Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1970-08-06, page 01 |
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•.¦i«i* 'N . r^ -i 3/\Q Serving Columbus, "Central"an?Southwe5tern Ohio V[7AE VOL. 48 NO. 32 AL(;U.ST «, 1970 — AV 4 aai JiaM'iMl Jewish Center Realigns Staff David Roth, President of the Jewish Center and Irv Barkan, Chairman of the Personnel Committee announce a change in structure and Staff positions for the 1970-71 season. Rose,Schwartz will,assume the position of Director of Oiildhodd Services to include 18 months thru age 6. San Dee Broida will become a part-time assistant in this department. Miss Broida will supervise playgroups and Pre-School Supervisorof Adult Services, physical education Meir Haber, Director^of programs. Miss Broida will continue in the Physicial Education D^artment as a part-time assistant in' charge of woihens and childrens I^hysical education prngrants. Bennett Streltzer will Israeli Culture and' Jewish Educatioh^'.Will move into itiore" intensive-activity in the' commuhity and on the campus. In addition, Haber will organic! Hebrew classes and .coinmunity holiday celebrations. Ihe Personnel Committee assurne the position of is presently attempting to ^Director of Youth Services, recruit a male Physical His responsibility will in¬ clude . supervision of programs ufor children' in grades 2 thru 12. Streltzer will also staff the Youth Activities Opmmittee. Caryn Pabner will assist ^Education Assistant' to pirovide ¦ more '¦ intensive service; ^d continuity to the Physical Education program. According to Barkan, '"Hiis new ; structure will ; StrdtzCT as the Director of provjd^^ Tween-Tieeii serviced wiUsupervfee-seryice to introdikie h?W meinbers^to igtad^'t fhrufia; ;slife-awIII*the jCentfer-program, and staff thV B'B.YiO; Com- toUow up on: iheiribership mittee and- the Teea Age partidpation. It^ is pur in- tentidh; that the Jewish component of Center service Cquncil Eli Estreicher will supervise a new area of intensifies and expands." Center service. Membership intake, new member in¬ terviews, adult clubs, volunteer recruitment and training, and adult Jewish education programs will be directed by Estreicher as Copy Deadline Friday Noon Members of the Center Aquatic Dept. in the Flash¬ back Follies this Saturday and Sunday Aug. 9 and 9 at ':[ 8:30 p.m., left to right, Jeanette Beckman, Luanne Saas, Becky Reed, Barbara Templeton, Cathy Collins, Vicki Kahn. Flashback Follies At The Jewish Center Flashback FoUie&faiL^quatic review, will be preserited this Saturday ahd'^day'Aug. 8 and 9 by the Jewish Center Synchronized^'kiid Spieed teams, Worthington pool diving team and YWCA synchronized swimming teart. ¦nie show sponsored by the Centfer's Aquatic I%t. is a part of its 20th Anniversary celebration. Show time isj8:30'p.m. flie Admission price iS 75 outdoor pool complex cents adults, 50 cents .children (7-12), children under 7 admitted free, the place is the Jewish Center llie Center will be hosting St. Vincents orphanage and Franklin Village as special guests for the performance. TEL AVIV (WNS)-'rhe'Manufacturers Association of Israel reported that the nation's gross national product of $4,750 million in 1969 amounted to 85 percent of Egypt's total of $5.6 million and that Israel could overtake the Arab state within the next four years. Israel's gross industrial product outpaced Egypt's by $1.35 million to $1.18 million. The GNP on a per capita basis has Israel far ahead of Egypt, $1,650 to $175. Israel's advancement was taking place despite . Egypt's 12 to 1 ratio in population and the extensive free and low cost aid advanced to the Arab stateby Russia, East European countries and oil-rich Arab nations. , . JERUSALEM (VWS)-Seif Eddin Zoiiabi, S 56-year- / old Nazareth Arab presided over a meeting of the Knesset in his role as Deputy %)eaker. He is the first : Arab to run a Knesset meeting. Mr. Zouabi, a Labor Party niember of Parliament since its.inception and ... candidate for Deputy Minister of Agriculture, called on . Arab states to make peace with Israel. NEW YORK (WNSX-The Hebrew Union College Cantorial School (Reform) reported that Barbara Ostfeld of North Haven, Coon., will attend the school starting next month and she could become the firet female cantor in Jewish history upon her graduation. She will be one of 25 cantorial students at the s<:hool ..and could qualify.