Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-08-22, page 01 |
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fig| . \^^M 2A\yy Serving Columbuit and Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 50 Years ^QA\ji LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1082 VEjLMa AVE. COLa. O. 43E11 EXOH VOL.52 NO.34 AUGUST 22,1974* ELUL 4 WASHINGTON (WNS)—The State Department has disagreed with Israel's contention that Syria has ., violated the disengagement agreement by moving mortars and heavy aetillery into the buffer zone bet¬ ween the two countries. The Department said it is "satisfied" the agreement is "workirig well." But Department spokesman Robert Anderson refused to confirm or deny the Israeli reports that large quan¬ tities of Soviet arms are being shipped into Syria. Israel, However, has been taking a tough stand against what (t considers Syrian violations. In one case Israel refused to remove a minefield from the buffer zone because the Syrians placed heavy mortar batteries into a zone where the agreement calls for a thinning of armaments, according to a report from Tel Aviv. While agreeing that most of Syria's violations have been minor, Israel is particularly concerned about Syria's failure to re-establish the civilian population of Kuneitra and the surrounding villages which Israel > relinquished as part of the agreement. NEW YORK (WNS) - The Jewish Community Council and the Board of Rabbis in Brooklyn have issued a joint statement warning Jewish religious and lay organizations to eliminate Las Vegas Nite fund raising operations which the statement said violated both state law and Jewish ethical traditions. The warning came after two recent incidents involving such fund-raising activities at two Brooklyn synagogues. First-a reputed Mafia figure, Steven Cirillo, 31, was shot to death during a Las Vegas Nite event at Congregation B'nai Israel of Sheepshead Bay. A week later police aided a similar event at the Hebrew Alliance Synagogue of Coney Island arresting 10 persons. Police sources said that it appeared that such gambling games were conducted occasionally at "- churches and synagogues by'organized- crime ' elements, but there was no connection between Jewish sponsors of the game nights and crime figures; Ne* Director To Assume Duties At Hebrew School Dr. Harold' Starr, President of The Columbus Hebrew School, and Dr. William Engelman, Chairman of the Jewish Education Committee - Columbus* Jewish Federation, announced the appointment of Mr. Joshua Chorowsky as Director of The Columbus Hebrew School, and the Jewish Education Committee - CJF, beginning with the new school year. Mr. Chorowsky comes to Columbus with a rich and extensive background in Jewish education. He was involved in teaching, supervision and ad¬ ministration in Day Schools and supplementary schools as well as with Communal educational institutions. Following a successful career of teaching, Mr. Chorowsky held ad-, ministrative positions in Day Schools for over ten years. Prior to his appointment in Columbus, he was associated with the United Hebrew . Schools of Metropolitan Detroit, where be held the position of Principal of The Hebrew High School and Registrar of the Midrasha College of Jewish Studies. Mr. Chorowsky was in¬ volved in the development of Innovative and experimental curricular projects which have gained national at¬ tention. Among those were conceptually integrated approaches and materials for the Day School, and a (CONTINUED, ON PAGE 15) Dr. A. Hackel Receives District BB Appointment Lawrence Peizer, District Grand Lodge No. 2 B'nai B'rith of Cleveland, has announced the appointment of Lawrence Greenwald as chairman of the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization com¬ mittee, Dr. Alan S. Hackel as the District Program Committee Chairman, and Manny Smith as chairman of the B'nai B'rith Insurance programs. Lawrence Greenwald is the junior Past President of the Indianapolis lodge No. 58. Greenwald stated that the BBYO has 50,000. teenagers in its program (CONTINUED ON PAGE t« Ford Involved In Soviet Emigration Issue: Jackson: Making Progress Toward Agreement By Joseph Polakoff WASHINGTON; (JTA) - President Ford has per¬ sonally involved himself in the U.S. effort to negotiate a solution to the Soviet emigration issue and "very good progress" is being made toward an agreement on it between the two countries. This was disclosed on Aug. 15 at a White House news con¬ ference by Sens. Henry M. Jackson (D. Wash.), Abraham Ribicoff (D. Conn.) and Jacob K. Javits (R. NY) upon concluding a 70-minute breakfast con- Egypt, Israel Each To Receive $250 Million In Economic Aid B? Joseph Polakoff WASHINGTON, (JTA) - The Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee, each with foreign aid bills under consideration, have both approved $250 million in economic aid to Israel and Egypt. The sum is $200 million above the Nixon Administration's previously requested aid for Israel. The Senate body also approved Aug*-.13,7$10<>. million, 4n military aid grants to Israel and $200 million to finance low-interest loans to Israel to buy U.S. military hardware. One of a series of policy amendments approved by the Senate committee would phase out over a three-year period the U.S. military aid program which now goes to 48 nations. A committee source told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the aid missions, known as Military Assistance Ad¬ visory Groups (MAAG), are currently active in 48, countries but Israel is hot one of them. The approval of the military and economic aid to Israel came as the Foreign Relations Com¬ mittee and the Senate Ap¬ propriations Defense Sub¬ committee approved cuts in the military and foreign aid bills. The sub-committee slashed the Defense Department's budget by more than $5 billion in ap¬ proving* a $81.9 billion ap; .