Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-11-09, page 01 |
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Vol. 45, No. 46
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, I967-« CHESHVAN
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Dr. Hermsii D. Stetn
College Deon To Address JFS Dinner
Jewish family Service wUl hold Its-59th Annual Meeting an Sunday, Nov. 12, 6/p.m., at Temple Tifereth Israel, 1354 E. Broad St. .jrhiswiU be a dtaner meet- ', ing. Dietary laws wlU -be I observed. . The.guest speaker will be Dr. Herman IX Steta, Dean , and Professor otSoclal Work j^ the Case WestemBeserve L^y,n"lvej^jtj^ho<a^of Ap-
S6' FmVbSt TOP.tBB'SiScIi and Behavioral Sciences of Case Western Reserve XJid- iversity ta^ Cleveland. Dr. Steta. wUl speak on "The Changing Patterns of Family Life."
DEAN Stein came to Western Reserve University from Colunibia Uilversity ta 1964, where he had been a professor and tlie Director of the ResearchCenter of the School of Social Work.
Since 1963, Dean Steta has spent one sabbatical year and part of several sum¬ mers abroad, where he had consulted on behalf of the United Nations ChUdren's Fund andthe United Nations Bureau of Social Affahrs ta Tanzania,.ThaUand, India and the Ivory Coast.
JEWISH Family Service, a beneficiary of the United Ap¬ peal and the United Jewish Fund and CouncU, provides counseling to approximately 450 Jewish families ta Franklin County and ta Central Ohio who require services such as: Adoption, foster care, marital counseling, homemaker ser¬ vice, services fbr New Americans, teenagers, the aging, the physically and mentally handicapped.
Solomon
Chairs
Workshop
Herbert L. Solomon^ pre¬ sident of the Columbus He¬ brew School, wlU chair a workshop at the MldwcstRe- glonal Conference on Jewish Educatlo) of.the American Association for Jewish Edu¬ cation.
The conference wiU be held ta Cleveland Nov. 14- 15. The title of the work¬ shop Solomai WiU chair is "Hdw a Non-Bureau Com¬ munity Can Planter Jewish Education."
Levi E^hflcol Opens ^ Knesset' Session
r<^:-
ROME (WNS) There are "alarmtag symptoms of a Nazi revival ta Germany today, " it was reported here Iqr a visiting anti-Nazi delegation firom Germany. This warning was sounded by members of the dele¬ gation at a press conference headed "by Werner Krumme, president ofthe Coordinating Committee of the Organizations of Political and Racial Persectutees ta Bovaria. Mr. Kmmme, whose Jewish wife was klUed by the Nazis at Auschwitz, holds , Israel's Medal of the Just. /
BONN (WNS) Stiff prison terms have been Imposed on two convicted Nazi war criminals accused of involvement ta the slaying of countless numbers of Jews ta the infamous Mauthausen concentration camp during World War U. One of the defendants; former S5 Lieutenant Anton Streitwelse, was given a life sentence, and^the other Carl Schulze was given a prison term of fifteen years.
ROME (WN$) Danny Kaye fiEuned American enter- tataer was honored here at areceptlon by Ambassador and Mrs. Ehud Avrlel of Israel. The reception was attended by many diplomats, celebrities and socialites. Mr. Kaye later left for a tour of Europe with Israel's youth orchestra.
CHICAGO (WNS) A resolution caUtag onthe govern¬ ment of, the United States to take the lead ta brtag- .. ing peace to Viet Nam was adopted here by the Chicago . Board of Rabbis last week. Voicing conviction that there can be "no mUitary solution of the Viet Nam war,".the rabblst urged Washington "to demonstrate Its moral inlttatlve by ceasing aU bomUng ot North
JERUSALEM, (JTA)— Prime Minister Levi Eshkol opened the winter Sessitni ofthe Knesseth(Parllament) here with a 90-mtautei speech ta which he decla red unequivocally that Israel tar^ tends to replace the 1949 armistice Unes with secure ' national boundaries agreed to withta^the framework of formal peace treaties, and that she wUl not return to any status quo' ante vriilch contatas the seeds of ftiture havoc and destmction.
ta his address' Eshkol ad¬ vised the big powers and the United Natitnis to avoid vague formulas like declarations on cessation of hostUities , unaccompanied by any real peace treaty, if an end to the Middle East crisis is to \» achieved. He reviewed ta detaU the events stace the Six-Day War and noted that the Arabs have not Aandoned their hostility. Israel, he said, maintains her pre- and wiU do aU
permit a restoraticm of the situation prior to June 5 that bore the seeds of Havoc C arid destruction for our vU- lages ta the vaU^, nor will the situation ta Staai, the Gulf of Elat. or the Suez Canal be restored to what it was."
