Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of notable Jewish American journalists. ... Kasriel Hirsch Sarasohn (1835–1905), founder of Jewish Weekly, Jewish Gazette, and Jewish Daily News [153]
Ruth Gruber (/ ˈ ɡ r uː b ər /; September 30, 1911 – November 17, 2016) was an American journalist, photographer, writer, humanitarian, and United States government official. Born in Brooklyn to Russian Jewish immigrants, she was encouraged to pursue her dream of becoming a writer.
Yated Ne'eman is an American weekly newspaper and magazine. [1] Published in the English-language, it is a Haredi publication based in Brick, New Jersey, and distributed in most large metropolitan areas where Orthodox Jews reside. A Hebrew language newspaper by the same name is published in Israel. While the two newspapers were originally ...
Judith Arlene Resnik (April 5, 1949 – January 28, 1986) was an American electrical engineer, software engineer, biomedical engineer, pilot and NASA astronaut who died in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. She was the fourth woman, the second American woman and the first Jewish woman of any nationality to fly in space, logging 145 hours in ...
The paper was known under a number of names over the years, until it officially adopted the name Washington Jewish Week in 1983. [17] During its early years it was known as the Jewish Week, National Jewish Ledger, and later, after merging with the New York publication The American Examiner, it became The Jewish Week and the American Examiner. [18]
The Algemeiner Journal, known informally as The Algemeiner, is a newspaper based in New York City that covers American and international Jewish and Israel-related news. It is widely read by Hasidic Jews.
Intermountain Jewish News: English Denver-Boulder, Colorado: 1913–Present 30,000 [27] Weekly J. The Jewish News of Northern California: English San Francisco, California: 1895–Present 17,000 [28] Weekly print edition, daily online edition Algemeiner Journal: Yiddish, English Brooklyn, New York: 1972–Present 23,000 [29] Weekly The American ...
In 1915, Agron began working as a journalist in the United States for Jewish newspapers in English and Yiddish: [18] his first newspaper job was writing obituaries and then editorials for The Jewish World in 1915, for which he gave up his rabbinical training, and he became editor of WZO paper Das Jüdische Volk in 1917, [1] [15] [19] for which ...