Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1984-06-14, page 01 |
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4
OfflOJEW
lllvj/ 5ervln9 Columbm
HROMCLE
LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORjCAt, SOC4*>
1982 VELMA AVE.
OOLsi. 0. 43211 . EXOH
Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community lor Over 60 Years
U/K
VOL.62 NO. 24
JUNE14.1984-SIVAN14
Devoted to American
Ant! Jewish Ideals
Dr. Mark Raphael
Becomes Director
Of Melton Center
Dr. Marc Raphael has
been appointed director of
the Melton Center for Jewish
Studies at The Ohio State
University.
Professor Raphael, a native of Los Angeles, received
his B.A. and Ph.D. from
UCLA and his rabbinic ordination from the Hebrew
Union College an|d has been
teaching Jewish history at
The Ohio State University
since 1971. During that period, he has been a visiting
professor at the HUC, Iliff
Seminary and, during 1980-
81, served as the Tisch Visiting Scholar of Modern
Judaism at Brown University. He is the author of two
' books, Jews and Judaism in
a Midwestern Community,
Columbus, . Ohio 1840-1975
and A History of the United
Jewish Appeal 1939-1982, and
the editor of four books,
Modern Jewish History: A
Source Reader, Understanding American Jewish Philanthropy, Jews and Judaism in
America: A Documentary
History, and Approaches to
Modern Judaism. He is the
editor of American Jewish
History, a quarterly journal,
and the book review editor of
Religious Studies Review, a
quarterly journal, and has
written a history of Judaism
in America Profiles in
American Judaism for Harper & Row, to be published in
1984.
He has served as the
founding rabbi of two congregations in Columbus,
Ohio, Beth Tikvah (1971-75)
and Beth Shalom (1977-80),
"retiring" from both when
they grew large enough to
. hire a "full-time" rabbi.
©solution Calling For Decrease
id To Israel Defeated
Jewish War Vets Visit Normandy
PARIS (JTA)—Jewish war veterans from a half dozen
countries and former resistance fighters marked the 40th
anniversary of the Allied landings in Normandy last week.
Hundreds strolled along Utah Beach where some of the fiercest fighting occurred and hundreds more placed wreaths at
military cemeteries. Most of the Jewish and non-Jewish
veterans came on their own. A few were members of the official delegations of the Western allied nations commemorating the opening phase of the battle to liberate Europe and
destroy the Third Reich.
Dutch Group Demands Ban
On Kosher Slaughtering
AMSTERDAM (JTA)—A new demand to ban the ritual
slaughter of animals in Holland for consumption by observant Jews and Moslems has been announced by the Netherlands Society for the Protection of Animals. The group has
urged the Deputy Minister of Agriculture to prohibit, effective immediately, the slaughter of animals for export without
first stunning them and to ban ritual slaughter for local consumption within a three year period. Should a local ban be instituted, it would affect only the small proportion of Holland's
20,000 Jews who observe kashrut. But Jewish ritual slaughter
for export is considerable.
BERKELEY,, CALIF.
(WNS)—A resolution on a
Berkeley ballot, voted on in
conjunction with the California Presidential primary,
calling for cuts in United
States aid to Israel, was defeated by a nearly three-to-
one vote, a spokesman for
the Coalition for Middle East
Peace and Justice reported
June 7.
She said the vote was
29,279 against and 12,107 for
in the voting on Measure E,
the title for the proposal.
Berkeley has 68,000 registered voters.
The proposal, placed on
the ballot by an ad hoc group
called Taxpayers for Peace
in the Middle East
(TAPME), declared that
"the people of the City of
Berkeley call on the United
States Government' to
reduce its yearly aid to Israel by an amount equal to
what it determines to be the
most accurate approximation of what Israel spends
annually on its settlements
in the occupied territories of
the West Bank, Gaza Strip
and the Golan Heights."
