Chancellor Eisen Announces Initiative to                Broaden JTS Reach                  The                Jewish Theological Seminary is now a partner in the President's                Interfaith and Community Service Campus Challenge: Advancing                Interfaith Cooperation and Community Service, a program that                invites institutions of higher education to commit to a year of                interfaith cooperation and community service programming on                campus. The best examples of students coming together to help                those in need will be recognized by the White House in summer                2012. Justice                in the Sukkah: An Interfaith Exploration of Food and Social Change                will be the first event of the initiative. It will take place at                JTS on October 16 from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Nathan Schumer (LC '09,                GS '09), Shuli Passow (RS '14), Yael Hammerman (RS '14), many                additional JTS students, and members of other faiths, community                organizations, and the government will discuss "food                justice"—tackling hunger by exploring its underlying political and                social issues—and how to get involved in food issues in the Harlem                community. Suggested donation for the evening—and a light dinner                in the JTS sukkah—is $10. Please email Shuli Passow at shpassow@jtsa.edu. Prospective Graduate Student Open House at                JTS                 Students                who want to learn about graduate study at one or more of JTS's                renowned graduate and professional schools—William Davidson                Graduate School of Jewish Education, The Rabbinical School, The                Graduate School, and the H. L. Miller Cantorial School and College                of Jewish Music—are welcome to join us for all or part of JTS's                annual Prospective Graduate Student Open House on Sunday and                Monday, October 16 and 17. Participants will have a chance to                study with JTS faculty and meet with current students and alumni.                JTS graduate-level classes are small and offer individualized                attention from world-class Jewish studies faculty, plus rigorous                encounters with Jewish texts in their original languages. Generous                merit- and need-based financial aid is available, as are                experienced career mentors. So take a day or two to learn why JTS                is a great fit for you, and invite other aspiring students you                know as well. See                the Prospective Graduate Student Open House schedule and                register.   Chancellor Launches Latest Phase of JTS Arts                Initiative Chancellor                Eisen has announced the next phase of the JTS Arts Initiative.                Called Ushpizin (guests), which builds on the tradition                of inviting biblical heroes and deceased relatives into the booths                built during the harvest celebration of Sukkot, the new JTS art                collection will feature works of art old and new: historical                pieces from The Library of The Jewish Theological Seminary and new                works created by current artists. The compilation will be on                display in the Brandt Family Sukkah during the holiday season, and                will be the basis of a new collection designed to spotlight the                essence of Judaism, Torah, and the history of the Jewish                people.                                 •                The JTS quadrangle is now populated by the three familiar sukkot                erected annually to celebrate the holiday. Although the deadline                for reserving space in the courtyard-level sukkot has passed, the                sukkah on the third-floor terrace, which is not weather-protected,                is first-come, first-served.   Library Book Talk with Dr. Eitan                Fishbane Dr.                Eitan Fishbane will speak about his book The                Sabbath Soul: Mystical Reflections on the Transformative Power of                Holy Time at a JTS Library Book Talk on October 24. The                book draws on the writings of mystical masters from the history of                Hasidism to convey an appreciation of the specific rituals of the                Sabbath and the ways they transform awareness on the seventh day.                The Sabbath Soul is one of two books by Dr. Fishbane                published in the past two weeks. The other is Shadows                in Winter: A Memoir of Love and Loss, a memoir of grief                and parenthood in the wake of his wife's death. The Library Book                Talk will take place at 7:30 p.m. in Kripke 406. Admission is                free, but reservations and a photo ID are required. RSVP to Hector                Guzman at heguzman@jtsa.edu. New Milstein Center Celebrates Its Founding and Its                First Academic Event                 JTS Convocation to Honor Members of the                Rabbinical Assembly On November 1, The Jewish Theological Seminary will award                honorary doctorates to 42 rabbis who have served the Jewish                community with distinction for a quarter century or more at a                Convocation being held in tribute to members of the Rabbinical                Assembly (RA). JTS Board Chair Abby Joseph Cohen will preside at                the event.                 What's Happening at JTS and in Your                Community On                Thursday, October 6, the H.                