..J -D Against Terrorists

16
} ~--'------~--~--- .. -.---- - - ·=~=;;;:;::::::::=:::::; ____ ______ ,. ... _ ..J < u -D 0 0- 0 ('J t-- 0 Cl) - :i:: . ....... ·, Jerusalem Guards Against Terrorists part of the city, ·heavily Arab, ·which was occupied in the 1967 war. LY ENGLIS H-J EW ISH W E EKLY IN R. I AND SOUTHE AS T MA SS. TEL AVIV: israeli officials called a security alert in Jerusalem and much of northern Israel to guard against Palestinian terrorist attacks on civilian centers. A number of roadblocks were set up and many Arab cars and some pedestrians were searched. Th.e atmosphere was tense but not panicky . . -- ------- -- -- ---- NUMBER 12 FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974 I 1s Festival Starts , , Evening May 26 LUl''l\,llE.'GA TION AGUDAS ACHIM Attleboro, Mass. Shevuos services at Congrega- tion Agudas Achim will start Sun- day, May 26, with festival candles being lighted at 7:45 p.m. Services on Monday morning, May 27, will start at 9 o'clock and Rabbi Philip Kaplan will deliver his sermon on "Training in To- rah" at 10: 15 a.m. Evening ser- vices on Monday will be at 8:30. Services on Tuesday, May, 28, will start at 7: 15 a.m. , followed by the sermon, "Yizkor and Sinai" at 8:15 a.m. and Yizkor memorial services at 8:30 a.m. - · CONGREGATION SHAARE ZEDEK- SONS OF ABRAHAM Providence At Congregation Shaare Zedek. Sons of Abraham Sbevuos services will start on Sunday, Mar 26 at 8 p.m., following the Lighting of the Candles at 7:49 p.m. Services on Monday and Tues- day mornings will be at 9 o'clock followed . by the sermon at 10:30. On Tuesday there will be Yizko_ r memorial services at 11 a.m. Eve- ning services will _start at . 8 o'clock. Reverend Martin Gottlieb will conduct th_ e services. ·coNGREGATION SONS OF JACOB CONGREGATION Proridence MISHKON TFILOH The Shevuos holiday begins at 8 Providence p.m. on Sunday, May 26 at Con- Shevuos services for" Sunday and · gregation Sons· ·or Jacob.· Services Monday, May 26 and 27, at Con- on Monday and Tuesday, May 27, gregation Mishkon Tfiloh are will be held at 8:30 a.m. and 8 scheduled to commence at 7:30 p.m. Yizkor services will be held p.m., and the Shacharis service on on ·-Tuesday at 10 a.m. Monday and Tuesday, May 27 TEMPLE BETH AM and 28, will start at 9 o'clock. Warwick Rabbi Emanuel Lazar will ad- Shevuos services will be held at dress the congregatipn on both · Temple Beth Am on Monday and days before the Musa!. (Continued on page· 15) · / To Honor Director, ,Wile At Bureau Annual Meeting Elliot S. Schwartz, executive di- ·cctor of the Bureau of Jewish Education, and bis wife, Aorcnoc, wi11 be honored at ·a reccptiod which will be held for them at the annual meeting of the Bureau of Jewish Education on Wednesday, May 29, at 8 p.m., at Temple Emanu-El. Nominations for the officers of the Bureau for the oomin1 year will be presented. They will be Sanford I. Kroll, president; Pro- fessor Benjamin Chinitz, ProfCSIOr Sidney Goldstein and Bernard J. • Mar1olis, Yic:c presidents; Ben- jamin Ha-, ..actary, and Dr. &twill S. Melllmm, trcuarer. SA...0.1. IIIOU. M~bcn to be nominated for thc Bureau board arc Dr. Eliot B. Barron, Dr. &ttmd Bencr, Har• Ian J. Espo, Carl H. Feldman, Dr. ' Joeepll G. Fishbeill, Geraldine Foller, Dr. IUdlard Hellman, Louis I. Kr-. Dr. Morris Le- ri.a, Dr. llalpll S. Le9itt, macl N. Marks, William Mebcr, Jact · Moaber1, William L. Robin, Donald M, Robbins, Dr. Edward A. Scheff, Gladys Solloay and Rabbi Joel H. Zai111a11. 16 PAGES 20¢ PER COPY ELECTED PRESIDENT: Robbi Joel H. Zaiman of Temple Emanu-El -• elected president of the Rhode ls- land Board of Rabbis at a moeting of !he ~rd on April 30, Other officers elected -re Rab- bi Jerome S.. Gurlancl, Tem'ple Sinai, secretary; · Robbi Leslie Y. Gutterman, Temple Beth El, trea- surer. The slate of officers was presented by Robbi William G. Braude. It was believe4 that a group of men had infiltrated into Israel from Lebanon. The scale and area of the spreading security alert in&icated, however, that authorities feared that other groups of terrorists · might move into the country. Israeli officials linked the security measures to last week's massacre of 20 teenagers at the northern town of Maal· ot and the subsequent retaliatory air raids on Palestinian , guerrilla areas in Lebanon. The officials said it was "logical" to assume the Pale s tinian organizations would want to show that their ability to strike at Israel had not been hampered by the heavy air raids. Volunteers Aid Police In the area around Nazareth, Afula and nearby areas ~uthorities had•ar.med several hundred civilian vo lu_nteers who were helping police and troops in searching schools, ractories and other sensitive areas ror infi ltrators. Along the northwestern Lebanon rrontier a major search, involving trackers and heli c_o pter observers, continued for the second day. In Jerusalem, unusual numbers or policemen stood on ihe streets, as well as augmented ·details of troop s, especially in the easte_rn After-school progr a ms for students. including some · sports, and other ac ti vities, were canceled during the afternoon. In at least one Arab vil l age south of Jerusalem a night-time curfew was imposed. In saparate action , police officials announced that they had uncovered and arrested a ··cell" of terrorists . in East Jerusalem, -and that ··considerable quant-ities of arms and sabatoge material we re round in posession of the three members of the gang. The anouncement alleged that the arestcd men were responsible • for several incidents, including the emp la cement of three large Soviet- made rockets aimed at the center of Jerusalem on the same day as the Ma"alot attack. The rockets, meant to be fired by a timing device, were discovered and dismantled before they went off. r The arrested men were also said to have emplaced several bazooka rockets that went off on the night of May 14 but did no damage. The police also attributed to them the murder of a Jewish taxi-dri ve r in April and the attempt to set off a demolitiOff charge on an offi~c building i_n the same month .. JFRI - Women's · Divisio-n- Plc/,i~ ,A~n-nua·1M·eeting _~ JEROME KAPLAN Jerome Kaplan Named President · 01 T_ emple Sinai Jerome Kaplan was elected president of Temple Sinai at the election held at tile annual congre- gational meeting held on May 15 . .He will succeed Herbert Galkin. The Women's Division of the • Jewish Federation of Rhode Island will hold its annual meeting on Tuesday; June 4, at the Royal Roost of the Providence Civic Cente r. The meeting will start at 10 a.m. with a Dutch Treat.lunch- eon following at 12 noon. Shiny Stones will present an informal showing of Israeli fashions during the luncheoh. Senator Julius Michaelson will serve as installing officer. The pro- _ ·posed slate " is headed by Mrs. Ja- cob Stone, president; and Mrs. Manfred . Weil, .Mrs. Benjamin Chi!lilZ, Mrs. Benjamin Mellion and Mrs. Maurice Shore, vice presidents. · Mrs. Arthur Altschuler, a mem- ber of the national board of the United Jewish Appeal, will be the guest speaker. She is a graduate of Bryn Mawr, the Boston Univer- sity School of Thc.ology and is currently a candidate for a Ph.D . degree in Old Testament at Har- Other officers who were elected vard 'University. She is secretary were Edwin ·-. Brooklyn, Junius of the Joint Mid-East Policy Com- Ger~z and Sta~ley Horo~itz, vice mittee and Special Gifts chairman presidents; Adrian Horovllz, trea- of the National Women's Division surer; Richard Kaplan, financial..._ of the UJA. sccrc_tary, and Roslyn Fradin, recording secretary. Other members on the proposed slate arc Mrs. Milton G. Scribner, recording secretary, and honorary presidents, Mrs. Bertram L. Bern- hardt, Mrs. Julius Irving, Mrs. Raymolld L. Cohen, Mrs. Merrill L. Hasicnfcld, Mrs. Leonard I. Salm1n10n, Mn. Edmund I. Trustees, elected for three years, arc Eileen Wexler, Edith E. Grant, Abbott Dressler, Joseph - Postar and lrvin1 Si1al. Elected as trustees for two years were Daniel Adler and Sheila Hal- perin. Stanley Turco was elected u a trustee for ·one year. · Waldman and Mn. Max Alpctin. Members of the board of dfrec- G,-11 1 tors arc Mn. David Allen, Mts. · MRS. BENJAMIN MELUON Flink, Mrs. Karl Foss and Mrs. Sheldon L. Gerber. Also, Mrs. M·al!rice Glicksman, Mrs. Herbert Goldberger, Mrs. Arnold Goldman, Mrs. Sidney Goldstein, Mrs. Lawrence gordon, Mrs. Marvin Granoff, Mrs. Max Greenberg, Mrs. Irving Greene, t,frs. Sumner B. Halsband, Mrs. David Horvitz, Mrs. Louis Hor- vitz, Mrs. Stanley Jagolinzer, Mrs. Sherwin Kapstcin, Mrs. Arthur J. Levy, Mrs. Isador S. Low, Mrs. Leo_Marks, Mrs. Richard Mittle- man. Mn. Benton Odessa, Mrs. Mil- ton Pierce, Mrs. Marvin Pitter- man, Mrs . Jan C. Prqer, Mrs. Samuel Rapaportc, Jr., Mrs. Sid- ney Roecnbloom, Mrs. Sol L. Resnik, Mrs. Alan Samdpcril, Mrs. Abraham Schwartz, Mrs. Jo- • ICph J. Seefer, Mrs. J. Sidney Shepard, Mrs. Aaron Slom, Mrs. Sheldon S. Sollosy, Mn. Alan Swartz, Mrs. Euacne Wachtcn- BUDAPEST: One of Europe'• Philip Biron, Mn. Eliot B. Baron, foremost specialists in Arab culture Mrs. Stanley P. Blacher, Mrs. Al- and history, Budapest-born Gyula den H. Blackman, Mn. Victor J. Germanus, is of Jewish ori1in . C.bclli, Mrs. Martin Chuc, Mn. Twice converted, rirst to Ernest Chernick, Mrs. Jason H. Christianity, then to Islam, Prof. Cohen. Mrs. Newton B. Cohn, Gcrmanus bas 1pcnt most of hi• 90 Mrs. Lou11 Cokin, Mn. J01eph A. years in the Arab world and holds Dannin, Mrs. Martin I. Dittclman, honorary profeuorahips in Mrs. Milton M. Dubinsky, Mrs . numerous Arab universities . Arthur I. f'ixlcr, Mn. Ellis M. - hcim, Mr,. Frederick Wcin1eroff, Mrs. Jack M. Werner, Mrs. James Winokcr, Mn. John Yash- ar.

Transcript of ..J -D Against Terrorists

Page 1: ..J -D Against Terrorists

}

~--'------~--~---.. -.---- - - ·=~=;;;:;::::::::=:::::; __________ ,. ... _

..J < u -D

0 ~ 0-0 ('J t-- 0 Cl) -:i::

. .......

·,

Jerusalem Guards Against Terrorists

part of the city , ·heavily Arab, ·which was occupied in the 1967 war.

LY ENGLIS H-J EW ISH W EEKLY IN R. I AND SOUTHEAST MA SS.

TEL AVIV: israeli officials called a security alert in Jerusalem and much of northern Israel to guard against Palestinian terrorist attacks on civilian centers.

A number of roadblocks were set up and many Arab cars and some pedestrians were searched. Th.e atmosphere was tense but not panicky . .

--------- -- ------NUMBER 12 FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974

I

1s Festival Starts , , Evening May 26

LUl''l\,llE.'GA TION AGUDAS ACHIM

Attleboro, Mass. Shevuos services at Congrega­

tion Agudas Achim will start Sun­day, May 26, with festival candles being lighted at 7:45 p.m.

Services on Monday morning, May 27, will start at 9 o'clock and Rabbi Philip Kaplan will deliver his sermon on "Training in To­rah" at 10: 15 a.m. Evening ser­vices on Monday will be at 8:30.

Services on Tuesday, May, 28, will start at 7: 15 a.m. , followed by the sermon, "Yizkor and Sinai" at 8:15 a.m. and Yizkor memorial services at 8:30 a.m. - ·

CONGREGATION SHAARE ZEDEK­

SONS OF ABRAHAM Providence

At Congregation Shaare Zedek. Sons of Abraham Sbevuos services will start on Sunday, Mar 26 at 8 p.m., following the Lighting of the Candles at 7:49 p.m.

Services on Monday and Tues­day mornings will be at 9 o'clock followed. by the sermon at 10:30. On Tuesday there will be Yizko_r memorial services at 11 a.m. Eve­ning services will _start at . 8 o'clock. Reverend Martin Gottlieb will conduct th_e services.

·coNGREGATION SONS OF JACOB

CONGREGATION Proridence MISHKON TFILOH The Shevuos holiday begins at 8

Providence p.m. on Sunday, May 26 at Con-Shevuos services for" Sunday and · gregation Sons· ·or Jacob. · Services

Monday, May 26 and 27, at Con- on Monday and Tuesday, May 27, gregation Mishkon Tfiloh are will be held at 8:30 a.m. and 8 scheduled to commence at 7:30 p.m. Yizkor services will be held p.m., and the Shacharis service on on ·-Tuesday at 10 a.m. Monday and Tuesday, May 27 TEMPLE BETH AM and 28, will start at 9 o'clock. Warwick

Rabbi Emanuel Lazar will ad- Shevuos services will be held at dress the congregatipn on both · Temple Beth Am on Monday and days before the Musa!. (Continued on page· 15) ·

/

To Honor Director, ,Wile At Bureau Annual Meeting

Elliot S. Schwartz, executive di­·cctor of the Bureau of Jewish Education, and bis wife, Aorcnoc, wi11 be honored at ·a reccptiod which will be held for them at the annual meeting of the Bureau of Jewish Education on Wednesday, May 29, at 8 p.m., at Temple Emanu-El.

