Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1960-10-07, page 01 |
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COLUMBUS EDITION
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x}i\j/ Serving Coiumous. Dayton ana Uenirai Unio Jewish Communities \\7AR
COLUMBUS
EDITION
Vol. 38, No. 42
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, I960
Brandeis Women Area Conference Is Scheduled Here
Pinal plans have been made for the Columbus Area Conference of Brandeis University National Women's Committee
The program calls for registration and a coffee hour on Wednes¬ day, Oot. 19 at the Fort Hayes Hotel, according to Mrs, William Was- serstroin, general conference chairman, Mrs, Theodore Schlonsky will call the session to order at 2 p.m.
MBS. HAROLD Goldberg, national president and Mrs, Leon Kowal, national chairman of the
OltO J I - ,'i ¦>. r; n J ,J Hi'j I ...V' :. • H!;l H H i-in^'7,-i I 'U',>I (iJis IH
D»vo«ad to Amertean and Jswiih Idaall
Area Conference will welcome the delegates.
Following a reception for the delegates, given by the national president, will be the banquet at Winding Hollow Country Club, with Mrs. Bernard Feltllnger pre¬ siding.
REGISTRATION will continue on Thuraday, Oct. 20, with a panel discussion on the agenda for the morning activities at the Fort Hayes Hotel, This will highlight the conference, Mrs. Wasserstrom, a national vice-president, will pre¬ side.
The keynote speaker will be Louis Schreiber, who la director of the Library Administrative Service at Brandeis University,
HE CAME TO the University In June, 1948 as acquisitions 11 brarian from the College of the City of New York. He became di¬ rector in 1953. Schreiber received his professional library degree with highest honors from Colum¬ bia University, and was elected a fellow In 1947,
He is the author of a "Unique Friend of the Library Movement" published in the current issue of
'College and Research Libraries." He also contributed book reviews to other library journals.
SCHREIBER IS a member of the American Library Association, the Association of College and Reference Librarians, the Massa¬ chusetts Library Association and the New England Library Asso¬ ciation,
This man with a dry wit and an amiable smile will speak at the luncheon to which all local Bran¬ deis members are invited, Mrs, Isadore Rinkov is chairman of reservations with the following committee calling for reserva¬ tions:
CAPTAINS - Mesdames Martin Godofsky, Harold Golden, Jerome Gross, Alan Lee, Louis Robins, Stanley Schwartz, Abe Shustlck, Meyer WarsaskI, Sidney Wasser¬ strom, William Zlpser.
WORKERS — Mesdames Louis
Adelman, Martin Adler, Harold
Bahr, Bennie Bender, Norman
Berger, Charles Blend, Alex Block,
(Continuod on page A)
i .i»^'
Bess Myerson In Israel
Boss Myerson, commentator for the French-Israel Fashion Show, to be sponsored by the Oohimbus Women's Division, State of Israel Bonds on Dec. 8, Is shown at the ATA Textile Co., located near Haifa. The ATA establishment employs nearly 1600 work¬ ers, and Is the largest prlN-ate industrial enterprise In IsroeL Three ot tho costumes that will appear in the show were sllk- screon printed at the Raltaofet plant In Israel. These include the Lonvin print designed by Mmo Kluger, and two Lola Beer fabrics designed by Abraham Levine of Tel Aviv.
King ttussein Hits UAR In A Speech To U.N. Assembly
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y,, (JTA) — King Hussein ot Jordan de¬ livered a series of sharp blasts at the United Arab Republic, ac¬ cusing its President, Gamal Abdel Nasser, ot following the Com¬ munist line In the Middle East, The Jordanian ruler also discussed the Palestine refugee question, accusing Israel of failure to carry- out U. N. resolutions. But his main fire was directed against UAR President Nasser.
Shukairy Blasts At Israel, Candidates
l-PARENT FAMILIES GROUP TO HOLD 1ST MEETING AT CENTER
The , Jewish Center has an¬ nounced that the first meeting of a new group known as "Parents Without Partners," will be held on Tuesday, Oct, 11, 8:15 p.m.
This group is designed for per¬ sons In one-parent families who feel the need to discuss their problems with other parents In the same category.
THE PURPOSE ot the group Is to give parents an opportunity to learn from other parents, with the help of experts, how to handle the problems arising from single parent families.
Sam Stellman, assistant execu¬ tive director, who recently com¬ pleted several graduate courses in parent education at Ohio State University, will Eict as advisor to the group.
Many local community groups, synagogues and temples have sanctioned the program and urge members Interested to attend.
TENTATIVE PLANS Include discussions, Jewiah holiday cele¬ brations, speakers and outstand¬ ing authorities on chlld-rearhig.
