Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1970-10-22, page 01 |
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imL^....a Lolumbus. "Csn.n.r iL^uThwestern Chin ^n/\C7
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VOL. 48 NO. 44
OCTOBER 22-TISHREI22
•aJ Jnrht Mnh
^27S,000 In Israel Bonds Sold
A total of $27S,000 in State of Israel Bonds were pledged and sold during the recent High Holy Day Israel Bond Appeals held at
Congregation Ahavas Sholom, Agudas Achim Synagogue, Beth Jacob Congregation and Beth Tik¬ vah Synagogue. Beth Tikvah Synagogue conducted their Bond appeal during the Succoth festival.
Hie amount of Bonds sold constitute a record high foi* Columbus and Bond leaders here ascribe it to "the awareness of the Jewish community to the emergency and crisis that prevails in Israel ^nd the urgency of continuing the flow of investment capital for economic security."
The appeals were led by the following participating synagogues: .at Ahavas Sholom, with Rabbi Julius L. Baker and Irving Baker, Bond Chairman; Agudas Achim, Rabbi Samuel W. Rubenstein, with Bernard Scholtenst^ii, Chairman; Beth Jacob, Rabbi Oavid Stavsky and Jerome Bloomfield, Chairman; Beth llkvah, Rabbi Alan Ponn, with Harold Chem, Chair¬ man.
The World's Week
ISTANBUL (WNS)r-Col. Rustem Ocok, the Turkish police commander of Trebizond, Friday said the two hijackers of the Soviet Antonov-24 civil airliner were "definitely not Jewish."When theajrliner, hijacked on Thursday while 'bn a domestic flight from Batumi to Sukhumi, landed at Trebizond, unconfirmed rumors identified the hijackers as Jewish. A stewardess was killed and the pilot and copilot wounded during the hijacking.
LONDON (WNS)-Three scientists, two of them ¦ Jewish, were announced as winners of the Noble Peace ' Prize in Physiology and Medicine. Tlie Swedish Royal Caroline Medico-Surgical Institute in Stockholm an¬ nounced the selection of the three. Sir Bemhard Katz o( London and Dr. Julius Axelrod of Bethesda, Md., both Jewish, and Sweden's Dr. Ulf von Euler. Itiey will share the prize of $76,800.
WASHINGTON (WNSl-TTie State Department this week said the "legitimate interests and aspirations" of the Palestinians would have to be considered in any peace settlement. At the same time,a State Depart¬ ment spokesman expres^sed the belief that "most Palestinians want a political solution" of the Middle East conflict. Earlier in the week, at a briefing for northeastern newspaper editors, government spokesmen envisioned a possible Palestinian State comprised of the West Bank add Ga2a strip.-"
JERUSALEM (WNS)-A "new" Soviet peace plan fo'ir the Middle East, calling for Israeli withdrawal from occupied Arab territory was rejected by Israel as "containing nothing new." The U.S..State Department had earlier rejected the plan calling it "soured wine in an old bottle."
Rogers - Riad- Gromyko Talks Show Hardening of Positions
Crisis On Campus, Subject For Young Leadership
Fourth Seminar in the 1970 Series, "Passport to the Uncertain '7Q's" of the Young Leadership Development Program of the United Jewish Fund and Council will-be held on Monday, Oct. 26, at 8 o'clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ellman, 260 N. tblumbia Ave.
Guest speaker and discussion leader will be Dr. Norman E. Primer, National Coordinator for Hillel Affairs in the New York area. Dr. Frimer recently served as Dean of Stern College for Women, Yeshiva University, and was also De^n of Students at Hebrew Theological College in Chicago. Ordained at Hebrew Theological College, he received his degree of Doctor of Hebrew Literature from Yeshiya University, and is preparing to receive another d^torate in Higher Education from New York Unf/ersity. ¦
Dr. Frimer has lectured extensively in the . United States and Canada in the .fields oif JewishHipught, Youth and Education, and has been a staff member of B'nai B'rith Adult InsUtutes
IM ;,*iin many jparts of the country.
'¦^?^l-HeiVwdl qualified to speak
• ion., the subject, "The
American College Campus -
I j Crisis or Catharsis." " j i >: Chdik-liian of the evening is
II Mi^^.t iAlan Wasserstrom^ ilMfl) Mrs. Frank Kass as iiJ^Ibsptttility Chairman.
