6 - The Canadian Jewish News, Friday, Dec. 9,1960
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GKl»]NWfflLOW KITCHEN IS "GIFT BAZAAR WORKSHOP'*
Long before my regular Hanukah baking and cooking begins, our home is filled with tantalizing odours from the kitchen as gifts jare in the making! I make up many a gift box with cookies and. confectionery . . . and I have yet to meet anyone who is not delighted with this sort of ipresent.
Here are two personal fa-voriter. . . MARSHMALLOW ROLLS and CHOCOLATE GINGER DEUGHTS. (This latter is a particular favorite with gourmets, because good ginger confections are very rare. And these are utterly luscious!)
Neither of these recipes is hard to make ... and you can store them till it's time to send them out. A mixture of the two makes an attractive and toothsome box. And for added variety, use Butterscotch CfflPITS instead of the regular choco. late.
MARSHMALLOW ROLLS Ingredients:
% c. iciing sugar
Mi c. chopped walnuts
1 tsp. vanilla
1 egg - well beaten 30 marshmallows cut into small pieces
1 8oz. pkg. desicated coconut 1 6oz. pkg. CHIPITS
Method:
Melt CHIPITS and marshmallows over hot water, stiring until blended, add egg, vanilla, icing sugar . and walnuts—mix well. Spread coconut on waxeH paper. Allow mixture to stand until cobl enough to handle. Form into small balls and roll in coconut.
CHOCOLATE GINGER DEUGHTS
Ingredients:
1 6-oz. package CfflPITS 20 marshmallows (diced) 1 package VAN KIRK TRUE ROOT GINGER (diced)
Method:
Melt package of CHIPITS in top of double boiler. As soon as chocolate is melted add marsh-mallow pieces and ginger pieces, stirring till all pieces are fairly well coated. Form in balls on waxed paper, and set to cool in room between 55 degrees and 68 degrees F.
The Woman And The Home
The Lybhs Den
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By Leonard Lyons
I WAS AT NORMAN MAILER'S SAD PARTY
Norman Mailer, famous AmericanJewish author of the the World War H classic. "The Naked and the Dead" has recently been in the news. He has become the victiin of some psyche disturbances.
Our columnist Leonard Lyons was a guest at the party during which Mailer"s trouble started. His story follows:
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I was at the Norman Mailer's party the previous Saturday night. 1 suspected what the guest list would be like when two young men entered the elevator ahead of me. The operator glanced at their attire — slacks, sneakers and sweaters — and pressed the button for Mailer's floor, the 13th. He knew at once they'd be Mailer's guests. The operator seiemed surprised when I too asked for "13". After all, I wore a hat, suit, topcoat and tie — definitely not a "Beat".
Mrs. Mailer, a tall, attractive brunette, was at the entrance hallway. I'd heard that they battled often — the last time was at Basin St. E., where he walked out and left her there with friends. Mailer was* in the living room, clutching a photo of himself taken at Birdland the night he was arrested. He seemed to believe the photo had some legal significance. "If you want to see it,*' he challenged a man, "try to take it from me."
It's been quite apparent, for more than a year, that the gifted writer needed psychiatric help. He seemed to be forever wanting to fight everybody — including City Hall. He told me of his plans to run for mayor. And, because Esquire failed to put his name on the cover, he wrote to Clay Felker, his friend and editor there, that when he became mayor he would have Esquire investigated.
There was little drinking at the party, because the way to
the bar was overcrowded. I overheard a tall, odd-looking lady say: "I spent three years in Paris translating pornographic novels under my own name, but it wasn't fun." More people started drifting in — Beats I didn't know. Mailer seemed a-lone as he listened to them, tense and with a trace of an odd smile, as if he really was trying to hear some distant music.
I started to leave, and he showed me — without making me fight to see it — the Bird-land photo. He'd phoned me twice last week, and I mentioned to him, as I left, that the next time he got into trouble and needed a lawyer late at night, I was available — and wouldn't charge a fee. He smiled that odd, grim smile again. Mrs. Mailer stopped me as 1 went through the door: "I wanted to talk to you. There's something I want to tell you."