L. Miller Cantorial School choir, under the direction of                Hazzan David Tilman, provided the moving musical interlude at one                of the New York City stops on the "Jewish Chaplain's Monument                Tour: Honoring the Memory of 14 Jewish Chaplains Who Died While on                Active Duty" held at the Center for                  Making News: In Print and Online                 Missed                an edition of Happenings? You can visit www.jtsa.edu/News/Happenings.xml                to browse the archive and get caught up. You can now receive JTS                Torah commentary automatically, as soon as it's posted online,                through RSS feeds such as Live Bookmarks or Google, by signing up                at http://www.jtsa.edu/x15092.xml. Admissions and Recruitment                Highlights                  Once                a month, the admissions offices let you know what's happening in                the admissions and enrollment world at JTS. Keep up to date with                JTS admissions—learn about upcoming events and important                deadlines, and read profiles of the next generations of Jewish                leaders, the students of JTS. Join our distribution list by                clicking getadmissionshighlights@jtsa.edu                and sending the blank email—you don't need to include any                text or a subject.   October                11, 2011 / 13 Tishrei 5772 Do                      you know someone who might be interested in receiving this                      newsletter? Your                      gift will make it possible for JTS to fulfill its mission of                      educating the best and brightest students. 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   From: news@jtsa.edu
To: alanjayg46@aol.com
Sent: 10/11/2011 6:45:23 P.M.    Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Happenings at JTS          
                                             
                                                                           
                    
                                        
                                                      
Rabbi Marc Wolf Appointed Vice                Chancellor of External Affairs                 
JTS Chancellor                Arnold M. Eisen has announced a personnel change designed to                help JTS achieve the significant broadening of its work outside                the walls of 3080 Broadway that is called for in the JTS Strategic                Plan adopted in spring 2010:
"We want to reach new                audiences—Jewish and Gentile, Conservative and others—with a new                set of courses, programs, initiatives, and ideas. Some of these                programs will be offered on a fee-for-service basis. All will                greatly increase the visibility of JTS and widen the circle of our                supporters.
"To best take advantage of                these opportunities, I am creating a new senior level position,                Vice Chancellor for External Affairs, and have asked Rabbi                Marc Wolf to assume it. When Marc took the helm in Development                three years ago, it was our intention that he remain in that                position for a transitional period and then move on to a wider set                of roles that draw more fully on his expertise, experience, and                relationships. The time for that move has arrived, following on                the heels of last year's development campaign in which giving to                JTS increased by 8 percent and many new donors joined the ranks of                our supporters. Marc has long been involved closely with JTS—first                as a student here, then as a proud alumnus, and, most recently, as                one of the leaders of the institution. His record, aptitude, and                interest in advancing programmatic aspects of JTS in the areas of                public and continuing education will serve him and JTS well as he                seeks to bring JTS resources to bear in partnership with the                Conservative Movement, the Jewish community, and our society at                large.
"A search is now underway to find a successor to                Marc, who will continue to serve as Head of Development until his                successor is appointed and only then will assume his new role.                Please join me in congratulating Marc on the responsibilities that                await him—and join me, too, in helping JTS make this coming year's                campaign the most successful ever."
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JTS Joins White House Interfaith Program on                Student/Community Dialogue
JTS, Chancellor Arnold M. Eisen, and Dr.                Burton L. Visotzky—director of the Louis Finkelstein Institute                for Religious and Social Studies, director of the Milstein Center                for Interreligious Dialogue, and JTS's liaison to the president's                initiative—are joining several other partners in this                commitment:                 
               
The                "official" inaugural event of worship, work, and celebration will                be held on October 23 at St. Mary's Episcopal Church on 126th                Street in Manhattan. The day will begin at 10:00 a.m. with an                interfaith service, and be dedicated to clearing the garden at St.                Mary's and making way for the interfaith gardening project that                will be a focus of the initiative. A potluck meal will be served:                please contribute a dish if you can, and consider making it                vegetarian to accommodate various religious eating practices and                dietary considerations. For more information about the White House                initiative and this event, and to RSVP, contact Dr. Visotzky                at buvisotzky@jtsa.edu or (212)                678-8989.
