San Diego Jewish World

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 Vol. 1, No. 139

       Sunday, September 16, 2007
 
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Jews in Congress
This website regularly covers the activities of 43 members of the Jewish community currently serving in the Senate and the House of Representatives.  Here, by state, is a roster:

key:
Democrat
Republican
Independent



Arizona (1)
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords


California (10)
Sen. Barbara Boxer
Sen. Dianne Feinstein
Rep. Howard Berman
Rep. Susan Davis
Rep. Bob Filner
Rep. Jane Harman
Rep. Tom Lantos
Rep. Adam Schiff
Rep. Brad Sherman
Rep. Henry Waxman


Connecticut (1)
Sen. Joseph Lieberman

Florida (3)
Rep. Ron Klein
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz
Rep. Robert Wexler


Illinois (2)
Rep. Rahm Emanuel
Rep. Jan Schakowsky

Kentucky (1)
Rep. John Yarmuth

Maryland (1)
Sen. Benjamin Cardin

Massachusetts (1)
Rep. Barney Frank

Michigan (2)
Sen. Carl Levin
Rep. Sandy Levin


Minnesota (1)
Sen. Norm Coleman

Nevada (1)
Rep. Shelley Berkley

New Hampshire (1)
Rep. Paul Hodes

New Jersey (2)
Sen. Frank Lautenberg
Rep. Steve Rothman

New York (7)
Sen. Charles Schumer
Rep. Gary Ackerman
Rep. Eliot Engel
Rep. Steve Israel
Rep. Nita Lowey
Rep. Jerrold Nadler
Rep. Anthony Weiner


Oregon (1)
Sen. Ron Wyden


Pennsylvania (2)
Sen. Arlen Specter
Rep. Allyson Y. Schwartz


Tennessee (1)
Rep. Steve Cohen

Vermont (1)
Sen. Bernie Sanders

Virginia (1)
Rep. Eric Cantor

Wisconsin (3)
Sen. Russell Feingold
Sen. Herb Kohl
Rep. Steve Kagen


Additionally, we report on the activities of fellow members of our Jewish community at various levels of  government.  These include:

Federal government

White House: Josh Bolten, chief of staff

Joel Kaplan, dep. chief of staff for policy

Cabinet:
Homeland Security: Michael Chertoff

U.S.Trade Representative:
Susan Schwab

Federal Reserve Board: Ben Bernanke, chair

U.S. Supreme Court Justices
Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Stephen Breyer

State Governments
California: Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner
New York Gov.
Eliot Spitzer
Pennsylvania Gov.
Ed Rendell

Big City Mayors:
Las Vegas,
Nevada:
Oscar Goodman

Louisville
, Kentucky:
Jerry Abramson

New York, N.Y.:
Michael Bloomberg

San Diego County
District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis
Sheriff Bill Kolender
Tax Assessor/ Recorder/ Clerk Greg Smith


 

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Israel and Middle East

While Israel prayed, IDF maintained its usual vigilance against terrorists

IDF Chief of Staff Ashkenazi makes hospital rounds to comfort wounded

Commentary

Glen S. Lewy and Abraham H. Foxman: The world in 5768 through ADL eyes

Sheila Orysiek: Jewish memories: One lake with three beaches

Features

Jewish Grapevine

18-Day Calendar

 

Sports

Joe Naiman: Peer shows skills at U.S. Open

Arts, Entertainment & Dining

Donald H. Harrison: Getting laughs at the Greek Palace

Lynne Thrope:
Palm Restaurant offers tribute to women in the wine industry
 


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The world in 5768 through ADL eyes

By Glen S. Lewy
, National Chair
and Abraham H. Foxman, National Director


NEW YORK (Press Release)--As Jews around the world come together to celebrate the High Holy Days, we pause to reflect on the year that has passed and that which lays ahead for the Jewish people, the state of Israel and the world.

This is a fragile time for our people.  It is a time of great optimism, of hope for the future, and at the same time it is a chapter in our existence with many shades of gray.  While many Jewish communities around the world are thriving in a state of safety and security unprecedented in our history, the ever-present and pernicious threat of anti-Semitism remains.  So, too, remain the many threats to the Jewish state of Israel from all sides.  So our optimism as a people, as always, is tempered with the realization that while we may be safe in our homes, places of work and houses of worship, there are others who feel the familiar pressures and threats of old.

Israel remains in a state of alert despite a lull in suicide bombing attacks and a resurgent economy.  The threat of a nuclear-armed Iran, and the Iranian regime's repeated calls for Israel's destruction, present a clear and present danger to the Jewish state.  The international community, led by the United Nations, must do all it can to stop Iran from acquiring the means to develop a nuclear weapon.

Israel is also confronted with the threat of a re-armed Hezbollah in the north and of a Gaza ruled by Hamas in the south.  Hezbollah, aided by Syria and Iran, has by all accounts completely rearmed in the aftermath of the 2006 war in Lebanon.  The Hamas takeover of Gaza earlier this year is another reminder of the dangers of extremist Islam as sporadic rocket attacks launched from Gaza continue to endanger Israeli civilians in Sderot.  And Israel's soldiers – Gilad Shalit, Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev -- remain in captivity, the would-be bargaining chips of terrorists.

Israel's leaders are weighing options for re-engaging in peace negotiations with the Fatah leadership in the West Bank.  At the urging of the Bush Administration, a new effort is underway for renewed contacts leading to a major meeting this fall.  It is encouraging that the United States continues to show strong, bipartisan support for a two-state solution that would enable Israel to live in peace and security with its neighbors.  It is heartening that the American people continue to understand the dangers still facing Israel, and to support Israel as it seeks to live in peace and defend its sovereignty as a nation.  We hope and pray that a time will come when Israel may live fully in peace and security with its neighbors.

