Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-07-03, page 01 |
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BROMCLE
3^? Servina Celumbus, "Cen'traT anTsouthwestern Ohio ^AR
VOL. 47 NO. 27
THURSDAY, JULY 3,1969 -17 TAMUZ
¦¦< Jnllli I4nli
Benson Wotman
Wolman
To Head A.C.L.U.
Tto American ClvU Li- torties Union of Ohio an¬ nounced today tte, appoint- ^ment of Benson A. Wdmaiv. ^'806 Harley Dr., Columbus ^'as its Executive Director, toginning July 1.
Wolman has long toen a famiUar figure In the cen¬ tral Ohio 9rea both,^ tte ACLVs legislative spokes¬ man at fto'Statehouse and '<~,^.as, tte'chairman of the local chap&r of tlie'civU Utiertles organization.
Tte new Director received
Ms Bactelor of Arts degree
In-political science from
Northwestern Unlverslfyand
(Continued on Page 7)
Job-Rights
Detroit (jnfAV-Federid guidelines protecting tte: job rights f3f Sabbath obsetvers have beenujpteldbyaFederal' court In Michigan in tteir first aifdlcation^i.to a local case in a sviit in which an OrthodoK lay organlzaUtm participated in a "friend of tte courts' briefw
Lawrence Halpeni| chair¬ man at the Detroit chapter of tte National Jewish Com¬ mission on Law ai(d Public. Af&drs, toldtte JewiishNews of Detroit thatthe decision of Federal DistrictCOurt Judge Noel P. Fox of GrandRa^ds had "far-reaching. ImpUca- ~ tions-for religious Jewish Sabbath observers wtur are enqdoyed in Michigan and throughout tte Untted States." COLFA has toen Instrumental; In^vobtainlng promulgatloh "ctf tteliE?ederal EqMal EmpIoymentConunls- slon rules protecting-BUCh job status. " _^ I ^'J' ¦ .' - -
The ^cage! lnvd}v^liQtert
Dewey, a memtor of tteRe-
formed Church, irti^twas re-/^
- quired by a union ci^act at ^
Relypolds Metal Poi'^'and by
'coiiipaqy poUcy toiworic on
Sunday. He refiisEsd;to do so
(Continued:o'ni?,Page 7)
Mrs. Meir To Discuss Soviet Plan
THIS YEAR, ''L'SHONA TOVAM TOTHiiNTIRE
WASHINGrON (VfNS)—What may to tteflrstkoster mess hail In tte history of tte UnitedStates armed forces was- set iip by 30 memtors of tiie njUitary police b^taUon of tin Dlstr% of Columbia NaUonal Gup]d and will provide lunch and dinner meals to tte men;vTte soldiers, who wiUbreaUtast in tte regular mess toU, wiU contribute tteir own* money to buy koistorfood. ¦ - - -
¦ SA^f PRANCBCO, (JTA)—The only Jewish chaplain serving with tte U,S. Air Force in Japan has toen . named^a vistthig professor at Sophia University In Tokyo, one tt tte largest Jesuit Institutions hi tte".^ Far East,-It was reported tere. Capt. Victor M. . Sdomon was ordained at YeshlvafUniverstty. He is currenOy a memtor- of tte faculty of Sacred Heart University in Bridgeport, a Jesuit institution, and is oa a three year leave of absence for Air Force duty.,
JERUSALEM, (JTA)—Foreign Minister Abba Eban said this week that information at tto disposal of tte Israel Government showed no progress has toen achieved at the Four Power talks ai tte Mideast in New York, He said Israel would continue to. Impress ' upon the U.S. Government Its view that dtarect Arab- IsraeU taUcs are tl» only w^ to settle tte conflict Mr. Eban spoke at a ^ss conference on tto eve of ' his departiire for£ast Afirica to visit Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda at tte invitations of tteir Govemements.