Nominations for the officers of the Bureau for the oomin1 year will be presented. They will be Sanford I . Kroll, president; Pro­fessor Benjamin Chinitz, ProfCSIOr Sidney Goldstein and Bernard J. • Mar1olis, Yic:c presidents; Ben­jamin Ha-, ..actary, and Dr. &twill S. Melllmm, trcuarer.

SA...0.1. IIIOU.

M~bcn to be nominated for thc Bureau board arc Dr. Eliot B. Barron, Dr. &ttmd Bencr, Har• Ian J. Espo, Carl H. Feldman, Dr. ' Joeepll G. Fishbeill, Geraldine Foller, Dr. IUdlard Hellman, Louis I. Kr-. Dr. Morris Le­ri.a, Dr. llalpll S. Le9itt, macl N. Marks, William Mebcr, Jact

· Moaber1, William L. Robin, Donald M, Robbins, Dr. Edward A. Scheff, Gladys Solloay and Rabbi Joel H. Zai111a11.

16 PAGES 20¢ PER COPY

ELECTED PRESIDENT: Robbi Joel H. Zaiman of Temple Emanu-El -• elected president of the Rhode ls­land Board of Rabbis at a moeting of !he ~rd on April 30,

Other officers elected -re Rab­bi Jerome S .. Gurlancl, Tem'ple Sinai, secretary; · Robbi Leslie Y. Gutterman, Temple Beth El, trea­surer. The slate of officers was presented by Robbi William G. Braude.

It was believe4 that a group of men had infiltrated into Israel from Lebanon. The scale and area of the spreading security alert in&icated, however, that authorities feared that other groups of terrorists ·might mo ve into the country.

Israeli officials linked the security measures to last week's massacre of 20 teenagers at the northern town of Maal·ot and the subsequent retaliatory air raids on Palestinian

, guerrilla areas in Lebanon.

The officials said it was "logical" to assume the Pale s tinian organizations would want to show that their ability to strike at Israel had not been hampered by the heavy air raids.

Volunteers Aid Police In the area around Nazareth,

Afula and nearby areas ~uthorities had• ar.med several hundred civilian volu_nteers who were helping police and troops in searching schools, ractories and other sensitive areas ror infi ltrators.

Along the northwestern Lebanon rrontier a major search, involving trackers and helic_opter observers, continued for the second day .

In Jerusalem, unusual numbers or policemen stood on ihe streets, as well as augmented ·details of troops, especially in the easte_rn

After-school progr a ms for students. including some · sports, and other acti vities, were canceled during the afternoon. In at least one Arab vil l age south of Jerusalem a night-time curfew was imposed.

In saparate action , police officia ls announced that they had uncovered and arrested a ··cell" of terrorists .in East Jerusalem, -and that ··considerable quant-ities of arms and sabatoge material were round in posession of the three members of the gang.

The anouncement alleged that the arestcd men were responsible

• for several incidents, including the emplacement of three large Soviet­made rockets aimed at the center of Jerusalem on the same day as the Ma"alot attack. The rockets, meant to be fired by a timing device, were discovered and dismantled before they went off.

r The arrested men were also said to have emplaced several bazooka rockets that went off on the night of May 14 but did no damage. The police also attributed to them the murder of a Jewish taxi-dri ver in April and the attempt to set off a demolitiOff charge on an offi~c building i_n the same month ..

JFRI -Women's · Divisio-n­Plc/,i~ ,A~n-nua·1 M·eeting _~

JEROME KAPLAN

Jerome Kaplan Named President ·01 T_emple Sinai

Jerome Kaplan was elected president of Temple Sinai at the election held at tile annual congre­gational meeting held on May 15. . He will succeed Herbert Galkin.

The Women's Division of the • Jewish Federation of Rhode Island

will hold its annual meeting on Tuesday; June 4, at the Royal Roost of the Providence Civic Center. The meeting will start at 10 a.m. with a Dutch Treat.lunch­eon following at 12 noon. Shiny Stones will present an informal showing of Israeli fashions during the luncheoh.

Senator Julius Michaelson will serve as installing officer. The pro- _ ·posed slate "is headed by Mrs. Ja­cob Stone, president; and Mrs. Manfred . Weil, .Mrs. Benjamin Chi!lilZ, Mrs. Benjamin Mellion and Mrs. Maurice Shore, vice presidents.

· Mrs. Arthur Altschuler, a mem­ber of the national board of the United Jewish Appeal, will be the guest speaker. She is a graduate of Bryn Mawr, the Boston Univer­sity School of Thc.ology and is currently a candidate for a Ph.D . degree in Old Testament at Har-

Other officers who were elected vard 'University. She is secretary were Edwin ·-. Brooklyn, Junius of the Joint Mid-East Policy Com­Ger~z and Sta~ley Horo~itz, vice mittee and Special Gifts chairman presidents; Adrian Horovllz, trea- of the National Women's Division surer; Richard Kaplan, financial..._ of the UJA. sccrc_tary, and Roslyn Fradin, recording secretary. ~ Other members on the proposed

slate arc Mrs. Milton G. Scribner, recording secretary, and honorary presidents, Mrs. Bertram L. Bern­hardt, Mrs. Julius Irving, Mrs. Raymolld L. Cohen, Mrs. Merrill L. Hasicnfcld, Mrs. Leonard I. Salm1n10n, Mn. Edmund I.

Trustees, elected for three years, arc Eileen Wexler, Edith E. Grant, Abbott Dressler, Joseph

- Postar and lrvin1 Si1al. Elected as trustees for two years

were Daniel Adler and Sheila Hal­perin. Stanley Turco was elected u a trustee for ·one year.

· Waldman and Mn. Max Alpctin.

Members of the board of dfrec-G,-11 ~ 1 tors arc Mn. David Allen, Mts.

· MRS. BENJAMIN MELUON

Flink, Mrs. Karl Foss and Mrs. Sheldon L. Gerber.

Also, Mrs. M·al!rice Glicksman, Mrs. Herbert Goldberger, Mrs. Arnold Goldman, Mrs. Sidney Goldstein, Mrs. Lawrence gordon, Mrs. Marvin Granoff, Mrs. Max Greenberg, Mrs. Irving Greene, t,frs. Sumner B. Halsband, Mrs. David Horvitz, Mrs. Louis Hor­vitz, Mrs. Stanley Jagolinzer, Mrs. Sherwin Kapstcin, Mrs. Arthur J . Levy, Mrs. Isador S. Low, Mrs. Leo_ Marks, Mrs. Richard Mittle­man.

Mn. Benton Odessa, Mrs. Mil­ton Pierce, Mrs. Marvin Pitter­man, Mrs. Jan C. Prqer, Mrs. Samuel Rapaportc, Jr., Mrs. Sid­ney Roecnbloom, Mrs. Sol L. Resnik, Mrs. Alan Samdpcril, Mrs. Abraham Schwartz, Mrs. Jo-

• ICph J. Seefer, Mrs. J. Sidney Shepard, Mrs. Aaron Slom, Mrs. Sheldon S. Sollosy, Mn. Alan Swartz, Mrs. Euacne Wachtcn-

BUDAPEST: One of Europe'• Philip Biron, Mn. Eliot B. Baron, foremost specialists in Arab culture Mrs. Stanley P. Blacher, Mrs. Al­and history, Budapest-born Gyula den H. Blackman, Mn. Victor J. Germanus, is of Jewish ori1in. C.bclli, Mrs. Martin Chuc, Mn. Twice converted, rirst to Ernest Chernick, Mrs. Jason H. Christianity, then to Islam, Prof. Cohen. Mrs. Newton B. Cohn, Gcrmanus bas 1pcnt most of hi• 90 Mrs. Lou11 Cokin, Mn. J01eph A. years in the Arab world and holds Dannin, Mrs. Martin I. Dittclman, honorary profeuorahips in Mrs. Milton M. Dubinsky, Mrs. numerous Arab universities. Arthur I. f'ixlcr, Mn. Ellis M.

- hcim, Mr,. Frederick Wcin1eroff, Mrs. Jack M. Werner, Mrs. James Winokcr, Mn. John Yash-ar.

Page 2: ..J -D Against Terrorists

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I JACK HOLLANDER

Funeral services for Jack Hol­lander, 65, of 8335 Willis Avenue,

· Panorama City, California, _for­merly of Providence, who died May 16, were held Sunday in Los Angeles, California.

The husband of Miriam (Shein­berg) Holfander, he was born in Webster, Massachusetts, a son of the late Morris and Yetta (Wei­ner) Hollander.

Besides his wife, he is survived by a son, Morton Hollander, and a daughter, Sheila Calof, both of Los Angeles; three sisters, Mabel Berman, Lillian Sandler and Elsie Bellcnap, all of Providence, and three grandchildren.

••• JEROME MITCHELL

Jerome Mitchell of Miami, Florida,- died recently after a year's illness. The husband of Harriet (Strauss) 'Mitchell, he was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, on October 27, 1925, a son of the late Harry and Ida (Tito) Mit­chell.

Mr_ Mitchell attended Durfee High School in Fall River and Ro­ger Williams Junior Coilege and served in United States Navy_

He was a manufacturer's r_epre­sentative for J.M. Tool Speciali~ts, a member of the Society of Manu- · facturing Engineers. He was_ also a member of Beth Kodesh Congre­gation in Miami.

Besides his wife, he is survived by a son, Sumner Robert Mit­chell; two daughters, Miss · Meryl Mitchell and Miss Susan Mitchell, all at home, and a sister, Dolores· . Calish Dorangricchia of Miami. ·

, ... MRS. CLARENCE H. SEIGLE

Funeral services_ for Anna (Har­ris) Seigle, 85, of Miami Beach, Florida. formerly of Brooklyn, New York, who died May 12, were held iii Brooklyn on May 15. Rabbi - Harry Halpern _ delivered

] the eulogy. Burial was in Washing­ton Cemetery in Brooklyn .

The wife of Clarence H. Seigle, she was born in Brooklyn. She had been a lifelong resident of that city llefore moving to Miami Beach a year ago. Site died on her 85th birthday, and had been mar­ried nearly 52 years.

Besides her husband, Mrs. Seigle is .survived by two sons, Saul Seigle of Pawtucket, and Al­fred Seigle of New Haven, Con­necticut; a daughter, Bernice Sta­visky of Bethesda, Maryland; a brother, Frank Harris of Washing­ton, D.C.; seven grandchildren and one great-granddaughter_

• •• MORRIS LEVINE Funeral services for Morris Le­

vine, 57, of 156 Pidge Avenue, Pawtucket, a self-employed area representative for several out-of­state sample furniture lines, who died Monday, were held Wednes­day at the Sugarman Memorial

Chapel. Burial was · in Lincoln Park Cemetery_

The husband of Lillian (Pome­ranz) Levine, he was born in Prov­idence on August 31, 1916, a son of the late Israel and Sophie Le­vine. He moved to Pawtucket 17 years ago.

Mr. Levine was a member of Touro Fraternal Association and Roosevelt Lodge, F&AM.

Besides his wife, he is survived by two daughters, Elyse Schneider of Pawtucket, and Susan Orent of Canton, Massachusetts; a brother, Aleck Levine of Providence; a sis­ter, Evelyn Roberts of Pawtucket, and a grandchild.

· (Continued on page 3)

Cards of Thanks The family of the-late Ab,aham

D. Weinbaum wish to thank all their friends and relatives for the many exprenion1 of sympathy re­ceived during their recent ber­eavement.

The family of the late FRANK I. AVERBACH wish lo thank all lheir­friends and relatives for the many conhibution, and . exp1·e11ion1 of sympathy received during theil' re­cent bei-eavement.

JEWISH LAW_ AND TRADITION HAVE EN­DOWED THE FUNERAL WITH PROFOUND RELIGIOUS SIGNIFICANCE. IT SHOULD EX­PRESS THE DIGNITY, SANCTITY AND REVER­ENCE OF A SO_LEMN RELIGIOUS SERVICE

TO 1:HIS END WE DEDl{:ATE OUR PURPOSE AND PLEDGE OUR SERVICE TO EACH FAMI­LY WITH WHOM WE COUNSEL

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Page 3: ..J -D Against Terrorists

Scientists To Meet At Soviet Dinner

NEW YORK - An international committee, including eight Nobel winners, is planning an unofficial seminar July I to 5 in the Moscow apartment of one or a group or Soviet Jewish scientists who have been living in professional limbo since seeking exit visas.

The purpose, announced at a news conference at the Biltmore Hotel by Prof. · Edward Stern or the University of Washington, is to help those Jewish scientists to " break out of scientific · isolation and .to maintain their scientific viability and to publicize their plight. "

The seminar is to be on "Collective Phenomena and the Application of Physics to Other Fields of Science." Abstracts of papers to be presented have been received from 24 scientists in the United States, 11 in Europe, 9 in Israel and 30 in the Soviet Union. ,·---;~;]

(Continued from page 2) OSCAR KLEMER '

Funeral services for Oscar Kie~ mer, 85, of 903 Hope Street, who died Wednesday alter an illness of two years, were held Thursday at the Sugarman Memorial Chapel. Burial was in Lincoln Park Ceme­tery.

The husband of Gertrude (Kof­sky) Klemer, he was born. in Ro­mania, a son of the late Nathan and Anna Klemer. He had been a Providence resident for 70 years.

Mr. Klem er was a partner in the Klemer, Cohn and Klemer Dry Goods Company of Provi­dence for many years until he re­tired two years ago.

