December 20, 1957

Page 1

Vol. XXXVI J.N

(• .li'l- m l C'.il; t r l i l i j . , !!)1 N 'J.I <j.iir»t.a .Ncuia»hu. I'liuni J.\ u *

OUUI1.

XI.BB.tSKA.

New Courses i Young Adults Will

Announced

Hold Dance

The Young Adults' Council is pl,inning an opciissquare dance at i In st ii I Ml (lu> JewI Camp tlrewster Saturday, FebruIsh Coinmiiiuiy f'i nlei after the ary, 1. New Ye.ir include adult bridge, New members or the Council are Latin-Aim iir.in {i(iii(.in^ MIUI Red Denny Abramson, Mary Abramson, C101J flisi Hid Ixroell Baumer, Frank Berg, BarT«ii adult lnidt'e rl.ivea will be bara Bernstein, I.ee Brown, Louis offr'ted one, on Mi>ud.i}S fiom 1 Brown, Judy Cohn, Marsha Feldp rn to 3 p in be^inuin); January ninn and Pierre Elllan. « and another Tlnirsd.iy from HI others arc Sid Klopper, Howard p in t o 10j> m o[»nini; January, Kuklin, Fred Marcus, Maxlne Prod, y, it \\:w announced hy J*-irl Kiegol, Kid Rosenblatt, l.ee Simon, C l Carol Center Adult chairman. Spector, Gail Spector, Pauline A duplicate llu-idge u i g e tournament r n n t Stone and Arnie Winer, lie lii-ld lit tin- conclusion of the j Election of officers, and commltclasHCi for lmth p.ist htndrntii ami; tees Ii on the agenda for the next oilier Jiiteicifcl plajcis Mil. I.ee meeting Sunday, December 29, at Nelson will teach the rinses. Fee the Jewish Community y Center. for either session will be JSOO. d I YAC YC ii Anyone IInterested In Plans are being made for another Invited to attend. Latin American d-ince elms as the result of many requests received, •t the center of flee. Im-ludeil ulllj ba the Rhumbn, Sniiiba, Tango and Ch-C)ia. Instrurtnis will be from the University of Omaha. A program at joslyn Art MuseA revised method of Instruction um and * party at-the Jewish wi'J bring a new look to the Red Community Center on December Crou First Aid class training 22 will highlight the' Children's Itartlng Monday, January 6 at the Sunday program's special holiday Center. From 0:30 a. m. to 11:30 observance. Youngster* and their a. tn. The hour was arranged to parents will meet In the Floral •ccomodate mothers wlio wished Court of the Museum at 2:15 p. m. to be at homo with their children Boys and girls representing all during their lunch hour. age groups will explain the holiday The class will be conducted by arid Its various symbols with the Joe Mlcrk, Center Aquatic director aid of different display articles. »nd .rerllflcrl lied Cross Instructor. The group will be Invited to »ce In conjunction with the National the Herman Aucrbach Memorial Civil Defense program. Exhibit befoe adjourning to the Information c o n c e r n i n g the Community Center for may br obtained nt the , games and refreshments Center office oi by calling JA 13Gti. 'Hie second srsnon of the regular Children's Sunday Rroup «ill open Jnnunry 5 at the Center. Many requests for registration have Iwcn m.iili" already. Mrs. JUIIIIH Cohn, i rhililren's netivitje's clialnnan re-

Chanukah Program

Seniors Invited To College Night

I |«>it..(l.