NEW YORK (JTA)~A flurry of diplomatic talks crucial to the fate of the stalled Jarring peace negotiations and the Suez cease-fire due to expire Nov. 5 opened here over the week¬ end with positions hardened on all sides. Secretary of State William P. Rogers met separately with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad of Egypt in what observers described as a last ditch Effort to save his Mideast peace initiative of last spring.But the U.S, is standing firm on its demand for a "rectification" of the alleged violations of the standstill phase of the cease¬ fire by Egypt with Soviet backing. The U.S. maintains, that the Jarring talks cannot get underway again unless confidence is restored in Arab and Soviet intentions.' Washington's "get tough" policy has reportedly en¬ countered . only stubborn inslstance by the EUissians that no violations occiured^ and that in any event the Soviet Union was not a party to the cease-fire and is hot responsible. Mr. Gromyko
reportedly rebuffed the U.S. Secretary of State on rec¬ tification and was non¬ committal on extension of the cesrse-firc byond Nov. 5. Mr. Rogers'also reportedly made no headway during a four hoiir dinner meeting with the Soviet diplomat at the Russian UN Mission Friday night in his efforts to head -off Soviet all-out support for Egypt in a new Mideast debate scheduled to open at the General Assembly Oct. 26.
No more promising results eioerged from Mr. Rogers' meeting with Foreign, Minister Riad late last Thursday diplomatic sources said. • The Egyptian official launched into a bitter attack on the U.S., and Israel when he addressed the General Assembly Friday and entered into an acrimonious exchange with U.S. Ambassador. Charles Yost and Ambassador Yosef Tekoah of Israel. Mr. Rogers and ^Mr. Gromyko are scheduled to meet again tomorroM^ night. Observer^ here believe that the issties of peace talks or resumed warfare in the Mideast will be settled during the next ten
days as diplomats, congregate :hiere for the 25th anniversary session of the UN. American diplomats made no effort to conceal their disappointment over the failure so far to end the impasse. Tthe' U.S. is believed willing to Nettie for considerably less than Israel's demands for total withdrawal of all Soviet missiles allegedly in¬ troduced into the truce zone since the cease-fire went into effect Aug. 7. The U.S. has carefully refrained from defining publicly what it means by "rectification" while Israel has 'made it. plain that it insists on ab¬ solute restoration of the Aug. 7 status quo ante. So far - however Israel and the U.S. are in close accord on the premise that the Jarring talks are dodiiied as long as an atinosphbre of; mistrust' prevails over the" missiles. Israel and the U.S.-are also agreed that the forthcoming Mideast debate placed on the General Assembly agenda at the insistence of Egypt could, do irreparable harm .'to the alreadfy dimmed prospects of peace.
Tl\e Young Leadership Development Program is, headed by William S. Friedman: Co-Chairman is Mrs. Ronald Rudolph. The Series for 1970-will continue with two additional seminars scheduled, ofle on Tuesday, Nov. 10, with I.L. Kenen, Editor and Publisher of the Near East Review & Digest, and the concluding seminar
scheduled for Monday, Nov. Service Agency of Newark, 30, with Irving Greenberg, New Jersey; as guest Executive Director of the speaker „and discussion Jewish C,ounseling and leader.
Sally Prelsand To Spoak Af Tontpio Israol
Israel loses Quiet But Intensive Effort To Forestall U.N.Debate
DR. NORMAN E. FRIMER
"A Woman Rabbi-Her Principles, Prerogatives and Problems," is the subject of a talk being given by; Sally Preisand, third year rab¬ binical student at the Hebrew Union College.: Jewish Institiite of Religion. Miss Preisand win be the first woman rabbi to be ordained in the United States.
