If you like CHEESE KREPLACH BOV-A CHEESE IN CE You'll love MEATLESS CHEF BOY-AR-DEE CHEESE RAVIOLI Just heat 'n'eati Hear family, guests, cheer for that real Italian flavor created by famed Chef Boy-Ar-Dee. Tender little macaroni pies...filled with tangy Italian Cheese..,simmered with savory tomato sauce and cheese... seasoned the real Ital. Ian way. So much tastier and easier than the frozen kind. So much thriftier, too—costs only about 15c per serving! - Yale University expert on Ori- ental research reported that an- other Dead Sea Scroll, dating to the First Century C.E., had successfully been unrolled in the Palestine Archeological Museum nk E. Brow ratche Dr ssor of Latin and secre- P of the American School - Oriental Research, said the newly un !led scrol con led rn- Biblical ne position Psalm, t, u now been f nd silly in th is not version of the Bi Scriptures, whic contain 150 Psalms. The scroll was believed to have been a book of Psalms used by the Essenes sect in a settlement in Quamran. The Colgate-Rochester Divin- ity School will publish the scroll's contents for the Ameri- can School which bought pub- lication rights from the Jordan The Al it:en s Club announce regu r meeting 8:30 p.m. resday at the ho of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Srir Magnolia, Southfiel A new Isr "Golden e shown. A musi- cal program will precede the film. The meeting will be fol- lowed by a social hour, at which Mesdames Irving Grand, Allen Blondy, and David Kaner will act as hostesses. Distributors for Swee-Touch-Nee Tea in Detroit: National Wholesale Gro. Co. 8938 12th Street, Detroit, Mich. Unmatched For Delicious Flavor! "-titafl 94- Liiit . -11(2, rate t ; FOR Y IN '25' KASHA RECIPE Mrs. Milton S. Gold411a11, Meridian Ave., Miami Beach, Fla., wins $25 for her Chinese Kasha Cantonese. CHINESE KASHA CANTONESE 1 cup onion 2 cups cooked 1/2 green pepper Wolff's Kasha 2 cups celery with 1 tbs. cooking oil 3 scallions tops 1-egg omelet deligh your family with the dish you m e! An you do is submit your favori ecipe for using Wolff's Kasha...fo tuffing chicken, derma ...maki knishes, varnishkas, soups.. ide dishes with onions, choppe ushrooms, peppers or any othe sty use for this all-time - fav e. And Cook Kasha as directed on box. Refrig- erate. Coarsely chop celery and onions. Slice green pepper in thin strips. Add to heated oil in large skillet. Stir while cooking three minutes. Break up cold Kasha into grains with fork. Mix with vegetables and cook over low heat five minutes, stirring several times. Just be- fore serving, blend in soy sauce, salt and pepper. Garnish with chopped scal- lions and shredded omelet. OU GET $25.00 11- isc sin Jewish icl ublished in Mil\ ee by former Detroite ruing G. Rhodes, unde - editorship of Edward erison, last reel: nted at length on the Purely Commentary article in The Detroit Jewish News and quoted from it extensively in support of the view that absorp- tion of English-Jewish weeklies by federations is "deplorable." Perlson's editorial in the Wis- consin Jewish Chronicle is en- titled "Two Obituaries in Pitts- burgh." It declares: "The Amer- ican community needs a free press . . . We sadly bemoan the deceased in Pittsburgh. W vently hope tha can Jewish m un it i es will take no nd that they will firmly solve that not other suc eaths shall occur in their b wicks. The freedom of press too precious'." ore for your money! M M ' ore cups to teoboi. more taste to the tea!_ Send your own original recipe with a Wolff's Kasha box top to: Phyllis Wolff, Penn Yan, N. Y. We will pay $25.00 for every recipe published; but every entrant receives a FREE Also enjoy Wolff's Creamy Kernels (grits) Kasha 'N' Gravy Kasha Soup Kasha Cookbook and all recipes be- come Wolff's property. KASHA deb:do-a Brown Buckwheat Groats r 4' Etiyhie44 TiViTgartRaW4t ILNO ICOSHER FRANKFURTERS BEEF Juicy with Flavor Superior osher Salami Bologna too! At Leading Delicatessens, Supermarkets and Restaurants. KO SHER FRANKFURTERS • CORNED •BEEF • BOLOGNA Distributed in Detroit & Michigan by: JULIUS POLLAK, 7522 Fenkell, Detroit Tel: UN 2-5822 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Friday, February 16, 1962 quick results ! LAWRENCE W. CROHN At 70, now retired only from the furniture business, Lawr- ence W. Crohn is as active as ever in communal affairs, in be- half of Jewish educational movements, studying and doing research into problematic Jew- ish issues, with emphasis on Zionism and Israel and on the synagogue and religion. Deeply interested in the Re- constructionist m o v e m en t, Crohn has made a deep study of reformism in Jewish reli- gious practices and in the hu- manism taught by religious faith. hus, in his latest essay. H anist View of God," j pu shed by the Reconstru io • , Crohn delves philosop ic into religious aspects tha t bled mankind. "The social cess," he points out, "is the stince expression of man's orld. The social phenomena are the culmination and not the