THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Quebec Situation Spurs CJC ' MONTREAL (JTA)—The Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) 18th Plenary Assem- bly May 12-15 is being view- ed as one of the most impor- tant in the history of the 58- year-old organization. According to the organiz- ers, the significance lies in , the current situation in Can- ada, specifically in Quebec. which will affect the Jewish community perhaps to a greater extent than it will most other Canadians. - According to Shirley Rabi- -,cnovitch, chairwoman of the arrangements committee, Quebec Premier Rene Le- is slated to make a major address May 13 dur- ing which he is expected to deal with issues of signifi cance to the province's mi- nority groups. Secretary of State John Roberts will also partici- pate in the conference, Mrs. Rabinovitch said. In addition to dealing with the political climate in Quebec, the assembly will also deal with the evolving role of the CJC at both the national and local levels and the policy of the feder- al government on issues re- lating to Israel. All major sessions will be conducted in simultaneous French- English translation. Jewish Youth Hostels Sought , to Counter Religious Cults PITTSBURGH (JTA)— Two leading authorities on cults and movements on col- lege campuses have called on American Jewish com- munities to establish re- treat centers or hostels for American Jewish college- age youth. Rabbi Arthur Green, as- sistant professor of religion at the University of Pennsyl- vania, and Rabbi A. James Rudin, assistant director of the interreligious affairs de- partment of the American Jewish Committee, issued their call at a special Cen- tral Conference of Ameri- can Rabbis (CCAR) meet- ing. c . Green called upon the American Jewish commu- nity to establish retreat cen- ters staffed by a small, ong- oing communal group which would provide an ad- dress in the Jewish commu- ,, nity "where young people in search of a serious reli- gious path might turn." Ex- isting institutions do not meet the needs of young Jews, said Green who is a co-founder of the Havurat Shalom of Boston and one c of the major innovative workers with Jewish stu- dents. Rudin said that along with assimilation and inter- marriage, the emergence of new cults, especially the Jews for Jesus, Hebrew Christians, Rev. Moon's Uni- fication Church, and the Hare Krishna, "pose a growing threat to Jewish continuity and survival in America." To meet the special needs of young Jews between the ages of 15 and 25, "a great- er emphasis must be placed on spiritual values, prayer and a sense of warmth and - Iection Delays Rabin Biography LONDON (JTA)—Pub- lication of the first full length biography of Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin has been delayed until Septem- ber because of the forthcom- ing general election. Robson Books, publisher of the book by Robert Sla- ter, a young American jour- nalist living in Jerusalem, said the hook was originally to have appeared . in May. . „. belonging that is often lack- ing in today's organized Jewish community," he said. Rudin recommended that large' Jewish communities establish Jewish hostels for young Jews, located in cen- tral cities and afford a total Jewish environment: sleep- ing accommodations, food, classes, counseling, prayer services, entertainment and, education. He said that the Jewish community has the financial and professional resources to set up the youth hostels. Newhouse Papers Name Publisher NEW YORK—David Starr, editor of the Long Is- land Press in Queens from 1969 until the paper's de- mise last month, has been named publisher of the S.I. Newhouse-owned news- papers in Springfield, Mass. Head of the editorial com- mittee of the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency for the past 10 years, Starr will contin- ue as senior editor of the Newhouse group, super- vising the Newhouse News Service, which distributes dispatches to 100 American newspapers. The Springfield news- papers of which Starr will be the publisher are The Morning Union, The Daily News and The Sunday Re- publican. Unique N. Y. Restaurant New York is unique for many things. It specializes in entertainment and it boasts about the thousands of restaurants. Seymour Britchkey's re- vised guide to "Restaurants of New York" (Random House) is a work that will he studied with relish not only by tourists visiting New York but by New York- ers themselves who will learn what had been strange to them. To purvey the entire gamut of restaurants in this introductory guidebook is like producing a romance. There isn't an ethnic or na- tional group, a country