Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1981-11-12, page 01 |
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_JI\Cy Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community far Over 50 Years ^7A__.
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VOL.59 MO.47
NOVEMBER 12,1981-CHESHVAN15
Devoted fo Aprterlcan
end Jewish (deals
Pictured above at the dedication of a plaque marking
the permanent endowment of the Ohio State University
Library's Jewish Studies Collection in memory of
Michael S. Melton are (1. to r.) Prof. Reuben Ahroni,
Charles Traphagen, David Miller, Sam Melton, Ms.
Minna Melton Rehm, Prof. David Golomb and Prof.
Yehiel Hayon.
Michael Melton Plaque Unveiled
. Shamir Warn Israel Will Reject
Ion
0
A plaque dedicated to the
memory of Michael S.
Melton was unveiled in the
Jewish Studies Reading
Room of the Ohio State
University Main Library on
Nov. 6. The occasion marked
the establishment of an
endowment by Samuel M.
Melton in honor of his son's
memory. Michael Melton
was a student when he was
killed in an airplane crash
March 6,1967 near Lima, O.
Melton's recent contribution is in the form of an increase to the original library
endowment created in 1980.
Income from the fund will be
used to purchase materials
for the Jewish Studies
Collection and to pay for services required to process
and maintain these library
materials.
This gift is a further
demonstration of Melton's
generosity toward Ohio State
University. Previously
Melton established the
Samuel arid Esther Melton
Chair in Jewish History and
Institutions, the first university chair at Ohio State to be
endowed by an individual.
He also provided the endowment which established
OSU's Melton Center for
Jewish Studies. Melton is a
, member of the University's
Presidents Club and is the
recipient of an Honorary
Doctor of Laws.Degree from
the University.
. , Speakers at the dedication
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
JERUSALEM (JTA)-
Premier Menachem Begin
and Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir have warned in
separate statements that
any European nation that
agrees to participate in the
Multinational Force and*
Observers (MFO) for Sinai
without affirming that it is
doing so within the framework, of the Camp David
agreements and the
Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty will not be acceptable to
Israel.
Begin declared last week,
"We warn London and other
capitals well in advance that
media presentation under
the direction of Sunnie Ghit-
jnan with the assistance of
the Columbus Hebrew
School Choir.
Columbus Hebrew School Friends
To Honor Bernard Solomon, Dec. «5
Bernard Solomon, former
teacher and bookkeeper for
the Columbus Hebrew
School, will be honored Sunday evening, Dec. 6 at the
Annual "Friends" Dinner,
confirmed Arthur Katz,
Chairman for the "Friends."
N. Victor Goodman will
make the presentation to
Solomon for his 35 years of
dedicated service.
A special invitation is extended to all of Solomon's
former students and colleagues to celebrate with the
"Friends" on this joyous
occasion.
The program for the evening will feature, in addition
to the presentation to the
honoree, an address by
Henry Margolis, Executive
Director-Community Services, Bureau of Jewish
Education, Cleveland, 0.
Highlighting this year's Dinner will be a unique, multi-
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they should not talk about
the Venice declaration (of
the* European Economic
Community in June, 1980) or
any other declarations. The
Multinational Force is being
established to ensure
Israel's security under the
Israel-Egypt peace treaty
and the Camp David accords. We shall not agree to
any contingent taking part
unless this Camp David commitment is clearly understood," he said. *
Begin spoke at a mass
gathering -in Eilat marking
the opening of that resort
, town's winter tourist season.
Shamir, addressing the
Knesset insisted that the
MFO which is to patrol Sinai
after Israel completes its
withdrawal next April, must
be "solely on the basis of the
Israel-Egypt-U.S. agreement within the framework
of Camp David." He said
that countries which wanted
to join the MFO but made
announcements deviating
from that basis would be
"disqualified."
Foreign Ministry officials
were reluctant to say that
under Shamir's criteria Britain would be "disqualified."
British Foreign Secretary
Internationally Acclaimed Author E. Grollman
To Lecture This Sunday, Nov. 15 At Cent;
Bernard Solomon
Festivities will begin at
Agudas Achim Synagogue
with cocktails at 6:15 and
dinner at 7 p.m. Reservations can be secured by calling 231-7764 or 231-8700.
Earl A. Grollman, internationally acclaimed author
and lecturer, and known for
his work concerning death
and,_l)ereavemjBnt. and di-,'
,vorce, will 'keynote three
-presentations, on Sunday;
Nov. 15 at the Jewish Center.