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New Jewish                Art Collection Begins in the                Sukkah
Ushpizin was developed by the chancellor                and the JTS Arts Advisory Board, whose members include Provost Dr.                Alan Cooper, representatives of The Jewish Museum,                professionals from several artistic disciplines, arts                philanthropists, and collectors. "The ushpizin panels                that beautify this year's Brandt Family Sukkah," says Dr. Cooper,                "were created by artists at JTS under the supervision of JTS                Artist-in-Residence Tobi Kahn. Shirah Rubin, who received a                master's degree in Jewish Education from the William Davidson                Graduate School of Jewish Education in 2003 and whose support                helped make the display of these works possible, wishes to                dedicate it to the memory of her beloved mother, a teacher of art                who saw the creative process as a spiritual act and who sought to                inspire everyone to explore their creativity to the fullest."
The annual List College Alumni                Sukkah Dinner will celebrate the holiday on Monday, October 17, at                7:30 p.m. in the Brandt Family Sukkah at courtyard level. Free to                alumni and $18 for guests, List College alumni can click                here to RSVP.
• On this holiday of the harvest, alum                Heather G. Stoltz (GS '04) explores the stories of homeless New                Yorkers. She's created an 8' x 8' x 8' sukkah, the outside walls                of which display works of art created by children in family                shelters throughout the city; the inside walls are fiber-art                panels Stoltz created based on her conversations with homeless                individuals in faith-based shelters. The installation piece will                travel to churches and synagogues in Manhattan during November;                refer to the exhibitions section of www.sewingstories.com                for the schedule and see Stoltz's blog at the site for some of the                panels and student work.
• As the holiday month continues,                enjoy the annual Erev Shemini Atzeret Concert of Pizmon, a                JTS/Columbia/Barnard a cappella group, October 19 at 10 p.m. in                JTS's Feinberg Auditorium. Tickets are free and are available now                in the JTS Office of Student Life (Unterberg 209) and the Kraft                Center (606 W. 115th Street).
        
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JTS's new Milstein                Center for Interreligious Dialogue is cosponsoring a one-day                academic colloquium on "Oral Transmission of Sacred Texts in                Judaism and Islam." The host and partner for the Tuesday, October                25, event is Georgetown University's Center                for Christian-Muslim Understanding. JTS faculty members Rabbi                Burton L. Visotzky, Dr.                David Kraemer, and Dr. Neil Danzig will participate. The                Georgetown/JTS colloquium brings together scholars on orality in                each religious tradition to familiarize them with the scholarship                of one another's traditions and to open new vistas in scholarship                and comparative religious studies.
The Milstein Center's                own inaugural event is a luncheon on Monday, October 31, welcoming                His Eminence Kurt Cardinal Koch from the Vatican, where he is                president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity,                which includes the Pontifical Commission for Religious Relations                with the Jews. This is Cardinal Koch's first trip to New York City                in that capacity.
JTS announced the                founding of the Milstein Center in September. The center is funded                with a $2 million gift from New York philanthropist Howard                Milstein and the Paul Milstein family. The Milsteins have a long                history of engagement with JTS. Irma Milstein chaired The Davidson                School and served on the JTS Board of Trustees. The gift from her                family marks the second generation of relationship between the                Milsteins and JTS.
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Chancellor Arnold M. Eisen, who will deliver the                convocation address and confer the degrees, has noted                that the occasion will enable JTS's faculty, administration,                and Board of Trustees to express their collective esteem and                thanks to these rabbis—spiritual leaders and scholars—for their                more than 25 years of religious leadership in the cause of                Conservative Judaism and kelal Yisra'el. JTS will                celebrate their achievements and voice appreciation for their                devotion.
