Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1983-06-02, page 01 |
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OfflOJE I Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 60 Years . LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOOi^lC 1982 VELMA AVE. COLS. 0, 43EU EXOH Jewish War Yets Plan Installation Jewish War Veterans, Capitol Post 122, will conduct its installation of officers on Tuesday, June 7, at the Leo Yassenoff Jewish Center at 7:30 p.m. The guest speaker .for the evening will be Colonel John F. Weeks, superintendent of the Ohio Veterans Home in Sandusky. All veterans and the community are invited to attend. U.S. To Sell Israel Mi Fighter Planes Former Commander Of Nazi Prison Deported ' NEW YORK (JTA)—An Immigration and Naturalization Judge has ordered the deportation of Karl Linnas, 63, of Greenvale, Long Island, on charges he commanded a Nazi prison in Tartu in occupied Estonia during World War II. Judge Howard Cohen affirmed three previous federal court findings that Linnas has served as an officer in an Estonian partisan group which collaborated with the German army and that he conducted executions at the prison at which more than 12,000 Eastern European victims, including 2,000 Jews, were murdered. Alberta Premier Promises Campaign Against Bigotry . TORONTO (JTA)—Premier Peter Lougheed of Alberta has promised to introduce an educational campaign to combat racial and religious bigotry in the aftermath of two recent incidents in which holders of public office in the province i «.. A.,n,„v.Hoitv of the Holocaust. Lougheed ad- Katzir Initiates Joint Accord On Hiah Tech Areas In Israel, N.Y. ^ ._... „_,_ onftft -nd rpi's "We want the jol ALBANY, N.Y. (JTA) -Prof. Ephraim Katzir, former President of Israel, launched a historic venture in sharing high technology knowledge and experience. Af the invitation of New York State Semite Democratic Leader Manfred Ohrenstein, Katzir initiated a joint agreement here on high technology regions in Israel and in New. York State. An internationally Region 2000 and RPI's Center for Industrial Innovation and planned technology park lend themselves to an agreement to share ideas and solve problems," Ohrenstein said. "Such an agreement will be beneficial to the future of high technology industries in both New York State and Israel." Four years ago, Katzir was appointed chairman of a commission to explore the State. An internationally coiiuuioaiu.. ~ ~r— recognized biophysicist, possibility of establishing a — ■ • -;-:i„j «,„ nmtm fftr science and industry region WASHINGTON (JTA) —The Reagan Administra- incidents in which holders ot puouc uiu» _ r.. tion officially announced last questioned the authenticity of the Holocaust. Lougheed ad- week its plans to sell 75 F-16 dressed the problem of tolerance and respect for minority -' *" tcrnoi groups after Stephen Stiles, a member of the Alberta Legislature, claimed publicly that the slaughter of Jews by the Nazis has never been proven. Stiles, a 38-year-old lawyer .and a member of Lougheed's Progressive Conservative Party, subsequently apologized to the Legislature for offending anyone, but he did not clearly renounce his doubts about the Holocaust. WeeK. lib piana »» t,w. jet fighter planes to Israel, with deliveries starting, in , December,"1986. | This is 11 months later than originally scheduled because of President Reagan's decision to hold up the sale of the planes after Israel went into Lebanon last June. The decision was in the form of official notification of the sale to Congress by the . Department of Defense. Congress has 30 days in:whjch' it may block the sale, an unlikely event since many in Congress have been pressing for months.for the embargo to be lifted. When all the planes are delivered, now scheduled for- . September, 1988, Israel will have 150 F-16s. The $2.7 billion sale includes support equipment for the 75 F-16s and training and maintenance equipment costs for all 150 planes Difficulties in Way Of Implementing Israel-Lebanon Pact Cited By Begin JERUSALEM (JTA)—Premier Menachem Begin acknowledged last week that there are seyeral difficulties in :the way of implementing Israel's agreement with Lebanon, chiefly Syria's refusal to cooperate by agreeing to withdraw its forces from that country. But he told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Security Committee that Israel should not present any ultimatums but should draw up a scenario in the event Syria remains intransigent. ' ' Begin's appearance before the committee exposed sharp differences in the opposition leadership over what course should be followed. Labor Party chairman Shimon Peres urged .Israel to set a target date for the pull-out x>f its forces from Lebanon, regardless of what the Syrians do. Otherwise, "We shall remain stuck-in the mud of rivalry between the communities in Lebanon without being able to reach agreement," he warned 150 planes. . , Rabbi R. Levy To Speak At CHS Graduation ■---.