The resurgence of anti-Semitism in Europe and Latin America, both from traditional sources and virulent new strains, also remains a pressing concern for Jews.  Surveys and events revealed that anti-Semitism is rising in many countries on the continent, reminding us yet again of the need for government, religious and community leaders to speak out against all manifestations of anti-Jewish hate, and to redouble our efforts to educate against bigotry and prejudice.

Most disturbing are the efforts in some nations, and especially in the United Kingdom, to isolate the State of Israel with boycotts or through divestment actions.

At home, we also face difficult issues and myriad concerns.  We have watched the war in Iraq unravel with great trepidation and fears for what it means for Israel and the region.  We have endured the accusations of a few "intellectuals" at leading universities, led by Professors Stephen Walt and John J. Mearsheimer, who have made spurious claims of an "Israel Lobby" that they suggest has compromised America's values by pressuring the Administration and Congress to support Israel and by pushing America into the Iraq war.

We had hoped that in our great democracy those who continue to engage in conspiracy theories about Jews would remain only on the fringes of society.  But with their 2006 essay and now a book, "The Israel Lobby," Mearsheimer and Walt have ushered such theories into the mainstream, charging that American Jews, because of their own self-interest and concern for Israel, control American foreign policy and are responsible for the war in Iraq.  These age-old canards have also been advanced by former President Jimmy Carter, who echoed those sentiments while promoting his book, Palestine Peace Not Apartheid.  Such age-old canards have to be debunked.

We have also watched with consternation the fallout from the immigration debate and the failure by Congress to reach a compromise on comprehensive immigration reform.  The wounds opened by the debate are still fresh; the vile rhetoric that emerged as part of the discussion and the angry, hateful words spewed by anti-immigration extremists were shocking to us all.  The promise of America as "A Nation of Immigrants" seemed squandered, at least for the moment, stalled in a morass of name-calling and bureaucratic foot dragging.  The Hispanics who turned out in large numbers to press for much-needed immigration reform felt the indignity of being blamed, scapegoated and left in limbo by an unworkable system of laws and restrictions.  Some believed they would pay a price for their outspokenness and expressed a feeling that their safety and security as a community had been comprised.  As Jews, we were reminded of our own experience as new immigrants in America, and promised to help.  So, at the same time there has emerged from the debate a resolve to move forward and to work together and forge new relationships among Jews, Hispanics and other minority groups to ensure a safe and pluralistic America.  There is much work yet to be done.

We have also raised our voices as a community against the threat of a mass genocide in Darfur.  As the atrocities persist without end, we continue to press for action at the highest levels of government and within the international community to stop the killing in Darfur and to bring humanitarian relief to the refugees.

We pray for 5768 to be a better year in which the Jewish people continue to show solidarity and resolve with the people of Israel and Jewish communities the world over as we pursue the path toward enduring peace and security for our people, and for all nations in the New Year.

We hope that respect for the diversity of our American society will continue to grow and that our democracy remains strong.  And we hope that world leaders will maintain a united front against the forces of anti-Semitism, religious intolerance and hate.  L'Shanah Tovah!

Glen S. Lewy is National Chairman of the Anti-Defamation League.  Abraham H. Foxman is the League's National Director and author of "The Deadliest Lies: The Jewish Lobby and the Myth of Jewish Control" (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).

 

 

 


 

  
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While
Israel prayed, IDF maintained its usual vigilance against terrorists

JERUSALEM (Press Release)--Two Israeli citizens were injured by gun fire last Friday, in an area west of Nablus, when a passing vehicle opened fire at their vehicles.  The citizens, who were lightly injured, received medical treatment at a nearby hospital.  In addition, terrorist operatives opened fire at IDF forces in five separate incidents.    In addition, a number of rocks were hurled at Israeli vehicles; causing no injuries but damaging the vehicles.
 
Seven explosive devices and improvised grenades were hurled at IDF forces operating near Nablus, last week.   No injuries were reported.  In addition, Molotov cocktails were thrown at Israeli vehicles.  No injuries were reported but damage was caused to the vehicles.   During IDF operations, six Palestinians were arrested and transferred to Israeli security forces for questioning.
 
From the 6th through the 15th of September, IDF forces uncovered over 40 different variations of explosive devices, seven different types of weapons, four blades and a number of fully-prepared Molotov cocktails to be hurled at IDF forces.   The explosive devices were detonated in a controlled environment by military sappers and the remaining weapons confiscated.
 
In a number of IDF operations, 76 terrorist operatives were arrested and transferred to security forces for questioning.

The preceding was provided by the Israel Defense Force


 

IDF Chief of Staff Ashkenazi makes hospital rounds to comfort wounded

By Amir Kidon

TEL HASHOMER—Just before Rosh Hashanah, the Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi. paid a visit to the wounded soldiers recovering in the Sheba hospital in Tel Hashomer. Amongst the wounded soldiers were those injured in the Qassam rocket attack that hit the Zikim army base last week.  The Lieutenant General then went on to visit the Belinson hospital in Petach Tikva and received a detailed briefing by the hospital's doctors on the state of the recovering soldiers.
 
Amongst the soldiers the Chief of General Staff visited was Lieutenant Itai Arnliv,  a commander of the paratroop brigade team who was critically wounded during operations in Nablus, last July.  "I come today, not just as a commander in uniform but as a father to his children,” the Chief of Staff said to Ita's father.
 
