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THE CANAOtAK 1KWI5H BEVIEW
COHEN'S HAYMISHA FARFEL
mGOUM ST. TORONTO, CAN.
Canada's Urge* Setltaf HAYMISHA PARFIL
r KOSHER _PAREVC
At jfw feveurtte gre<eY � eelfcleas as a side 4Uk with gravy
"CUMrea Leve It."
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HIGH HOLY DAY SIRVICES IN SYNAGOGUES AFFILIATIO WITH THI SYNAGOGUI COUNCIL OF GREATER MONTREAL
ROSH
HASHANAH:
YOM KIPPUR:
Friday evening, September 28th Saturday, September 29th Sunday, September 30th
Sunday evening, October 7th Monday, October 8th
Congitt*i*o* A dirt H__
Rtbbi
Ctntor
Auxiliary Strvkti
Charles B�nder Im�c J. Tcichcr
B. Goldb�rg� Community Hall & School Auditorium
J. Dtia
Dr. Eliaicr Ebntr Htrahcl Stem
UiUr R. Ro.ntr M. K.ulfltt Community Hal!
Allan M. Langoct H. Giuer
Morris Halp�rn Nathaniel Schub Banquet Hall
Sidney Shoham Tibor Holcier SocUl Hall
David Roth J. Roienzwcig
Morri* Werner
Nafuli Fogel
W. Frischnun Auditorium
ADATH ISRABL McEachran and Ducharme Ave.
BBTH DAVID � BBTH YITZCHOK � KBHAL YESHURUN 422 St. Joeepfi Bird. Weit BBTH AARON 812? Stuart Ave..
BBTH HAMBDRASH
HAGADOL 4603 MacKenxie St.
BBTH EL 1000 Lucerne Road
BBTH ORA 2600 Badeaux Street
BBTH ZION < 57 AO Hud ton Ave. CHBVRA KADISHA � B'NAIJACOB 9237 Clanranald Ave. 172 Fairmouat W. CHBVRA SHAAS 4170 St. Urbaia St. CHEVRA THILIM � PINSKBR KINYAN TO RAH 1904 Van Home Are. SHAAR HASHOMAYIM 430 Kensington Ave., SHAAR SHALOM New Protectant School 102nd Ave., Chomedey,
SHAARE ZBDBK 3 303 Roiedale Ave.
SHAARE ZION 5573 Cote S*. Luc Road
SHBVET ACHIM 5829 Cote Dee Neigee Road
SHOHRIM LABORER � BETH YEHUDAH �� SHAARE TBFILLAH 6410 Weithury Ave. SPANISH tc PORTUGUESE 5471 Lemieux Ave. TEMPLE BMANU-EL 4100 Sherbrooke St. W. TEMPLE BBTH SHOLOM 6666 Terrebonne St.
TIFERES JBRUSALBM Eastern Cote St. Luc and Hampetead Baity and Randall
YOUNG ISRAEL
OF MONTREAL 6235 Hillsdale Roed
YOUNG ISRABL
OF ST. LAURENT 805 Gougeon Street
YOUNG ISRAEL
OF CHOMEDEY 1025 Elizabeth Blvd.
YOUNG ISRAEL
OF VAL ROYAL 2855 Victor Dore
Memberthip and pew arrangements may. be made at Hie reipeetlve tyna-
eoque*. _ Weekdayt 7-10 P.M. and Sundays 10 A.M. - 1 P.M.
AFFILIATE YOURSELF WITH THE SYNAGOGUE OF YOUR CHOICE
Wilfred Shuchat N. Mendelson Community Hall &
School Auditorium
Morton M. Deut*<h Rev. N. Kroll Office:
483 - 83rd Ave., Chomedey
A. Bernard Leffell M. Fogel Auditorium
Maurice S- Cohen Solomon Gisser Community Hall Joseph Grunblatt G. Berkovits Community Hall
Dr. Chaim N. Dtoburg
Arieh L. Suber Lower Auditorium
Dr. Solomon Frank G. Aronson
Main Auditorium 6C Lower Auditorium
Dr. Harry J. Stern Ouo Staeren New Social
Auditorium
L. Poller David Hartman
M. Lewittea
Luciano Delia Pergola
I. Abramchik
Z. Halperin Community Hall
Meyer KUelnik Max Muhlstock
Solomon J. Spiro Jacob Singer
Irving Rosner Max Richler
Say Happy New Year Once Again! Rosh Hashonah Commences at Sundown, on September 28
Send in your greeting coupon now with $3. It must be in the Review office by September 14, to appear in the September 28, New Year Festival Magazine Issue. Be sure the greeting coupon is filled out correctly and return It with payment in cheque or money order only,, to The Canadian Jewish Review, 1500 Stanley Stmt, Montreal 25, or to 21 Dundas Square, Toronto 1. Include the names of your children at home along with your name, so that their wishes will go with your wishes to your family and friends.