Rabbi Daniel S. Nevins, dean of                the Division of Religious Leadership and Pearl Resnick Dean of The                Rabbinical School at JTS, and Randie Malinsky, chair of the                Religious Leadership Advisory Board, will be the sponsors of the                honorees at the ceremony, and Rabbi Gilah Dror, president of the                RA, will deliver greetings on behalf of the RA. Those honored will                include congregational rabbis, Jewish communal professionals,                educators, and chaplains from the United States and                abroad.
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Jewish History. A memorial                plaque listing the fallen becomes a permanent installation later                in the month at Arlington National Cemetery. • JTS students and                alumni take note: If you are attending the Jewish                Federations of North America's 2011 General Assembly in                Denver, Colorado, early next month, you'll want                to make time in your schedule for the Ramah Alumni Reception on                Monday, November 7, at 5 p.m. National Ramah Assistant Director                Amy Skopp Cooper will receive the prestigious 2011                Covenant Award for Excellence in Jewish Education. Request an                invitation online,                via email, or by calling (212)                678-8881. • "Rebel Women of the Bible" is Rabbi                Andy Shugerman's topic at a JTS Lunch & Learn in                Florida on two Tuesdays, November 8 and November                15. It takes place at noon at B'nai                Torah Congregation in Boca Raton. To RSVP,                contact Carolyn Kantor at cakantor@jtsa.edu or (561)                852-3454.
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Chancellor                Eisen's poignant High                Holiday Message of Hope is a must-read at HuffingtonPost.com.                • JTS's recent survey commissioned by Chancellor Eisen and                conducted by Dr. Steven M. Cohen on the generational differences                about Israel among JTS rabbis and rabbinical students is discussed                in the JTA's "Rabbis'                Love for Israel: Is It a Generational Thing?" and in the                Forward's "Young                Rabbis Love Israel But Lean to Left of Elders." • Rabbi                Daniel Nevins's essay, "Rebranding                Tzedakah: From Charity to Sacred Spending," is the cover story                in October's issue of Sh'ma and on the journal's website.                The essay has been selected by Sh'ma to be syndicated to                all Jewish newspapers around the country. • An article by Dr.                Robert Harris, "The                Book of Leviticus Interpreted as Jewish Community," appears in                the online journal Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations                (Vol. 6, No. 1, 2011: 1–15). • Dr. Eitan Fishbane is                quoted about Kabbalah and why married couples tend to seek it                out when they experience marital woes at abcnews.com in a piece                called "How                Kabbalah Could Help Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher." • "Atoning                for Nothing" in the Jewish Week describes the                development of Ohel Ayalah, an organization founded by Rabbi                Judith Hauptman that provides free High Holiday services for                hundreds of Jews. • Cantor                Nancy Abramson, Dr.                Carol K. Ingall, Dr.                Anne Lapidus Lerner, and David                Wachtel each contributed essays to the Hiddur                Mitzvah Project: A Fresh Approach to Enhancing Mitzvot, a                publication of the Women's                League for Conservative Judaism (WLCJ). The text helps to                enhance and adorn holiday and Shabbat celebrations throughout the                year, and is available on the WLCJ website for purchase at $18                each and, in a few weeks, for downloading by members only. WLCJ's                semiannual newsletter, BookMarks, features interviews                with JTS faculty members Dr. Carol Ingall, Shira                Kohn, and Dr.                Edna Nahshon and introduces their current books. • Rabbi                Moshe Margolin is quoted in "JTS                Reaches Out to Suburbs Through Adult Study," a New Jersey                Jewish News article about JTS's Institute for Jewish Learning                and its inaugural program, Context.                 
Unable to attend an event, but interested in what we're                doing? You can still share in the inspiration, wisdom, and                community of JTS. Listen                to lectures, programs, performances, commentary, and more. Connect                with your fellow alumni and friends of JTS—check out our Social                Media Initiatives. And visit our online community                calendar to find out about upcoming talks and events on and                off campus. 
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