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ADL offers reward for information leading to arrest and conviction of person(s) targeting immigration rights group

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

EL CAJON, California (Staff Report)–The Anti-Defamation League of San Diego has offered a $2,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction  of the person or persons who have been attempting to intimidate Estela de los Rios, director of the Center for Social Advocacy here.

At a news conference, ADL Regional Director Morris Casuto called the community’s attention to three incidents at the CSA headquarters at 227 East Lexington in this San Diego County city, east of San Diego.

In the first while De los Rios was inside her office, a man pounded on the window and screamed at the immigration-rights advocate: “We know what you’re doing!  We’re going to kill you!”

In the next incident, the word “Bitch” was sprawled grafitti style outside the office.

And, in the most recent incident, the window on which the man had pounded was broken, and a computer was removed from the office.

Casuto told a news conference on Thursday, May 6, that the “attempt to intimidate and silence an organization is outrageous and unacceptable.  To the degree that a legitimate organization is silenced all our freedom is diminished.”

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Preceding based on information provided by the Anti-Defamation League

Israel’s Consul General Jacob Dayan protests photo exhibit attack

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

LOS ANGELES (Press Release)–On March 27, 2010 the Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City, CA opened an exhibit entitled Water: Our Thirsty World. The exhibit, which is scheduled to be on display until June 13, features photographs from National Geographic and coincides with its special issue on water. The exhibit aims to “explore the causes and consider the ramifications of the world’s impending fresh water crisis” through ”environmental, social, political and cultural perspectives.”

Of the 65 photographs on display, 10 are dedicated to Israel, the only country to be negatively portrayed and attacked with false political accusations. The photo captions weave a fiction where Israel hoards water and steals from its neighbors, with photographs depicting Israelis relaxing by overflowing pools and beautiful beaches while others suffer from drought.

Israel is a world leader in water resource management and regularly shares its knowledge with nations around the world. Water is not a weapon and the Annenberg Foundation along with National Geographic had an opportunity to elevate the discourse of global water resources – instead the exhibit is used to manufacture a crude political attack against Israel. The specific Israel-related photos are attached, or you may see the exhibit online for yourself at  www.annenbergspaceforphotography.org/

The Consul General of Israel in Los Angeles, Jacob Dayan, sent the following letter to the Annenberg Foundation and National Geographic:

“It has come to my attention that the Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City, CA is hosting an exhibit from National Geographic called Water: Our Thirsty World which is described as ‘examining the precarious state of our world’s fresh water.’

“Access to fresh water is an issue of global importance and it deserves honest and serious attention. So it is with great disappointment that I have learned that this exhibit, which could have been used as a tool for education, is instead being used as a political tool to spread lies and misinformation about Israel’s role in international efforts to provide access to fresh, clean drinking water.

“The exhibit manufactures an outrageous fiction wherein Israel is depicted as stealing and hoarding water while her neighbors suffer from drought. This is not only false but the exact opposite is true.

  • Israel, with a 75% water recycling rate, is the world’s number one water recycler. The second largest water recycler is Spain, with a rate of 12%.
  • Israeli-invented Drip Irrigation helped achieve 70%-80% of water efficiency in agriculture -the highest rate in the world.
  • Israel is home to the world’s largest Seawater Reverse Osmosis (SWRO) desalination plant, annually producing 100 million m3 at the low cost of approximately $0.52 per m3 of water – the most cost-efficient of its kind in the world.
  • Israel’s total water consumption has remained the same since the 1960s, despite a growing population, rising water requirements and increasing agricultural production.
  • Since 1958, MASHAV – the Center for International Cooperation of the Foreign Ministry of Israel, has trained almost 200,000 course participants from approximately 140 countries and has developed dozens of demonstration projects worldwide in fields of Israeli expertise including water resource management.

“”This is the true story of Israel’s role with regard to water and none of these basic facts are highlighted in the Annenberg-National Geographic exhibit. Israel has a firm commitment to delivering international aid and support around the world in the areas of poverty reduction, sustainable development, disaster recovery and access to basic resources such as water. We offer not only our technology and know-how but more importantly the dedication of our people to deliver on these promises.

