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November 02, 1984 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-11-02

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

16 Friday, November 2, 1984

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Ann Arbor Winter Art Fair

Nov. 24,1984

Friday 10 AM-9 PM
Saturday 10 AM-9 PM
Sunday 10 AM-6 PM -
U of M Track
& Tennis Building
Ferry Field on State Street
1-94 Exit State Road (North)

U of M $1.00 Parking on Ferry Field

AUDREE
L E V Y

$2.00 Admission

Children under 10 free with adult

250 Artists & Craftsmen

BOOKS

FRONT
DISC
BRAKES

$59.95

Value of historical data retained
in anthologized U.S. landmarks

with coupon

Regular
$69.95

Semi-Metallic
pads extra



• New Pads • New Seals
Turn Rotors • Road Test f:
Repack Bearings

BIRMINGHAM TIRE ..i.
::1104 S. Woodward, Birmingham

642-3116 . . .
:.:ED STONE Alm
wog 642-3288

'

Unusual bits of historical re-
cords, accumulated in the Michi-
gan section of American Jewish
Landmarks (Fleet Press), contain
so much fascination that they
cease to be curiosities: they are,
indeed, "landmarks."
Here are several of the "tidbits"
in that volume which contains the
collective efforts of the late Ber-
nard Postal and his associate,
Lionel Koppman:

INKSTER

"Crime isn't limited to Detroit...
Even in affluent suburbs as Birmingham
and Grosse Pointe, crime is no stranger."

,

Detroit Free Press, September 30, 1984.

"Lt. Raymond Zussman Army
Transportation Center, 3200 S.
Beech Daly Rd., is named for one
of the two Jewish servicemen to
- receive the Congressional Medal
of Honor in World War II. A na-
tive of Detroit, Zussman was kil-
led in Sept. 12, 1944, while lead-
ing a unit that captured 92 Ger-
mans and killed 18 others in the
course of liberating the French
village of Noroy de Bourg. The
medal was awarded post-
humously."

JACKSON

"Lannik Collection of Pre-
Columbian Art, Walker Hall,
Jackson Community College,
consists of rare clay pieces dating
from the beginning of the pre-
Columbian era, is named for Dr.
William M. Lannik, a Jewish
physician of Merrick N.Y., who
assembled the collection and do-

COOKING

Matt why we need
&snick for Judge.

Ed Sosnick has been an Oakland County Trial Lawyer for 16 years. Those years -
have given him extensive experience with criminal cases. And that's important,
since 89% of all the cases in the 48th District Court are on the criminal docket.

Sosnick is the Senior Trial Attorney in the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office.
He has won hundreds of cases in 48th District Court, Circuit Court, the Court of
Appeals—as well as in State Court, Supreme Court, and Federal Court.
He also has won the respect of his peers. The Honorable David F. Breck and
the Honorable Alice L. Gilbert—both of whom have been 48th District Court
Judges, and are now Oakland County Circuit Court Judges—have endorsed
Ed Sosnick. He also has the endorsements of L. Brooks Patterson, Oakland
County Prosecutor; Leonard R. Gilman, United States Attorney; the Women
Lawyers Association of Michigan; Michigan Trial Lawyers Association; West
Bloomfield Command Officers Association; and Bloomfield Township Police
Officers Association.
Crime is everywhere. Ed Sosnick knows how to deal with it. Make him your
choice for 48th District Court Judge.

Elect Ed Sosnick 48th District Court Judge. On the Blue Ballot.

Sosnick

The experience and respect it takes to be Judge.

Paid for by the Committee to Elect Ed Sosnick, P.O. Box 1036, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48303

SALMON MOUSSE
1 medium onion cut into quar-
ters
1/2 cup boiling water
11/2 envelopes unflavored gela-
tin
2 tbsps. lemon juice
'/2 cup mayonnaise
1 /4 tsp. paprika
1/2 tsp. dried dill weed
1 small can red salmon -
drained
11-1b. can red salmon - drained
1 cup table cream
Drain the salmon well and pick
out any bits of bone.
In a blender, for about 1 minute,
blend the onion, water, gelatin
and lemon juice.
When well blended, add the fol-
lowing (in about 3 equal parts)
and blend well after each addi-
tion: the mayonnaise, paprika,
dill weed and both cans of salmon.
When all the parts are well
blended, add the cream, 'A cup at
a time.
Grease (oil) a 6-cup mold very
well (a fish shaped mold is the
most appropriate).
Pour in the mousse and chill in
the refrigerator for at least 3 days
before serving.
One hour before serving, un-
mold. Do not unmold by dipping
mold in hot water. Instead go
around the edges with a knife, if it
does not unmold then, put the
mold in 1/2" of hot water for 10 sec-
onds.
If you wish, you can use olives
for the eyes, scales, etc. and
pimento too. Serve with minia-
ture rye and/or pumpernickel
breads, or with crackers.

nated it to • Jackson Community
College.
"Saul R. Levin School at South-
ern Michigan Prison, 4200 Cooper
St., is named for the late promi-
nent penologist. (U.S. Senator
Carl Levin and Rep. Sander Levin
are Saul Levin's sons.)
"Site of founding of Republican
Party, N.W. cor. West Franklin
and 2nd Sts., marked by a bronze
table recording that the party was
born here on July 6, 1854, recalls
the fact that among the signers of
the call to this historic conference
was Edward Kanter of Detroit.
Louis , Mizner and Moses Sol-
omons, also of Detroit, and Meyer
Ostrander from Calhoun County,
were other signers.
"Temple Beth Israel, 801 W.
Michigan Ave."

"A merican Jewish

Landmarks" by
Bernard Postal and
Lionel Koppman
(Fleet Press).

This is not a new book. Fleet
Press has re-issued a series of vol-
umes in which the late Bernard
Postal and Lionel Koppman have
assembled -unknown or forgotten,
many overlooked, facts about
Jewish historical experiences in
this country. Michigan receives
due attention in the anthologized
work.
Jacob R. Marcus, director of the -
American Jewish Archives, un-
questionably the best-informed
scholar on American Jewish his-
tory, gave the Postal-Koppman
volumes highest rating when they
were first published in 1954. In a
forward to American Jewish
Landmarks, he stated:
"In a way, these volumes by
Bernard Postal and Lionel
Koppman are the only complete
history of the American Jew, for
they deal with the great and the
mighty and with the men and
women of the towns and villages.
Here are the annals of Jews whose
communities reach from Port-
land, Maine, to San Diego,
California — and on into the
northernmost reaches of North
America and into the Pacific and
the Caribbean.
"This is real history, grass roots
history, the chronicle of an old
people in a new world. They are
also delightful books, carefully
researched, and well written. We
are truly grateful for American
Jewish Landmarks."
This judgment retains its
validity to this date. The just-
released Volume 3 of the Postal-
Koppman series, in which the
Michigan section is featured,
gives emphasis to the retained
Jewish historical records at a time
when the writing of Michigan
Jewry's history, with emphasis on
Detroit, is on the community
calendar.
—P.S •

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