100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

November 22, 1996 - Image 94

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-11-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TEMPTING
BITS OF
INTEREST
AND INFO.

ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM

EDITOR

Round Up
Them
Cookies

Sure Roy Rogers was
tough, but when was
the last time he
whipped out a
rootin' tootin' deee-
licious cookie —
kosher, of course
— shaped like a
cow?
Partners, meet
Texas Tina.
Texas Tina

the concoctions' names: Buck-
a-Roos Chocolate Cookie Bits,
Pony Espressos, Cowtown
Cookies and the taxi-shaped
New York Traffic Treats.
New York?
Here's the story.
Texas Tina was born Tina
Blumenthal in New York,
where she worked as a design-
er and art director with ad

itr 151Z 44 s)

Driving
Home
A Mes-

T HE AP P LETREE

MILKS W141Ti CMOGOLATi
000 1 /.0 COOKS "US
(0,43S1rono l
- :

8

lives in San Antonio, where
she cooked up a recipe for suc-
cess producing kid-sized boxes
of pretzels, cookies, candy and
other snacks, all certified by
the Orthodox Union. The box-
es are mighty fine, too, as are

came next. This savvy cowgirl
not only comes up with the
recipes, she designs the boxes,
as well, and you'd be hard-
pressed to find anything cuter.
"She talks about the Lone
Star State with the
enthusiasm of a
born-again Tex-
an," the San Anto-
nio Express News reports.
She already owns more than
25 pairs of cowboy boots.
Texas Tina's treats are for
sale at the Gene Autry Mu-
seum in California, the
Alamo Restaurant in New
York, Marshalls through-
out the country (including
Southfield), Bed, Bath
and Beyond, and at Gum-
ball's in Port Huron and
Traverse City.

agencies
and for Gentlemen's
Quarterly magazine.
But deep in her heart,
e alWays loved Texas, and af-
:-ter her parents moved there
She:decided to join them in
1988.
Today, Texas Tina is the head
of Wild West Productions, Inc.
Her first taste treat was Cow-
town Cookies; Alamo Crackers

Sage
Mothe Against
Drunk Driving
(MADD) is sponsor-
ing a poster/essay
contest that reem-
phasizes it commit-
ment to stop
underage drinking.
Called "My
World. My Choice. No Alco-
hol," it is open to all students
in elementary through high
school. Students may submit
entries in each of the cate-
gories. The poster competition
is for to those in grades 1-12,
and the essay competition is for
those in grades 4-12. This year,
two new categories were
added to the contest for grades
7-12: black-and-white photos

and video , -, public
, . .• , .., an-
,,, :: - ; service
nouncerrients:-
--,.)q,F:)1-1Tii
post- i
H
b1.1- 31 : :4 3 1
s 12an- a e iPaf
mar
Alikeeliir-beclsifteil - l Ith
' ging'
''' ' 1. " -4' - r - t"'E
'• -e ' place'
pt .ilac ' :---"- '
1997. Judging
on March 12.

1

,

.



Sixty-six cash prizes
awarded, including $200 for
the first-place winner in the
high-school division; $150 for
the junior-high division; and
$100 for the elementary divi-
sion. Second- and third-place
winners also are awarded cash
prizes. All participants will re-
ceive a ribbon or certificate of
achievement.
First-place entries will qualify
for a national contest, where
students will compete for more
than $10,000 in prizes.
For an entry form and rules,
contact MADD, Michigan
State Office, 910 Eastlawn Dr.,
Midland, MI 48642, (517)
631-6233.

Baby Plans

You know your baby is a work
of art. Now everybody else
can know it, too.
Babyplans in Birmingham
will create an 8 1/2" by 11"
art print of your baby, com-
plete with technical specifica-
tions about how this-
wonderful little angel came
about (Daddy is the "archi-
tect" and Mom is the "devel-
opment engineer"). Plans also
reflect baby's Caucasian,
Asian, African or Hispanic eth-
nicity.
The idea for the project
started with John Loizon,
founder of an independent ar-

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan