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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, November 9, 1956
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By Leah W. Leonard G
AJP Food Editor •>
Author of "Jewish Cookery” and “Jewish Holiday Cookbook” ^
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Time to brush upon baked
goodies, ladies! The chill winds
do blow, and the kiddies troop in
after school for a hot snack.
Nothing like home-baked cookies,
rolls, muffins and suchlike to go
with warm milk or other bev
erages for young and old. Try
the following suggestions;
NCIINEKKN (Continental Snails)
Dough
1 package dry yeast
'.i cup lukewarm water
1 tablespoon sugar
!•'i cups lukewarm milk (scald
ed and cooled)
5*-j cups sifted all-purpose flour
\\> teaspoons salt
3 eggs
H cup sugar
1 cup melted vegetable short
ening
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
Dissolve yeast in lukewarm
wnter to which the tablespoon
sugar has been added. Scald the
milk and let cool to lukewarm.
Sift together flour and salt into
a mixing bowl, make a well in
the center and stir in first the
dissolved yeast then about V\ of
the cooled milk to form a
“sponge" in center of flour. Beat
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eggs with sugar and add melted
shortening and grated rind. Stir
this into the “sponge” alternate
ly with remaining milk, until all
the flour has been combined in
to a ball of dough. Knead on a
floured board as lightly as con
sistency of dough permits. Re
turn dough to mixing bowl, cover
and chill m the refrigerator at
least 4 hours, better still, over
night. When ready for baking,
divide dough, which should be
fairly soft in the handling, and
roll out into 2 or 3 rectangles
about 8 x 12 inches, filling and
cutting each section as directed
below:
Filling:
1 cup dried currants or chopped
seedless raisings
1 ■> cup finely chopped nuts of
your choice
1 cup dark brown sugar, firm
ly packed for measuring
1 tabespoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons fine bread nr
cracker crumbs
a cup melted vegetable short
ening (or butter)
Combine Ingredients in the
order listed and spread evenly on
each rectangle of dough in turn.
Roll up tightly from the long
end, jellyroll fashion, a n d let
stand until all the rolls are form
ed. Grease cookie sheet. Cut rolls
into 1-inch rounds and place 3^
inches apart each way on the
cookie sheets. Cover and let rise
at room temperature until double
in bulk. Heat oven to 400’ F and
bake 15 to 18 minutes or til
browned to desired degree. Size of
Schneken depends on yourself.
FUDGE CUTS
■'i cup coarsely chopped mixed
nuts (walnuts, Brazil nuts,
pecans, etc.)
2 ounces unsweetened chocolate
'a cup vegetable shortening
1 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs, well beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 ■> cup sifted all-purpose flour
1 k teaspoon salt
Grease an 11 x 8-inch cake
pan and light the oven, heating
it to 400’ F while preparing the
following mixture: Melt the
chocolate in a saucepan over mod
erate heat or boiling water and
stir in half the chopped nut meats,
shortening, sugar, beaten eggs
and vanilla. Now stir in gradu
ally the sifted flour and salt till
free from flour-lumps. Spread
evenly over bottom of prepared
pan and sprinkle remainder of
chopped nuts over top. Bake 12
to 15 minutes at 400’ F. Remove
from oven, let cool in pan then
cut into 1 or D-j inch squares.
* * *
Mrs. Leonard can be reached by
writing here or 8200 Byron Ave.,
Miami Beach, Florida. For reply,
please enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope.
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MEMBER OF ‘BILDOR"
ASSN.
JA. 5-5685
J.W.B. to Expand Activities;
$2,275,000 Budget for 1957
NEW YORK, (JTA) — Plans
for expanding program services
for teenagers and young adults
in Jewish centers, as well as
religious and welfare activities
for Jewish military personnel at
68 overseas areas, were adopted
here today at the conclusion of
a four-day session of the Nation
al Jewish Welfare Board. More
than 250 community leaders in
all phases of JWV work partici
pated in the sessions.
A 1957 budget totalling $2,275,
000 was adopted at the parley.
The JWV is serving 352 Jewish
Community Centers which have
a membership of 565,000, and
meeting the religious and welfare
needs of 150,000 Jews in the U.S.
armed forces and Veterans Ad
ministration hospitals.
The JWB decided at its session
last night to solve the critical
shortage of trained professional
workers in the Jewish Communi
ty field by launching an intensi
fied recruitment program. The de
cision was taken after hearing
that there are 200 vacancies in
350 Centers affiliated with the
National Jewish Welfare Board.
The critical shortage of train
ed professional Center workers
required by Centers and the re
cruiting program to deal with
this problem were described by
Joseph Goldstein of Rochester,
N. Y. In the absence of quali
fied personnel some Centers are
beginning to engage untrained
people, thus threatening the in
tegrity of both old and new
Center programs, Mr. Goldstein
disclosed. He also said that for
the first time there has develop
ed a serious shortage of experi
enced professional workers for su
pervisory positions as well as a
need for trained specialists in the
arts, pre-school programs and
health and physical education.
The growing gap between the
constantly rising requirements of
the Jewish Community Center
fields for JWB service and JWB’s
capacity to meet these needs was
underscored by Mrs. Florence
Heller of Chicago, chairman of
the JWB’s Jewish Community
Center Division. While the an
nual expenditures of all local
Centers rose 45 per cent from
194!) to 1955 and the number of
professional workers employed by
Centers climbed 48 per cent dur
ing the same period, the budget
of the Jewish Community Center
Division decreased 30 per cent
and its staff was curtailed from
38 to 22, she pointed out.