He was a member of Temple Emanu-EI, a former board mem­ber of Temple Beth Israel and a member of the Providence Frater­nal Association. He was also a SO­year member of the United Com­mercial Travelers.

Besides his widow, he is sur­vived by a son, Bernard Klemer of Providence; a daughter, Beatrice Katz of Providence; four grand­children and two great-grand­children.

••• MRS. BARNET A. EPHRAIM Funeral services and burial for

Rose (Susal) Ephraim, 58, of 61 Pitman Street, who died May 17, were held the same day at B'nai Israel Cemetery in Woonsocket.

The wife of Barnet A. Ephraim, she was a daughter of E1hel (Breg­man) Susal of Providence and the late Jacob Susal. She had been a long time resident of Providence.

She was employed by the P&B Manufacturing Jewelry Company of Warwick, until she left because of illness about a year ago. Pre­viously she worked at the Star Jewelry Company of Providence.

Besides her husband and moth­er, she is survived by a son, Charles Ephraim of Coventry; a daughter, Gail Jones of Provi­dence; two brothers, Harold and Charles Susal, both.of Woonsock­et; four sisters, Anne Whitehorn and Zita Friedman, both of Long Island, New York, Dorothy Marks of Lincoln and Sarah West of Warwick, and four grand­children.

. · Mrs. Michael Jay Field Miss Sharon Marie Petitpas, daughter of Mrs. Maurice 0 . Petitpas of

420 Warwick Neck Avenue, Warwick, and the late Mr. Petitpas, be­came . t!ie _bride on Sunday, May ·19, of Michael Jay Field, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Field of 26 Wilcox Avenue, Pawtucket. Rabbi Joel H. Zaiman and Cantor Ivan E. Perlman officiated at the 5 p.m. ceremo­ny which was held at Temple Emanu-EI. A reception followed at the Chateau de Ville in Warwick. ·

Given in marriage by her uncl~. Silvy DcAugustinis, the bride was , gowned in silk organza styled with an empire bodice, long sleeves em­

. : bellished 'in reembroidered Alencon lace and jeweled with seed pc.iris encircling the hem of the A-line skirt w_hich was fashioned with a deta-chabl~ train. She wore a matching mantilla. ·

Mrs. John Kells, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. Brides­maids were Mrs. Raymond Waskiewicz, Miss Esta Holzman, Mrs. Frank Bell, Miss Sheryl Snell and Mrs. James Poole.

Alan Roy Field served as best man for his brother. Ushers were Barry H. Field, brother of the bridegroom; Kenneth Goodblatt, Mark Freed­man, Ronald Abrams, Stanley Sobin, John Boulmetis and John Kells. Mr. Field is the grandson of Sarah Goldberg of Pawtucket.

Following a wedding trip to St. Maartens in the Virgin Islands, the couple will reside in East Providence.

RECEIVES AWARD Dr. Melvin B. Yoken, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Yoken of 97 Delcar Stree·l, Fall River, Mas-·· sachusetts, has been awarded the Distinguished Service Award for outstanding contributions to the cultural life of Fall River, accord­ing to James Coyne; president of the Fall River Jaycees. -

In honoring Dr. Yoken, the Jay­cees paid tribute to what the , Friends of the Fall River Library . have accomplished under his lead­ership. Since the organization of th·e Friends in December of 1972, Dr. Yoken has brought a number of distinguished and influential guests to Fall River for lectures and programs.

An assistant professor in the Department of Modern Langu·ages ·at Southeastern Massachusetts University since · 1966, Dr. Yoken is active in many j:,rofessio~I or­ganizations and is listed in several national and international bio­graphies. A dinner honoring Dr. Y oken and two other recipients will be held at White's Restaurant on June 6.

••• DAUGHTER ,BORN

Mr. and Mrs, J01Cph Leonard of Sharon, Massachusetts, an­nounce the birth of their first child

and daughter, Susan Beth, on April 27. Mrs. Leonard is the for­mer Judith Waltman.

Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Irving Waltman of East Providence. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Morris Leonard of Newton, Massachusetts.

Great-grandmothers are Sophia Wachter and Betty Waltman.

••• JURIS DOCTOR DEGREE

Kenneth Stuart Cohen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Cohen of 304 Fairfax Drive, Warwick, re­ceived his Juris Doctor degree from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, in com­mencement exercises held on May 15.

Mr. Cohen was graduated from Pilgrim High School and .Brown University. He is married to the former Linda Susan Horovitz of Warwick .

(Continued on page 5)

Falci~has Form Council To Aid In Immigration

JERUSALEM, - Falasha im­migrants in Israel have formed a public council with the aim of help­ing all members of the Falasha community in Ethiopia to immi­grate to Israel. It has appealed to the government and Jewish organi­zations and communities through­out the world for support.

A NEW JEWISH FUNERAL HOME SERVING THE RHODE ISLAND COMMUNITIES

The inaugural meeting was at­tended by some 130 young men and women who have settled here. Des­pite the creation of the council, there is little optimism among the members that there will be any change in the government and Jew­ish Agency's policy of "disinterest" over the fate of the community in Ethiopia.

FISHER MEMORIAL

CHAPEL MONUMENTS

OF DISTINCTION

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Since the severing of relations be­tween Israel and Ethiopia last year, the trickle of mainly well educated Falashu to Israel has stopped 11lt0-

gether.

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Page 4: ..J -D Against Terrorists

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FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974

Let the Tourist Beware After every outrage against innocents committed by Arab ter­

rorists anywhere in the world, a dismal and futile pattern is re­peated: governments deplore tha crime, Israel - against whose survival the crime is ultimately directed - retaliates and the United States then solemnly condemns the retaliation.

The cynicism of that charade was reflected last week in the freeing by the Greek Government of the two Arab terrorists who last August systematically riddled the Athens airport lounge with machine-gunfire, taking five lives and wounding 45 persons. Many Americans were among the casualties. With a show of in­dignation, the Greek court condemned the murderers to death. The sentence was soon commuted to life imprisonment - l!,S

those who, like this newspaper, oppose capital punishment thil)k it should have been. But now, scarcely _ten months later, the kr!l­ers are quietly freed to leave the country, presumably to go back to the slaughter of innocents at other airports.

Greece is not alone, of course, in such indulgent treatment, but the Athens incident ·was .s<i flagrant and . the behavior of the Greek Government so pusillanimous that American action :is clearly in order. · ·

That action can be extremely simple. Let the State Depart­ment do what it has often done in the case of states torn by war or revolution: let it warn passport holders and applicants that travel to Greece, while permitted, is entirely at their own risk. This-newspaper does not believe in travel restrictions, nor does it think that Washington should tell otheF governments how to ad­minister justice. But it has a right and obligation to tell its own nations that a country puts so little value on the lives of foreign travelers that it regards ten months in jail as adequate penalty for their mass murder. ·

Your Reprinted from

The New fork Times

Money's Worth

By Sylvia Porter

Whither Food Prices Now?

Throughout the farm areas of the U.S., prices of the major com­modities that go into our bread, ba­con, pork chops, steaks, other key foods have been plunging and are now spectacularly below their 1973-74 highs. The latest official re­port on wholesale food prices shows them down in April for the second month in a row - by a hef­ty 3.7 per cent on top of a 2.4 per cent aecline in March. Although agricultural experts in Washington sti ll predict that food prices at the grocery counter will end up 12 per cent higher in 1974 than in 1973, they also say that a major propor­tion of this year's food price up­su rge is already befiind us.

Can it be ? Is this Fart of the in­nation nightmare through which we have been crawling for so long finally comi ng to an end?

The reluctant conclusion must be: al most su rely, no. For, in blunt, realistic words, this is the back­ground:

ITEM : We do not yet know the real impact of the lifting of all price controls, nor do we yet know how the minimum wage hike just grant­ed to tens of thousands of farm workers will affect prices - partic­ularly during the summer-fall har­vest season and the period after the harvests when fruits and vegetables arc canned and frozen . But we do know the pressures on prices will be strongly upward.

ITEM : Fuel shortages, sure to resume in the months directly ahead - as we return to our shameful waste of fuel if for no oth­er reason - also will help push prices upward. High-priced fuel is

essential to run tractors, manufac­ture fertilizers, transport and dis­tribute food. Fuel shortages can and will cause serious harvesting dislocations and delays too.

ITEM: There is no near-term re­lief in sight from our chronic rail­road boxcar shortage - another source of continued upward price pressure on food transportation costs.

ITEM: We are struggling this year with the worst shortages of all key types or fertiliz_er since World War II - a terrible barrier to in­creases in farm production. Just since fertilizer price ceilirigs were lifted last October, prices to farm­ers have doubled . While the big fer­tilizer producers have pledged to hold the line on prices until the end of June, after that prices may double again, according lo private predictions of government econo­mists . Fertilizer prices on world markets already are double U.S. prices and producers are warning that they can't and won ' t turn down many more "tantalizing" ex­port deals after June 30.

Fertilizer inventories are near zero. Farmers are now ordering fer­tilizer months ahead but supplies are being sold out before the ferlili­zer is even produced.

ITEM : Most significan t, our re­serves of virtually all key foods have aJI but vanished - reserves which for years have served as a supply cushion and a deterrent lo shortages and therefore also to sharp price increases .

Our reserves of cereal grains ( both food and feed grains ) are the lowest in 20 years. Warns Dr. Nor­

(Continued on page 8)

FROM FRIDAY TO FRIDAY A Patient Oriented Hospital

By BERYL SEGAL

Who is a good physician? I. A man whose compassion

with his patient is sincere. 2. A man who is not ashamed to

say, "I don't know," when he does not know what is the matter with his patient. 1 ·

These are two criteria given by Dr. Fiorindo. A. Simeone, director· of the Department of Surgery at The Miriam Hospital.

Dr. Simeone, who is about to retire in June, delivered the main address at the Annual Meeting of the hospital the other night.

Compassion and - truth. Aren't they the characteristics of the great scholar, the good teacher, or for that matter, the sincere friend.

But in medicine the admission that we don'i know leads . to re­search and justifies all the ex­penditures in time and money, to inquire, to search for the truth. When one is too proud, or too blind, not to say, "I don't know," when confronted by a puzzling problem, he will never advance his special field by a single step for­ward. Dr. Simeone practiced what he preached all through his career.

We also head of .the Lamed Vov People at that meeting. Lamed Vov,' as you know, is the Hel!rew equivalent of 36. Legend has it that in every gc;_neration, in every land, there live 36 anonymous righteous me!l (and women) who support and sustain the world by their -good deeds Such Lamed \' ov Miriam People have pledged themselves to support the hospital. No one knows who they are a·nd what they contribute, · except~ for Stanley Grossman, vice president of The Miriam Hospital, and his committee. Should you decide to join The Miriam People today, that would destroy the number 36, and the legend of the Lamed Vov would be no more. But don't let it deter you. Stanley Grossman can start another Lamed Vov Miriam People with you among them.

A Cook Book to end all Cook Books will be out in the coming year, according to the President of the Women'.§ Association, Joan Ress Reeves. She ·reported about a group of women who are always busy, never lack in enthusiasm, and are ingenious in finding new projects. . And new projects were the

theme of the report of Norman M. Fain, President of the Board of Directors of the hospital. .

Ever since tlie. hospital open<:<! its doors, it has not stopped remo­deling and reshuffling its facilities to meet the needs of the patients. Patient care, all patients, whoever they are, whatever race or creed they may be, is the key word of The Miriam.

It started as a reconverted ma­ternity accommodation on Parade Street, and The Miriam •imme­diately began -the progress that has never stopped to this day. Hem­med in by houses all around, the hospital bought two buildings, one to the left and one to the right, for ~""1ntNIIIHIIIIINllllllfflftHHllfflllllnlfflln111n111111

COMMUMIT1 CALENDAR

A SHVICE OF THE JEWISH FIDERA TION

OF RHODE ISLAND and the

R.1. JEWISH HERALD For Littint Call 421-4111

SUNDAY, MAY 2', lt74 10:00 . .... . , .......... -........ -....

.....,.,, MAY 2f, '74

7:IO , ..... S...th ~ ...... "" ... ".........,. __ ,..

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the purposes of housing a clinic, a laundry, a pharmacy, a store and purchase department, and a room for the one and only intern and resident and doctor and surgeon and delivery room specialist, all rolled into one person, . who was available for the whole hosp'ital, for almost a quarter of a .century. In the meantime the m~in building was perpetually being remodeled. Walls were taken out and put up somewhere else. Sun parlors were being reconverted to patient rooms. A windowless storage space ·was being made into an X­ray department. And the one and only elevator creaked its way up and down, if it ever came down.

Then came the move to Summit Avenue and the process of making a hospital out of an orphanage. The saga of the present day Mi­riam, as we know it today, is known to all. And this saga does not stop. The hospital is now plan­ning, and Ilic plans will probably start to materialize this year, of · adding 30 more beds to be avail­able to patients and to those who, though no longer sick, never­theless, are in need of ·.4 hospital surrounding. They call it Extended Care Facility.

The hospital · will also start building a new wing to accoin­·modate the Intensive Care Unit

The Lyons Den ~

NEW YORK: John Glenn, who won the Democratic Senate nomination in Ohio last week, spoke of a meeting he had soon after he orbited the earth in 1962. When asked how soon he planned to make a second trip, Glenn replied: "Not for a while. Right now it's too expensive. I'll wait 'tit the 'fares' go down - in about 20 years." ... Mayor Beame will be honored May 29 at the Plaza by the nonpartisan Citizens' Budget Commission with its gold medal for "High Civic Service" and for his years of service as Budget Director and Comptroller.

Jon Voight, who plays a teacher of poor black children in the movie Conrack recently appeared on the Pat Collins Show on WCBS-TV, where he met Dr. Ed Carpenter, Headmaster of Harlem Prep here. As a result of the meeting, Voight will leach an acting class there ... The Duchess of Windsor attended the May 17 performance of Jumpers, the British play at the Billy Rose Theater ... 92-year-old writer P. G. Wodehouse, who just recorded his first autobiographical album of anecdotes, said: "The trouble with all young authors is that they don't know how to write - and I was no exception."