Transportation will be provided for those interested In attending meetings by calling Mra, Phyllis Schlezlnger, BE. 1-9946, Mrs. An¬ nette Maierson, BE. 1-8858, or the Center.
Parents interested In joining must have at least one child under 18 years.
CORRECTION
Zion Lodge, B'nai B'rlth Men, will hold Its Installation dinner this Sunday, Oct. 9, at Winding Hollow Country Club with Rabbi Harry Kaplan speaking.
It was incorrectly stated In last week's Chronicle that the affair would be held on Oct. 18.
Louis Schreiber
UNITED NATIONS, (WUP) — i The notorious arch-enemy of Is¬ rael, Ahmand Shukalry, took tho occasion of ercv Yom Kippur to call upon "a new United Nations'' embracing nearly 100 states to oust Israel from the world organi. zation and thus "undo" what he termed the "Injustice" of the "1947 Palestine catastrophe,"
Speaking as the chairman of the Saudi Arabian delegation, the former Jerusalem lawyer made an appeal to the new African dele¬ gates to join the Arab cause against Israel which Is "penetrat¬ ing into Africa under tho guise of economic assistance."
I DEVOTING THE greater part of his 47-page speech to invectives
' against the Jewish State, Shuk¬ alry turned lo President Nkrum-
I ah of Ghana and with all sorts of flattery begged him to reconsid¬ er his "proposal to guarantee non- attack between the A.rab states and Israel." He said the proposal by the "national hero" of Africa "ia prima facia luring and attrac¬ tive, but only to those who do not know," hinting that Nkrumah himself waa not fully aware of the situation.
(At a UN Correspondents Aaao-
ciation limcheon the same day, Nkrumah reaffirmed his support for Israel despite Shukalrys pleas. The President of Ghana stated that the only way out of the Middle ISast dilemma is for both sides to negotiate peacefully for a settlement),
Skukalry also took the occasion of his propaganda speech to at¬ tack both presidential candidates. Said he:
MESSRS. NIXON AND Ken¬ nedy have made public pledges to larael tn identical terma ... In substance" they "have declared that he who succeeds to occupy the White House will not hestltate to support Israel, They have stressed that the Suez Canal be open to Israeli shipping. They (Continued on pag. 4)
U.S. Won't Back Nasser For U.N. Seat For UAR
UNTTEID NATIONS, N. Y, (JTA) — Authoritative sources here—as well as in Washington and In New York—expressed "absolute conviction" that the United States has no intention of supporting President Nasser of the United Arab Republic in his bid for a seat on the United Nations Security Council- All indications point to the fact that President Elsenhower, Vice President Nixon, Secretary of State Herter and Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, former head of the American delegation to the United Nations, are all opposed to assisting Nasser to realize his ambition, it was emphasized.
The United States will support the candidate of another mem¬ ber of the Atro-Aslan statea for the seat In the Security Council, these sources said, They indicated that Nasser's alignment with the hostile attitude taken by Soviet Premier NIklta Khrushchev against UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold Is regarded as a sure deterrent to hla ability to aecure American aupport,
(The United Arab Republic's delegation at the United Nations Issued a statement denying a report that Naaser had decided to side with the Western Powers against Khrushchev's request to repl&ce Hammarskjold and to move the UN headquarters from the United States to another country,)
It was also Indicated authoritatively here that no formal statement on the attitude toward Nasser's attempt to seek a seat for his country tn the UN Security C!ouncll would be forthcoming while the General Assembly is in session.
BONN SEEKS INFO ON MAN ARRESTED AS MARTIN BORMANN
BONN, (JTA) — The West Ger¬ man Foreign Office disclosed It had instructed the West German Embassy in Buenos Alrea to look Into the report that a man has been seized,by Argentine police on suspicion he may be Martin Bormann, Hitler's wartime depu¬ ty. It was understood that If the auspect proves to be Bormann, the West German Government will immediately ask for his extradi¬ tion.
(Alfred Vltolo, Argentina's Min¬ ister of the Interior, said In Bue nos Aires that the arrested man, who gave his, name as Walter Fluegeh, entered Argentina il¬ legally 11 years ago. He was ar¬ rested in Zarate, 85 milea from Buenos Aires, by Federal police. So far police have not been able to Identify the auspect poatlvely as Bormann, who was officially declared dead six years ago by authorities In Berlin.)