As evidence of what has been
happening in the Center field,
which depends on JWB for day-
to-day assistance in all fields of
programming, staffing, adminis
tration and organization, Mrs.
Heller said: total Center budgets
have reached $16,314,000; Cen
ter professional staffs number 1,
350 full-time workers; 285 Cen
ters own their own buildings; 107
Centers have either completed
or are now engaged in new con
struction programs; Centers op
erate 117 summer resident camps,
203 summer day camps and 115
nursery schools; more than 10,
000 people serve on Center boards
and committees.
Rabbi Joseph Lookstein report-
“Frontiers of Faith”
Nov. TV Programs
“Frontiers of Faith,” NBC’s re
ligious television hour, has an
nounced the following programs
of Jewish interest for November.
“Lawyer from Boston,” Nov.
11, in honor of the Louis D.
Brandeis Centennial; “The Forest
of the Night” on Nov. 18, and
“Cry A Warning” in celebration
of Hanukah on Nov. 25.
The program is ctrried in the
South on the following stations:
Albany, WALB-TV; Chattanoo
ga, WGRP-TV; Columbia, WIS-
TV; Columb us, WDAK-TV;
Greenville, S. C., WFBC-TV;
Jacksonville, WJHP-TV; Knox
ville, WATE-TV; Mobile, WALA-
TV; Montgomery, WSPA-TV;
Nashville, WSM-TV; Savannah,
WSAV-TV; Winston-Salem, N.C.,
WSJS-TV; Atlanta, WSB-TV.
ed that the Department of De
fense is “calling more and more
upon the JWB chaplaincy ser
vice to care for the special morale
needs of men not in combat and
therefore with more leisure and
more problems.” There are now
101 Jewish chaplains on full-time
duty and by the end of 1957
there will be 115, in addition to
the 272 who serve as part-time
chaplains, Rabbi Lookstein re
ported.
“Variety” Reports
TV Play on
Jews Cancelled
NEW YORK, (JTA) — A pro
jected telecast of John Gals
worthy’s “Loyalties” — a play
dealing with what was described
as “the sensitive area of Jews
in English society" — has been
cancelled despite an endorsement
by the American Jewish Com
mittee and approval by the Na
tional Broadcasting Company, it
was reported in Variety, show
business trade newspaper. The
newspapei* said that it wa's not
known who was responsible for
the decision to cancel perform
ance of the play, which was to
have been shown on the “Kaiser
Aluminum Hour.”
The report added that it was
made either by Kaiser itself or
by Unit Four Productions, which
produces the dramas. A spokes
man for the advertising agency
of Young & Rubica, as well as
NBC sources, had indicated that
the “routine ” rejection of the
play took place at the end of
the summer. But, "Variety” point
ed out, it had learned that the
outline had been submitted to
the AJC only the week before.
The AJC had approved it, the
report added, on the basis that
it did not involve sterotypes and
is actually helpful.
Reform Group
Sponsors Hanukah
Photo Contest
As part of the Jewish holiday
of Hanukah, youngsters of all
ages are competing in a gigantic
national photo contest through
the religious schools of the Re
form temples of the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations.
There are over 1,000,000 Reform
Jews in the United States and
Canada.
The contest will be judged by:
NBC-TV Star Steve Allen, re
nowned performer and recording
personality Harry Belafonte; Ben
Wickersham, Photo Editor of
Look magazine; Oscar M. Lazrus,
vice chairman of the UAHC, and
Dr. Maurice N. Eisendrath, pres
ident of UAHC.
Winners will compete for a
Benrus Embraceable and a Ben-
rus Waterproof watch; a $200
Revere DeLuxe Tape Recorder
and Revere 8 mm ft^vie Camera;
the latest Bulova Transistor ra
dio; portable TV sets and dozens
of other valuable prizes — in all,
over 200 gifts.
Any member of a temple is
eligible to compete. Parents can
assist a youngster if they wish
to do so. Only professional pho
tographers and members of the
UAHC staff may not enter the
contest.
Many people could retire
comfortably on what their ex
perience has cost them.
ONE-STOP STORE FOR
H-I-S
Hanukah Gift
ZIMMERMAN’S
Finer Men’s Wear
Piedmont Hotel - 108 P’tree St.
Choose the color and style
to fit the guy - “Pops,”
Granddad or Sonny.
TEP Tap Architect
As “Man of the Year”
Architect Max Abramovitz,
twice winner of the American
Institute of Architects award of
merit, will be honored on No
vember 14 as “Outstanding Man
of the Year” by Tau Epsilon Phi,
collegiate social fraternity, ac-i
cording to Isadore Heiman, At
lanta. national president.
The award will feature the fra
ternity’s annual founders day
dinner at Belmont Plaza Hotel
in New York.
Among the outstanding ex
amples of Mr. Abramovitz’s work
are his work on the United Na
tions Headquarters in New York,
the Three Chapels at Brandeis
University and the Socony Mobil
Building in New York. He is a
trustee of Mount Sinai Hospital
in New York, on the advisory
committee to the Princeton
School of Architecture, a member
of the board of consultants to
the Columbia U. School of Ar
chitecture and vice president of
the New York Building Congress.
He joined the TEP chapter at
University of Illinois in 1926 and
received a B.S. degree there in
1929 and an MS. degree from
Columbia in 1931.
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