“It is my sincere hope that the parties involved in this unfortunate exhibit will find a way to correct this egregious error and restore dignity and respect to the mission of honest, open, and sincere discussion of the important issues that face our global society today….

 The hosts of this exhibit can be contacted at:

Annenberg Foundation:

Camille Lowry

Communications Department

clowry@annenbergfoundation.org

310-209-4568

National Geographic:

Beth Foster

Communications Department

befoster@ngs.org

202-857-7543

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Preceding provided by Israel’s Consulate General in Los Angeles

Philanthropists urged to utilize community teamwork

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

SAN DIEGO (Press Release)The Jewish Community Foundation (JCF) and San Diego Grantmakers co-hosted a special philanthropic education event featuring distinguished speaker and author Dr. Jeffrey Solomon on April 15.The event attracted more than 95 attendees.

JCF Board Chair Murray Galinson who also serves on the San Diego Grantmakers Board welcomed guests to the event.

“Jeff’s insights on philanthropy help all of us implement our grant-making in a more purposeful, and meaningful way,” said Galinson. “His pearls of wisdom educate donors on how to help the community with maximum impact.”

Solomon, co-author with Charles Bronfman of the newly-published The Art of Giving: Where the Soul Meets a Business Plan and president of the Andrea and Charles Bronfman Philanthropies, took part in an armchair conversation with Marjory Kaplan, JCF president and chief executive officer and holder of the Miriam and Jerome Katzin Presidential Chair. Their conversation focused on how donors can expand their philanthropic impact.

Most recently, The Art of Giving received the Axiom Business Book Award gold medal in philanthropy for being one of the best business books of the year. Solomon will attend the awards ceremony during Book Week in May. 

“Giving with a purpose is a sacred challenge. Don’t go it alone!” said Solomon. “Use the resources of your community, such as the Jewish Community Foundation and San Diego Grantmakers to add meaning, structure and impact to grant-making.”
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Preceding provided by Jewish Community Foundation of San Diego

SDJA presents Irish Catholic-born Orthodox Jewish star of ‘Circumcise Me’

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

SAN DIEGO (Press Release) – On Sunday, May 23rd, San Diego Jewish Academy (SDJA) will celebrate its 30th anniversary with An Evening of Comedy featuring a performance by comedian Yisrael Campbell fresh from his hit off-Broadway show, Circumcise Me.

All proceeds from the event benefit the Every Child Campaign, which helps SDJA provide its students with exceptional faculty, outstanding programs and tuition assistance. 
 

Born Christopher Campbell and raised Irish Catholic, he later moved to Jerusalem, converted to Orthodox Judaism and changed his name to “Yisrael.” Campbell is known for his humorous social commentary and attracts fans from around the world. “These Payos are just the beginning of a comb-over,” joked Campbell in his show.
 

An Evening of Comedy is open to the public and will be held in the SDJA gym. Tickets start at $100 and discounts are available for multiple tickets. The evening will also feature an elaborate dessert bar and a mini-auction featuring a Chargers’ jersey signed by Drew Brees.

To purchase tickets for An Evening of Comedy or for more information, visit www.supportsdja.com or contact Deena Libman at 858-704-3712 or dlibman@sdja.com.

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Preceding provided by San Diego Jewish Academy

Lebanese government conspiring with Hezbollah to arm against Israel

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

By Shoshana Bryen

Shoshana Bryen

WASHINGTON, D.C. — It could not have been more explicit. 
 
Standing next to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Washington, Israel’s Defense Minister Ehud Barak said if the situation in Lebanon flares into warfare as it did in 2006, Israel would not just blame Hezbollah.

“The main responsibility lies with the Lebanese government.  We make it clear once and again that we see the government of Lebanon and behind it the government of Syria responsible for what happens now in Lebanon. And the government of Lebanon will be the one to be held accountable if it deteriorates.”
 
In Israel, BG Yossi Beidatz of Israeli Military Intelligence was equally clear in his presentation to the Knesset Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee. “Weapons are transferred to Hezbollah on a regular basis and this transfer is organized by the Syrian and Iranian regimes. Therefore, it should not be called smuggling of arms to Lebanon – it is organized and official transfer.”
 