-propriatiohs - bill. The Foreign Relations Com¬ mittee trimmed $750 million , from the $3,225 billion asked by former President Nixon for foreign aid. None of these cuts, however, apply to Israel or Egypt which were specifically named to receive the identical economic aid sums. The House committee so far has not considered military aid. cuts such as proposed in the (CONTINUED ON PAGE U) ference with Ford and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. "We're moving in the direction of an agreement," declared Jackson, author of the Jackson Amendment to the Trade Reform Bill pending in the Senate, "There has been significant Russian movement. We hope to resolve thematter in time by this Congress," he said. The life of the present Congres ends Jan, 3, 1975. Jackson disclosed that Ford met Aug. X4 with the Soviet Am¬ bassador, Anatoly F. Dobrynin who, the Senator said, returned earlier than expected from Moscow "largely for this subject" of emigration. Dobrynin also met with Kissinger on Aug. 12 only hours after arriving from Moscow. Both meetings were at Dobrynin's request and it is believed that the Soviet envoy "brought something" from Moscow on the emigration- trade issue. Jackson revealed that "certain discretions" for the President will be worked out with Congress for his negotiation with the Soviet government but he and the other two Senators, leaders in thf Senate for the emigration measure, in¬ sisted that the Jackson Amendment "per se will be in the bill." "We are exploring the possibilities on how to relate the understanding between the President and the Congress and between the President with the Russians," Jackson said. This means, he observed, that Congress would grant (CONTINUED ON PAGE IS) Actresses Stage Dramatization Of Soviet "Justice" In Polsky Trial NEW YORK, (JTA) - A crowd of lunch-time onlookers in front of the New York Public library on Filth Avenue witnessed a "theater of the absurd" on Aug.15. It was a surrealist dramatization of "justice" in the Soviet Union per¬ formed by seven professional New York stage . actresses to call public at¬ tention to a "complete ; mockery of justice'* taking place at that hour in Moscow where the trial of Victor Polsky was scheduled! to begin. However, in Moscow, \the' .trial of Polsky was postponed without any ex-' planation, according to the National Conference oh Soviet Jewry. Polsky, a noted Jewish physiciat, and a dissident and activist, has been charged with "reckless driving." Kings County District Attorney Eugene Gold, chairman of the Greater New York Con¬ ference on Soviet Jewry, the group that sponsored the demonstration, saw the pending Moscow trial as noting less than a cruel form (CONTINUED ON PAGE IS) Mayor Declares BBW Operation Stork Day Mayor Moody has proclaimed Aug. 22, 1974 as Operation Stork Day (B'nai B'rith Women's). Operation Stork is*a national project of the B'nai B'rith Women which is instrumental in educating the public on good prenatal care as well as many other facets. Pictured with Mayor Moody L.toR: Lil Rosen, Nitza Operation Stork Ch., Bebe Gilbert, Zion Operation Stork Ch., Irene Daroe, Council Civic Affairs Vice President, Mayor Moody, Bess Siegelman and Sylvia Wolpert, Candlelight Operation Stork Ch., and Patty Shulman, Community Service Vice President of Twin Rivers. Not pictured is Nancy Hawk, Masada Rose Schwartz Retiring From Center A special reception has been planned in honor of Rose and Al Schwartz who will be moving from .Columbus to San Diego at the end of August. The event has been scheduled for Sunday evening August 25, at 7:30 p.m. in the Jewish Center auditorium. Mrs. Schwartz recently announced her retirement from her position with the Jewish Center where she has served as director of the Pre¬ school and Early Childhood Services for the past 25 years. Rose started in Pre- Mrs. A. R. Schwartz School work more than 35 years ago when her own three children were young. Her husband was with the Department of Justice and they traveled around quite a bit. Sometimes their com¬ munities were small and the schools did not offer as much as Rose wanted for her children. Her characteristic response was to organize a program of her own. A graduate of .Columbia Teachers College where she received her early training at the famous Bank Street (CONTINUED ON PACE 15) M tf
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-08-22 |
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 | 3644 Bytes |
