Archive for July 1st, 2009

Rome gives honorary citizenship to seized Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit

July 1, 2009

ROME (AP) – Rome has given honorary citizenship to an Israeli soldier kidnapped by militants linked to Gaza’s militant Islamic Hamas group three years ago.

Sgt. Gilad Schalit’s father, Noam Schalit received the honor at a city hall ceremony Wednesday.

A giant photo of the soldier hung in the piazza, with the words “Rome wants its citizen Gilad Schalit free” – words Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno repeated at the evening ceremony.

The city council voted to give Schalit honorary citizenship to coincide with Thursday’s third anniversary of his capture by militants in a cross-border raid from Gaza into Israel.

Talks to trade Schalit for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in Israel have been unsuccessful.

Missouri road renamed to “Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel Memorial Highway.”

July 1, 2009

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) A Missouri road adopted by a neo-Nazi group under the state’s litter cleanup program has been renamed for a rabbi who narrowly escaped Nazi Germany in World War II.

Gov. Jay Nixon on Wednesday signed a bill naming the half-mile stretch of U.S. 160 in Springfield the “Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel Memorial Highway.”

But Heschel’s daughter says her late father wouldn’t have felt honored by the move. Susannah Heschel, a professor of Jewish history at Dartmouth College, also said she’s worried future generations will think her father condoned Nazi beliefs.

A leader of the Springfield Unit of the National Socialist Movement said Wednesday that renaming the highway “is silly” and shouldn’t have been done.

GOP loses last Jewish senator with Coleman loss

July 1, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) The defeat of incumbent Norm Coleman in the drawn-out Minnesota Senate race leaves Republicans without a Jewish senator for the first time in half a century.

Coleman’s departure comes two months after the GOP’s other Jewish member, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, switched parties to become a Democrat. Coleman conceded his long-contested race with Democratic challenger Al Franken Tuesday after the Minnesota Supreme Court rejected Coleman’s legal challenge.

Republicans have had at least one Jewish senator since New York’s Jacob Javits took office in 1957, reaching a peak of three during the mid-1980s.

In the House, Eric Cantor of Virginia has risen quickly since he took office in 2001 to become the minority whip, the second-ranked House Republican. His other distinction is that, since 2003, he is the only Jewish Republican in the 435-member body. That’s down from eight Jewish GOP members who served in the House during the 1990s.

The National Jewish Democratic Council lists 30 Jewish Democrats now serving in the House. The Senate will have 13 Jewish members as of next week when Franken, Coleman’s rival in Minnesota, is sworn in. That’s 11 Democrats and two independents who normally vote with the Democrats.

Ira Forman, CEO of the National Jewish Democratic Council, said the sharp drop in the number of Jewish Republicans in Congress paralleled the party’s shift to the right. “It’s a reflection of where the Republican Party has gone,” he said. “It’s left the Jewish community pretty cold.”

Matt Brooks, executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, said his group was not happy with the defeat of Coleman, who has worked with them as a consultant. But he disagreed with those who say the Republican Jewish movement is declining, saying “you will see and are seeing Jewish Republicans winning elections all across the country” at the state and local level.

Census lists 3 Orange County villages among top 10 fastest-growing Kiryas Joel, Montgomery, Maybrook

July 1, 2009

A trio of Orange County villages are among the fastest-growing small localities in the state.

According to figures being released Wednesday by the U.S. Census Bureau, the Village of Kiryas Joel’s population increase since 2000 made it the third-fastest-growing in the state.

Montgomery ranked fifth and Maybrook seventh.

FASTEST-GROWING NY VILLAGES: top 10

1. Brookville, 3,874, up 82 percent

2. West Hampton Dunes, up 73 percent

3. Kiryas Joel, population 21,793, up 66 percent

4. New Square, population 6,461, up 40 percent

5. Montgomery, population 4,741, up 30 percent

6. Kaser, population 4,315, up 30 percent

7. Maybrook, population 4,006, up 30 percent

8. Old Westbury, population 5,283, up 25 percent

9. Port Washington North, population 3,327, up 23 percent

10. North Haven, population 914, up 23 percent

Source: U.S. Census Bureau estimates from 2000-08.

From 2000 to 2008:

  • Kiryas Joel grew from 13,138 residents to 21,793 — an increase of 66 percent.
  • Montgomery grew from 3,636 to 4,741 — an increase of 30 percent.
  • Maybrook grew from 3,084 to 4,006 — an increase of 30 percent.

    “The village is a pretty popular place,” Montgomery Mayor Steve Brescia said, citing its reputation as an eating and antiquing mecca. “It’s one of the nicest places in Orange County.”

    When Brescia became mayor 20 years ago, the population was about 2,500 and it’s been growing steadily ever since, adding 100 to 200 residents every year.

    But, he said, the growth hasn’t taxed municipal services because many developments have been built with private roads and many of the new residents are senior citizens.

