NOVEMBER 1, 1974 Prospects Who Buy Often Arc Newspaper

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NOVEMBER 1, 1974 Prospects Who Buy Often Arc Newspaper ~-...;:::--r-•••~- - --- - --- •---,-----.- --..-. -- ------ -,-,-- -~_,r.--~ = ~ - ------ - t 'j Ill < ..I < ./) t> 0 c,- c: ('J ....0 0 ti) Armed Group Escapes After Assaulting Official NEW YORK: Three men forced coordi nati o n orga ni zatio n of their way into the Park Avenue · Palestinian guerrilla groups headed office of the Palestine Liberation by Yasir Arafat. It was recognized ONLY ENGLISH -J EW ISH WEEKLY IN R /. AND SOUTH EAST MASS. Organi zation, beat an official with two days ago by Arab heads of a piece of lead pipe and fired at s tate as the "sole legitimate ------- ~~-..a- ~ .., least two shots before fleeing, the represe nta tive o f the Palestine III, NUMBER 35 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1974 24 PAGES 20c PER COPY police said. pe o ple" a nd was recentl y authorized by a vote of the United The official, who wa.s said to be Egypt-Soviet Union Nations General Assembly to the only staff member in the office To Hold Installation Of Rabbi address a plenary meeting next at the time of the attack, was Announce Agreement month. At Temple Beth Sholom On Sunday treated at Bellevue Hospital for CAIRO: Egypt and the Soviet cuts of the head and bruises, but he John Scali, the United States Leading religious and public of­ Union will sign a five-year was not hit by gunfire, according to permanent delegate to the United ficials will attend the installation economic agreement to consolidate the police. He was identified as Nations, condemned the attack as of Rabbi Ira A. Korff of Milton their relations. Egypt's Foreign Hasan Rahman, 30 years old, "an ugly reprehensible action by and Hull, Massachusetts, as spirit­ Trade Minister, Fatti el-Madbouli, assistant director a t the misguided zealots." Mayor Beame ual leader of Temple Beth Sholom said. organization's local office at 101 termed it "a deplorable act that on Sunday, November 3, at 7:30 The minister said the agreement Park Avel)ue. ca nnot be excused b y a n y p.m. would take effect in 1976. He did rationale." Ceremonies will be held in the The Associated Press and United not indicate when it would be Warning Recalled main sanctuary of the temple, with signed, but said an interim trade P~ess International reported that a reception to follow in the protocol for 1975 would be signed anonymous telephone calls to their The office where the attack took temple's Rosenfield Hall. - in January. offices minutes after the attack, place, a five-room suite on the third Govenor Philip W. Noel of which occured at about I : 15 P.M ., floor, was ransacked. Telephones Rhode Island is expected to bring Mr. Madbouli said the five0 year had attributed the action to a group were ripped out and files dumped, greetings to the congregation dur­ accord would lay the foundation of · calling itself the Jewish Armed according to the police. ing the installation. Rabbi 13aruch Egyptian-Soviet economic Resistance. Ghazi Masoud, one of five staff Korff, an uncle, will open the in­ cooperation to fulfill the aims of The Palestine Liberation mem hers at the office, which is stallation ceremonies, which will Egypt's next five-year development Organization is the princiP,al marked only by a hand-lettered be conducted by Rabbi Chaim U. plan. sign on the door saying " PLO," Lipschitz, research and project di­ said there had been two telephoned rector of Mesivta Rabbinical Sem­ Yael Dayan To Speak Before threats a day earlier. inary. Rabbi Lipschitz is also di­ rector of the community service A male voice had warned that a bureau of Mcsivta Torah Vodaath; Two JFRI Affairs In RI bomb would be set off and that president of the National Informa­ RABIi IRA A. KORFF Yael Dayan, author and daugh­ "somebody might be killed," Mr. tion Bureau for Jewish Life; chap­ gree from Brooklyn Law School ter of Israeli General Moshe Da­ Masoud reported. He said the lain for the New York State Sen­ and is a ~l!d.\111.trof the Fletcher yan, will be the honored guest and police had been told of the calls. ate and Assembly, and managing School of: 'Law and Diplomacy, principal speaker at two major Mr. Rahman, although bleeding editor and columnist for "The with degrees in international law functions for the Jewish Feder­ from head wounds, was said to Jewish Press." . anil relations, and a specialization ation of Rhode •fstand ·oit Sunday, Rabbi Samuel I. Korff of Con­ in the peaceful ·settlement of inter­ have chased his assailants from the November 3. wrecked office and into the gregation Kehillath Jacob of New­ national disputes. The first event will be a special ton, Massachusetts, and rabbinic In 1969, when Rabbi Korff was builping