But Secretary Clinton, in her remarks to the AJC, maintained the fiction that the Lebanese government is not a party to the conflict in its own country:

“We have spoken out forcefully about the grave dangers of Syria’s transfer of weapons to Hezbollah.  We condemn this in the strongest possible terms and have expressed our concerns directly to the Syrian government… Transferring weapons to these terrorists – especially longer-range missiles – would pose a serious threat to the security of Israel. It would have a profoundly destabilizing effect on the region. All states must stop supplying weapons to terrorist groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas. Every rocket smuggled into southern Lebanon or Gaza sets back the cause of peace.
 
“The cause of peace” is a relative term.  There are those for whom the removal of Israel from the region would engender “peace.”  Hezbollah is one of them, taking arms, funding and training from Syria and Iran in pursuit of its goal.  It is also an indigenous Lebanese organization that serves in the Cabinet of pro-Western PM Sa’ad Hariri.  It is that Cabinet which authorized Hezbollah to maintain an independent army in the country. Which, to close the circle, means that Hezbollah weapons – whether in the north or in the south – are part of the Lebanese Government’s responsibility.
 
JINSA’s 28th Flag and General Officers Program in Israel met with the UNIFIL liaison to the IDF earlier this month.  The Colonel, accompanied by a political officer, confirmed that understanding of the military situation in Southern Lebanon.  UNIFIL’s mandate under UNSCR 1701 is to ensure that no weapons are kept south of the Litani River except those of UNIFIL itself and those of the Lebanese Government; it has no mandate to stop smuggling from Syria. Claiming that UNIFIL patrols have found little in the way of Hezbollah armaments in the south, the Colonel said that any missiles in Lebanon would therefore be NORTH of the river – the problem of the Government of Lebanon, not UNIFIL.
 
Self-serving as that position is, it comports better with reality than the American position – which is that the Government of Lebanon is victimized by Hezbollah, and the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) should be supported, financed, armed and trained to assert itself in the south so it can disarm Hezbollah  in conjunction with UNIFIL.
 
In that belief, the US has provided the LAF with helicopters, anti-tank missiles and night vision goggles.

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Bryen is senior director of security policy of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.  Her column is sponsored by Waxie Sanitary Supply in memory of Morris Wax, longtime JINSA supporter and national board member.

Memories of a New York Times music critic

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

By David Amos

David Amos

SAN DIEGO–I read a book titled The Pleasure of Their Company, Reminiscence, by Howard Taubman. Mr. Taubman had a long and distinguished career (forty two years) with the New York Times, serving as reporter, music editor, chief music critic, drama critic, and critic at large. For a decade and a half after his retirement, he was a consultant to the Exxon Corporation, and was one of the creative minds behind the highly successful television series Great Performances.

This book is an interesting collection of many personalities which he met and befriended, as well as stories of his start as a writer and his involvement with the armed forces. His anecdotes on the giant figures in the performing arts of the Twentieth Century are both interesting and insightful. It makes not only for entertaining reading (perfect for those long plane flights and those dreadful waits at airports), but also gives us a fresh dimension into the public and private lives of people of whom you and I read about, but most probably never met.

There are stories about Casals, Bernstein, Shostakovitch, Alfred Lunt, Marian Anderson, Copland, Ingrid Bergman, Horowitz, Richard Burton, Oscar Levant, Menotti, Birgit Nilsson, Lawrence Olivier, Rachmaninoff, Hindemith, Jessye Norman, Samuel Barber, Stokowski, and many others. Here is a sampling of my favorite commentaries and anecdotes from this book:

–On Ernest Bloch: Bloch did not enjoy being called a Jewish composer, simply because he was of Jewish origin and wrote Schelomo, Three Jewish Poems, Baal Shem Suite, the Israel Symphony, a setting of the Sacred Service, and other pieces of Jewish inspiration. “I wrote a great deal that had no Jewish source”, he declared. “Must we look for roots in everything?”

–Diplomats, like nobility, sometimes behave as if the old attitude toward artists is still in effect; they are little more than servants to be patronized.

