Mary Phagan Autopsy, Conducted on Monday, May … – Leo Frank
DR. H.
Here's a look at what's happening this week in Cincinnati. Due to the surge in new COVID-19 cases and uncertainties surrounding events during the pandemic, be sure to double-check with venues before heading out. MUSIC: Danish String Quartet, 7:30 p.m., Memorial Hall, 1225 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine
Picture this: A woman, her hair covered with a scarf, watches as Jonathan Van Ness, the hair and makeup expert for Netflixs Queer Eye styles her sheitel.
Tractate of the Talmud about blessings and prayers, particularly the Shema and the Amidah Berakhot (Hebrew: , romanized:Brakhot, lit. "Blessings") is the first tractate of Seder Zeraim ("Order of Seeds") of the Mishnah and of the Talmud
Again in 2021, the United Nations General Assemblyoverwhelmingly passed 14 resolutionsaimed at criticizing Israel (and supporting the Palestinians). On every resolution, only a handful of countries (among them the USA, Canada, and a sprinkle of small Pacific island nations) stood with Israel.
Senior leaders of The Simon Wiesenthal Center together with communal and political leaders at the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County formally opened of the Courage to Remember exhibit, a new and critical tool to increase Holocaust education and combat antisemitism and hate in Nassau County schools and beyond. Courage to Remember is Simon Wiesenthal Centers 40-panel traveling exhibition on the Nazi Holocaust, which has been seen on six continents by millions of people and continues to be displayed in cities across the United States and across the globe. Today when Holocaust Denial is rampant and Memory itself is under assault it is critical that we deliver the lessons of the Holocaust to young people wherever they are, stated Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean & Director of Social Action Agenda, Simon Wiesenthal Center
Israels Religious Affairs Minister Matan Kahana is on a mission. A member of Prime Minister Naftali Bennetts Yamina party, Kahana has set out to break the Chief Rabbinates monopoly on conversion and kashrut
Some headlines from the last few months. March: the French government agrees to return a major landscape by Gustav Klimt to the heirs of Nora Stiasny, a Jewish woman from Vienna, forced to sell it before being sent to her death in 1942. June: the Royal Museums of Fine Arts in Brussels returns a still life by Lovis Corinth to the family of Gustav and Emma Mayer, Jewish refugees from Germany whose belongings were looted in Nazi-occupied Belgium
This year has been an exciting time for people who like trying new restaurants. Even as the industry has faced challenges such as rising prices and a labor shortage, an array of exciting new projects have opened since January.
After a flurry of activity this past summer as many pandemic-delayed restaurants finally got to open their doors, fall looks to be a little quieter on the restaurant-opening front. The slowdown is understandable, especially as the Delta variant has put a bit of a crimp on the industrys roaring return