Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1967-06-29, page 01 |
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"¦ '. ¦,"".: ''[:¦..;'.:'¦¦: ;'¦''¦'.-¦: ¦¦ '¦"¦;,¦,''-'¦ -''f/"¦.¦'¦¦.':¦ '-'''¦'¦..'^^:'t'''jy^'''-!'r''^\'''y'^A- pi P't^ ¦ 1 ifM ^ S^4 p^"^ 1 ¥"-- ! • ,:-:¦, ^,y;:'V'4-? ¦¦:f 'Ik ^ HRONICLE 2IM Serving Columbus, "CeritraT and Southwestern Ohio \ll\L V4L 45, No. 26 THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1967 - 21 SWAN, 5727 •mt<<ti«BHlin' nlJmlilUMit-' DINNER PURCHASES TOP GOVERNOR'S GOAL Nearly 600 people were in attendance Sunday night at the Governor'scansion for the Govemor Rhodes dhuier in behalf '£f the Israel Bonds campaign. Early ' estimates place the purchases that night at near ^ million, surpa^shig-the. Governor's goal of $1-1/2 million. Close ^ 1/3,of the amount raised came from the Columbus Icommunlt^l placli^ the local campaign within striking distance rt its goal of $500,000. m the top photo Govjemor Rho^s (left) receives a silver Bible from Mrs. Joseph Schwartz (right) hi recog¬ nition of his friendship to the state of IsraeL Mrs. ' Rhodes looks on. The Bible was made in Israel with large Negev stones set in tiw cover, hi tiie lower photo^ seated, left to riglit: Ambassador Michael Amon, Govemor and Mrs. Rhodes. Standing: Judge Leonard Stem, Mrs. Joseph Schwartz and Joseph F. Kass. Does Israel Have Secret Weapons? LON]X}N, (JTA) — The London Daily Mail asserted that the Israeli Air Force had used two secret weapons to achieve one of the most fantastic feats hi history—the destmction of Nasser's air force on its Egyptian runways and strips. The paper saidthat examination of photographs of Nasser's shattered Soviet-built MIG fighters showed" somethhig very special was use<| againstithem." Each one of the planes. It said, had beenjhit hi the engine and cocltpitjwlth la single shot. THIS WAS done, accordhig to the Dai]y»Mail,hyarocIcet armed with a honUng ^vice, possibly magnetic, develop¬ ed by Israeli sci^s^s.Tho paper noted that the .dupmy, decoy planes m^ of wood and canvas, scattered around the fields, were nq); ^cbed -and that the isr|a^|i. .pilots had gone only for ,thf), real planes. ,, i The second secret weapon credited to Israeli was a rocket-poyvered bomb de- siJEned to destroy >runways. By use ot this bomb, it said, the enemy planes were trapped on'the ground and picked off at leisure. Air¬ fields in the very heart ot Egypt were devastated in this fashion, some of them at the extreme flying range ofthe French-built Vautour jet- bomber. The raid on the LUxor airfield, the paper said, called for extremely delicate flying. Israeli bombers, it asserted, cruised on one en¬ gine and attacked onthe first pass ovor the target, flew back on one engine andglided into their own bases with all fUel gone. NEW YORK, (JTA) ~ More than 1,000 Jewish adults and students assembled for a three-hour demonstration near the Soviet Mission to tiie United Nations to protest Soviet statements against Israel made during the emergency session of the General -Assembly. The protest was sponsored by the Israel Crisis Coordinating CommltteeottheNewYorkJewlsh Community Relations Council, comprised of major Jewish organizations in the New York metropolitan area, as well as t^a New York Board of Rabbis and the New York Jewish Youth Council. JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Prime Mhiister LeviEshkol said that the situation in the Middle East presented better prospects tor peace, after Israel's victory in the war, than ever before. He added the Cabinet hoped to repent to Parliament on tlie Postwar situation within a month. At the same time, the Premier de¬ clared that the Soviet Union was trying to turn the clock back by giving unlimited diplomatic support to the Arab-rulers and by re-supplying Egypt with wear pons. TEL AVIV, CJTA) — Former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon said on his arrival here on a fact¬ finding mission that Israel had .a right to keep the' places taken in the war which had served as "sprhig- boards of aggression" against It until a settlement - insuring Israel's security was reached. The Republi¬ can leader met with former Premier David Ben- Gurion at Ms home in Tel Aviv. At Athens airport, before he left for Israel, Mr. Nixon told reporters that there should be direct talks between the Arab states and Israel, ' - WASHINGTON, (JTA) — The State Department an¬ nounced