All lii|:li school seniors are In* j Youn::st(.'rh. iiml^r tlit* direction viled to attend a (.'ollci:i> Night I uf an Exix-ricncnl staff, will parprogram In the Jewish CoiiuniinHy tlelpate In suili activities a.s a Jew. CenliT aiidltorinm. December noth |sh Music Month Concert, outside at K ]i, in. trips, arW( and crafts, swimming, Ctillcr.e fre.ihmen jrpre.'ientlnij athletics dramatics, sinRinc and major college e*infeieut'e« luclml* dancing and a fin:it program and Ing tlir Ivy I/MIRIIC, ISij; Kiglit. I!ig party. Ten. Southeast, Pacific Const, stal/1 nnd local schools will be present to report on n first hand imprenlon of first year campus life. "The purpose of the program," A children's vacation program Phil Kuller, youth committee ch/ilrrnnn, declared, "Is to give the filled with a variety of activities high school.senior a personal ap- at the Jewish Community Center praisal of freshman life In col- has been announced by Mrs. Julius Cohn, children's -activity commitlUsverly C-oldlierg and Irvln Bel- tee chairman. Sessions have l>een scheduled rer, chairmen for the affair, urge for Monday, Wednesday, Friday, all seniors to attend. December 2.1, 1T>, 27 and Monday, the 30th from 'Z p. m. to liltO p. m. Plans have been made to entertain youngsters of grade school URi' (in this particular Kioupi with movies, trips'to local places of Tlic "Woman, of Valor" pin, the interest, names and som;fe.sls. Tin' only one, ever received liy an fee will be ?l. payable at the flret Oinallan, Was iH'stoued Upon Mrs. meelini!. ' J. Harry Kulakofsky at the reChildren ami youth swlinmini: cent Chanukah Festival for Israel. will be availablo also durlni; the 'lite award, n distinction con- holiday nn Monday, Wednesday fi-rlcd U[hin women for sellini; ami Friday from 2:30 p. in. to SIOO.CIOO or more in Israel bunds, •ir.'iO p. m. Li held by only 47 Americans. Mrs. Ktilalcofrky will tie one ol the. guests at a dinner to l>e given January 11 in Washington by Israel AnibaRsador and Mrs. Abl>n Kban In trll«ite to the "Women Jerusalem UTAt Israel spent df Valor," on defense and se lic.nds. Bales totalllnR 5I2.O(X) cuiity exi>endilijres in the past were made at the Chanuknh fesdecade, Finance Minister Levl tlvnl held last Sunday nt the KshJiol reveuled. Tin* Finance ,\Iiuniiickntoiie. Isfer d i s c l o s e d that betvvecn $).,.">00,000,000 and $1,7M,(XW,000, bail been invested In development projects in the same ten years, while local Investments for the Deadlines for Copy to 1» same period were 3,800.000,000 pounds. submitted for the December 27 nnd January 3rd issues of T OF HYKIAN JKWS th* Jewish Press mu.it be In Tel Aviv (WNS)—The plight of the newspaper's office on the the jlx thousand Jews In Syria is preceding Fridays, The regular schedule will be resumed after worse than that of any minority Kroup In the countries of the Mldthose dales. ! die Kast, It was reported.

DKCEMBKH

U J Spe

*

Israel Gets . Soviet Note J e r u s a l e m (JTA) — A 13-page Soviet note to Israel calling this state's attention —as a United Nations member—to the Increased threat of nuclear war and urging Israel to step" u p - efforts to strengthen world peace, was received" at the Foreign Ministry. -The note, handed to Israel's Embassy In Moscow Friday, It simitar to scores of such missives sent to other UN members. Members of the NATO and" Wanmw Pact groups received differently worded notes, it Is understood.

1MT

f ims For 1958 kescue Fund Leaders Confer at Twentieth Annual National Meeting

Nmv York (WN8)—The United Jewish Ap|N>al at Its two-day JOth anniwl national conference here, called on Amrrlraji Jtwry to undertake • special "Itmcue Fund" of f 100,000,000 ovor and above the |10J,031,000 sought for th« I'JA rofuUr 195S campaign. The conference closed with the election of Morris W. Berlnstein of Syracuse, N. Y,, u general chairman of Uie'UJA to lead II) 20th nationwide campaign In behalf of immigrants to Israel, distressed' Jews overseas and refugees to this country. Mr. Berin•tein became the UJA's fourth general .chairman since its Inception In 1939, succeeding- William Roaenwald of New York w h o served as general chairman for the campaigns of 1955, 19o6 and 1967. Jerusalem (JTA)—The RabbiniThousands tn Need cal Council of America will accept Mr. Berlnsteln told the more us binding all .ruling* by the Israel Chief Rabbinate, it was for- than 1.300 delegates that "there mally pledged at a meeting of the are still ten» of thousands of Jew* Chief Rabbinate Council here. The In dire need, living in countries pledge was made on behalf of the where they capnot live as Jew*, who want to reach the sacred noil American Council.

