Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1970-11-19, page 01 |
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3/\^ Serving Colunibus, "Centrar" and Southwestern t)hio ^PK
VOL .4K NO. 48
NOVEMBER 19, 1970-CHESIIVAN 20
tnilt4 I* AMtritM ni ItmliU Un\i'
Jerry Schoilenslein Named MC lor CTA Bar Mitzvah Dinner
Dr. ^ Ivan Gilbert, , *. ._¦ ! ,uL „„.„ wriH»„ ar
President of CTA, ann¬ ounced . the recent selection of ¦ Jerome Schottenstein as Master of Ceremonies for . Columbus Torah. Academy's Scholarship Dinner this Sunday, Nov. 22, at 6:30 p.m. The selection is most ap¬ propriate in view qf an an¬ nouncement this past week that Schottenstein was a recipient of t^e 1970 i(Vmudim Award of Torah U'mesorah, 'the National Society for Hebrew Day Schools. The award, is . presented each year to outstanding leaders of the American Jewish community who are dedicated to enhancing Jewish Education. By added circumstance, Schottenstein was chairman of the com¬ mittee inliich jestablished the school, serv^ as its first ¦. chairman of the iioard and has been a guiding forc^ since Torah Academy's birth.
Slated for the Sheraton Columbus, this year's Scholarship Dinner takes on the added significance of the first event in Torah Academy's Bar Mitzvah Year celebration. The semi- fOrmal affair is a departure;, from previous dinners, beginning with a true gourmet menu personally
J. SCHOTTENSTEIN
created and supervised by Mr. Gajdoss, the Sheraton's Food and Beverage Director...and the dishes are' magnificent.
Dinner guests will be . treated to a discourse by Dr. Haim Ginott, one - of the nation^' leading authorities on child b^avior.^ "Teacher- Aiithor-Lecturer Ginott has delighted audiences throughout the world with his comments and advice to parents on how to cope with their progeny.
Entertainment this year' will be provided l^y students selected from present classes and graduates who return from their .studies in local high schools and universities to join in\a review of what has occurred in Torah Academy through
the years. Written and directed by CTA teachers Ruth Abramsoh and Anabelle Snyder, the fast- paced "blackouts"'are witty and pointed, probing into little known and long forgotten situations and coming up with some very funny lines.
And, as a Bar Mitzvah thanks his parents and friends for helping him "reach this day," so too will Torah Academy pause during the evening's festivities to honor the many friends of Traditional Jewish Education who have nur¬ tured and helped the school during its first 13 years. '
The nij||y special facets of the wipend celebration require the attention of a large committee, headed by General Co-Chairmen Mr., and Mrs. Bernard Yenkin and Jerome Schottenstein;
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
An Afternoon Wtth Cleveland
The Columbus Chapter of Hadassah is pleased to.,, announce "An Afternoon wiU) Cleveland Amory" as the; program for its Donor LUiicheon on Jan, 19, 1971 at the Hospitality Motor Inn.
"The author of three best- selling classics of American Society, The Proper Bostonians, The Last Resorts and Who Killed Society?, Mr. Amory has also been called "the most widely published writer in America." In addition to frequent special articles, he is chief criUc for TV Guide, writes- the weekly column "Trade Winds" for the Saturday Review, and prodiices a semi-monthly column in animal welfare for Holiday magazine.
One of the counti7's most popular lecturers, Mr. Amory is also well known as a television personality. He has appeared frequently on ¦ suij^v.shows .aB,|']rhe,;,l^ery;
CLEVELAND AMORY
years his humorous essays on The Today Show were looked forward to by a host of viewers, and for three years his radio satires, three limes a week, brightened the early morning listening of New York's \yPAT audience,. Minimum donation to attend the donor luncheon is $30. For information contact Mrs. Jerry Shapiro, Chapter Dpnor Chjfiirman at ^-2803 P^ ';^(II^JV•^La^\yrence^'{i^'seri• ¦
Israeli Cabinet Debates Position
ROBERT C. TENENBAUM
Tenenbaum Named Press Secretary by Gov. Elect Giliigan
COLUMBUS — Gov¬ ernor - elect John J. Giliigan today appointed HobCTt C. Columbus secretary.
