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October 02, 1953 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1953-10-02

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

uETROIT JEWISH NEWS-13 • Thomas. Braniff Appointed

Friday, October 2, 1953

vG

A J • FEATVas

(Author of "Jewish Cookery")
Now is the time for baking
everything from muffins and
biscuits to cakes and Kugel,
PUDDING, if you prefer that
designation. So get out your
mixing bowl and baking pans.
To begin with, try making the
following luscious ring mold
which was sent us by Mrs. Mor-
ris Michelson, of Brookline,
Mass.; daughter of Mrs. Samuel
Steinberg, of Fitchburg, Mass.
Writes Mrs. Michelson:
"I was more captivated by the
fact that the lowly, ubiquitious
carrot's stature has been elevat-
ed to a 'company concoction'
than I was by the . . dish it-
self." •
Well, the carrot is a very valu-
able item in human , nutrition
because it supplies a goodly

To Wed in January

Detroit Girl . Weds
Doctor from Maine

LEAH LEONARD

amount of vitamin A. It is col-
orful, too, and has eye appeal
whether served in a salad, a
TZIMMES or in this recipe
which is easy to make, and guar-
anteed to please the men, too.
Many thanks, Mrs. Michelson.
Mrs. Steinberg, too!

Carrot Mold

cup vegetable shortening
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 egg
2 tablespoons cold water
1 1/4 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
Li teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon and/ or 1/4
teaspoon nutmeg
2 cups grated raw carrot, tightly
packed

Cream shortening and add
sugar and egg while continuing
to.cream the mixture till smooth.
Sift together dry ingredients
and stir in, adding the water
and grated raw carrot while
mixing lightly till combined.
Turn into a well greased 9 inch
ring mold and bake approxi-
mately 1 hour at 350° F or till
firm and lightly browned on top.
Unmold on a warm serving plate
or platter and serve with or
without your favorite sauce, pre-
ferably an orange or lemon
sauce.

* * *
Orange Sauce
1 cup canned orange juice (or fresh
variety)
2 tablespoons lemon juice (1 lemon)
1 tablespoon vegetable shortening or
oil
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon grated rind of orange
or lemon
n or 1/4 teaspoon almond
flavoring
Boiling water if thinner sauce is
desired
-

MISS SARALEE KOPMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Morris Kopman,
formerly of New York, now re-
siding on Monte Vista Ave., De-
troit, announce the engagement
of their daughter, Saralee, to
Allan Weinstein, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Guss, of Tyler Ave
and the late Joseph Weinstein.
The wedding will be solem-
nized Jan. 23 at Holiday Manor.

German Bundestag Leader
Asks Amnesty for Ex-Nazis

BONN, (JTA)—A demand for
the immediate and complete
amnesty of all war criminals re-
maining in prison was made in
telegrams dispatched to the
three Western High Commis-
sioners by Dr. Friedrich Middle-
hauve, chairman of the Free
Democratic Party in North Rhine
Westphalia.
Dr. Middlehauve, who won a
Bundestag seat in the recent
national elections, described as
inadequate the "dilatory proce-
dure of clemency boards" to be
established by the Western pow-
ers.

I DAVE DOMBEY

& ASSOCIATES

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Combine a ll ingredients in the
top of a double boiler, stirring
while cooking g over hot water till
thick and cr eamy. Beat with a
work if necessary
scary to add boiling
water. Serve e hot or cold over
Carrot Mold, Lockshen Kugel or
left-over sp
sponge cake. Garnish
with fresh mint leaves, mara-
schino cherries„ chopped nuts,
etc.
Yields 11/4 cups sauce.
Variation: Make the fruit juice
content 50/50 for Lemon Sauce.

* * *

Meat Balls, Mexican Style
1 pound ground lean meat
1 small carrot, grated
1 medium size onion, grated
Salt and pepper to taste
teaspoon chili pepper for "hot
stuff" or 1/4 teaspoon paprika for
milder flavor
3 teaspoons fine cracker or bread
crumbs
1 cup thick tomato sauce, fresh or
canned
Vegetable shortening or salad oil for
frying as directed

Combine the ground meat,
grated carrot and onion, and
add salt and pepper to suit the
family taste. All, chili pepper
or paprika and crumbs. Stir in
2 tablespoons of the tomato
sauce and mix well. Save the
remaining sauce to use as di-
rected. Heat the shortening in
a heavy frying pan, making sure
there is enough to fry the meat-
balls without scorching. Form
the meat mixture into balls the
size of a walnut and fry on all
sides till nicely browned. Keep
the heat under the pan even
and moderate. Add the remain-
ing tomato sauce, shaking the
pan to distribute. Cover, turn
down heat to a slow simmer for
10 minutes and serve hot with
kidney beans, steamed rice,
spaghetti cooked plain and
strained, or with mounds of
mashed potatoes. Serves 5 or 6.