-—* r\ tOTI„ rtf direction of Sunnie Ghitman. will follow the p . Rabbi Robert D. Levy of Temple Israel will deliver the commencement address at the graduation exercises ' of the Columbus Hebrew School. Rabbl Robert D. Levy Scheduled for June 9 at 8 p.m. at the Agudas Achim Synagogue, the exercises will also feature a dramatic presentation written by Dr. David Salczer, CHS director, entitled "Love." The presen- .. tation will be accompanied by thfc-CHS Choir under the ■ direction of Sunnie Ghitman Rabbi Levy's address titled. "The. Relevance of the Kamatz Katan" will follow the graduates' presentation. Rabbi Levy, who is a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Boston University (1974), earned his M;A.H.L. in 1978 and his Rabbinic Ordination in 1979 at the Hebrew Union College—Jewish Institute of Religion. He is chairman of the East Area Mental Services. He-is also a Board member of the Columbus Hebrew School, member of the Women's Task Force Coalition for Alternatives in Jewish Education, a teacher at the Heritage House, chaplain of the Central Ohio Council—Boy Scouts of. America and a member of the Jewish Committee on Scouting and the Planning and Citizens' Legislature Committees of theFranklin County Mental Health and Retardation Board. - A reception, given by the parents of the* graduates, will follow the program. Relatives, friends and the general community are invited to attend Katzir visited the Center for Industrial Innovation at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (PRI) in Troy, briefed legislative leaders on high technology industries in Israel and met with RPI officials and Ohrenstein to discuss formulation of the agreement. As a result of Katzir's visit, he, Ohrenstein and Tom Field, director of RPI's Rensselaer Technology Park, agreed to proceed with step one in developing an . agreement. Field and Prof. Arieh Lavie, chief scientist of the Israel Ministry, of Industry and Trade and director of the planned Region 2000 high technology center in the Galilee, will jointly identify the specific areas in which the two projects will share information. After this has been accomplished, an Israeli and an RPI expert in each of these areas will become part of a project team that will also include Katzir, Ohrenstein, Field and Lavie. JIhe group ■• will then meet at determined intervals to exchange information and learn from each other's strengths and weaknesses. "The many similarities between Israel's plans for science and industry region in the Galilee that would best meet the challenges of the year 2000. This resulted in, the concept for Region 2000, which will stretch, from Segev in the south to Maalot in the north, with Carmiel at its center. "We want the jobs available, educational facilities and feeling of community responsibility to attract the best professionals from within and without the country," Katzir said of Region 2000. "The region will have the most modern technology for communications', education and health services, plus advanced industries in which to earn a living." Plans for the Rensselaer Technology Park, located on 1200 ares of RPI-owned land in the Town of North Green- bush, Rensselaer County, were announced in April, 1981 by then New York State Governor HugtT Carey and RPI president George Low. RPI made a financial com- (CONTINUED ON PAGE i) Political Affairs Counselor At Israeli Embassy Sees Room For negotiations With Arabs "•• - i?