Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-08-01, page 01 |
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LIBRARY, OHIO H18T0FUCAL SOCIETY 1982 VELMrt AVE, COLS. 0. 43E11 EXCH 2f\\yy s^rv'"9 Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community (or Over 50 Years \\7A\X. VOL. 52 NO. 31 AUGUST 1, 1974 - AB 13 Soviets Attempting To Stifle Information: BUENOS AIRES (WNS) - The ninth plenary | session of the Latin American Jewish Congress ended here with resolutions protesting the prison sentence given Nazi.hunter Beate Klarsfeld in Germany and expressing solidarity with Israel and the Jews in the Soviet Union and Syria. The $500 Latin American human rights prize for 1974 was awarded to .Martin Luis,Guz'man, a Mexican senator and former chair¬ man of the Mexican-Israel Culture Institute. JERUSALEM (WNS) - The 140 delegates to the Conference of the Europe-Israel Parliamentary Friendship Association ended a two-day conclave here by urging European governments not to give in to Arab; economic pressures aimed!against- Israel. The representatives of 13 European parliaments urged support of Israel and called for direct negotiations between Israel and the Arab states. A small group of delegateeees agreed to keep in constant touch on ef¬ forts to help Soviet Jews to emigrate to Israel. NEW YORK (WNS) - The Joint Advisory Com¬ mittee of the Synagogue Council of America and the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council and the National Jewish Commission on Law and Public Affairs (COLP) have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reject an appeal from a district court ruling that the provisions in the 1958 federal Humane Slaughter Act permitting schechita (kosher . slaughtering) was constitutional. The appeal was filed by a group of eight taxpayers, the Society of Animal rights and the Committee for a Wall of Separation between Church and State" in America. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York had ruled that schechita was "historically related to considerations of humaneness" and that by allowing it . to continue congress "neither established the tenets of the faith nor interfered with the exercise of any other." Soviet Authorities Detain Ohio Students; Appeal Made To Hurok For Soviet Jewish Artists WASHINGTON (JTA) — Two students from Ohio who were detained for two-and-a- half hours and released by Soviet authorities in Kiev arrived in London July 23 where they plan to file a protest with the United States Embassy there, according to the father of one of the students. Dr. Louis Rosenblum told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency by telephone from Cleveland that his daughter Miriam, & Allon In U.S. For Talks On Next Stage Of Geneva Jerusalem (JTA5 — Deputy Premier . and Foreign Minister Yigal Allon left July 25 for the United States for meetings with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger and Treasury Secretary William Simon. It was not determined at the time of his departure whether Allon would meet President Nixon. Allon is due to arrive in Washington July 28. Political analysts in Jerusalem noted that Allon decided to make the visit as " previously planned despite the latest developments in .the Watergate affair and the fact that the center of in¬ ternational interest is focussed on the situation in Cypnus. It is expected here that Alton's discussions will center around the next stage of the Geneva peace con¬ ference. Although no dramatic results are ex¬ pected, it is assumed that one of the main topics will be whether the next round of talks would take place with Egypt, Jordan or both. Before leaving Israel, Allon said that he would not bring any specific plans for talks with Jordan. He said he ! would merely discuss with Kissinger the various alternatives for talks with King Hussein. Israel in¬ dicated last week that she is ready to hold negotiations with Jordan, and that she no longer insists that a further round of talks with Egypt, take priority. The reasons for this shift, observers note, is that the normalization process oh the Suez Canal is proceeding slowly and Israel prefers not to continue the dialogue with Egypt until it can be better determined how normalization would take effect. The issue of a Palestinian entity, which was discussed at the Cabinet session July 21, will also undoubtedly be raised by Allon. Another subject to be discussed will be implementation of American promises to in¬ crease economic and military aid to Israel. Allon is expected to be out of the country for 10 days. His duties will be handled by Premier Yitzhak Rabin. Prior to his American visit, Allon will spend three