'Nobody will drive us out,' mayor
of Sderot vows in conference call
NEW YORK (Press Release)—Mayor
Eli Moyal of Sderot, a frontline Israeli city under constant rocket
attacks from Gaza, described the effects of those attacks on the
citizens of Sderot in a teleconference earlier this week with the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.
Originally scheduled as a videoconference, a Qassam rocket attack
prevented Mayor Moyal and citizens of Sderot from reaching the studio.
“We will keep
this city forever. Nobody will drive us out. It doesn’t matter how long
it will be
or how tough it will be,” said Mayor Moyal. He told the Jewish leaders
that “operating the city
as normally as possible is our response to the terror.” The attacks,
though, have caused half of
the citizens to seek shelter elsewhere in Israel, leading to a 75%
reduction in attendance at
schools and a 25% reduction at places of work. Small businesses, in
particular, have
been severely effected. For seven years, Sderot has been attacked by
Qassam rockets, said
Mayor Moyal, and the international media have ignored the untenable
situation of its citizens.
Representatives of
Conference member agencies pledged to bring representatives from Sderot to
the US to recount their stories and garner attention for their situation.
Organizations also discussed their current assistance to Sderot’s students
and how they might provide financial assistance directly to small
businesses.
Chairman of the Jewish Agency Board of Governors Carole Solomon talked about
the combined efforts of Jewish funding agencies to react quickly and address
the needs of Sderot, and added, “We want
you to know of our respect for your steadfastness and that of the people of
Sderot. We will continue to support your efforts to keep the community both
safe and viable.”
AMIT President Jan Schechter spoke about their efforts to assist the Sderot
school system. United Jewish Community’s
Director of Israel
Emergency Campaign Jim Lodge mentioned that UJC
had allocated $10 million of additional funds in the last
few days for Sderot, and looked forward to working with the people of Sderot
on specific needs.
“We admire your courage and the courage of your citizens, and we want to
express our solidarity with you,” said Conference Chairman Harold Tanner,
who also recalled the Conference of Presidents’ solidarity visits to Sderot
during the Lebanon war last summer and the Conference’s Annual Mission to
Israel the year before. Israel’s Consul-General in New York Amb. Arye Mekel
told Mayor Moyal that the mayor’s “leadership was well-known here in the
United States.”
Deputy
Consul-General Benjamin Krasna and British Consul-General Jon Benjamin also
joined
the Conference leaders and member agency representatives for the
teleconference.
Also today, the
New Rochelle Jewish Coalition, representing over 5000 families in the New
York area, announced a partnership with Sderot to express their solidarity.
The initiative, supported by New Rochelle
Mayor Noam Bramson and city
council members, will promote mutual appreciation between the cities,
cultural activities, learning about each city’s history, and
people-to-people exchanges.
The foregoing article was provided by the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations
International and
National
ADL's Foxman raps Swiss for proposing
to Iran the conference on the Holocaust
NEW YORK (Press Release)—The
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has expressed outrage at a report that the Swiss
Foreign Ministry proposed a seminar "about different perceptions about the
Holocaust" during talks with Iran over its nuclear program last year.
The idea was reportedly floated by Switzerland's
President, Micheline Calmy-Rey, during a working visit with the Iranian Deputy
Foreign Minister on December 21, 2006, shortly after the Iranian government
sponsored its Holocaust denial conference in Tehran. Word of the proposed Swiss
seminar emerged this week in written proceedings of the meeting obtained by the
weekly Zurich-based newspaper, Weltwoche.
"We are outraged that the Swiss government could have pitched the idea of a
seminar on the Holocaust to — of all countries —- Iran," said Abraham H. Foxman,
ADL National Director and a Holocaust survivor. "The Swiss government owes an
apology to all Holocaust survivors."
According to the report in Weltwoche, minutes from the diplomatic meeting
indicated that Ms. Calmy-Rey had proposed "that a seminar about different
perceptions of the Holocaust could be organized in one of the Geneva centers."
Mr. Foxman said: "Any seminar on so-called perceptions of the Holocaust,
especially one that would possibly include Iranian participants, would be
tainted because it would aid and give comfort to the anti-Semites and the
deniers who call the fact of the Holocaust into question."
The article notes that there has been no follow-up on the seminar since it
was first proposed at the meeting, and that Ms. Calmy-Rey, through a spokesman,
indicated that she made clear to her Iranian counterpart that the Holocaust was
historical fact.