"The IDF has warmly embraced us,” his father, Dov Arnliv said during the visit. "Itai's commanders have been very careful to keep in contact with us, as has the Chief of Staff, the head of the command-explain, the commander of his brigade even his comrades who fought alongside him.  Their camaraderie continues and has gotten stronger in the hospital- one only has to look around to see."
 
Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi shook the hands of the wounded soldiers and said he was thankful to the medical teams who spent day and night trying to rehabilitate the wounded.   He then blessed the soldiers and their families for the strength they have shown throughout the stages of rehabilitation, wishing them all a happy new year.

 The preceding was provided by the Israel Defense Force


 



 

Commentary

Jewish memories
One lake with three beaches

By Sheila Orysiek 

SAN DIEGO—I’ve always been fond of picnics and love to go to Lake Murray in San Diego and sit in the shade of a tree enjoying the breeze from off the water.  As I look out across the water, I see another lake…another time….

The lake was in New Jersey and had three beach areas separated by an invisible barrier for three different groups of citizens.  While there were no written rules, nevertheless Jews went to one area, white Christians to another, and blacks to a third.  Today it is hard to imagine this happening in America, but that’s the way it was when I was a child.  No one contested it, and to a certain extent it was comforting to be amongst those who shared a common background, ate the same food, spoke in English heavily laced with Yiddish and Yiddishisms – and all the hot dogs were kosher.

In the late 1940’s my father’s extended family numbered around 75 people, all descendents or married to descendents of Great Grandmother Bella and honoring her name formed the Bella Family Circle. Members attended monthly meetings, the Annual Passover Seder and the Annual Family Picnic, plus other events.

Not everyone at that time had a car, so the transportationally deprived climbed into the back of my Grandfather’s venerable (barely working) flat bed truck.  For the occasion he reinstalled the wooden slats – like a fence - around the bed of the truck to keep kids and food from spilling out.  This was well before child safety seats, seat belts or safety inspections for vehicles.  It was even before turn signals were common equipment. What the truck lacked in grace it made up in courage and grinding gears.

We must have looked like a tribe fresh from having crossed the Red Sea as we descended upon the beach, staked out our territory (who could argue with such numbers?) ready for a day of relaxation. 

The “relaxation” had actually started at home with the anxiety of choosing a bathing suit.  Probably nothing is as emblematic of the contrast from that time to this as the swimsuit.  Then, it was to uncover as little as possible, while now it is to uncover as much as possible.  The men simply put on swim trunks, however, for the Aunts; it was more problematic.  Extra pleats, folds, tucks and skirts were added for “style,” but the real intent was to hide as much as possible.  The younger people looked better in their swimsuits, but heaven help them if they showed it.

We came in two colors:  snowy white left over from a Philadelphia winter or the burnt toasted skin of the greatly tanned.  Being tan was considered a sign of “health” and the darker the “healthier.”  But that wasn’t really the reason some tanned themselves to a dark umber.  It screamed: “I have time to lie around in the sun.”  Translated into:  “I have outside help to clean my house,” which was the salient point of the deeply tanned.

As a group we were initially fairly sedate – intent on “relaxation.”  However, the Bella Family Circle couldn’t maintain that facade – it was boring.  When my Grandfather got bored he woke up the world.  Never having had a music lesson in his life, he could play the piano or accordion with both skill and zest.  For obvious reasons, the piano stayed home while the accordion made the trip to the lake.  He began humming, doodling on the accordion, got others to hum and finally broke out into song.  He had a fine voice and an excellent sense of music

Soon everyone was singing as he stood in front conducting and dividing us up to sing in parts.  He is the only person I know who could conduct and play the accordion at the same time. At first other family groups looked askance in our direction, but our merriment was infectious.  Many looked as if they would like to sneak in as an extra cousin.  We might not have noticed.

In previous years we had brought food to share, but when it became a bit competitive we decided that each family unit would bring their own.  This lasted for about five minutes as children hurried from table to table; the food always looked better on someone else’s table. 

We weren’t very much into BBQ and no one brought steaks, but Uncle Benny brought a huge iron skillet and made fried matzoh: his prize recipe.  Passover was sufficiently in the past that matzoh had regained its allure.  It didn’t seem strange to eat fried matzoh on a picnic – why not?  We never had any alcoholic beverages – we didn’t need to; the Bella Family Circle was perfectly capable of “relaxation” without it. 

This brings me to the kugul wars. Every female relative had her own “perfect” recipe.  The big division was between noodles or rice as a base.  Advocates were entrenched: a noodle kugul lover simply couldn’t understand a rice kugul lover.  With regular raisins or golden raisins was another bone of contention.  Lemon rind or orange rind – a matter for a skirmish which lead to a battle over adding apples or not.  However, the real war was how to pronounce it:  kugul versus keegul.   My mother was an unrepentant “keegul-er” and she held her ground with every possible version of rolling eyes and lifted eyebrows a face could produce.    She recounted her entire ancestry clear back to Manna in the desert – and declared the tribes had all pronounced it “keegul.”

I thought the trick was to try several kuguls/keeguls and then make an informed decision.  I was soon disabused of this traitorous contemplation.  The only true keegul was with rice, apples, regular raisins and lots of cinnamon – my mother’s. 

After eating, floating about in huge inflated truck tire inner tubes, singing, and more eating of keeguls/kuguls – as evening drew on, it was time for real “relaxation” – dancing.  We formed a circle, linked arms and hora-ed the hours away (Grandfather could dance and play the accordion at the same time).  Then, we broke up the circle and snaked in and out around the tables and on down the beach and back again.  When someone got tired, a little more kugul/keegul fixed him/her right up and ready to dance again.  The other people on the beach were either long gone, or tired just from watching us “relax.”  But, there were times they joined in and it was then we enjoyed having our own “gentleman’s agreement” beach.  Strangers though these others be, they were Jewish sisters and brothers.