But more Beats were arriving. "I'll be back later," I told Mrs. Mailer. "You'll tell me then." I didn't return.
"LITERATURE"
• Maurice Zolotow's book on Marilyn Monroe will be published in England by W. H. Allen. The British version will include the two nude photos of Miss Monroe. The author, who couldn't get those nude photos into his U.S. edition, asked the British publishers how they could avoid the censorship. "We did it," he was told, "by raising the price of the book to one guinea. This puts it into the class of literature."
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• Aaron Copland, the composer whose 60th birthday was celebrated throughout the music world last month, has been litOe changed by his fame — except pnly to Oscar Levant: After a'fOur-hour visit to Levant's home, Copland left— and Levant said: "Aaron, you're developing into an egomaniac. You used to be able to sit here and listen to me talk all night."
Hoshe Sharett, ex-Prime Minister of Israel, was in N.Y. Nov. 29 to hear his nephew, Kenneth Chertok, sing at Town HaU.
ACCORD: In a speech in N.Y. recently, David Susskind revealed the last words spoken to him by Khrushchev after their TV session. When Khrushchev left, he said to Susskind: "You have lovely eyes; I think I could negotiate with you."
• The bust of Nasser made by the Italian sculptor Sellini was shipped six months ago, by mistake, to Israel. It's at the Customs shed there now.
• Ivy Litvinoff, widow of the Soviet diplomat, has translated a Tolstoi story for the December issue of Vogue . . . Arthur Miller said the other night that he'll soon have a play ready for Broadway.
• SOLUTION: Adele Nathan and Howard Lanin produced a land-development show near Albuquerque, N.M. They hired James Garner to play a .card shark, Dennis Day to play a hick and Denise Darcel to play a dance hall doll. On the afternoon of the show the cast hadn't arrived, and the report was that the cars were jammed, bumper to bumper, for 11 miles. They got the cast out of the line of traffic by searching and finding the marked car, via helicopter.
• PLAYERS: Hank Green-berg was in El Morocco, discussing his project for an American League ball club in Los Angeles. He was asked a-bout the pool of big-league players each club had made avail-
able for purchase by the new clubs in both leaques. '1 know those ballplayers being offered, for a pennant race," said Grieen-berg. "I wouldn't even lead them through the Red Sea."
• Geoffrey Home, who has been making a movie in Yugoslavia, is flying home this week end to see his new daughter, who was bom at Doctors Hospital last Saturday afternoon. I danced with her. A few hours later she phoned me from the hospital: "Fll bet", she said, today was the first time in your life that you danced with two girls at once. I just gave birth to a daughter."
Yol Brynner, who co-starred in Anatole Litvak's film, "Anas-tasia," now is serving as st^ll
photographer for litvak's new film. Brynner is a dedicated cameraman who arrives at the studio carrying five cameras, and in a chauffeur-driven $27,. 000 Rolls-Royce. He bought the car via an ad: The owner, Stayjos Niarchos, had ordered it for his wife, who decided, after one ride, that it didn't suit her personality. Brynner bought it from him for $11,000.
Music Note: Frank Glazer will give his piano concert at Town Hall, November 16th. He recently played a concert in Athens. The notices reached him in Paris, where his wife took them to the Greek Embassy for translation. An Embassy aide started to read the reviews and Mrs. Glazer anxiously asked: "What does it say?" ... "It says" was the diplomat's practical resume, "that you married the right man."
• Kirk Douglas was to have flown from Boston on that, doomed Electra, but canceled because of press interviews . . Dag Hammarskjold wrote those historic UN speeches replying to Khrushchev. He tested them fiist on his aides.
fCopyright. The Canadian Jewish News and New York Poat>
Keep S mil tag —
KEEP SMILING DOUBLE-DUTY
The housewife was interviewing an applicant for a job on her household staff.
"Do you know how to serve company?"
"Yes, ma-am, both ways,'' was the reply.