The foregoing article was provided by the
Anti-Defamation League.
_______________
Buena Vista Hadassah
cordially invites you to hear
Rabbi Chaplain Joel D. Newman
based on his experiences in the war zone
"Passover in Iraq"
12:30 p.m., Tuesday, June 19
Vista Library, 700 Eucalyptus Avenue, Vista
Free refreshments
For further information: call Vivian (760) 967-0149
Wiesenthal Center urges
investigation
of Hizbollah activities
in Paraguay
LOS ANGELES— The Simon Wiesenthal
Center is urging the government of Paraguay to launch an official
ininvestigation into Hizbollah- related activities in Ciudad del Este, at the
Tri-Border area bordering Argentina and Brazil.
In a letter to Interior Minister
Rogelio Benítez Vargas, Shimon Samuels (Director for International Relations of
the Wiesenthal Center) and Sergio Widder (Latin American Representative) refered
to an NBC – Telemundo report , which includes testimony by Mustafa Khalil Meri,
who openly supports the terrorist group Hizbollah, and threatens to carry out
violent actions, as well another individual, identified as the person in charge
of a mosque in Ciudad del Este, who stated that “Shiite mosques have the moral
obligation to finance Hizbollah”.
“Beyond its criminal activities in the Middle East, Hizbollah was accused as the
main responsible for the terrorist attacks against the Israeli Embassy and the
AMIA Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires (1992 and 1994, respectively), and
permissiveness towards any action aimed at strengthening that group is against
all regional cooperation policies on terrorism”, said Samuels and Widder.
The foregoing article was provided by the
Simon Wiesenthal Center.
AJC congratulates law enforcement
for thwarting a terror attack at JFK
NEW YORK (Press Release)—The
American Jewish Committee praised law enforcement today for preventing a large
terrorist attack at John F. Kennedy airport in New York. Law enforcement
announced that they have arrested one man, and are seeking the extradition of
three from Trinidad.
“This plot to cause a major catastrophe at
JFK airport is a vivid reminder that utmost vigilance is necessary against
ongoing threats from Islamist radicals,” said AJC Executive Director David A.
Harris. “For all in New York
and across the United States,
complacency is not possible in the post-9/11 era.”
The four, who allegedly have ties to a
radical Muslim group in Trinidad, and include a former member of the Guyana
Parliament, reportedly were planning for more than a year to bomb fuel tanks at
JFK airport and underground fuel lines in adjacent residential neighborhoods.
The arrests come shortly after law enforcement prevented a
terrorist attack on FortDix in
New Jersey.
The foregoing article was provided by the American Jewish Committee
_________________
Ban-ki delivers closed-door report on Middle East
to members of United Nations Security Council
UNITED NATIONS,
N.Y(Press Release)—The situation in the Middle East
remains volatile and tense, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned the Security
Council on Friday, with fresh clashes between Israelis and Palestinians in the
Gaza Strip and the resumption of fighting at a Palestinian refugee camp in
northern Lebanon.
Briefing Council
members in a closed-door session after returning from Berlin, where he took part
in a meeting of the principals of the diplomatic Quartet on the Middle East, Mr.
Ban said he has spoken to several regional leaders to try to help alleviate the
situation.
He noted that the
Quartet voiced support for the ongoing bilateral talks between Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, as well as
regional efforts – particularly the Arab Peace Initiative – to find a solution
to the conflict.
The Quartet, which
comprises the UN, the European Union, Russia and the United States, decided to
meet at an undetermined location in the Middle East on 26 June or the day after
to continue the momentum of international peace efforts, Mr. Ban’s spokesperson
Michele Montas told reporters.
Quartet members will
meet with Israelis and Palestinians and will then hold a separate meeting with
members of the Arab League to follow up on the Arab Peace Initiative, Ms. Montas
added.
In northern Lebanon,
fighting has again resumed between Lebanese army forces and Fatah al-Islam
gunmen entrenched in the Nahr el-Bared refugee camp near the city of Tripoli.
The shelling on Friday
heavier than on previous days, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) reported, and it has meant the agency is
unable to obtain first-hand information on the latest conditions for civilians
living in the camp.
