Food CRAVING page120 0 4 sp. • • ;,\ •• • It IPt (formerly Oak Farms) SUPER SPECIALS GROUND MANY TIMES DAILY! FRESH ALL BEEF 8 HAMBURGER 5-8 VP lb. LB. PACKAGE FARMINGTON LOCATION ONLY CArnaE mANS -koltta SNO WHITE CAUUFLOWER 88 GARDEN FRESH 3 LEAN AND MEATY "FLANKS" BEEF SHORT RIBS !ea d 00% ORANGE JUICE CASE OF 48......$ 8.99 F OCRISP FRESH HEAD LETTUCE Great For Lunches ii,. 298 5 8 Head The Meat Department will open mid October in Oak Park You'll come in for our prices and come back for our quality. Guaranteed. Prices Good Thru Oct. 9, 1994 1 I-696 OAK PARK PLAZA 23101 COOLIDGE • 546-4355 'weii S 9 Mile UPTOWN FARMINGTON PLAZA 31550 GRAND RIVER • 471-3210 OPEN 7 DAYS TO THE PUBLIC PERSONAL CHECKS AND FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED c 8 Mile SERVICE OPEN 7 AM to MIDNIGHT THE. DET RO MONDAY - FRIDAY 122 southfiEld CHRYSLER Jeep Plymouth Eagle 28100 Telegraph Rd.-Telegraph at 11 1/2 Mile At Tel-Twelve Mall, South End Southfield • 354-2950 We Accept 7,F4 Personal Checks & Cash In the top of a double boiler, stir together 112 C. sugar, gelatin and salt. Stir in all Coca Cola. Beat egg yolks, stir into Cola mix- ture. Cook over boiling water, stirring constantly, until gelatin is dissolved, about 5 minutes. Re- move from boiling water stir in lime juice and rum. Chill until mixture mounds when dropped from spoon. Beat egg whites un- til soft peaks form. Gradually beat in remaining 1/2 c. sugar, beating until stiff and glossy. Fold gelatin mixture into whipped top- ping, then carefully fold this into egg whites. Chill several minutes then pile into pie crust. Sprinkle with grated peel. Chill several hours until firm. Makes One 9- inch pie. If desired, top with whipped cream or whipped top- ping. Recipes courtesy of Coca-Cola Co. ©Eileen Gottz 1994 I Tries To Move Games ut.W CI. CALIFORNIA 5 0R 19 in. graham cracker, chocolate cookie crust or baked pie shell 2 T. grated lime peel 77 Observant Player 0 FRESH EMPIRE KOSHER Limit 4 1 c. sugar, divided 1 T. unflavored gelatin 1/8 t. salt 1 c. Coca Cola 3 eggs, separated 1/4 c. fresh lime juice 1/4 c. dark rum 1 c. whipped cream or whipped topping k FARMINGTON LOCATION ONLY ► "Tender Snappin' Good" CUBA LIBRE CHIFFON PIE t 1R RPM 440 I , 5 8 11). imam BREASTS Pkgs, Please GREEN BEANS Preheat oven to 350. Rinse chicken pieces, pat dry, Coat chicken with the flour and the 2 t. salt. Brown chicken on all sides in the hot oil then place pieces in a 3 qt. casserole. (Discard drip- pings.) Combine all the remain- ing ingredients, mixing well. Spoon sauce over chicken, cover- ing all pieces. Cover casserole, bake for about 1114 hours or un- til chicken is fork tender. This is great served with hot cooked rice. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Can be prepared ahead, refrigerated un- til ready to bake. N cc c attIent ra nallive New York (JTA) — American and Jewish traditions are clash- ing in Longmeadow, Mass., where an observant public high school football player is trying to get the home games' schedule changed from Friday night so that he can do more than warm the bench. Teammates, classmates and local residents have rallied around Spencer Kimball, 17, a se- nior at Longmeadow High School and a running back on the varsi- ty football team. But their unusual efforts to convince school administrators to change the game schedule have been unsuccessful. Spencer's father, Jeffrey Kim- ball, describes the family as Lubavitch. Spencer and his brother, E.J., attend a local Lubavitch yeshiva study program three evenings a week. Spencer estimated that about 25 percent of the students at the high school are Jewish. The five varsity team home games are scheduled for Friday nights. So Spencer spent last year practicing hard but sitting out the games. He will be doing the same this year unless the school ad- ministration acquiesces to re- quests to try and change the home games to Saturday nights. So far, the school's athletic di- rector, in whose hands the deci- sion rests, has refused, saying that the schedule could not be changed to accommodate the needs of one family. "At one point the athletic di- rector told us that Friday night games are a tradition here," said Jeffrey Kimball. "But its only in the last two years that games are held on Fri- day nights, since the school got lights for night games. They used to play Saturday afternoons. It's not a 100-year-old tradition," he said. Although they have not yet succeeded in changing the game schedule, the issue has prompt- ed unusual solidarity among Spencer's teammates and class- mates. They collected signatures from 350 of the 900 students at Long- meadow High School in a last- minute effort last June as final exams were being given. When the petition was pre- sented to Schools Superintendent Thomas McGarry, he said it would be a bad idea to make a temporary accommodation that would benefit only one family, ac- cording to a Boston Herald report. But while Spencer spent the summer at a Jewish sports camp, the football team captains, sev- eral of the high school seniors and the class president went door-to- door and haunted supermarket parking lots collecting signatures from local adults. The new petition was present- ed to the local school board at an Aug. 24 meeting by the senior class president, Paul Fix. "We see this as a lesson in re- ligious tolerance and democracy."