Tenenbaum,'29, will be responsible for liaison between the governor and his staff and all news media. He will also serve as liason between the governor's office and the press officers of the various executive
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
Tenenbaum of as his press
JERUSALEM (WNS)-The Israeli Cabinet, is split over the conditions vvhiqh would permit it to return to Uie, Jarring peace talks.
Premier Golda Meir and one faction of the cabinet is opposed to returnjng to the. talks unless the misbile violations, have been rec¬ tified. Defense Minister Moshe Dayah, supported by , a majority of the cabinet, ''favors rettiming to talks even if the missiles remain in the standstill zone.
Political circles believe Israel will return to the talks once Foreign Minister Abba Eban negotiates a new formula with the U.S. which would enable Israel to return to the talks without losing face or accepting too great a military risk.
Mr. Eban is believed in¬ sisting • on American.' guarantees that would protect Israel from future
Advance Gifts Retreat Sets Pace For 1971 Campaign
fiWh
G^i^i.Sho^y^^/rii^jiDick'f'mani;Qi%^ > Resi^tipti „, ^,^,.., C«jt#jo. Showy^;ThO MikK;^f |winii»235-8065. G^ rHerfjjferf
Dou);las Show, Life with Linkletter, etc., as well as serving as guest, com¬ mentator on CBS' Sixty Minutes. In 1968 Mr. Amory hosted a daily 60-minute Iclcvision pri^gram from Philadelphia. For many
j,<nhairijiar
Donor Chairman are: Mitzvah, Mrs. Simon Dinitz; Szold, Mr^. Morris Swedlow; Shalom, Mrs. Fred Roland; Liloh, Mrs. Neil Pallet; Chai, lUrs. Bert Goldmeier; Ziona, Mrs. Lee Ross; Sampler, Mrs. Goldie Mayer.
Leadership and workers of the Advance Gifts Division set a high pace towarcis meeting the 1971 Campaign 6oaI of the United Jewish Fund and Council of $3,000,000, at its recent all- day Retreat. Approximately 40 members of the Advance Gifts Division leadership conducted the Second'An¬ nual Retreat, at the Hospitality Inn last Sunday, indoctrinatuig. and gearing themselves to conduct one of the most ambitious and far- reaching Campaigns ever undertaken in Columbus. A majority of the gifts an¬ nounced before the Retreat ended represented double that of last year's pledges.
.Present at the.^jRetreat werev the foUowjjgii Ben Goo(]in^n, gene^^l^iChair- f^j^acks, Advaftpe .Gifts, Ernest Stem, co-chairman. Advance Gifts, Marvin L. Glassman, president of the UJFC, Sidnay I. Blatt, Norman Meizlish, and Ed\yard Schlezinger, members of the Campaign Advisory Board,. Marvin Franks Arthur J. Isaac, Jr., Edmund Klein, Leonard Schottenstein, Stanley Sch¬ wartz, Jr.,' and Alan Weiler, Associate Chairman, Sol Zell, immediate past chairni|^;i an(|,.th^,,following wojcHprlj'/.jIJiifJirh^odore'^ N.
Herbjfert •'vy|(olmi|p^i Irving Schneider. li'a Monroe, Miirray Greenberg, Stanley Goldbergs, Harry Schwartz, Mitchell BJazar, Elliot Grayson, Richard Kohn, Leon Handler, R. Milton Friedman, Ed Ellman. Chairman of the
man^' ' Gordon chairman.
Trades & Professions Division, Martin Hoffman, and his co-chairman, Gerald Friedman, were also present as well as the following Section Chairmen: Heinz. Hoffman, William Brand- wein, and David Mellman.