UNRWA estimates that
about 5,000 people remain at Nahr el-Bared, less than two weeks after the deadly
clashes erupted in a camp that was home to about 31,000 people. Most refugees
fled to Tripoli or the nearby camp of Beddawi during lulls in the fighting.
The foregoing article was provided by the office of
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
______________________
Wexler, Crist on bipartisan trip to Israel
WASHINGTON,
DC— Congressman Robert Wexler (Democrat, Florida), a senior member of the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs and Chairman of the Europe Subcommittee, is leading
a bipartisan delegation to Israel with Governor Charlie Crist (Republican,
Florida) through June 3. During their meetings in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, the
delegation will focus on strengthening bilateral economic, security, and
military relations between the United States and Israel. In addition, the
delegation plans to meet with Israeli officials and business leaders to enhance
trade and economic cooperation between Israel and the State of Florida.
Wexler and Governor Crist will met with top Israeli officials, including Prime
Minster Ehud Olmert, Knesset Speaker and Acting President of Israel Dalia Itzik,
Former Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Deputy Prime Minister Simon Peres, as
well as members of the Knesset. While in Israel, the delegation will visit holy
sites in Jerusalem, as well as Yad Vashem and former Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin’s gravesite.
“It is an honor to lead this bipartisan mission to Israel with Governor Crist. I
hope it will serve to strengthen our nation’s relationship with Israel as well
as increase economic cooperation and foster people to people cooperation between
Florida and Israel,” Wexler said. “Like Governor Crist, I strongly believe
America must stand with our ally Israel in its fight for security and peace, and
it is the goal of our visit to express our solidarity and support for the
Israeli people.”
The delegation joining Congressman Wexler and Governor Crist includes business
leaders from Florida, as well as Democratic and Republican state and federal
legislators, including US Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), US
Congressman Alcee Hastings (D-FL), Florida State Senator Nan H. Rich (D-FL),
Florida Representative Adam Hasner (R-FL), Florida Representative Dan Gelber
(D-FL), and Broward County Commissioner Stacy Ritter (D-FL).
Congressman Wexler is Chairman of the Europe Subcommittee and a senior
member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and the House Judiciary
Committee; and he also sits on the Financial Services Committee.
_________________
Sept 23-Dec 30: Princess Cruises: Dawn Princess: 7-day round trip to
Mexico
Sept. 28: Celebrity Cruises: Summit: 14-day Hawaii
Sept. 29: Holland America: Oosterdam, 7-day Mexico.
National Intelligence Estimate to determine what
threat global warming poses to American security
WASHINGTON, DC (Press Release)— The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence last
week approved the FY’08 Intelligence Authorization bill, which includes a
provision sponsored by U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Chuck
Hagel (R-Neb.), John Warner (R-Va.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Olympia Snowe
(R-Maine), and Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) to require the Director of National
Intelligence to produce a formal intelligence assessment on the potential
national security impacts of climate change.
Specifically, the unclassified amendment offered by the Senators requires the
Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to produce a National Intelligence
Estimate (NIE) on the impacts to national security from global climate change
within 270 days. It requires other agencies with climate change-related
expertise to cooperate in writing the NIE, and authorizes the DNI to work with
outside groups as needed. Unlike a similar provision in the House version of
the authorization bill, this amendment incorporates suggestions from the DNI.
“Climate
change projections call for massive disruptions to the global economy and
health, including potential humanitarian crises, massive migrations, and impacts
on energy resources. The Intelligence Community should help prepare our
nation’s leaders for these scenarios,” Senator Feinstein said.
Dianne Feinstein
“That’s why Senators Hagel, Warner, Whitehouse, Snowe, Mikulski and I offered a
bipartisan measure to require the preparation of a formal National Intelligence
Estimate on the potential national security impacts of global warming – and this
amendment is now part of the bill approved by the Committee. Let me make clear
one point: this estimate will not divert resources from other critical
Intelligence Community priorities, such as the gathering of intelligence on
rogue nation states, terrorist groups, or potential proliferation activities.” The
foregoing article was provided by the office of Senator Dianne Feinstein
Wyden contrasts his and Obama's health care plans
PORTLAND, OREGON (Press Release)—U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden (Democrat, Oregon) issued
the following statement concerning health care legislation proposed by Senator
Barrack Obama (Democrat, Illinois):
I am very pleased that
Senator Obama (D-IL) has come forward with a proposal to fix the nation’s broken
health care system and that his plan is based on some of the core principles
contained in the bipartisan Healthy Americans Act. I look forward to seeing the
details.