When Grandfather and the Uncles decided it was time to stop relaxing, we piled back into the cars and the flatbed truck.  People sat down, leaning upon one another, children quickly falling asleep.  However, Grandfather was not quite done and he was driving.  When the people in the back of the truck looked a wee bit too comfortable, he found a convenient pot hole, the bigger the better, and hit it with deadly aim.  That shivered the timbers of the wooden flat bed truck and stirred up the sleepers and kept him smiling as he drove.

However, what goes around comes around and by the time the truck was going through downtown Philadelphia, and just in front of the Academy of Music (Philadelphia’s very famous and most prestigious opera house) a front tire gave out – flatter than a bad E note.  At that time there were few gas stations in downtown Philly, and it was Sunday night when none would have been open in any case.

Grandfather was not easily defeated.  Everyone was evacuated from the truck bed and lined up on the curb of Broad Street, one of Philly’s busiest downtown streets as he and other handy male cousins lifted the tire off the truck. A sixteen year old cousin was given instructions to get on the subway/elevated train, told where to get off, told where a friend lived who could fix the tire, given a dime for the train and a dollar for the friend.  My cousin walked off down the street rolling the big truck tire in front of him and down into the subway station.  I can imagine him sitting on the train with the huge truck tire in front of his knees.

We sat on the flat bed of the jacked up truck, our feet dangling over the edge, children fast asleep. True to his reputation, Grandfather had had a flat tire in the perfect place.  We could sit and watch all the wealthy patrons of the opera – the Blue Bloods of Philadelphia’s Main Line Society - leave the Academy of Music in their gowns and jewels and get into their chauffeured limousines, while we waited for Cousin Bernie to come back with the tire.  In the meantime we snacked on rice/noodle – kugul/keegul – and relaxed.

 


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Features

The Jewish Grapevine                                                  
                 


    
Oscar Goodman     Kronosaurus, Sea Monsters   Greenspan

AROUND THE TOWN

The recent award by a federal judge of $12.9 million in Iranian assets to the San Diego family of Hebrew University cafeteria bombing victim Marla Bennett has been welcomed by the university.  In a statement, a spokesman for the university said that the school "pays tribute to the memory of Marla Bennett and all of the other victims of the terrorist attack and expressed satisfaction at the decision of the court, which perhaps will ease, if only slightly, the sorrow of the family." 

● The arrest of former football star O.J. Simpson on a charge of armed robbery at a Las Vegas hotel casino—an incident in which Simpson says he was trying to get back sports memorabilia that belonged to him—prompted questions about who is the best criminal defense lawyer in Las Vegas. The answer that sprung to everyone's lips was Oscar Goodman, but he's highly unlikely to take on the case.  He is currently serving his third term as mayor of the gambling city.  San Diegans remember that he defended one-time mayor Roger Hedgecock against charges of violating the city's campaign laws.  After resigning from the mayor's office in the wake of those charges, Hedgecock later became a successful radio talk show host.

● Actor Liev Schreiber narrates Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure, which will be fall attraction at the Reuben H. Fleet Omnimax Theatre in Balboa Park.

CYBER-REFERRALS
San Diego Jewish World appreciates and thanks those individuals and organizations which recommend or post stories of interest to the worldwide Jewish community:

Cable News Network: In his new book, former Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan said Republicans deserved the 2006 election drubbing they received because they traded principles for power.  Here is the link


JEWS, GOVERNMENT and POLITICSThe Jewish community lends its support and leadership to a wide range of issues affecting the broad general community.  In this section of the column, compiled from news releases, we note some of those efforts:

● The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations has lent its support to a rally at noon Monday, September 24, "rain or shine" to be held in Dag Hammerskjold Plaza adjacent to the United Nations building to protest the policies of Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who will be addressing the world body.

 
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Eighteen-Day Calendar
      September 17—October 4, 2007     

(Editor’s Note: The Eighteen-Day Calendar was a popular feature in the San Diego Jewish Press-Heritage before its demise, and now we are running it daily in the San Diego Jewish World for the convenience of our readers.  Jewish organizations or those with specific Jewish-interest programming may send us their items via sdheritage@cox.net)

Ongoing Events

Dead Sea Scrolls ExhibitSan Diego Natural History Museum, Balboa Park, through December 31.


Journey to the Copper Age: Archaeology in the Holy Land—San Diego Museum of Man, Balboa Park, through February 4. 

Sunday, September 16

Fast of Gedalyah—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) members begin the fast of Gedalyah at 5:21 a.m., daven Shacharit at 8 a.m.; hold mincha services at 6:25 p.m., and the fast ends at 7:36 p.m. 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Kever Avot Memorial Services
Congregation Beth Israel (Reform) conducts 11 a.m., Memorial Service at the Sol Stone Chapel at Cypress View (40th and Imperial, west of Highway 805); 12:30 p.m. at El Camino Memorial Park Chapel, 5600 Carroll Canyon Road, and  immediately following, at Mount of Olives Lawns.

Klezmer concert/ Holocaust—
Klezmer musician Alexander Gourevitch gives a klezmer concert and Holocaust Survivor Erwin Levy talks of  his experiences at 1 p.m. at the Julian Library, 1850 Highway 78.  An accompanying exhibit, “Davka: The Survival of a People,” remains on view through September 19. (760) 765-0370. 