Jan pianist-singer Dorothy Donegan, who began an engagement at Jimmy Weston's recently, told of the time Hoagy Carmichael chided her for heeding every request from the audience. "You shouldn't cater so much to their whims," he suggested, "Just play what you want to play." ... "I replied, tactfully, I hope," 'you have your million. I still have to make mine.' "

Robert W. Sarnoff, Chief Executive officer of RCA , delivered the commencement address at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks where he received an honorary doctor of laws degree. Sarnoff is responsible for direct di al to Alaska because three years ago it was he who authorized RCA 's purchase of the Air Force Alaska Commu nic ations System for establishing RCA's Alaska Communications.

(ICU), a most urgent and life sav­ing unit, as all who have been se­riously ill will testify.

New wings. More units. Better medical care. Compassion as typi­fied by the late Dr. David Freed' man. Brilliance as testified by Dr. Simeone in describing his col­league Dr. Robert P. Davis. These are the ingredients of The Miriam Hospital. This is what puts it in the forefront of hospitals.

Mr. Jerome R. Sapolsky, execu­tive vice president of The Miriam Hospital, once said to me that in all the expansion, all the new de­partments opened, all the equip­ment and added personnel, all are for one purpose only:

The Better to Serve the Patient. This is perhaps why the Miriam

Hospital has such a high rate of occupancy, according to Dr. Mel­vin D. Hoffman, President of the Medical and Dental Staff. He re­ported that the hospital had a 95% occupancy and sometimes' it reached 100% and patients had to sleep in the corridors.

The patients come to the Mi­riam and the Miriam will once again, as. of old, accept them no matter who they are, whatever race or creed they may be. ( Mr. Sega/'s opinions are his own, and 1101 f!ecessarily thdse of this .newspaper.)

By Leonard Lyons

Adela Holzer, producer of Broadway's Bad Habits , was asked if she was related to Hans Holzer, the writer-parapsychologist and ghost investigator. "A producer," she replied, "is more interested in investors - 'ange ls ' - than ghosts." ... Miss Holzer, whose first two shows were failures, read the opening night reviews of "Bad Habits," and said: "What a pleasure it is to reach for a glass of champagne - instead of a closing notice."

Edward Sieff, who has fully recovered from the terrorist attack on him last year is sel ling his London home where he was shot ... Andre Kostelanetz will record an album of the songs from MGM "s musical documentary retrospective, That's' Entertainment. .. Ron Liebman, star of the movie The Super Cops will host an upcoming Tonight Show. .. . Yoko Ono, the stranged wife of former Beatie John Lennon, i~ booked for a series of rock concerts in her native country of Japan in August.

Warren Coleman, who just returned from three weeks of filming documentaries in Israel dined at the Magic Pan and told of Golda Meir: During their discussion, the Prime Minister chain-smoked, and when Coleman suggested she give up smoking, 76-year-old Mrs. Meir shrugged: "It's not necessary. When I die, It won't be as a youngster." . .. Dorothy Lamour purchased a ranch In Santa Fe, New Mexico .. . Richard Adler ls already receiving calls for opening night tickets to the Rogen-Hamlck, Lawrence and Lee musical Rex. which he's producing In the spring or I 975.

Ernest Borgnine, now filming Grand Street in New York with Carroll O'Connor , is constant ly being stopped by spectators who compliment him on his trim form, which is the result of exercise, hard work and diet. " Believe me," said the actor, "the popularity of dieting proves that people will go to great lengths to avoid widths ."

Page 5: ..J -D Against Terrorists

ORGANIZATION NEWS

MRS. JODREY TO SPEAK Mrs. Kenneth Jodrey will be the

guest speaker at Temple Beth To­rah Sabbath services on Friday, May 24, at 8: 15 p.m. Her subject will be " A Convert Speaks Out."

Mrs. Jodrey, who was converted t~ Judaism in May of 1973, will discuss her feelings and ex­periences during her first year as a Jew.

MAY MEETING The Providence Chapter of

Women's American ORT will hold its May meeting on Sunday, May 26, at the home of Rachel Kaufman at 9 Baldwin Orchard Road, Cranston, at 8 p.m .

. Dr.. Frank Jones, psychiatrist, will speak. Husbands are invited to -attend.

CHESS TOURNAMENTS Four chess tournaments, spon­

sored by the Rhode Island Chess Association and the Warwick Open Chess Club, will be held on Saturday, June 8, at Warwick Mall.

Three of the events are state school championships, one for the elementary grades, one ·for . middle schools and junior highs, and one for high schools. The fourth event is for adult amateurs.

Further information may be ob­tained by writing to Philip Hirons at 62 Hagerstown Road, Warwick 02886, or calling 739-9597.

ALEPH CHAPTER The Aleph Chapter of Provi­

dence Hadassah will hold its monthly study group meeting at the Eileen Darling Restaurant in Seekonk , Massachusetts. The luncheon and meeting witl be on Thursday, May 30, at 12 noon.

Tess Hassenfeld will review " The Provincials" by Eli N. Evans.

SQUARE DANCE The second annual Meeting

Street School benefit square dance will be held at St. Joseph's Parish Hall, Mendon Road, Woonsocket, on Friday, May 24, from 8 to 11 :30 p.m.

The event is. open to all square dance clubs and their friends . The dance ·is sponsored by the Paw­tucket Easter Seal Campaign Committee. Further information may be obtained by calling 521-6800.

TO INSTALL OFFICERS Donald Wexler will be installed

as president of the Temple Sinai Brotherhood at the Sabbath eve­ning service on Friday, May 31. He will succeed Jerome Kaplan.

Rabbi Jerome S. Gurland will serve as installing officer.

Other officers to be installed will be Harry Fradin, Stanley Tur­co and Arthur Lowenthal, vice presidents; Robert Roiff, treasur­er, and Stanley Kaplan, secretary.

Elected to the board for one year terms are Robert Engle, Har­old Grant, Aaron Falcofsky, Ju­lian Savage, Abbott Dressler,Jo­seph Postar, Julius Levine, Nath­aniel Sandler, Robert Barrie, Adrian Horovitz, Ralph Rotten­berg, p!arles Fischer, Stanley Horovitz and Arhur Bellin.

FREEZE ACCOUNTS BA SLE - T h e Sw i ss

government has wa rned the Arab oil countries that it will freeze Arab accou nts held in their banks if the Arabs make good their threat to emba r go oi l to Switzerland, it was reported by the Swiss correspondent for the Israeli daily, Ha'aretz, in Basie. The warning came as a result of a threat issued by Libya that it will cease shipping oil to Switzerland unless the governm ent cancels its ban on continuing the trai ning in Switzerland of Libyan helicopter pilots. It is estimated that approximately 20 bi ll ion Swiss francs are deposited in Swiss banks to the credit of various Arab accoilnls.

Mrs. Carl M. Youngman Temple Emanu-El was the setting on Sunday, May 19, for the mar­

riage of Miss Joan Susan Blackman to Carl Youngman. Rabbi Joel H. Zaiman and Cantor Ivan E. Perlman officiated at the 4: 15 p.m. ceremo­ny which was followed by a reception held at the Ledgemont Country Club in Seekonk, Massacusetts.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Blackman of Fifth Street. Her mother is the late Beatrice Wolf Blackman. A graduate of Wheelock College she is presently a teacher in the• Quincy School Sys­tem in Quincy, Massachusetts. She is also completing her master's de­gree in education at Wheelock College. Mr. Blackman is senior partner in the accounting firm of Blackman & Blackman of Providence.

The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Youngman of Newburyport, Massachusetts. He is a graduate of Governor Dummer Academy, Worcester Polytechnic Institute and Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. Mr. Youngman is a partner in the firm of Youngman, Charm and Associates, Brook line, Massachusetts, management consulting firm . .

The bride was given in marriage by her father . Mrs. Robert A. Feld­man served as matron of honor for her sister, and Leslie B. Charm of Brookline was best man. ·

Mr. and Mrs. Youngman will reside in Brookline.

I:::::: :~i~~~~?.: :~~~~: ~ ~~:~::: ::: ] (Continued from page 3)

ANNOUNCE ARRIVAL Mr. and Mrs. David Gary

Schwartz of 37 Milford -Lane, Suf­fern , New York , announce the ar­rival of their daughter, Stefanie Joy, on May 12.

Mpternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Goldman of Be­verly, Massachusetts. Paternal grandparents· are ·Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schwartz of Providence.

Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Schwartz of Provi­dence; Hyman Smith of Lynn, Massachusetts, and Mrs. Michael August of Miami, Florida.

• • • RECEIVE AW ARDS

At the annua·1 sales conference . of Massachusetts Casualty Insur­ance Company held at the Dorado Del Mar Hotel in Puerto Rico this past week, Paul Samuel, of Cran­ston, and Noah Temkin, general agent for the company in the state of Rhode Island, were honored with awards for outstanding sales achievements in 1973. Mr. Tern­kin's office was ranked in the top ten agencies throughout the United States and Mr. Samuels was ranked in the top 15 agencies in the US.

••• RECEIVES MA DEGREE

Lynne Carol Switsky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tan- . enbaum of 39 Foxcroft Avenue, Warwick, received her master of arts degree from George Peabody College for Teachers at recent commencement exercises. She is the wife of Harvey N. Switzky.

• •• RECEIVES FELLOWSHIP

Miss Bayla Sbusman of Bar­rington bas been named a Fellow in Je)¥ish Educational Leadership by the Institute for Jewish Life of

Wellesley, Massachusetts. Dr. Leon Jick, director of the

institute, said that these newly-es­tablished fellowships are designed to promote the entry of talented individuals into the field of Jewish education ·and to raise the level of graduate training in the field .

Miss Shusman, who is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. May­nard Shusman of Barrington, is a member of the Class of 1974 at Brandeis University. N~xt year she will be pursuing graduate stud­ies in Jewish Education at Brandeis, Lown Center for Cin­temporary Jewish Stuidies in Wal­tham, Massachusetts .

••• CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Pepper of 9

Parkis Avenue celebrated their 60th anniversary at a family din­ner at the Ramada Inn in See­konk, Massachusetts.

The dinner w~s given by their two daughters, Mrs. M. Rubin of New York and Mrs. Gilbert Bornstein of Waltham, Massachu­setts. They have four grand­children and two great-grand­children.

Guests were present from Tuc­son, Arizona, New York, Con­nec ticut , Ma ssachusetts and Rhode Island.

••• SECOND CHILD BORN

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Feldman of Bellevue, Washington, an­nounce the birth of their second child and son, Scott Michael on April 30. '

Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tatelman of West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Cy Feldman of Providence.

High product interest doubles newspaper ad readership.

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974 5

Sinai Soldiers TEL A VIV - Specially trained

police dogs Joaned by Scotland Yard are . assisting the tripartite (lsraeli-UNEF-Egyptian) teams trying to locate the remains of soldiers who died in the Sinai desert during the Yorn Kippur •War, it was learned here.

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Page 6: ..J -D Against Terrorists

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6-THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974

When in doubt, you need look no further for the perfect gift. The Herald subscription is always appreciated for birthdays or holidays. Call the Herald at 724-0200.

Ara~ Pop. Drops

JERUSALEM: Recent data published by the Central Satistical Institute shows that, since the Six Day War of 1967, the percentage of Arabs in the State of Israel (inclusive of the occupied areas) has declined . In the year 1967, .according to th · statistical tables, the total populaiion of Israel (including the territories) was 3,761,900, amongst whom the

.. ···- . ·-·· ··•··=-=--~--=-~=-=-=~--

Arabs numbered 1;378,300 - i.e., 36. 64 of the total. By I 972 the overall population had grown to 4,230,000, of whom approximately 1,500,000 were Arabs (35.62 of the population). Since the Six-Day War the proportionate number of Arabs has dropped from 36.64 to 35.62. That is how matters stood at the end of 1972 and, according to the Statistical · Bureau, no significant change has occurred in the year 1973 . .

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· Increase In Typical Utility Fuel Costs From September 1973 to February 1974 Northeast ..... . ........... 139% Mid-Atlantic . . .............. 51 % Rocky Mountain ............. 37% PacificCoast ....... .. ....... 46% South .......... .. .......... 51% Mid-West .................. 30%

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< ' New England utilities should be forced to pay these excessive fuel prices in order to provide reliable customer service.

Particularly since the National Energy Office and enacted legislation call for the equitable distribution of fuel ail at equitable prices among all users!

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congressional representatives to help put New England on an equal price footing with other parts of the country until this fuel crisis is over.

It's also why we continue to ask them to help us get long-term vari­ances for coal-burning, which will enable us to get better coal at a lower price. And, to speed up the licensing of nuclear power plants, because nuclear power is so much less expensive than coal or oil.

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In America

-By Harry

Golden

ooooooooooo1 The

President's Transcripts

What amazes me as I read the transcripts of the- President's tapes is that not only are these men -Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Dean, and Richard Nixon not Sicilians, they are not even Italians. But they are, like a cell of hit men, advising one anothef what not to say to the grand jury, how to fix the chief cop, who's supposed to use the hideout this weekend.

Twenty years ago, a Republican attorney general na med Herb Brownell was so outraged at witnesses who pied the Fifth Amendment that he wanted the Congress to amend the Constitution so that he could convict subversives who wouldn't snitch.

We need Herb Brownell today. If he wanted to repair t~e damage the · Fifth Amendment wrought, he would certainly want to abolish the pri vi leged relati o nsh.ip between lawyer and client.

The Wa terga te conspirators relied heavily on the assumption that if they but once told a lawyer what they were about they would never have to testi fy to the fact.

It is poignant to read · the President referring to the Alger Hiss case. If anyone should know the depth s and degradation to which subterfuge lead it is Richard Nixon. He prided him se lf on uncovering Alger Hiss's duplicity.