Like
the Healthy Americans Act, the Obama plan appears to ensure that every American
has quality, affordable private health coverage similar to what Members of
Congress have. Both plans also emphasize prevention and wellness, so that our
citizens have health care instead of “sick care.” And our plans also call for
reform of the insurance market so that no one would be denied health care
because of pre-existing conditions.
There
also are, however, some key differences between our plans: first, the Obama plan
calls for a single, national health insurance exchange to monitor insurance
companies offering coverage. While it’s important to have minimum national
standards, I’m not sure creating a new federal bureaucracy is the best
approach. By contrast, the Wyden-Bennett legislation would allow each state the
flexibility to innovate as long as minimum federal standards are met.
The
Obama plan also relies heavily on the current employer-based system which leaves
workers at risk of losing their health care if they lose or change their
jobs. It also puts U.S. companies and workers at a disadvantage in the
long-term when they have to compete in a global economy against overseas
companies whose workers get their health care paid by their government.
Finally, it’s not clear if the Obama plan does anything to change the current
Federal tax code that gives the biggest tax breaks for health care to the
affluent and subsidizes inefficiency.
While
I will wait to see the details of his proposal, I’m very pleased that Senator
Obama has come forward with some health reform ideas and hope that other
presidential candidates will do the same.
The
foregoing article was provided by the office of Senator Ron Wyden. He
introduced the Healthy Americans Act in January 2007. The chief Republican
sponsor in the Senate is Senator Bennett, a senior member of the Republican
leadership. U.S. Representatives Brian Baird (D-WA) and Jo Ann Emerson (R-MO)
plan to introduce a companion bill in the House
______________________
Daily Features
Jews
in the News --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Like you, we're pleased when members of our community are
praiseworthy, and are disappointed when they are blameworthy. Whether
it's good news or bad news, we'll try to keep track of what's being said in
general media about our fellow Jews.
Our news spotters are Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H. Harrison in San Diego,
and you. Wherever you are, if you see a story of interest, please send a
summary and link to us at sdheritage@cox.net.
To
see a source story click on the link within the respective paragraph.
____________________________________________________________________________________________
*Philanthropists Eli and Edythe Broad have contributed $26 million to
build an art museum at Michigan State University, his alma mater. The
Associated Press
story is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Dr. Bruce Chernof, director of Los Angeles County Health Services,
branded as "inexcusable" the manner in which Edith Isabel Rodriguez, 43,
succumbed to a perforated bowel. She writhed in pain at King-Harbor Hospital
as personnel and other patients looked on indifferently. The
story by Charles Ornstein is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*At a news conference, San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders denounced Sunroad
Enterprises owned by Aaron Feldman as an "irresponsible"
company "willing to thumb their nose" at the law. His anger was
prompted by disclosures that even as Sunroad is in the midst of a
controversy with the city and the FAA over a building near Montgomery Field,
the company has plans for another controversial building near Lindbergh
Field. The
story by Maureen Magee and David Hasemyer
is in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune. The newspaper also ran an
editorial on the subject.
*U.S. Rep. Bob Filner (Democrat,
San Diego), chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, told a forum at
the University of California San Diego that VA facilities around the country
cannot physically keep up with the number of veterans from the Iraq and
Afghanistan Wars who still need treatment. More than 200,000 of them have
filed claims. The story by Steve Liewer is in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune.
*U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel will hold hearings in October to
determine whether the state's method of executing prisoners—lethal
injection—constitutes unconstitutional "cruel and unusual punishment." The
story by Henry Weinstein is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Patrick McGilligan, in writing the biography Oscar Micheaux: The Great
and the Only, weighed the impact of the Leo Frank lynching in Georgia
on the African-American film-maker. Frank, a Jew, had been accused by a
black janitor of raping a factory girl—an accusation later proven false.
Micheaux obsessed on the case, resulting in some works that border on
anti-Semitism. The
review by David Ehrenstein is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Labor arbitrator Sam Kagel, perhaps best known for his work on the
1982 National Football League strike, has died at age 98. His
obituary is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*An April 1 fire that burned down Bais Yehudi synagogue in Monsey, N.Y., was
caused by a 15-year-old boy playing with matches, and not by anyone angry at the
Neturei Karta congregation because of its pronounced anti-Zionist views,
police have reported. The Associated Press
story is included in a briefs column in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*Risa Levitt Kohn, curator
of the upcoming Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit at the San Diego Natural History
Museum, provides background on the scrolls in an
interview with Kelly Bennett printed today on the Voice of San Diego
website.