days iri London, in what was described as a "purely private, visit." Alton's son and daughter are currently in Britain. At his departure at Ben Gurion Airport, Allon said he would certainly talk to U.S. officials about the need for secure and defensible (CONTINUED ON PAGE 15) 20, and Sheldon Benjamin, 18, both students at the University of Cincinnati, were trying to find out the needs of Soviet Jews who are studying Hebrew at ulpanim throughout the Soviet Union. Dr; Rosenblum said ^n Moscow alone there are 800 students of all ages but mostly young people lear¬ ning Hebrew. He said they desperately need Hebrew books and students have written; frequently from Moscow arid Leningrad to the Israeli government seeking the books. The two students were arrested at a farewell party for Zolo Torevsky, a Kiev film director who was leaving the next day for Israel. Dr. Rosenblum said the two students were charged with stealing several items from the home, but there was nothing in the apartment since everything had already been Palestinian Question Debated In Israel By David Landau JERUSALEM (JTA) - The government's policy on the Palestinian question as enunciated by the Cabinet statement July 21 was challenged two days later by four urgent motions for the agenda'in the Knesset. All of them were comfortably voted to committee despite^a small number of' Labor: abstentions and ' ^bne defection. The government's position, as approved by the Cabinet, is that Israel would continue to seek peace in the Middle East by negotiations with Jordan ■ as the representative of the Palestinian Arabs and that it would not negotiate with "terrorist organizations." Among the proposers of motions for the agenda was Knesseter Moshe Dayan who stated his own ideas on the West Bank and Palestinian issues—but he agreed in the end that his motion be voted to committee rather than be debated by the plenum and thus avoided a parliamen¬ tary confrontation between himself and the government arid party colleagues. Replying to,all the motiafflb 7.T- front Shmuel Tamir-'of Likud, Yitzhak Raphael of the National ' Religious Party, and Nissim Eliad of the Independent Liberal Parry — Foreign Minister Yigal Allon said that the Cabinet's statement July 21 had not been new, but had rather "clarified" policy. It showed, he said, that the government recognized the problem and sought a solution to it based on the expression of the Palestinian national identity within the framework of one Arab state east of Israel. Allon stated further that Israel could no longer be accused by its critics of ignoring the Palestinian problem arid the Cabinet statement would facilitate. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) shipped to Israel. Dr. Rosenblum said the students had been "roughed up soriie." Dr. Rosenblum, a former president of the Union of Councils for Soviet Jewry, said the arrest was part of the Soviet policy to try to discourage tourists from meeting with Soviet Jews. The two students, on 'leaving London, arrived in Israel to work on kibbutzim. NEW YORK (JTA) - Soviet authorities have taken a new series of actions aimed at stifling information about the situation of Jewish activists in the USSR, ac¬ cording to reports from the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry. The Kremlin is worried that the publicity surrounding their treatment of the activists will increase chances that the Jackson Amendment and other legislation restricting trade credits will be passed by Congress, the SSSJ reported July 25. On July 19. the (CONTINUED ON PAGE U) ' •» - David M. Adlerstein To Head District No. 2 AZA David M. Adlerstein has been elected Aleph Godol (president) of District no. 2 of AZA, a position in which he heads all AZA activities in the states of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico and Wyoming, for 1974-1975. He had served as District no. 2 S'gan (vice-president) in 1973-1974. David is a senior at Eastmoor High School, in Columbus, where he serves as Managing Editor of The Eastmoor Chariot, and where he was a member of the 1974 "In The Know" championship team. He currently is completing his term as Aleph Godol (president) of Heart of Ohio Chapter, AZA, in Columbus. He is a member of the B'nai B'rith District no. 2 Board of Governors and the Ohior Kentucky Regional Board of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. At the recent l BBYO District no. 2 Convention, in Champaign, Illinois, David David M. Adlerstein served as Convention Coordinator, and - along with Laurel Baldwin, of Louisville, Kentucky - was responsible for the entire program of the 5-day con¬ vention. The convention theme was "Kulam B'yachad" and focussed on challenges to Jewish youth. 