Herewith enclosed find three dollars for which you may print the following greeting in the September 28 issue of THE CANADIAN JEWISH REVIEW.
Mr* and Mrs*
of
wisJi tfceir relatives and friends a HAPPY and H0SHRQUS NEW YEAR
CLASS IN COOKERY
CHOCOLATE PEPPERMINT PINWHEEL COO
one-half cup mOTgatine one. egg
one teaspoon peppermint
extract one square (orie ounce)
unsweetened chocolate
one^qudrter teaspoon salt . three-quarters cup sugar one and one-quarter cups
sifted flour one-quarter teaspoon baking powder
one tablespoon milk
Blend iri&rgarine, sugar, egg, milk, and pepermint extract. Add combined dry Ingredients, and mix thoroughly. Divide dough-into two parts. To one-half, add the chocolate which has been melted, and mix thoroughly. Roll out each portion of dough to one-half inch in thickness on waxed paper. Dough will be soft. Place white dough on chocolate dough. Remove paper and roll as for jelly roll. Wrap In waxed paper. Chill thoroughly two or three hours. Slice one-quarter-inch in thickness and place cookies on baking sheet which has been lightly greased with margarine. Bake in a moderate oven at 375 degrees about ten minutes, or until lightly browned. This yields three dozen cookies.
Mrs. I. Mandelsys. 4722 Maplewood Avenue, Montreal.
SOUR CREAM CAKE
one-half cup shortening one teaspoon vc
one cup sugar one teaspoon baking powder
two eggs one-quarter teaspoon salt
two cups flour one cup sour cream
one teaspoon baking soda
Sift twice: flour, baking powder, and salt. Put vanilla, shortening, sugar, and eggs in bowl and beat. Dissolve the baking soda in the sour cream, and alternately add the flour mixture and sour cream mixture. Pour batter into a nine-or-ten-inch tubular pan or, square greased pan, and bake at 350 degrees for forty minutes.
Mrs. Ronald Cohen,
4854 Bathurst Street Toronto.
Sabbath Condlei will be kindled on Friday, September 14, at 6.52 p.m., D.S.T., in Montreal Friday, September 14, at 7.16 p.m., D.S.T., in Toronto Friday, September 21, ot 6.39 p.m., D.S.T., in Montreal Friday, September 21, at 7.03 p.m., D.S.T., in Toronto
?
Tishri 1, 5723, foil* on Saturday, September 29
Rosh Hashonah commences on Friday evening, September 28 Yom Kippur commences on Sunday evening, October 7
African Boy At Technion Courts African Girl At Hebrew U. Through Hebrew
1Y JAC0I I SENSIIAK, OF NiW YORK, PRESIDENT OF AMERICAN TECHNION SOCIETY
The story making the rounds in Haifa, Israel, today, is that of a young male student from one of the new republics in Africa, who was interested in furthering his friendship with a young female student from another African country, but who found that the language barrier was a rather severe obstacle..His native country had originally been a British colony while Jhers had been a French possession; and each of these youngsters was mono-lingual.
However, since they were both studying in Israel, he at the Tech-nion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, and she at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, they were quickly becoming masters of modern Hebrew. At last reports, the friendship was blossoming between the two, thanks in large measure to their Hebrew-accented discussions, letters, and phone calls. This is but one of the profoundly interesting and deeply human stories that one runs across in a visit to Israel in general, and in the Technion, high on Mount Carmel, in particular.