Alger Hiss tried to pull a fast one on a Congressfonal Committee and the Committee bagged him for it. Thal Committee pursued Alger Hiss as the media pursued Richard Nixon. One is left with the impression that Richard Nixon is a man who has forgotten nothing but he has learned nothing either.

You can lie to the public once but you cannot keep lying. '"Fool me once," goes the barroom ditty. '"shame on you. t::_ool me twice. shame on me."

The White House tried to cover up the invol vement of high-level sta ff in planning the Watergate break-in and subsequentl y they could not cover up the Ellsberg robbery , the San Clemente expenses, the Hughes gift, the ITT fix.

As I write, the President has expressed profound annoyance with the television newsmen and the newspaper reporter s for concentrating only on the seamier aspects of his submission.

Ch' arles Van Doren was obviously intelligent, well-bred and· well-educated . What made him newsworthy 15 years ago was that no one thought he could be fixed .

The White House and Lying

Will it or not, with the publication of the President's tapes, the time has come to discuss disgrace.

What disgraces a writer is not that he has plagiarized . Man y writers have plagiarized and had their plagiarisms come to light and thrived despite this. Coleridge was a famous plagiarist.

The observation " Inside of every fat man there is a thin man screaming lo get out"" is one I have read in a variety of books. It is original either with George Orwell, who was thin , or his great friend, the editor and critic, Cyril Connoly who was fat.

What disgraces a writer is going

(Continued on page IO)

Page 7: ..J -D Against Terrorists

• • • - • •

B R I D G

- • • • .. • I watched as three Declarers

committed the unpardonable sin of being too complacent and leading an honor, expecting that suit to break well enough so that it wouldn't matter. However, as the case happened to be, it did matter and because they didn't take what should have been an automatic precaution, they lost a Trump trick unnecessarily. True, there was a guess as to which honor they should play up to first, even here, if they play the odds, they will come out making the hand. If they simply guess, they will be right only half the time.

West ♦ 10 9 4 2 • J 9 7 3 ♦ K85 •10 7

North ♦J 8 6 .AK ♦ 10 7 4 2 • K 9 6 3

South ♦K Q 7 5 3 •a a 5 ♦Q J 3 .A 4

Eost ♦A .,o 6 4 2 ♦ A 9 6 .QJ852

East-West were vulnerable South Dealer with this bidding: '

S W N E ,. p 2 ♦ p

2 ♦ P 4 ♦ End

To comment on the bidding, ev-ery pair did reacl! the Spade game but their bidding sequences were varied and yet each bid the hand correctly. Some Norths, with elev­en points and only three Spades, temporized rather than bidding three Spades, bidding a minor, raising or jumping in Spades later. Even here some bid Clubs and some Diamonds and it makes ab­solutely no difference which they bid for they intended to support Spades on the next round. Every South rebid their Spades as they had no other bid to make and now the action returned to North. Here again, there were differences of opinion for some jumped right to game while others felt their hand was only worth a three Spade bid. No matter, South had enough ex­tra to go on to game.

~ost of the Wests I watched led their doubleton Club but even that didn't matter. The whole hand depends entirely on the han­'dling of the Trump suit. Two Dia­monds have to be lost and certain­ly the Trump Ace but if played ccSrrectly that's all the Trumps that have to be lost. Yet, as I said above some Declarers lost another trick to the ten. Here is why: At trick two expecting the Trumps to break normally they led the King from their own hand. When this lost to the SINGLETON Ace it happened to establish West's ten for the setting trick. To protect themselves against this all they have to do is the basic thing of leading toward an horior. True, in this hand, if . they lead toward Dummy's Jack they will be in the same poor position of losing an honor to that singleton Ace and I wouldn't condemn any player who happened to "guess" wrong and do that.

If it were just a guess then again they would have just as much chance of leading from the wrong hand but here again there was a very fine clue handed them on the opening lead. Note that West led the Club 10. That might have been a Iona sequence had the 9 not been right there in Dummy. As most players lead low from more than two to the 10. this should be coostrved by a dis­cerning Declarer as no more than • doubleton. II that were what t)ley base thew play on. it would man that Eal has at least f1Ye CIIIII.. With only that to go on,

-=----~";.J;;l>~-~.,....---,...;::,rc-.:'::.-~-•"°'._-'7,-;;_::;_,::-,.,-;:,,.-:-::.::;,_::,-_.,, __ =,,,-"""'··""-"",=--·-----------

• .. -E

By Robert E. Starr

• • • • • .. which opponent would be more likely to have less Trumps than the other? The same one who has more Clubs, East. So just in case East should have a singleton Trump Ace, as he does, Declarer must take care of this eventuality by going over to Dummy and leading from the Trump Jack to his own hand. Certainly -a Heart is safe enough for the entry. When East plays his singleton Ace on that small Trump the hand is over. Now West can no longer make a trick with the ten. Everyone should have made the hand for the reasons I have stated.

Moral: Never be complacent. Do everything possible to · gove yourself every edge by going with the percentages all the time.

BAS MITZVAH: Judi-Unn Holland daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold

, Holland of 39 Larch Road East Greenwich, celebrated he; Bas Mitzvah on Friday, April 19, at Temple Beth Torah. -'

Prospects · who buy often are much more likely to see your newspaper ad than occasional buy­ers .

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974 7

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October War Takes Toll CELLO·

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University is fighting hard to recover from last year's Mideast war.

The 26-year-old university, the nation ' s first Jewish-sponsored , nonsectarian institution of higher learning, has lost more than $3-million in income since last fall because many of its benefactor -95 per cent• of whom are Jewish -are giving instead to Israel.

And because there ftas been a sharp drop in pledges as well, the effect of the war last October is likely to be felt for the next few years at least, according to Dr. M. H. Bernstein the university's president. '

"We have been hit very hard by the Arab-Israeli war," Dr. Bernstein said in an interview. "There has been a 50 percent drop in pledges alone."

In an attempt to recoup these losses, Brandeis has initiated a fund-raising drive to attract new major donors. One feature of this campaign is to persuade Jewish donors to give money to the university with which to buy State of Israel Bonds.

"We have made it clear to donors that we are prepared to accept donations for Israel Bonds instead of outright cash gifts," Dr. Bernstein said. "This way the individual performs double benefits.

Nonprofit academic institutions are eligible to earn 5.5 per cent dividends on these bonds, while an individual buying Israel Bonds on his own would draw 4 percent interest. Thus, when Brandeis gets contributions for Israel Bonds, •the donor is helping both Israel and the university because while the hard cash for the Bonds goes lo the Jewish state, Brandeis earns the dividend income.

In the last three months or so, Brandeis bas received 5200,00() from donors for the purchase of such Bonds. In the United States, about S250-million is given each year for Israel Bonds.

"We usually expect the university to hold on to the bonds till they reach their full 15-year maturity," Dr . Bernstein said. "But sometimes we may dispose them fot income. Of course. we make no bones that cash gifts to Brandeis itself arc more valuable."

The university felt particularcy hard-hit by war, Dr. Bernstein said, because it has appeared last year that Brandeis was on its way :o financial stability after five years of huge budgetary deficits. Brandeis has 3.100 under1raduates and 1radua1e students and 8 ,000 alumni. c--. ...... ~

When he came to Brandeis in July , 1972, from Princeton

University's Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, Dr. Bernstein inherited a deficit of $2.6-million. Through a series of budgetary cuts and economic belt­tighlening, he was able to bring the deficit dow.n to $1. ?-million through rext year.

Indeed, he said, the economic belt-tightening was working so well that a budgetary deficit for 1973-74 had been expected to be only about $450,000. And in 1974-75, for the first time since 1968, Brandeis had projected a balanced budget of about $30-million.

Instead, because of the drop in "unrestricted" gift income -from $5.2-million to $2.8-million and a $68,000 decline in dividend income from the university's h·oldil)gs, the 1973-74 deficit is expected to be a record $2.8-million.

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.. . , 8 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 241 1974

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(Continued from page 4)

man Borlaug 1970 Nobel peace prizewinner as father of the "green revolution" ( through the devel- · opment of new high-protein, high­yield "miracle" wheat strains ) in a terrifying new biography, "Facing Starvation·," to be published next month by Lne Reader' s Digest Press: if we have a single (just one) bad growing season between now and the end of 1975, not only will we be unable to export any imp'or­tant amounts of wheat but we also may not be able to meet our own domestic needs. "Drastic" food price rises will be the inevitable re­sult if this happens, forecasts Bor­laug.

What can we do ? What we must do is develop a ra­

tional, national food policy which could assure supplies of basic foods in the event of shortages, stimulate production in time to meet antici- . pated needs and, above all, brake today's yearly price upsurges.

In June, the Senate Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs will hold a major series of hearings in Washington, o ut of which should come a proposal for a na­tional food policy in time for next November's World Food Confer­ence in -Rome.

This is a challenge of the most urgent importance to all of us. The stakes have become far too high to continue what we now have in the vital areas of food production, food exports and food prices :...:.. a policy which , Ken Schlossberg, staff direc­tor of the Senate Committee, con­demns as a "completely dis­o rg anized scatterbrained ap­proach."

Hello Again!

News of the Sports World by Warren Walden

A GREAT RACE! Aren't we all' .- of the war years, the big Indy spe-1 suppose someone has come up cial has been_ run every ye~r, at­with the old tomato . to you with tractrng the b\ggest crowds rn the the statement, "It's a great day sports world. for the race." And when you 've • • • asked, "Which race?" the answer EMULATING THE SHOW: has been,_; 'The human race." Pat Anyone remember "Of Thee I Deluca, fisherman, huntsman and Sing?" It was a musical show that an automobile dealer with author- was sort of a satire on life in ity, will tell you that the first Washington, D.C. executive cir­American automobile race on a cles. One setting showed a hall of track was held at old Narragansett congress in which the president Track in Cranston on September was to address a gathering. Differ­?., 1896. Pat doesn't know just ent was a boxing ring that was what speed was attained but he built in front of the podium. When does know that A.J . Foyt hit bet- the announcement was made con­ter than 191 and a half miles an cerning the appearance of ' the hour while · qualifying for the pole President, it went something like position in the big Indianapolis this, " The President of the United Classic that is scheduled for next States - and - while he speaks, Sunday. 'Bullneck Mooseface· will wrestle

• •• TWICE AND THEN SOME: It was in 1911 that Ray Harmon flashed down the home stretch in his "Marmon Wasp" to win the first Indianapolis race with an av­erage speed of 74.59 miles per hour. Foyt's qualifying time is more than twice that figure. Why Troy Ruttman, who weighed 245 p.ounds, drove his "Agajanian Spe­cial" to victory at Indianapolis in 1922, he sef a new speed mark ol 128.922 and racing experts be­lieved it to be close to the absolute limit. And, by the way, back in those days of earlier auto racing, the cars had to be "cranked up" for· the start. With the exception

'Flat-top Davis' for your entertain­ment!" It was a great hockey series and the Flyers are to be congratulated as winners - in hockey and not in fighting. Hock­ey could be greater if some of the players would concentrate on zig­ging and zagging and ragging the puck instead of swinging lists and sticks. The game is interesting in itself. It loses its interest when fights take over. The fights are not needed for entertainment. Degrad­ing, disgusting and of .,the baser sort, to say the least. ·

•••

Arafat Asks Arabs For Help In T~e~ebuilding Of Towns

WHICH BRINGS US TO: Sam Silverman of Boston who an­nounces a closed-circuit TV boxing show for Monday-, June 17, at lhe Palace Theatre in Providence. (And Sam will not need a hockey game as a side-light.) A 12-roun­der from Mlldison Square Garden will feature , former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier and Jerry Quarry. The co-feature will be a 15-round bout from Albuquerque, New Mexico, matching Bob Fos­ter, world light heavyweight king, and Jorge Ahumada.

BEIRUT, Lebanon: . Yasir Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, reportedly appealed to the ambassador of Arab countries represented here for help in rebuilding refugee camps struck by Israeli planes. '

The United Nations Relief and Works A,gency, which is responsible for aid for Palestine refugees here, is financially unable to provide any large-scale help for the camps that were hit, according to its spokesman, John F. Defrates.

The first Arab country to offer assistance was Kuwait, which

· pledged $10.3-million. In addition, the Lebanese Government allocated about S4-million to the Council for South Lebanon, which is concerned with Palestinian problems.

The United Nations agency provides· food, medical · help and educational services to about 1.3

.million Palestinian refugees throughout the Middle East, including about 160,000 in Lebanon. About half the refugees cared for by the United Nations here live in camps, which have been largely evacuated since the Israeli attacks began in reprisal for the Palestinian raid on a school in the northern Israeli town of Maalot.

Muy H-• Destroyed United Nations o!ficials report

that 80 per cent of· the houses in the camp at Nabatieh in southern Lebanon, were damaged or destr-oyed by Israeli planes along with several United Nations buildings.

At Nabatieb and other camps, the United Nations bas been providing blankets, extra food and emergency medical help, but distribution of regular food rations has been hampered by the dispersal of th~ refugees, either because their homes have been destroyed or because they rear. rurtber Israeli raids. The agency had to ask private church groups worklnJ . with Palestinians in

Jordan to provide cooking utensils and other necessities for the homeless refuge_es here.

"We just haven ' t got the resources to do anything on a large scale," Mr. Defrates said.

Even in normal times, Mr. Defrates said, United Nations help for the refugees is "very, very inadequ_ate." Food ration~ fo! example, provide only 1,500 calories daily, he went on, callin~ that a "modest supplement" to a proper diet. About 60 per cent of the students in United Nations schools arc on half sessions.

Senlces May be Cut For 1974, the agency faces a

deficit of S0.2-millio out of a budget of $81.5-million. Unless more money is raised soon, Mr. Defrates said, the agency "is only weeks away from putting reductions into effect." The Relief and Works Agency is largely funded by voluntary contributions from United Nations.

Cutting 25 per cent of the flour ration would save S4-million, according to United Nations calculations, and closing the agency's secondary schools for the fall term · would save SJ-million more.