ESHKOL warned Egypt, iSyrla, Iraq and other Arab countries that Israel wiUnot remata sUent ta face cf the harrasment and persecutlm of Jews withta their borders. He demanded that Jews im¬ prisoned ' ta Arab countries be released and permlttedto leave those countries.
The Prime Minister said , that the local Arab inhabi- ; tants of the WeJstBank regicm [ and the Gaza Strip have not [ cooperated with terrorist ; gangs, and the situation, is j settting down. He noted that ; the unlflcatlan of Jerusalem > was carried out .without any ' upheaval, and the sltuaticm ; has returned to norm^ll de- spite attempts attacitement. r
ESHKOL devoted part of i Ms spe ech to castigating Soviet ptAicy, which he said, > "has degenerated with ; hostillly that recaUsthe dark ' days before the overtfirow ' of the Czarlst regime."
Blood Day Is Nov. 29
Sanford Fishman,' presi¬ dent of the Jewish Blood Donor CouncU, vdll be as-
BONN (WNS) The West German Government has made no arms committment to King Husseta of Jordan on his recent visit to this country. It was declared ere by agovernmentspokesmanwhosaidthatGermany wiU not send any weapons to areas of tension. At the same time It was reported that the talks between King Husseta and Foreign Mtalster WUly Brandt centered primarily on teciuiical aid to Germany, to Germany.
MONTREAL (WNS) An estbnated five mUllon people visited the Israel PavUion at Expo 67, accordtag to a preliminary report by Its management. From the report It appears that the Israeli exhibit was one of the most popular pavUlons at the World's Fair.
Blatt To Head UJFC am paign
Announcement was made at the Annual Meeting of the United Jewish Fund and CouncU of the appotatment of Sidney I. Blatt as general chahrman of the 1968 cam¬ paign.
In appotattag Blatt to the top position of leadership ta the annual campaign struc¬ ture ot the UJFC, Herman Katz, president, stated: "Mr. Blatt was chalrnian ofthe Ad¬ vance Gifts Division ta 1967. His performance demonstra¬ ted clearly not only his abU- ity and competence, but also his deep concern for and commitment to the aims and causes represented by tlie United Jewish Fund and CouncU beneficiary ag¬ encies, supported by our an¬ nual ftuid drives. We know that with his dedication and leadership, the 1968 cam¬ paign wUl prove even more successful than the 1967 ef¬ fort."
BLATT HAS had an op¬ portunity to view at tirst hand some of the results of the Six Day War, as well as to be briefed by high leveL leaders ta the Israe¬ li GcKernment concerning somemof the xn'ohlems stem¬
ming fk-om the War and its aftermath.
Additional appointments to the 1968 campaign structure wUl be announced soon.
U.S.
Accuses
Soviets
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA) — The United States accused the Soviet Union of attempting to prevent con¬ clusion ot a convention on the elimtaation ot aU forms ot religious intolerance and charged that the Soviet rep¬ resentative was seeking to turn the United Nations Third Committee "into ilfiDrumfiMr'
wfense farce's with whatever arms and equipment are needed to protect the nation.
REFERRING to the boundary situtdlon, Eshkol said the 1949 Itaes had no characteristics of normal boundaries and were the re¬ sult cf nothing more than mlUtary expediency.. T he Arabs have insisted on this principle throughout the years and, for this reason, "there is ample justlhcation firom legal, poUtical and se¬ curity points of view for Israel's attitude that secure national boundaries must be determined within the framework of peace treaties," he declared.
"As for the restoration," Eshkol said, "we shaU hot
J.T.A. Editor Retires
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The retirement of Boris Smolar after 43 years with the Jew¬ ish Telegraphic Agency, the last 26 as Editor-ta-Chief of ttie world-wide news ser¬ vice, was announced this week by Robert H, Arnow, JTA president. Mr. Smolar, who is 70, wUl conttaue to write his popular column distributed by JTA to the American Jewish press and wUl carry the title, Editor- ta-Chief Emeritus.
