Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-01-27, page 01 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 10 | Next |
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
plONICLE
2J\Q^ ServinR Columbus, Dayton/b?nW andTsouthwestern Ohio, JUJ^R
iilU
Vol. 45, Ni. 4
FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1967 — 16 SHEVAT 5727
** ''sftiii^kCJr'
J.T.A. President To Speak In Columbus
Eleazer Lipsky, president of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, best-selling author and attorney, will speak at.the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Alvln Schottenstein on Tuesday evening in behalf of the United Jewish Fun^ and Council 1967 Campaign.
Sidney Blatt, Advance Gifts chairman, in announcing Llpsky's visit to Columbus, stated: "He is an ideal, person (to talk to the Advance Gifts contributors, shice lie is' eminently successful in a variety of professional, com¬ munal and cultural endeavors, just as are' the men who will at¬ tend the meeting. I am confident that MrJ Lipsky's message will be tUnely' and important, and that his unusual gifts as an ora¬ tor, coupled with his thorough knowledge of the situation in Israel, will impress all who at tend Tuesday evening."
A,LVIN Schottenstein and Louis Krakoff, associate chair¬ men of the Advance Gifts J>i- vision, head a Committee com¬ prised of the following: Mark Feinknopf, Sam Gurevitz, Robert Kaynes, Morris, Mattlin, Alien Schulmah, Dr. Albert Strouss, Joseph Summer, Martin Hoff¬ man, Joseph Kass, David Levi¬ son, David Roth, and Bemard Ruben.
, ,Ih urging maximum attend- r^nlsa^^t^the Parlor, Mgetlng,ne?ct| Tuesday evening Schottenstein and Krakoff stressed the hnport¬ ance of this function in achieving the 1967 campaign goal, of $797,- 000.
Krakoff expressed hhnself as delighted in havhig Lipsky as the speaker for the meeting. He said "Lipsky is the son of the late distinguishd leader, Louis Lipsky, and as a true son of his father, he was early imbued with an abiding interest in Jevylsh af¬ fairs here and in Israel, which he has visited many times. He is a practicing New York City At-
The World's Week
Compiled from JTA and WUP Report^
Elcazer
Ll^islty
Steve Oa^or
A. A. Sisterhood .To Celiebrate Its 61st Year Witti Dinner
The Agudas Achhn Sisterhood wiir celebrate 61 years of exist¬ ence and activity' on Simday, Fel^ruary 5, hi the social hall of the snyagogue. Dinner is called for 6:30 p.m.,' and the evenhig will be culminated by the ap¬ pearance of Steve Gaynor, whose star is rapidly rising .in.show business is a young and dynamic peronality and a humorist witl> the gifted ability to incorporate vocal talents in to his satire. , The combination of these talents makes for a highly enters taining' presentation. Steve has been enthusiastically received when he. played the Town Casbio, Town and Countrjf, Nevele Coun¬ try, Grosslngers,' Concord and
' (conllnuad on pag«.4)
torney, and was for four years Assistant District Attorney for New York County."
THE 1067 campaign of the United Jewish Fund and Council, of which Marvin Glassman is General chairman, has set a goal of $797,000 for the support of more than 40 local, national and overseas ; beneficiary agencies These include aiding immigrants to Israel, refugees and distressed Jews all over'the world, and,,In our*'owii"conunijinft3i'; 'fife^Ji&'wisH Center, Heritage House," Colum¬ bus Hebrew School, Community Relations Committee, Jewish Family Service and others.
NEW YORK, (JTA)—A record budget totaling $13,000,- 000 was approved here by the national conference of the American ORT Federation., The total, representing • an Increase of more than $240,000 over last year's budget, will finance a stepped-up program of vocational and educational services for nearly 50,000 Jews In 21 countries,
NEW YORK, (JTA)—Rabbi Abraham L. Feinberg, rabbi emeritus of Holy Blossom Temple In Toronto, Joined two Christian clergymen in voicing pessimism over the possibility of an early end to the Viet Nam war, It was reported by Agence France Presse. The three clergymen are currently visiting North Viet Nam. They said they did hot believe that the "North Vietn^amese "can be beaten Into sur^ render or submission by any foreign power." The two Christian churchmen were the Right Rev. Ambrose Reeves of Britain's Anglican Church, and the Rev. A J. Muste, an American Pacifist. \
SAN QUENTIN, CaUf., (JTA)—The existence of at least 40 hard-core Nazis among convicts at San Quentin Penitentiary was disclosed by prison authorities In com¬ menting oh last week's race riot at the. Institution. Leaders In the anti-Negro agitation were Inmates Identified with a movement inspired by the American Nazi Party. It was reported that the Nazis had manufactured iron, crosses and swastika emblems in the prison machine shop. An associate warden said the Nazis were not dedicated to any political principles but only motivated by sadism and hate.
Pamphlets Try To Stop Anti-Semitism
NEW YORK, (WUP)—The John XXIII Center of Fordham University has just published a unique series of six pamphlets aimedf at Catholic parishioners across the country and designed to attack "the evil of anti-Semitism as a thought as well as an act."
