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May 24, 1957 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1957-05-24

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

To Wed Aug. 25

MissRothtoWed

tal

z

F EAT U

Friday, May 24, 1957

M

MISS JUDITH ROTH

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Roth,
of W. Grand Ave., announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Judith C., to Irving Mendelson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin
Mendelson, of Washburn Ave.
An August wedding is planned.

Pioneer Women
Set Installation
Lunch Tuesday

Mrs. Irving 'Turner, recently
re-elected president of the De-
troit Council of Pioneer Women,
will lead the slate of officers
to be inducted at the annual
installation luncheon on Tues-
day, at the Labor Zionist In-
stitute.
Elected to serve with Mrs.
Turner are Mesdames Norman
Kanter, execu-
tive vice-presi-
dent; Norman
Leeman, Har-
old Noveck
and Sam Was-
serman, v i c e-
presidents;
Harry Mondry,
Frank Wasser
and Morris
Mondrow, sec-
retaries; Louis
LaMed, treas
urer; and David
Colman, dues
Mrs. Turner chairman.
Mrs. Wasserman, vice-presi-
dent of organization, states that
Mrs. Harold Noveck is the af-
ternoon's chairman. Mrs. Henry
Greenbert will give the in-voca-
tion.
Mrs. Rose Kaufman, of Cleve-
land, 0., a member of the na-
tional advisory board of Pioneer
Women, will install the officers
and deliver the principal speech.
She has recently returned
from a two-month stay in Israel
where she attended a special
seminar conducted by Pioneer
Women, Moatzot Hapoalot and
the Jewish Agency.
Following the ceremonies and
the presentation of special merit
awards, a musical review,
"Golden Wedding Anniversary,"
will be offered by the Sharona
Chapter choral group, under
the direction of Mrs. Ted Sallen,
with accompaniment by Mrs.
Victor Linden.
Mrs. Isadore Cohen and Mrs.
Julius Tatelman are taking care
of special arrangements, and
reservations may be made with
Mrs. Frank Wasser, DI. 1-0786.

It is time to plan for Shevuot,
ladies, especially if you anticip-
ate giving a reception in honor
of your confirmand. For in the
Reform Liberal Temples every-
where in this country, Shevuot
is not only the Festival of First
Fruits of very ancient origin,'
and the Festival of the Giving
of the Law or Ten Command-
ments. It is the Day of Confirm-
ation of young men and young
women. Make your plans early,
for the culinary department of
your home will be busy aplenty
with details for that happy holi-
day, with which cheese dishes
are associated. Double or triple
the following recipes for these
time-honored' Shevuot cheese
dishes, but plan to serve one or
both.
SHEVUOT CHEESE BLINTZES
(12 Blintzes if 10-inch pancakes
are rolled up and cut)
PANCAKE BATTER
2 eggs
1/2 cup sifted flour
3 /4 cup water or 50/50 milk
and water
1 tablespoon melted butter
A pinch of salt
Butter for greasing pan
Make a thin batter of beaten
eggs and flour, adding the liquid
gradually while mixing or beat-
ing with a fork till smooth. Add
melted butter and salt, mixing
well. Pour in a thin stream of
batter, starting at center of heat-
ed, greased frying pan, tilting
to distribute evenly across the
bottom. Cook over low heat
when starting, then increase
heat as soon as pancake is
smooth and firm on top, the
bottom lightly browned and the
edges curled upward. Turn out
on a double layer of paper or
linen kitchen towel, bottom side
up. Spread with filling while
the next pancake is cooking
over moderate heat. Roll up,
tuck in sides. When all the
blin-4es are done and rolled up
add butter to frying pan and
brown on both sides till firm
and browned. If making a dou-
ble or triple reciw, arrange all
the filled blintzes on a buttered
cookie sheet or other shallow
pan and brown in a hot oven,
turning only when the under-
side is browned to brown the
other side. May be re-heated in
a moderate oven for 5 to 10
minutes on top shelf.
CHEESE FILLING
1 pound dry cottage cheese or
mixed cream and farmer
cheese
1 Or 2 egg yolks
2 tablespoons sugar
A dash of salt
A dash of cinnamon or 3
drops of vanilla
Combine with a fork to a
smooth and spreadable consis-
tency, thick enough to hold its
shape when placed on a pan-
cake for rolling up. If mixture
is too thick and heavy, add a
little sourcream or eggwhite. If

by

LEAH LEONARD

too thin, add crumbs. Cut rolls
in half before frying.
(A Quick-easy)
SPONGE CAKE
Glamor Pineapple Cake
6 eggs, separated
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1-cup sugar
1 cup flour, sifted
Drained canned pineapple
slices as directed.
Beat egg whites stiff but not
dry. Beat in half the sugar a
little at a time using spoon or
electric mixer. Beat yolks with
lemon juice till thick then fold
into the first mixture as lightly
as possible. Combine sifted
flour with remaining sugar and
sift into the batter, scraping
down sides of mixing bowl with
rubber spatula while mixing
gradually into a smooth con-
sistency. Turn into an ungreased
tube cake pan and b'ake 35 min-
utes at 375' F, or till light pies-
sure with index finger leaves
no depression on top of cake.
Invert pan with cake over a
wire cake rack or hang on the
neck of a strong bottle so that
air circulates under and around
cake till cold. Remove from pan
to cake plate. With a sharp
knife, make as many cuts in
the cake as servings planned.
Remove 3 slices, making room
for a cut of canned pineapple,
well drained, to be inserted in
each cut. Use the 3 slices of cake
for extra servings, of course.
No decorations are needed, but
the drained pine-apple juice
may be thickened with corn-
starch and cooked 5 minutes
over low heat, stirring con-
stantly. Adding a little grat-
ed lemon or orange peel is a
good touch. Serve this sauce se-
parately over each serving, as
topping. Pineapple slice on cut
of cake may be embellished by
inserting a red or green maras-
chino cherry, also, to add color.