lobby, at Park Avenue and cock tail party to · launch the 39th Street, before_they escaped. administrator of the Associated 20 years old, he was appointel:I 1974/ 1975 campaign of the Woon­ Synagogues of Massachusetts, also rabbi of the Yilna Congregation in socket area division of the JFRI. The police said the attackers an uncle, will deliver the in­ Boston, Massachusetts. He_ later This will be held at Congregation were all men in their 20's, at least stallation charge. simultaneously served Teinple Is­ B'nai Israel in ·Woonsocket at 4:30 one of whom wore the insignia of Other speakers will include rael of Nantasket, Massachusetts, p.m. on Sunday. Lester A. Mack­ the Jewish Defense League. Rabbi Abraham I. Halbfinger, and the Charles River Park Syna­ tez, campaign chairman of the Three years ago, in a si milar president of the Yaad Harabonim gogue of Boston. Named to the Woonsocket drive, has said that incident, a bomb exploded in the of Massachusetts; Rabbi William Outstanding Young Men of Amer­ the entire Jewish communitt of doorw ay of a Fifth Avenue gift G. Braude, rabbi emeritus of ica (Washington, D.S.) in 1973, Woonsocket has been invited to shop s pecializ ing in Soviet Temple Beth El; Rabbi Yehuda Rabbi Korff is a member of the attend. Gershuni, dean.Rabbinical Acade­ Rabbinical Alliance of America, products. That attack also was At the second event Miss Dayan attributed to " the Jewish Armed my of Israel, Yeshiva Merkaz Ha­ New England Rabbinical Council will address a group of the Young rav, and Bernard C. Gladstone, and Yaad Harabonim of Mas­ Resistance" by an a nonymous Women's Division of the Jewish telephone call to a news agency. president of Temple Beth Sholom. sachusetts. Federation of Rhode Island at the YAEL DAYAN The installation theme will be He is also a member of the Jewish Community Center at 8 traditionalism. United Nations Association, p.m. on Sunday. This meeting will Born in Boston, Rabbi Korff is World Affairs Council, American be chaired by Mrs. David Cohen, Nominate Max Alperin To Head a graduate of Hebrew College and Society of International Law, and president of the Young Women's Columbia University. He was or­ a director of Friends of the Flet­ Division. Jewish Home For The Aged dained and trained at the Rabbi­ cher School of Law and Diploma­ Miss Dayan is the author of Max Alperin has been nomi­ nical Academy of Israel and the cy. several best selling novels, in­ nated for the office of president of Chaim Berlin Rabbinical Acade­ He is the son of Rabbi and Mrs. cluding "New Faces in the Mir­ the Jewish Home for the Aged-of my, both in New York. Nathan Korff of Milton, Mas­ ror," "Envy the Frightened," Rhode Island for the coming year. He also holds a Juris Doctor de- sachusetts. "Dust," and "Death Had Two The election will be held at the Sons." annual meeting of the board of Jewish Federation To Launch She has studied political science trustees of the Home on Sund ay, at the Hebrew University in Je­ December 8, at 2:30 p.m. Campaign At Initial Gifts Event rusalem, and has traveled exten­ Also nominated are Mrs. Albert sively in Europe, South America, Alter, vice president representing The 1974/ 1975 campaign of the Asia and the United States. She the Ladies' Association; Donald F. Jewish Federation of Rhode Island has worked as a journalist for the Barrengos, Milton Dubinsky. Ir­ will be officially launched at an Jewish Press and the British ving I. Fain, Benton Odessa, Mar­ Initial Gifts dinner which will be Broadcasting Corporation. tin M. Temkin, vice presidents; held on Monday. November 11 . at Miss Dayan is a Sabra, native Philip J. Macktcz, treasurer; Sam­ 6 p.m. in the meeting house of Israeli, born in 1939 in Nahalal, a uel Michaelson, assistant treasur­ Temple Emanu- EI. it has been an­ village near Haifa. Her mother, er; Milton I. Brier, financial secre­ nounced by Edwin S. Soforcnko, Ruth Dayan, is the head of Mas­ tary; Norbert Fessel, recording general campaign chairman. kit, Israel's village of crafts and secretary; Mrs. Elliot Revkin, as­ Irvi ng Bernstein. executive vice industry. sistant recording secretary; Her­ chairman of the United Jewish man J. Aiscnberg, Jacob I. Felder, Appeal. will be the principal Nazi Released. Harold Leavitt, honorary presi­ speaker and will give his address dents; Bernard B. Abcdon, Alex­ MAX AIPIIIN on Israel and the Middle East. Due To Health ander Rumplcr, honorary vice man, Mr. Leavitt, Robert A. Rics­ Mr. Bernstein became executive HAMBURG,WeRG«m~~A presidents. man,, Samuel Rosen, Ralph J. vice chairman in 1969 after former Gestapo officer, Ludwig All present members of the Rotkin and Mr. Rumplcr. serving for a number of years as Hahn, once known as "the board of trustees were renomi­ Members of the nominating assistant vice chairman.
