Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-01-16, page 01 |
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Vol. 47, No. 3
2tS^ Servinfl Columbus, "Centrar andSouthwestem Ohio Q\R
THURSDAY. JANUARY 16,1969-i 26 TEVES
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Saxbe And Young Back Statement
Senator WiUiam B. 3axbe and Senator Stephen M. Youqg both joined in tin circulation ot a strong four-point program on tbe Middle East. This statemmt indicated concem about the United Nations SecurityCounciIre8oIuaon"inviewo(the tact that itmakes no reference to thedirect threat to Israel's survival posed by tfae continuingnddsintolsrael—withtheir mounting toll in lives and property—by Arab guenrilla operations from die Arab
states."^
Among the four points is the key one (rf the need to establish permanent peace bl the Middle East. The sta¬ tement also urges tfaat "the strategic arms balance be¬ tween radical Arabs and Is¬ rael" be midntalned. -
SENATOR SAXBE, hi a communication to the Com¬ munUy RelaUons Committee -of the United Jewish Fond and Council statedtfaat: "The United States should assume active and In^aginative lea¬ dership In tbe Intemational communiiy and In the United Nations to secure a poUticia settlement Intiie MIddleEast based antiwfollowlngpriqcl.^ pies:
A. An end to tfae state of belligerency between the Arabs and Israel and reco- idtion by all states in the area of' Israel's rigfat to live and prosper as an in¬ dependent nation.
B. The UnitedStates sfaoidd join witfa otfaer nations in recognizing tbe religious im¬ portance of tiie holy places within the CUy of Jerusa¬ lem as fUndamoital to botii the Israelis and Arabs.
-C. The UnitedStates should conUnue to strive for inter¬ national guarantees of'un¬ contested passage tlnougfa International waterways. In¬ cluding tfae'Stralts d Tiran and the Suez CanaL"
Blatt to Sdeak For
pij-l-'V«*f>te
When tfae Key Leadership Breakfast for the Trades &' Professions Divishm d tite 1969 Campaign d tbe United Jewish Fund and Council Is held on Sundaymoming, Jan. 19 at 10 o^dockattheJewIsh Center, the speaker will be SiAiey L Blatt, Vlce-Fresi- dent of the UIFC. the 1968 Campaign Chairman, and present Chairman d the Campaign Advisoiy Ccnnmit¬ tee.
Ernest Stem, (Chairman, and Marvin Frank, Co- Cfaairman of tfae Trades & Professions Division, have Issued an urgent caU to all Chairmen and Vlce-Chair- . men of eveiy Section in the Divlsionr to attend tUs im¬ portant meeting. Discussion yiiU center about tfae current situations atfaome, overseas, and especially inlsrael, wtdch dictate tbe dimensions of the 1969 Campaign. Tfae latest film release from the United JewishAppeal, entitl¬ ed "Never Again to be De¬ nied."
S£x;TI(»4 chairmen and Vice-chairmen invitedtotfae Breakfast Meetfaig inchide tbe foUowfaig: Operation Up¬ grade: Saul Komessar, CfaalrmaiQ Accountants, Ih- surance & Finance, andGra- phic'Arts, David Weisman, Chafarman, Mal Sokol, and Milton PinskyCo-Cfaainnen. Attorneys: Richard Kohnand Irving Barkan, Co-Chafar- men; Battelle, Dr. Seymour dddstoDe, Dr. Harold M. Epstein and Dr. Bernard Goobich, Co-CfaairmeiQ BuUdfa« &RealEstate,Tfao- r.1.') Lurie, Cfaafarman, Na¬ than Gorenstein, Sherwood Walker, Marthi L. Green- •,.beig, Leo Elchehbauni, Jack
WalUds and Irvfaig Schotten¬ stein, Vice-Chairmei^ Com¬ munity Workers, Murray Daninhirsch, Chairman; MO- ' ton Klefai, Rabbi Edward Ki¬ ner, Robert Gddenbeng and Mayer Rosenfeld.