An "open house" for children
ready. to begin kindergarten this
fall will be held at 1 p.
Wednesday, at Bagley School.
According to Agnes Renton,
school principal, children eli-
gible for public school this fall
must be five years old by Dec.
1. It will be necessary to show
the official birth certificate at
time of registration.

A carnival, featuring booths
of luck and skill, is planned by
the United Synagogue Youth of
Adas Shalom Synagogue at 8:30
p.m., June 1, in the congrega-
tion's social hall.

SAM ROSENBLAT

MISS JEANNE MACKEY

Master of Ceremonies

Mr. and Mrs. Maurice M.
Mackey, of Roselawn Ave., an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter, Jeanne Elaine, to
Stanley Victor Delidow, son of
Mrs. Pearl Delidow, of Mark
Twain Ave. An Aug. 25 wedding
is planned.

and His Orchestra

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Chefs at Americana
Provide 'Tour of Famous Foods'
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — A
tour of the famous foods of the
world is possible at the new
Americana Hotel in Bal Har-
bour. Executive Chef Hugo
Hunecke has 60 chefs working
around the clock to serve Amer-
icana guests, and the cooks re-
present virtually every nation
on earth.
The $17 'million Americana
employs 1,000 persOns, and over
half of them are engaged in the
preparation and service of foods
from the 475-room hotel's six
main dining areas.

Portraiture
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Call Richard Levinson, Evenings
Weddings
Bar Mitzvahs

DI 1-3059

Confirmation,
Wedding, Bar Mitzvah,
Sweet Sixteen Invitations.
Matches and Napkins

Complete Selection at Reasonable
Prices

MRS. KATE ALTMAN

UNiversity 4-0640

Mus c

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your affair
by

PHOTOGRAPHS by

Dave Davidson

BERNARD H.

WINER

and orchestra

PHONE ME ABOUT YOUR
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KE. 1-8196

CANDIDS • 3-D • MOVIES

Sabbath League Sets
Annual Kibbutz Project

The annual Kibbutz Project
of the Women's Sabbath League,
Which is held to provide a ma-
jor appliance for a religious
labor institution in Israel, will
be held at 12:30 p.m., Tuesday,
at Young Israel Center on Dex-
ter.
Mrs. Milton Winston has been
named by Mrs. Isadore Levin,
president; as chairman of the
day, with Mrs. Morris Servetter
in charge of hospitality. Assist-
ing are Mesdames Abe Feldman,
Harry Greenfield, M. Biegler,
S. Bielewich, Pearl Leader, T.
Ehrenfeld, S. Lax and H. Ross.
Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka will
be the guest speaker. He per-
sonally has visited many of the
religious labor colonies and in-
stitutions while touring Israel.
Also on the afternoon's pro-
gram is the presentation of a
cantata, "The Sabbath Queen."

Invited to 'Open House'

Youth Group Slates Carnival

LI 4-3042

G FT

LI 5-4352

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BAR MITZVAH FLOWERS
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Physicist to Address
Shaarey Zedek YPL

Dr. Jack E. Goldman, head of
the physics department in the
Ford Motor Co. scientific lab-
oratory, will be guest speaker
at the final open meeting of the
Shaarey Zedek Young People's
League, at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday,
in the synagogue social hall. His
topic will be "The Jewish Mind
— Does it Exist?"
Dr. Goldman, author of 40
publications in the field of
physics, has charge of all Ford
research in physical, atomic and
nuclear research. He is a board
member of the Hebrew Institute
of Pittsburgh and is affiliated
with that city's Zionist District,
Jewish National Fund and Jew-
ish Community Relations Coun-
cil.
A social hour will follow the
talk.

4

Prospective Kindergarteners

Register Now

WE. 3-0141
UN 4-9261

All orders in accordance with Michigan
Liquor Control Commission rulings.

•r,A.1113_,AND
CAATP V

AND

KINDERWELT

ORM

Our 29th

MICHIGAN

Season

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And Kinderwelt

Its the Heart of the Waterloo Recreation Area

• A Complete Supervised Program
• Mature Well Trained Staff
• Most Reasonable Rates

Coll or Write for Information:

MUNI MARK
3200 FULLERTON

Detroit 38, Mich.

TO. 7-7665

1

CAMP OPENS JUNE 27

REGISTRATION MAY BE MADE FOR
•4 or 8 WEEK PERIODS

Forband Camp is a part of the Labor Zionist Movement

Call or Write for Information:

HAROLD KARBEL
20535 AVON

Detroit 19, Mich.

KE. 5-7233

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