^to serve as a stiidept caritor iiii her : iirst year if her studi^ are satisfactory. Miss Ostfeld said she wanted to bie-^ caritor since ^e was a little '•. giri:' .. ¦,¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ . . •.¦..., "¦/ ¦ ¦ : .^ JERUS>^ braeli government plans ... 'toi estail^sh ina jor iriidustriai tfoifers; in: Jii^ea; arid in ; , i', Sarifi^ria undler ani ecpriomic deyelppment plan drawn 'up't^'MJiflst^riWithqut^^^ tivJB projects have $57i|420 eaiiriarked for the, in¬ dustrialization effort^iwhicif will employ 300 persorisin— hiodera buildings. JERUSALEM. (WNS)-The Left-wing Mapam Party's full entry into the coalition government was completed when the Cabinet approved the appointiriient' of two party members to head ministries, u ItCnister- Without-Portfolio Victor Shemtov will be Minister of Health and Knesset Member Nathan Peled will be Minister of Immigrant Absorption, llie two posts had beeri filled on a temporary basis until Mapam assumed full responsibility as a CkKilition partner. Report From Israel... A Trip Backward In Time & Space • by Hersh L. Adlerstein The second in a series ot reports by ihe Regional OTrecfor oi the Ami Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, .and Director ol. thQi^Columbus CRC, who is spending 5 weeiis in Israel as part of the Seminar on World Jewish Service of the Hebrew University. ' .. ' JERICHO: Jerusalem for Jen a trip backward inHlms<^jj^gv> space. The semi-arid Jerusalern countryside begins to turn to desert as the road winds through the hills. A few miles out of Jerusalem the landscape is as bleak as anything in Death Valley - and con¬ siderably less hospitable. For as far as the eye can scan one, can see only rock, sand and blue cloudless sky. Rain may fall here in the winter, but the soil is so eroded that nothing, grows 'except an occasional tuft of sagebrush. Only the rusted hulks of Jordanian tanks occasionally dot the land, reminding the onlooker that even this desolate wilderness was fought ov6r in 1948 and again in -1967. During the nearly two decades between the War of Independence and the Six Day War, this was Eirst Step Taken- Peace In Mid-East.'' LATE FLASH Even though thc Gah.il Rarly sphtvPrcmicr'Oolda Moir • oflicialiy iicccpNfl tho Roqcrs Proposal Tuesday indicatinq thorn would t)c no Withdrawal untiln peace adrcomcntWiis signed WASHINGTON, (JTA) - Official Washington indicated today that it believ«i the first small step has been taken toward an eventual peaceful settlement of the Middle East conflict. -Tlie approval by Israel's Cabinet on Friday of Secretary of State William P. Rogers' proposals for a 90-day cease-fire and negotiations under the aegis of United Nations peace envoy Gunriar V.' "' , . acceptance. But hie warned,. "We have; ii long way to go; Ihis is orily a first step." In.- effect President, Nixori w^s saying that the American initiative has. only set the stage for Arab-Israeli negotiations, not arranged a settlement itself. The developments so ifar are regarded .as a personal trimph tor Secretaiy i^gers and. his: credo of ''quiet diplomacy." It was: Mr. Rogers' proposals to Israel arid the Arab states, .couplj^ with a plea to "stop shooting and (start talking" that is credited with having ; br^ciiied'the Mideast im- piTMs Briefing Friday at-th(B paisspfor the fii^t tiine since c>«.^- rii.^L.J^^ .:;..U;.1;U- ntus^'n^'tt^tA''.'¦ Tiink '"'toic?'^'..tinw'-..' 1i.n Jarring,/ was greeted, here with a sense of relief that the first obstacle to peace may have been overcome although the final goal remains as distant and elusive as ever. TTi^^Rogers' proposals were accepted earlier by Egypt and Jbrdan with apparently fjrrii backing from the Soviet Uriion. The U.S., goverrimerit is now awaiting Isri^el's official reply, tjhe text of which js beirig drafted in Jerusalem. It is nptexjpecteU to bie received here howiever before. Wednesday, presideiit Nixpni set'the .tone of ^ifcautibus joptiinisw ^at^ ;:.Sari Cleriierite summer Vniite House. Einergirig i firorii a . two-and-a4ialf hour meeting with Secijetary Rogers,. Mr. Nixon announcedi^Israel's «% / the Jiinfe;;-^67;^»%};!; The Niii^phi :a'dministraiiprii^iap- pareritiy succeeidM in winning Soyiet cooperation -(continued on page f) THIS YCARI SAY L'SHONA TOVAH'' TOTHCENTIIIE JEWISH COMMUNITY afiylflgpJo^^i'iflll.Mi; -I occupied ffi'Wt',efej^^^^^ is Israeli- i%V^$^;(Hp|/bipi^i((or part of the Administered Territories," as