Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-05-15, page 01 |
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I](S? Servina CeiiimbUs,' "CentraT and Southwestern Ohio \1PK
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Vol. 47, No. 20
tHURSDA¥;:lVIAVM5, 1969 - 27 AVAR
D«vtti4 to Aa«f l(w »d jtwiili fdoilt
Facing The 70%: Annual Meeting Topic
"The JewishCenter Faces the 70*8" will bethe theine of an address by Mr. Herbert MUlinan atthe annual meeting ofthe Jewish Center, Wednesday, May 21 at 8 p.in., inthe
audltOTium. ¦ • ; ,; -
Mr. Millman,; associate executive ofthe National Jewish Welfare Board, will: relate the operation ofthe Jewish Center movement in the next decade to the cmcems of the Aiperl- can Jewish community.
The role of the Jewish
Center in establishing Jewish Identity, in meeting the chal¬ lenge of teenagers and col¬ lege .youth, and serving as a vehicle for Jewish cultural expression, were among the concerns examined by a na¬ tional study conducted bytiie National Jewish Welfare Boar4 with Manheim Shapiro and Dr. Herman Stein, as
*T"'^f' u\..u A WASHINGTON, (JTA)-A , Mr.Mlllman^hadbroad convei«ence of UnitedStates ««Berience to Uw center gndSoviet views on aMlddle field, and last spoke to the j-ast settlement appears to Columbus Bbardjif Directors ^ave developed in the round at tte annual meeting in 1959. ^ washlt«ton talks betw^een . t^J'f 1 "l®!?!**"^? Assistant Secretaiy of State '^i!'' *i^f"K*"l2J""^ Joseph J. Sisco and Soviet meeting at which new offlcers Ambassador Anatoly F. Do-
'^JS?"'^*"*.^r "^^ laynJ". But the positions of
"1!teS?!SS^' the tvip powers h^ve not yet
MAsitbaXtMaob^^^;^^^ Aitt(clfentjyi.>ld?e"'
hi ' ~
' <? :'., -y^r an -.- v;
• Rdbert Aronson is chair¬ man of the anmial meeting, and arrangements for tbe reception are under the di¬ rection ofthe Center's Ser- Vlee League.
Officials
Deny
Bombs
JERUSALEM, (JTA)—Fo¬ reign Ministry offlcials vigorously denied this week foreign press reports that Israel had built Ave nuclear . bombs..Tiiey called such re¬ ports '^speculative, uiiauth- cjflzed and unfounded." Tte report in the Montreal Ga¬ zette whichwas re-published in tte LondohEveningStand- ard was attributed to an as yet unpublisted article in Der Spiegel, the West Ger¬ man weekly.
, The ofQcials said such reports "crop up flrom time to time" but that "Israel is "not a nuclear state." The govermnenfs policy re- mainsi they said, that Israel will not be the first nationto Introduce such weapons into tte Middle East. The denial tere corresponded'word for- word with a sbnUar denial Issued here last Januaiy wten tte National .Broad- Co, reported that?
WASHINGTON, (JTA)—A declaratlori calling for direct Arab-Israel peace negotiaticms, urging Arab gqvelmments to end terrorism and deidoring one¬ sided Ujiitied Nations condemnations.of Israel hasbeeh' signed t}y a ins^ority of tte House and Senate. Signa¬ tures of. the declaration of sentiment have been given by 59 Senators {Old 233 Bepresentatlves and names were stiU fpmlhg.in. The signatories include eight of the 15 meters of tte Senate! Foreign Belatims Committee'- and 22 out of tte 38 memters oftiie Hbuse Foreign Affairs Committee.
'ROME, (aTA)~Secretary-GeneralUThantsaidhere this Week that the situation in tte Middle East was deteriorating but te did not Intend to pull Utdted Nations cease-fire observers away ft'om the embatOed Suez Canal.zone. Mr. Thant spoke to newsmen after a meeting with Pope Paul VL He said the United States, the SoWet Union,. Britain and France ted a special responsibiUty to act uigently. He said the Four Powers should work to put into effect tte Novemter, 1967 Security Council resolution on the Middle Bast.
