Southfield High School Newsline . By RANDY ZUSMAN Enrollment of participants in the annual Zionist Organiza- tion of Detroit Balfour Concert commenced last Sunday morn- ing, at a brunch. Photo shows Carmi M. Slomovitz, chairman of this year's concert (left), with Judge Ira Kaufman (right), ZOD president, and Philip Slomovitz, who was the morning's speaker. Harry Cohen gave the invocation. Fifty Balfour concert workers attended the brunch. The annual concert, to the held Dec. 1 at Ford Auditorium, will feature Isaac Stern, world famous violin- ist, and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Valter Poole. Jewish Meals By MILDRED GROSBERG BELLIN (Copyright, 1963, JTA, Inc.) STUFFED ZUCCINI 5% lbs. zuccini 3 thin slices toasted white bread 1 tablespoon parve margarine 1 medium onion, minced 1 8-oz. can tomato sauce Salt and petter to taste Select zuccini of the same size. Wash, and lightly scrape the skin, but do not peel. Cover with boiling water and cook, covered, for 15 minutes. Drain and cool to luke- warm. Remove the stem end, and cut each of the zuccini in half lengthwise. Scoop out the centers, leaving a rim about a quarter-inch thick. Place the scooped-out pulp in a mixing bowl. Dice the toast small and add. Saute the onion in the margarine over low heat until soft but not brown. Add to the pulp. Mix to blend. Add salt and pepper to taste, but do not season highly. Place • the shells; cut side up, side by side and close together in a shallow baking dish. Fill with the pulp and bread mixture, and spoon the tomato sauce evenly over the tops. Bake uncovered for 30 minutes at 350 degs. F. This amount serves 6. * * * BANANA SPONGE CAKE 6 eggs, separated 1 cup fully ripe, mashed bananas 1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 teaspoon lemon juice Iz teaspoon salt 11/4 cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon double-acting baking powder 1/4 teaspoon ground allspice 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg Ii teaspoon cream of tartar Remove the eggs from the refrig- erator an hour before beginning to bake. Place the yolks, mashed ba- nanas, 34 cup of sugar, and the lemon rind and juice in a large mixing bowl. About 2 medium bana- nas will be sufficient. Beat the mixture in the bowl until light and thick. Sift together the flour, bak- ing powder, allspice, and nutmeg, and stir into the batter only enough to blend. Wash the beaters thoroughly, then beat the egg whites, salt and cream of tartar until stiff enough to stand in peaks. Gradually add the remaining 1/4 cup sugar and beat until the mix- ture resembles a meringue. Fold the banana mixture into the egg whites just enough to blend thor- oughly, but no more. Pour into an ungreased 10x4 inch tube pan. With the blade of a silver knife cut in an ever-widening circle through the batter, beginning near the tube. Bake at 325 degs. for 1 hour, until a cake tester inserted in the center comes out dry. Invert until cold, then carefully remove from the pan. In recent years the role of Sukkots as a harvest festival has reacquired more -of its original importance and many of us like to emphasize the connection between this observ- ance and the American holiday of Thanksgiving. With this in mind, during the festival we prepare one meal Moe that ;served at Thanksgiving. Yet, even in ancient days Sukkots was much more than a joyous • harvest celebration. For a time the harvest aspect of Sukkot was almost com- pletely eliminated. We, in re- viving it, become one in spirit with the forefathers who dwelt in ancient Eretz Yisroel, as we express thankfulness for our God. A thanksgiving dinner is therefore true to this aspect of Sukkot. But just as Sukkot has in addition all these other distinctly Jewish meanings, so too our meal should include distinctly Jewish customs and traditions. Instead of being exactly like our late November feast, this one should combine the roast turkey and cranberry sauce with our own special holiday delicacies. We would have the wine for Kiddush, the challos, and the bowls of honey. As we do at many of our other simchas we might begin with chopped