28 Friday, October 26, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS In NI MI MI IIII =M EN NI NE NE M MTh ME NEM MI IN 1 I I ENTERTAINMENT? Seymour Schwartz Of Course! 356-8525 INVITATIONS? Hattie Schwartz of course! 352-7387 COOKING 1 • THE FINEST IN MUSIC • 1 MAN BAND II • COMICS • SPEAKER • DANCERS • CLOWNS • MIME • VENTRILOQUIST • MAGIC HEBREW COPY AVAILABLE • CARICATURE ARTISTS MI NM IN ME OM MI 1111111111111101111111111111MMIIINIIIIIIM11111111•11•11 FOR THE BEAUTIFUL INVITATIONS PEOPLE TALK ABOUT 11 MN Migdal - Tzion THE Students compile kosher cookbook BY GLORIA KAUFER GREENE United Synagogue Youth JEWISH YOUTH GROUP of the Detroit Metropolitan Area for Grades 9-through-12 If you want the fun and benefits of belonging to this outstanding organization please mail the Annual Dues: $10.00-Tax Deductible Make checks payable to: Migdal Tzion - U.S. Y. 29901 Middlebelt Road Farmington Hills, Ml 48018 One issue affects your life in the 48th District Court election. One candidate is addressing that issue! One issue affects your life, and your family's lives— Drunk drivers who are not properly punished, will drink and drive again. It's a real issue. Approximately 19,000 persons are killed and 660,000 injured in alcohol-related accidents yearly. Sadly, if you're like most, you know of someone who was killed or injured by a drunk driver. Endorsed by the UAW, Michigan Educational Association, American Federation of State, County & Municipal Em- ployees. • 26 years Oakland County Sheriff Department • Paid for by the Committee to Elect Hank Hansen 484 Kennett, Pontiac, Michigan 48055 15 For 12 JOIN B'NAI B'RITH TODAY AND GET 15 MONTHS OF MEMBERSHIP THRU DEC. '85 IF YOU JOIN NOW JOIN 500,000 MEMBERS AROUND THE WORLD FIGHT ANTI-SEMITISM HELP JEWISH YOUTH 10,000 MEN & WOMEN MEMBERS IN METRO DETROIT FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 552-8177 (M-F 9-5) "Offer does not apply for Oakland-Century Lodge" Edward Ajiouny is working now to help stop the problem! Ajiouny — He's working now, helping programs that prevent drug abuse among young people. Ajiouny — He's fighting for better alcohol awareness, and tougher enforcement programs. Ajlouny — He's committed to upholding the letter of the law— and he'll be tough on drunk drivers. Ajlouny. .. He won't be silent on an issue that affects your life! AJLOUNY FOR 48th DISTRICT JUDGE Paid for by the• Committee to Elect Edward Ajlouny. P.O. Box 1135. Bloomfield Hills . Michigan 48303. CASH REFUNDS MON.-SAT THURSDAYS 10'.00.8:45 FREE GIFT WRAP Scores of students have begun or returned to college. Most are probably looking forward to se- eing friends, donning fall clothes, buying new books, fixing up dorm rooms, and maybe even just being in the inspiring atmosphere of academia. I doubt, however, that many are licking their chops in anticipation of the dining-hall fare for which institutions of higher learning are justly in- famous. The problem compounds itself for students who observe kashrut. Some subsist on kosher TV- dinners, others become vegeta- rians, still others just become des- perate. Fortunately, Hillel often comes to the rescue, though the food there may not taste much bettr than elsewhere on campus. That is, unless you're a student at the University of Cincinnati. In the fall of 1977, director Rabbi Abie I. Ingber started a very clever competition that has kept members and guests of the Hillel Jewish Student Center superbly satiated ever since — at least every Erev Shabbat. Each Friday night, a different pair of student chefs prepare dinner for about 50 people. Each school quartr, one team of "master chefs" is chosen from among them, and at the end of the year, two chefs are honored as "grand masters." The friendly competition has done more than just provide gourmet kosher fare. It has encouraged the young chefs to learn about the laws of kashrut in relation to the preparation of food, and shown them that delectable meals are quite possible within these limits as well as those of economics. (Guests are charged only $4 a meal.) And, it has given them a culinary education that is quite helpful when they leave col- lege and set up their own kitch- ens. Now, thanks to the collabora- tive efforts of several Hillel stu- dents with the assistance of Rabbi Ingber and his wife, you need not transfer to the University of Cin- cinnati just to sample the fine kosher fare. In May 1983, the Hillel Jewish Student Center published Cook Unto Others: A Gourmet Kosher Cookbook, which features the best recipes from the Shabbat compettions along with a few personal treasures from celebrities such as President Re- agan and author Stephen Bir- mingham. Cook Unto Others is useful not only for students, but for anyone who is constantly on the lookout for creative kosher cuisine. The 140-page, 8 1/2-by-6-inch, spiral- bound cookbook has heavy cardboard covers that are de- signed to look and feel like leather. Inside is a • well-produced book that is easy to read and use. It is divided into chapters accord- ing to type of dish, and even in- cludes a chapter of Passover dis- hes. Each recipe in Cook Unto Others is marked with D, M, or P, for "dairy," "meat," or "pareve," and most include the number.of servings. The recipes are gener- ally not that difficult to prepare. The cookbook features tradi- tional Jewish fare, but the em- c7;