TAPME was created by
the American Arab Anti-Dis-
Louis Robins Nominated To Serve
Village
J. Maynard Kaplan, chairman of the Heritage'Vill&ge
Nominating Committee, announced that Louis Robins
had been nominated to serve
as president of the Heritage
Village Board of Trustees.
Election and installation of
all of the officers and members of the Heritage Village,
Heritage Tower and Geriatric Service Organization
Boards of Trustees will be on
Sunday, June 24, at 2 p.m. at
the Heritage Village Annual
Meeting.
Currently serving as vice
president, Robins has previously served as chairman
or member on every major
committee of the Village
Board of Trustees. As chairman of the Robins Beverage
Group, Robins is also active
in other aspects of community life, including currently
serving on the National Committee for ORT, past president of ORT and past Advance Gift chairman for the
United Jewish Fund.
Kimche Says Beirut Regime Must
Approach Israel On Withdrawal
JERUSALEM (JTA) - Israel will not approach the
Lebanese government for
any deal aimed at the withdrawal of the Israel defense
Force from south Lebanon.
But it will consider any proposal offered, by the Beirut
regime, David Kimche,
Director General of the Foreign Ministry said last week.
Speaking on the second
anniversay of the start of "■
"Operation Peace for Galilee," Kimche said Israel will
follow a "pragmatic" course
for the time being and will
seek security arrangements
in south Lebanon in cooperation with local elements, not
the Lebanese government.
"We will not run after
them, neither do we intend to
repeat the process of Khalde
and Kiryat Shemona," Kim
che said. He >vas referring to
the long drawn out negotiations in those towns that led
uthmately to the May 17,
1983 withdrawal and security
agreement between Israel
and Lebanon — an agreement repudiated this year by
the government of President
Amin Gemayel.
Nevertheless, Kimche
said, if the government of
Lebanon offers Israel proposals that would make
feasible the withdrawal of
the IDF from south Lebanon,
"we shall be pragmatic and
consider them."
According to Kimche,
Syria in anxious for an Israeli pull-out of Lebanon and
would be likely to ignore
negotiations between Jerusalem and Beirut as it had a
'' (CONTINUED ON PAGE 10)
Louis Robins
Also nominated to serve as
officers of Heritage Village
are: vice presidents, Robert
Glick (two year); Harry
Schwartz, (two year); Mrs.
Harry Wexner (two year);
Sol Morton Isaac (continuing) ; Elliott Grayson (continuing) ; Mrs. Gerald Friedman, secretary; Mrs. Harry
Polster, assistant secretary;
Alan Weiler, treasurer, Irving Barkan, associate treasurer.'".; .([-■'■■ ■
Nominated to serve as
members of the Board of
Trustees are: for a three-
year term — Mrs. Barbara
K. Brandt, Mrs. Herbert
Glimcher, Mrs. Morris
Groner, Marvin Katz, Mrs.
Morris Mattlin, Mrs. Harold
Monett, Neil Moss, Mrs.
David Paine, George, Rosen-
berger, Fred Summer, Mrs.
Herbert Tieman, Kenneth
Warren, Mrs. Abe Yenkin,"
Arthur Zwelling; /or a two
year term — Jules Garel,
Allen Gundersheimer, Jr;
for a one year term—Martin
Hoffman. The Board observers for 1984-1985 are Mrs.
Howard Burnett; Mrs.
Stuart Gordon; Robert Polster, M.D., and Tom Schottenstein.
Nominated to serve as officers of Heritage Tower are
President Sanford Goldston
(continuing); Vice Presi-
(CONTINUEO ON PAGE 10)
Orthodox Rabbis Told
To Study Religious
Needs Of Women
LANCASTER, Pa. (JTA)
—Rabbi Gilbert Klaperman,
outgoing president of the
Rabbinical1 Council of
America, an Orthodox rabbinical group, said here that
he hoped his successor would
create a commission on religious needs of women which
he had not been able to do.