that it has lifted restrlctions'.cm travel tp, Israel andfourother.natlons.StatoDepartmentspc^es- ' man Carl Bartch^ said the ban, imposed on June 5 -wbenthe'Arab-Israeirwar erupted, would no longer be in effect for Israel, Kuvyait, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, and Tunisia. But restrictions will remain bi force for -Egypt, Algeria, Iraq, Jordan, Iiebanon, Libya, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. The prohibiticm on travel to the nine Arab nations was continued "because of conditims resisting from recenthostllitiesintheNear East'" WASHINGTpN,, (JTA) — Fifty-one Democratic and Republican Congressmen^ co-sponsored a resolution urging Freshlent Johnson jtp seek five objectives in achieving Mideast peace '^ urging presidential op- positlcm to premature Israeli withdrawal "to avoid repeating the mistake of 1956 which led to a resump¬ tion of hostilttiesll years Isiter. The resolution called for opposition to any precondition to negotiation that would require "the relinguishment by Israel of ter¬ ritories possessed" at the time of tin ceasefire. The measure was originated by Rep. Charles W. Wlia- len, Ohio Republican. CHICAGO, (JTA) — Philip M. Klutznick, former United States Ambassador to the Uhited Nations and - former president of B'nal B'rith was awarded an honorary degree at the annual commencement ex¬ ercises of the College.of Je\vish Studies. Dr. Rolf A. Well, president of Roosevelt University, was also awarded an honorary degree. Twelve graduates of College were awarded degrees and diplomas. ' AMSTERDAM, (JTA) — Ivo Samkalden, former Dutch Justice Minister, was nominated to become mayor of Amsterdam, starting on August 1. He wlU .be the first Jewish mayor of Amsterdam. Maneuvering Is Pursued In UN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA) — The Soviet Union led the Soviet bloc and its Arab prot^es at the emergency session at tha General Assembly in maneuvering to win approval for a resolution calling on Israel to yield Its territorial gains without compensating gains tor its- se¬ curity. On this key Issue, the two draft resolutions before thd Assembly were diametrical¬ ly opposed and neither was considered likely to obtain the required two-thirds ma¬ jority for approval. The Uni¬ ted States draft envisaged Israeli withdrawal only through negotiations "with appropriate third party as¬ sistance" to aclileve Arab recognition of Israel's right to exist; freedom of passage in international waterways— meaning the Suez Canal and the Tlran St r ait—an equi¬ table solution of the Arab refugee problems and li¬ mitation of all arms ship¬ ments into the area. THE SOVIET draft would condemn Israel as the ag¬ gressor, require immediate withdrawal ^ Israeli to Its pre-war boundaries and re¬ quire Israel topayindemniiy for destruction to Arab pro- perty-fpresumably includ- lnc^,.Russla's $3 Ulllrai dollar' arms Investments—caused inthe sbc-day Arab militaiy disaster. Arthur CMldberg, the Uni¬ ted States mission head, de¬ scribed the Soviet proposal as a prescription to restore the conditions which brought aboutthe June 5 war. THE ISRAELI position ap¬ peared to be to keep its counsel, other than its an¬ nounced determihation to in¬ corporate Old Jerasalem in¬ to it capitaL But Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban told several Lathi American delegates that Israel was willing to put the shrines of Christendom under intema¬ tional Christian administra¬ tion and those otislam under Moslem administration. The first open clash be¬ tween Israel and UN Secre¬ tary General U Thant took place early inthe emergency - session. Thant rejected cri¬ ticism voiced by Eban over the withdrawal of the U^il Emergency Force firom the Egyptian-Israel border hi May. In anothei'^ statement— lEF VITAL... Isroel Needs Sharply Increase The needs of UIA's im¬ migrant aid, relief and wel¬ fare programs in Israel have been sharply increased by war' damage and by an ec¬ onomic dislocation wliich' 'will.