–At a time when conductor Serge Koussevitzky was the director of the Boston Symphony, there was some friction because the Orchestra was losing radio and recording engagements, and seeking an end to confrontation and turmoil, he urged a change of policy on the Orchestra’s trustees. When the members of the board refused, he reminded them that they were not the Boston Symphony. “We the musicians are the orchestra,” he admonished the trustees. “Without you, we are still an orchestra, but without us, what are you?”

–Arturo Toscanini functioned as a conductor until he was eighty six. His final concert with the NBC Symphony was for him a tragic one. He knew that it would be followed by the dissolution of the orchestra, and he was distressed. I attended the last rehearsal for this concert in Studio 8H in Radio City. After the last downbeat he stood on the podium like a person in mourning. The baton dropped from his hand. No one on the orchestra moved to pick it up. Jimmy Dolan, the orchestra’s librarian, recovered and kept it when Toscanini used another one for the final concert. Dolan presented the fallen baton to me. In a simple frame, it hangs in my home.

–On music drama and criticism: I recall that Archibald MacLeish, poet and playwright, once turned to me and asked, “What can we do to improve criticism”? My answer, “You must educate publishers and chief editors about the importance of the arts, so that they will look seriously for people who can bring knowledge and sympathy to the task”.

–On artists’ ability to accept criticism, and the enormous influence which reviews in the New York Times had: It can not be easy to be subjected to judgments that differ from one’s own, and that can have so profound an effect on one’s career.

–Artur Rubinstein enjoyed recalling a time when he was assailed by a stubborn case of hoarseness. The press was full of perils of smoking. Must he give up Havana cigars? The prudent thing to do was to consult a throat specialist, who examined him for thirty minutes. “I searched his face for a clue”, Rubinstein recalled. “It was expressionless. He told me to come back the next day. I didn’t sleep that night.” The next day, another long examination, and again an ominous silence. “Tell me”, Rubinstein exclaimed. “I can stand the truth. I’ve lived a full, rich life. What is wrong with me?” The physician looked at him coldly and said, “You talk too much!”

–George Szell had the reputation of being the most arrogant of conductors. Certainly, he was one of the most arrogant, but he had a lot to be arrogant about. He turned the Cleveland Orchestra into one of the best in the world. It has been argued that conductors who have been pianists as Szell had do not equal those who have been string players in the subtleties they achieve with an orchestra. Having heard the Cleveland under Szell, I have my doubts. But I have none about his conviction that he was always right.

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An extra treat in The Pleasure of Their Company is the generous amount of photographs which were taken from the New York Times archives, and Taubman’s personal albums. The book is published by Amadeus Press, Portland, Oregon.

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Amos is conductor of the Tifereth Israel Community Orchestra and has guest conducted professional orchestras around the world.

San Diego County’s Historic Places: Bancroft Ranch House

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

Bancroft Adobe, Spring Valley

By Donald H. Harrison

Donald H. Harrison

SPRING VALLEY, California—Speculation was propular from the 17th through 19th centuries that Native Americans might have been descended from the Lost Tribes of Israel. In this community off State Route 94, there once lived a famous historian who was among those who investigated the Lost Tribe theory and then dismissed it as being fanciful.

He was Hubert Howe Bancroft, who is perhaps best known as the namesake for the Bancroft Library at the University of California Berkeley. For a good portion of his life, Bancroft was a book seller in San Francisco and a collector of historical and ethnographic materials. He became a publisher and eventually compiled histories of most of the western states, which today are collector’s items.

Approximately in 1885, shortly  after writing The Native Races , the first of his 39 history works, Bancroft purchased an adobe home from Rufus K. Porter near the spring that gave Spring Valley its name. Today the Bancroft Ranch House is both a state and national historic landmark.

A lover of the Bible since he was three years old, Bancroft purchased enough additional properties to assemble more than 500 acres of farm land, on which he planted date palms, olive trees as well as non-biblical crops. While California historians would believe that he wrote some of his histories while staying in Spring Valley, this is not for certain. Other historians say it is possible that this was the place Howe came to vacation from his writing, or at least to consign it to his subconscious.

