June 2012

‘The Line,’ aka ‘El Primero,’ played with gusto but script is boring

  By Mimi Pollack SAN DIEGO — The Line  by Israel Horovitz is the longest-running play off-off Broadway, having made its debut in 1974. It has been seen in 25 countries and translated into 35 languages. One of those languages is Spanish and Teatro Punto y Coma recently presented it during the San Diego Repertory Theater’s 19th

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Jewish History, Mimi Pollack

Positions sadly get twisted in U.S. elections

By Isaac Yetiv, Ph.D. LA JOLLA, California — Two factors make these elections different from the past: the outrageous amounts of money spent on both sides, passing the billion mark, (and its corollary, the unending and repetitious campaign,) and the excessive use  of ad hominem attacks rather than a reasoned debate on the issues (and its corollary, a cynical demagoguery

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USA

Adventures in San Diego Jewish History, December 28, 1956, Part 2

Compiled by San Diego Jewish World staff Press Notes Southwestern Jewish Press, December 28, 1956, Page 3 Time Covers and Uncovers: Lanes and roads overgrown during years of disuse are once again open for men and women in pursuit of knowledge. Five years ago when the California Western University took over 117 acres of wooded

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Adventures in SD History, Jewish History

Why is the U.S. doing military exercises with Lebanon, Pakistan and Egypt?

By Shoshana Bryen WASHINGTON, D.C. — It can’t be said that the U.S. is doing nothing about Syria. The administration created the “Atrocities Prevention Board,” which failed the test at Houla. It is supporting the feckless Kofi Annan, who is adding to a resume that includes the genocide in Rwanda and massacres in Bosnia. It

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Middle East, Shoshana Bryen