«„„f h™kp off of that territory to 1 When Egypt broke off West Bank and Gaza autonomy talks with Israel two years ago, Robert Sabel changed jobs. vited to attend. — —p Temple Israel Brotherhood Honors Three Members rxay yvv**^, *-■*•— „ afld Rabbi Robert Levy were the honorees for the annual awards presented by the Temple Israel Brotherhood at Brotherhood Sabbath on April 29. Ray Wells was named the "Man of the Year" for his many years of outstanding work and service to the Temple in numerous capacities. Wells was recently in- . stalled as the new president of Temple Israel. The "Man of the Year", award is presented annually by the Brotherhood for exemplary service to the Temple, the Brotherhood arid the community. David Zager was the 1983 recipient of the Leon J, Uooamaii <no>u presented annually for "in spiring leadership and unselfish devotion to the cause of Judaism through . Temple service." Zager is a member of the Board of Trustees of Temple Israel and is a past president of the Temple Israel Brotherhood. Rabbi Robert Levy was the 1983 recipient of the Allan Tarshish Memorial Young Leadership Award which is presented annually by the Brotherhood to men aged 40 and under. The award is in memory of Allan Robbie Sable A deputy legal advisor to the Israeli Foreign Ministry and a member of the Camp David and autonomy delegations, "Robbie" Sabel was reassigned as political affairs counselor to the embassy in Washington. Despite the hold on autonomy negotiations, Sabel remains optimistic about their long-term chances. "It's frequently ignored that Israel formally left the status.. of the area open. We've said when we come to the negotiating table we'll have our position—but we've also said, 'Let's talk about it.' Vv-.'-v.- "I can't see any Israeli award is in memory of Allan i cm* ■. ^ ~..„ __ Tarshish, a past president of government transferring all the Brotherhood who en- of Judea and Samaria to for- couraged leadership among eign sovereignty, and I can't young men in the organiza- see any Arab government (continued on page 5) accepting the transfer of all,. of that territory to Israeli sovereignty. "This leaves enormous room in between, and that's what we'll be negotiating about," Sabel said during an interview in : Columbus, where he spoke to the,Community Relations Committee and Tzavta, as well as to several journalists. He does not think the Begin government's settlement policy for Judea and Samaria will lead necessarily to a multiplication of Yamits. There, settlers who refused to evacuate as the Sinai was returned to Egypt, were removed by force. The town was bulldozed. "In the future, I think Jews will be living in the area. Under what legal system, we have to negotiate," Sabel explained. As part of his job, he is in almost daily contact with U.S. State Department officials. He believes at least some now recognize America "acted unwisely with the Reagan plan" by not consulting Israel beforehand—as it did several Arab nations—and by prejudging the final disposition of Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip. "The only way is to begin with autonomy and see how the Palestinian self-governing council works over the five-year Camp David transition period," Sabel asserted. "I assume the U.S., with Israel, will go back to Camp David to try to get the autonomy scheme working," he added. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 10)
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1983-06-02 |
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 | 3566 Bytes |
Searchable Date | 1983-06-02 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-11-02 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1983-06-02, page 01 |
Searchable Date | 1983-06-02 |
Full Text |
OfflOJE
I Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 60 Years
. LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOOi^lC
1982 VELMA AVE.
COLS. 0, 43EU
EXOH
Jewish War Yets
Plan Installation
Jewish War Veterans,
Capitol Post 122, will conduct
its installation of officers on
Tuesday, June 7, at the Leo
Yassenoff Jewish Center at
7:30 p.m.
The guest speaker .for the
evening will be Colonel John
F. Weeks, superintendent of
the Ohio Veterans Home in
Sandusky.
All veterans and the community are invited to attend.
U.S. To Sell Israel
Mi Fighter Planes
Former Commander Of Nazi Prison Deported
' NEW YORK (JTA)—An Immigration and Naturalization
Judge has ordered the deportation of Karl Linnas, 63, of
Greenvale, Long Island, on charges he commanded a Nazi
prison in Tartu in occupied Estonia during World War II.
Judge Howard Cohen affirmed three previous federal court
findings that Linnas has served as an officer in an Estonian
partisan group which collaborated with the German army
and that he conducted executions at the prison at which more
than 12,000 Eastern European victims, including 2,000 Jews,
were murdered.