Tashlikh Service—Congregation Beth Am (Conservative) conducts a combination 6 p.m., Minha service and Tashlikh ceremony at Fletcher Cove. (858) 481-8454.

Israeli Dancing—Paul Kalmar teaches all comers some of the dances of Israel at 7 p.m. at Tifereth Israel Synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  (619) 697-6001

Selichot Service—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) holds a service at 8:15 p.m, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Monday,  September 17

Meaningful Yom Kippur—Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) conducts a class at 7:15 p.m. on “Making Your Yom Kippur More Meaningful” followed at 8:15 p.m. by Selichot services,
7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Tuesday, September 18

Scrapbooking—
Eden Nullar and Laura Birman demonstrate the art of scrapbooking at 6 p.m. at Tifereth Israel Synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  (619) 697-6001.

Wednesday, September 19

Tea and Fashions—
Brandeis University National Women’s Committee, Rancho Bernardo Chapter, holds a 1:30 p.m. tea with fashions from Chicos of Carmel Mountain to be modeled by members at Oaks North Community Center, 12578 Oaks North Drive, Rancho Bernardo.  Ticket: $10. Enid (858) 487-7343.

Melton Mini School—Rabbi Morey Schwartz, curriculum developer for the Florence Melton Adult Mini School in Jerusalem, leads a demonstration class on "Songs of Return," songs in the Bible and liturgy that speak of returning to God, to better days and to Israel, at 7 p.m. at the Lawrence Family JCC in an event sponsored by the Agency for Jewish Education.  To register for the free event, email Ilene Powell at the Agency, or call (858) 268-9200.


Selichot—Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) holds a service at 8:15 p.m., at 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Thursday, September 20

Film Discussion—
San Diego State University Prof. Lawrence Baron screens the movie Kadosh, directed by Amos Gitai, about personal and political conflicts within the Haredi community in Israel, followed by a discussion, at SDSU's Little Theatre (on campus near SDSU's signature Hardy Memorial Tower), see map. (619) 594-5338

Friday, September 21

Daily Services
—Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) holds Shacharit 6 a.m; Mincha 2:30 p.m.

Davka ExhibitDavka: In Spite of Everything, an exhibit on the Jews of pre-Holocaust Europe, today through October 2 at the Rancho San Diego Library, 11555 Via Rancho San Diego, El Cajon 92019.  (619) 660-5370.
         

Jazz Singer—
San Diego State University History Prof. Lawrence Baron shows the Danny Thomas version of the movie, The Jazz Singer, then leads a discussion, at 12:45 p.m. at the Jewish Family Service’s College Avenue Senior Center, 4855 College Avenue, San Diego. (619) 583-3300.

Kol Nidrei Services

         
Congregation Beth Am (Conservative) —5:45 p.m.—Childcare for children 18 months to kindergarten ages begins for 6 p.m. first service. Second service begins at 8:45 p.m. at the synagogue, 5050 Del Mar Heights Road, (858) 481-8454

            Chabad Jewish Center of Oceanside (Orthodox)— 6 p.m., Best Western Oceanside Inn, 1680 Oceanside Blvd.,  (760) 806-7765, www.JewishOceanside.com
 

            Congregation Beth Israel (Reform)— 6 p.m. early Service, 8:30 p.m. Late Service, at San Diego Civic Center, 1100 Third Avenue (at B).  (858) 535-1111.
 

            Temple Adat Shalom (Reform)—6 p.m. early service, 8:30 p.m. late service, at 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway.  (858) 451-2408.

           
Tifereth Israel Synagogue (Conservative)—6:15 p.m., service at the synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd., San Diego.  (619) 697-6001.

            Young Israel of  San Diego (Orthodox)—6:29 p.m. Candlelighting; 6:35 p.m. Kol Nidrei, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.


          San Diego Humanistic Jewish Congregation (Humanist)—7:30 p.m., at the Carlsbad Women's Club, 3320 Monroe St., Carlsbad. (858) 549-3088.
 
           
         
Congregation Kehillas Torah—Doubletree Resort, 14455 Penasquitos Drive, San Diego. For time, call (858) 613-0222.


Saturday, September 22

Yom Kippur Services

    
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodoc)—8 a.m., Shacharit; 11:30 a.m. Yizkor; 4:46 p.m. Mincha; 7:28 p.m. Fast ends.

      Temple Adat Shalom (Reform)—8:30 a.m. early service; 11:30 a.m. late service; 1:45p.m. children's service; 2:15p.m. Adult Discussion; 3:30 p.m., afternoon, Yizkor and Neilah Service; at 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway.  (858) 451-2408.

      Tifereth Israel Synagogue (Conservative)— 8:30 a.m, services at the synagogue: with mincha at 5 p.m., neilah at 6 p.m.; Break the fast thereafter for those who RSVP before Sept. 22.  6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd., San Diego.  (619) 697-6001.

      Congregation Beth Am (Conservative)—8:45 a.m. service; 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Children's Service (Grades 1-7) and Childcare (18 months-kindergarten);  4 p.m. Yizkor; 4:30 p.m. Minha and Ne'ila; 4 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Childcare (18 months-kindergarten); at synagogue, 5050 Del Mar Heights Road,
(858) 481-8454

      Chabad Jewish Center of Oceanside (Orthodox)—9:30 a.m.;  Yizkor Service 11:30 a.m.; Mincha & Neila followed by Break-the-fast, 5:30 p.m. Best Western Oceanside Inn, 1680 Oceanside Blvd.,  (760) 806-7765, www.JewishOceanside.com

      Congregation Beth Israel (Reform)—9:30 a.m., Morning Service at the Civic Theatre; 9:30 a.m Family Service; 1:15 p.m. Discussion Session; 2:30 p.m. Afternoon Service; 4:30 p.m. Yizkor Service; 6:30 p.m. Neilah concludes. Services at Civic Theatre and in the Copper Room adjacent to Civic Theatre; Third and B Streets, San Diego.  (858) 535-1111.