In his book on Native Americans, Bancroft examined the Lost Tribe of Israel thesis, one toward which it might have been more difficult for him than other historians to maintain an attitude of strict neutrality. His father, a minister, had been one of the persons who had helped to popularize the theory in Ohio, where he said he had discovered a tombstone with ancient writing that appeared to be the Hebrew of the 1st or 2nd century CE.

In the 1989 book Menasseh Ben Israel and His World published by E.J. Brill, A chapter by Richard H. Popkin on the “Rise and Fall of the Jewish Indian Theory,” explained why Christian theologians, in particular, were so intrigued with the idea of Native Americans being descended from the Lost Tribes.

If the ancestors of Native Americans indeed were the Lost Tribes of Israel then 1) it was evidence of the biblical concept that all mankind was related to Adam and Eve, or at least to Noah and the other seven human survivors of the Flood. On the other hand, if they were not members of the Lost Tribes, it might be evidence of a theory that directly contradicted the Bible—that humans sprung up independently all over the globe.

Additionally Christians theorized that if Native Americans were indeed descended from Jews, their conversion to Christianity might represent a fulfillment of prophecy, particularly if these converts could be persuaded to move to Jerusalem and thereby pave the way for what Christians believed would be the second coming of the Messiah.

Not everyone was pleased by  such ideas, according to Popkin’s article. Those who wanted to take the lands of Native Americans away preferred the theories of Samuel Morton of Philadelphia, who measured skulls of members of different races and “fudged his data” to prove there were differences in the brain capacities of Asians, African-Americans, Native Americans and Caucasians. His conclusion that there was thus no common ancestry among the races provided “evidence” to support the contention that the other races were inferior to Caucasians, and they were not therefore entitled to any familial consideration.

Among those who embraced Morton’s theories was the scientist Louis Agassiz, who visited Spring Valley during the time that the adobe was owned by Rufus K.Porter.

It was not unnatural that Agassiz would come visiting: Porter’s father, Rufus Porter (whose name was without the middle initial K), was the founder of the magazine Scientific American. While Agassiz was in San Diego County, he found European brown snails (Helix Aspersa) living in the nearby hills. Later Porter named one of the peaks which dominates modern day La Mesa as “Mount Helix” after Agassiz’s discovery.

In his interesting chapter, Popkin writes: “The important American historian, Hubert Howe Bancroft, in his history of the native races of America, presented a chapter on the origins of the Indians, setting out the prevailing theories. The Jewish Indian theory was taken up and disowned by Bancroft but it was described as having strong evidence in its favor. The evidence consisted of the phylacteries (found in 1820 in an Indian burial ground) and the tomb… Bancroft’s father deposited in the local historical society from whence it seems to have disappeared.”

Beautifully bound leather volumes of Bancroft’s historical works are kept at the adobe, which is both the home of the Spring Valley Historical Society and for 30 years the pride of Jim Van Meter, an architectural designer and draftsman, who has served as the property’s caretaker and guide in exchange for the right to live in a nearby dwelling on the property.

I toured through the original two rooms of the adobe, as well as some rooms that were later added on, saw the historical society’s crowded library, and then visited the adjacent palm-studded lot where one can find the nests of numerous trap-door spiders and the small water seep indicating an underground spring. This is one of the greener places in San Diego’s arid climate.

Van Meter said  that before Porter had owned the property, it was owned by Augustus Ensworth, an attorney who actually had built the adobe back in the 1850s. As the author of Louis Rose: San Diego’s First Jewish Settler and Entrepreneur, I recognized that Ensworth had handled some minor legal matters for Rose (attempting to collect debts for him) and also had complained in a letter during the 1860s to a general store business partner about how difficult it was for Gentile merchants to sell anything to the townspeople. This was because so many of the townspeople owed money to the Jewish merchants in San Diego, debts which they said they couldn’t pay. If the same customers were spotted going into the cash-only stores owned by Gentiles, the Jewish merchants might sue the customers for payment of back debts.

Prior to Ensworth, the land had been granted to the family of Santiago Arguello during San Diego’s Mexican period.  Arguello had served in 1830 as alcalde or mayor of San Diego, and he and his wife, Pilar, had 22 children.