Recommended publications
  • OZ 35 Richard Neville Editor
    University of Wollongong Research Online OZ magazine, London Historical & Cultural Collections 5-1971 OZ 35 Richard Neville Editor Follow this and additional works at: http://ro.uow.edu.au/ozlondon Recommended Citation Neville, Richard, (1971), OZ 35, OZ Publications Ink Limited, London, 48p. http://ro.uow.edu.au/ozlondon/35 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: [email protected] OZ 35 Description This issue appears with the help o f Jim Anderson, Pat Bell, Stanislav Demidjuk, Felix Dennis, Simon Kentish, Debbie Knight, Stephen Litster, Brian McCracken, Mike Murphy, Richard Neville, John O’Neil, Chris Rowley, George Snow, David Wills. Thanks for artwork, photographs and valuable help to Eddie Belchamber, Andy Dudzinski, Rod Beddatl, Rip-Off rP ess, David Nutter, Mike Weller, Dan Pearce, Colin Thomas, Charles Shaar Murray, Sue Miles and those innumerable people who write us letters, which we are unable to print and sometimes forget to reply to. Contents: Special Pig issue cover by Ed Belchamber. Stop Press: OZ Obscenity Trial June 22nd Old Bailey. ‘The onC tortions of Modern Cricket’ A commentary on the current state of the game – Suck, sexuality and politics by Jim Haynes + graphics. ‘The onC tinuing Story of Lee Heater’ by Jim Anderson + graphics. How Howie Made it in the Real World 3p cartoon by Gore. Full page Keef Hartley Band ad. ‘The Bob Sleigh Case’ by Stanislav Demidjuk – freak injustice. ‘Act Like a Lady’ – gay advice from Gay Dealer + graphics by Rod Beddall. Chart: ‘The eM dical Effects of Mind-Altering Substances’ – based on charts by Sidney Cohen MD and Joel Fort MD.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Comparative Legal Histories Workshop
    Department of Sociology Comparative Legal Histories Workshop: Colonial/Postcolonial India and Mandatory Palestine/Israel Stanford Law School Faculty Lounge June 6, 2011 Description In recent years, an impressive body of scholarship has emerged on colonial legal history. Some of this work has focused on Indian and Israeli legal history. While both contemporary Indian and Israeli law are in some senses a product of English law, many additional legal sources, including religious and customary law, have played a significant role in shaping the corpus of law in both countries. This history has yielded complex pluralistic legal orders which faced, and still face, similar problems, including the ongoing effects of the British colonial legacy and postcolonial partition, tensions between secularism and religion, and also the desire to absorb universalizing western culture while maintaining some elements of tradition. The goal of our workshop is to bring together a group of legal historians interested in comparative colonial histories who are studying different aspects of the history of Indian and Israeli law. The workshop will be a one-day informal gathering that would combine a discussion of trends in comparative colonial legal history with an opportunity for participants to present their research projects. Our objective is to create a forum where legal historians who may not necessarily be in dialogue with one another can interact, exchange ideas, and perhaps even begin collaborative research projects. The workshop is organized by Assaf Likhovski (Tel Aviv University) Renisa Mawani (UBC) and Mitra Sharafi (UW Law School). It is funded by the David Berg Institute for Law and History at Tel Aviv University, the Institute for Legal Studies, University of Wisconsin Law School, and the Department of Sociology at the University of British Columbia, and hosted by Stanford Law School.
