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As Trump s term nears end, loyalists seal plush posts

As Trump’s term nears end, loyalists seal plush posts 21 Dec 2020 Former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski speaks at the GOP headquarters in Martinez, Georgia. File/Associated Press Jordan Fabian, Tribune News Service Donald Trump has appointed a slew of prominent aides, supporters and fundraisers to federal advisory boards since losing re-election, a sometimes controversial practice that indicates recognition his presidency is coming to a close. Roughly three dozen Trump allies have received appointments to federal boards and commissions in recent weeks including some who bring no apparent expertise to the posts. For instance, Trump appointed two of his 2016 campaign officials, Corey Lewandowski and David Bossie, to the traditionally nonpartisan Pentagon’s Defence Business Board. Andrew Giuliani, the 34-year-old son of Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, secured a spot on the US Holocaust Memorial Museum’s board, along with the president’s close aid

Daily Kickoff: 🇨🇦 Edition — Amb Marcy Grossman is Canada s woman on the ground in the Emirates + Annamie Paul, the new Green Party leader

On Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) announced additional House committee assignments.  Congresswoman-elect Sara Jacobs (D-CA) was the only incoming House freshman named to the Foreign Affairs Committee. “I look forward to bringing my experience in U.S. foreign policy and international organizations and my voice as a millennial who has never known a day in my adult life that the United States has not been at war to the committee as we work to rebuild America’s standing in the world,” Jacobs told  Jewish Insider in a statement.   Congresswoman-elect Kathy Manning (D-NC) told JI last month that she was hoping to join Foreign Affairs. Instead, Manning was tapped for the Education and Labor Committee. Additional committee assignments are likely to be announced in January. 

Written during the Holocaust, a song finds new meaning – The Forward

Starting a year after World War II ended, the words to “Lomir shvaygn” (“Stay Silent”) appeared in collections of songs from the Shoah without the music or a composer credit. In 1960, the Polish Jewish composer Henech Kon conjured a melody for “Stay Silent” in his book “Songs of the Ghettos.” Scholars attributed the Yiddish lyrics to the poet Hirsh Glick, but they weren’t sure they were his. “One of the reasons that the song was published a few times was because it was a question mark,” said Bret Werb, the recorded sound curator at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Pandemic forces Holocaust survivor interviews onto Zoom

Pandemic forces Holocaust survivor interviews onto Zoom Michael Ruane © Bill O Leary/The Washington Post Ina Navazelskis, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum s oral history interviewer, prepares a virtual interview in her home in Falls Church, Va. on Dec. 10. Holocaust survivor Mano Orel, 95, was an hour and a half into telling his story when he broke down and began to cry. He had been recounting his life as a German-speaking Jewish teenager in Greece who translated for unsuspecting Nazis, how he had been part of the resistance and how he helped eliminate collaborators. But when he got to the part about how his mother, Liza, and younger brother, Rafael, had been lured to an Athens synagogue with promises of food, and how they were shipped off to the Auschwitz death camp, he began to weep.

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