"Just what do you mean, 'both ways'?"
"So'b they'll come back or so's they won't." ,' *' *
ONE GUESS
During a bad electrical storm, mother thought her young son would be frightened, so she tiptoed into his room to comfort him.
The boy opened his eyes and mumbled: "What's Daddy doing with the television set now?"
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LOOK AGAIN
A beautiful Hollywood actress was trying on a dress in the studio wardrobe department. "I don't like that color," -commented the designer. "Now
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"I x^rtainly would," replied the actress. "I'm not wearing stockings."
* •
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"Wliat sort of fellow is he?"
"Well, it's like this. After a beggar has touched him for a dime, he'll tell you he ha; just given a little dinner to an acquaintance of his."
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Headaches For Nothing
BY RUTHIE
Whenever thei^e's an affair to attiend, I get butterflies in the pit of my stomach prior to our going out. And why? Because my better half refuses to don a tuxedo!
As a salesman, Ned entertains his clients often; Lunch, a five o'clock cocktail or early dinner presents no problem. However, when something of a more formal nature appears, it's sheer murder.
I'm accustomed to the pattern of events by now. Here is a typical morning..
''Dear," gingerly, ''don't forget about tonight."
"What about tonight?"
"You have to wear your tux".
"Who says so?" ~
"But all the men will be dressed up!"
"Don't 'but' me. I'U go as I please.'^ ^
"Honey, you'll feel embarrassed."
"I never feel embarrassed. That I leave for the women/'
More firmly, "What will nay friends say?"
"So! L knew there was something botherilig you. Trouble is, you have nothing to do all day so you think up schemes to torture me."
"Nothing to do!" I shriek. "All I do is prepare four school lunches, do the dishes, make half a dozen beds, dust, mop, answer the phone and doorbell a dozen times an hour, shop, manage to look fresh as a daisy and goodness knows what else! That's all."
By that time I run to another part of the house with hands agahist my ears so as not to ^ear the barrage which follows.
Why do I start this conversation in the first place? Very sheepishly he concedes, having the effrontery to say he intended all along to wear bis tuxedo.
• ♦ * ♦
The other day we indulged in another similar free-for-all. This time there was an added twist.
"I gained weight. The pants won't fit," from him.
"The suit was loose last time. So now, if you'll just hold in your breath you'll get by." i
"That's what yoo think! I'm not wearing them."
With that, he left the house.
All day long 1 seethed. The aspirins I took had no effect.
"Okay," I muttered to myself. "Go like a slob. See if 1 care. Why should it worry me? Let it bother you for a change. I've had it!"
That evening, when my stubborn mule arrived home early, I was ready and waiting. I said nary a word. From the corner of my eye I noticed the unusual puttering about. He kept groping in the bureau drawer. Out came the fancy cuff links, the soft, frilly shirt. Then, loudly enough for me to hear, he yelled,
"Freddie, where's my tuxedo? Were you wearing it?"
He knew full well where it hung. That was just for my benefit. But 1 wouldn't budge an inch. I ignored him. Let him grovel. 1 deserved my moment of victory.
He finally presented himself, grinning, "I'm all set, boss. Let's go."
* • » *
There are many, many men who love "dressing up". A tuxedo is no different from any other suit. So why the hullabaloo? My husband, though, belongs to the vast majority who prefer certain preliminary antics. Their silly tantrums merely prove what big babies they are. They must have the fun of being contrary. They think it's cute when wifie gets mad. And she's a dope because she does—for nothing.
(COPYRIGHT, 1960, CJN)
RUBENSTEIN'S
KOSHER POULTRY PRODUCTS
3323 BATHURST
RU. 1-4294
602 COLLEGE ST. LE. 1-8941
Under Daily Kosher Supervision of RABBI DAVID OCHS AND KASHRUT DIVISION OF THE CANADIAN JEWISH CONGRESS
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• FRYERS — 5 LBS. AND UP — 32c Lb.
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# SOUP CHICKENS — 27c LB.
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