    [Show full text]
  • CHELSEA Space for IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    PRESS RELEASE CHELSEA space FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE We are watching: OZ in London Private view: Tuesday 13 June, 6-8.30pm Exhibition continues: 14 June – 14 July 2017 OZ 22 (1969) cover by Martin Sharp, Richard Neville (Editor). ‘They [the conservative elite] were overly terrified, and that somehow in the fluorescent pages of our magazine in which we dealt with revolutionary politics, drugs, sexuality, racism, trying to be much more candid about these matters and very very defined, I think at last they felt if they could shut us up, if the could stop Oz, that they could somehow stop the rebellion.’ Richard Neville, ‘The Oz Trial, Innocents Defiled?’, BBC Radio 4, 17 May 1990 OZ magazine (London, 1967-1973), has come to be known as a publication that typified the Sixties, through its experimental approach to design, editorial and the lifestyle it depicted, often through its contributors whose lives became enmeshed in the publication as it gained popularity and notoriety. CHELSEA space 16 John Islip Street, London, SW1P 4JU www.chelseaspace.org PRESS RELEASE CHELSEA space FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE The exhibition, We Are Watching: OZ in London, will explore the creative output of a range of the magazine’s contributors over the six years that it was based in London, where it provided a voice to young journalists, artists and designers. This international network included Richard Neville, Martin Sharp, Felix Dennis, Jim Anderson, Robert Whitaker, Philippe Mora and Germaine Greer. Several other individuals were also fundamental in the success of OZ, their hard work unaccredited at the time, including Marsha Rowe and Louise Ferrier.
    [Show full text]
  • Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville Pete Steedman [email protected]
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Research Online Counterculture Studies Volume 1 | Issue 1 Article 9 2018 [Review] Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville Pete Steedman [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/ccs Recommended Citation Steedman, Pete, [Review] Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville, Counterculture Studies, 1(1), 2018, 98-116. doi:10.14453/ ccs.v1.i1.9 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: [email protected] [Review] Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville Abstract The 60s, ew are constantly told, were a time of rebellion, a time of change, a time of hope, or just a self- indulgent game of the "me" generation, depending on point of view. The 60s ra e currently decried by a younger generation, jealous of the alleged freedoms and actions of the baby boomers who have supposedly left them nothing to inherit but the wind. Revisionist writers go to extraordinary lengths to debunk the mythology of the 60s, but in essence they mainly rail against the late 60s early 70s. In their attacks on the baby boomers they conveniently forget that the oldest of this demographic grouping was only 14 in 1960, and the vast majority of them were not even teenagers! Keywords hippies, counterculture, OZ Creative Commons License Creative ThiCommons works is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Attribution 4.0 License This journal article is available in Counterculture Studies: https://ro.uow.edu.au/ccs/vol1/iss1/9 Richard Neville, Hippie Hippie Shake: The Dreams, The Trips, The Trials, The Screw Ups, The Love Ins, The Sixties, Heinemann, London, 1995, 384p.
    [Show full text]
  • Punk · Film RARE PERIODICALS RARE
    We specialize in RARE JOURNALS, PERIODICALS and MAGAZINES Please ask for our Catalogues and come to visit us at: rare PERIODIcAlS http://antiq.benjamins.com music · pop · beat · PUNk · fIlM RARE PERIODICALS Search from our Website for Unusual, Rare, Obscure - complete sets and special issues of journals, in the best possible condition. Avant Garde Art Documentation Concrete Art Fluxus Visual Poetry Small Press Publications Little Magazines Artist Periodicals De-Luxe editions CAT. Beat Periodicals 296 Underground and Counterculture and much more Catalogue No. 296 (2016) JOHN BENJAMINS ANTIQUARIAT Visiting address: Klaprozenweg 75G · 1033 NN Amsterdam · The Netherlands Postal address: P.O. BOX 36224 · 1020 ME Amsterdam · The Netherlands tel +31 20 630 4747 · fax +31 20 673 9773 · [email protected] JOHN BENJAMINS ANTIQUARIAT B.V. AMSTERDAM cat.296.cover.indd 1 05/10/2016 12:39:06 antiquarian PERIODIcAlS MUSIC · POP · BEAT · PUNK · FILM Cover illustrations: DOWN BEAT ROLLING STONE [#19111] page 13 [#18885] page 62 BOSTON ROCK FLIPSIDE [#18939] page 7 [#18941] page 18 MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL HEAVEN [#16254] page 36 [#18606] page 24 Conditions of sale see inside back-cover Catalogue No. 296 (2016) JOHN BENJAMINS ANTIQUARIAT B.V. AMSTERDAM 111111111111111 [#18466] DE L’AME POUR L’AME. The Patti Smith Fan Club Journal Numbers 5 and 6 (out of 8 published). October 1977 [With Related Ephemera]. - July 1978. [Richmond Center, WI]: (The Patti Smith Fan Club), (1978). Both first editions. 4to., 28x21,5 cm. side-stapled wraps. Photo-offset duplicated. Both fine, in original mailing envelopes (both opened a bit rough but otherwise good condition). EUR 1,200.00 Fanzine published in Wisconsin by Nanalee Berry with help from Patti’s mom Beverly.