Victor M, Bienstock, who was JTA editor ta 1933-35 and has been its general manager and director otop- '{^^tions stace 1951, has as- ' s'uilfjlMPUie eiiitoriia dlrecticm
a&*iii»i*
political vituper'fiftori." ' ""'' ^^.^^ „„„„. Mrs. Patricia it'.' ^^mt''^o^ia^4iiay, the AmericanrepresenlaUve MR. ARNOW also ta the Committee, took the floor to answer .allegations made by the Soviet delegate comparing the position of the Jews ta the United States un¬ favorably with that of Jews ta the Soviet Union.
an¬ nounced the appointment of John Kayston as.Business Manager of the JTA. Mr. Kayston, who jotaed the JTA organization ta 1936 has been responsible tpr JTAadmta-. istrative aflairs.
lowing majors: Leo Elchen- baum, Julius Krier, Jack Rubta, Bernard Friedman, and Mrs. Daniel Goldsmith.
Each major is responsible for a group of organization volunteers, who wiU be con- tacttag members of com¬ munity for donors for the semi-annual drive. The Red Cross BloodmdbUe wiU be at the Jewish Center firom 12:30 to 6:30 p.m. on Wed¬ nesday, Nov. 29, to collect blood; a large turnout of donors is essential, as this Is the last campaign for the year, and unless amaxi- mum number of pints cf blood are received, the partici¬ pating arrangement which the Jewish community has with the Red Cross maor be ta jeopardy.'
BYTHlSarrangement, every member ofthe Jewish community, man, woman and chUd, is guaranteed free blood at any time or any where, for any purpose. When it is realized that ta many communities, ta tact, ta most cities throughout the country, blood must be paid for ta varying amounts running as high as $75.00 a pint, or must be replaced on a two, and sometimes three-for-one basis, the fortunate position of the Co¬ lumbus Jetyish conununity becomes apparent However, the Jewish community has been assignedaqHotaofptats for the year,'akd unless this qiiota is kepf-flUed, the en¬ tire program may be dls- conttaued. .
Fishman emphasized these points at a special meeting, of volunteers at the Jewish Center last week, as they met to fill kits and prepare for the major underr taking of contacting the hundreds of dimors ta the commuhlty. "The Nov. 29 B. Day campaign under the Chalfmaiiishipof Cordon
Zeldman," be stated, "Is a ^ cruel al one for m any..r6a- ". sons. Blood Is In desperate ,^
""'¦mitmMatnnriilllrnfrfMn^'iliiin&wi^
Gordon Zeldman has an- > nounced the following as ,' chabmen for thebr various { organizations, who wiU be ! co-ordtaating the work ot . volunteers for"B" Day: ! Agudas Achim Sisterhood, Agudas Achim Brotherhood, Arthur Levy; Agudas Achlm Sisterhood, Mrs. S.Llcfaten- j steta andMrs. Philip Beck¬ man; Bnal Brlth Zion Lodge, Dr. Lariy Zlpser; Hebrew School FTA, Mrs. Otto Neubauer; Hadassah, Liloh, Mrs. Marvta Goldfarb; Had¬ assah, Mitzvah, Mrs. Julius Stone; Brandeis Women's ' C ommlttee, Mrs. Samuel, Gordon; Hadassah, Zion**' Mrs. Joel Schlossberg; Beth ' Jacob Brotherhooc^ Martta Schecter.
Beth TikvehCongregation, WUliam W. Gilbert; NSJCA, Alan Rosenfield; Temple Is¬ rael Sisterhood, Mrs. Robert Cohodes; Temple Israel Brotherhood, RmaldRobtas; Ahavas Shdem Sisterhood, Mrs. Samuel Greenberg; Torah Academy PTA, Mrs. Bernard Abrams;. Alpha ' Omega Auxiliary, JMrs. Kenneth Feingcldi Raanana, Mrs, Sam KandeU.
Tifereth Israel Men's Club, Jerome Knight; ORT, . Mrs. A.C. Strip; Jewish War^ Veterans, PhU Gordon; Beth ; Jacob Sisterhood, Mrs. Sam : Komessar; B'nalB'rlthCan- dleUght Chapter, Mrs. David , Sinai; B'nal B'rith ZIpn ! Chapter, Mrs. Ernest Stem; Tifereth Israel Sisterhood >. Mrs. Donald Cohen; CouncU I of Jewish Women, Evening ; Branch, Mrs. Alvta Wander. '.
CouncU of Jewish Women, |. Day Branch, Mrs. Richard j Chessin; Jewish War Vet- \ erans AuxUiaiy, Mrs. Bar¬ bara FIok; Ha das safe^Sho^ ; ¦lom, Mrs. Dora Abrams; ' Hadassah, Chai, Mrs. James Tennenbaum; B'nai B'rith ; Twin Bivers Chapter, Mrs.; Jeff Pearson; Ploneief*" Women^ Mrs. A.S. Kohn.
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-11-09 |
| 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 |