herring spread on kichel. Kichel comes in many forms, from plate-sized sheets to dainty cookies. The one we are serving is just large enough to be a generous base for a canape, and is not at all sweet. Since stuffed vegetables are traditional for Sukkot, we prepare zuccini, also a favorite in Israel, in this manner. Also Northville Hospital tradtional for Sukkot are pas- Will Present 11th tries of fruit, such as strudels or a delicious Banana Sponge Annual Patients Fair Northville State Hospital will Cake delicately flavored with hold its 11th annual Patients spices. Fair on Tuesday and Wednesday MENUS FOR SUKKOS Wine for Kiddush Challos at the hospital, 41001 Seven Bowls of honey M i 1 e, Northville, announced Chopped herring on kichel Vegetable soup Roast turkey Louis J. Schuldt, director of Candied sweet potatoes community relations and chair- Stuffed zuccini Waldorf salad (apples, celery, nuts, man of the event. and raisins with mayonnaise) Among the committee heads Mixed sweet pckles Cranberry sauce Banana sponge cake Fresh fruits Black coffee or tea * * KICHEL (EIRKICHEL) FOR APPETIZERS 7 /8 cup sifted all-purpose , A teaspoon double-acting baking powder tablespoons sugar '1/4 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup-vegetable oil 3 eggs Place all ingredients in a mixing bowl and beat with a rotary beater or an electric beater at low speed for 15 minutes. Using a half-tea- spoon of batter for each cake, drop some distance apart on greased cookie sheets. The batter will spread. Bake at 350 degs. F. about 15 minutes, until the edges are a light brown. Be careful not to 'over- bake. Cool on racks. The kichel are puffy but thin and crisp. If sugar is spread on the batter before bak- ing, they may also be used as plain cookies. This makes about 35. Over 900 sophomores opened the 1963-64 school year on Sept. 4 with Sophomore Orien- tation Day. Sophomores were acquainted with the rules and regulations at Southfield High and allowed to go to their classes without the juniors and seniors. Southfield is going to change its high school arrangement to what is called the "campus plan." Two of the prospective buildings are now either fin- ished or in the closing stages. The material, center, which will house the library, department offices, conference rooms and paperback book store, has been completed. House A, or the first of a series of small high school buildings, will be ready for occupancy Oct. 3. At this time, students who are supposed to have classes in the new building are holding them in the library, materials center foyer and the audito- rium. Southfield High School has been selected for a -two-year comprehensive study of Eng- lish programs, sponsored by the National Council of Teach- ers of English. The Southfield school is one of 110 across the country to take part in the national project, financed by the U.S. Office of Education. Purpose of the study is to identify and describe current practices of highly regarded English departments. By a va- riety of methods, including questionnaire, interview and observation, staff workers will collect data to discover what characteristics of schools pro- mote success in English among their students. James Shippee is English department chair- man. Among those students from Southfield visiting Europe dur- ing the summer months were Ron Tauber, Exchange student to Holland, and Dave Gold- stein, a member of the Michi- gan Chorale. chairman; and Young Women's Bicur Cholem Organization, Mrs. Morris Golden, chairman. Games, prizes, 17 booths, a puppet show to be presented by Mrs. Walter Ruessmann and Eddie Schick and his orchestra will highlight the fair. Community Council d e 1. e - gates, committee members and officers of affiliated organiza- tions have been invited to the Council's Institute on Church, State and Religious Freedom. The two-day series discussion meetings will be held at the Jewish Center Saturday, Oct. 12, 8 p.m., and on Sunday, Oct. 13, starting at 9 a.m. Zeldon Cohen, chairman of the planning committee, said that "while they have been overshadowed in recent months by other domestic