attenuation of the biological process. Man as a social animal is once uniquely individual and at the same time given to co- operative pursuits. It is in this latest stage that advanced sym- bols are needed." Pursuing his philosophical analysis, Crohn wrote: "There have been mighty setbacks in the advance of civilization. The forces of atavism rema inexorably strong. We are a few thousand years the Bronze Age. H needs time. The beat has not been eradica . But still the God symbol serve to uplift an purify, even though, in the ame of God, hipocrisy and cruelty have been rampant. or in idea this religion and the man are creations of the mind. The kind of Go that develops will be a direc reflection of the needs and the aspirations of human so- ciety." Crohn's view is that "life has developed from integration and organization, but with increas- ing freedom for the individual. These are two polar aspects of the one universal process. Out of all this has come man and his unique odyssey. If God is to remain the verbal symbol of this all-embracing journey from darkness into light, then we do indeed enter that ancient part- nership which Moses so well expressed, 'Ye shall be Holy, because I am Holy." Crohn was born in New York City, Feb, 22, 1892. He was ed treated in the New York schoo and New York University. father came to New York fr East Prusssia in 1857. mother was born in New more than a century ago, parents having come from and in 1838. Devoted to basic Jewish t ets from childhood, Crohn a ways was a deep student of Jew- ish history and his Zionist activities date back to his earli- est youth. He has been under the influence of Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan for more than a half century and was his student in the first class of the Teachers Institute of the Jewish Theo- logical Seminary of America. Many of the giants in early Jewish communal life in New York were in the circles he frequented — Prof. Solomon Schecter, Dr. Israel Fried- laender, Samson . Benderly, Justice Louis D. Brandeis, Judge Julian W. Mack an many others. Now the chairman of the i portant education committee the United Hebrew Schools, f many years one of the vic presidents of the schools, one of his major interests in local communal functions, Crohn has held many important official posts, including the presiden- cies of the Zionist Organization of Detroit, Zionist Council, and Jewish Community Council; has served on the governing board of the Jewish Welfare Feder- ation and many other move- ments. He also is deeply interested in music and two of his children Leah and Harris, have made it their careers. Crohn was married to Jennie Brodie, in Baltic 1920. Thei , David,.-- v visiting this countr , on a spec nission for the Palestine E omic Corporation, has lived srael with his wife and three hildren, Ary Aviva. Their a well known to Leonar eer. The nifer. The Crohns' 19 Crohn proudly refers to his grandfather, Abbe Baum, a learned Jew who was a Sofer in Europe and went to Cali- fornia during the gold rush in 1849. His daughters, Esther Rus- kay, who became a prominent writer and social worker, Sarah Epstein, Milicerit Baum and Chron's mother, Leah, c •• on his love fo and fo de government with funds pro- vided by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bechtel of San Francisco. — The new Israel Bond Spon- sor chairman for 1962 will be Mrs. David Pollack, it was an- nounced by Mesdames Joseph Katchke and Max Stollman, Wo- men's Division co-chairmen. Mrs. Pollack will be the host- ess at the annual Sponsor re- enrollment affair at 12:30 p.m., Wednesday, at her home, 18625 Fairfield, at a dessert luncheon. The new Negev Sponsor em- blem, encrusted with semi- precious stones of the Negev, will be shown in connection with the announcement of the new Negev Sponsor category. Any woman purchasing .$1,500 or more in Israel Bonds. in 1962 will be awarded the new Negev Sponsor pin. The special significance of this category is that a Minyan or 10 Negev Sponsors will equal a $15,000 Negev Trustee or the equiva- lent of the investment funds needed to settle a new family in the Negev. Mrs. Pollack, is a leader in many organizations. She is on the executive board and cor- responding secretary of the De- troit Chapter of Hadassah, and is active in the Jewish Welfare Federation, League of the Jew- ish Women, Bar Ilan University Women's Auxiliary, TB and Health Society Committee, and is a recipient of the Red Feath- er Award for her work,,. the Blood Bank and Otter com- munity services during World War II. A graduate of the United Hebrew Schools and the United Hebrew High School, she re- Ceived her degree and di /years of post gr uat a Wayne Un'vers mg ocial w r- e her hild gui Pollack, of iage to i s loners. e corn etroit's :hters. hey hav= three Crohn, on 70th. Birthday, Devotes Another Dead Sea Unrolled Nis Energy to Philos()Pith! Study Scroll NEW HAVEN, (JTA)—A 17 Mrs. Pollack Named Chairman for 1962 of Bond Sponsors