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Harrison is editor of San Diego Jewish World. This article appeared previously on examiner.com

Jewish License Plate~Ima2Jen

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

Jen's mother

SAN DIEGO–Melanie Rubin continues her observant ways, spotting this plate meaning “mother to Jen.”  Previously, she found Aba2Jen, so clearly Jen has very proud parents.  Images of both license plates can be found in our online collection.

‘Souls on Fire’ ignited appreciation for music and dance of Spain

May 6, 2010 Leave a comment

 By Eileen Wingard

SAN DIEGO–The line outside Smith Recital Hall, on the SDSU campus, curled across the quad as students and adults from the community waited to get in to hear  “Souls On Fire: Music of Spain’s Golden Age.”

Twenty minutes after the scheduled curtain time, with extra chairs up front and every seat in the house accounted for, the April 13th program began.

Yale Strom, in red shirt and hat and Elizabeth Schwartz, wearing a red gown, flanked the other dark-clad musicians, Jeff Pekarek, contrabass, Adam del Monte, flamenco guitar, Jesus Montoya, flamenco vocals and Marco Emtesali, percussion. Lakshmi Basile, flamenco dancer, accompanied by del Monte’s exquisite guitar playing , Montoy’s exclamatory singing and ‘Emtasali’s drumming was an electrifying  presence who mesmerized her audience. With several costume changes, she added color and variety to the show. Basile’s rapid footwork and undulating shoulder movements truly portrayed a soul on fire.

Schwartz’s singing in Ladino brought contrast to the program which gave examples of Flamenco, Ladino and Jewish music, including one of Strom’s  original works in Ladino style. 

The program opened with an extensive solo by guitarist del Monte who has done extensive research to confirm counter- influences between Flamenco and Ladino music. It closed with Lakshmi Basile, dressed in pants, doing her final virtuosic movements. This talented young woman grew up in San Diego. She is the daughter of contrabass player, Jeff Pekarek. Basile studied with Antonio Vargas while a student at UCSB, then traveled to Spain for serious work with famous teachers. She continues to dance in Spain and the U.S. 

Strom, artist in residence in SDSU’s Judaic Studies program, continues to bring outstanding programs to the community. He and his band will soon be heard as part of the Lipinsky Jewish Arts Festival at the Lyceum Theater.

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Wingard, a retired symphony violinist, is a freelance writer based in San Diego.

UCSD Student Senate rejects Israel divestment second time

May 6, 2010 3 comments
 

Roz Rothstein

By Roz Rothstein

SAN DIEGO–“How dare you silence us? Free, free Palestine!  From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!” shouted the UC San Diego [UCSD] divestment crowd as they stormed out of the student senate tonight, May 5, after their divestment bill was rejected yet again.

About 100 people attended Wedneday’s meeting, and around 30 people spoke for or against the proposal.

When they first introduced the divestment measure at last week’s student senate meeting, a marathon debate ensued.  The resolution was dramatically amended and then sent to a committee composed of an equal number of proponents and opponents of the measure.  They were tasked with finding a compromise resolution.  That effort failed, and there was more debate on Wednesday night.
 
When pro-Israel students presented their views, the divestment group often snickered.  One pro-Israel student said that “Our side was targeted, and we were defamed by the pro-divestment side.  They were aggressive.  It was tough to be in that room tonight.”
 
The pro-Israel students wore UCSD shirts and held signs that read, “Divestment Divides our Campus.”  Adam Teitelbaum, a UCSD student, told me that “The pro-Israel students at UCSD stood strong tonight.”
 
After the senate heard all the statements, it voted to leave the divestment resolution in committee and to table it indefinitely.
 
The pro-Israel students are concerned because the senate is meeting again next week, and the divestment camp could come up with a new surprise to try once again to get some form of divestment passed.
 
But as of Wednesday night, divestment was rejected once again.

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Rothstein is CEO of StandWithUs, a nine year-old, international, non-profit Israel education organization that ensures that Israel’s side of the story is told on campuses and in other venues.

 
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