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 Louis Rose Society Newsletter No. 14
April 12, 2007
 
LRS Newsletter file
 


Louis Rose Society
for the preservation of Jewish history

 
Newsletter No. 14

San Diego, Thursday, April 12, 2007
 

In this Issue:
  

National and International
*Holocaust survivors in Lebanon War.
*NJDC auditions presidential hopefuls
*Campers to honor 'Aunt Ruth'; recall Marjorie Morningstar filming
 

 Local and Regional
*The Jewish Grapevine 

*Jews in the News
 


 

Ready Reference

Jewish Community Calendar
San Diego Jewish Directory

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*Gert Thaler Tribute Dinner 


 



New study indicates Holocaust survivors
suffered terribly in 2nd Lebanon War


HAIFA, Israel (publicity release)—A quarter of the Holocaust survivors living in northern Israel who were released from hospitalization shortly before the war were in immediate need of help during the Second Lebanon War, but in some cases local authorities were unaware of their needs.

Researchers found relatively high levels of depression, psychologically-induced physical ailments and loneliness among the Holocaust survivors who were residents of Haifa and northern Israel during this summer's war.  The research was conducted by Prof. Ariela Lowenstein, Dr. Dana Parilutzy, Batya Rappaport an Dafna Halperin of the Center for Research and Study of Aging at the University of Haifa.  The study was undertaken in behalf of the Foundation for the Welfare of Holocaust Survivors in Israel.

The study found a quarter of the survivors in immediate need of personal care at home, food or medicine. "The study demonstrated the need for organizing and developing a program specifically for elderly Holocaust survivors that will answer their basic functional and emotional needs," stated Lowenstein, head of the Center for Research and Study of Aging.

The survey identified three main areas of need: home care, medical care and medications/ food supplies.  Many home care workers left the area fearing the dangers of the Katyusha rockets. Many medical clinics were closed during the war, rendering medical care and medications inaccessible. The lack of mobility of some of these elderly survivors prevented them from acquiring adequate food supplies. 

About a third of the survivors found themselves living alone, unable to take care of their basic needs.  A study found 25 percent of the survivors in immediate need of assistance and that some of the local authorities were unaware of their needs.

Common responses to the researchers' questions were: "I keep taking tranquilizers." "I don't have anything to live for."  "If I had the courage, I would kill myself."

Lowenstein said a program now is being undertaken to train professional teams to deal with the special needs of Holocaust survivors in traumatic situations.


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The Jewish Grapevine


YOM HASHOAH—Hillel Mazansky,
in anticipation of Yom HaShoah, passes on the link to this CBS video clip on "Hitler's Secret Archives." Meanwhile the lineup is being finalized for Sunday's communal Yom HaShoah observance at 1:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Family JCC in La Jolla. The schedule calls for participation from various members of the New Life Club of Holocaust Survivors in addition to other dignitaries.

Among individuals expected to be on the Lawrence Family JCC program are: Michael Bart, Cantor Mauricio Bogomolny,  Gizella and Zoltan Buchinger, Congresswoman Susan Davis, Lou Dunst, Rabbi Baruch Shalom Ezagui, Mendel Flaster,  Cantor Joseph Furmansky, Eve Gerstle, Joe Goetz, Sol Kempinski, Dora and Leon Kozin, Hannah Marx, Tovah Marx, Rabbi Scott Meltzer,  Israeli Consul Gillad Milo, Edith and Herman Polak, Myla Wingard Rosen, Sally and Norman Scheinok, Herbert Siegel, Pastor Greg Stephens, Eileen Wingard, and Gussie and Mike Zaks.