on earth that is not either rep- resented or emulated. Of unusual interest is the following story about a most unique Jewish restau- rant: "The Parkway and its ad- mirers strain for the past, one that is largely unre- membered, at that. This res- taurant is an archeological reconstruction rather than the survivor of a tradition, no matter how directly it can trace its provenance to a real Romanian Jew's real Romanian-Jewish restau- rant on New York's once- mainly-Jewish Lower East Side. The food here is for real, and jollity is jollity, but the culture is moribund, if not dead, its assimilated descendants scattered, and the feasts and celebrations and evenings out are larky, contrived, "something dif- ferent," not a natural as- pect of the lives of the people who come here. "But the recipes are in the public domain, the in- gredients available; and museums, after all, cannot be faulted for displaying the teepee but not the rain dance. "Many of the best things - at the Parkway are free. You are presented with great bowls of pickles: pick- led red and green tomatoes, pickled peppers, all exceed- ingly tart, sweet and gar- licked, and all very stimu- lating. You accompany them with rye bread that is fresh and moist in its crack- ling crust and with the car- bonated water (seltzer) that is served in big pitch- Herzog Says Egypt Suffered in Security Council Debate UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—Chaim Herzog, Is- rael's Ambassador to the United Nations, said that the adjournment of the Security Council's Middle East debate last week was "a defeat" for the Egyp- tians who initiated the de- bate. The council adjourned indefinitely without adopt- ing any resolutions or mak- ing any other decisions. Diplomatic sources here said that the Egyptians. who wanted the council to declare its support for the participation of the Pales- tine Liberation Organiza- tion in the Geneva talks, agreed to a postponement of the debate without a date for reconvening when they realized that they faced an American veto and were unable to guarantee the nec- essary nine votes to pass a resolution in the council. In addition to American opposition, Syria and Libya refused to support the Egyp- tian resolution because it was "too moderate" in their view. Herzog said that Egypt's plan at the council 'com- pletely misfired and on The eve of Passover, Israel ad- ministered another Pass- over plague against the Egyptians." Sources here also said that the Egyptians backed off in order to avoid a conflict with the United States on the eve of Presi- dent Anwar Sadat's visit to Washington for talks with President Carter. ers. The bread may be smeared with butter, but the knowing eschew that for the chicken fat (schmaltz) that is served in little pitchers—schmaltz is to butter what a malted milk is to coconut milk. "The stuff you pay for in- cludes, to begin, the famous Chopped Chicken Liver, which is soft, rich, peppery, garlicked, and adequately soaked with chicken fat when you get it. However, the boss may decide he likes you, and he will, right at your place, just the way your mother did when you broke both your hands, add more schmaltz, as well as slivered white radishes, and greeven (browned strands of skin that are a pungent by-product of the process of rendering chicken fat), which converts the sturdy food into something that is almost overwhelmingly suc- culent. "Then there is the egg- plant, which is simply chopped baked eggplant until you (or the boss) im- prove it with raw onions, perhaps, or radishes, or the greeven, or lemon, or com- binations thereof. For some- thing more elemental but equally rich, there are cold sliced brains—three thick slabs, and you eat them straight. "And for something com- paratively dietetic, there is pitcha, cold calf's feet in jelly—an acquired taste, but if you have already ac- quired it (it can be ac- quired at the Russian Tea Room, where a more re- fined version is called kholo- detz) you will find nothing to fault in these. Friday, April 8, 1977 5 It is better to be cursed than to curse others. —Talmud Daily—Hospital Sympathy FRUIT BASKETS BIG SELECTION! GOWN 3 Times Daily Nation-Wide Delivery Wedding—Party—Bar Mitzva $ 39 TO $139 AU. SIZES — 6 To 44 SHANDELS 154 SOUTH WOODWARD (Nr. Maple) MI 2-4150 BIRMINGHAM $13.95 RODNICK— ' McINERNEY'S 779-4140 772-4350 do, 1 Sterling Silver and Solid Gold Anklets They're more popular than ever. Each is. beautifully crafted and hung on a chain. In Silver Top: Any name up to 7 letters $9.50Center: Twin hearts $7.50 Bottom: Plaque. suitable for engrav- ing, $7.50. 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