NEW YORK, (JTA)"A card-carryingmemterofthe. reportedly deftmct American Nazi Party was arraigned tere. this week on a technical chaise of failing^ register explosives. His intentini, according to As¬ sistant District Attorney Stuart StUlman, was to blow up the fonner Israeli luxury liner Shalom. Mr. Still- man said that Chaiies S, Schofer was arrested after te turned over 10 sticks of dynamite and two blasting „citPa,to an undercover agent whom he tried to eidi^ t
r-=i.«- .„..,„,rf.„.,*'-^!,ln.tte'pIot^v>t^v^¦',^"<^ti*¦^s«,'.«f>,*'•^4-^. '"'•' ;-'»->-
[errea to tne cour
Convergence Develops In Big 4 Talks
¦'^^••V*''*^^ *^ ^'''* '"r'*'-
Power Mideast talks that are teing held concurrently in New York, Washington Post correspondent Robert H. Es- tabrook said inareportfrom the United Nations this week. Mr. Sisc«<wd Ambassador Dobrynin- Ictb tnet 12 times in Washington. The Four PowerjS—United States, Bri- t^, France and Soviet Russia—teld their seventh meeting iii New Yoilt.
Mr. Estabrook, attributing his informaUon to Westem . diplomats, said that Dobryn¬ in lias suggested that minor boundaijr adjustments could te n^otiated if Israel com¬ mitted Itself tb with draw from occulpied territories. The envoy reportedly Indl-. cated tiiat the Soviet envis¬ aged a ptesed Israeli with¬ drawal rather than a one- shot affEdr.tte UnitedStates position has been that Israeli withdrawal should follow an Arab declaration of non-bel- lUgerency and that ^ it should 'jtfe^to "secure and recogniz¬ ed boundaries." "The U.a in¬ sists that the boundaries must be negotiated. But Washington apparentljr agrees with the Russians that only minor border ad¬ justments should be made and tbat they should "not reflect tte weight of con- quest," tte Post reported.'
According to Mr. Esta-' brodc's sources, Dobrynin tes given reason to believle that Moscow would not object if the Syrian Gcdan HeigMs were included within Israel's new frontiers nor would-lt object" strenuously if Isi^ael
NABLUS (WNS)—A Nablus mosque tes been re¬ tumed to Moslem religious use by order of the Ministry for Religious Affairs after a photo of the mosque teing used as a synagogue by Israeli soldiers stationed in tte aieas appeared in a local paper. All Jewish religious appurtenances have been removed
PARIS, (JTA)—Tte Conference ai Soviet Jewry announced this week ttet a numter of JF'rench per- sonaUties. from the academic and intellectual world had agreed to serve vn a mission to study tte situation of the Jews in the Soviet Union.
TICKET SELLERS
"Decisions, decisions," says Mrs. Jote Paton, 3589 ^set Dr., as she tries to decide from which Scout to buy her ticket to Scout-.0-Rama. Offering ter tickets to tte giant public display-of scouting to te teld at tte Ohio Exposition Center May 17-18, are left to right, Steven Loeb, L^uiy LoebandButch Loeb, Tte boys are the sons of Dr;. and Mrs. Walter Loeb, 3599 Sunset Or.
Scoiu|t-0-Raiiiq Shbw Blasts Off Saturday
^
Israeli Consul Backs Bonds
Judith Beilin
Israel ted built or wouldiit-etained East Jeni^^em .soon build nuclear weapons, provided that^'-Jordahian'
Tte Montreal Gazette stoiy, written by Peter Lust, its foreign affairs specialist^ said that existence of tte alleged bonOis was discover¬ ed by a group of Der Spiegel journalists. The Gazette de- . scribed the bombs as 20
rights iri Moslem Holy Places were respected. Another point of conveiigence tetween Washington and Moscow ap¬ pears toteSoviet acceptance of the Westem contention titat contractual agreement must, be ,'|!eacted betweoi
fcUoton atomic l)o(mb9».',.-,-.-,-.Israel\iiwl. tteArab'States/
Judith BeUin, Consul of Israel In New York, will tev the guest speyer at "tiie home of BerhardRuberi, 2525 Berwick Blvd., on Tuesday ' evening, May 20, when she will address' a "top level" men's meeting on tehalf of. the Central Ohio IsraelBond program.