TEL AVIV, (JTA)—Official sources tere and weU- kiformed IsraeUs in WasMngton ^claimed tills week th^ Ejgyptlan anthoitities .anparenUjr perpetrat^ a hoaxlon President Nixon wiioenieiftainedm'v'fdow and daughter of a deceased Etgypti^ pUot in tto WUte House. The sources said that tte late Capt Hadayat Yysuf Hllmi, who pUoted a plane that cairied Mr. Nixon during his 1963 visit to Egypt, died in a crash in Septemter, 1967 and not as claimed by £airo, in the Six-Day War. Tliey said tte Egyptian Government was trying to expidt the visit of Mrs. Hadayet HUml and ter 14-year-dd daughter Nagla, to/Washlngton for propaganda purposes.
WASHINGTON (WNS)"iB- raeU Premier Gdda Meir wiU tegin a week-lonp; visit to tte United States on July 27 and wUl meet withPresI- dent Nixon and otter Aibnin- istraUon dfldals.
During ter stay Intte US. Mrs. Melr wlU appear, on television, hdd a press con¬ ference and meet'With Am- ,eiican Jewish leaders.
A major topic for dlscus- s'lon.totween tte IsraeU lea¬ der, and American ofQcials wiU to tte new peace plan proposed by tto Soviet Union foUowing discussions te¬ tween Russia and Egypt Tto plan was Mo^cow'srespmse to an American proposal for miys to tolp end tte Mideast crisis.
American officials saidtte Russian projposals were a "disappointment" and could even b^ considered a stejli backward in that it included suggestions that tte U.S. had teUeved were droppedl^tto Soviet Udon as a result of "liUateral talks totweeii tto two Big Powers.
Tto Russian plan, \rtilch reflects tte position of Egyp¬ tian I^sldent Gamal Abdel Nasser who madq Ms views on tte U.S. inrdposals known
tt
Urban Crisis Lifled JiWiSH COMMUNITY «One Year Worse"
I
Chronicle' readersi Greet your friends and relaUves In our New Yearns Edition. TMs year tte book wiU reach homes and leacUiig business firms InCdumbusandCentral X)Uo^bySeptl9.
Greeting friends and relatives .In tte pages of tte Chronicle's New Year's Edition has long teen a tradition for Central Ohio Jewish famlUes. TMs is aq exceUent ine^bod of showing your interest -In tte entire Jewish community, and it is a jnost effective way of expressing your good wistes to aU tiiose (}ear to you.
It is easy to assiu^^^ii^j[our,'gr^eting wIU appear In this Issue; FUl Iq tte piacte'd coupon aind maU It at once to the Clironicle, is? N. Sixth St Or caUus and submit your greeting over tte telephone.
Our pakes wlU to closing soon. Be sure to specify whether you want tte regdar $3^00 greeting ortte specid $5.00 display greetbc.
Toe THE OHIO JEWISH CHRONICLE, 87 N. Sixtii St, Cdumtos, OMo^ 43215.
Bear Sir:
/ Please Insert tte fdlowing greeting in your NEW •^YEAR'S EDITICW:
..4-
V Regdar $3 greeting
Icdx 4-6 lines '>W»a,
n $5 display greeting Addre.Ss^, 2.cdx2 Inctes ^
i:t BUI {he H Money enclosed
PTTTSBURGH, (JTA)« —, Tte former executive direc¬ tor of tte Kerner Commis¬ sion tdd the NationalJewlsh Conununity Relations Advi- . sory CouncU tMs week that "It Is one year later andone year worse" In an assess¬ ment of urban prd>lems since tte commission warned that
-America was teadlngtoward racid pdarization.