      San Diego Humanistic Jewish Congregation (Humanist)—5:30 p.m., Nitzkor and Break-the-Fast at the Carlsbad Women's Club, 3320 Monroe St., Carlsbad. (858) 549-3088.

      Congregation Kehillas Torah—Doubletree Resort, 14455 Penasquitos Drive, San Diego. For time, call (858) 613-0222.
 

Sunday, September 23

Morning Service—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) holds 8 a.m. Shacharit, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Israel Archaeology—
Ben Gurion University Prof. Steve Rosen tells of the rise of desert cults in the Negev 7,000 years ago, at 3 p.m. with a tour of the “Journey to the Copper Age” exhibit immediately following at the Museum of Man in Balboa Park.   Ticket $20 public, $10 museum member. (619) 239-2001 or click on the Museum of Man ad on this page.

Live From 92nd Street Y—Television comedian Alan Alda, in New York, participates in an interactive broadcast with Congregation Beth Israel, in which he and Alan Rosenblatt discuss “Talking About Talking,” at 9001 Towne Centre Drive.
Ticket: $5 CBI member; visitor $10. Bonnie Graff at (858) 535-1111, Ext 3800, or email bgraff@cbisd.org

Israeli Dancing—
Paul Kalmar teaches all comers some of the dances of Israel at 7 p.m. at Tifereth Israel Synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  (619) 697-6001.

Monday, September 24
Daily Services
— Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox)  has 6:05 a.m.. Shacharit services;  8:15 p.m. Maariv services, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Tuesday, September 25
Daily Services
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox)  holds 6:20 a.m.. Shacharit  services at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Wednesday, September 26
Daily Services—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) holds 6:20 a.m.. Shacharit services at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Thursday,  September 27

Sukkot Services

            Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox)—Shacharit 8:45 a.m.; Mincha 6:30 p.m., candle lighting 7:21 p.m. or later, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.


            Tifereth Israel Synagogue (Conservative) —Services 9:15 a.m., at synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  (619) 697-6001.

            Congregation Beth Israel (Reform)—10 a.m. Sukkot Morning Festival service, followed by light kiddush lunch, 9001 Towne Centre drive.  (858) 535-1111.

            Temple Adat Shalom—10 a.m. Service, at 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway.  (858) 451-2408.

Friday, September 28

Daily Services—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) holds 8:56 a.m. Shacharit services;  6:20 p.m. candle lighting; 6:25 p.m. Mincha, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Kabbalat Shabbat/ Dinner—
Kabbalat Shabbat and Shemeni Atzeret services at  6:15 p.m. at Tifereth Israel Synagogue (Conservative), 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  will be followed by a kosher dinner costing  $18 for adults and children 6 years and older.  Those kids between 3 and 5 will have their appetites accommodated for $6 each, while children under 3 get to munch all they want for free.  (619) 697-6001.

Saturday, September 29

Daily Services
—Young Israel of San Diego conducts 8:45 a.m. Shacharit service;  9:39 a.m. latest time for Shma; 10:39 a.m. latest time for Amidah; 6:05 p.m. Mincha; 7:18 p.m Shabbat ends, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.


Sunday, September 30


Daily Service—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) conducts 8 a.m. Shacharit service at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Dead Sea Scrolls—
Risa Levitt Kohn, curator of the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit at the San Diego Natural History Museum, tells some of the behind the scenes stories at 4 p.m. at Temple Adat Shalom, 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway. (858) 451-1200.

Dinner in Sukkah—Tifereth Israel Synagogue holds a 5:30 p.m. dinner in its large sukkah, with tickets for adults over the age of 12, $7 for children from 6 through 11, and $6 for children ages 3 through 5.  Those younger than that eat for free at the synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  (619) 697-6001.

Israeli Dancing—
Paul Kalmar teaches all comers some of the dances of Israel at 7 p.m. at Tifereth Israel Synagogue, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd.  (619) 697-6001

Monday,  October 1


Daily Services
—Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) conducts 6 a.m. Shacharit services,  8:15 p.m. Maariv, at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Senior Center It’s moving day for the Jewish Family Service’s University City senior center which goes from Chabad of University City to larger quarters at Congregation Beth Israel, 9001 Towne Centre Drive.  (858) 550-5998

Tuesday, October 2

Daily Services— Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) conducts 6 a.m. Shacharit services at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447.

Piano in the Sukkah—Pianist Rachelle Danto entertains seniors during a noon luncheon at Jewish Family Service’s College Avenue Senior Center, 4855 College Avenue. 
(619) 583-3300.

Klezmer Concert/ Lecture—Heather Maio and Jackie Gmach of the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center, at  6:30 p.m. will show a DVD and talk about the Davka exhibit at the Rancho San Diego Library, 11555 Via Rancho San Diego, El Cajon 92019.  (619) 660-5370.  A  klezmer concert featuring Alexander Gourevitch will follow at 8 p.m.

Wednesday, October 3

Daily Services—Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) conducts 6 a.m. Shacharit services at the shul, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447. 

Shimini Atzeret —
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) begins observance with a 6:13 p.m. candle lighting; 6:15 p.m. Mincha. 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego. (619) 589-1447. 