    [Show full text]
  • Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville Pete Steedman [email protected]
    Counterculture Studies Volume 1 | Issue 1 Article 9 2018 [Review] Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville Pete Steedman [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/ccs Recommended Citation Steedman, Pete, [Review] Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville, Counterculture Studies, 1(1), 2018, 98-116. doi:10.14453/ ccs.v1.i1.9 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: [email protected] [Review] Hippie Hippie Shake by Richard Neville Abstract The 60s, ew are constantly told, were a time of rebellion, a time of change, a time of hope, or just a self- indulgent game of the "me" generation, depending on point of view. The 60s ra e currently decried by a younger generation, jealous of the alleged freedoms and actions of the baby boomers who have supposedly left them nothing to inherit but the wind. Revisionist writers go to extraordinary lengths to debunk the mythology of the 60s, but in essence they mainly rail against the late 60s early 70s. In their attacks on the baby boomers they conveniently forget that the oldest of this demographic grouping was only 14 in 1960, and the vast majority of them were not even teenagers! Keywords hippies, counterculture, OZ Creative Commons License Creative ThiCommons works is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Attribution 4.0 License This journal article is available in Counterculture Studies: https://ro.uow.edu.au/ccs/vol1/iss1/9 Richard Neville, Hippie Hippie Shake: The Dreams, The Trips, The Trials, The Screw Ups, The Love Ins, The Sixties, Heinemann, London, 1995, 384p.
    [Show full text]
  • Claims Resolution Tribunal
    CLAIMS RESOLUTION TRIBUNAL In re Holocaust Victim Assets Litigation Case No. CV96-4849 Certified Award to Claimant [REDACTED 1] to Claimant [REDACTED 2] and to Claimant [REDACTED 3] in re Account of Max Lengsfelder Claim Numbers: 150143/HB; 150144/HB; 150145/HB Award Amount: 49,375.00 Swiss Francs This Certified Award is based upon the claims of [REDACTED 1], née [REDACTED], ( Claimant [REDACTED 1] ), [REDACTED 2] ([REDACTED]) ( Claimant [REDACTED 2] ), and [REDACTED 3], née [REDACTED] ([REDACTED]) ( Claimant [REDACTED 3] ) (together the Claimants ) to the published account of Max Lengsfelder (the Account Owner ), over which Olga Lengsfelder (the Power of Attorney Holder ) held power of attorney, at the Zurich branch of the [REDACTED] (the Bank ). All awards are published, but where a claimant has requested confidentiality, as in this case, the names of the claimants, any relatives of the claimants other than the account owner, and the bank have been redacted. Information Provided by the Claimants The Claimants each submitted Claim Forms indicating that they are siblings and identifying the Account Owner as their paternal grandfather, Dr. Med. Max (Maximilian) Lengsfelder, who was born on 27 November 1877 in Austria-Hungary (later Czechoslovakia), and was married to Olga Lengsfelder, née Stern, who was born on 1 August 1882. According to the Claimants, their grandparents, who were Jewish, resided in Kratzau (Chrastava), Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic), where their grandfather was a medical doctor and owned a medical clinic, a dental clinic, and several buildings. The Claimants indicated that their grandparents had two children: [REDACTED], who was born in 1905 in Kratzau and died childless in 1928, and [REDACTED] (the Claimants father), who was born on 22 October 1914 in Kratzau.