IN BUENOS AIRES, the effort by Argentine authorities to deter¬ mine whether the German arrest¬ ed here was Bormann, Hitler's wartime deputy, brought a re¬ minder that the World Jewish Congress here reported publicly in 1945 that Bormann had come to Argentina that year in one of two German submarines. The report was later confirmed by Vladimir Dormeason, the then French Am¬ bassador to Buenos Aires,
It was also disclosed that an Italian physician from Milan who (Continuad on pag. 4)
Obvloualy disregarding heavy Arab pressures which, since his arrival here, attempted to con¬ vince him that, in the Interests ot Ariib "unity," he should withhold criticism of the United Arab Re¬ public, King Hussein told the General Assembly plenary session that he could not keep silent on tho "local quarrel" between Nas¬ ser and Jordan, That dispute en¬ dangers peace In tho Middle East and threatens world peace as a whole, he affirmed,
"FROM TIIE very beginning," ho stated, "the aim of our sister state has been our destruction." He said the hostility of the U.A,R, against Jordan dates from the time, he, Hussein, spoke out clear¬ ly against Jordanian alignment with the Communist bloc or Com- muhlst ideology,
Jordan, he, said, haa been sub¬ jected by the U,A,R. "to' abuse, pressures of many kinds, incite, ments by radio and other means, and subversion." He cited the fact that Jordanian Prime Min¬ ister Majali and 11 other persons wore killed recently by a bomb explosion, and tied up those assassinations with U.A.R, policies directed against Jordan.
COMING TO "The Palestine Question," King Hussein treated that subject with comparative mildness, "The world," he said, "has closed and continues to close its eyes to the tragedy of humani¬ ty In the Middle East, the tragedy of the Arab refugees."
"Nothing has been done by the United Nations to bring pres¬ sure upon Israel to live up to U.N, resolutions. Israel must live up to those resolutions. There can be no peace in the Middle East without a just solution of the refugee problem," King Hussein stated.
NASSER, WHO absented him¬ self from the Assembly during Hussein's speech, left New York for Cairo this week according to Arab circles here. Thus, Nasser's projected tour through the United States has been called off.
In attacking Nasser at the U. N, Assembly, King Hussein said that tensions between Jordan and the United Arab Republic began sev¬ eral yeara ago when he had warn¬ ed tho people ot Jordan against "Communist penetration" Into the area.
After that warning, he declared, Jordan found itself subjected to "abuse, subversion and external pressures." He could only inter¬ pret theae acts, he emphasized, as a UA.R. effort aimed at the de¬ struction ot Jordan.
THE UJV.R., he charged, is seeking to dominate the Arab part of the world and, if It suc¬ ceeded, "either as a neutral or as an openly avowed Communist ally," It would destroy the basic alms of the Arab people- "Better ways," he told the Aasembly, "muat be found to bring the com¬ bined weight ot public opinion quickly and effectively to bear upon whatever nation trans-
greaaes agreed upon interrelation¬ ships." However, he made it clear he is not requesting immediate action from the United Nations on the disagreement between Jordan and the U,A,R.
In regard to larael, the Jordan- Ian king aaid that "the original failure ot the United Nations" went back to the partition resolu¬ tion ot 1947 which, he claimed, "left in Its wake a sorrowfully un¬ resolved situation." He insisted it waa "morally wrong and political¬ ly unjust In 1947 to partition Pal¬ estine, and It Is no less so today."
WUliam V. Kahn
UJFC Prexy
William V. Kahn was unani¬ mously elected president of the United Jewish Fund and Coun¬ cil at the second annual meet¬ ing of the organization last Sun¬ day, Oct 2. The largest crowd ever to attend suoh a meeting wag In attendance. Other offi¬ cers elected were Herbert H, SclUff, Abe I. Yenkin, Aaron Zacks and Cliarles Ooldsmltli. vice-presidents; Samuel M. Mel¬ ton, treasurer; Jack Schlff, as¬ sociate treasurer; and Jack S. Rttsler, secretary. Mrs. Bernard Yenkin and Marvin Olassnuin were presented a new leader¬ ship award, given this year for the first time to outstanding young leaders In the communi¬ ty. Ralph Lazarus, the featured speaker, outlined the challenge and problems of the American Jewish community. More com¬ plete details of the annual meeting wlU appear In future Issues of the Chronicle.
$55,000 RAISED
Wmiam Sohlff, Oolumbus High Holyday chairman. State of Israel Bonds, announced that the recent efforts of Ills oonunlttee has resulted in a total of $6S,000 new purchases and commitmentB for State of Israel Bonds, bringing the to¬ tal commitments and pnr- chases In Colurhbus since Stau- uary, 1960 to $115,000.
Do You Realize The Need For The New Home For The Aged?
J
Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1960-10-07 |
| 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 |
| Image Height | Not Available |
| Image Width | Not Available |
| Format | newspapers |
| Date created | 2008-11-05 |