Searchable Date | 1974-08-22 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-11-02 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-08-22, page 01 |
Searchable Date | 1974-08-22 |
Full Text | fig| . \^^M 2A\yy Serving Columbuit and Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 50 Years ^QA\ji LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1082 VEjLMa AVE. COLa. O. 43E11 EXOH VOL.52 NO.34 AUGUST 22,1974* ELUL 4 WASHINGTON (WNS)—The State Department has disagreed with Israel's contention that Syria has ., violated the disengagement agreement by moving mortars and heavy aetillery into the buffer zone bet¬ ween the two countries. The Department said it is "satisfied" the agreement is "workirig well." But Department spokesman Robert Anderson refused to confirm or deny the Israeli reports that large quan¬ tities of Soviet arms are being shipped into Syria. Israel, However, has been taking a tough stand against what (t considers Syrian violations. In one case Israel refused to remove a minefield from the buffer zone because the Syrians placed heavy mortar batteries into a zone where the agreement calls for a thinning of armaments, according to a report from Tel Aviv. While agreeing that most of Syria's violations have been minor, Israel is particularly concerned about Syria's failure to re-establish the civilian population of Kuneitra and the surrounding villages which Israel > relinquished as part of the agreement. NEW YORK (WNS) - The Jewish Community Council and the Board of Rabbis in Brooklyn have issued a joint statement warning Jewish religious and lay organizations to eliminate Las Vegas Nite fund raising operations which the statement said violated both state law and Jewish ethical traditions. The warning came after two recent incidents involving such fund-raising activities at two Brooklyn synagogues. First-a reputed Mafia figure, Steven Cirillo, 31, was shot to death during a Las Vegas Nite event at Congregation B'nai Israel of Sheepshead Bay. A week later police aided a similar event at the Hebrew Alliance Synagogue of Coney Island arresting 10 persons. Police sources said that it appeared that such gambling games were conducted occasionally at "- churches and synagogues by'organized- crime ' elements, but there was no connection between Jewish sponsors of the game nights and crime figures; Ne* Director To Assume Duties At Hebrew School Dr. Harold' Starr, President of The Columbus Hebrew School, and Dr. William Engelman, Chairman of the Jewish Education Committee - Columbus* Jewish Federation, announced the appointment of Mr. Joshua Chorowsky as Director of The Columbus Hebrew School, and the Jewish Education Committee - CJF, beginning with the new school year. Mr. Chorowsky comes to Columbus with a rich and extensive background in Jewish education. He was involved in teaching, supervision and ad¬ ministration in Day Schools and supplementary schools as well as with Communal educational institutions. Following a successful career of teaching, Mr. Chorowsky held ad-, ministrative positions in Day Schools for over ten years. Prior to his appointment in Columbus, he was associated with the United Hebrew . Schools of Metropolitan Detroit, where be held the position of Principal of The Hebrew High School and Registrar of the Midrasha College of Jewish Studies. Mr. Chorowsky was in¬ volved in the development of Innovative and experimental curricular projects which have gained national at¬ tention. Among those were conceptually integrated approaches and materials for the Day School, and a (CONTINUED, ON PAGE 15) Dr. A. Hackel Receives District BB Appointment Lawrence Peizer, District Grand Lodge No. 2 B'nai B'rith of Cleveland, has announced the appointment of Lawrence Greenwald as chairman of the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization com¬ mittee, Dr. Alan S. Hackel as the District Program Committee Chairman, and Manny Smith as chairman of the B'nai B'rith Insurance programs. Lawrence Greenwald is the junior Past President of the Indianapolis lodge No. 58. Greenwald stated that the BBYO has 50,000. teenagers in its program (CONTINUED ON PAGE t« Ford Involved In Soviet Emigration Issue: Jackson: Making Progress Toward Agreement By Joseph Polakoff WASHINGTON; (JTA) - President Ford has per¬ sonally involved himself in the U.S. effort to negotiate a solution to the Soviet emigration issue and "very good progress" is being made toward an agreement on it between the two countries. This was disclosed on Aug. 15 at a White House news con¬ ference by Sens. Henry M. Jackson (D. Wash.), Abraham Ribicoff (D. Conn.) and Jacob K. Javits (R. NY) upon concluding a 70-minute breakfast con- Egypt, Israel Each To Receive $250 Million In Economic Aid B? Joseph Polakoff WASHINGTON, (JTA) - The Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee, each with foreign aid bills under consideration, have both approved $250 million in economic aid to Israel and Egypt. The sum is $200 million above the Nixon Administration's previously requested aid for Israel. The Senate body also approved Aug*-.13,7$10<>. million, 4n military aid grants to Israel and $200 million to finance low-interest loans to Israel to buy U.S. military hardware. One of a series of policy amendments approved by the Senate committee would phase out over a three-year period the U.S. military aid program which now goes to 48 nations. A committee source told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the aid missions, known as Military Assistance Ad¬ visory Groups (MAAG), are currently active in 48, countries but Israel is hot one of them. The approval of the military and economic aid to Israel came as the Foreign Relations Com¬ mittee and the Senate Ap¬ propriations Defense Sub¬ committee approved cuts in the military and foreign aid bills. The sub-committee slashed the Defense Department's budget by more than $5 billion in ap¬ proving* a $81.9 billion ap; .