*The Legislature will debate a bill by Assemblyman Lloyd Levine
(Democrat, Van Nuys) next week to permit terminally ill patients to be provided
means to self-administer drugs that could end their lives. The "right to
die issue" is back in the news with the release from prison of Dr. Jack
Kevorkian, whose moniker became "Doctor Death" because of all the suicides at
which he assisted. The
story by P.J. Huffstutter is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Robert Rosenthal, managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle,
has resigned his position as the newspaper, like others in California, has been
forced to trim its staff because of rising costs and competition. The
story by James Rainey is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*When NBC Entertainment was under the control of the late Brandon
Tartikoff, the slogan was "first be best, then be first." With Ben
Silverman coming in, it may be "plug our sponsors, before they unplug us."
The
story by Scott Collins is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Irving Zeiger, a man with a passion for the Los Angeles Dodgers and
liberal politics, died at age 89. His
obituary by Valerie J. Nelson is in today's Los Angeles Times
(return to
top)
_________________________________________________
The Jewish Grapevine
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AROUND THE TOWN—Joseph Shapiro has been promoted from associate dean
to dean of
San Diego State University's College of Extended Studies...
CYBER-REFERRALS—Hillel Mazansky passed on this clip of Jennifer Grey—granddaughter
of comedian Mickey Katz—singing "Dovid Crockett" on the Conan O'Brien
Show.
SPORTS—Bruce Lowitt notes that
Red Sox first baseman Kevin Youkilis, one of 13 Jewish major leaguers,
has launched his own blog on MLB.com and is asking fans to come up with a name
for it. "So far, the leading contenders are Yoooouuuukkk, Youk's Scoop, Youk
Nation,
Youk's Yackings and Youktastic."
Regional and Local
___________________________________________________________________________________
The
Jewish
Citizen by Donald H. Harrison
________________________________________________________________
Finding a Jewish story wasn't a fair challenge
DEL MAR, Calif.—Our continuing
campaign to prove that "there is a Jewish story everywhere" took us to press
preview night at the San Diego County Fair. In this case, we didn't have
to search for a story, it found us in the form of David "Leapin' Louie"
Lichtenstein, who cordially describes himself in the official program as the
"most explosive Jewish Cowboy Juggling Comedian from Oregon (or any where else
for that matter)."
Walking
on stilts and brandishing a lasso, Lichtenstein dropped a loop over my wife,
Nancy, within a few moments of our crossing the threshold of the fairgrounds,
adjacent to the famed Del Mar Racetrack.
Lichtenstein is a street performer who has made it big: instead of doing his
shtick for tips, he travels from fair to fair, where he is paid by
management to keep people amused as they stroll the midways. Not only can
he juggle, he can demonstrate the fine art of the bullwhip. After stepping
down from the stilts, he found a volunteer to hold up some toilet paper, and
after some suitable patter to heighten suspense, crack, his whip cut a
single section of toilet paper in half without harming the nervous looking
volunteer.
Lichtenstein has a website on which he posts his press clippings. In one
of the them, a reporter asked how difficult it was for him, as a Jew, to work on
Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath. He responded by describing himself as a "West
Coast Jew," not an Orthodox one, which evidently I must be too, because there I
was on the fairgrounds on a Friday night.
I brought some other West Coast Jews with me, and ran into a few more at the
event intended
to raise public consciousness of the fair, which will open June 8 and continue
through July 4,
with closures on June 11, 12, 18, 19 and 25. A ticket is $12 for people in
the half-century range between 12 and 62. But if you're either older or
younger than that, it admission is only $6. And children under 6 get in free.
This year the fair's running theme will be a "Salute to Heroes," both living and
dead, with one
in the former category being Holocaust Survivor Gussie Zaks, today a San Diego
resident, and in the latter category being Dr. Jonas Salk, discoverer of the
polio vaccine. More Jewish angles!
