Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-07-31, page 01 |
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2IS? Serving Gelumbusr 'Xentrkr anil Southwesterri Ohio ffliK
Vol. 47 No. 31
JULY 31.1969-16 AV
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Dayaii^ Hord Line Presented ITo Knesset
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JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Defense Minister Moshe Da-
^yan^told the Knesset .this wedc that Israel must retahi - possession ofSharmel- Sbeikl^ the strongpoint (yarding the entrance to the
, ^bisits of Tiran. Quali^ihg this view as his personal opihion. Gen. Dayan said however that on this issue he and Foreign Minister Ab¬ ba Eban were in fuil agree¬ ment. Gen. Dayan's remarks marked the secondtime dur- ing.the weekthathe spoke out on what he considered Is¬ rael's ' s sent ial security
. fraitiers. lie Md the Labor Party platform committee that tlie Jordan River" must be Israel's eastern frontier, that Israel' must retain the Gaza Strip andGolanHeights and, must be perm^nUy Jinked ''through territorial continuity" with Sharm el- Sheikh.
Gen. Dayan told the Knes¬ set "I prefer to sit IiiSharm el-Sheikh without peace than have peace andreturnSharm el-Sheikh to Egyptian Iiands." He recalled having
-'St^fthe same^tUng-several ' weeks agoat^Klbbutz move¬ ment convention. He cUed Ebai^s recent assertion that '¦any (peace) arrangements
must ensure Israel's con¬ trol over Sharm el-Sheikh as tliat is thednly way to ensure free navigatiot^' in the Straits of Tiran. Egypt, Gen. Dayan said, sitill stands on the "three nrfs" d the 1967 Arab summit confer¬ ence ini^hartoum—no peace with Israel, no negotiations and no recognition of IsraeL In those circumstances, the Defense Minister asserted, Israel should prefer holding Sharnr el-SheIkh to a return to the pre-June, 1967 lines.
Gen. Dayan dismissed So¬ viet proposals for a Middle East settlcmeiitt^daiise they "do not contain tlie element of peace." Moscow calls merely for the Arabs and. Israel to deposit declara¬ tions of the non-belligerency with the-United Nations Se¬ curity CounciL and wUle Is¬ rael does not belitltle non¬ belligerency, '"we sno^dJie precise,enough in our term- iifology to make a clear dis¬ tinction betWeen peace and non-belligerency," Gen. Da¬ yan said.
He also told the Knesset ,that.Israeli-securtty forces have killed 119 Arab guer¬ rillas and saboteurs in clashes between January, and July 7, 1969. .
v^^'-^?-H^S^''j3i5^^ Moscow's Stance
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THIS YEAR, SAY li^HioilA TOVAH
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TOYHEENflRE JEWlSHxCOMMUNITY
Chronicle readersi Gireet your friends and relatives In our New Year's Editidn. This year the book willreach homes and leading business firms inColumbus and Central Ohio By SoBteiSBBirtL s
Greeting friends and relatives in the pages of the Chronicle's New Yearns Edition iias long been a tradition for Central Ohio Jewish families. This is an excellent method of showing your interest in the entire Jewish community, and it is a most effective way of expressing your good wishes to all those.dear to you.
ACT NOW!
tt is easy to assure that your greeting will appear in .this issue. Fill in the attached coupon and maU it at once to the Chroniclej_ 87 N. Sixth St. Or call iipjand submit your greeting oveFthe telephone.
The regular single famUy greeting is $3.00. $5.00 is the cost ofamulti-familygreetbigoraspecialdisplay greeting. Be sure to specify.
