June 20, 2008

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Vol. LXXXVII No. 41 Omaha, NE

Celebrating 87 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa

Jewish scouts tell harrowing experience in deadly tornado by GARY JAVITCH Special to the Jewish Press For two families in the Omaha Jewish community, it was every parent’s worse nightmare. Each had sent a 13-year old son to Boy Scout camp for a special week-long training program open only to the “best of the best” -- the elite scouts. Then came the news that a tornado had struck the Little Sioux Scout Camp and not only were there injuries, but the unthinkable had also occurred: there were fatalities. Of the 125 staff and campers, the tornado had taken four Lloyd Roitstein, executive director of the Boy Scouts of America Mid-America Council, left, addresses young lives and injured the media at the Blincoe Community Center about the events surrounding the June 12 tornado at the Credit: Josh White, Daily Nonpareil more than half of the Little Sioux Boy Scout Ranch. my head up. My glasses flew off. I saw branches flying people there, some still hospitalized at press time. around and a truck blown into the chimney, knocking it Just back from a hike “I felt like my ears had been torn off,” Zach Kahn said, down. It lasted for eight seconds and just ‘bam,’ it disdescribing the deafening roar of the tornado that struck appeared,” he concluded. At the worst of it, he wondered, “Am I going to die?” on Wednesday, June 11 at 6:35 p.m. Four scouts did die: Josh Fennen, 13; Sam Thomsen, “We had just gotten back from a hike. I noticed that the clouds were turning red and were coming our way. 13; and Ben Petrzilka, 14, all of Omaha. The fourth I heard the sirens. (As instructed) we ran for the troop killed when a cabin collapsed was Aaron Eilerts, 14, of shelter,” he told the Press. “When everyone was (safe) in Eagle Grove, IA. Zach sustained cuts on his left knee and right leg. He the shelter, our troop guide offered us a Monty Python movie. I had seen it before and it was pretty good. But also injured his back and was taken to Missouri Valley then suddenly a scout leader rushed in and told every- Hospital. Undeterred, aside from his bumps and bruises, he planned on attending a regularly scheduled scout meetone to ‘Get under the table.’” Zach paused, “Within seconds it hit! The wind pres- ing this week and soon will attend another scout camp. sure was trying to pull you up off the ground. It pulled Continued on page 2

Former Omahan gets personal with her satiric first book by LEO ADAM BIGA For a long time playwright/author Rachel Shukert saw herself not as a young literary lioness but as a sassy stage/screen actress for the X-Y-Z Generation. Picture a Jewish Marisa Tomei. Then reality hit. In New York the Omaha native grew disillusioned by the business of acting -- making the rounds, et cetera. Unable to find monologue material to suit her satiric bordering-on-absurdist tastes and suffering from anorexia, she turned inward, where she’s most comfortable anyway, and funneled her imagination into writing. The words poured out. Fast forward a few years later and the late-20-something is now enjoying her new status as a produced playwright, published journalist and acclaimed author. Her first book, the nonfiction Have You No Shame? And Other Regrettable Stories (Villard), is lauded for its collection of unsparing satire. Shukert will schlep through town for two book events: Thursday, June 26, 7:30 p.m. in the Kripke Jewish Federation Library at the JCC; and Saturday, June 28, 1 p.m. at The Bookworm in Countryside Village. Reinventing herself as a writer both liberated and test-

Inside

ed her. “I was having a hard time as an actor in New York,” she said by phone from the L.A. Book Fair. “I’m not particularly castable and I also really dislike the process and the dues you have to pay as an actor. All of the things actors have to do to get started I found completely anathema to my way of being. I’m a total narcissist, but I’m not a narcissist in the right way. She added, “I have a really hard time sending photographs of myself to people Rachel Shukert and constantly being up and being really hungry for roles I have absolutely no interest in. I hate going to the gym. I hate doing hair and teeth and skin. The actual day-to-day grind of being a professional actor did not sit very well with me.” Shukert, who enjoyed writing English themes at Central High and sporadic diary entries at home, thought like a writer before becoming one. Continued on page 5

This Week: More coverage of AIPAC: Pages 6-7

See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’ Opinion Page see page 12

Schreibman scholarship winners announced: Page 2

17 Sivan, 5768

June 20, 2008

Omaha loses a leader by JOAN K. MARCUS David Friedland, a man who always loved books, died June 11 at the age of 75. Services were held June 13 at Temple Israel for the former chairman of the board of United Distillers Products Company and active member of the Omaha Jewish community. Friedland came to Omaha from Chicago in 1962 when he married Omahan Nancy Blotcky. When the first board of directors for the “new” Jewish Community Center was formed, he was approached to serve on the committee. His expertise as a volunteer and a businessman led him to the presidenDavid Friedland cy of the Jewish Federation Foundation and an original member of its Board of Directors. He remained a member for many years. In 1991, United Distillers, a distributor of liquor since 1893, bought out the Ed Phillips and Sons Company of Omaha, a subsidiary of the Phillips Beverage Company of Minneapolis. After 115 years in the family, it was sold in February of this year to Republic National Distributing Co. and he became chairman of the board. He was active -- and well-liked -- in the liquor industry and served as president and a director of the Wine and Spirits Wholesalers of America, Inc. In 1986, Friedland was appointed, along with Phil Schrager, to lead the Pacesetters Division of the men’s campaign, comprised of donors who gave a donation of $5,000 or more to the campaign. In 1988, Friedland, then chairman of the Foundation, was part of group that approved a grant to assist recreuitment for Jewish community teachers in Omaha. The Bureau for Jewish Education hoped that this grant would help Omaha be competitive in the marketplace. Friedland said at the time the grant was only a temporary solution to a permanent problem because there was no guarantee the teachers would stay after they got here. He said, “Quality Jewish teachers have always been at the essence of Jewish life for centuries. Teachers are not only an influence in our schools but in the general community as well. They make an impact and we need them. I am confident that this community will continue to respond. This fund, to endow the community teachers program, will surely reap its own rewards.” Friedland lauded the Foundation because it was a small, cohesive board that worked well together. He was always known as a man who always worked well with others. He quickly became a “team member” for whatever cause he represented. In 1993, Friedland received the Endowment Achievement Award of the Council of Jewish Federations (today part of United Jewish Communities). That award is presented annually to those who have helped the growth of their Federation’s endowment funds through their leadership, vision and dedication. Norman Veitzer, then chairman of the Foundation, said, “David’s efforts on behalf of the endowment funds of the Foundation were particularly noteworthy. As a dedicated volunteer and community leader, he was not only a founding member of the Foundation’s Board of Trustees, but he found time to later serve as its chairman.” Friedland considered his greatest achievement, however, to be his involvement with the Kripke Jewish Federation Library. He, himself, was an avid reader and a collector of books, noting, “I’ve always loved libraries and enjoyed going to them. I can spend all day in a good library without any trouble at all.” He read extensively and believed that the Library was the largest collection of Judaica between Chicago and the West Coast. “Because of this library, there is a great Continued on page 15

Coming Next Week: Senior Living: June 27 Temple president raises building question at annual meeting: Page 3

Yachad campers appreciate teamwork, meet challenges: Page 9


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June 20, 2008 by Jewish Press - Issuu