Erev Simchat Torah—Temple Adat Shalom (Reform) celebrates the completion and beginning anew of the Torah reading cycle at 7 p.m., with music by the Simchat Shabbat Band accompanying the festivities which include a confirmation ceremony. 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway.  (858) 451-2408.

Thursday, October 4

Daily Services—
Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox) conducts Shacharit services at 8:45 a.m., 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego (619) 589-1447.

Shemini Atzeret

      Tifereth Israel Synagogue (Conservative)—9:15 a.m. services, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd, San Diego (619) 697-6001.

Simchat Torah

 
     Temple Adat Shalom (Reform)—10 a.m. Simchat Torah and Yizkor service, 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway (858) 451-2408.

Erev Simchat Torah

      Young Israel of San Diego (Orthodox)—6:10 p.m. mincha services, 7:12 p.m. or later, candle lighting, 7:30 p.m., Hakafot, 7291 Navajo Road, San Diego (619) 589-1447.

     Congregation Beth Israel (Reform)—7 p.m., Erev Simchat Torah services followed by an oneg and Israeli dancing, 9001 Towne Centre Drive. (858) 451-2408.

 
      Tifereth Israel Synagogue (Conservative)—7p.m. services, 6660 Cowles Mountain Blvd, San Diego (619) 697-6001. Singing, dancing and a kazoo procession, especially for the children.

    


 

Sports

Peer shows skills at U.S. Open

By Joe Naiman

LAKESIDE, California—Since the number 18 has lucky significance in Judaism, Israeli tennis player Shahar Peer couldn't complain about being seeded 18th in the women's singles competition at the U.S. Open recently played in Flushing Meadows, N.Y.

The seeding mavens may have seen the connection, and Peer
eliminated one higher-seeded player during the tournament
and reached the final eight before a loss in the quarterfinals.

Peer thus closed out tennis' grand slam season with quarterfinal losses in both the opening and closing tournaments. Peer also reached the quarterfinals in the Australian Open in January.  She advanced to the fourth round of the French Open and reached the third round of the British Open at Wimbledon.

In tournaments other than the four grand slam events, Peer has also earned notice.  She opened 2007 with the Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts tournament and advanced to the semifinals before a 6-4, 6-7, 1-6 loss. In February Peer reached the finals of the Morgan Keenan Championships before a 6-1, 6-1 loss to Venus Williams, and Peer also reached the semifinals of the Sony Ericcson Open in March.

San Diego County had little chance to see Peer; she entered the Acura Classic but lost a three-set match in the first round.  Although that provided the 20-year-old Israeli with a rough start to the month of August, she ended August
still in contention for the U.S. Open.

Peer began the U.S. Open with a match against Meilen Tu.
Peer won the first set, six games to four, and captured the
second set on the tiebreaker after each player won six games.

In the second round Peer faced Bethanie Mattick.  Peer
had a relatively easier time in that match, taking the first
set by a 6-2 score and winning the match with a 6-1 victory
in the second set.

Peer found herself playing against 13th-seeded Nicole Vaidisova in the third round at Flushing Meadows. Peer took a 6-4 triumph in the first set, but Vaidisova became the first opponent to take a set against Peer during the tournament with a 6-3 victory.  That forced the third and deciding set, which went to a tiebreaker after Peer and Vaidisova each won six games.  Peer won the tiebreaking game to take the set and match.

The fourth round against lower-seeded Angieszka Radwanska produced a 6-4 set in Peer's favor to start the match and a 6-1 set for Peer to end the match.

The win against Radwanska gave Peer a quarterfinal match against sixth-seeded Anna Chaketadze, who ended Peer's court time at Flushing Meadows with a 6-4, 6-1victory.

In addition to reaching the quarterfinals and winning
four of five matches, Peer also won eight of eleven sets
and 58 of 104 games.

Despite the significance of the number 18 in Israel, Peer and the rest of the Israeli tennis community can willingly accept a substitute number in the world rankings.  Peer is now ranked 16th among all women on the professional tour. 



{Marc Kligman, who combines being a sports agent with his life as an observant Jew, invites you to listen. Click on the ad above for more information}
 

Arts, Entertainment & Dining


____________________
The Jewish Citizen
             by Donald H. Harrison
 

 
FOUR COMEDIANS—Standing at the entrance to the Greek Palace at 8878
Clairemont Mesa from left are Tarrell Wright, Joe Charles, Scott Bowman and
Tony Calabrese.

Getting laughs at the Greek Palace

SAN DIEGO—Probably someone else thought of this long ago, but a wonderful topic for a master’s thesis, or maybe even a doctoral dissertation, would be a study of the jokes that stand-up comics tell at the local comedy clubs.  People like to tell jokes and  laugh about those issues that make them uncomfortable, so what gets the laughs—and what material the comedians keep in their routines—could well be considered a barometer of society’s moods and anxieties.

Nancy and I  joined John and Vicki Pierce last night at the Greek Palace in the Kearny Mesa area where seven male comedians filled a total of two hours.  Easily half of the material had to do with lust, raunchy descriptions of what guys will say or do to persuade women to have sex with them, or what they’re reduced to doing when they are turned down.  Such material varies little from generation to generation, except perhaps in how graphically sexual relations are described.  Little was left to the imagination by the seven comedians we heard: Tim Begley, Josh Mullins, Scott Bowman, Mark Ellis, Tony Calabrese, Joe Charles and Tarrell Wright. 

Joe Charles enlivened his presentation with some funny sound effects: like the sound of two wall charts being pulled down when a man decides not to tell, but to show, his partner all the things he would like them to do together. 