Sponsored by the joint committees of Jewish Family
Life Education, of Jewish
Family Service and the
Jewish Center, Dr. Groll-
man's seminars will focus
upon the issues of death and
divorce and how these situations affect our lives as
individuals and the impact
upon our families.
. For more than 25 years,
' Grollman has been rabbi at
Beth El Temple in Bellmont,
Mass. He received his Doctor of Divinity degree from
Hebrew Union College. He is
also on the Massachusetts
Advisory Council Board of
Omega, a magazine devoted
to death, dying and bereavement. In addition, he has appeared on numerous national radio and television
shows, recently completed a
special commentary to be
aired on national television,
and has published eleven
books.
At 10 a.m. Dr. Grollman
will address .the issues of
attitudes about death and
how they are transmitted to.,
children, guidance for
parents in explaining death
to children, and how we as
adults confront the issue of
death of our parents. This
session, entitled "Explaining Death To Children And
Ourselves" is targeted to
parents and adult children
with aging parents.
"Living When A Loved
One Has Died" is the title of
the 12 p.m. session. The
presentation will deal with
the facts, and emotions of
death and its aftermath will
be of particular interest to
the recently, bereaved as
well as fgr anyone who has
ever lost a loved one.
At 2 p.m. Dr. Grollman
will address the issues of
divorce. "Talking About
Divorce" will focus on coping with loneliness, changes
which occur as a new identity emerges, consequences
resulting from family breakup including its affect on the
extended family, and how to
explain divorce to children.
Immediately following the
keynote, participants will
have an opportunity to discuss issues and concerns in
small groups. Dr. Grollman
Earl A. Grollman
will then respond to the
groups' questions in the pro-
(CONTINUED OiM PAGE SO)
Lord Carrington who visited
Saudi Arabia last week, has
repeatedly said for the
record that British participation in the MFO would be
"not associated with Camp.
David."
Carrington in fact was
quoted as repeating that
statement in Riyadh last
week, after Shamir's warning in the Knesset. A Foreign
Ministry spokesman here
said that "If and when Bvi-
tain officially announces its
participation (in the MFO)
Israel will then examine"
the terms of its participation.
Observers here, said
Shamir's warning was intended mainly to head.,
off—or moderate—an evolving EEC statement on the
Middle East which the European Common Market nations plan tolssue simultaneously with the announcement that several member
states would participate in
the * Sinai. force." Britain,
France, Holland and Italy
are expected to be the Euro-
" pean participants.
It is expected here that the
EEC statement will re-
rendorse the Venice declaration and possibly support
Saudi Arabia's eight-point
peace plan. The Knesset this
week categorically rejected
both. According to Israeli
officials, Shamir wants to
make it clear that Israel
would not accept EEC
participation m the Force'
with "strings attached."
King Hussein's Visit To Washington
by Trade B. Feldman
Chronicle White House
Correspondent
Washington,' D.C: Jordan's King Hussein met
Ronald Reagan for the first
time last week; and although
the two leaders got along
very well, their strategies
differ on how to bring peace
to the Middle East.
During his four-day state
visit to Washington, the third
monarch of the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan, Hussein
ibn Talal lauded Saudi
Arabia's peace plans as
"worthy of consideration"
and stressed that the Palestinians should be involved in
peace efforts.
"As far as the eight-point
Saudi Plan is concerned,"
Hussein said, "it doesn't differ basically from any of the
positions that we've adopted
over the many years of the
problem. The Saudi contri
bution is worthy of consideration."
The Saudis are desirous of
American acceptance of
their plans for peace as an
alternative to the Camp
David accords. However,
President Reagan said he
has no intention of deviating
from the Camp David-approach. And King Hussein
maintains that the Camp
David accords are "inade
quate" as a framework for
solving the Palestinian
question.
In their Oval Office talks.
King Hussein told Reagan
about Israeli Prime Minister
Begin's "intransigence" and
also described the Jewish
settlements onN the West
Bank as a "serious obstacle"
to peace.
During his welcoming
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
King Hussein and President Reagan are all smiles as
they bid adieu on the White House South Lawn after
two days of talks.
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Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1981-11-12 |
| 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 |
| File Size | 4847 Bytes |
| Format | newspapers |
| Date created | 2009-08-11 |