the official designation puts it) and ^ne can only WPnder' -, with some trepidation - who could have ^ver wanted this waste. ' Suddenly looming up out of the desert.one comes to the- first; signs of life as Jericho appears before us. Jericho, Uie guidebook tells us, is the oldest inhabited city in the \yorld. Ruins of the walls that"came tumbling down" allegedly exist on the out¬ skirts of the present city and an archeological dig that began decades ago has discovered 10,000 year-old remains of an ancient city of Jericho. The city is.ancient, and the city looks ancient, but thc secret of Jericho is, iriimcdlateiy apparent even lo the uninitiated - it is a (Continued on Page 4) (3irontcle readers! Greet your friends and relatives in our New Year's Edition, ^is year ihe book willreach homes and leading business firms in Columbus and Central Ohio by September 28. Greeting friends and relatives in the pages of the Chronicle's New Year's Edition has long been a tradition for Central Ohio Jewish families. This is an excellait method of showing your interest in the entire Jewish community, arid it' is a most effective way bf expressing your good wishes to all those dear .ito you. . AC? NdW! It is easy to assure that your greeting will appear in this- issue. FiU in the attached coupon and mail it at once to the Oironicle, P.O. Box 13299-43213. Or ciill us and submit your greeting over the telephone. The regular single family greeting is $3.00. $5.00 is the cost of a multi-family greeting or a special display greeting. Be sure to specify. To: THE OHIO JEWISH CHRONICLE, P.O Box 13299, Cblumbus, Ohiif, 43213. Please insert the following greeting in your NEW YEAR'S EDITION: ,, ..• ¦ '¦ ¦ ;.',i!ns!.'i,.W'.!..H.t- ¦ '^ i^Vv'' 'i . '" 't . .Signed, $3 greeting "' $5 greeting 1 col X 4-6 lines D $5 display greeting 2 col X 2 inches .d Bill me Adih^ss.^. p. Money enclosed .I-' /''. >F<»?«tM^ft-iW&<WWH-KM(utF.\t: Si^X;
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1970-08-06 |
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 |
Image Height | Not Available |
Image Width | Not Available |
Searchable Date | 1970-08-06 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-11-02 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1970-08-06, page 01 |
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 | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1970-08-06, page 01.tif |
Image Height | 4907 |
Image Width | 3302 |
File Size | 2065.607 KB |
Searchable Date | 1970-08-06 |
Full Text |
•.¦i«i*
'N
. r^
-i
3/\Q Serving Columbus, "Central"an?Southwe5tern Ohio V[7AE
VOL. 48 NO. 32
AL(;U.ST «, 1970 — AV 4
aai JiaM'iMl
Jewish Center Realigns Staff
David Roth, President of the Jewish Center and Irv Barkan, Chairman of the Personnel Committee announce a change in structure and Staff positions for the 1970-71 season.
Rose,Schwartz will,assume the position of Director of Oiildhodd Services to include 18 months thru age 6. San Dee Broida will become a part-time assistant in this department. Miss Broida will supervise
playgroups and Pre-School Supervisorof Adult Services, physical education Meir Haber, Director^of
programs.
Miss Broida will continue in the Physicial Education D^artment as a part-time assistant in' charge of woihens and childrens I^hysical education prngrants.
Bennett Streltzer will
Israeli Culture and' Jewish Educatioh^'.Will move into itiore" intensive-activity in the' commuhity and on the campus. In addition, Haber will organic! Hebrew classes and .coinmunity holiday celebrations. Ihe Personnel Committee
assurne the position of is presently attempting to ^Director of Youth Services, recruit a male Physical
His responsibility will in¬ clude . supervision of programs ufor children' in grades 2 thru 12. Streltzer will also staff the Youth Activities Opmmittee. Caryn Pabner will assist
^Education Assistant' to pirovide ¦ more '¦ intensive service; ^d continuity to the Physical Education program.
According to Barkan, '"Hiis new ; structure will
; StrdtzCT as the Director of provjd^^
Tween-Tieeii serviced
wiUsupervfee-seryice to introdikie h?W meinbers^to igtad^'t fhrufia; ;slife-awIII*the jCentfer-program, and staff thV B'B.YiO; Com- toUow up on: iheiribership mittee and- the Teea Age partidpation. It^ is pur in-
tentidh; that the Jewish component of Center service
Cquncil
Eli Estreicher will supervise a new area of intensifies and expands."