    Maybrook Mayor Dennis Leahy said the growth there has been so gradual that he’s barely noticed it. Although the population has leveled recently, it’s poised to shoot up again. There are about 250 housing units awaiting approval from the village Planning Board, including 136 units for seniors.

    “Developers want to build here, which is beyond my comprehension considering the way the economy is going,” he said, “but it’s good that people are hopeful.”

    Other fast-growing spots in the state are Brookville, in Nassau County, and New Square in Rockland.

    Nationwide, the fastest-growing city in the country is New Orleans, which grew more than 8 percent in the past year as it approaches its pre-Katrina population.

    The numbers being released are estimates. The Census Bureau will get a more exact count next year with the decennial census.

  • http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090701/NEWS/907010354/-1/NEWSLETTER100

  • Queens – Judge: Meal Mart Kosher Meat Processing Plant Union Elections Illegal New Elections Should Be Scheduled

    July 1, 2009

    IDF robots to spray tear gas at suspects and paralyze them prior to arrest

    July 1, 2009

    The robotics department at the IDF’s Ordnance Corps has recently developed a
    prototype robot that can spray tear gas and allow troops to “paralyze”
    suspects during raids.

    Over the years the robotics department has become a kind of a “hospital” for
    the robots that are being used by the army’s elite units during operational
    activity and while tracing explosive devices and searching buildings that
    are deemed dangerous.

    “We get the robots, treat and repair them and send them beck to their
    units,” explained Sergeant Major Roee Arbalani, head of the robotics team.

    The team, which is constantly working to upgrade the robots, recently
    decided to equip them with a remote controlled arm that can spray tear gas.
    “This is a request that came from the troops. We planned and designed it,
    consulted experts and built a prototype that will soon be installed on all
    the robots,” said Arbalani.

    The innovation is meant to improve the forces’ ability to operate in
    populated areas, especially during searches for suspects. The IDF stressed
    that the new technology will not be effective as means for dispersing riots.

    www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3739422,00.html

    20 Israeli Hotels Appeal to Religious Guests, Sign Modesty Code; No TV, Internet only if couple, separate beds

    July 1, 2009

    (IsraelNN.com) A month after the Committee for the Character of the Jewish People was created by senior haredi-religious rabbis to establish a list of modest vacation spots, 20 hotels in Israel have committed to accommodating the group’s directives. The new modesty standards include having televisions locked away in the closet, internet connections only being offered to married couples, an option to separate the beds, and agreeing to act according to the instructions of current rabbinical religious authorities.

    Five of the hotels agreed to maintain the standards all year long, while the other 15 hotels committed to institute the during busy times for haredi-religious guests. All 20 hotels have agreed that their failure to maintain the standards will result in the public being notified that they are no longer authorized by the committee.

    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/167334

    US Airways Exclaims ‘Bilui Naim!’ as It Debuts Philadelphia – Tel Aviv Service

    July 1, 2009

    New, Daily Nonstop is US Airways’ First-Ever Service to the Middle East
    PHILADELPHIA–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Jul. 1, 2009–
    US Airways (NYSE:LCC) debuts new, daily nonstop flying to Tel Aviv from
    its international gateway at Philadelphia International Airport today,
    linking the two sister cities and bolstering travel options between
    Israel and the United States.

    Senior Vice President, East Coast, International and Cargo Operations
    Suzanne Boda said, “Tel Aviv is an extremely exciting component of our
    trans-Atlantic portfolio and we’re pleased by the strong bookings our
    newest route is seeing. We look forward to offering this service and
    greatly appreciate the partnership of the Philadelphia Division of
    Aviation.”

    New Airbus A330-200 aircraft with seating for 20 in Envoy—US Airways’
    trans-Atlantic business class—and 238 in the main cabin will operate the
    year-round flying. The route will also be the longest in the US Airways
    system at more than 5,700 miles. Schedule detail is as follows:

    Routing Flight Frequency Departure Arrival Start Date

    Philadelphia – Tel Aviv US796 Daily 9:15 p.m. 3:30 p.m. next day July 1, 2009

    Tel Aviv – Philadelphia US797 Daily 11:15 p.m. 5:10 a.m. next day July 2, 2009

    Tel Aviv is the third of three new trans-Atlantic routes from
    Philadelphia in 2009. Birmingham, U.K. and Oslo, Norway offerings began
    in May.

    US Airways was America’s number one on-time airline in 2008 among the
    “Big Six” hub-and-spoke airlines according to the U.S. Department of
    Transportation’s (DOT) monthly Air Travel Consumer Report. US Airways,
    along with US Airways Shuttle and US Airways Express, operates
    approximately 3,200 flights per day and serves more than 200 communities
    in the U.S., Canada, Europe, the Caribbean and Latin America. The
    airline employs more than 33,000 aviation professionals worldwide and is
    a member of the Star Alliance network, which offers our customers more
    than 16,500 daily flights to 912 destinations in 159 countries
    worldwide. And for the eleventh consecutive year, the airline received a
    Diamond Award for maintenance training excellence from the Federal
    Aviation Administration (FAA) for its Charlotte, North Carolina hub line
    maintenance facility. For more company information, visit usairways.com.
    (LCCG)

    Updated: London Shomrim arrive first at mystery blast, Jewish owner is of UK’s richest

    July 1, 2009

    Man injured after mystery blast destroys flat

    An explosion has ripped through a second floor flat in north London.