WASHINGTON, (.^A) — The White House announced this week that Eugene SL Coweh — who is a JeW and a strong supporter of Israel --has been appointed special assistant to Pie.Eiident Richard M. Nixon to work on Con^ssloiial: lialisoiU Mr.' Cowen, 44, served for many yeats as administrative assistant to Sen. Hugh Scott, Pennsylvania Republican. Tlie new ap¬ pointee Is widely regarded here as a liberal and proponent of progj-essive socidi legislation. Hei is a native of New York City, a graduate of Syracuse Ud¬ versity, and lives with his wife and two chQdren in SUver^prings, Md. The Cowens are active in the local synagogue. '^
COLUMBUS, (JTA) — RabblSelwyn IX Ruslander, of Dayton, an Immediate, past chairman of the Na¬ tional Jetrish Welfare Board's copiffllssibn on Jewish chaplaincy died here this week at the age of 58. He was commissiaii chairman from 1965 to 1968. A navy chaplain in World War n, he was the first Jewish chatdain in the Mstory cf the U.S. Navytobe assigned to combat fleet. Ddring the invasion ot soothem France, he was a flotilla'chaplaln. -
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — A rabbinical court here issued this week a temporaiy injunction barring Jewish folk- singer Neliama Llfschitz, who recently came tolsrael . from; Russia, from leaving IsraeL The injunction was sought by her husband, Haim Binstein, who claimed that his wife planned to desert him now that she has become famous. Miss Lifscliltz claimed in court- that her marriage to her much younger husband was fictitious in that she married to save him and his family from the Nazis after the invasion of Lithuania in 1940. She was scheduled to perform in'New York next month.' - - - -
BONN, (JTA) " A foWth "Auschwitz trifd" will open soon In FrahkfUrt,' It. was announced here this week. Two public prosecidiars have visited Warsaw, Fosen and Cracow to interview 19 witnesses. The defendants are six low-ranking fornier officials of Auschwitz death campkhd one ex-Kapo, an inmate member of the camp police."Many Kapos' were Jews. The identity df the one to face trial at Frankftart ^ not disclosed, nor .the exact date when the trial would begin. The prosecutor'sS office also aimounced that .Josef Windeki 66, who was sentenced to life im¬ prisonment at the tUrd Auschwitz trial in Frankfurt last summer> had been freed on rec<Hnmendation of doctors. '
Sixth Knesset Becomes History
WASHINC?rON (WNS) — United StatesAssistantSecretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Josetdi J. Sisco has left Moscow after presenting Russian leaders with the' latest American formula on ways to end the Mideast crisis.
On his way htrnie he stopped in Stoddudm, Sweden, to infcnrm Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring, the Uidted Nations Mideast peace envoy, about the latest U.S.-Soviet talks.
Mr. Jarrlng's talk with Mr. SiscofoUowedanearUer meeting the Swedish diido- mat had with Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban bi Zur- IcI^ Switzerland. This "In¬ formal" talk, was initiated by Jerusalem In an IsraeU effort to have Dr; Jarring resume his Mideast ndssion.
The four-day talks ipMOs- cowjFeportediy resulted Inno cha^ in the Soviet position on how to achieve peace in¬ the Mideast. Russian lead¬ ers were reported to still Insist on a detailed' time¬ table fw IsraeU withdrawal from the occupied lands without any direct t^s be¬ tween Jer usalem andthe^ Arab states.
The peace formula pre¬ sented to the Soviet Union fay Mr. Sisco is tbe Nixon ' AdmlnistraUonrs counter proposals to a Russian note ^of June 17. That proposal which was draftedfayMoscow after consultations with Egypt, was tlie Soviet count¬ er offer to an American plan presented to Russia during bilateral talks between Mr. Sisco andSoviet Ambassador Anatidy F. Dobrynin ih Washington.
Details of the new Ameri¬ can plan were not disclosed fay officials. TheearUerUa proposals, which had been made known to Israel and the Arab states, caUed for
Toe THE OHIO JEWISH CHRONICLE, 87 N.SixUl St, Columbus, OhiOk 43215.
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JERUSALEM, (JTA)—Is¬ rael's sixth Knesset passed into history this wedc after, approvhig 249 biUs in 429 sessims during whichlsrael won its unprecedented Six- HOay War and Jerusalem was reiinited. It posted a record in dealing with 7,825 auestr ions and with nine non-con- fidencie motloils '-one on its last day — all of which were defeated.