The fun of fairs, of course, is that people can meet and learn a little bit
about each other. Judging by media night, there will be plenty of interesting
people to meet. Just walking down the midway,
I encountered the strolling Mariachi Juvenil Azteca, made up of students;
chatted with Ted Platis, operator of the Mediterranean stand which sells gyros,
falafel, and Greek salads; saw a modern dance routine on stage; talked to fierce
costumed wrestlers, who were there to advertise an upcoming exhibition, and
learned that at a county fair people will line up to eat anything, even
deep-fried cola.
I also watched in fascination as my
88-year-old father-in-law (with the neon lights of the midway reflecting off his
head); 58-year-old wife Nancy and a young boy unknown to us competed fiercely at
a Giambra Concessions booth to be the first to squirt sufficient water at a
target to cause a balloon to inflate and pop. Nancy had extra motivation:
one of the prizes she could win was a stuffed Spiderman toy for our 6-year-old
grandson Shor. (Yes, she eventually bagged one!)
"Hey Don," said a voice in the darkness. It turned out to be Joe Naiman, a
Jewish community member who covers the San Diego County Board of Supervisors for
a number of small newspapers, including the Ramona Sentinel. He and
brother Allan Naiman were fascinated by the live turkeys of the Turkey Stampede.
Races are conducted by having the turkeys chase a toy truck filled with grain.
Other critters walking around fairgrounds included a variety of farm animals
raised by 4-H Club members.
As we were leaving another Jewish reporter, Marsha Sutton of the Rancho Santa
Fe Review, arrived with her husband Rocky Smolin and son Noah Sutton-Smolin.
By the standards of Leapin' Louie, they must be hybrid Jews. Before
arriving at the fair, they attended Friday night Shabbat services at
Congregation Beth El.
Left to Right: Joe and Allan Naiman check out
the turkeys; a young woman pets a goat, and Rocky Smolin,
Noah Sutton-Smolin, and Marsha Sutton, make ready to check out the bright lights
of the midway.
___________________
Max Siegel
Congratulations on your
graduation!
Now
it's off to UC Berkeley!
Grandma Paula
Arts,
Entertainment and Dining
Arts
in Review
by
Carol Davis
__________________________________________
Babies, Babies, Babies
SOLANA BEACH, Calif.—Baby
is a musical about…well… babies; how to get them; what to do
while waiting for them; what to do if it doesn’t work, and how to behave when
the news is
positive. And, if you are in that could be gestation mode, that’s great. Yours
truly just clicked on
“How to handle those Hot Flashes ….New Menopause Survival Tools” headlining my
AOL News
Feature. That’s where I am!
Don’t be misled. I’ve done the baby thing five times, three of mine and two
grandsons, and in
retrospect, there were parts about it that were funny. It wasn’t then and it
probably isn’t now if
you are in the middle of it so I guess that’s why two guys, Richard Maltby, Jr.
who wrote the
lyrics and David Shire who wrote the music along with Sybille Pearson (the only
one who really
knows) who penned the book, wanted to give those unsuspecting, prospective
parents who
weren’t as worldly, a ‘heads up’ or ‘heads out’ or whatever.
Baby
opened on Broadway in 1983 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre. It ran for 241
performances
and was nominated for seven Tony Awards. Unfortunately it was up against some
pretty tough
competition: La Cage aux Folles; Sunday in the Park With George, and
The Tap Dance Kid.
And…….the winner was…La Cage which walked away with six Tony’s. But for a
revival in
2004 where Pearson revised and updated Baby, we might not be seeing it
today.
Director Paula Kalustian, who heads up the MFA Musical Theatre program at San
Diego State
University, and who along with Jill Masaros co- produced (Miracle Theatre
Productions years)
shows at The Theatre in Old Town for 14 years, until this year has directed
Baby no less than
four times. She obviously has an affinity for it. So now, it is in its current
state at The North Coast
Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach where Artistic Director David Ellenstein gave
her the nod to
do what she loves doing best.
If there is a plot, well, there really isn’t. It’s more of a time line following
three couples through
the beginnings, the middles and the ends of approaching parenthood. In one case;
a false start.
One might call this little ditty a musical play. Every situation has a matching
song. There isn’t a
lot to write home about or hum on the way home, but it’s not unpleasant, either.