In her first Columbus appearance, she will $peak at Temple Israel Tuesday,
'Oct^ 27, 8 p.m., under the joint sponsorship of B'nai B'rith Meii and Women and Teiiipl^Israel. The public is invited and a social hour will
'iwiow.;- ¦ .¦ ¦;,-;; : , ¦ ;,
' Teljeyision ;ah<l ritdio' i m^^i ^ beu^ handled by) n^j|^Mf| Qfo^an and'i
pcfsKijalby^iAfr^. Richard
¦ i. i"! M ' P ¦¦¦¦«¦¦ : :
SALLV PREISAND
Palmer under the chair-' mansJiip of Mrs. Jerry ScH-' ,wartz.' ¦,-¦; '¦.,;.
Miss' Prei$anfl, vylio has received 'national piibUcit/, attended the-lihden^Uiiate ;^n^^ \t the t;i^t«i^ty of
' ICONTINUED OlfPAbk's) ''
(Copyright, 1970 JTA. Inc.)
UfllTED NATIONS, N.Y. (J^)—Israel lost a quiet but intensive effort this week to forestall a debate before the current > General Assembly here on the Middle East impasse, a debate which Israel has ample reason to fear will be one long series of anti-Israel propaganda blasts from Arab countries.
The defeat was signaled by a formal -request to Assembly president Edvard Hambro by Mohammed el- Za^at, Egypt's envoy to the UN, for a ftillscale debate as soon as possible. Such .requests are routinely granted and debate was announced as beginning Oct. 26. A spokesman for the Israeli Mission said the request "adds another ob¬ stacle to the establishment of a peace settlement in the Middle East and to the . resumption of peace talks" , under the aegis of Dr. Gunnar: ^rarring, the UN peace emissary. , V EgypUan,:^yiet «;prtWgal I offensive at the yilfjgffx: ^1: pectedto be(iirect9|,«^|f^t , the United l^t^tes a^i ilfell: as Israel. Recording io ob- : serves^ here the Egyptians . believe the hard line taken by the Nixon administratitin on alleged cease-firc« violations oy Egypt stems
from consideration of the "Jewish vote" in next month's elections, Egypt's acting President Anwar Sadat accused the MS. this week of hoping for a power vacuum in Egypt following Nasser's death so that it can exert "pressure and threats" to weaken Egypt's stand against Israel. He told newsmen in Cairo that bis instructions to Mr. Riad were to "be'open to all, but any talks based on pressure or threats are rejected." The
Egyptians are expected to. seek a new UN .resolution that will define moresliarply the clients of the Security Council's Resolution 242 of Nov. 22, 1967," Which .call for Israel's withdrawal from the occupied Arab territories. Ihe Egyptians are said to believe that if they can bring such a resolutioii to a vote the U.S. would be m the awk¬ ward, position of having to support, it, at Israel's di^leasure, or reject it and thereby destroy the credibility of Washington's insistance that R^lution, 242 is fbe basis of its Mideast plicies. If the U.S., opposes' such a' resolution, the Egyptians claim, it will be isolated from other western countries nervous over Arab threats 'toe Western- Oil in¬ terests idiidaiixioui to have the Suez Canal, jne-bpened.
Ibe Middle East debate
began unofficially m the General Assembly's special political committee where th^ Egyptian delegate AW: Ismail Teymour, injected' the Arab-Israeli conflict into a discussion of the apartheid policies of the South African government. Replying to . Teymour's charges of ikraeli racism, the Israeli '(i^e|ate Shamey C&hana,"'alsBrted that the cause of the Mideast conflict was Arab insi§,teiicfi on the theory that'the'region "' must be excltisively Arab' He said this was discrimination. 'Ih^i^'afe'' already Arab: stat«s," why must there be another oKe at the expense of fcrad? he
asked. The Egyptian'allied that Israel insisted that' it must be exclusively Jewish the same kind of argiimWit that was advanced by white " supremacists jn South Afnca. A similar argtmient was advanced in the General Assembly by former " President qJiarlraHelou, of" Lebanon, attendinigvitliel' t^iOii as a presideiitiaL mv^ fwm his coimBy! W -:^ou saidit was ''strange'-'''' i that In the aoBi cehlunT'Hfte'^ armed forsea 6( awiisHi" " were able to oribJater^hd i expand a state wliqse ¦¦ existence conlVadlidtW i i history, to the prejtidlcey«rt: i only ol Moslems aSS ' CSu^sUans but perhaps also of Jews." »~ I- "«o
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1970-10-22 |
| 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 | 2008-12-17 |