He told the 48th annual
convention of the Rabbinical
Council there was "an
urgent need" for such a commission to deal "with the
needs of women to find some
form of rewarding participation" in the Orthodox synagogue! He added that such a
commission should study
and issue guidelines on areas
in which women "may legitimately take part in women's
prayer groups, as well as in
the administrations of synagogues, within Halachic
parameters." ll
crimination Committee,
which has headquarters in
Washington.
Passage of the amendment would have required
the mayor of Berkeley to
write letters to President
Reagan, Secretary of State
George Shultz, California's
two senators and Congressional representatives, announcing the vote for the aid
cut.
Dr. Marvin Zuravsky Re-Elected
President Of Cols. Hebrew School
Dr. Edmond Schecter,
chairman of the Nominating
Committee, announced the
re-election of Dr. Marvin
Zuravsky as president of the
Columbus Hebrew School.
At the Annual Meeting
held on May 24, the following
officers were elected to
serve with Dr.- Zuravsky:
- Stanley' Sacks and Susan
Coomer, vice-presidents;
Judith Berenstein, secretary, and Ralph Krasik,
treasurer.
Re-elected for a one-year
term to the Board of Trust-1
ees were: Jane Bhaerman,
Henry Epstein, William
Goldsmith, I.M. Harris,
Terry Janis, S.M. Melton, A.
Leonard Niisbaum, Dr.
Robert Ruberg, Melva
Schottenstein, Melvin L.
"Schottenstein, -William
Schottenstein, Barbara
Schuster, Farrell Shar,
Tussy Shnider, Judi- Ull,
Philip Waldman, Kathi Wolinetz, Kathy Worly and Fred
Yenkin.
Elected for one-year term
to the Board of Trustees
were: Stephen A. Feldman,
Richard Handler, Bonnie
Milenthal and Howard A.
Simons. Also, appointed for
next year's term was Terry
Low Changes Threaten
Soviet Jewish Activists
LONDON (JTA) -Thelife
of Jewish activists in the;.
Soviet Union could be made
harsher than it already is because of new alterations in
Soviet law, says a study published here by the Institute of
Jewish Affairs.
Major amendments in the
Soviet criminal code were
made following a decree
adopted by the Presidium of
the USSR Supreme Soviet
earlier this year.
.Analyzing the changes, the
institute, research arm of
the World Jewish Congress,
says they make Soviet law
"considerably more repres-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
Samuels.
Past presidents continuing
to serve on the Board and not
subject to election are: Irving A. Baker, Morris Fleishman, Dr. William Gilbert,
Dr. Max Kanter, Arthur
Dr. Marvin Zuravsky
Katz, Louis M. Levin, Robert
L. Mellman, Frank R. Nutis,
Dr. Edmond Schecter, Ben
Seiferas, Herbert L. Solomon, Dr. Harold Starr and
Sol D. Zeldin.
In addition, Daniel Harrison; Rabbi Jerome D. Folk-
man, Ph.D., D.D., and Rabbi
S.W. Rubenstein were
elected as Honorary Life
Members.
Rabbis occupying pulpits
serving on the Board and not
subject to election are:
Rabbi Howard Apothaker,
Rabbi Harold Berman,
Rabbi Hirsh M. Chinn, Rabbi
Alan G. Ciner, Rabbi Harvey
S. Goldman; Rabbi Gary
Huber and Rabbi David
Stavsky.
Shcharansky Gets
Honorary Degree
NEW YORK (JTA) - Yeshiva University last week
presented its first honorary
degree in absentia to Soviet
Jewish-Prisoner of Conscience Anatoly Shcharansky,
who is currently serving a
prison term in the Soviet
Union's Chistipol prison.
Avital Shcharansky, Ana-
toly's wife, in accepting the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1984-06-14 |
| 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 | 3567 Bytes |
| Format | newspapers |
| Date created | 2009-08-21 |
