Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1987-03-12, page 01 |
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VOL.G5 NO. II
MARCH 12,1987-ADAR11
Devoted to American
and Jewish Ideals.
Rabbi Samuel Joseph
To Speak March 20
At Founders' Sabbath
Rabbi Samuel K. Joseph,
associate professor of Jewish Religious Education at
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute, will be guest
!□
J987~
ADAR IjS.'Wjfl
A Joyous Festival
Celebrating the deliverance
from Hainan's plot to destroy
the Jewish people in the days
of Persia's King Ahashverosh
and Queen Esther.
Jonathan Pollard Gets Life Term
For Spying On U.S. For Israel;
Wife, Anne, To Serve Five Years
"**«»*?-
«o»
WASHINGTON (JTA) -
Jonathan Pollard, the former civilian Navy analyst
who pleaded guilty to spying
on the United States for Israel, was sentenced last
week to life imprisonment.
William Novak Will Deliver
Keynote Address To Singles
Rabbi Samuel Joseph
speaker at the annual Joint
Founders' Sabbath on Friday and Saturday, March 20
and 21. Temple Israel will
host the events for the local
Reform congregations which
include Beth Shalom and
Beth Tikvah. -
Friday evening, Rabbi Joseph will speak on "Jewish
Education in the 21st Century — Is There a Future?"
(CONTlajtlFP ON PAfF l'l
During the "Say Hello Columbus" Singles weekend
March 20-22, William
Novak, author, editor and
speaker, will deliver the
keynote address as part of
the Sunday activities for
singles. Other activities on
Sunday include a Film
Festival, Anne Frank exhibit
tour, massage therapy,
brunch and a dessert social.
Novak began his writing
career in Jewish magazines.
At 21, he became editor of
Response, a Jewteh student
t.
'&*!£$*
journal. Later, he signed on
as executive editor of Moment Magazine. More
recently, he has been editing
New Traditions, a small
magazine devoted to explorations in Judaism.
He is also the co-author of
The Big Book of Jewish
Humor, published in 1981 by
Harper and Row. He is probably best known for his
work on Iacocca: An
Autobiography, which he
wrote together with Lee
IflCOCCfl "*
,wftovak' is curr¥ritl3^work-
ing'.with Speaker of the
House Tip O'Neill on
O'Neill's memoirs) which
will be published next
September. He lives ill 'the
Boston area, where he and
his\wife, Linda, operate New
Possibilities, a Jewish
dating service.
His topic for the keynote
address will be "I'm Okay—
You Better Be Perfect and
Other Roadblocks to Romance." This presentation
Dick Cavett speaks with Judy Maybruck (center),
vice president of communications, and another member of National Council of Jewish Women at a press
conference held before the organization's "Evening
with Dick Cavett" at the Hyatt Regency on March 7.
NCJW's 'An Evening With Dick Cavett'
Brings TV Talk Show Host To Columbus
By Joyce Reisinger
Chronicle Staff Writer
Television talk show host
Dick Cavett was the guest of
the Columbus' Section, National Council of Jewish
Women, last Saturday night,
March 7. But, for once, lie
was answering some of the
questions.
After a Champagne and
Hors D'Oeuvres Buffet at the
Hyatt Regency Hotel, Ohio
Center, guests listened to a
presentation by Cavett and
were encouraged to ask the
entertainer questions.
Cavett reminisced about his
friendship with Groucho
Marx and interviews with
William Novak
will bring to light issues for
Jewish singles including
meeting each other, expectations and the importance of
Jewish singletrbeing able to
find other Jewish singles to
date. Seating is limited; call
Jeanie Kaplan at 231-2731,
ext. 251, for more information.
An additional highlight of
the weekend is an Oneg
.Shabbat on Friday from 9
p.m.-midnight.
Saturday activities include
four workshops, sports and
leisure, a cocktail party and
a dinner-dance with the band
"Creatures of Habit."
Chief Judge Aubrey Robinson of the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia also sentenced
Pollard's wife, Anne Henderson-Pollard, 26, to two concurrent five-year terms on
charges of being an accessory to her husband's espionage activities and receiving
stolen government material.