262 youth, 4 staff members, and 4 scholars-in-residehce participated in the program. David is the son of Mr .and Mrs. Hersh L. Adlerstein of 1629 Kenview Road, Columbus, Ohio. Ambassador Shalev To Visit Here On Behalf Of Bonds . Ambassador Mordechai Shalev, Minister Plenipotentiary of the State of Israel in its embassy at Washington D.C. will be the • guest of honor at a reception on behalf of the Prime Minister's Club of State of Israel Bonds Tuesday night, August 13,1974 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Ruben, it was announced by Ben Goodman, General Chairman for Israel Bonds in Columbus. A leading career officer in Israel's diplomatic corps for over two decades, Mr. Shalev has served in key posts at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs in Jerusalem and as an Am¬ bassador and Consul- General in Africa and North' America. Prior to assuming his present post in Washington, Mr. Shalev was the Director of the African Division of the Israel Ministry for Foreign Affairs In Jerusalem from 1970 to 1973. Before that he served for three years as the Director of the Consular Division of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. From 1965 to 7(067 Mr. Shalev was Israel's Am¬ bassador to Ghana, . In a previous diplomatic assignment in the United States, between the years 1961 and 1965 Mr. Shalev represented his country in Los Angeles, California as MORDECHAI SHALEV Cbnsul-General for ^the. Western United States. In 1951 he was stationed at the Israel embassy in Washington where he served for a six year period as Secretary to the Embassy; In a distinguished military career, he served as a lieutenant in the Jewish Brigade of the British Army during World War II, arid as a Major in Israel's Defense Forces in the War of Liberation in 1948 and 1949. Born in Czechoslovakia in 1915, he attended the Masaryk University from 1934 to 1938. He immigrated to Israel the following year. Mr. Shalev also holds an M.A. degree in International Relations from, the American University in Washington D.C. A member of Israel's (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-08-01 |
Subject | Jews -- Ohio -- Periodicals |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Creator | The Chronicle Printing and Publishing Co. |
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 |
File Size | 3645 Bytes |
Searchable Date | 1974-08-01 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-11-02 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-08-01, page 01 |
Searchable Date | 1974-08-01 |
Full Text | LIBRARY, OHIO H18T0FUCAL SOCIETY 1982 VELMrt AVE, COLS. 0. 43E11 EXCH 2f\\yy s^rv'"9 Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community (or Over 50 Years \\7A\X. VOL. 52 NO. 31 AUGUST 1, 1974 - AB 13 Soviets Attempting To Stifle Information: BUENOS AIRES (WNS) - The ninth plenary | session of the Latin American Jewish Congress ended here with resolutions protesting the prison sentence given Nazi.hunter Beate Klarsfeld in Germany and expressing solidarity with Israel and the Jews in the Soviet Union and Syria. The $500 Latin American human rights prize for 1974 was awarded to .Martin Luis,Guz'man, a Mexican senator and former chair¬ man of the Mexican-Israel Culture Institute. JERUSALEM (WNS) - The 140 delegates to the Conference of the Europe-Israel Parliamentary Friendship Association ended a two-day conclave here by urging European governments not to give in to Arab; economic pressures aimed!against- Israel. The representatives of 13 European parliaments urged support of Israel and called for direct negotiations between Israel and the Arab states. A small group of delegateeees agreed to keep in constant touch on ef¬ forts to help Soviet Jews to emigrate to Israel. NEW YORK (WNS) - The Joint Advisory Com¬ mittee of the Synagogue Council of America and the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council and the National Jewish Commission on Law and Public Affairs (COLP) have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reject an appeal from a district court ruling that the provisions in the 1958 federal Humane Slaughter Act permitting schechita (kosher . slaughtering) was constitutional. The appeal was filed by a group of eight taxpayers, the Society of Animal rights and the Committee for a Wall of Separation between Church and State" in America. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York had ruled that schechita was "historically related to considerations of humaneness" and that by allowing it . to continue congress "neither established the tenets of the faith nor interfered with the exercise of any other." Soviet Authorities Detain Ohio Students; Appeal Made To Hurok For Soviet Jewish Artists WASHINGTON (JTA) — Two students from Ohio who were detained for two-and-a- half hours and released by Soviet authorities in Kiev arrived in London July 23 where they plan to file a protest with the United States Embassy there, according to the father of one of the students. Dr. Louis Rosenblum told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency by telephone from Cleveland that his daughter Miriam, & Allon In U.S. For Talks On Next Stage Of Geneva Jerusalem (JTA5 — Deputy Premier . and Foreign Minister Yigal Allon left July 25 for the United States for meetings with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger and Treasury Secretary William Simon. It was not determined at the time of his departure whether Allon would meet President Nixon. Allon is due to arrive in Washington July 28. Political analysts in Jerusalem noted that Allon decided to make the visit as " previously planned despite the latest developments in .the Watergate affair and the fact that the center of in¬ ternational interest is focussed on the situation in Cypnus. It is expected here that Alton's discussions will center around the next stage of the Geneva peace con¬ ference. Although no dramatic results are ex¬ pected, it is assumed that one of the main topics will be whether the next round of talks would take place with Egypt, Jordan or both. Before leaving Israel, Allon said that he would not bring any specific plans for talks with Jordan. He said he ! would merely discuss with Kissinger the various alternatives for talks with King Hussein. Israel in¬ dicated last week that she is ready to hold negotiations with Jordan, and that she no longer insists that a further round of talks with Egypt, take priority. The reasons for this shift, observers note, is that the normalization process oh the Suez Canal is proceeding slowly and Israel prefers not to continue the dialogue with Egypt until it can be better determined how normalization would take effect. The issue of a Palestinian entity, which was discussed at the Cabinet session July 21, will also undoubtedly be raised by Allon. Another subject to be discussed will be implementation of American promises to in¬ crease economic and military aid to Israel. Allon is expected to be out of the country for 10 days. His duties will be handled by Premier Yitzhak Rabin. Prior to his American visit, Allon will spend three days iri London, in what was described as a "purely private, visit." Alton's son and daughter are currently in Britain. At his departure at Ben Gurion Airport, Allon said he would certainly talk to U.S. officials about the need for secure and defensible (CONTINUED ON PAGE 15) 20, and Sheldon Benjamin, 18, both students at the University of Cincinnati, were trying to find out the needs of Soviet Jews who are studying Hebrew at ulpanim throughout the Soviet Union. Dr; Rosenblum said ^n Moscow alone there are 800 students of all ages but mostly young people lear¬ ning Hebrew. He said they desperately need Hebrew books and students have written; frequently from Moscow arid Leningrad to the Israeli government seeking the books. The two students were arrested at a farewell party for Zolo Torevsky, a Kiev film director who was leaving the next day for Israel. Dr. Rosenblum said the two students were charged with stealing several items from the home, but there was nothing in the apartment since everything had already been Palestinian Question Debated In Israel By David Landau JERUSALEM (JTA) - The government's policy on the Palestinian question as enunciated by the Cabinet statement July 21 was challenged two days later by four urgent motions for the agenda'in the Knesset. All of them were comfortably voted to committee despite^a small number of' Labor: abstentions and ' ^bne defection. The government's position, as approved by the Cabinet, is that Israel would continue to seek peace in the Middle East by negotiations with Jordan ■ as the representative of the Palestinian Arabs and that it would not negotiate with "terrorist organizations." Among the proposers of motions for the agenda was Knesseter Moshe Dayan who stated his own ideas on the West Bank and Palestinian issues—but he agreed in the end that his motion be voted to committee rather than be debated by the plenum and thus avoided a parliamen¬ tary confrontation between himself and the government arid party colleagues. Replying to,all the motiafflb 7.T- front Shmuel Tamir-'of Likud, Yitzhak Raphael of the National ' Religious Party, and Nissim Eliad of the Independent Liberal Parry — Foreign Minister Yigal Allon said that the Cabinet's statement July 21 had not been new, but had rather "clarified" policy. It showed, he said, that the government recognized the problem and sought a solution to it based on the expression of the Palestinian national identity within the framework of one Arab state east of Israel. Allon stated further that Israel could no longer be accused by its critics of ignoring the Palestinian problem arid the Cabinet statement would facilitate. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) shipped to Israel. Dr. Rosenblum said the students had been "roughed up soriie." Dr. Rosenblum, a former president of the Union of Councils for Soviet Jewry, said the arrest was part of the Soviet policy to try to discourage tourists from meeting with Soviet Jews. The two students, on 'leaving London, arrived in Israel to work on kibbutzim. NEW YORK (JTA) - Soviet authorities have taken a new series of actions aimed at stifling information about the situation of Jewish activists in the USSR, ac¬ cording to reports from the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry. The Kremlin is worried that the publicity surrounding their treatment of the activists will increase chances that the Jackson Amendment and other legislation restricting trade credits will be passed by Congress, the SSSJ reported July 25. On July 19. the (CONTINUED ON PAGE U) ' •» - David M. Adlerstein To Head District No. 2 AZA David M. Adlerstein has been elected Aleph Godol (president) of District no. 2 of AZA, a position in which he heads all AZA activities in the states of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico and Wyoming, for 1974-1975. He had served as District no. 2 S'gan (vice-president) in 1973-1974. David is a senior at Eastmoor High School, in Columbus, where he serves as Managing Editor of The Eastmoor Chariot, and where he was a member of the 1974 "In The Know" championship team. He currently is completing his term as Aleph Godol (president) of Heart of Ohio Chapter, AZA, in Columbus. He is a member of the B'nai B'rith District no. 2 Board of Governors and the Ohior Kentucky Regional Board of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. At the recent l BBYO District no. 2 Convention, in Champaign, Illinois, David David M. Adlerstein served as Convention Coordinator, and - along with Laurel Baldwin, of Louisville, Kentucky - was responsible for the entire program of the 5-day con¬ vention. The convention theme was "Kulam B'yachad" and focussed on challenges to Jewish youth. 262 youth, 4 staff members, and 4 scholars-in-residehce participated in the program. David is the son of Mr .and Mrs. Hersh L. Adlerstein of 1629 Kenview Road, Columbus, Ohio. Ambassador Shalev To Visit Here On Behalf Of Bonds . Ambassador Mordechai Shalev, Minister Plenipotentiary of the State of Israel in its embassy at Washington D.C. will be the • guest of honor at a reception on behalf of the Prime Minister's Club of State of Israel Bonds Tuesday night, August 13,1974 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Ruben, it was announced by Ben Goodman, General Chairman for Israel Bonds in Columbus. A leading career officer in Israel's diplomatic corps for over two decades, Mr. Shalev has served in key posts at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs in Jerusalem and as an Am¬ bassador and Consul- General in Africa and North' America. Prior to assuming his present post in Washington, Mr. Shalev was the Director of the African Division of the Israel Ministry for Foreign Affairs In Jerusalem from 1970 to 1973. Before that he served for three years as the Director of the Consular Division of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. From 1965 to 7(067 Mr. Shalev was Israel's Am¬ bassador to Ghana, . In a previous diplomatic assignment in the United States, between the years 1961 and 1965 Mr. Shalev represented his country in Los Angeles, California as MORDECHAI SHALEV Cbnsul-General for ^the. Western United States. In 1951 he was stationed at the Israel embassy in Washington where he served for a six year period as Secretary to the Embassy; In a distinguished military career, he served as a lieutenant in the Jewish Brigade of the British Army during World War II, arid as a Major in Israel's Defense Forces in the War of Liberation in 1948 and 1949. Born in Czechoslovakia in 1915, he attended the Masaryk University from 1934 to 1938. He immigrated to Israel the following year. Mr. Shalev also holds an M.A. degree in International Relations from, the American University in Washington D.C. A member of Israel's (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2009-04-30 |