develop- ments, the issues connected with the separation of church and state are of commanding importance to the American— and to the Detroit-Jewish com- munities." The recent Supreme Court decisions outlawing the use of the Regent's Prayer, Bible read- ing and the recitation of the Lord's Prayer in the nation's public schools, have been sig- nificant milestones, Cohen said, "However," he added, "many unsettled problems remain af- fecting the relations between church and government and be- tween religion and the public schools." Philip Jacobson, program co- ordinator of the National Com- munity Rela- tions Advisory Council (NC- RAC), and Rabbi Morris Adler will keynote t h e Saturday eve- ning meeting with a discus- sion of "The Background Separation — Jewish Com- munity Views and Actions." After a continental Jacobson b r e a k f a s t Sunday morning, those attend- ing the Institute will view a locally produced telecast on "Religion and the Public Schools," in which the partici- pants are Rabbi Adler, Rev. Malcolm Boyd and Father Jo- seph Walsh. Concurrent work- shops will then discuss specific problems. At the concluding session, a panel will comment on the reports of the workshop chairmen. The panel will be moderated by Sidney M. Shevitz, Commu- nity Council president. Other members will be Dr. Norman Drachler, Deputy Superintend- ent of the Detroit Public Schools, Rabbi Max Kapustin of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foun- dation, and Jacobson. Advance registrations can be made through the Community Council office. Registration should be accompanied by a $1 fee. Israel's Citrus Crop Israeli citrus groves during the past year produced 17,500,- 000 crates of fruit, of which 12,- 600,000 crates were exported. Want The Best? Ask the Folks Who've Had SAM BARNETT and His Orchestra LI 1-2563 ;5 , ..NY:::+wg- f::•azicK>mkarxvira X • PLASTIC FURNITURE Ps: v ei COVERS ti .. MADE TO ORDER or READY MADE N !.., CALL CAL ANNA KARBAL Sheldon Rott and his ORCHESTRA airJ "Music As You Like It" HOME: OFFICE: LI 7-0896 LI 5-2737 • Candids • Formals • Movies ALL Your Photography Done in a Distinctive Way For Those Special Occasions By J. J. CLARKE CALL MR. ROSEN 341-4141 "The A.P.A. Story" will be featured at the Center Theater meeting 8:15 p.m. Tuesday at the Jewish Center. Also on the agenda is a "Cap- sule Class," using audience par- ticipation to demonstrate the techniques used in Center The- ater's course on Acting, which begins 8 p.m. Oct. 7. On the Center Theater pro- gram will be scenes from the A.P.A. productions of "School for Scandal," "The Sea Gull" and "The Tavern," starring Rosemary Harris and George Grizzard. The Association of Producing Artists is the Profes- sional Resident Theatre Com- pany affiliated with the Univer- sity of Michigan. The meeting is open to the public. The Center Theater acting class of 20 lessons will provide training and experience in all phases of acting, under the di- rection of Mrs. Harold Orbach. The course is open to non-mem- bers and registrations will be accepted at the first class meet- ing. The fee to non-members is A gentile, Warder Cresson, got, an appointment from President Tyler as Consul to Jerusalem, so that he might facilitate the re- building of the Jewish Home- land. Cresson, who later became a convert to Judaism, helped es- tablish the first Jewish agricul- tural colony in Jerusalem's Val- ley of Rephaim. 1 LI 2-0874 .4 AMT>t*MiWait'VKX•ZIKAIKIEWSM Center Theater Plans Meeting, Opening of Class planning the fair are Mesdames Louis Pearlman, Sol Goldfarb and Rose Fine. Among the groups providing assistance are the Bnai Brith Women's Coun- cil, Mrs. Dorothy Lieberman, chairman; David Horodoker $20. For information, call LI Young Women's Organization, 4-8836. Mrs. Jack Friedman, chairman; Jewish House of Shelter Ladies Auxiliary, Mrs. Morris D o r n, Jewish Council to Hold Institute on Church, State, Religious Freedom SAVE 25% This is our Everyday Discount on Sterling Silver Al Beigler, Your Host 19 - THE DETRO IT JEWIS H NEWS — Frid ay, Sept. 27, 1963 Balfour Concert Activities Set Into Motion at Workers' Meeting