<;ontinue tor sometinfie' to ,come, a United Jewish Appeal delegation of three top leaders told a nation-t> wido'^'audience on a record*^ tele^ftine ho^AAp last'week. Their report proi^ded 'the American Jewish community with tl^ first eyewitness acr- count of conditions in Israel since the cease-fire. The cost of maintainhng UJA's humanitarian pro¬ grams in the' foreseeable fiiture ispresentlyunascert- ainable, the delegation re¬ ported to some 500 com¬ munities from coast to coast, bul Is certahi to be hi the hundreds of millidns. The American Jewish communily onnwt provide the bulk of the fill^tliDeded, they declared, through a continued heavy response to the Israel Em- etgency Fund of the Uhited Jewish Appeal. Gifts may be 'sent c/o the United Jew¬ ish Fund and Council, 40 S. Third St., Columbus. Ke«p Accident From Spoiling Weelcend "Don't let the chance of an accident preventyoufl:om taking that Fourth of July holiday trip." That was the advice today of Warren C. Nelson, State HighwaySafety Director. "Only about five percent ot Chip's {drivers, in.an en¬ tire yesur, have an accident," the Director said. "So your chance of having a mlslup in the tour-day span 1.e^ min- ute.-"And, you can by your own efforts cut tha^ slim chance down to practically zero' by driving safely ,qt all times, keeping .an eye on the other driver, and observing the ruIes.V made outside the Assem¬ bly—Thant said that a 1957 memorandum by the late Secretaiy General Dag Ham¬ marskjold and Egypt was a "purely private" under¬ standing which was notbind-.t«-< big on Thant or on Egypt IN THE memorandum- made public earlier in the week by the press—Ham¬ marskjold had indicated he regarded his agreement as barring a UNEF withdrawal before reference to the As¬ sembly. Debate at the Assembly apparently was designed fay some of the powers to stall tor time until President (Continued on Page 3) Time Magozine Sunporfs Rights ^^. Off Israel NEW YORK, (WUP)—The June 23rd Issue of "Time" Magazine, containing a leng¬ thy essay "On Facing the Reality of Israel," holds that Israel is justified in ¦ hold¬ ing (mi to the new territories gained until the Arabs are wiUingto sit down and dis¬ cuss a peace settiement. The essay, notlngthat "the sad performance of the Arab attitude is perhaps the strongest argument for Israel's need to protect her¬ self,", declares that "Is¬ rael's argument that Itacted in self-defense is based ixA ^ only on the fftct that the Egyp¬ tian blockade of the Gulf of Ac^ba was generally consid¬ ered an act of war. IT IS tdso based on the Arabs' two-decade record of demanding and workbig for the extermination oflsrael, contrary to UN resolutions.. The UN Ibies, the Israelis can argue, are not a per¬ manent frontier, hence they have the right to adjustthehr boiplaries to ensure their security in the absence of a peace treaty..." JWV Convention ^ This Weelcend Tbe Columbus Jewish War Veterans and AuxiUaiy will. be host to tiie Department of Ohio Convention in Co- lunjij^u^ Friday, Saturday and Sun^Hjfu at tiie Columbus Sh^X^noteL Pr^cipal speaker, who will '.address ttie group at the, Banquet and Dance on Satip:^ night, will be Mal- colip', Tarlov, national com¬ mander ot the JWV. I TO BEhonoredwlllbeout- £;oing commander otthe De¬ partment of Ohio Martin Kauther and Department [President Marlon Nlsen. ''^ ':ky- ¦;:^ ym m > T i] /, 1 . I ,1 . 'i ^ •¦ ' ''>! ' ut \ l\ lm-
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1967-06-29 |
Subject | Jews -- Ohio -- Periodicals |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Creator | The Chronicle Printing and Publishing Co. |
Collection | Ohio Jewish Chronicle |
Submitting Institution | Columbus Jewish Historical Society |
Rights | This item may have copyright restrictions. Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Name | index.cpd |
Image Height | Not Available |
Image Width | Not Available |
Searchable Date | 1967-06-29 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-11-02 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1967-06-29, page 01 |
Subject | Jews -- Ohio -- Periodicals |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Creator | Ohio Jewish Chronicle |
Collection | Ohio Jewish Chronicle |
Submitting Institution | Columbus Jewish Historical Society |
Rights | This item may have copyright restrictions. Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Name | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-06-29, page 01.tif |
Image Height | 4790 |
Image Width | 3082 |
File Size | 1720.912 KB |
Searchable Date | 1967-06-29 |
Full Text |
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HRONICLE
2IM Serving Columbus, "CeritraT and Southwestern Ohio \ll\L
V4L 45, No. 26
THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1967 - 21 SWAN, 5727
•mt< |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2008-12-05 |