Dentists, Dr. AUen Blair, Cfaaimian; Dr. Harold Mo¬ nett, Dr. Jack Palestrant, and Dr.Cfaarles Young, Vlce- Cfaalrmen; DepartmentStor- es, Asher Moser, Cfaalrmai^ Fred Maier, Max Sdmad- ron, Joe Natfaan, Sfaerman Kriviti; Bany MiUer, Leon Beck, Ed Kaqi^ and Jade Jay, Vlce-Chainnen; Foo4 Leonard Qidnn and Morris Fleischman, Co-Cfaairmen; Manufacturing, Scrap & Steel, Leon Handler, Chair¬ men, SolZeldin,IsadareZel- din and Sol Shaman, Vice- Cfaairmen; RetaU Merchants, ArtUkr J. Isaac, Jr., Chair¬ man; Irving Cliasin, Bernard Mentser, CbarlesSogarman, David Zucker, BemardKap- lan^ Or; AI Tyroler, and Dr. Harold korn, Vice-Cfaair- men; Ohio State University, Dr. Marris Ojalvo^ Chair- mai^ Dr. Marvin Fok, Dr. Herschel Hausman, Dr. PhU¬ Up HoUander, Dr. Ricfaard Goodmaiv Fred^GraU, and Robert Blaittner, Vice- Ciiaiiinen. Nortfa American Engineen, Saul MUenthal, and Ed Bartfleld, Cp-Cfaafar- mei^ Physicians, nr.Roiiert HaUe^ Chainden;]>r.Robert ^Friedman, DrFPaid MiUer, Dr. Jack SQberstefai, Dr. Fred Kapetansky, Dr. PfaUlp doliBng and Dr. Jadt Gold¬ beig, Vlce-Cbainnei^ Shoes, S. R. Kotzer, Chainnan; Sig Wasserman, Vlce-Chair- maiQ Travelling Salesmen, Irvfaig H. Sdmeider, Pbil Giuck ahd Alan Lee, Co- Cfaairmen; and Out oCTown and Retired, DavidLevinson, Chairman. . ~ .
ROME (WNS)~Pope Paul VI^ on the fifUi aimlver- saiy of Ids trip to Israel and Jordan, renewed his plea tor peace in tfae Middle East. Addresisihg a titrbng in St. Peter's Square, he said "tiiat wish for peace, ex¬ pressed In tiiose days. Is sUU operative today."
GENEVA (WNS)_The cantonal ^court erf Lausanne, Switzerland, had ordered aU jprlntod oo^es of an anti- Semitic book destroyed and has reiitdred the authorto pay court expenses. The Federation of Jewish Com¬ munities in Sirilzerland and a number «rf individuals lastyear Oledacomi^laintagtdnstthe book, "The Past, The PresentandTheJewisfa Question" fay James Albert Mathez, andthe court faad issued an injunction at that time against its distrifauUQn.
CHICAGO (WNS}~PkvfiB8Sor Norman Golb of tiie UUversUy of Chicago has repnrted tiie discovery of manuscript evidence of tiie existence of a medieval center of Jewish learning and culture IhRoueii, once tiie capital of Normandy in France. Mr. Gold, an associate professor of Bfedieval Jewish studies at the IftdversUy, told a meeting of the Airitarlcan Academy oC Jewish Research tiiat the manuscript findfaqgs. Indi¬ cate tfaal tiie Rouen center was active during the Uth and 12th centuries aUioqeJb it mi^ have orlf^nated as fbr back as tiie Stfa oentihy.
NEW YORK (WNSV-The 375-bed hospital ofthe Albert Efaistefai CoUege of Medidne of YesUva Uni¬ versity and the 773-bed Moote&ore Hos^tal, both lo¬ cated in tiie north Bronx, have margod,,!riti!M()nte- Uare assuming fidl TeaptiiislMl^ji^:-wOii''More effective use of inedical maxtBOtferaad^im*ttes was cited as the reasons. ' -r-~':::'M^^W^^ x--r.
NEW YORK (WN$)-The Uidm of Anierlcan^ebreiK ConereKatiiinsiJrefinin) plans :tbj:pttbiuai. a; serleis^ of ^
on critical problems toMng flie "coihjffi^ such as war, sex and dnig abuse. The Maurice;|7.Efasendratfa Piddicatiott F^md, estabUshed to iriark the 25th anni¬ versary of Rabid Elsendratfa's sendee as president of tfae Union, wOl defray the cost of piddlcatian. So far $15,000 has been contributed tp tfae fimd.
JERUSALEM (WNS) — Israel's ^st faeart trans¬ plant patient, 41-year-old Yitzfaak SnUam, died witfa¬ out regaining consciousness two wedcs after ids oiieratian. The anaoancement than Beiili^san Hospital in Petach Tikvah said the f^dber of faul^«&d,qt ^Any malfunction and not rejection of tli^.n^iw heart by bodily rejection mecfaanisms.
Anger Mouiitmg Over De Qiauile
NEW YORK. (JTA)—Mounting anger among American Jews over Frendi President de GauUe's Embargo on arms and spare parts to Israel was dramatisjed in a demand foi; a boycott of aU French productis and jervlces; Tiat actian was urged by sonie 1,000 coUege students who staged foitf irotost demonstrations in tiie Grea^ New York area;
Tfae largest group of pickets march^ In front of a FifUi
STAVSKY HONORED
Pictured above are Louis Fox, j^'sidel^ of tbe . CouneU of Jewisfa Federations and Weilfare Funds, congratulatfaig Babbi DavidStansky of theBeth Jacob Coogr^ation at tfae recent GmeralAssembly.oCthe CJFWF heldvfai'<AfliBilii^l:Geo(ie^^^^l'atn^p«^ tfae 1968 ree|id^70t tbe 'fisVm^^itjSa^ldi!!^^ United Jewish'iFiind and Coiunc!iD''and 'r^eeiwcl an expense-flree trip to the General Assembly makings as part ofthe ai«ard.