"That's the magnitude of the problem," Mr. Defrates said. "That would still leave us $3· million short. Where can we cut it - you tell me."

United Nations officials here are concerned that any sizable cut in their services would have significant political repercussions. As one put it:

"This would be seen by the refugees as a first step in reducing the U.N.'s commitment to the Palestinian Arabs. It would be seen as an attempt to liquidate the

· refugee problem, and it would cause not just a ripple but a wave of protest." --'-----

When in doubt, you need look no further for the the perfect gift. The Herald subscription is a lways a ppreciated for birthdays o, holidays. Call the 1-terald at 724-: 0200.

••• GOOD EXAMPLE: Wrestling is held every other week at Westerly High School where part of the proceeds go to a scholarship fund. Joe Celletti, busy with his land­scape gardening, had time to call with praise for promoter Lenny Malagrino who is also planning open-air wrestling shows for this summer. The next show at the high school is scheduled for May 31 , according to Celletti. Hoe says that he has recently been ap­proached by several prospective young boxers who want to ge\_ in the game. The lure of the publi­cized big purses, no doubt. .... ATTRACTIVE WHITE FLEET: For a while it appeared that unof­ficial races on the Bay would be resumed between the "Mount Hope" and the "New Shoreham." A number of years ago, two steamboats bearing those names plied the waters between Provi­dence and Block Island. providing added excitement with " unoffi­cial" races. Recently. Blount Ma­rine Corporation of Warren launched modern versions of the "Mount Hope" and "New Shore­ham" - but - the "Mount Hope" has been sold and plies the waters on the Pacific side. I've been told. Old timers will recall the old steamboats with affection and will be happy in knowing that the modern "New Shoreham" is tremendously popular with its vacation excursions that include trips to the Saguenay River. Flor­ida, the coast of Maine, etc. Re­servations are being taken for viewing the America's Cup Races too.

••• AND REMEMBER: " So many Gods, so many creeds; so many ways that wind and wind; while just the art of being kind is all this ~ .world need.st ,- CARR'( O]'J!

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J !! a

l'IIESENTS CHECK: Mn. Wiliam E. INftS, pNsiclent of the Miriam Hospital Women's Au«iation, p,-sented a check in the amount of $38,000 to hospital p..sicle.nt Norman Fain at the Women's Auociation annual mNting held on May 20. The check NpNsenh the funds raised by the Women's Auoclation oftr the past year including monies from the Association's house tour and the hospital gift shop. It will be U!N to·c-r the cost of an additional heart-lung machine and electrocardiography treadmill monitoring equipment. Mn. LawNnce Z.lkind -s chairman of the day and guest speaker and installing officer was Dr. Stanley M. Aronson, director of the department of pathology and laboratory medicine at The Miriam, and dean of rne­d~I affairs at Brown Uniftrsity. He spoke on ,the role of women in medicine.

Lebanon,'s Call For UN Meeting Stopped By Other World Powers

UNITED NATIONS, N . Y .: Lebanon protested to the Security Council over Israel's air attack on her territory, calling it a "murder­ous and barbaric rampage."

But after being pressed by the United States and other nations not to endanger current Middle East p~ace efforts by insisting on a de­bate, Lebanon did not call for a Council meeting. ·

President Nixon and Secretary of State Kissinger both sent messages to Lebanon expressing _condolences fo r the losses inflicted by the Israeli air attacks, which were carried out in retaliation for the killing of Is-raeli students at Maalot. ·

Lebanon' s letter to the Security Council said that more than 40 per­sons were killed and 180 wounded by the Israeli raids.

Britain and France Actt.e Delegates here said that a. num­

ber of governments, among them Britain and France, had been active in dissuading the Lebanese from demanding a Council meeting that could upset Secretary of State Kis­singer's efforts to obtain an Israeli­Syrian disengagement accord.

They were said to have impressed on Lebanon that she could not get a resolutioo condemning Israel that did not also mention the Maalot killings by Arab terrorists.

The Council last month con­demned an Israeli attack on south­ern Lebanese border villages that was in retaliation for a terrorist as­sau lt on the village Qiryat She­mona, where 18 Israelis were killed. There was no specil1c mention of Qiryat Shemona in tJie resolution, and this caused the Israeli delega­tion to walk out in protest and de­nounce the Council action as a " travesty."

"The Lebanese have been told they cannot get away with a resolu­tion like the last one," one Eu­ropean diplomat remarked . Anoth­er said that the Maalot slayings had touched a "raw nerve" and that the Council would have to take ac­count of the sentiments it aroused.

u.s., ....... sc.w A United States official said that

the delegation had voted for the resolution la t month that did not condemn the terrorist action s~if­ically but that the United Stata now would not approve any resolu­tlon not condemning the Maalot kiUin .

DipkJmata llcre said that tbs f.opCiaa ud other Arab delep­liolll 111111 uaed tlle ~ to ■t>-

peal to the Council last month but were not encouraging them to do so now unless Israel repeats her puni­tive strikes.

Officially, Egyptian and Jorda­nian delegates were saying only that the Israeli raids must stop. But they also were expressing concern that an acrimonious debate now would not be helpfu and might jeopardize the peace talks.

One Middle East expert quoted an Egyptian official as saying that "the whole situation in the area could be adversely affected," and this the expert said, clearly implied

that Cairo was concerned that its own disengagement agreement with Israel could be affected.

Diplomats here said they were surprised that Israel- had not called for a Council meeting immediately

. after the Maalot incident. Israel long has maintained that she can­not expe€I a fairjudgment.y:om the .Counai11 and that !he, Soviet Union and China would veto any resolu­tion opposed by the Arabs.

The political balance, the Israelis say, is against them since eight of the 15 Council members have no diplomatic relations with Israel.

AJC Conference Cautions Members On Public Qpinion

NEW YORK: The executive vice president of ·the American Jewish Committee cautioned American .Jews not to label everyone who disagrees with them as anti-semitic.

While asserting that there is a "growing public insensitivity to matters of Jewish concern" the official, Bertram H . Gold, said Jews "must not confuse legitimate differences of opinion with anti­semitism."

Speaking at New York Hilton Hotel as the opening session of the committee's 67th annual conference, Gold said such characterizations "deprive us of the vital opportunity to mediate and resolve competing group interests before they become antagonistic."

Prop■1 .... Orin Seen "To label such people as anti­

Semites could very easily make . anti-Semites of them," Mr . Gold said . "If we use too broad a brush on our labeling, no one can escape its sweep. Furthermore, it is important to recognize that the American way is to resolve connict, not exacerbate it."

Mr . Gold did cite what he regards as new sources of anti­Semitism in the United States, including Arab_propaganda "financed by new oil riches." He said the Arab League had begun a " vicious, sophisticated, heavily financed propaganda campaign that has resurrected all of the di,crtdited anti-Semitic stereotypes and is giving them wide currency." ~ He also said American Jews were

concerned about news reports of allegations that ethnic slurs had been made in the White House.

At another seuion , Mrs . ·Katherine Graham, publisher of

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The Washington Post, told the delegates that Watergate had "revitalized and renewed freedom of the press."

Mrs . Graham received the American Jewish Committee's Mass Media Award, citing her "for intellectual integrity and courageous commitment to the democratic principle of free expression."

Eichmann, Dayan Comparable Men?

MOSCOW: Tass, the Soviet pres~ agency, compared Gen . Moshe Dayan to the Nazi · war criminal Adolf Eichmann and charged that the Israeli Defense Minister had engineered the deaths of the Israeli children held hostage by Palestinian guerrillas in a school in Maalot.

The allegation followed a wave of attacks in the Soviet press against the -fnaelfs for their reprisals against Palestinian refugee camps after the massacre.

Tass said General Dayan had ordered the storming of a school 'with only three Palestinians and some Israeli children inside." The agency, which did not mention that the children were hostages, alleged that General Dayan had encouraged the killing as "a prete~t to prolong the Israeli · illegal occupation of ~rab lands."

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BEIRUT, Lebanon' Israel continued her reprisal raids against Palestinian camps in Lepanon with a naval bombardment of the Rashidiyah refugee camp south of the old port of Tyre. ·

Abu Yussef, a Palestinian guerrilla leader at the camp, told newspapermen later that eight people had been killed and about IO wounded by missiles fired by Israeli gunboats.

About 50 of the cement block buildings with sheet-metal roofs that house the camp's 12,000 peopfe were damaged, including six along the waterfront that were said to.be barracks.

The attack lasted about 50 minutes, according to Y1itnesses, but the firing was intermittent. This allowed many people to run to safety in fields and orchards behind the camp. ·

"The dead and wounded were mainly those who didn't . have a chance to run," said •Mr. Yussef.

The Lebanese Defense Ministry, reporting the Israeli attack, said that coastal guns had hit one of the boats.

"All our heavy guns participated in the firing," the Defense Department communique said . "Smoke was seen pouring from one of the boats after it took a direct hit."

Palestinian guerrillas also fired machine guns at the gunboats, which were well within sight, but the swift French-made vessels were soon out of range. ·

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camp. Israeli jeis ·attacked 'palestinian

refugee camps and Lebanese villages with bombs and rockets. More than 50 people were killed and nearly 200 were wounded in raids that were in reprisal for the bdnapping and shooting of sc hoolchildren by Palestinian · guerrilas in Maalot in northern Israel. ' An hour after the attack o n Rashidiyah, the camp occupants were si tting in front of-their homes talking about it or were trying to recover belongings from the damaged houses.

The camp, the southernmost in Lebanon, is only six miles from the border with Israel. ft is the second largest of the 15 camps here.

The camps, which a re maintained by the United Nations Relief Administration for Palestinian refu gees, were built o riginally ·for refugees coming here after the partition of Palestine and the Arab-Israeli war of I 948.

All 15 are policed and administra ted by Palestinian resistance organizations. Since the headquarte rs of these guerrilla gro ups are usually just another building among the closely packed houses, it is virtually impossible to attack them from the air or by distant bombardment without causing casu.allies amo ng the civilian refugees.

Israel Reports Raid -TEL AVIV: Israeli naval boats

this afternoon attacked what Israel

said were Palestinian guerrilla bases on the south coast of Lebanon in a continuing series of punitive me asures that followed the shooting of students at Maalot.

The naval raid just north. of the Israeli border and south of the town of Tyre lasted 30 minutes, an Israeli spokesman said that the boats were fired o n from shore, "but were not hit a nd returned safely to Israeli waters."

"T he boats shelled a nd hit buildings and installations" near Rashidiyah, the announcement said .

3 Israelis Wounded Meanwhile, the small war of

attrition · between Israel and Syria continued and Israel said that three of her soldiers had been wounded by Syrian shelling. The death of an Israeli so ldier was also announced.

Optimistic reports that an American-sponsored military disengagement might be near did not seem to have limited the a rtill ery exchanges. Unofficial sources said that they were still fair ly intended.

The struggle, wlJile small-scale, goes on without interruption. At night Israeli infantrymen lie in the bitter cold of contested Mount Herm o n in ambush positions to thwart Syrian attempts to place land mines on the vital road along the mountain spine held by Israel.

Both sides occasionally send out patrols, "if only lo give the bored infantry something to do other than sit under shelling," one source said.

I HARRY GOLDEN I (Continued from page 6)

into business, say, as Mark Twain went into business. Twain tried to sell everything, from new-fangled bed clamps for infant's cribs to historical board and parlor games no one wanted to buy .

He became a publisher and while he was returned fabulous money for his enterprise he sunk it all in a printing machine which left him in his mid,S0s broke and despondent.

We presume the greatest disgrace to be visited upon a ballplayer is to throw a game. Shoeless Joe Jackson helped throw the 1919 World Series. But one remembers Joe hit .387, .408, and .395 three years in succession and never won a batting title.

The great shanda in baseball for me at any rate is Billy Loes' statement to Charlie Dressen that he didn ' t feel like pitching in the World Series one day .

In the days when the Pittsburgh Pirates were the hapless patsies of the National League, the young

pitchers always tried to beg off from their rotation. They were always particularly anxious to be excused if the team had won the day before "because," as they put it . "everyone knows the Pirates can't win two in a row.''

For the politician the great disgrace re s t s always in hi s misapprehension that we think he is better than he is. We know politicians arc no better than they have to be and lying to us and trying to di sg ui se thi s fact is juvenile.

It is always a shock to a politician who stands as wordless as a kid caught in a fib that the constituency knows he lies and knows he pulls fast ones but the constituency is still more interested in the truth than they arc in image.

The voters do not confuse form and substa nce. The politicians do . The disgrace for the politician is finally to confess that he lied for us, for our benefit, for no other reason. It 's a likely story, as we say.

Page 11: ..J -D Against Terrorists

SUCC,ESSFUL INVESTING

ROGER E. SPEAR SMALL INVESTOR

STILL NEEDED Q: As an individual in the

military with ,only limited resources, I would like to know if there is any way that I can invest small amounts of capital, or is the market only for people with substantial sums of money to invest? H.S.

A: In spite of what you may have read to the contrary, there are about 32 million individual owners of stocks and mutual funds in this country and a large proportion of these are owners of under 100 shares. In fact Merrill Lynch, the largest national retail brokerage concern, recently revealed that about 40% of their orders are in amounts of $2,000 or under. If you prefer direct purchase of common stock, you should check the various brokers in your area to see if they impose minimum amounts on transactions. Practically speaking, however, very small orders . are more costly on a percentage basis.

Many mutual funds allow purchases in amounts as small as S20, although the usual minimum is $100. If- you are only able to invest $100 at a time, a no-load mutual fund would be your least costly method of acquiring a stake in a diversified investment portfolio.

Q: I would appreciate your comments on Consyne Corp. (ASE). I have 800 shares, which I purchased at $8 before the two­for-one split. H.D.