It’s easy, pleasing to the eye and somewhat of a no brainer. With minimalist
sets (Marty Burnett
was still able to be creative with his primary colored wooden shapes and
building blocks which
were easily moved around and of course the bed in the center of the
stage.), and Ali Bretches,
the company who either supplied the clothes, designed them, (I doubt) or
suggested them, the
show has a casual look. Jeans, tennies and workout suits with a few conventional
skirts, blouses
and trousers are the style of the day. The cast, with few costume changes
needed, is nimble and
gifted.
The music performed by Danny King on percussion and Andy Ingersoll on piano and
musical
direction might have sounded better had I not been sitting right in front of one
of the speakers
which were literally less than two feet from my space and ears. That’s the luck
of the draw.
The best part, the redeeming part of the show and production (and we saved it
for last) is the
versatile and talented cast of eight; three couples whose lives are in the
balance because of either
unplanned pregnancies or unwanted ones, or nuttin’ happen’ here, and a fourth
couple who is
everyone else or the ensemble.
Nick
and Rebecca Spears, the couple whose false start
set them on the path to planned conjugal experiments,
carried the comedy workload, and they do it well. Both
were students under Kalustian at SDSU and both are
talented singers and actors. Rebecca’s funny little
twitches and turned up smile seem to be her trademark.
They were relaxed and looked like they were having
fun. As a real life couple, one can imagine this is a
dream come true. Steve Gunderson and Susan Jordan
are the more mature couple with grown children who
are about ready to settle for the ‘empty nest’ when lo Nick and Rebecca
Spears
and behold, on an anniversary vacation…. Now they struggle about whether to
carry the baby
and start all over again. Gunderson, who is an all time San Diego favorite
having stacked more
stage time to his credits than the total of all the others, is perfect for the
part of the more mature,
more serious and more determined Alan. Jordan, as Arlene, is just right as his
counterpart. Her
voice is soothing and her acting smooth and convincing.
Ashley Linton (Lizzy) and Jason Maddy (Danny) are the college students whose
lives will be
forever changed by her pregnancy. Both of these young folks are a welcome treat
to San Diego
audiences. Maddy was last seen in The Welk’s Fiddler as Perchick.
Charming, spirited and gifted,
both, theirs was the most interesting relationship to watch. The fact that they
each have a fine set
of vocal chords, endless energy and good looks helps. Paul Morgavo and Lindsay
Gearhart prove
to be talented in their own right as the ensemble.
Baby is the 6th production of the theatre’s 25th season. According to Artistic
director David
Ellenstein, the theatre is in‘great shape’. We wish them well on their future
plans for expansion.
POSTSCRIPT:
David Shire met Richard Maltby, Jr. while both were attending Yale. They wrote
two musicals
Cyrano and Grand Tour which were bothproduced by the Yale
Dramat. He also co founded a
jazz group at school, The Shire-Fogg Quintet and was a Phi Beta Kappa honors
student, with a
double major in English and Music.
At graduate school at Brandeis University he was the first Eddie Fisher Fellow.
Shire is married to
Didi Conn (Edith Bernstein) whose brother Richard Bernstein was the featured
tenor recently
seen and heard in the San Diego Opera’s production of The Marriage of Figaro
.
Baby
will play through June 24. For more information on Baby, the theatre can
be reached by
calling (858) 481-1055 or logging on to www.northcoastrep.org
See you at the theatre.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- What's
Good to Eat in
San Diego?Lynne Thrope
___________________________________________________________
A Visit to the Renown Culinary Institute
of America
HYDE PARK, N.Y.—I have been to mecca. For the
would-be actor; that would be Hollywood; Jackson Hole for the outdoors
enthusiast. This mecca, however, percolates in the narrow swath of land known as
the Hudson River Valley in the picturesque town of Hyde Park, New York, a mere
two-hour jaunt from Manhattan and well worth the escape from the never-ending
city lights and hectic pace.
This mecca known to professionals of the culinary world is the prestigious
Culinary Institute of America which, with
unparalleled deft direction, trains, molds, and graduates some of the finest
chefs, sommeliers, entrepreneurs, and restaurateurs who have endowed the world
with their visionary leadership. Today, we diners are the beneficiaries of
37,000 talented alumni who hold key positions in the foodservice and hospitality
industries making their marks in such culinary destinations as New York City,
Boston, Washington, DC, Aspen, Chicago, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
and San Diego.