    Firefighters rushed to the blast at 2.15am this morning and rescued a man who was taken to hospital suffering from burns.

    Residents from surrounding properties were evacuated.

    Blast: The force of the explosion tore the front wall off the offices in Bell Lane, Hendon, this morning

    Blast: The force of the explosion tore the front off the property in Bell Lane, Hendon, this morning

    Concern: Property tycoon Leo Noe rushed to the scene

    Concern: Property tycoon Leo Noe rushed to the scene

    The explosion also caused damage to a shop underneath the flat, which is owned by a company belonging to Jewish multimillionaire Leo Noe. 

    Mr Noe, who is worth £600m, was also notified and arrived at the property in Bell Lane, Hendon, shortly afterwards. 

    Members of the voluntary Jewish North West Community Patrol who, had been patrolling the surrounding area, were first on the scene.

    Mr Noe, who was at a family wedding last night, was brought to the site in a Bentley.

    The 55-year-old, who is ranked 70th in the 2009 Sunday Times rich list, is known for his shrewd reading of the property market.

    A spokesman for the tycoon said: ‘Our only concern is for the man who has been injured.’

    The cause of the blast is under investigation and the area remains cordoned off.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1196709/Man-injured-mystery-blast-destroys-flat.html?ITO=1490

    Israeli Architect Invents Popular Sudoku Spin-Off

    July 1, 2009

    (IsraelNN.com) When you open the morning paper you may find that alongside the traditional crossword and Sudoku games, there is now a new, complex form of Sudoku called Tredoku.

    The 3-D game, which has recently taken off and is in syndication in newspapers around the world, was invented by Israeli architect Eyal Amitzur. What began as a design challenge for Amitzur is now an internationally popular game with its own Facebook group of more than 4,500 fans.

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    Amitzur, 33, explains that the appeal of Tredoku is that it takes the same rules as the addictive Sudoku, but with the additional challenge of playing within three-dimensional shapes, which forces the player to use different methods to win the game. It’s more fun, he points out, to play a game that doesn’t look the same all the time.

    “For me the visual side of a game is very important,” Amitzur tells ISRAEL21c. “While studying in Milan, I went to many art exhibitions and sat in bookstores for hours. M.C. Escher, the graphic artist with his impossible worlds has influenced the Tredoku design, as well as artist Bridget Riley of the Op-Art movement, who made amazing paintings that ‘pop out’ of the flat canvas.”

    An infinite number of 3-D shapes
    Two years ago, Amitzur was introduced to Sudoku. He quickly realized that he was finding the game monotonous because the design of the game doesn’t change. Designers like Escher inspired Amitzur to take the Sudoku template and play with the design. The result became Tredoku, a Sudoku-based game with an infinite number of possible 3-D shapes.

    Amitzur’s first big break came at the end of last year. He had been sending Tredoku to many newspapers, without success. But he had also been receiving encouraging feedback from mathematicians in Oxford, Harvard, and Stanford universities.

    It was The Times in Britain that first agreed to print a Tredoku game as a special Christmas feature last year. The game ended up being featured on the cover, and was a hit with the Times’ readership.

    “People sent emails to the newspaper that they really liked Tredoku,” Amitzur relates. One email said, “‘After three years of the same square, this is a really nice twist.’”

    Games that make you think
    Heeding the enthusiastic feedback, The Times took on Tredoku as a weekly feature. The game is now also in syndication in newspapers in Denmark, Australia, Chile, Belgium, and Italy.

    Amitzur describes how his architectural background came into play in the design process: “When you work in architecture, you have to show the building from many angles – you have to show it in a 3-D view. So my idea was to move Sudoku to an architectural place. I thought, instead of just showing the façade, let’s break it down and see what can be done with multiple angles. I started getting really interesting designs.”

    Amitzur’s ambition is that Tredoku will someday be as much a household name as Sudoku. “My company has all kinds of plans, but the basic idea is that we’d like Tredoku to be kind of a brother of Sudoku – the rules are the same as Sudoku but the designs keep changing, and it’s also an optical challenge. If enough people like it around the world, then we’ll be developing a game that will somehow be as widespread as Sudoku – in newspapers, magazines and cell phones.”

    But the main thing, Amitzur adds, is to never forget the purpose at the heart of designing games. “What’s most important to me is that my games make people think, and enjoy themselves.”

    Reprinted by permission of Israel21c.

    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/132157