COMPILED BY ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Guess Which President's Granddaughter Wed Mr. Cohen I t's party time again for the presidents. Cele- brating birthdays this month: Andrew Jackson (March 15), James Madi- son (March 16), Grover Cleveland (March 18) and John Tyler (March 29). Now, all you Albert Einsteins, see if you can correctly identify the birthday presidents with the following stories (and don't cheat and look at the bottom for answers before you even wager a guess!): 1) This man was the only president who could read He- a brew, he skill acquired in religious studies at Princeton University. He also was the first presi- dent to \ _ appoint a Jew to a diplo- matic post. Mordechai Manuel Noah served from 1813-1816 as consul gen- eral to Tunis. 2) Noah later became a New York City newspaper editor and a Democratic Party partisan. He threw his support behind this candidate's 1828 bid for the presidency. When the he won, candidate appointed Noah as survey- or of the Port of New York. 3) When this president referred to Americans as a "Christian people," it incurred a protest from Jacob Ezekiel, the Jewish communal leader of Richmond, Va. In his reply to Mr. Ezekiel, the president admitted his error. He stated, "For the people of whom you are one, I can feel none other than profound respect." 4) During this pres- ident's first term, he nomi- nated John Kieley as U.S. minister to Aus- tria. The Austrian govern- m en t refused to accept Kieley because his wife was Jewish. The president left the post vacant rather than capitulate to the Austrians. In 1968, this president's granddaughter, Marion, married Alfred Cohen. ANSWERS: 1) James Madison 2) Andrew Jackson 3) John Tyler 4) Grover Cleveland. What's Cooking In Israel he Israel Embassy in Washington, D.C., has produced a cookbook that will give Americans a new taste of Israel. Distributed by the Buena Vista, Calif., Chapter of Hadassah, the cookbook includes recipes from the diverse commu- nities throughout Israel and reflect the geograph- ical origins of the people who have settled there. In addition to tradi- tional Jewish favorites, recipes in the book include baba ghanouj (eggplant salad), bourekas, baklava and shaksbouka (eggs in tomato sauce), Preceding the recipes, all of which area kosher, are explana- tions of their history and development. The cookbook costs $3 plus '75 cents postage. Checks should be made payable to Hadassah. To order, write Ethel Morrow, P.O. Box 230970, Encinitas, CA 92023. Of Chic en, urger And Really Tough Men erusalem (JTA) - e ll' McDonald's has filed Free Pesach Checklist T National he Halachah Hotline is offering a free checklist to help everyone through those last, thrilling days of scouring the house for Pesach. The guide offers a detailed listing of house- hold items that must be thoroughly cleaned and searched for chametz. For a copy of the check- list, send a self- addressed, stamped enve- lope to the National Halachah Hotline, 225 Division Ave. #3-C, Brooklyn, NY 11211. Rabbi's Brother Saves The Day or months, the Israel office of the North American Conference on Ethiopian Jewry was overflowing with duffel bags, cartons and suitcas- es full of children's clothes, school supplies, toys and other much-need- ed things donated from America. The only prob- lem: there was no place to put it all. Then Rabbi Philip Spectre of the Masorti movement (brother of Adat Shalom's Rabbi Efry Spectre) found free stor- age space for the NACOEJ. Now everything has a temporary place - until it finds a permanent home with a new immi- grant family. For information about donating items or taking a duffel bag to Israel for the NACOEJ, contact the Conference at 165 E. 56th St., New York, NY 10022. F Empire Koshe oultry for allegedly infringing on its trademark. an official Complaint Perdue has long based against Israel for its its advertising campaign efforts to prevent . the on a slogan made famous company from importing by owner and spokesman its own potatoeS for frari- Frank Perdue: "It takes a Chi.ses slated to open tough man to make a ten- there by the end of next der chicken." d Now Empire, year. in a new is a vertising carapitign The company filed the k complaint with the U.S.‘ using the tag line, "It government hat Israel was obstruct- ' man to 'make if .kosher 4 4 1:g vei r rri e ln e ti ‘ o en . agnr_dautnhdast eh a i ce k s en a "niin ev de e li.'t(I4gje : Moses Israeli potatoes do not of 'Mici olding ' h the 10 dm t meet the standards for . to Perdue's its French fries:.. Adeording t- ca m- McDonald's has begun aNV3- s constitutes issuing franchiSes to of Perdue ' s local . ‘businessMen. infringe—iitl_ and:. false, throtighout' Israel; .-But it ;also' as - insisted that it be advertising' Perdue says `e ne ,adVertise,- lloWed tesiinPort its own . ii0; cr: have 'Israeli‘ e new cour t t meet tkrin raillero s f poto gtra°wes to nd refused e is strict standards. didrt°t . asg i m . s r u eie e r:o a a a ry ts, tempor .ns eanwh le in other ,s Museum Hosts Chagall Exhibit T he Art Institute of Chibago is hosting through May 7 a set of murals created in the 1920s by Rus- sian painter Marc Chagall to decorate the State Jewish Chamber Theatre in Moscow. "Marc Cha- gall: The Jewish Theatre Murals" pre- sents works Mr. Chagall considered his master- pieces. They explore such themes as ‘ , music, dance, \ drama and literature. The exhibit, on loan from the State Treti'iakov Gallery, will return to Moscow following its visit in Chicago. Completing the exhibit will be photos, posters and sketches to help create a picture of the development of the secular Jewish the- ater move- ment during an unusual period of in- novation and experimenta- tion in the post-Revo- lutionary Soviet Union. Mr. Chagall became in- volved in a campaign to promote a na- tional Jewish art program early on in his career. He was commissioned to de- sign sets and costumes for 40r-s, opening night - Jan. 1, 1921 - of the new State Jewish Chamber Theatre. 11