Alberta Premier Promises Campaign
Against Bigotry
. TORONTO (JTA)—Premier Peter Lougheed of Alberta
has promised to introduce an educational campaign to combat racial and religious bigotry in the aftermath of two recent
incidents in which holders of public office in the province
i «.. A.,n,„v.Hoitv of the Holocaust. Lougheed ad-
Katzir Initiates Joint Accord On
Hiah Tech Areas In Israel, N.Y.
^ ._... „_,_ onftft -nd rpi's "We want the jol
ALBANY, N.Y. (JTA)
-Prof. Ephraim Katzir,
former President of Israel,
launched a historic venture
in sharing high technology
knowledge and experience.
Af the invitation of New
York State Semite Democratic Leader Manfred
Ohrenstein, Katzir initiated
a joint agreement here on
high technology regions in
Israel and in New. York
State. An internationally
Region 2000 and RPI's
Center for Industrial Innovation and planned technology
park lend themselves to an
agreement to share ideas
and solve problems," Ohrenstein said. "Such an agreement will be beneficial to the
future of high technology industries in both New York
State and Israel."
Four years ago, Katzir
was appointed chairman of a
commission to explore the
State. An internationally coiiuuioaiu.. ~ ~r—
recognized biophysicist, possibility of establishing a
— ■ • -;-:i„j «,„ nmtm fftr science and industry region
WASHINGTON (JTA)
—The Reagan Administra- incidents in which holders ot puouc uiu» _ r..
tion officially announced last questioned the authenticity of the Holocaust. Lougheed ad-
week its plans to sell 75 F-16 dressed the problem of tolerance and respect for minority
-' *" tcrnoi groups after Stephen Stiles, a member of the Alberta Legislature, claimed publicly that the slaughter of Jews by the Nazis
has never been proven. Stiles, a 38-year-old lawyer .and a
member of Lougheed's Progressive Conservative Party, subsequently apologized to the Legislature for offending anyone,
but he did not clearly renounce his doubts about the Holocaust.
WeeK. lib piana »» t,w.
jet fighter planes to Israel,
with deliveries starting, in
, December,"1986. | This is 11
months later than originally
scheduled because of President Reagan's decision to
hold up the sale of the planes
after Israel went into Lebanon last June.
The decision was in the
form of official notification
of the sale to Congress by the
. Department of Defense. Congress has 30 days in:whjch' it
may block the sale, an unlikely event since many in
Congress have been pressing
for months.for the embargo
to be lifted.
When all the planes are delivered, now scheduled for-
. September, 1988, Israel will
have 150 F-16s. The $2.7 billion sale includes support
equipment for the 75 F-16s
and training and maintenance equipment costs for all
150 planes
Difficulties in Way Of Implementing
Israel-Lebanon Pact Cited By Begin
JERUSALEM (JTA)—Premier Menachem Begin
acknowledged last week that there are seyeral difficulties in
:the way of implementing Israel's agreement with Lebanon,
chiefly Syria's refusal to cooperate by agreeing to withdraw
its forces from that country.
But he told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Security
Committee that Israel should not present any ultimatums but
should draw up a scenario in the event Syria remains intransigent. ' '
Begin's appearance before the committee exposed sharp
differences in the opposition leadership over what course
should be followed. Labor Party chairman Shimon Peres
urged .Israel to set a target date for the pull-out x>f its forces
from Lebanon, regardless of what the Syrians do. Otherwise,
"We shall remain stuck-in the mud of rivalry between the
communities in Lebanon without being able to reach agreement," he warned
150 planes. . ,
Rabbi R. Levy To Speak At CHS Graduation
■---.-—* r\ tOTI„ rtf direction of Sunnie Ghitman. will follow the p
. Rabbi Robert D. Levy of
Temple Israel will deliver
the commencement address
at the graduation exercises '
of the Columbus Hebrew
School.
