Village Shalom opens state-of-the-art memory care facility
Under new executive leadership, The KC Jewish Chronicle is on the move!
Work from home in our P/T advertising sales effort with flexible hours; a guaranteed salary plus commission; and real growth opportunities. Contact Stephen Rose, publisher: .
The Chronicle is celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2020 with a commemorative edition this summer. We’ll look back at the events that have shaped the Kansas City Jewish community for the past 100 years.
We are searching for photos from 1920 through the present that will help tell those stories. Please send any vintage photos you have from that time period that would be of interest to the Kansas City Jewish Community and provide us with a one sentence description of each photo, including the approximate year if possible. If it is a small group, we will also identify the people in the photo.
Please send these photos to Kansas City Jewish Chronicle/Rose Publications, 10650 Roe Blvd., Suite 141, Overland Park, KS 66207-3907. If you want the photo/s returned, please enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope. Digital photos, in high resolution or large-file format, may be emailed to . Questions? Contact or call 913-235-4474.
COVER ARTIST
— Several readers made it a point to make sure we knew KC native Andi Arnovitz is mentioned in the January/February 2020 issue of Hadassah Magazine. The internationally acclaimed artist moved to Israel in 1999 and is mentioned in Hadassah Magazine for her role with the Living Under Water project, which culminated in a 60-page e-zine. The e-zine was edited and created by Arnovitz and Shaul Bass. The project was created under the auspices of Beit Venezia — A Home for Jewish Culture and is described as “the tangible result of a three week artist’s residency in Venice 2018” where, according to Hadassah magazine, they explored the Jewish response to climate change. The cover of the e-zine, described as “an ark sinking below the water, a stark commentary on the rising sea levels that are one symptom of climate change,” is an Arnovitz creation as is the back cover. To learn more about the project or to download the e-zine, visit livingunderwater.org.
The Chronicle featured Hall in an article in September 2017. That article is still available at kcjc.com.