Other topics had to do with ethnic relations in San Diego.  I figured sooner or later we Jews would take a poke, but apparently in San Diego, the relations among Jews and non-Jews don’t make many people uncomfortable, and hence (for Gentile comics at least) they’re just not good humor material.  Instead we heard jokes about Mexicans and Asians and occasionally about Blacks. 

The Asian jokes generally ran along the stereotype that Asians are very smart.  Josh Mullins, who is slight of build, has a routine about how all his efforts to look and be macho come to naught because “I have a body of an Asian woman.  I don’t attract women, I attract guys from UCSD.”

The Mexican jokes typically dealt with the idea that they fill so many jobs in the service industry.   Tarrell Wright, for example, told about a time he was hungry but had only enough money to go to a Mexican take-out place or a Jack-in-the-Box.  Either way, he needed to speak Spanish to order, he said.  Tim Begley told how literate graffiti writers are in the bathrooms of Barnes & Noble.  “More people should emigrate,” said one.  “You mean immigrate,” said another. The running conversation on the bathroom wall became increasingly low brow.  Mark Ellis remarked on the realism of the video game Grand theft Auto.  “It looks like LA, but people speak English.”

Some aspects of Black culture also were put under the microscope.  Tony Calabrese, who affects a jaundiced view of everybody and everything while staring into his ever-present tequila on the rocks,  defined rap music as a misspelled word , having dropped the first letter ‘c.’

Smoking—both of cigarettes and marijuana—received some attention from the comics.  Wright explained that ‘weed’ can make people fail to think straight.  There was a time when a policeman suddenly detained him, he joked, for the reason that he had been spotted j-walking two blocks back.  “Whew!” Wright blurted. “I thought you were talking about the weed in my pocket.”   Scott Bowman noted how cigarette smokers have a tendency to take a last puff before going into stores (they walk to the entrance and blow the smoke the other way before stubbing the cigarette out) and even when being busted.  He did a shtick about a guy being ordered by the police to get down on the ground, and hurriedly puffing his cigarette while he complied.

Bowman also did a riff on local politics—picking on San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders for never building a higher bridge over the San Diego River at the point behind the Fashion Valley Shopping Center where it floods every year (thereby causing a terrible loss of tax revenue), and on Donna Frye for her weathered appearance.  Calabrese also ventured into political waters, suggesting that if we elect a woman president, “there will be no more wars; we just wouldn’t talk to those countries for a while.”

A generation older than the other comedians, Calabrese had the ba-dump-bump timing down the best, which may be why he was chosen to fill the longest time spot on the program.   “My wife likes to make me feel like an idiot…. I help her all I can.”   Being an older fellow, he’s thinking of having his body pierced. “I’m gonna get a nipple ring,” he said to gasps of surprise.  “I forget things—it might be a good place for keys.”

The program at the Greek Palace is preceded by a  Greek-style buffet dinner, which one assumes is consistently good.   Last night, the buffet featured chicken and lamb dishes.  Required drinks are expensive.  The comedians, whose material and deliveries may vary night to night, stand at the door as you leave with a big tip barrel.  One assumes they divide the proceeds equally. 


What's Good to Eat in
San Diego
?

           Lynne Thrope 
 

Palm Restaurant offers tribute to women in the wine industry

SAN DIEGO--The Palm Restaurant, San Diego’s classic American steak house, announced a national fundraising alliance with Dress for Success Worldwide that will feature the launch of nine “Women in Wine” vintage selections, presented by influential women in the wine industry. 

The new menu will be featured throughout the months of September and October. The partnership is part of PalmCares, a philanthropic program that reflects the company’s commitment of generosity by supporting locally recognized nonprofit organizations that address issues of empowerment, hunger, health awareness and equality. 

“Dress for Success is an incredible organization that empowers women by giving them the tools they need to be successful in their professional and personal lives,” said Carl Essert, general manager of The Palm Restaurant in San Diego.  “At The Palm, we have long said that generosity is the cornerstone of hospitality.  Through PalmCares, we are proud to work alongside a great partner in Dress for Success to help make a positive change in the communities where we live, work and do business.”

The Palm will donate 10% of all proceeds from these new menu items to Dress for Success Worldwide, with a minimum annual donation of $25,000.  The program will help Dress for Success in its mission to promote the economic independence of women by providing professional attire, a support network and career development skills to help them succeed in work and in life. 

The new “Women in Wine” menu of vintage selections will include:

Patricia Colagiuri, Sue Mueller & Brenda Helies, owners of distinguished vineyards worldwide and the Kobrand Corporation present: Foley Estates, Chardonnay, Domaine Carneros, Pinot Noir and Sequoia Grove Cabernet Sauvignon

Representing the Marchesi Antinori family’s 26th generation, sisters Albiera, Allegra & Alessia Antinori present: Péppoli Chianti Classico; Villa Antinori, Sangiovese/Cabernet; and Bocca di Lupo, Angianico/Cabernet

Partners Kristy & Corene Phillips with the assistance of Tracy Knapp from Michael-David Vineyards present: Earthquake, Cabernet Sauvignon, 7 Heavenly Chards, Chardonnay  and Petite Petite, Petite Syrah/Petite Verdot

“Our guests will absolutely love our new ‘Women in Wine’ menu, which offers a delectable way to support a very important cause,” added said Miguel Martinez, executive chef of The Palm Restaurant in San Diego.  

“We introduced the ‘Women in Wine” menu to pay tribute to the strength and resilience of the great women who take part in the Dress for Success program, as well as a group of influential women who have helped to re-shape and lead the wine industry.” 

The Palm is located at 615 J Street in San Diego’s East Village, a stone’s throw to Petco Park.  For reservations call 619-702-6500.