The group listened tO and discussed the needs to be met,, locally, nationally and overseas. They discussed their roles as leaders, as pacesetters and as solicitors, in sessions on group dynamics and techniques of solicitation. Soul-searching questions were asked:. "What areHhe implications for world and American Jewry,, relating to the sur¬ vival of Israel? " What does a strong Israel mean fot* American foreign policy?" "What is my responsibility, as V? "lembfir of the Columbus JeWish com¬ munity, to my people here at home, and to 'my people throughout the world, particularly in Israel."
In addition to general increased gifts made that evening, several of the men present will be going to Israel on UJFA MISSIONS; others will be attending the UJA Conference in New York in mid-December, where Moshe Dayan will address the gathering of the most outstanidljingi;^ewish leaders of the Unitied States and Canada.
Parlicipatitig . in the ttetreat were also Colonel Nathan Sharony of Israel, Artillery Officer based at the Sue;: Canal, and Samuel M. Miller, member of the United Jewish Appeal National Cabinet. Local participants included
Messrs. Glassman, Bop)' Goodman,^Gordon Zacks,;.^ and Norman Meizlish. .,\ti A great deal of ground-' work is now being laid before the Campaign opens of-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE i)
deceptions on Egypt's part, while Mrs. Meir is seeking "contractural" agreements thai the U.S. will continue to deliver armslo Israel. Afms are at present being delivered on a day-to-day basis.
Meanwhile, the govern¬ ment has come under at¬ tacks by opposition parties for considering a return to the peace talks. Menahem Beigin, leader of the Herat Party, denounced the government stating that a return to the Jarring talks would resultin a compulsory Israel retreat beyond the boundaries now acceptable to the government.
Another Herut leader, Gen. Ezer Weizman, a brother-in-law of Mr. Dayan .and former commander of the Israel Air Force, accused ¦the government of "playing down" the missile threat. "One day the goyemment Was, up in arms about the threat of 50 Soviet Sam missiles introduced in the Canal zone," he isaid. "Suddenly within a few (Jays, the SO missile sites have vanished-if not from the west bank of the §uez Canal, at least from the political landscape."
' Reports persist that Israel rwould return to the talks if the follo.)rVing three con¬ ditions werie met: ¦ An American pledge to main-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
Mrs. Martin Godofsky Named Chairman for Bonds Fashion Show
Mrs. Martin Godofsky, long active in the Israel Bonds Campaign in Columbus, is the 1970 Bonds For Israel Fashion Show Chairman. Mrs. Godofsky has served with the Women's Division for Bonds For Israel in many capacities, since its inception; three times as Women's Division Chairman of the Governor's Dinner, two terms as General Chairman of the Women's, Division, and currently as a member of the Bon<ls For Israel Advisory Board. As a tireless worker in the cause of Israel, Mrs. Godofsky has served on the boards of many organizations in Columbus. She is a life member of Hadassah, and a life member of Brandeis,_ as well as being a charter member of the Columbus Chapter of Brandeis Women's Committee,.. Her pther comnpiufjity , par¬ ticipation inql^^(i|es B'nai - B'rith Women',' 'Mizrachi;' ORT, National Council of Jewish Women, Agudas Achim Sisterhood and Tifereth Israel Sisterhood, and the Women's Division of the United Jewish Fund and Council..
. As Fashion Show
MRS. MARTIN GODOFSKY
Chairman, Mrs. Godofsky is pleased to announce that Mrs. Bernard Mentzer and Mrs. Walter Robinson have agreed to serve as Fashion Show Co-Chairmen. Also serving as Chairmen for the Dec. 10 Fashion ShcTw are: Mrs. Melvin Schottenstein and Mrs. Bernard Cohen, jyipdels; Mr9,'i<J,9lius;^aker,; Jfilfipli()^\ei:W[rSHlrViirigS6fi|;i j^ese^rya^tions; H Mrs.. iBen' Goodman, Menii; and Mrs! Frederick Luper, Publicity. The exciting and glamorous Fashion Show and Luncheon will be held at the Sheraton Columbus on Dec. 10. Minimum Bonds purchase is two hundred
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 41
y
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1970-11-19 |
| 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 |