Founded
in 1946 in New Haven, Connecticut, the Culinary Institute of America is the
oldest culinary college in the United States. It later moved in 1972 to
its current location, once home to Jesuit seminarians. In 1995, the college
opened the CIA at Greystone, its
center for continuing education in St. Helena, California, in the heart of Napa
Valley where wine studies, flavor discovery, and research and development are
featured.
Classes in both locations span the culinary globe, exploring great cultures,
cooking techniques, and cuisines to prepare students Student dining hall at Culinary
Institute of America
for the diversity and creativity of the food service industry. Two 38-month
programs are offered resulting in a bachelor’s degree, one in culinary arts
management and one in baking and pastry arts management. In addition, an
associate degree prepares students in food safety, nutrition, product knowledge,
and menu development before the real-world experience of an 18-week externship
at renowned restaurants, hotels, resorts, and publications, such as Allen Wong’s
in Honolulu, The Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, The Lodge at Pebble Beach
and Chocolatier Magazine
in New York.
Columnist Lynne Thrope with
master staffer and author John W. Fischer. At right, Jeff Levine of the
CIA
My education about life inside the CIA began with lunch in one of the five
student-staffed
public dining venues in which sophomores work. Learning about service etiquette from
master staffer, John W. Fischer, this rotation practices his principles
discussed in his book
At Your Service: A Hands on Guide to the Professional Dining Room.
Charming and full of wit and humor, John shared with me the importance of
competency, friendliness, and knowledge of the dining experience which I
observed first hand in the
American Bounty Restaurant, my choice pick, because of the regional specialties
prepared
with local Hudson Valley ingredients and because of the raves it received from
Tim Zagat
of Zagat Survey who touts the venison quesadillas as “out-of-this-world
cuisine.”
An extraordinary trio at American
Bounty Restaurant Some
results from a pastry class
It took but one bite of this imaginative twist
on a San Diego staple to agree. Exceptional
with its morel essence was the Cream of Asparagus Soup surpassed only by the
warm
elegance of the Durham Ranch Rabbit Pot Pie and the extraordinary trio of
Buffalo
Taquitos on Yellow Mole, Indian Corn Stuffed Quail on chocolate Port Sauce, and
Venison Tamale on Chimayo Chile Sauce. Dessert deserved a closer look for me
since
one of my favorites is a Mexican Chocolate Soufflé topped off with a peanut
butter chocolate sauce.
After lunch, I met Jeff Levine, communications
manager and my student guide Michael
Sterner (who, I predict, will one day become as recognizable as Jacques Pepin)
for a tour extraordinaire. Strolling the halls of this hallowed culinary
college, I easily conjured the
images of its elite graduates marinating together in the 41 kitchens and
bakeshops including mainstreamers Anthony Bourdain (’78) author and executive
chef, Les Halles, Michael
Chiarello (’82) CEO and Founder, Napastyle.com, Sara Moulton (’77) television
personality
and executive chef, Gourmet, Todd English (’82) owner, The Olive
Group, Bradley Ogden
(77) chef/co-owner Lark Creek Restaurant Group of which San Diego’s Arterra is
one, and
Roy Yamaguchi (’76) chef/owner Roy’s Restaurants, to name a mere familiar few.
I was
humbled, indeed, to walk in the paths of these legends.
Campus life at the CIA bustles with a kinetic energy unlike any college I’ve
experienced. No problem keeping pace with students, however, as they hurried to
the Anhauser-Busch Theatre, General Foods Nutrition Center, J. Willard Marriott
Continuing Education Center, Colavita
Center for Italian Food and Wine, the Betty Axleroad Language Lab, and the
Conrad N. Hilton Library which boasts nearly 74,000 volumes and 3,500 videos and
DVDs of food related titles.
Fantasizing about turning back the clock to be amongst these energetic, aspiring
masterful chefs
on a daily basis, I did take peaceful time, too, to gaze at the east bank of the
majestic Hudson which wends its way past the 170-acre campus before departing to
the town of Hyde Park, made famous by the nearby home and presidential library
of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Oh if wishes were to come true…B’Tayavon
Lynne Thrope can be contacted at
www.TheReadingRoom.net
Tours of CIA Hyde Park campus are available on Mondays at 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Wednesdays at 4 p.m., and Thursdays at 4 p.m., at $5 per person. Reservations
are required. For more information, or to schedule a tour, call 845-451-1588,
Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Group tours for restaurant guests (groups of
20 or more) may be scheduled by calling (845) 451-1544