    [Show full text]
  • The British Underground Press, 1965-1974: the London Provincial Relationship, and Representations of the Urban and the Rural
    THE BRITISH UNDERGROUND PRESS, 1965-1974: THE LONDON­ PROVINCIAL RELATIONSHIP, AND REPRESENTATIONS OF THE URBAN AND THE RURAL. Rich�d Deakin r Presented as part of the requirement forthe award of the MA Degree in Cultural, Literary, andHistorical Studies within the Postgraduate Modular Scheme at Cheltenham and Gloucester College of Higher Education June 1999 11 DECLARATIONS This.Dissertation is the product of my own work and is. not the result of anything done in collaboration. I agreethat this. Dissertationmay be available forreference and photocopying,. at the discretion of the College. Richard Deakin 111 ABSTRACT Whateverperspective one takes, contradictions in the relationship between the capital and the provinces have always been evident to some extent, and the British undergroundpress of the late 1960s and early 1970s is no exception. The introductoryfirst chapter will definethe meaning of the term 'underground' in this context, and outline some of thesources used and the methodologies employed. Chapter Two will show how the British underground press developed froman alternative coterie of writers, poets, and artists - often sympathisers of the Campaign forNuclear Disarmament movement. It will also show how having developed from roots that were arguably provincial the undergroundadopted London as its base. The third chapter will take a more detailed look at the background of some London and provincial underground publications andwill attempt to see what extent the London undergroundpress portrayed the provinces, and vice-versa. In Chapter Four actual aspects of lifein urbanand rural settings, such as communes, squats, and pop festivals,will be examined in relation to the adoption of these lifestylesby the wider counterculture and how they were adapted to particular environments as part of an envisioned alternativesociety.
    [Show full text]
  • In 1949, Moshe Ben-David, Then 22 Years Old and Already An
    In 1949, Moshe Ben-David, then 22 years old and already an established jewelry maker by family tradition, immigrated from his ancestral home in Southern Yemen to the year-old State of Israel. His personal migration, part of a larger wave influenced by a Zionist zeal, was initiated and carried out by the Israeli government and the Jewish Agency that feared for the well-being of the community (Ben Zvi, 1949). The Jewish exodus from Yemen was sparked by the rising tides of nationalism, a political backlash to the failure of the Palestinian cause, and an anti- Semitic sentiment that had flared in the 1947 Aden riots. The perceived sense of immediate threat to the well-being of the community gave way to a decision to transport people to Israel as quickly as possible. The exodus from Yemen—simultaneously conducted in Iraq and subsequently in Iran, Morocco, and the majority of the Arab world—meant hastily leaving without gathering belongings, cultural artifacts, personal records, and documents. As people rushed from city centers to transitory and refugee camps, to makeshift airports, they carried only what they could. It is almost unfathomable that the flourishing Jewish Yemeni community—one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world, deeply entrenched in its territory, and holding a unique cultural and religious tradition—had all but disappeared in less than a year. Ancient Torah books, musical instruments, photographs, personal letters, heirloom rugs, silver, jewelry, and furniture were left behind, lost in transportation, or sold to fund a new beginning, causing a massive loss of community heritage and cultural knowledge (Meir-Glitzenstein, 2015, p.
    [Show full text]
  • Rock and Roll Music
    Rock & Roll Michael Hardaker, HRDMIC006 A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Master of Arts specialising in Creative Writing Faculty of the Humanities University of Cape Town 2017 This work has not been previously submitted in whole, or in part, for the award of Universityany degree. It is my ownof work.CapeEach significant Town contribution to, and quotation in, this dissertation from the work, or works, of other people has been attributed, and has been cited and referenced. Signature: Date: 2017-08-21 The copyright of this thesis vests in the author. No quotation from it or information derived from it is to be published without full acknowledgement of the source. The thesis is to be used for private study or non- commercial research purposes only. Published by the University of Cape Town (UCT) in terms of the non-exclusive license granted to UCT by the author. University of Cape Town ABSTRACT Through unfolding, fragmentary memoirs, the disconnected odyssey of Nick Numbers, a rock music critic working in London and LA through the 1970s into the early 1980s, Rock & Roll explores the multiple realities that exist between documentary, documentable fact and supposedly pure fiction. Real people and verifiable occurrences are interwoven with invented characters and situations in a way that blurs any clear distinction between the two. The book also sees how the power of additions such as images and footnotes can add, or perhaps undermine, authority and credibility to a story. Meanwhile, stories connect the twin musical and lyrical strands, black rhythm and blues and the writings of the Beat generation, that somehow merged in the mid-1960s to produce rock music.