Mrs. Stavsky accompanied Um to Atlanta, where lie parttdi^ded. a^ong witfa 22 other BabbiUcal Award wfamers firom communities aU over tbe country in discusslohs on CoUege YouUi, Education, Israel, and other vital areas of concern qf lay and reUgious lead- er^i;tojthe.Uta|te(l,^t^tM«»d9!*n^^
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Avenue buUding wUch houses the French tourist ofSce, the French Lines andthe Froidi Bookshop. Tfaey carried l»n- ners and distributed hand- \dOs deiioundng"DeGauUe^s Treachery." Other studoits marched tfaroughtiie garment district and the diamond dis¬ trict in Manhattan and at the Renault auto plant in Engle- wood, Clifb, N.J.
THE lEMONSTRATIONS were orgaidzed by tfae Ad Hoc Conunittee of American Youtfa for Peace and Justice fai the Middle Fast "Boy¬ cott Ff ance, De GauUe Aids Arab Terr^ was one sign. Another wasy"1969 Travel Aids Arab T^or" was one sign. Another was "1969 Travel Schedule—Riviera Out, Isracd hi."
A spokesman saidtiiepar- jtidipatjhg :^ationarJewiBh youth groups wUch orgaid- 'zod'OteTpscdesisv^^ Anierlcahs "to voice tiieir' oppiosltion" to Gen de' GauUe's "One-sided standby actively boycotting French fashions, French wine, Frencfa automoUIes, Frencfa perfumes and' French tourism."
THE AMERICAN Jewish Congress assaUed the em¬ bargo and called on the French people to demand a reversal of France's Mid¬ east policy. RabU Athurt J. Lelyveld, AjCongress presi¬ dent, remarlted that Ameri¬ can Jews who travel to France, buy French products and use French services could take encouragement from the strong reaction of Frenchmen against the "pe¬ culiar definition of neutral¬ ity" tbe statement saidde- GauUe was trying "to im¬ pose on tfae Middle East." The statement urged France to use its good offices to bring tbe Arab states and Israel to tfae bargaiidngtaUe' as an action better designed to bring peace to tbe area.
The Jewish War Veterans described the embargo as a "hostile, one-sided act" and urged France to reconsider it. Commander Charles Feuereisen said In a letter to French ambassador Char¬ les Lucet tbat the embargo was "potentially seU-defeat- Ing and self-damaging" for France hi tfaat it disquali¬ fied France "as a possible Intermediary for peace in tiie Middle East."
TK^ ;NE)V York Thnnes, ;wUcfa:faaj4^)^Yerdly critici¬ zed Isrtie>l' for^ tiie Beirut raid and applauded the Se¬ curity CouncU's condemna¬ tion of Israel for the act, condemned the embargo, caUing it an "unevenhanded poUcy" and "twisted diplo- ipacy." Most West German newspapers expressed simi¬ lar views. The Skieddeutsdi
Zeitung said Gen. de GauUe had "dearl^ tiikeji the side oftfaeArabs.'^
Israel
Squelclies
Rumors
JERUSALEM, (JTA5~An- tfaoritative sources ho'e de- ided a NaUonal Broadcasting Company report that Israel had developed a nudear bomb or would have one soon.
The Israel Embassy in Washington denied tiie re¬ port and State Department officials told the Jewish Te- legrapUc Agency that the repcart wis totaUy erroneous andjtiiat the Uidted States ::.wa8.'6atl^fied'that,'.Iw^m^s^~ ;^i -¦: adhering ntoi;It8;;|loi|ge; t^tt* It would..iKt;4bo;cthe...fir ¦- natiim to Iidrodoce such wear pons in the area. -
THE STORY was televised on the "Huntiey -' Brinkley Report" ty James Itobinson, tfae NBC State Department correspondent. HeattrttMted Us report to uUdentUted sources who he said claimed United Sti^s Intelligence agenta bad learned that Is¬ raeU officials were quietly buying special parts and ma¬ terials usaUe only for the manufacture of nuclear wea¬ pons.
'Bonds'In Ottdal Role In '69
The people of Israd are detennined to go aliead witii their econondc development in spite of any danger of in¬ creased tension andviolence in tile r^oo. Dr. Joseph J. Schwartz, vice president of the Israel Bond Organisa¬ tion, declared foUowing fais retura Crom IsraeU
Dr. Schwartz spent a wedc in year-end talks with Priine ^ - ' Minister Eshkol, Finance Minister Sharef,. Minister without Portfidio Sapb: and other.govenunent leaders on the econondc needs of 1969 and on the extent to which th^ could be met by the proceeds from the sale of State of Israel Bonds.
REPORTING on the situ¬ ation in Israel foUowing i'o- cent develofinients which brought the Middle East crisis tothepdntcf bdllng over. Dr. Schwartz said:
"Tbe people inlsrael were saddened by a lack of under¬ standing on the port of the worid at large of tbeir dU- , . .flcult pasiHtfv'*. , ,¦./.'. '
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Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-01-16 |
| 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 |
