Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1976-10-21, page 01 |
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, /;^^^.,.--v^.i5. K l«jM**aLta>lnT"*>4fK\ VuM!,-*-- -eAui A yJutt>4cMf.*ttU( *»rtJSi»<k, ■■ fe «. .M.-'.s/Nr v*£*-^ 2jL\\/7 Scrving Columbus and Caniral Ohl&Jawish Community for Over 50 Years v(7A\K VOL. 54 NO. 44 OCTOBER 21.1976- TISIIKEI27.5737 LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL, SOCIETY 1982 VEOI* AV£* / ' ' COLS, o, 43211 -. ' EXOH ; j iriposfxT Solution, ist il? ''4 Dr. James Tennenbaum (lelt) presenting plaque to Robert Aronson, outgoing president ot. the Jewish Center in recognition of his distinguished service to the community. T©sineistaiarai Is Mev^ President Of Jewish Cetster Dr. James Tennenbaum was elected President of the Jewish Center for 1976-77 at the-annual meeting of the Center on October 12. • ' - Immediate past president of the Ohio Allergy Society" and a iaculty member of Ohio State - University College of Medicine, Dr, Tennenbaum is a Fellovy, American College of Physicans and American. Academy of Allergy At the JewishCenter, a United Way agency aflili- aled with* the, Columbus Jewish Federation and National "'Jewish' Welfare Board, Dr. Tennenbaum " served as chairman of the Early Childhood Services Department 1968-73 during which ,time innovative, new' programs ior children under 4 were begun. From 1973 to 1975 he was chairman Of the Personnel Committee and in 1975-76, Vice President ■ in - ■ charge of Programming. He was a member of the Young Men's Division' Cabinet of , the' Columbus Jewish Federation. An active .* worker in the Federation "* campaign since 1966, he _" served as co-chairman of the Physician's section in 1975-76. In accepting the presi- * dency ol the. Center Dr. 'Tennenbaum praised the outstanding work of the staff - jft developing quality, pro¬ grams for all ages. He "stressed the importance of the Center in strengthening ' family life and of developing outreach programs-in newly emerging .areas of the , Jewish community. He indi¬ cated that a special search committee would be appointed to select a new - ■ executive director of the Center to succeed Mayer- Rosenleld, whose plans to re¬ tire were announced at the meeting. Inspired by a visit to Israel ■ last year Dr. - and Mrs. , Tennenbaum will conduct a ■ group trip to that country in November-' The Tennen- baums and their four child¬ ren. Charles, William, Craig and Ginny are members oi Congregation Tifereth Israel and reside at 45 S. Merkle in .Bexley, Also elected officers ot the Center were: Marvin Brown. Dr. Alan Hackel, -and Mrs.- Robert Tennenbaum, Vice Presidents; Michae) Talis, Treasurer; Burton Schildhouse, secretary'; and Larry GYcenberg. Assistant Treasurer - . ICON.TINUEDON PAGE 111 NEW YORK. l-JTA) - President Ford pledged Oct. m 12 to an audience ot about* 3.000 people!, mostly Jews, (hat (here will be "no im¬ posed solution and no one¬ sided concessions" in the Middle East, that his Administration will continue to support a strong Israel and that he would personally continue to raise "again and again" the issue ol Soviet Jewry at meetings with Soviet leaders, Ford spoke outside the Joel Braverman High School of the Yeshi va ol Flatbush in the heart of the. heavily Jewish populated Midwood section of Brook¬ lyn. Following his 10-minute address, the President visited the Center lor Holocaust Studies at the Ycshiva and conferred with a group of Jewish leaders.m- side the building Thatjmeet- jng was closed to the press and there was r no briefing given reporters afterward.