    [Show full text]
  • Authors, Authors!
    arts & life book fair Authors Authors! Authors! Authors! Authors! Authors! The JCC’s Annual Elizabeth Applebaum | Special to the Jewish News Jewish Book Fair sizzles with books efore her extraordinary Book Club Night.” adventures — The secrets! Lutz also recommends An about Detroit, mystery, BThe romance! — Addie Improbable Friendship by Anthony religion, romance, Montforte lived in a drawer. David, which “reveals the per- She was there for more than 15 sonal sacrifices Ruth Dayan and ghosts, heroes and years in the form of a few notes, a Raymonda Tawil endured in the character waiting for Pam Jenoff to effort to strive for peace and under- rock-and-roll. take her from idea to heroine. standing for Israel and the Middle Jenoff is a clinical professor of East. Anthony David will speak law at Rutgers University in New on his historic book of these two Jersey and the author of eight independent women on Thursday books, including her latest, The evening, Nov. 12. details Last Summer at Chelsea Beach, the “The next day, the film Life as story of Italian-born Addie who a Rumor will be shown, which Book Club Night will be comes, as WWII approaches, to the furthers the acknowledgement that 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, at the United States, where she will begin the leaders of Israel often suffered JCC and includes a dessert a life full of surprises. personally, into the next genera- reception. The cost is $18 Jenoff will be the guest for Book tion,” Lutz says. for the author presentation Club Night on Tuesday, Nov.
    [Show full text]
  • Concrete Structuresstructures Annual Technical Journal
    Free Example HUNGARIAN GROUP OF fib CONCRETECONCRETE STRUCTURESSTRUCTURES ANNUAL TECHNICAL JOURNAL Géza Tassi – György L. Balázs INTERACTION BETWEEN THE OLD NEW LAND AND THE CENTRE OF THE CARPathian basin – from HISTORY TO CONCRETE 2 Zsigmond Dezsô – László Polgár DEMANDING AND MODERN STRUCTURAL SOLUTIONS FOR THE NAGYERDEI STADIUM IN DEBRECEN, HUNGARY 13 János Kozák – Béla Magyari FRC COVERINGS APPLIED AT TWO STATIONS OF THE UNDERGROUND LINE NO. 4 IN BUDAPEST 20 Katalin Szilágyi – Adorján Borosnyói – István Zsigovics VARIABILITY OF CONCRETE SURFACE HARDNESS MEASUREMENT PARAMETERS 24 Orsolya Németh – Éva Lublóy – György Farkas EFFECTS OF HIHG TEMPERATURE ON THE COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH OF POLYMER CONCRETE 31 Viktória Vass – Éva Lublóy – László Horváth – György L. Balázs FIRE DESIGN OF CONCRETE-STEEL COMPOSITE STRUCTURES 36 Mazen Al Makt – György L. Balázs EXTERNAL SHEAR STRENGTHENING OF PRECRACKED RC BEAMS WITH INSUFFICIENT INTERNAL SHEAR REINFORCEMENT USING NEAR SURFACE MOUNTED CFRP 44 2013 Vol. 14 CONCRETE STRUCTURES Jo ur nal of the Hungarian Group of fib CONTENT Editor-in-chief: 2 Géza Tassi – György L. Balázs Prof. György L. Balázs INTERACTION BETWEEN THE OLD NEW LAND AND THE CENTRE OF THE CARPATHIAN BASIN – frOM HISTORY Editors: TO CONCRETE Prof. Géza Tassi Dr. Herbert Träger 13 Zsigmond Dezsô – László Polgár Editorial board and DEMANDING AND MODERN STRUCTURAL SOLUTIONS Board of reviewers: FOR THE NAGYERDEI STADIUM IN DEBRECEN, HUNGARY János Beluzsár Assoc. Prof. István Bódi 20 János Kozák – Béla Magyari László Csányi FRC COVERINGS APPLIED AT TWO STATIONS OF THE UN- Dr. Béla Csí ki DERGROUND LINE NO. 4 IN BUDAPEST Assoc. Prof. Attila Er dé lyi Prof. György Far kas Gyula Kolozsi 24 Katalin Szilágyi – Adorján Borosnyói – István Zsigovics Dr.
    [Show full text]