activities in Society
The Sherman Family Club will meet 8:30 p.m. Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Israel Levenstein, 19178 San Juan. Election of
officers will take place.
A_ sweet sixteen dinner-dance honoring Miss Nancy Pearl Nudell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hyman D. Nudell of Pembroke Ave., was
held Saturday at the Furnifure Club of Detroit.
Delegates from Adas Shalom Synagogue attending the United
Synagogue Youth National Convention in Chicago last weekend were
Ava Goldberg, Cynthia Goldstein, Rozzie Heideman, Diane Levine, Neil
Schneider, Jeffrey Weinstein and Marli Weiss. They led services, con-
ducted official organizational business and participated in Torah study
sessions. Rabbi Pesach Sobel. youth education director, accompanied
the group and acted as faculty member at some of the Torah study
sessions.
Teen-agers from Beth Abraham and Bnai David youth groups at-
tended the Torah Seminar for youth this week at the Carousel Motel
in London, Ont. Joining several hundreds from the Orthodox synagogue
youth in Michigan. Ohio and Ontario, were Sandy Schwartz. Peggy I
Krohngold, Shelley Bank, Jenny Young, Harry Young, Risha Ring.
Joanne Blau. Lynn Farber. Arlene Gross, Sharon Goldstein, Harold
Gach and Joe Fleish of Beth Abraham. Mrs. Morris Schwartz, a member
of the congregation's youth commission and a youth group sponsor,
accompanyed the contingent and assisted in the six-day seminar
program. The seminar was sponsored by the youth bureau of Yeshiva
University. Bnai David Youth who attended the seminar were Benny
Adler, Donald Cohen, Suellen Chips, Linda Ginns, Bill Mechanic,
Steven Posar. Bradley Schram. Donald Schneider and Allan Shulman.
Allan J. Roth of Church Rd., Oak Park, returned recently from a
vacation in the Dutch West Indies.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Podol of Whitmore Rd. have returned to their
home town of Chicago to take up residence.
Mar-Part) at Top of Tasty Recipes
2 teaspoons vanilla
31/2 cups flour
, A2 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup milk
3 ounces chocolate
1 cup chopped nuts
1 cup chopped candied cherries
Cream one cup Mar-Pary and brown
sugar together. Add slightly beaten
and vanilla. Sift flour, salt.
eggs
baking powder and add alternately
with milk to original mixture. Melt
chocolate and remaining 1/2 cup Mar-
Pary and add. Finally add chopped
nuts and chopped candied cherries.
Drop from teaspoon onto greased
cookie sheet. Bake for about 15 min-
utes at 350 degrees. Makes about 10
dozen cookies.
Mar-Parv, the kosher parve
margarine, is the subject of a new
information campaign on its uses
in the Jewish home.
Made by the Miami Co. of
Cincinnati, Mar-Pary is an all-
vegetable margarine made with
highly unsaturated corn oil and
other vegetable oils, plus vita-
mins A and D. It contains no
milk or animal fat, so it may be
used in the preparation of and
served at Jewish meals contain-
ing meat or dairy foods.
Mar-Pary may also be used by
people allergic to milk and milk
products, and in any diet where
milk is restricted.
K o s h e r, parve Mar-Pary Mar-
garine is produced under strict
supervision of the Union of Ortho-
dox Jewish Congregations of
America and bears the (1.7) seal on
the package.
Tasty treats using Mar-Pary in-
clude the following, for which re-
cipes are provided:
• • •
HEARTHSTONE CAKE
cup Par-Pare
2 cups dark brown sugar
2 eggs
1 cup buttermilk
2 cups cake flour
1 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup nutmeats
1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream Mar-Pary and sugar. Separate
eggs and add beaten yolks to creamed
mixture. Sift flour with soda and cin-
namon and add alternately with butter.
milk to original mixture. Add vanilla
and finely chopped nut meats. Beat
egg whites and fold in. Bake in two
layer pans 30 minutes at 375 degrees.
Frost with caramel foam icing.
CARAMEL FOAM ICLNG
1 , 4 cups light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 unbeaten egg whites
1 teaspoon vanilla
Mix all ingredients in top of double
boiler and beat at high speed for about
4 minutes over boiling water.
FRENCH PASTRY CAKE
PA cups Mar-Pary Margarine
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
I cup milk
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 Cup cocoa
1 /2 cup boiling water
Cream Mar-Pary and sugar. Add eggs
slowly. Sift flour with baking powder
and add. Bake in two pans greased
and floured for about 40 minutes at
350 degrees.
ICING
4 tablespoons Mar•Pary
4 tablespoons cocoa
4 tablespoons hot water
2 cups 4X sugar
Dissolve cocoa in hot water. Add
Mar-Pary and let it melt in hot mix-
tue. stirring it through. Add sugar and
beat until creamy.
Congressman Asks U.S.