As members left the chamber, they exchanj;ed partings and greetings, of "see you in the next Knes¬ set," which wiU be based on the coming October elect¬ ions. But many current members have announced they will not run again in Octobeirf notably Speaker Kaddish Luzi who said in a radio interview tliat he plan¬ ned to retire to his honie in' Kibbutz Degania. Moshe Un- na, tiead ofthe Knesset leg¬ islation ^6mmittee,,also will not ruh'again. The two depuly speakers — Mrs. Ruth Hak- tih and Emma,Thalml — said they also would not run again. Others, for different
reasonSfiirobably wlUnotbe iii the seventh Knesset.
The laist non-confidence vote was moved by the Free' Center's Shiituel Tamir for allegedly "undemocratic legislation," the majority vote of more than 61 mem¬ liers for the elections cam¬ paign finance biU and another biU on broadcast time aUo- cation to the various parties. • The finance measure was approved at a marathon ses¬ sion, replacing a previous measure nullified by Israel's Supreme Court on grounds it discriminated against smaU parties. Tlie Knesset members sat up half the night to see the measure through the, required sec¬ ond and third readings leiss than 24 hours after it pas¬ sed its first'The Knesset also gave final approval to^ a 1)U1 validating aU pre- -viously adopted election laws to forestall the possibility of future nulUficaUons by the high court
Ti^mlr charged that the. basic laws of equality had not been satisfied by the
a package agreement on a settlement agreed to by aU sides. It caU^d fiir adjust¬ ments in the boundaries be¬ tween the Mideast ccnnbat- ants, free passage throogji international waterways, compensation, with some Re¬ settle me nt» for Palestine Arab refugees and the sta¬ tioning of a United Nations peace force in the area.
' Tlie Russian plan reject¬ ed the general intent oftiie US. effort -by calling for IsraeU vdthdrawal from the occupied areas without any ,prior peace agreement, no' direct negotiations, between both sides, and left unclear tbe status of other points at issue. ''
Jerusalem's effort to re¬ vive the UN's Mideas^ace mission reflects the beliefs of Israeli officials that thb time is ripe for Mr. Jarring to resume his efforts. While his previous activity falledto yield any results, they main¬ tained some dialogue ahd 'contact between Israel and the Arab States. The halt hi the Big Power talks at the UN and the impasse in US- Soviet talks have %ade re¬ sumption of some contact between both sides import¬ ant, Israelis officials' in¬ dicated.
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measure and that the Knes¬ set had missed the "spirit^' of the Supreme Courtf s po¬ sition. He charged, that the new election finance law would pave the way for single party rule. An uproar devel¬ oped when he charged tbsi money cfflning in from world JiBwry',' was being spent on eli^ct'ion campaigns. Pre¬ mier Golda Meir arose to protest asserting that "you know yourself only too weU that this is not true" and ^ -she accused Tamtr of trying to make use of the final .Sixth Knesset session as a platform for his election campaign. The non-con¬ fidence motion was rejected by 73 to eight with three ^stetiftlons.
Rights Prdbed
NEW Y0RK,(JTA)—Riab¬ bi A; Bruce Goldman, who has been named as one of two rabbinical student adr visers iat Columbia Univer¬ sity, said this week that the City Human Rights Commis¬
sion would continue its plan- . ned investigation d the de¬ cision fay the university not to extend his contract for the coming year. The contro¬ versy over his non-appoint¬ ment 'led to a university' de¬ cision last week to reorgan¬ ize the school's religious advisory program- under which a new student groups the Radical Jewish Union, selected Rabbi'GoIdmaii, wd five other student groups chose an Orthodox rabbi, Charles Sheer, as their ad¬ visers.
Rabbi Goldman said also that if the Human Rights .Commission sustained his comidaint tliat he had been ' dismissed for his support of student rebeUions at the ui^yersiiy last spring, he would not accept reappoint- meiid under his canceUed contract but would seek com- .pensation for "damages at aU levels." He assumed his new duties as one of the.two Jewish advisers on July 1. He said Rabbi Sheer would begin his assignment Aug. 1.
Under the prior agree-- ment, religious advisers, Jewish and Christian, were muned suid their . .Uurles paid by church and syna¬ gogue agencies approved by the university.
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Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-07-31 |
| 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 | 2008-12-12 |