-propriatiohs - bill. The Foreign Relations Com¬ mittee trimmed $750 million , from the $3,225 billion asked by former President Nixon for foreign aid. None of these cuts, however, apply to Israel or Egypt which were specifically named to receive the identical economic aid sums. The House committee so far has not considered military aid. cuts such as proposed in the (CONTINUED ON PAGE U) ference with Ford and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. "We're moving in the direction of an agreement," declared Jackson, author of the Jackson Amendment to the Trade Reform Bill pending in the Senate, "There has been significant Russian movement. We hope to resolve thematter in time by this Congress," he said. The life of the present Congres ends Jan, 3, 1975. Jackson disclosed that Ford met Aug. X4 with the Soviet Am¬ bassador, Anatoly F. Dobrynin who, the Senator said, returned earlier than expected from Moscow "largely for this subject" of emigration. Dobrynin also met with Kissinger on Aug. 12 only hours after arriving from Moscow. Both meetings were at Dobrynin's request and it is believed that the Soviet envoy "brought something" from Moscow on the emigration- trade issue. Jackson revealed that "certain discretions" for the President will be worked out with Congress for his negotiation with the Soviet government but he and the other two Senators, leaders in thf Senate for the emigration measure, in¬ sisted that the Jackson Amendment "per se will be in the bill." "We are exploring the possibilities on how to relate the understanding between the President and the Congress and between the President with the Russians," Jackson said. This means, he observed, that Congress would grant (CONTINUED ON PAGE IS) Actresses Stage Dramatization Of Soviet "Justice" In Polsky Trial NEW YORK, (JTA) - A crowd of lunch-time onlookers in front of the New York Public library on Filth Avenue witnessed a "theater of the absurd" on Aug.15. It was a surrealist dramatization of "justice" in the Soviet Union per¬ formed by seven professional New York stage . actresses to call public at¬ tention to a "complete ; mockery of justice'* taking place at that hour in Moscow where the trial of Victor Polsky was scheduled! to begin. However, in Moscow, \the' .trial of Polsky was postponed without any ex-' planation, according to the National Conference oh Soviet Jewry. Polsky, a noted Jewish physiciat, and a dissident and activist, has been charged with "reckless driving." Kings County District Attorney Eugene Gold, chairman of the Greater New York Con¬ ference on Soviet Jewry, the group that sponsored the demonstration, saw the pending Moscow trial as noting less than a cruel form (CONTINUED ON PAGE IS) Mayor Declares BBW Operation Stork Day Mayor Moody has proclaimed Aug. 22, 1974 as Operation Stork Day (B'nai B'rith Women's). Operation Stork is*a national project of the B'nai B'rith Women which is instrumental in educating the public on good prenatal care as well as many other facets. Pictured with Mayor Moody L.toR: Lil Rosen, Nitza Operation Stork Ch., Bebe Gilbert, Zion Operation Stork Ch., Irene Daroe, Council Civic Affairs Vice President, Mayor Moody, Bess Siegelman and Sylvia Wolpert, Candlelight Operation Stork Ch., and Patty Shulman, Community Service Vice President of Twin Rivers. Not pictured is Nancy Hawk, Masada Rose Schwartz Retiring From Center A special reception has been planned in honor of Rose and Al Schwartz who will be moving from .Columbus to San Diego at the end of August. The event has been scheduled for Sunday evening August 25, at 7:30 p.m. in the Jewish Center auditorium. Mrs. Schwartz recently announced her retirement from her position with the Jewish Center where she has served as director of the Pre¬ school and Early Childhood Services for the past 25 years. Rose started in Pre- Mrs. A. R. Schwartz School work more than 35 years ago when her own three children were young. Her husband was with the Department of Justice and they traveled around quite a bit. Sometimes their com¬ munities were small and the schools did not offer as much as Rose wanted for her children. Her characteristic response was to organize a program of her own. A graduate of .Columbia Teachers College where she received her early training at the famous Bank Street (CONTINUED ON PACE 15) M tf |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2009-04-30 |