Washington attorney David Glnsburg, who coordinated tte study <rftiie^NatiotfdAd- visoiy Commission on ClvU Disorders, appointed Itytten President Jotason and tead¬ ed by fonner Ulinds Gov. Otto Kerner, cited tte in? crease in cl^ disorder, con¬ tinuing sident demonstra- ti(His in coUeges wMch has since hit high scluids, and a rise in tte mentor of vldent
, crimes. He^so cited pdlce incidents wMch to said threatened civU peace In slums and tto lack of needed reforms in crimlnd justice.. He tdd tto ass^enibly d 250 Jewish leaders and com¬ mudty relations speclaUsts titat tiie Kerner commission proposds for resdving ra¬ cid imbdance in jobs, hous¬ ing, welfare and education had "neitter toen ignored nor implemehtedr-they await tte re-ordering of our na-
to^Moscpw wten Soviet For¬ eign Minister Andrei Grom¬ yko pdd a hurried visit to Cairo last month, include the foUowing points:
A detaUed timetable for Israel's i^drawd firomtlie occulted territories; sped- fic detaUs for wlthdrawd and wtere troops shodd puU tock are included for each of tte areas. Tte US. plan had spoken only of a return to "secure boundaries" after such lines are agreed to by all^parties. TMs would bave taken place under a "pack¬ age" agreement, a pobit not mentioned by tte Russians. They tiad previously indi¬ cated ttey agreed withtte idea of a"package" settle¬ ment ¦ —
Sharm el Sheihk shodd to retumed to tJnited Nations contrd with no UmltaUoncn Es^an acUvily lotto airea.
EstabUshment of demiU- tarized zones "astride" tte fi:ontIers. Tte imppcaUonis that Israel territory ihslde tte 1967 lines wodd l!ie in-
':^ducted*i'thesiB'7(»Bs;^#)iKy . Reference to .restoration of rights to Pdestine re-. fUgees rather than a choice
(Continued on Page 7)
tiond priorities" wMch te sdd waa "bound to cnne." He dso sdd no effective nati(Hiwlde action was pos¬ sible untU «^hite pditicd support for needed legida- ti<n was "createdandforce- fdly expressedtdCongress" and te urged tte Jewish, com muniiy to participate fdly in that effort
He reported "great pro¬ gress" had teen made in striking down both legd si^ port and tte actud effects of "overt racism" but that many problems persisted, such as "deliterate.exdu- slotf' of non-wMtes from labor udons, law Arms, some industries, schod districts, private schods, socid dubs and aU-White residential neighborhoods. A more serious "sdiOe" pro¬ Uem, to tde the gattoring was tte "Institutiond sub¬ ordination" of non-whites Created by self-perpetuatfng patterns of discrimination- and te cited suburban zoning laws wMch, whUe incdrpora- ting noh-discriminatory dauses, actually seek to dis- . courage low income hciuslng to ihdntdn hjigh living stan¬ dards and open space. Such laws created discrimination situations, te sdd..
AMERICANS SWEEP PRIZES
Brooklyn-bom 14-year-dd Noam Zohar, d Tel Aviv, top winner of Israel's International Bible Qdz Contest Iscongratdatedby President ZalnianShazar at close. of rigorous two-day Jerusdem event on Israd's Independence Day. Competing wlth26nationd winners from malor Jewish commudttes throughout tte world, Noam andthree American Jewishyoungsters took tte top four prize's. In tte order named, tte three runners-up, aUcMldrenttfactivememtorsandleaders . of tte MizracM' Women's Orgadzation of America, were Howard Koenig and Yaroh Reich, both students at tte Flatbush YesMva of Brooklyn, N.Y., and GiUa Ratzerdorfer, a, jifhlor at tte YesMva High Schod for. Girls In Manhattan. AU four wIU receive fdljschdar- sMps for ayeaor's study hi IsraeL
Tte knockout question reacted by the top three flnaUsts witii identicd scores: "Name tte sevenkings of Israel who were andnted. Name tte person who anointed each of ttem and teU tte place where each ceremony was teld. Name tte one king oftte seven vrtio was not a jew. Name tte one of tte seven who was anointed three times; ijlentib' the person who anointed Mm each time and name tte place fdr each of tte three anointments."
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Object Description
| Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1969-07-03 |
| 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 | 2008-12-12 |