Rabbl Robert D. Levy
Scheduled for June 9 at 8
p.m. at the Agudas Achim
Synagogue, the exercises
will also feature a dramatic
presentation written by Dr.
David Salczer, CHS director,
entitled "Love." The presen-
.. tation will be accompanied
by thfc-CHS Choir under the
■
direction of Sunnie Ghitman
Rabbi Levy's address titled.
"The. Relevance of the
Kamatz Katan" will follow
the graduates' presentation.
Rabbi Levy, who is a
Magna Cum Laude graduate
of Boston University (1974),
earned his M;A.H.L. in 1978
and his Rabbinic Ordination
in 1979 at the Hebrew Union
College—Jewish Institute of
Religion. He is chairman of
the East Area Mental Services. He-is also a Board
member of the Columbus
Hebrew School, member of
the Women's Task Force
Coalition for Alternatives in
Jewish Education, a teacher
at the Heritage House, chaplain of the Central Ohio
Council—Boy Scouts of.
America and a member of
the Jewish Committee on
Scouting and the Planning
and Citizens' Legislature
Committees of theFranklin
County Mental Health and
Retardation Board. -
A reception, given by the
parents of the* graduates,
will follow the program.
Relatives, friends and the
general community are invited to attend
Katzir visited the Center for
Industrial Innovation at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (PRI) in Troy,
briefed legislative leaders on
high technology industries in
Israel and met with RPI officials and Ohrenstein to discuss formulation of the
agreement.
As a result of Katzir's
visit, he, Ohrenstein and
Tom Field, director of RPI's
Rensselaer Technology
Park, agreed to proceed with
step one in developing an
. agreement. Field and Prof.
Arieh Lavie, chief scientist
of the Israel Ministry, of Industry and Trade and director of the planned Region
2000 high technology center
in the Galilee, will jointly
identify the specific areas in
which the two projects will
share information.
After this has been accomplished, an Israeli and an
RPI expert in each of these
areas will become part of a
project team that will also
include Katzir, Ohrenstein,
Field and Lavie. JIhe group
■• will then meet at determined
intervals to exchange information and learn from each
other's strengths and weaknesses.
"The many similarities
between Israel's plans for
science and industry region
in the Galilee that would best
meet the challenges of the
year 2000. This resulted in,
the concept for Region 2000,
which will stretch, from
Segev in the south to Maalot
in the north, with Carmiel at
its center.
"We want the jobs available, educational facilities
and feeling of community
responsibility to attract the
best professionals from within and without the country,"
Katzir said of Region 2000.
"The region will have the
most modern technology for
communications', education
and health services, plus advanced industries in which to
earn a living."
Plans for the Rensselaer
Technology Park, located on
1200 ares of RPI-owned land
in the Town of North Green-
bush, Rensselaer County,
were announced in April,
1981 by then New York State
Governor HugtT Carey and
RPI president George Low.
RPI made a financial com-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE i)
Political Affairs Counselor At
Israeli Embassy Sees Room
For negotiations With Arabs
"•• - i?«„„f h™kp off of that territory to 1
When Egypt broke off
West Bank and Gaza autonomy talks with Israel two
years ago, Robert Sabel
changed jobs.
vited to attend. — —p
Temple Israel Brotherhood
Honors Three Members
rxay yvv**^, *-■*•— „
afld Rabbi Robert Levy were
the honorees for the annual
awards presented by the
Temple Israel Brotherhood
at Brotherhood Sabbath on
April 29.
Ray Wells was named the
"Man of the Year" for his
many years of outstanding
work and service to the
Temple in numerous capacities. Wells was recently in-
. stalled as the new president
of Temple Israel. The "Man
of the Year", award is
presented annually by the
Brotherhood for exemplary
service to the Temple, the
Brotherhood arid the community.
David Zager was the 1983
recipient of the Leon J,
Uooamaii |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2009-08-18 |