the fun
place for luncheon and dinner. And there's Yesterday's,
Southfield's most popular nightspot with dancing and live
entertainment.
Call us soon to reserve a guest room for yourself
or for out-of-town visitors. And get a taste of Sheraton-
Southfield's hospitality and low weekend rates.

V

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Sheraton-Southfield Hotel

SHERATON HOTELS & INNS, WORLDWIDE
17017 WEST NINE MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD. TELEPHONE 5574800

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