Israel Rabbinate Ruling Accepted

Pioneer Omahans Celebrate 60th Wedding Anniversary

Program Arranged For Younger Set

Mrs. Kulakofsky Receives Award

700 Million Spent On Israel Defense

Deodine Change

- John Kftlln* Plwla,

Mr. and Mm. lien ilien Kulaliohky Mr. nnd Mrs. Reuben Kulukof- Kulakofsky was a charter memlwr sky, pioneer Omahans, will cele- of the latter synagogue nnd of the brate their sixtieth wedding annl- Highland Country Club. Mrs. Kulakofsky was ona of versury, December 26. the organizers of the Council of Residents of this city most of Jewish Women and a charter their lives, they were married here member of Iladassah. She was also by the late Rabbi Henry Crodln- a charter member and president sky at what was then popuhirly of the one-time Jewish Ladles Reknown as Washington Hall. lief Society, which later became Mr. Kulakofsky, now. retired, the former Jewish Women's Welwas a former partner In the Cen- fare organization, ' tral Market. He will also observe She served on the boards of the his 81th birthday, Decemlwr 22. visiting Nurses Association, the Mrs. Kulnkof.sky will be 82, May 7. Nebraska Tuberculosis AssociaThey are the parents of Mrs. A. tion, the Red Cross and the HatII. Ilrodkey of Omaha; Mrs. Aaron tie n. Monroe Home for nearly a Richards nnd Seaman L. Kay of quarter a century nnd Is nn honSan Jose, Cal., and have five orary member of the latter organ grandchildren and 13 great grand- Izatlon. children. The Kulakofskys spent seven They ar« members of Temple years in California, prior to 1931 Israel and Beth El Synagogue Mr, when they returned here.

•f ts W el. The U. S. A., he aaid, must reckon with aiding up to 80,000 Jews from Kastern ' Europe and Moslem countries who" will need urgent help to reach Israel and other lands where they'can build new lives. * ' Kalse Living Standard* Highlighting the conference was an address by Moshe Sharett, former Prime Minister of Israel. Mr. Sharett itressed that while brael has greatly progressed "there is stUI a long way to travel until we can harness to the fullest extent the productive potential of our land and our people, utilize all our w a t e r resources and mineral wealth and attain the goals of self-sustenance and a decent standard of living for ail. In the area of immigration, he said that apart from the challenge of completing the absorption of 900,000 refugees Israel faces the tact that "there are still entire Jewish com. munltle* which have not been permitted To participate in the liberation and rehabilitation process unfolded In Israel in the last decado. Apropos ihe political situation, the former Israeli Prime Minister said that the sharpening of the Kast-West conflict In recent months had complicated still further the Middle East situation, adding that "the Soviet Government, by adopting u policy of implacable hostility to Israel, has assumed a very grave responsibility for relardlng peace In the Middle East." K«settlitment of Many UJA honorary chairman Edward M. M. Warbunc declared that 'some 70,000 Jews In Eastern Europe, North Africa and other Moslem areas will In* In urgent need f resettlement In Israel In 1956" and that "another 10,000 displaced Jews including refugees who fled Kgypt and Hungary lust year, and who now arc In transit camps in Western Europe can be resettled to free countries, including the United States, British Commonwealth lands and Latin America/' Dr. Nahum Goldmann, chairman of.the J*wi«h Agency for EalesHne, the orginl/.utlon which carries out Immigrant aid programs in Israel financed chiefly by theUJA, warned agalait a settlement of the Middle East problem at Israel's expense. . Critical Test Faced Warning that "Israel may soon face its most critical and decisive test as. a result of the mounting ferment In the Middle East," Dr. Goldmann aald: "Attempts may soun be initiated to stabilize the Mddlc East at the expense of Israel's territorial Integrity which would be '.'perilous to Israel'* cxIstdnce and would not stabilize the Middle E:ast." He cautioned that "the weakening of Israel, an exemplar of democratic living In all Africa and Asia, would weaken the democratic cnusc among the underdeveloped c o u n t r 1 e » and could be-a fatal blow to the moral stature of the world."

All Aliens Must Report Addresses AH aliens, who are in the United Stutes on January 1 each year, must report their addresses to the Attorney General by the end of that month, it was announced by. the Immigration and Naturalization Service at the Federal Building. Forms with which to make the report enn be obtained from any Post Office or Immigration office, The law provides severe penaltlei for failure with comply with this requirement. ' '


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