*!. The crowd was prflite hut not notably enthusiastic and gave the President only mo ierate applause. Security measures were slricfX Bar- . iiers. syi-rounded Ihe higli school building and heavy „ concentrations ol umiormed police were present in' Ihe .surrounding -streets .hours belore Ford's motorcade ar¬ rived, t There were no incidents but loud heckling erupted during" the President's brief address I pom members ol the Jewish Delense League and the Student Struggle lor Soviet-Jewry. JDLers car¬ ried signs reading,. "Ford Musi Go" and others de¬ manding (he dismissal ol SecTctar\ of Shite Henry-A. Kissinger .and (he proserva- 'lion ol Israel's hold on the oc¬ cupied territories.- SSS.I members carried signs de¬ claring. "DetcnU- With Honor Save Soviet Jew rv" and "Ho.uolt Ford." An¬ other group earned signs identifying themselves' ;is "Polish" Jews For Carter." The latter was apparently a reference lo Ford's state¬ ment during his; loi'eign, policy debate wilh Demo- Staiisiif In Conduct Torah . WASHINGTON (WNS) - Israel's' Foreign Minister Yigal Allon, emerged from a 55-minule meeting with President Ford ih the White- House to announce that "a new decision" on "important items" in weapons tor Israel has been made by the .UjS. According to reporters, Allon chatting with the President in the Oval Office, was overheard - expressing- .his thanks for Ford's "new decision""- on weapons' and that Ford said it was "ob¬ viously the right thing to do." But media reports on the lands of new military equipment were knocked down-by a U.S. official as "speculative" and by an Israeli source as "incor¬ rect." The challenged re¬ ports said Israel would_get laser-guided bombs, armed helicopter gunships with pre¬ viously-withheld anti-tank missiles, night fighting wea¬ pons, radar equipment and a speedup of delivery of M-CO heavy tanks, , self-propelled artillery, armed personnel carriers and new' types of ■guided anti-tank missiles and bombs. The Israeli source said some ot the items were: de¬ livered a year ago. Just what Israel wilj get, will not be made officially known lor al, least three months, because the list- must first' be sub¬ mitted lor approval by Con¬ gress which must approve any single sale ot more than ' $25 million. The 94th Con¬ gress will not ,meet again -and the 95th" Congress does not convene until January. The White, House said Israel definitely will not get any Pershing missiles, which can carry nuclear warheads. When reporters asked Allon whether the arms talks had anything to do with the "Presidential election cam¬ paign," he replied negotia¬ tions had been going on for years," months before elec¬ tions and months after elec¬ tions" in a "continuing pro¬ cess." White House press secretary Ron Nessen said at a press briefing that there had been no increase in the U.S. commitment of $1 billion in military credit for Israel for fiscal 1977, which ., ,beganonOct. l.He.aiso.sfiid . (CONTINUEDON PAGE M) The adult education pro¬ gram ol.theColumbus Torah, Academy will he conducted by Rabbi David Stavsky; Thursday October 2(1. apm. at the Torah Academy library. 1 Rabbi Stavsky s"', deep- grasp oi the Jewish expen- „ once in today'„s World ana his ability lo transmit bis under¬ standing to jpthers have earned him the reputation as one ot the" most exciting speakers in the -Columbus Jewish'community ; Spiritual leader ol the Beth Jacob" Congregation since. ' 1957 Rabbi Stavskv has" been . very much an-activist-in virtually all • phases ol Jewish lite His work with lthe Jewish youth ol' Columbus , is'. particularly wellkhovvn, •*, .. ,. . ' Rabbi Stavsky received his rabbinical ordination Irom the ,Rabbi Isaac Elchanon Theological Semi¬ nary and his M.A. in psy¬ chology Irom Ohio Slate University. As a founder ol Columbus Torah Academy, he has- been intimately associated with the growth and progress ol' the .school since its inception. The "Dynamics ol Prayer" is his topic lor the eVening. - This is the second in a series of programs which has been designed to draw the community into the circle ol Jewish scholarship. According to a statement by Dr. Irving Fried principal ol Columbus Torah Academy. "II we are to serve intelli¬ gently and. creatively