The meeting wUl convene for the committee leaders, friends and supporters oftte ¦>Bohdd'fblT'J^i>aer'drIve'tatoW'-
.current inthis ariea. The an¬ nual Governor's Banquet, scheduled to be teld in mid- June, will te a highligM of the Spring campaign. Mr. Ruten, chairman of the Buil¬ ders of Istael phase of the drive , wIU serve as the official host at this get to¬ gether.
' Mrs. Beilin, who has been serving hi New York since 1961, made intensive study tours of Israel in the sum¬ mers of 1963 and 1965, con¬ centrating in particular on all facets of tte young na¬ tion's develc^mientprcgram. Bora and educated in Eng¬ land, Mrs. Beilin achieved success as tm actress both on the stage and withthe British- Broadcasting Company. She. giave up her acting career in the. late 1930*8, ih order'to marry the ardent Zionist, Harry BeiUn, and settie in Palestine with hini. She has niade her permanent teme there sincel938,andtesser¬ ved Israel throiigh her own efforts as a speaker and through ter leadership as t|ie wife of one of Israel's public ¦-flguresi'*'*»'-'v->'-'•'•'¦,'•'*'•*•¦
All systems are go for blast off of the biggest Boy Scout cjxposition ever held in Central Ohio. More than lOiOOO scouts and leaders will te manning hundreds of scoutcraft exhibits when the doors open for this year's versions of Scout-0-Rama on May 17 at 1 p.iin. . The theme of this year's 'Show is Youth-in Action. And ttet Is what visitors to the show will find; tteusands of scouts actively demonstrate ing scouting skills ranging from archery to zoolqgy. - A continuous stage show wUl also te a part of Scout- 0-Rama. Drum and bugle corps, bands and other spec¬ ial acts will add to tte fest¬ ivities.
"We've put together a show tiiat tes something for tte entire family,'' says Sid Herman, Scout-0-Rama chairman. "Besides all the great scouting displays, there- will te several special exhibits by local, state and federal agencies. Business and Industry will also teve a few exhibits."
Tte Federal Bureau of Investigation, Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identiflcation, Columbus Police and Fire Departments, Highway Pa¬ trol and other public organi¬ zations will teve displays. The Ohio Department of Na¬ tural Resources wiU teve a Uve exhibit of Ohio's native fifh. Sportsmen can get a close look at ttet Cote Sal¬ mon ttey teve teard so much about. Tte Aircraft Snake Hunters Conservation Club has a surprise in store for stew visitors.
Tte youngsters will teve an opportunity to. voice tteir opinions on today's issues Iv casting tteir ballots on a voting machine supplied ijy -¦th^Columbus'DIspatchi/- ¦.¦".•.
Scouts firom tte'nine coun¬ ty Central Ohio Council are competing for prizes and ' mqney for theii*- troops by selllqg tickets td the show. Tickets for adults are' $1. Children under eleven witha ticket holder will te admit¬ ted free. Also all members of organized youth groups such as Girl Scouts, Camp Fire GhrlK wear bigtheir uni-' farms wiU te admitted free.
"This annual show serves two purposes," says Fred¬ erick LeVeque, president oS.-.. tte Central OhioCouncil."It" gives us an opportuidty to show tte community wtet a dynamic, constructive role scouting plays in tte lives of thousands of bqys. It also provides needed funds .to make the character tending program of scouting avail¬ able to more boys."
Recent surveys prove'||iit 64% of aU toys thai ii-^t:'. Scouts would like io^iiTtK^ are not -in the program te¬ cause there are no scout units in theiriwlghterhoods.
"With tte lo-oceeds trom
tfils show, we wiU te able
to recruit and train addition^
al volunteer leaders wte will
make scouting available to
more boys who want it,"
LeVeque said. '
- Scout-P-Rama will te in
tte Multipurpose Building at
tte Ohio Exposition Center,
Saturday and Sunday, May 17
and IS. Times for tte stew
are 1 p.m. - 9 p.m. Satur- .
day apd 1 p.m^ -%''j^W' .¦ Sunday. -¦ .—...(.r;^n-.
AU three scout units of tte Jewish Center wlU te participating in tte stew and
_t}cket:sales. They are under the direction ofpostadvisor, Sanford Lichtenstein; troop leader, Nate, Nateman; and Cub Scout ]^ck 126 advlsor„^
¦¦'BUi-Slioipe; •'•'''-¦''¦-'•¦•¦•'¦*•'¦¦''•'• ¦'•¦
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-05-15 |
| 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 |