Meanwhile, the 6th@Penn Theatre has begun a Human Rights Festival that will run through August 12, with five of the offerings in the twelve-program festival having components directly bearing on Jewish history. Three of these productions will deal with the Holocaust, and two will examine the Arab-Israeli conflict. From May 24 through June 8, the theatre will produce Catherine Filloux's Lemkin's House, story of a man haunted by genocide. Vessels by Kim Yaged deals with lesbian identity in the Holocaust. It will be performed June 21-July 6.  Fireflies by Charmaine Spencer will follow, July 26-Aug. 12.  It deals with the art of the Terezin ghetto. The Israeli-Palestinian situation will be addressed May 5 with the showing of the film, Saraida, Woman of Palestine and May 12, with the film Keep Not Silent: Ortho-Dykes.  Information about these and other programs scheduled during "Resilience of Spirit: Human rights Festival 2007" may be accessed via this link.
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Biden               Clinton              Dodd        Edwards        Obama      Richardson
Democratic presidential hopefuls to woo National Jewish Democratic Council

WASHINGTON (Publicity Release) – The National Jewish Democratic Council (NJDC) will be welcoming Senators Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Chris Dodd, John Edwards, Barack Obama, and Governor Bill Richardson to speak at its Washington Conference, April 23-25 at the Almas Temple, 1315 K Street NW in Washington DC. 

The candidates will be addressing Democratic Jewish activists from throughout the country and taking questions on issues ranging from Middle East politics to church-state matters and other domestic issues. 

The conference will also feature DNC Chairman Howard Dean, Israeli Ambassador Sallai Meridor, and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer.  More than two dozen Jewish Senators and Representatives will be chairing a reception for the attendees.   


 

Real campers from locale of Marjorie Morningstar to honor'Aunt Ruth' in SD

By Geri Kuscher Pizzi

In the Rancho Bernardo section of San Diego, where she has been a retiree for 20 years, people know her as 92-year-old Ruth Fineman.  But back at Camp Cayuga in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, she’s revered as “Aunt Ruth,” mentor to thousands of summer campers from the 1950s to the 1970s.  Along with her late husband Bill, she ran the camp on Schroon Lake that lives on from that period in the movie Marjorie Morningstar which starred Natalie Wood and Gene Kelly.

More than 50 of her former campers have decided to pay tribute to her on the first weekend of May  by having a grand reunion in San Diego—an early present for her 93rd birthday which falls on May 29.  In the eyes of the former campers,  Paradise Point Resort on Mission Bay will be transformed into Camp Cayuga and legends of both “Aunt Ruth” and of the 1957 filming of Marjorie Morningstar will be relived by campers and former staffers who will gather from points all over the world.

It all started when Ralle Greenberg, a Cayuga camper and counselor for 14 years, and Marcia Abelson, also a camper, visited Aunt Ruth last December in San Diego.  As they were saying their goodbyes, they asked her what was her wish for her upcoming birthday.  Aunt Ruth responded that she’d love to see her campers and learn where they were and what they were doing. She added that if it were to be done, it should be soon because of her advancing age, and also in the San Diego area because long distance travel was not an option.

On returning to her home in Connecticut, Greenberg began networking with other campers.  Through Google and an uncountable amount of phone calling to high school alumni officers, people started to be found. “What was amazing,” said Greenberg, “was that as people were located, they not only expressed positive interest in attending the gathering, they also became involved in the effort  to make the reunion a reality.”  Old friendships from as many as five decades ago are being restored—as was always promised in the songs these campers sang so many years ago.

Ruth and Bill Fineman met at a Pi Alpha Tao sorority dance in Albany in 1934.  Ruth, a graduate of New York State University at Albany, remembers it as “love at first sight.”  Bill, a newspaper reporter,  had immigrated at a young age with his family from Manchester, England to Minneapolis, where he was graduated from the University of Minnesota.  He later became a journalist with the Albany Times Union in New York.  The couple married in 1936 and had a son and daughter.  Uncle Bill continued his career as a journalist and Aunt Ruth taught school.

In 1950, they became involved with a partner in the camp, and later became its sole owners.  When Marjorie Morningstar was filmed on location at the camp it gave Camp Cayuga a fingerprint that it would retain until it closed in 1970.


Flag raising scene from Marjorie Morningstar.  In photo at right, writer Geri Kuscher Pizzi
points to a scene featuring Natalie Wood (left) and Carolyn Jones (right) at that ceremony.


Based on a popular novel by Herman Wouk, the film featured Natalie Wood as Marjorie, a camp counselor, whose older love interest, Gene Kelly, was an actor/songwriter residing at South Wind, a nearby resort modeled on the real Scaroon Manor.  In one scene, all the real girl campers of Camp Cayuga got to participate in a flag-raising ceremony, in which Natalie Wood and her friend played by Carolyn Jones stood in the front ranks.