The 32-year-old Pollard
stood with his right arm behind his wife as the: sentences were being pronounced. When Robinson announced the life sentence,
Mrs. Pollard yelled "No, no"
and fell to the floor.
When her sentence was
pronounced, she collapsed
again, screaming. She could
be heard screaming after
being taken from the courtroom.
U.S. Attorney Joseph di-
Genova indicated that
neither Pollard had a chance
for parole and both would
have.to serve their full sentences.
Pleaded For Mercy For
Each Other
Robinson sentenced the
two Pollards after three
Eddie Murphy and Kather-
ine Hepburn. He spoke for
approximately two hours
and 'ended with his famous
"rope trick."
NCJW President Ruth
Longert said Cavett was impressed by Columbus architecture on his drive from the
airport to the Hyatt. He was
especially taken with the old
homes on E. Broad St. and in
German Village and the Ohio
Theatre, where he was given
an impromptu backstage
tour. According to Longert,
NCJW chose Cavett to speak
at their major event because
of his appeal to a wide group
of > people, including husbands.
hours of testimony in which
husband and wife pleaded
for mercy for each other and
expressed their mutual love.
"I pray to God every day
that I'll be reunited with my
husband," Mrs. Pollard
said. "That's all I live for."
She wept through much of
the hearing and appeared to
be in pain from a gastrointestinal disorder from which
she suffers. The hearing was
recessed twice to allow her
to receive medical attention.
Richard Hibey, Mr. Pollard's lawyer, argued that
while there was "no excuse"
for what Pollard did there
was "no intent" to harm the
U.S. and there was no
damage done to the U.S.
He said the information
was not given to an enemy of
the U.S., but to a country
that "except for England
and Canada, is our closest
ally."
But Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles Leeper argued
that the information did
damage the U.S., as Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger noted in classified information presented to the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 17)
Anne Frank Exhibit Reopens
At JC With March 12 Lecture
David Levison, recipient of 1985 Heritage Village
"Life With Dignity" Award is pictured above with
Eleanor Resler.
Nominations Being Accepted
For 'Life With Dignity' Award
Sol Morton Isaac, chair- The award will be presented
man of the Jack and Eleanor at the 1987 Annual Meeting,
Resler "Life With Dignity" to be held in early summer.
Award Selection Committee, - The "Life With Dignity"
announced that nominations Award was created in 1977
are now being accepted for by the Heritage Village
the Heritage Village award, (continued on page »>
The Anne Frank in the
World: 1929-1945 photographic exhibit will begin its
final two weeks in Columbus
on Thursday, March 12, at
the Leo Yassenoff Jewish i
Center and will host Reverend Douglas K. Huneke, the
evening's keynote speaker.
Rev. Huneke is a Presbyterian minister who has written
and lectured extensively on
the role of those who helped
the victims of Nazi persecution during World War II.
His lecture will begin at 7
p.m.
Rev. Huneke is the author
of The Moses of Rovno, the
story of Herman "Fritz"
Graebe, a German Christian
who risked his life' many
times to save Jewish victims
of the Nazis. Graebe was
also the only German citizen
to volunteer to testify
against the Nazis at the
Nuremberg trials.
It was while on what Rev.
Huneke describes . as "a
spiritual and academic pilgrimage" to former extermination camps, in 1976 for
the purpose of "preparing a
personal Christian response
to the Holocaust and its victims" that he became aware
of the crucial role played by
the rescuers.
He went to camps in Poland and the German Democratic Republic and to the
Israeli Holocaust archives at
Yad Vashem in Jerusalem,
to learn more about the three
roles in the Holocaust: murderer, victim and bystander.
But as he did his research
and talked with people, he
saw a fouA ii> rol emerging:
the* nf tb» rncpHPr
Although Revi Huneke had
previously read "various
incomplete accounts of the
rescuers ... it was not
enough for me to know only
the stories. I was compelled
to know what led the rescuers to take such risks on
behalf of total strangers."
The name of Fritz Graebe
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 17)
iSis»|§Mi
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1987-03-12 |
| 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 | 4437 Bytes |
| Format | newspapers |
| Date created | 2009-09-09 |
