111 IN • COMPILED BY ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM A HADASSAH HONEY T he National Honey Board is sponsoring a recipe con- test for all members of Hadassah, for the best recipes in which honey is the primary sweetener. Recipes for appetizers, main dishes, dressings, sauces, baked goods and beverages should use at least 1/4 cup hon- ey. As many recipes as desired SOME SWELL MOTHER-IN- -LAW Hungarian Government Awards Prize y ou've heard the difference A member of Temple B'nai Je- between in-laws and out- hudah in Kansas City, Mo., Mrs. laws (one's wanted)? Aaron is in the midst of planning Don't try those worn-out in- the foundation's first major fund- law jokes on American League raising event, featuring sports umpire Steve Palermo. Since commentator and TV host Bob Mr. Palermo was shot and Costas. The dinner, slated for wounded in 1991, his mother-in- Jan. 14 in Overland Park, Kan., law has been tirelessly work- ing on behalf of a foundation in his name. Diane Aaron is executive director of the Overland Park, Kan.-based Steve Palermo Foundation for Spinal Cord Injuries. The or- ganization was established after Mr. Palermo (who is married to Mrs. Aaron's daughter, Debbie) was shot while breaking up a mug- ging and robbery in Dallas The billet entered his spinal cord, resulting in instant paralysis to the lower ex- tremities. Doctors predicted Mr. Palermo would never walk again. Today, he walks with the aid of a leg brace and canes and "improvement continues daily," he says. Now he is working to Steve Palermo "heighten the awareness of spinal cord injury and let the also will include sportscaster Bob world know there are many oth- Uecker and George Brett of the ers whose lives have been and Kansas City Royals. will be dramatically changed by For information, write the this debilitating injury" (which Steve Palermo Foundation for also affected Mike Utley of the Spinal Cord Injuries, 11184 An- Detroit Lions). tioch, Suite 14, Overland Park, Spinal-cord injury affects KS 66210, or call (800) 513-3700. 842,000 Americans every year. T • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • he Hungarian government recently award- ed the Budapest Prize, for those making major contributions to democracy, freedom and education in Hungary, to David Moskovits of New York. Mr. Moskovits was honored for his key role in founding and guiding, without pay, the American Endowment School, a Budapest primary and secondary school that em- phasizes democratic principles and offers Judaic studies. Mr. Moskovits also is the founder of the Endowment for Democracy in Eastern Europe, a not-for-profit char- itable corporation dedicated to promot- ing private enterprise in Eastern Europe. • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • /( Me r Archaeologists Find Ingots Nio • • may be submitted, but only one • per chapter (and individual) • can win. Entries must be post- • marked no later than Feb. 26, • 1994. • For a complete list of contest • details and rules, send a self- addressed, stamped, business- • sized envelope to the National • Honey Board, Hadassah • "Touch of Honey" Contest, 190 •• Queen Anne Ave. N, Seattle, • WA 98109. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • el Aviv (JTA) — Archaeologists working under water have uncovered more than 60 rare copper ingots dating from the late Bronze Age, the Antiquities Authority reported this month. It is believed that the copper, used to make weapons and uten- sils, was part of a cargo from a ship that sank off the coast of the Haifa area around 3,500 years ago. The copper, weighing nearly half a ton, has been sent for analy- sis to determine its age and where it was mined. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Ohio State Removes Nazi Doctor's Portrait CENTRAL REGISTRY OF WAR CRIMINALS AND SECURITY SUSPECTS WANTED LIST PART 11 death in 1986, the Justice De- partment's Office of Special In- vestigations had initiated steps toward prosecuting him for hav- ing participated in acts of per- secution." Officials at Ohio State told the WJC they had no idea of Col. Strughold's past. They are now having his picture re- moved from a mural of stained- glass. STRUBE Dr. STURBE DR. STRUBE Dr. Jens STRUBE Walter STRUBE Dr. Will STUBEER Heinrich STRUEL Frans STRUCHTRU B. 33442 3344 3 63972 M GER 33445 63974 M GER 33446 33447 STRUCK STRUCK STRUCK Bruno STRUCK Karl 63953 M GER 33448 M GER 33449 M GER 33450 M STRUCK Paul STRUCK Wilhelm STRUCK Wilhelm STRUCKMANN STRUEBEL SIRUGHOLD Hubertus STRUIK STRUM Use STRUIK Wilhelmina STRULTSER STRUM Erich STRUM Karl STRUMPEL STRUMPFMAIER Josel STRUNCK 33441 09 X F rity report stated that Col. Strughold's "successful career under Hitler would seem to in- dicate he must be in full accord with Nazism." Col. Strughold came to the United States as part of Project Paperclip, in which he and oth- er Nazi scientists were recruit- ed to work on the U.S. space program. According to the WJC Report, "shortly before Strughold's •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• 13 58194 M GER GER 33451 33452 63987 M GER 63954 M 33454 44931 F DUT 111334 F DUT 11891 F GER 63956 M GER 33455 63957 M 33453 33456 33457 3 ollowing a request from the World Jewish Con- gress, Ohio State Univer- sity has agreed to remove from a mural of medical heroes the portrait of the head of the Nazis' Air Force Institute for Aviation Medicine. The WJC notified school offi- cials that Col. Hubertus Strughold had been listed on a 1945 U.S. Army registry of war criminals. His American secu- GER 98 16 •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Scrimmage For etank tffiderstaitcligig • • slack and Lubavitch youth joined New York Mayor-elect Rudolph Giuliani recently for a sporting game of ethnic un- • derstanding. • • Equitable Ethnic Understanding Night was held Dec. 14 during •• the New York Knicks-Denver Nuggets game in New York. The high- • light was a half-time • scrimmage with children • of different ethnic commu- • nities, joined by Mayor- • • elect Giuliani and coached • by black and Lubavitch • youth from Crown • Heights. The event, sponsored • • by the Equitable Life As- • surance Society and coon • dinated by the Foundation • • for Ethnic Understand- • ing, also featured the • distribution of the pre- mier issue of the Harmonist. • • • Written by teens, the news- • paper features articles and • essays about racial harmony. •