Sponsored by the Benjamin and Anna E. Wiesman Family Endowment Fund AN AGENCY OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF OMAHA
Civil rights activist Lilly This Ledbetter to speak in Omaha Week July 6, 2012 16 Tammuz 5772 Vol. 92 | No. 41
by LIZZY GILBERT Corporate & Community Development, ADL Plains States Region For 10 years, Lilly Ledbetter fought to close the gap between women’s and men’s wages, sparring with the Supreme Court in a historic discrimination case against Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company. Ledbetter won a jury verdict of more than $3 million after having filed a gender pay discrimination suit in federal court, but the U.S. Supreme Court later overturned the lower court’s ruling. Despite her defeat, Ledbetter continued her fight in Congress. On Jan. 29, 2009, President Obama signed into law the first law of his administration: the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. On Tuesday July 10, Ledbetter will speak in Omaha at an event titled “How Federal Courts Impact Our Lives: One Woman’s Battle for Justice”. The Nebraska Coalition of Constitutional Values (NCCV) is hosting this event at 7 p.m. at the DC Center (11830 Stonegate Drive) where attendees can enjoy desserts, coffee, and learn about Ledbetter’s
Plus One showing in the JCC Gallery Pages 6
Beth El plans special Jews & Brews at JCC Pages 7
fight for equal pay. This event is open to the public with no charge to attend, however advance online registration is required at http://neappl.es/ledbetter. “The Nebraska Coalition for Constitutional Values is bringing Lilly Ledbetter to Omaha not only to speak about her personal story, but to show how decisions by the federal courts have a life-altering impact on our entire society,” said Carol Bloch, NCCV Co-Chair. NCCV is a coalition of diverse organizations that work together to educate the public and elected officials about the importance of the judges who sit on the bench of the federal courts. Currently, many states are experiencing judicial emergencies, meaning that there have not been enough federal judges confirmed by the Senate to fill open positions. Because U.S. District and Circuit Courts are not fully staffed,
Lilly Ledbetter justice is not being done and the American people are not being served. For this reason, thirteen organizations in Nebraska have come togeth-
er to form NCCV. Member organizations include: Anti-Defamation League – Plains States Region, American Association of University Women in Nebraska, American Civil Liberties Union – Nebraska, B’nai B’rith Henry Monsky Lodge-Omaha, Business and Professional Women in Nebraska, Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, Latino American Commission – Nebraska, League of Women Voters of Greater Omaha, National Council of Jewish Women, Omaha Section, Nebraska Appleseed Center for Law in the Public Interest, Nebraskans for Peace, Temple Israel Social Justice Committee, Omaha, and Northeast Nebraska Family Health Services. “When we think about our civil rights, we tend to consider only the laws passed through the legislative and executive branches of government. However, the judicial branch plays an equally influential role in determining some of our most vital freedoms,” said Alan Continued on page 2
The beautiful side of healing Schwalb Center sponsors UNO professors in Israel Shawarma and shenanigans mark Star Deli anniversary Page 11
Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam
This Month Legal Special See Front Page stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on Jewish Press
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by ANNETTE VAN DE KAMPWRIGHT Editor of the Jewish Press Omahan Mary Lou Walker has worked in the beauty industry for over 50 years. She started her career at Brandeis, retired and subsequently established Garbo’s Salons in 1988. The business is a family affair: daughter Roxanne Kahn and son David Walker are involved (daughter Denise lives in California and designed the salon at Regency); granddaughter Becky Kahn manages the salon at the Eagle Run location. Having so much family nearby has been a blessing, in more ways than one. In January of 2011, Mary Lou was diagnosed with early stage pancreatic cancer. “She felt something wasn’t right, and in having it detected so early, she was one of the lucky ones,” says daughter Roxanne. “She was able to have surgery, and she is now in remission. A difficult year and a half later, she is once again active, playing golf and traveling.”
The fact that Mary Lou is doing so well is quite miraculous. While she was battling through her chemo treatments, her husband of 57 years, Arthur Walker, passed away. “While she was fighting the can-
by DR. MOSHE GERSHOVICH One of the fruits of Partnership 2gether (Formally known as Partnership 2000) between regions in Israel, such as the Western Galilee, and American Jewish communities, such as Omaha, have been the strong academic ties
The purpose of the workshop was to link American and Israeli scholars with mutual scholarly and pedagogical interests in order to promote collaborative research projects that may yield publications. The 2012 workshop was the fourth one organized by WGC.
Mary Lou Walker cer, she had to simultaneously work on her emotional recovery,” Roxanne says. “Nothing about this was easy, and I don’t believe she could have done it without support from her family and support from the entire staff at Garbo’s. In addition, customers would ask how she was doing every day. It made a big difference.” A beauty salon is traditionally a place where one goes to be pampered, to feel beautiful, and to relax. In that sense, Garbo’s does its job well: satisfied customers abound, Continued on page 2
Group picture of all the participants in the WGC Workshop, taken at Rosh Hanikra on Israel’s border with Lebanon. The four UNO participants are standing on the right corner. between the Western Galilee College (WGC) in Akko and the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO), through its Natan and Hannah Schwalb Center for Israel and Jewish Studies. The latest chapter in this partnership has just been written with the participation of four UNO professors in the Fourth Bridges International Faculty Workshop, which took place between June 3-7 at WGC.
Three UNO faculty members had participated in the first workshop, in 2009, but UNO was not represented in the second and third, which had taken place in Akko and at Westminster College in Pennsylvania in 2010 and 2011, respectively. Sending a strong delegation to the fourth workshop was an important step in reaffirming the Schwalb Center’s Continued on page 2