While the real-life camp under Aunt Ruth had plenty of stage productions, color wars, and traditions, nothing could compare with the thrill the Campers of ’57 had in participating in that film. Carol Beth Gold, who attended Camp Cayuga for 17 years, remembers when the filming equipment began to come in.  “Natalie Wood and Carolyn Jones showed up in mink coats and long gloves. We couldn’t understand why they were dressing like that in the heat of the summer.  The poor boys that went to Cayuga (a coed camp) just watched.  They all remember seeing Natalie Wood being courted by her then boyfriend Robert Wagner…right there at our camp!”  While not in the movie, Wagner, smitten by Wood, hung around on location.  They were married soon afterwards.

One of the scenes in Marjorie Morningstar had Wood and co-star Jones leaving the camp in a canoe at night to sneak off to a resort down the lake.  Ironically, when Natalie Wood died in a tragic and still mysterious drowning incident in 1981, there was a great deal of discussion about her fear of the water.

Following the camp reunion at the beginning of May, Aunt Ruth will be feted again on her May 29 birthday by the Rancho Bernardo Chapter of Brandeis University Women for her distinguished work in education and summer camp direction.

Pizzi, once a camper at Cayuga herself, is a freelance writer based in Virginia. 

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Arts in Review

 by Carol Davis
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Hold Please: Female views on the office

There are two articles of clothing in my wardrobe that I can always count on for being there whether I gain or lose weight; my shoes and my scarves. So when Kandis Chappell, in her character as Agatha in Annie Weisman’s Hold Please at the Old Globe Theatre on the Cassius Carter Center Stage in Balboa Park, extolled the wearing of pins and scarves as being the right accessories for business attire, I breathed a sigh of relief. Scarves are my best new embellishment for I too am of the older generation in a young workplace. But I get ahead of myself.

Hold Please
brings the older, more genteel generation of office worker  together in a sort of face off with the younger, faster, more ambitious.  Weisman’s new work is receiving its debut here in San Diego (it had its first outing at The South Coast Repertory Theatre in Costa Mesa) and is  under the skillful direction of Kirsten Brandt, former director of Sledgehammer Theatre. Brandt has also directed two other shows at The Globe since leaving San Diego to pursue other avenues, The Intelligent Design of Jenny Chow and Lobby Hero, both of which won critical acclaim. She is a master of her craft and here, once again she proves it.

Hold Please  is a is a fast paced comedy/drama that has all the earmarks of one day becoming the proto type for a sit-com series. The play opens with the four secretaries, Erika, Agatha, Jessica and Grace, of a large (or so it seems) business located
(l-r) Stephanie Beatriz, Globe Associate Artist Kandis Chappell and Starla Benford in The Old Globe’s production of HOLD PLEASE, by Annie Weisman, directed by Kirsten Brandt, playing in the Cassius Carter Centre Stage March 31 through May 6; photo by Craig Schwartz. somewhere in Southern California (SXG&S),

gathered in a small circle with the leader of that group holding a red velvet heart. It’s a ‘Truth Telling Session’ that bears all the earmarks of conspiracy (let’s call it sexual harassment but let’s not call it that yet) to get rid of one of the top honchos.

Thoughts are not allowed, feelings only and if you stray, you are brought right back into the fold by its leader, Agatha. She has been there the longest and has her story, as they all do, but we need to wait our turn to hear it. The heart is passed around and the only one allowed to speak is the one holding the heart. It’s funny at a first glance, but not ha, ha funny. It also has its cynical moments and in light of the advancements of the Women’s Movement where there are more opportunities, kumbaya fests  and camaraderie in the workplace, there is also more backstabbing,
gossip and conniving or so it seems.

Working the phones on Michael Vaughn Sims’ sprawling set on the theatre in the round with sleek looking modules set up as tables, desks, file cabinets, and of course, the ever blinking phones with more buttons flashing than a series of red lights along Harbor Drive, (David Lee Cuthbert) the women tend to do business, i.e. answer the phones, take messages, and drink their Starbucks in between telling their stories.
They take turns at answering the phones, taking notes, mocking each other and having a one upsy as to how fast they answer and if they
got all the initials in the business name correct.