Center service. Membership intake, new member in¬ terviews, adult clubs, volunteer recruitment and training, and adult Jewish education programs will be directed by Estreicher as
Copy Deadline Friday Noon
Members of the Center Aquatic Dept. in the Flash¬ back Follies this Saturday and Sunday Aug. 9 and 9 at ':[ 8:30 p.m., left to right, Jeanette Beckman, Luanne Saas, Becky Reed, Barbara Templeton, Cathy Collins, Vicki Kahn.
Flashback Follies At The Jewish Center
Flashback FoUie&faiL^quatic review, will be preserited this Saturday ahd'^day'Aug. 8 and 9 by the Jewish Center Synchronized^'kiid Spieed teams, Worthington pool diving team and YWCA synchronized swimming teart.
¦nie show sponsored by the Centfer's Aquatic I%t. is a part of its 20th Anniversary celebration. Show time isj8:30'p.m. flie Admission price iS 75 outdoor pool complex
cents adults, 50 cents .children (7-12), children under 7 admitted free, the place is the Jewish Center
llie Center will be hosting St. Vincents orphanage and Franklin Village as special guests for the performance.
TEL AVIV (WNS)-'rhe'Manufacturers Association of Israel reported that the nation's gross national product of $4,750 million in 1969 amounted to 85 percent of Egypt's total of $5.6 million and that Israel could overtake the Arab state within the next four years. Israel's gross industrial product outpaced Egypt's by $1.35 million to $1.18 million. The GNP on a per capita basis has Israel far ahead of Egypt, $1,650 to $175. Israel's advancement was taking place despite
. Egypt's 12 to 1 ratio in population and the extensive free and low cost aid advanced to the Arab stateby Russia, East European countries and oil-rich Arab nations. ,
. JERUSALEM (VWS)-Seif Eddin Zoiiabi, S 56-year-
/ old Nazareth Arab presided over a meeting of the Knesset in his role as Deputy %)eaker. He is the first : Arab to run a Knesset meeting. Mr. Zouabi, a Labor Party niember of Parliament since its.inception and
... candidate for Deputy Minister of Agriculture, called on
. Arab states to make peace with Israel.
NEW YORK (WNSX-The Hebrew Union College Cantorial School (Reform) reported that Barbara Ostfeld of North Haven, Coon., will attend the school starting next month and she could become the firet female cantor in Jewish history upon her graduation. She will be one of 25 cantorial students at the s<:hool
..and could qualify.^to serve as a stiidept caritor iiii her : iirst year if her studi^ are satisfactory. Miss Ostfeld said she wanted to bie-^ caritor since ^e was a little '•. giri:' .. ¦,¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ . . •.¦..., "¦/ ¦ ¦
: .^ JERUS>^ braeli government plans ...
'toi estail^sh ina jor iriidustriai tfoifers; in: Jii^ea; arid in ; , i', Sarifi^ria undler ani ecpriomic deyelppment plan drawn 'up't^'MJiflst^riWithqut^^^ tivJB projects have $57i|420 eaiiriarked for the, in¬ dustrialization effort^iwhicif will employ 300 persorisin— hiodera buildings.
JERUSALEM. (WNS)-The Left-wing Mapam Party's full entry into the coalition government was completed when the Cabinet approved the appointiriient' of two party members to head ministries, u ItCnister- Without-Portfolio Victor Shemtov will be Minister of Health and Knesset Member Nathan Peled will be Minister of Immigrant Absorption, llie two posts had beeri filled on a temporary basis until Mapam assumed full responsibility as a CkKilition partner.
Report From Israel...
A Trip Backward In Time & Space
• by Hersh L. Adlerstein
The second in a series ot reports by ihe Regional OTrecfor oi the Ami Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, .and Director ol. thQi^Columbus CRC, who is spending 5 weeiis in Israel as part of the Seminar on World Jewish Service of the Hebrew University. ' .. '
JERICHO: Jerusalem for Jen
a trip backward inHlms<^jj^gv> space. The semi-arid Jerusalern countryside begins to turn to desert as the road winds through the hills. A few miles out of Jerusalem the landscape is as bleak as anything in Death Valley - and con¬ siderably less hospitable. For as far as the eye can scan one, can see only rock, sand and blue cloudless sky. Rain may fall here in the winter, but the soil is so eroded that nothing, grows 'except an occasional tuft of sagebrush. Only the rusted hulks of Jordanian tanks occasionally dot the land, reminding the onlooker that even this desolate wilderness was fought ov6r in 1948 and again in -1967. During the nearly two decades between the War of Independence and the Six Day War, this was
Eirst Step Taken- Peace In Mid-East.''