Act on Soviet Persecution
WASHINGTON (JTA)—A Penn-
sylvania congressman called upon
the United States Government to
take steps through the United
Nations to deal with the "persecu-
tion and deprivation" of Jews in
the Soviet Union.
In a letter to Secretary of State
Dean Rusk,' Rep. Richard S.
Schweiker, Pennsylvania Republi-
can, suggested that the United
States request an investigation on
the status of Soviet Jewry by the
UN subcommittee on the persecu-
tion and the protection of minori-
ties.
CHOCOLATE PEAKS
1 14, cups Mar-Pary
2 cups brown sugar
2 eggs
JULES DONESON TRAVEL
PHOTO-QUIZ NO. 7
Anti-Jewish Publication
Is Banned by Morocco
He's the first male in this series
of "babies Ott the move." He's a
physician with twin sisters,
married to the former Claire
Hirsch of Muskegon. They're
cruising the Caribbean now with
their twin daughters, travel ar-
rangements by JULES DONESON
TRAVEL AGENCY.
WHO IS HE?
(Answer next week on "Activities
in Society Page.)
y
CASABLANCA (JTA) — The
anti-Jewish publication "Akhbar
Edounia" was banned by a decree
issued by the prime minister of
Morocco. The magazine, which is
financed by-- several foreign
sources, has regularly carried anti-
Semitic articles and has often as-
serted that Moroccan Jews cannot
be considered full citizens.
In its most recent issue, "Akhbar
Edounia" printed an editorial as-
serting that "the Jews always have
their hands in the pockets of their
neighbors." The editorial appeared
at the same time when the Moroc-
can ambassador to the United
States was publicly a s s u r i n g
American Jewish Committee lead-
ers that there was no Jewish
problem in Morocco.
•
_
,•-
■
......
Nancy Elizabeth Kraft
to Marry Nebraskan
Civil Rights Commission Cites Sanders' Efforts
The Michigan Civil Rights Corn- pany's action was voluntary and
mission has announced a program ! in no way implied that it had
of helping voluntary action by pri - ; knowingly discriminated against
vate employers to achieve racial minority groups in the past.
and religious equality.
As an exampie of what it expects
to accomplish, t h e commission
cited a program involving the Fred
Sanders Co. confectionery outlets.
Sanders has worked with the
commission staff for weeks in an
intensive personnel study. result-
ing in a program intended to corn-
, pletely integrate its work force in
all phases of assignment, promo-
tion and training.
It was emphasized that the corn-
Max Schrut
For Good Photographs
and Prompt Service
Call me at
For the HY Spot
Of Your Affair
Music by
MISS NANCY KRAFT
Mr. and Mrs. James Kraft of
Robson Ave. announce the engage-
ment of their daughter Nancy Eliz-
abeth to Dennis Allen Schulman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schul-.,
man of Omaha.
The bride-elect is a student at
Michigan State University, where
she is affiliated with Alpha Epsi-
lon Phi Sorority. Her fiance is a
; graduate of the University of Ne-
braska.
They are planning an August
wedding.
Writer Auerbach,
Yiddish Poet, Due
at Local Reception
A reception honoring Yiddish
writer Ephraim Auerbach will be
held 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Labor Zionist Institute.
The reception has been arranged
by the Detroit Israel Histadrut
Campaign and the City Committee
of Farband, Labor Zionist Order.
Auerbach recently returned from
a lengthy stay in Israel.
Born in Selz. Bessarabia, in 1892,
Auerbach published his first Yid-
dish poem at 16
and was one of
the young Yid-
dish writers who
grew up and de-
veloped around
Isaac L. Peretz.
For a short time
he was also a
teacher: however,
he always yearn-
ed to settle, in
Auerbach
the Holy Land.
Before World War I he, his
wife and daughter went to Pales-
tine. With the outbreak of the
first World War, however. Auer-
bach had to leave the country,
then under the rule of the Turks.
In 1915, Auerbach joined the
first Jewish Legion under
Joseph Trumpeldor. When the
British dissolved his Army corps,
Auerbach and his family arrived
in America.
For the past 50 years, Auerbach
has devoted his energies and talent
to writing. To date he has pub-
lished 14 major works: poems,
stories and essays. He is a staff
member of the Yiddish daily, "Tog•
Morning Journal."
Two years ago the Jewish liter-
ary world observed his 70th birth-
day. For over a year Auerbach
lived in Israel and returned only
a few weeks ago to New York.
Friends are invited to the recep-
tion. Refreshments will be served.
Kennedy Building Begun
at Israel Hadassah Center
JERUSALEM ( J T A) — The
cornerstone for the John F. Ken-
nedy Information Center at the
Hadassah-Hebrew University Medi-
cal Center was laid Monday at a
ceremony attended by Israeli lead-
ers, American diplomats and
Hadassah delegates to the forth-
coming World Zionist Congress.
Funds for the memorial building
are being donated by members
of Hadassah.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, January 1, 1965-23
Hy Herman
And His Orchestra
(Hy Utchenik)
BLAIR STUDIO
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