In one of the funnier scenes when all four are together, watching Erika and Jessica try to teach Grace and Agatha the new phone system, hits a raw nerve here. They just don’t get it, and watching them trying to maneuver the buttons is simply too funny. I can identify! So my next question is,  “Can we really teach old dogs new tricks?” I wonder. The younger set are always looking to the future and what it holds. Sadly, the older generation is looking back. It’s a cruel world out there, downsizing is the way of the future and the strongest survive. It’s not a new concept.

The younger women dress casually (Mary Larson), the more mature, conservatively,  each showing their individuality, but Erika (Stephanie Beatriz) pushes the cleavage card to a point and gets grief from it later on. She’s having an affair with one of the wigs and plays a little phone sex between answering calls. Unfortunately hers is a story told in countless offices across countless boardrooms. It seldom turns out positive in the end and Beatriz plays the roll perfectly. She is sexy, spunky, emotional and aloof  in turn, and tries to mind her own business in the meantime. She is a survivor as we soon see.

Her counterpart, Jessica (Kate Arrington) is an odd duck She’s in a relationship that requires physical abuse for it to work. Her daffy remarks, which leave you scratching your head wondering what she just said, is one of the endearing things about Weisman’s piece. She is clever, witty and take you by surprise. Aside from the fact that Jessica still can’t make up her mind as to what she wants to be when she grows up, she considers her options throughout the play. She might be a lawyer or a rapper. She has connections. Arrington’s performance is quite amazing as she changes her mind and her options for opportunities, as fast as a chameleon changes color.

Grace (Starla Bedford) has the quiet calm of someone you would want to work with. Although she has been there and done that, she seems at peace with herself and doesn’t seem to want much more. Watching her phone manners and comparing them to the two younger secretaries, (she’s the one who wears the pin as an accent) you know why she has had her job for so long. Both Agatha and Grace have, most likely, forgotten what these younger women have yet to learn.

Chappell’s performance as Agatha is, as is to be expected with anything she does, amazing and done with aplomb. Her harshness, when she chides the others for stealing her Nutter Butters that she hides behind the microwave, is in sharp contrast to her softer reminiscences of her less successful climb up the corporate ladder. Unfortunately, her story is the least believable of the four. Perhaps because her tale of an embarrassing situation that happened years ago, sounds trite now it gives pause as to why Weisman couldn’t have come up with a better one for that character. That’s the one drawback to Weisman’s otherwise clever set up. But you be the judge.

Weisman, a graduate of Williams College, is a native of San Diego who grew up in Del Mar. She lives and works in Los Angeles. Her other works include Be Aggressive, which had its debut at The La Jolla Playhouse, Surf Report, and The Essential Alice. Her play, Hold Please is an interesting take on the workplace today. If you are in it, you will identify. If you are not, this might be a good time to check it out.

Hold Please
will continue through May 6th on the Cassius Carter Center Stage of The Old Globe. For more information call 619-234-5623 or  on line at: www.theoldglobe.com.

See you at the theatre.

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Jews in the News            -----------------------------------------------------------------
 News spotters: Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H. Harrison in San Diego., Marsha Sutton in North San Diego County. If you'd like to be a spotter in your California city, please contact Harrison at sdheritage@cox.net
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*
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has been weighing a boost in interest rates to ward off inflation, the Associated Press reports in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) was one of the co-sponsors of the Republican version of the stem-cell research bill, which allows research on cells of embryos that are "naturally dead."  Michael Luo of the New York Times news service tells the story in The San Diego Union-Tribune.

*Stan Daniels, writer and producer of television's Mary Tyler Moore show and co-creator of Taxi, has died.  Valerie J. Nelson wrote the obituary in today's Los Angeles Times

*As foreclosures on homes across the nation mount, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) is mulling a bill to provide aid to homeowners. Associated Press reporters Alan Zibel and Dan Caterinicchia tell the story in The San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
The Six Million Jewish victims of the Holocaust are remembered in a photography exhibit on Nazi Concentration Camps reviewed in today's San Diego Union-Tribune by art critic Robert L. Pincus.

*The role of U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and others in the outing of Valerie Plame Wilson as a covert intelligence agent is discussed by columnist Robert Novak in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.