A: This manufacturer of dental, medical and orthodontic devices has come through 1973 with record sales and earnings as predicted by management early in that year. Net was up 30% to (iOta share on a 45% increase in sales. Several recent developments which should aid operations this year include a new orthodontic bonding process, expansion of manufacturing capacity and a high backlog of orders for the company's -patented Edgelok orthodontic bracket. At only 7x projected 1974 net, shares have above-average upside potential. If you are able to forego current income, these shares should be retained for gradual long-term appreciation.

CYANAMID SHARES UNDERVALUED

Q: I would greatly appreciate any comments you might have on American Cyanamid (NYSE). K.K.

A: Management projects record re!llllts in 1974, whicll wu off to a good start i■ the quarter ended Mar. 31. la the first quarter opera~ readied aew peaks with ..in ■p 15% to $410.S milli1111 and ear■i■c1 ■p 20% to 7:)t a share •er•H 61t a 511are I■ the 1973 •arter. A1ric■ lt■ ral chemicals pro,14e4 a si1alflcaat lloollt, co■trlhtl■c 29% to 1973 profits · a .. 21% to ales. I■ riew of die a■f■Hille4 4eaa.. f« f~Uzen, tllis 4i.t91o■ ._.. co■tl- to 1eaerate •• illcreul■c lltare of operatl■c re•lts. TIie IH4lcal pro4■ctl lfo■p, wllidi acco■■ts f« 21% of 1alu, llria11 4ow■ I~ profit o■ eadl ale9 4ollar ... pro,Wa 30% of die cc.,aay's after-tu eanillp. Wllile •le9 are aot n,ecte4 to iacrease -teri■lly tlll1 year, tile 41'islo■ co■W co■trlwte •«e praportioately to profits, reflecti■c a aew plaat h1 P■erto Rico a ■4 a lll1ller profitaMHty lettl f« Ille c-,uy'1 Dno■ •tares. INll9trlal dletakals 9"e■ Wr-aialfallle.

Two prolllea areas, NIWl■g pro4■cu ... la.. llenlopaeat, ,-ala Nt are aot ••J« facton.

·Ho■9i■l 1tarts, la re-,- to lllgll llltett9t rates, llatt lleea off, a --■do■ wllicll w•W lie tra■!llate llllo !eftr• a1e9 of F-ica, a Cyaaa•i' pro4■ct. Erda, a■ ■acemolWatd ll■IWl■c _,. real

estate division, should cut losses this year. Cyuamid is trading at 9x estimated 1974 earnings, well below the historic arerage. Shares are rated hold.

Q: You suggested recently a reader switch from Mass . Investors Trust Fund to Mass. Income Development for greater income. I hold the former and need a higher yield but hesitate because my fund has been irt existence for nearly 75 years and its total assets are 7x greater. .What are your comments? F.P.

A: Massive size is not necessarily an advantage for a fund, since stock positions are large and not easily liquidated. Futhermore, since lloth funds are managed by the same advisor, Mass. Financial Services, you need not be concerned about Mass. Income Development's short history.

READER HAS STRONG PORTFOLIO

Q: I am 62, a widow and would like to 'retire in a few years.

_ Would you advise me on any changes I ' Shc>uld make in my investments for higher retirement income? I hold 200 shares of Eli Lilly (NYSE), 100 shares of DEKALB AgResearch (OTC), 600 Dreyfus Mutual Fund, 48 Essex Fund (in tlie Fidelity group) and ' $24 , 000 in 7 % bank certificates. R.S.

A: For the time being your portfolio should remain unchanged. Both Lilly and DEKALB have strong records of ris.ing sales and earnings. Consequently share trading prices have appreciated markedly over the years. While neither issue has survited ·the recent

· bear market unscathed , the recovery potential is well above average in each case. DEKALB is currently trading at 20x projected 1974 earnings versus a 27x average P / E over the last 4 years, despite a 150% rise in profits during the period. A similar situatioo holds true for Lilly shares. Although the historically high multiples which characterized the market in the late 60s and early 70s may be a long while in returning, some upgrading in P / E levels appears probable.

Your mutual fund holdings are oriented toward growth with Dreyfus the more conservative of the two. Both funds have allove­average JO-year performance records. At retirement, I would suggest exchanging your shares for those of income funds within the l>TeyfH and Fidelity groups. Your lltocks should ••so be sold at that time and the proceeds reinrested in bonds.

Q: We have an number of E bonds bought between 1942 and 1947. Are these still ·drawing interest and if so, at what rate? s.c.

A: Y oar bonds are earning hiterellt at the rece■tly iDCreased rate of 6%. Bo■4s l..ed prior to Jaae, 1949, llall H orl1laal life of 10 yean NI lla,e li■ce Ileen 1rallled tllree 10-year exte■91on perlo4s f« a •year life. Tl■is, tllese llo■4s wlll llegla malllrl■c in 1982 a■4 wlil co■d- to ear■ l■ternt a■tll tllat ti-.

Jewish Malcontents PARIS - The Soviet weekly

Aganiak has published three poison-pen articles based on conversations between one of its correspondents and a number of Soviet Jewish malcontents in Vienna who had left . Israel. Among other things, the returnees asserted that every Israeli Jew who sends a request for a relative to leave the Soviet Union receives a bonus from the government of IL. 200 (in the case of an ordinary person) and IL. 300 (in the case of an academician .)

D,·. S. Harold Reuter, autho;" of the "No Calculation" diving tables, shows simplified linea1· system to Captain Jacques Cousteau. The tables we,-. recently published in "The Ocean World of Jacques Cousteau."

Dr. Reuter Formulates Simplified-Div~it!. f:'t~!= of Mr. and Mrs.

Dr. S. Harold Reuter, a Ho~s- William Reuter of · 21 I Adelaide ton, .Texas, phys1c1an, and a native Avenue. of Providence, has formulated a simplified dive table to help scuba sport divers avoid the "bends.'' Dr. Reuter, an underwater photo­grapher and lecturer, devised the "No Calculation Dive Tables" from the universally accepted yet complex US Navy Tables, into a relatively uncomplicated linear system for repetitive scuba dives.

The tables have be~n published in French, Spanish, German and Italian and have been converted into the metric system. Recom­mended by the National YMCA Scuba Program, the National As­sociation of Underwater I nstruc­tors, the National Oceanic and At­mospheric Administration, and the World Underwater Federation, they were lauded in "The Ocean World of Jacques Cousteau" which was released last week.

In his daily medical practice, Dr. Reuter specializes in surgery and disease of the ear, oose and throat. He is considered an expert on barotrauma (accidents related to pressure) particularly as they apply to ear pressure.

A winner of more than 20 awards for his expertise in . both scuba diving and underwater pho­tography, Dr. Reuter is currently on the medical board of Hermann Hospital, which is the primary teaching hospital for the Univer­sity of Texas Medical School at Houston where Dr. Reuter is an associate in otolaryngology. He is also an associate professor at Bay­lor College of Medicine. He serves as medical advisor to the National YMCA Scuba Program, serves ac­tively on the National Association of Underwater Instructors Diver

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Dr. Reuter, a graduate of Hope High School and Brown Univer-Comptroller' s Report Adds To '73 War Questions

il--TEL AVIV - Several new

indictments of Israel 's lack of preparedness on the eve of the Y om Kippur War are contained iii the annual report of the State Comptroller which has been just released . They show that there were serious dificiencies in the repair and maintenance of tanks, half-tracks, troop carriers and other armored vehicles with some of them not having been inspected for 3-5 years. The Comptroller, Dr . Yitzhak Nebenzahl, is also a member of the Arganat Committee which is investigating the Yorn Kippur War.

Most of the Comptroller's report dealt with the financial problems of the va rious govern ment ministries, irregularities, govern ing of budgels and incorrect handling of bids to cont ractors . The Co mptro ll er found that agreements between the government and financial bodies provided excessive income to banks and higher interest rates for the public. Dr. Nebenzahl urged the government to close the large gap between salaries for civil servants and persons working for private industry .

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Page 12: ..J -D Against Terrorists

'

AT ANNUAL LAYMEN-TEACHERS CONFERENCE: At the annual laymen-teachers conference, sponsored by the Bureau of Jewish Education of Rhode Island, held on May 1, thrH received teacher certification. Shown abave, le~ to right, are Aaron Falcohky, chairman of the certification committff; Helen Foreman, Raphael Pltchon and Ira Zaidman, who received teacher certification, and Elliot S. Schwartz, executive director of the Bureau.

Breakdown Called For 'Judenstaat' that it is in its own interests to evacuate Arab lands," he ~aid. Sayegh 's speech was greeted by applause. Sayegh also said that "there will be no peace in the middle East until three million expelled Palestinians are reintegrated into their natural habitat and the · 'Judenstaat' is replaced by a new state where Arab Christians and Moslems ·will be able to live in peace with their Pales_tinian Jewish neighbors."

MONTREAL : An Arab diplomat called for dismemberment of the "Judenstaat" in a speech here in which he sharply criticized past U.S. policy in the Middle East but said the U.S. was now pushing Israel "in the right direction ." The speaker, Dr. Fayez Sayegh, the Kuwaiti counsellor to the United Nations, addressed 200 Canadians; Americans and guests from abroad

at the Rotary ·International · convention at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel. The meeting was attended by the consuls of Egypt, .Syria and Lebanon.

According to Dr. Sayegh, U.S. policy has changed since the Y om Kippur War because America felt its growing diplomatic isolation. "The U.S . is acting with more energy today · in convincing Israel

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Nazi Criminals

NY Rep. Claims La-xness In The Immigration Laws

NEW YORK : Representative Eliz-abi:th Holtzman charged that "an_ appalling laxness and superficiality" in investigations by the Immigration and Naturalization Service had made America "a haven for at least 73 alleged Nazi war criminals" over the last 25 years.

Representative Holtzman, a Brooklyn Democrat on the House Immigration subcommittee, said that a study of status reports of investigations showed at least 15 cases in which the immigration service had failed to interview eyewitnesses to atrocities allegedly committed by some of the suspects.

The agency also failed to initiate contacts with foreign governments and doucment centers for key information on those under investigation, she charged.

"Despite the 'high-priority' nature of the l.M.S.' investigation, its administration and conduct can only be described as haphazard, uncoordinated and unprofessional," she declared in a letter to Commissioner Leonard Chapman Jr. , of the immigration service . The letter and an accompanying memorandum on some of the cases were seleased in New York and at a news conference in the Capitol.

Some Suspects lnteniewed Asked later for comment, a

spokesman for Commissioner Chapman, Verne Jervis, said that since July, agency investigators had conducted 82 interviews in New York and 44 others around the country in an effort to develop cases against supects. But he declined to reply directly to Representative Holtzman ' s charges, saying a_detailed rejoinder was being prepared .

In New York, Sol Marks, the immigration district director who was named last year to head a nationwide stepped-up drive against alleged war criminals, said, "I'm sor'""Miss Holtzma n feels that way because it 's dead wrong. We have a long hard row to hoe finding evidence th a t 's clear, convincing and unequivocal. "

Mr. Marks, who is retiring after 40 years of service, also disputed Repre se ntative o n several particula rs, asserting that an Israeli document center had in fact been approached for information and that after a change of procedure a request had gone to Latvia for conviction records of a suspect now living in Mineola, L.l.

Some Suspects Named Miss Holtzman named nine of

the suspects whose cases have received attention in the press over the years. Included were the man from Mineola , Bole s lavs Maikov s kis, who is under a Latvian death sentence for an a lleged role in wartime exte rmin a tion s there; Andrija Artukovic of Los Angeles, former Interior Mini ste r of Nazi-run Croatia who has successfully withstood Yugoslav demands for hi s extradition since 1951 ; a nd Bishop Valerian D. Trifa of the Rumanian Orhodox Episcopate of America outside Detroit, former studen t leader of fascist Rumania.

None was immediately avialable for comment. Mr . Maikovskis has an unli s ted telephone . Mr. Art ukovic was said to be living with his brother, a contractor, in the Los Angeles area but attempts to reach him there or through his former atto rne y, Robert T . Reynolds of Washington, proved unsuccessful. No one answered the t<:lephonc at Bishop Trifa 's Episcopate at Grass Lake, Mich .

Miss Holtzman complained, investigators had not interviewed a single witness on Bishop Trifa from names made available to the Government. According to Charl&s

·Gordon, counsel to the immigration agency , one witness

has been interviewed. Miss Holtzman also charged that

since last August, investigations of at least five suspects of the 43 cases she considered active were canceled "for unclear reasons and in some cases for no reason at all." One of

. these cases, she said, concerned a doctor alimplicated in medical experiments on concentration camp inmates.

Papers Pointed Rosy Scene Before October War Began

TEL AVIV: In tracing the factors responsible for Israel ' s unwarranted complacency preceding the Yorn Kippur Wa r, some of the nation 's newsmen are frank lo admit that they, too, were at fault. Journalists tended to paint a too rosy picture, they said, and avoided even mentioning the hint of serious trouble and dangers ahead. This admission, voiced by many newsmen at a recent symposium held here, was challenged by Davar 's military correspondent as being unfairly self-critical. In those halcyon days before the October War, he argued, any reporter who dared to write of dangers ahead would have been denounced as a defeatist, a pessimist and as undermining public morale. It would have been asking too much oC -the fourth estate that it supply the prophecies of doom at a time when the nation's generals were reassuring the prople that their security was ironclad and that Israel's military prowess rivalled that of England and France. · ·

The Davar newsman ( his paper is the official organ of the Labor party ) deplored a social climate that ' tolerates no criticism and expressed doubt as to whether the press will behave differently in the future than it did in the past.

Hitler's Birthday Celebrated On Sylt

BONN - The Kiel public prosecutor h as s tarted investigations into a ceremony on the Nort h Sea island of Sylt to mark Hitler's birthday.

The celebration was attended by 50 men and women between the ages of I 5 and 25 "wearing brown shirts a nd swastikas. The hotel in Westerland where the party took place was decorated with Nazi e mblems and pictures of Hitler. Recorded Nazi marches and speeches were played, and a toast was-made to the "Fuehrer.··

Questioned by police, the you ng people taking part sa id the shirts and sympbols had been bought at junk shops and the party had been staged because " life on the island was tedio us." They belonged to no particular political party, it appea rs.