I do not think that there is another institution of higher learning quite like the Technion. Outwardly the Institute closely resembles some of our finer American institutes devoted to the engineering sciences. The Technion is proud of its high standards of teaching and research, of its modern laboratories and equipment, and of its continuing efforts to retain its hard-earned reputation as a university of great quality. The graduates of the Technion, some 600 annually, are accepted by practically every university in the United States and Western Europe whan they apply for graduate work and fellowships.
The nearly $.600 foil-time students at the Technion, including nearly 600 who are working for their Master's degrees and Vh.D.% are a rather serious group of people; and they are eunwnhil oUsr
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in the Institute's laboratories, as well as in the minds of some of its eminent academic leaders, is of increasing and even crucial importance.
In recent years, Technion has assumed still a new role as a provider of technical education to young men and women from the African and Asian nations. This role of international cooperation, woven about the pillar of science and technology, is a sure bridge across which Israel must one day move in its efforts to achieve peace and progress, not only for itself but for the entire Middle East.
than their counterparts in other parts of the world. The reasons for this are quite simple: Firstly, Israel's universal military conscription makes it almost impossible for a youth to begin his higher education, except in special cases, until he is about twenty or twenty-one years of age. Secondly, at least half of the students are newcomers to Israel and are still continuing the immigrant's struggle of a new life in a ne wland.
There is still another element that permeates the atmosphere of Technion which cannot help but be noticed, even by the most insensitive of tourists and visitors, of whom there are hundreds from every country of the world, practically every day. The feeling that transmits itself from the students and the teachers is a feeling that says: "We know that a tremendous responsibility rests upon us as future engineers and architects of Israel, and if we fail in our course, we will be failing not only ourselves but the whole of Israel as well."
This is not to state that the students walk around with halos. They are, like students everywhere, perfectly normal young people, who gripe about their teachers and about exams, who scramble about to earn extra money to supplement their traditionally slim income, and who stay up late at night studying and cramming.
Most important of all is the fact that Technion is the only source of technologically trained manpower. The future of Israel has been carefully planned, and it is crystal dear that Israel will become a highly industriaUxed nation, leaning heavily on its cadres of trained and qualified engineers and technicians. Each student at tit TeehaJon is potentially an employer of scores and even hundred* of Israeli families, the growtnc pare and applied research jrojessf that are beta* eondocted
Israel Study Of Aged Links Diet And Heart Trouble
Two groups of immigrants, all over the age of seventy, living side by side in Israel under similar conditions, have provided a natural testing ground to support the theory of a causal relationship between a high trtlMesterol animal fat diet and heart orsease. One group consisted of two hundred and twenty men and women from Yemen, a desert kingdom on the Arabian peninsula, and the second group was composed of two hundred and sixty newcomers from European countries.
They live together in a village for the aged, Sbaar Menashe, maintained by Malben, the Joint Distribution Committee program for aged, ill, and handicapped immigrants. J. D. C. receives its funds chiefly from the United Jewish Appeal.
The village for the aged is divided into a number of self-contained units, each with its own kitchen and dining room. Both groups were given the same basic food. However, the Yemenites adjusted their diet to conform with their own eating habits. There was no significant difference in the calorie -intake between the two groups. However, the Yemenites' consumption of animal protein and fat was relatively low (24 grams of animal proteins and 16 grams of fats daily, compared to the Europeans' 60 grams and 35 grams respectively). On the other hand, their vegetable fat and protein intake was slightly higher.
It was the low incidence of heart disease among the Yemenites which prompted the medical survey. The presence of the two groups in the same environment provided a natural control. The studies showed no signs of heart disease among the Yemenite men; among the Yemenite women the incidence was less than one per cent. In contrast to these figures, the incidence of heart disease among the European men was 3.7 per cent and among the women 3.4 per cent.
The medical researchers, one of them being Dr. M. Shadel, a member of the JDC-Malben staff, found that the blood pressure of the European women was considerably higher than that of Yemenite women. There was no significant difference in the blood pressure of the men of both groups.
The researchers also found that the degree of cholesterol deposits was much lower among the Yemenites than among the Europeans. Host important, the study revealed that electrocardiographic signs of atherosclerotic heart disease, and incidence and severity of atherosclerosis of the abdominal aorta were about three times higher among the European immigrants. The study was supported by grants from JDC-Malben and the Israel General Federation of Labor*
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