MAH JONGG SETS

AND SUPPLIES
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Brotherhood Week Chairman

Send Them to a "Specialist"

City and Suburban Delivery

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.

Thomas E. Braniff, president of
Braniff International Airways,
has been named general chair-
Man of Brotherhood Week, to
be nationally observed Feb. 21-
28, under the „:47;, Mmt: • •
sponsorship of
the National
Conference o f
Christians and
Jews, it way Y`
announced b y
Dr. Everett R.
Clinchy, NCCJ
president.
The 1954 ob-
servance of
Brotherhood,
Week will mark
its 20th anni- -
Braniff
versary. It was first held in 1934
with 30 communities in the
United States participating.
More than 10,000 communities
join in the celebration today,
according to Dr. Clinchy.

THE RECORD STORE

MRS. SIMON DORFMAN'

Fineman, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Nathan L. Milstein, of
Princeton Ave., becaine the bride
of Dr. Simon Dorfman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Dorfman,
of Bridgeport, Me.
The ceremony was performed
by Rabbi Morris Adler in a gar-
den setting at the home of the
bride's parents. The newly-weds
will- reside in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Refugee Relief Act
Attacked as Biased

BALTIMORE, (JTA) — Philip
B. Perlman, who was Solicitor
General of the United States for
many years, described the Eisen-
hower Administration's Refugee
Act as even worse than the Mc-
Carran-Walter Act. Mr. Perlman
said the Act, which was de-
scribed by the new Administra-
tion as a "liberal achievement,"
was actually "the most discrim -
inatory, the most restrictive and
generally the worst piece of (im-
migration) legislation" in the
nation's history.
"The Refugee Relief Act of
1953 expressly adopts the dis-
criminations and the other
abuses of the McCarran-Walter
Act, and then adds new ones,
so drastic in scope as to destroy
the hopes of many who have
been dreaming of a 'safe haven
in the United States," he said.
As head of a seven-member
commission appointed by former
President Truman to study im-
migration legislation, Mr. Perl-
man last January turned in a
report urging complete revision
of the McCarran-Walter Act.
Mr. Perlman said there has
been an attempt to confuse the
immigration issue so that the
public would think the new
Refugee Relief Act is a revision
of the McCarran-Walter Act, in
line with President Eisenhower's
campaign pledge. He especially
decried a letter written to Presi-
dent Eisenhower on Aug. 31 by
Sen. Arthur V. Watkins, chair-
man of the Senate Immigration
Subcommittee, which urged that
nothing be changed in the Mc-
Carran-Walter Act until the new
1953 emergency law expires in
three and one-half years. He
pointed out that:

1. The law admits about 58,000 immi-
grants annually, although President Eis-
enhower had asked for 120,000 per year.
He noted that the 58,000 does not absorb
the unused immigration quotas of the
north and west European nations.
2. The law, originally intended to help
solve over-population problems as well
as provide for more refugees, was
"emasculated in the Senate" to such an
extent that a limited number of visas
for non-refugee Italians, Greeks and
Netherlanders who are close relatives
of American citizens and resident aliens
are "the sole vestige left."
3. It allows Congress to "usurp" ex-
ecutive powers by ordering deportations,
if Congress so desires, of aliens who
entered this country before July 1, this
year, as non-immigrants.
4. It fails to state to which countries
persons failing to win Congressional ap-
proval will be deported. Thus, there is
the threat that some persons may be
deported to homelands they fled to
avoid religious or political persecution.
5. It is "replete with conditions and
prohibitions and qualifications" which
require immigrants to give proof they
are not displacing other persons in this
country from housing or employment.
6. The• law—and Mr. Perlman empha-
sized this point—allows consular and im-
migration officers to refuse aliens visas
if the officer has "reason to believe"
the alien is ineligible. This gives such
officers dangerous arbitrary powers, he
said.

Mr. Perlman made these re-
marks in an address before the
Baltimore chapter of Americans
for Democratic Action.

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KAHRNOFF-SOFFAR. In

recent ceremony in Denver:,
Colo., Joyce Soffar became the
bride of Marvin Kahrnoff, son
or Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kahrnoit.
Fbllowing the ceremony, the
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Soffar, were hosts at a
luncheon for the immediate
family and friends. Following a
Miami Beach honeymoon,. the
newlyweds will make their home
h
in Detroit.

MICKEY
WOOLF

Open on
SUNDAYS, 12 to 4

In a recent ceremony, Lois J.

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