LATE FLASH Even though thc Gah.il Rarly sphtvPrcmicr'Oolda Moir • oflicialiy iicccpNfl tho Roqcrs Proposal Tuesday indicatinq thorn would t)c no Withdrawal untiln peace adrcomcntWiis signed
WASHINGTON, (JTA) - Official Washington indicated today that it believ«i the first small step has been taken toward an eventual peaceful settlement of the Middle East conflict. -Tlie approval by Israel's Cabinet on Friday of Secretary of State William P. Rogers' proposals for a 90-day cease-fire and negotiations under the aegis of United Nations peace envoy Gunriar V.' "' , .
acceptance. But hie warned,. "We have; ii long way to go; Ihis is orily a first step." In.- effect President, Nixori w^s saying that the American initiative has. only set the stage for Arab-Israeli negotiations, not arranged a settlement itself.
The developments so ifar are regarded .as a personal trimph tor Secretaiy i^gers and. his: credo of ''quiet diplomacy." It was: Mr. Rogers' proposals to Israel arid the Arab states, .couplj^ with a plea to "stop shooting and (start talking" that is credited with having ; br^ciiied'the Mideast im- piTMs Briefing Friday at-th(B paisspfor the fii^t tiine since
c>«.^- rii.^L.J^^ .:;..U;.1;U- ntus^'n^'tt^tA''.'¦ Tiink '"'toic?'^'..tinw'-..' 1i.n
Jarring,/ was greeted, here with a sense of relief that the first obstacle to peace may have been overcome although the final goal remains as distant and elusive as ever. TTi^^Rogers' proposals were accepted earlier by Egypt and Jbrdan with apparently fjrrii backing from the Soviet Uriion. The U.S., goverrimerit is now awaiting Isri^el's official reply, tjhe text of which js beirig drafted in Jerusalem. It is nptexjpecteU to bie received here howiever before. Wednesday, presideiit Nixpni set'the .tone of ^ifcautibus joptiinisw ^at^
;:.Sari Cleriierite summer Vniite House. Einergirig i firorii a
. two-and-a4ialf hour meeting with Secijetary Rogers,. Mr. Nixon announcedi^Israel's
«%
/
the Jiinfe;;-^67;^»%};!; The Niii^phi :a'dministraiiprii^iap- pareritiy succeeidM in winning Soyiet cooperation
-(continued on page f)
THIS YCARI SAY L'SHONA TOVAH''
TOTHCENTIIIE JEWISH COMMUNITY
afiylflgpJo^^i'iflll.Mi; -I occupied ffi'Wt',efej^^^^^ is Israeli-
i%V^$^;(Hp|/bipi^i((or part of the Administered Territories," as the official designation puts it) and ^ne can only WPnder' -, with some trepidation - who could have ^ver wanted this waste. ' Suddenly looming up out of the desert.one comes to the- first; signs of life as Jericho appears before us. Jericho, Uie guidebook tells us, is the oldest inhabited city in the \yorld. Ruins of the walls that"came tumbling down" allegedly exist on the out¬ skirts of the present city and an archeological dig that began decades ago has discovered 10,000 year-old remains of an ancient city of Jericho. The city is.ancient, and the city looks ancient, but thc secret of Jericho is, iriimcdlateiy apparent even lo the uninitiated - it is a (Continued on Page 4)
(3irontcle readers! Greet your friends and relatives in our New Year's Edition, ^is year ihe book willreach homes and leading business firms in Columbus and Central Ohio by September 28.
Greeting friends and relatives in the pages of the Chronicle's New Year's Edition has long been a tradition for Central Ohio Jewish families. This is an excellait method of showing your interest in the entire Jewish community, arid it' is a most effective way bf expressing your good wishes to all those dear .ito you. .
AC? NdW!
It is easy to assure that your greeting will appear in this- issue. FiU in the attached coupon and mail it at once to the Oironicle, P.O. Box 13299-43213. Or ciill us and submit your greeting over the telephone.
The regular single family greeting is $3.00. $5.00 is the cost of a multi-family greeting or a special display greeting. Be sure to specify.
To: THE OHIO JEWISH CHRONICLE, P.O Box 13299, Cblumbus, Ohiif, 43213.
Please insert the following greeting in your NEW YEAR'S EDITION:
,, ..•
¦ '¦
¦ ;.',i!ns!.'i,.W'.!..H.t-
¦ '^ i^Vv'' 'i
. '" 't .
.Signed,
$3 greeting "' $5 greeting 1 col X 4-6 lines
D $5 display greeting 2 col X 2 inches
.d Bill me
Adih^ss.^.
p. Money enclosed
.I-'
/''.
>F<»?«tM^ft-iW& |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2008-12-17 |