The pamphlets, called the "Spiritual Heritage Series'," repre-'
sent an earnest and dramatic attempt to hnplement the Vatican
Declaration on Non-Christian Re- , . , . '
llglons as it applies to Jews. Jewish property and the killing
ILLUSTRATED with color re- "^ .J^ws through the centuries
Conservative Judaism Topic For Institttte
Kiesinger Is Revealed As llaw Haw' Boss
UNITED NATIONS, (WUP)— Chancellor Kiirt Kiesinger — as one of the top leaders in the fifth column subversion operated by the Nazi radio service—was the boss of the notorious traitor William Joyce, better known as "Jjord Haw HawJ' according to documentary evidence published in the East "German Report" circulated here at the UN this week.
On January 2,1946, Lord Haw Haw was hanged in London's Wandsworth' prison. He had been sentenced to death, for high treason—^broadcasting subversive propaganda for the Nazi radio services during World War II.
THE "GERMAN Report" pub¬ lished, a photostat from an of¬ ficial Nazi Foreign Office docu¬ ment dated September, ,1943, Which shows that Kiesinger was Deputy head) of the Radio-Politi¬ cal- Department of the Foreign Office in direct charge of "gen¬ eral propaganda" and "coordina¬ tion of the work of the national sections."
"National Setcion R II," which was under Klesinger's guidance, the Report states, was responsi¬ ble for all broadcasts to "Eng¬ land, Ireland, and English- language broadcasts for the British Empire," This was the section fpr which Lord Haw Haw worked,, \.
THB REPORT takes objection to Klesinger's claim that he had ^become alienated from the Niwl party in 1934—one year after he joined, "In fact," the Report notes, "he had remained a mem¬ ber of the Nazi party until the very end of the war in 1945; and his title as 'auxiliary worker" in the Foreign Office does not mean that he was a minor clerk, but simply that he was a war- tbne appointee and not an estab¬ lished civil servant."
Rabbi Nathan Zelizer vi^lU be the fourth speaker hi the current Institute for Jewish Communal Workers on Monday moming, January 30, at 9 a.m., at the Jewish Center. He will speak on "Conservative Judaism." Irving Stern,. Educational Director ot Agudas Achim Congregation, will serve as chairman of the meet¬ ing.
Rabbi Zelizer has the distinc¬ tion of having served only one congregation in his 36 years as a rabbi. He^ has been rabbi of Tifereth Israel Congregation since 1931, comhig to Columbus after his ordination from the
Federations Aid Education
NEW YORK — Federations and welfare funds,have a major responsibility to help hnprove post-elementary Jewish educa¬ tion! and recruit and train the most able teachers to give young people; the highest quality edu¬ cation possible.
These recommendations were made this week in a report re- lased by the National Committee on Federation Planning for Jew¬ ish Education established a year ago by the CJFWF.
THE REPORT, issued follow¬ ing an intensive year-long study of the vast problems of Jewish education m North America, not¬ ed that close to 90 per cent of Jewish children drop out of Jew¬ ish , schools before they enter high school except in the day school movement. Two priorities were;
TO SEEK ways central com¬ mittee efforts and planning can help recruit; train and utilize top-quality teachers since Jew¬ ish ediication can only be as good as its teachers, \
*TO DETERMINE ways com¬ munities can upgirade post-ele¬ mentary education, which the report emphasizes,: is indispensa¬ ble for a meaningful Jewish ed¬ ucation, If progress on these problems in Jewish education can be made, 'the beneficial ef¬ fects on the entire field of Jewish education would be far-reaching. UJFC is participating in the national effort.
Jewish Theological Seminary,
A OKADVATE of New Y6rk University, he also received his Master of Arts deg)ree from Columbia University, and was awarded a Doctor of, Divinity by the Jewish Theological Sem¬ inary in 1964.
The Institute this year deals with "Major Religious Move¬ ments in Judaism" and will fea¬ ture two further sessions, with Rabbi Samiiel W. Rubenstein, and Professor Marvin Fox as speakers. Daniel Harrison, prin¬ cipal of Columbus Hebrew School, is chairman of the pro¬ gram committee. .
SER,VING with hhn are Lazar Brenner, executive director of Heritage House; Ben Mandel¬ kom,^ executive director of the United Jewish Fund and Coun¬ cil; and Mayer Rosenfeld, eixec- utive director of the Jewish Center.
Hersh L. Adlerstein, Associate Director of the Community Re¬ lations Cbnimlttee of the United Jewish Fund and Council, is chainnan of the publicity com¬ mittee.
production of religious and other art works, they discuss the spbrit¬ ual bonds between Jews and Christians; the deicide charge; the persecution of Jews by "the ancient church" through the mid¬ dle ages and into modem thnes; condemn anti-Semitism as "many thnes a sin," and urge Catholics to engage in "brotherly dialogue" with Jews hi order' "to leam about one another as human beings."
The series bears the imprhna- tur of Bishop Russell J. McVln- ney of Providence, R. I., The Rev. Adward Flannery, member of the U.S. Bishop's Secretariat for Catholic Jewish Relations and author of "The Anguish 6f the Jews," is editorial director.