as Jewish parents and leaders in the Jewish Community it is imperative that we keep within the circle of Jewish scholarship. Indeed, the tradition of scholarship is responsible for the creative survival of the Jew." "Mrs. James Tanenbaum. chairman" ot the Adult '£ > w '-- »- > ' - 4*-%*,r Jj * rt\ t, " si - 1 2$ *f r * vs. J"\ f ^ r\ •''"•■">-^ ! *V J hi - a > ' \f kr , - 15al>l>il>;i\ ill Minsk* ' Education .Committee .has announced the lollouing chair people The MesdJimv Marvin Kaplan and Bruce Siogel, Programming. Hnue Sicgcl, Telephone. Hernard l|irsch. hospitality and Irving Fried. Publicity. ; ' Torah Academy" pfirents. -board members arid-the , community at. large ^.are ,,urged |o come and avail ' ihemselves'7 of. ,this oppor¬ tunity to learn. >\, civilic" Presidential c-andi- date Jimmy Carter lasl week th.it Poland and other Eastern European countries were not under Soviet domi¬ nation. The -PresKlenl declared (hat "tsrai-j's strength <-n- fiaiues I he ' prospccls ol pi-iice" .in Ihe Middle East and cla'imed that Israel's, luttiro is <-" brighter " now. than belore he • became Presidenl lie re- lerrcd (o Israeli Premier Yil/lrak Rahiu as "nn per- ^ sonaf fiicpd "• and cited re¬ cent remarks by R.ibin (hat - -Israelii^S, relations_limi¬ ne vor been lu'lliii" He pledged thai his Admiiiislra- ; tion will continue lo stippoit "and light for Israel ;lt the United Nations-'and would oppose'an>' attempt to oiisi *, Isi.iellniintliewoildi'igiUii- /illion 'Ford also, pledged th.il the V S wmijclflight. inteuiiitiotuil tt-rronsm .Hid H-k-ned to tsciol's "heion-" le.si-ue ijj - hiisj;iges/.it Entebbe \iipoil m 1'g.inda Inst Julv -i. He s.nd he was "pioiid ' lo haw beeji I lie tus| he;i<l ol state to praise lh.it operation. Find real tinned his opposition to the Aral) bo.uytt. declaring. ,*l- have noi and will not tblf_" , ia(e" rlisi-riminatinniin reli- " gums .grounds'bi might mto Ainciicaii hie He i-elcned to {us.order to* life Depart¬ ment nl Cominerce to"dis- close the names ol Aiiierioan companies- thai/ iii',-the , future.' comply, With Arab Jmycott demands -lle-de;. , senbeddial liidoras.'slrong execulive action against the * boycott." Hesaidhis-Admin- islralion has been pressing tor movement on the issue of .CONTINUEDON PAGE 191 Hy Yat/hak Kabi UNITED NATIONS. UTA» - As the General Assembly prepared to con¬ clude this year's general de¬ bate Oct. 14. diplomatic sources here noted that Israel was not treated as harshly as in lasl year's As¬ sembly, but said that the Arab bloc is preparing lor a major assult on Israel in the UN alter the American Pres¬ idential election Nov. 2, Israel, the sources said, will be laced with a major attack equivalent to last year's anti-Zionism olfensiye, but this year the issue will-be the < report of the 20-member Committee on Palestinian Rights which calls lor Ihe es¬ tablishment ot a Palestinian state under (he aegis ol the PLC) and the withdrawal ol Israel from all Arab (erri- (ories by June 1977.. Israel, supported by the West, has rejected the Committee's recommendations; lennmg them "a plan in stages lor the destruction ol Israel," -^ So far, the 31st session- of the General Assembly has shitted its focus from the Arab-Israeli conilict, that dominated the sessions ol the last two years, to Ihe pro-' blems in South Africrfr-While 30 percent of fhe speeches at ; CONTIiyueDQN PAGE 12' T. ft i ' j :' ' 11
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1976-10-21 |
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 | 4537 Bytes |
Searchable Date | 1976-10-21 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-11-02 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1976-10-21, page 01 |
Searchable Date | 1976-10-21 |
Full Text |
, /;^^^.,.--v^.i5.
K l«jM**aLta>lnT"*>4fK\ VuM!,-*-- -eAui
A yJutt>4cMf.*ttU( *»rtJSi» |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2009-06-22 |