ONE OF the pamphlets, "Our Sph-tiual Heritage," declares that "Judaism is the root from which Christianity erew" and calls the Old Testament "one of the strongest of spiritual bonds between the Jewish.and Chris tian..peopiles
and up to modem times when "the Jew .was subject to innum¬ erable further pogroms and at¬ tacks." > '
THE FIFTH pamphlet hi the series, "To Walk Together," urges diaglogue with'"Jewish neighbors and co-workers,. . . The sixth brochure examines the meaning of the Declaration'oni "Non-Christian Religions and its potential impact ori Catholic- Jewish relations. '
The "Spiritual Heritage Series" has had a first printing of 250,000' sets. The John XXni .Center of Fordman has called upon Ameri¬ can bishops to endorse the proj¬ ect and to urge priests and edu¬ cators in their dioceses to distri¬ bute the pamphlets to their parishioners.
Another,' <"The O u 111 n e, of Truth," deals with the death of Jesus and the charge of delddc "wich for "nearly 2,000 years haj. been a source of hate, bloodshed and violence-directed against the Jewish people." It describes "the outline of this terrible event" as having been "distorted and twisted for all these centuries through misunderstandhig, mis¬ interpretation and plain lack of knowledge . . ."
MiE.FAOE of Shi" brochure likens anti-Semitism to "a^ terr - ble shadow: of mistruth, misun¬ derstanding and ignorance" hanging over the lives of two families.
"The Anguish of a People" de¬ tails the "page tom out of our history books" in order to make Catholics aware of "the depth and extent of persecution suf: fered by the Jewish people down the ages. Without this page," the paniphlet declares, "we cannot understand why Vatican Council made its statement on the Jews," It goes on to enumerate attacks synagogues, severe restrictions on Jewish Ufe, confiscation of
YOUNGMATRONSDIVISIOH OF THE UJ.F.G. ANNOUNCES NEW SrEERIN6 GOMMITTEE
The Steering Committee for the Young Matrons Division of the United Jewish Fund was annqunced by Mrs, Stanley Katz, chairman, and Mrs. John Resler, co-chairman durhig the past summer, "In this way," Mrs. Katz said,"all committee members could prepare for the 1967 campaign well in advance.
The young women serving on the steerhig committee have demonstrated leadership ability in previous drives ahd recognize
the importance of their work in meeting the needs of the total Jewish community.
THE OOMMITTEE has met twrtce to formulate its plans. Mrs. Resler outlined the sched¬ ule: "After our Advanced Gifts kickoff event, we will concen¬ trate our fund raising goals: and educational activities in Febru¬ ary and March 2, and the Fore¬ runners Luncheon on Thursday, Marth 9, We will conclude the campaign with the Pathfinders Affair on Thursday, March 23 and the Telegift on Sunday, March 26."
The Young Matrons began their campaign on,January 17 witji the Advanced Gifts Parlor Meeting. Mrs, Katz urges any young woman who l)as married
recently or has moved to Colum¬ bus during the past few months to contact her at 237-9275 or to call Mrs. Resler at 471-3414.
Photo of the'steering conunit¬ tee will appear next week.
Jpspe At Hillel
The Hillel Forum this Sun¬ day, January 29, will feature Dr. Alfred Jbspe, program di¬ rector of the Nationai HUlel Foundations In Washington, who will speak on "Inter¬ marriage on the Campus — Myth or Reality." The pro¬ gram starts at 8 p.m. and admission IS'free. ,
Cindy Adams
GINDY ADAMS IS SLATED FOR 'ANCa*
This year the Columbus Sec¬ tion of the National Council of Jewish Women is having its Gol¬ den Anniversary Angel Lunch¬ eon on Thursday, February 16, at Whidlng Hollow Country Club at noon. Mrs. Barry Zacks, chair¬ man of this year's luncheon, an¬ nounced that Cindy Adams is to be the speaker.
' In the now famous "Sukarno, An Autobiography as told to Cindy Adams," President Sukar¬ no refers to a new tropical fish he had just asquired as the "Cin¬ dy fish" , , , further explahiirig, "It's the most aggressive fish I've ever seen."
THB FACT that Cindv Adams is aggressive, vivacious, vibrant and charming is undoubtedly only one way of explaining her varied and remarkable career. Writer, actress and model are only three facets of her life , . -. and at all three she has been successful.
A world traveller, Mrs. Adams has clrpled the globe more than half a dozen times. Her travels have taken her on Interviews with the Empress of Iran, Prhne Minister Nehru, President Su¬ karno, Defense Minister Krishna Menon, the King and Queen of Thailand, the Duchess of Whid- sor, Soroya, to name only a few. In the United States she has had audiences with such notables aa President Eisenhower, the late Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, John Wayne and Richard Burton,
AS A syndicated columnist for the North American Newspaper
(contfnutd on pagt 4)
iniHiii wXiiWiirari^f II
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-01-27 |
| 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 | index.cpd |
| Image Height | Not Available |
| Image Width | Not Available |
| Format | newspapers |
| Date created | 2008-12-05 |