Shapiro, Tisch Receive University Award

C INC INNATTI - Laurence A. Tisch and Irving S . Shapiro, chairm an of the board and chief executive officer of Loews Corporation and the Du Pont Company, respectively, have been named first recipients of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of R e li gion's "Award for Distingu ished Jewish Service," a nn ounced by Dr . Allred Gottsch a lk , President of the College- Institute.

The awards, in recognition of Tisch 's and Shapiro ·s "outstanding leadership and service to Jewish philanthropic and communal causes," will be presented at the convocation dinner of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion ·s New York School at the Pierre Hotel in New York City. City.

Page 13: ..J -D Against Terrorists

/

. ------------~===========-:-:-=-=-=--=-======-=---=-=-=--=--=-=--==-=-=-=::__=-~-=--= .. - ----· -

APPOINTED IEPIESENTATIVE: Mn. Harold Kolman of 134 Dox­terdale Road has boon appointed VA hospital repre•ntative for the American Rod Cron at a meeting of the Camp and Hospital Council al the Veterans Hospital.

Mn. Kolman began her IOrvico at the VA Hospital in Juno 1964. She began Gray Lady training in May of 1964 and received certifi­cation in August of that year. She has boon acting deputy since July of 1973.

Hor previous volunteer ex­perience · has boon at lying-In Hos­pital, March of Dimes and the Heart Fund. She Is past president of the Providence Chapter of the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society in Denver, Colorado, now called the American Medical Center at Denver. She •rvod on ill notional board of dirocton and is honorary president for lit.. . .

n,!'~,!:m~~ai, ::;7,~:, Jewish Homo for the Aged and Temple Ernanu-EI Sisterhood.

Exposure to national ad pages in newspapers is consistent by day of the week.

French Jews Deplore Arrest Of Klarsfeld

PARIS, - The French Jewish community has sharply condemned the ·arrest of Beale Klarsfeld by German authorities near Munich and her detention without bail in a Cologne jail until her trial, which is expected to take place late July. The avowed Nazi hunter was ar­rested on the eve of Holocaust Me­morial Day while attending a dem­onstration at the site of the former Dachau concentration· camp, to protest against the Bonn Parlia­ment's delay in ratifying an extra­dition accord signed three years ago with France.

Mrs. Klarsfeld is accused by German authorities of having tried three years ago to kidnap Kurt Lis­chk a, former head of the Gestapo in Paris during the German occu­patio n of France, and bringing him to justice in France where a court sentenced him in absentia in Sept., 1950, to life imprisonment for war crimes . Mrs. Kla rsfeld was de­ported from West Germany and to ld she would face cha rges if she returned .

In condemning West German au­thorities for her a rrest and in­carceration, the French section of the World Jewish Congress recalled that her fundamental aim is "the search for war criminals." The In­ternational League Against ~acism and Anti-Semitism LI CA) called fo r Mrs. Kla rsfeld's " immedia te re­lease" and has set up solidarity committees to support her cause. The Association of Former Jewish Deportees of France declared their solidarity with the anti-Nazi activ­ist an·d in a communique called for her release and demanded " the Nazi torturers be thrown in prison in her. place."

Hera ld ads get results.

ENGAGBI: Mr. and Mn. Milton Kaplan of Unden, New Jeney, an­nounce the engagement of their daughter, Miu Ellen Joy Kaplan, to Lawrence Bernard Maries, son of Mr. and Mn. Jack L Maries of Sla­ter Avenue.

Miu Kaplan is a junior at Temple University'• College of Al­lied Health Profouions, majoring in occupational therapy.

Mr. Maries is a graduate of Providence Hebrew Day School, Classical and is in his third year at the Temple University School of Dentistry. He· was an· honor stu­dent at Providence Collogo and a

· member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, the International Premedical Honor Society. Mr. Maries is a 2nd U. in the United States Air Force Medic­al Service Eaify Commission Pro­gram. In his sophamoro year al Temple University, he was one of 80 dental students soloctod to ro­ceivo a full Air Force Kholanhlp.

Mr. Maries is the grandson of Mr. and Mn. William D. Strong of Hollywood, Aorida, and of the late Mr. and Mn. Morris Maries of Providence. ·

A Juno 1975 wedding is planned.

'The Dybbuk': Leonard Bernstein's New Ballet Based On -Yiddish Play

NEW YORK, - The relationship of mathematics to music is n o t new s, but the relationship of Leonard Bernstein to the Kaballah, the traditional Jewish mysticism with a passion for numbers, strikes a new note, according to Richard F. Shepard of the New York Times .

The new note, and other new notes we r e being str uck at a rehearsal the other day at the New York State Theater, where Mr. Bernstei n had just taken the New York City Ballet o rchestra o n a first run through the score of "The Dybb uk ," a ba llet fo r which, he has done the mu s ic and Je ro me Robb ins the choreograp hy. It opens May 16, afte r a benefit preview.

"The Dybbuk" is an o riginal in the exorcist genre. The new Bernstein-Ro bbins ballet, inspired by the sto ry of "The D ybbu k" rat her than a narration of it , is the umpteenth versio n of this great Yiddish play, which is a classic even though it is less than 60 years o ld .

Various Adaptations It is a play that has much to do ·

with Kaballah and Mr . Bernstein has taken his inspiration for the musi c from the my s tical numerology in which much of the Kaballah is rooted . "The Dybbuk" was written in Russia by S. Ansky a nd first staged in Warsaw by the Yiddish Vilna Troupe. It became a n importa nt part of the Hebrew­speak ing Habimah repertory a nd has si nce been done as opera, novel and play. often under o ther titles and adapted to other scenes, such as Paddy Chayefsky's " The Tenth Man:·

A dybbuk - the word is Hebrew - is a disembodied spirt of a dead person tha t has entered into the body of a live one. In the play, the rejected suitor of a village girl learns that she is betrothed to a nother. He dies but his spirit enters into her and she speaks his words in his voice. The spirit is finally and thunderously ,

dramatically, exorcised in lime for an unhappy fina le .

All of which takes us up to Mr. Bernstei n si tt ing in the late 20th cent ury in hi s modern dressing r oom a nd explaining in a n int erview sq u eezed betwe en rehearsal a nd a denti s t 's appointment how he came to be caught up in this most occult of worlds. · The lau reate conductor of the New York Philharmonic who had las t raised hi s baton in early September in England's E ly Cathedra l, inherited his knowledge of Jewish tradition from his father , a Talmudic sc holar a nd businessman.

"Every note in the ballet was a rrived at by cabalistic or mystical . manipulation of numbers," lie said . "That in c lud es numerology, conversions, anagrams. Not a lways co nsciously, not because I tried, but it came out of it while I was worki ng."

One of the main elements is that every o ne of ire 22 lellers of Hebrew a lphabet has a numerica l va lue. Aleph , the first leller is number I, beth is two, yod is IO, koph is 100 and so on.

The cabali stic numbers ada pt al m ost n at urally to the basic components of the 12-tone system in music, Mr. Bernstein found.

T o help him mate mysticism and music, he drew for him se lf a diagram of a cabalistic tr ee representing the emanations of the God head and called Sephifot, of numbers . The di ag ram emb races man y s piritual and phy s ica l qualities, such as understanding , strength . grace, endurance a nd glory . It has m a le a nd fem ale aspects. A notation on his freehand tree observes that 10 numbers plus 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet created 32 channels of connection by which upper aspects of the tree may be con nected with the lower.

The name of Leah , the unhappy heroine of "The Dybbuk," has a name with letters that add up to the number 36, the maestro went on .

"Thirty-six is the number of un known, just men, saints put o n earth to do good deeds," he said . "Thirty-six is twice 18 and 18 is the sum of the letters for the word that mea ns life, khai . Twice life, that mea ns Leah's life and the · suitor's life, united in her namey a further indication th a t this forbidden marri age must take place. · " Musically, to achieve 36' s, and

I 8' s - many cases I can' t begin to go into and ca n' t even remember­I quite un co nscio us ly invented , wi thin the octave range, a scale with notes, going back notes as the ninth . This has to one of the scale's origina l a multiple factor of 18 or 36."

Warming to h i°s th esis while rushing it though to an end, Mr. Bernstei n, speaking a lmost like a Norton Professor a t H a rvard, which he was for three months late last year, said: "Nine is a magic · number. It has such extraordinary powers. Any multiple o f nine, even · to infinity , adds up to nine. Two times nine is I 8, o ne and eight are nine. Five times nine is 45, four and five a re nine . Two nines a re life, four are the 36 just men.

"Of course, Bac h a lso used significant numbers in the final notes of his St. Matthew Passion" he interpolated i n sc hol a rl y fashio n .

" The more I look al it , I feel I' ve never o rchestrated at such length to produce a mu s ic that a ll goes together. It 's even more difficult when your collaborator asks for four beats more here or there for the dancers."

The co mpose r s ighed and concluded. regretfully, " I had one piece, called '18' written for the ballet. It had 18 rhythms for 18 in struments . But they cut it. After a ll , it's a long ballet now , 40 minutes."

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Page 14: ..J -D Against Terrorists

14-THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 24,-1974

Dayan Makes Emotion·a_l Speech~ Probably His Last As Minister

JERUSALEM: Defense Minister Moshe Dayan attacked the Israeli Government's initial decision to give in to the demands of the Arab terrorists who were holding

. students hostage and said that he had personally opposed it.

tn an emotional speech that may prove to be his last as Defense Minister, · Mr. Dayan told Parliament that Israel' had no choice but to kill terrorists who seized hostages inside her borders, regardless of the age of the hostages.

"Of course we don't want to light the war on the backs of our children," he said, repeating the reason Prime Minister Golda Meir originally gave for the Government's decision.

"B.ut where do we draw the line? What's the criteria? Old people but not young people? We will release terrorists for 16-year-olds but not 17-year-olds?"

"I regret the Government's decision," he said; in a rare public disclosure of disunity within the . Israeli Cabinet. "By surrendering, we are takmg a path that we have not taken before."

With three Arab terrorists holding teen-age students hostage at the school in Maalot, the Israeli Government originally decided to fulfull the terrorists' demands that : over 20 Arab guerrillas held in-. Israeli prisons be released and flown to Damascus. When it became apparent that the 6 p.m. deadline could not be met, however, Israeli soldiers stormed the school. Sixteen of the students died immediately, along with the three guerrillas. · Dayan reportedly gave General Gur permission to convey his opinion directly to the Israeli Cabinet.

M. Dayan•·s remarks in Parliament came in the midst of a full-scale debate on the Maalot incident in which Mrs. Meir defended the Government's action. She also announced the formation of an official commission on inquiry into the incident.

Mr. Meir · said that the government made its initial decision to accede to the terrorists' demands "with a heavy heart, aware as we were of its grave complications."

This decision was made at 11 a.m., according to an official chronology issued by the Government.

She said the terrorists had originally said that they woura negotiate only with the French or Rumanian ambassador to Israel, and only if they had a code word, which was to be delivered through the Governments · in Paris and Bucharest.

New COlldltioa later , Mrs. Meir said, ·the

terrorists announced that the code word would be deli~ered only after the released guerillas had been nown to Damascus.

Still later, according to the Prime Minister, new conditions were set under which half tbe hostage students would have to be nown with the three terrorists to an Arab country and released there.

" Not a single member of the Cabinet countenanced agreeing to this terrible demand," Mrs. Meir said.

I nstcad, the Cabinet decided on military action .

" When no alternative remained," she said, "we preferred - lucid ly but with great apprehension and heavy heart - to endeavor to rescue the children with the help of the Israel Defense Fo rces."

Menaham Begin, the leader- pf the Opposition , responded with an acid speech in which he challenged the reliability of /I Government­appointed Cl)mmission of inquiry. He contended that a parliamentary comm i ss ion would be more independent.

An Angry Reply Apparently incensed by Mr.­

Begin's remarks, Mr. Dayan asked permission · to speak. -Dressed in an open-collar shirt and windbreaker, he strode to the podium and launched into the most emotional speech he has made in Parliament in years.

"I don't care w kind of inquiry commission we have or whether we have one at all," he said. "For my part, I don't think we should."

Mr. Dayan maintained that the security forces had ·done everything possible to protect against a terrorist attac_k. "Everything was a possible target," he said .

. "The real question is: What kind of protection do 'l'e want?" he continued, ignoring the shouted interruptions of the opposition.

"I saw pictures in the papers of

· soldiers in helmets with gun belts posted on the roor of a yeshiva in Safad. Is that rhe kind of atmosphere we want to live in?" Despite Mr.s . Meir's lengthy recapitulation, a number o( questions remain unanswered.

Why, for instance, did the Israeli Government fail to understand the t errorists' demands until midafternoon? A.n Arab guerrilla spokesman in Beirut has maintained that tbe terrorists carried six letters, addressed to the l~raeli Government, th'e French and Rumanian ambasadors, the Iniernational Red Cross, the municipality of Maalot and the children's families. These messages supposedly were carried out of tile school in the early morning by a woman lieutenant whom the terr<1rists released.

USS·R To Prev~nt July Science Seminar MOSCOW: The Soviet Union

indicated that it would· seek to prevent an international scientific seminar plann.ed here in July by a group of Soviet Jewish scientist who have been barred from emigrating to Israel.

The labor newspaper Trud reported that the State Committee for Science and Technology, the scientific arm of the Soviet Council of Ministers, had disowned the siminar as "a provocative action of · certain circles that has nothing in common with science." -

The July seminar, to which many prominent foreign scientists, among the eight Nobel Prize lauretes, had been invited, was organized here to help update the pr9fessional qualifications of Jewish scientists who have been dismissed from their posts following their applications to emigrate.

The 19 . organizing scientist said that they had also invited scholars prominent in the Soviet establishment and had asked- for official assistance in arranging seminar facilities and visas for

foreign visitors. But in response to a question

that Trud said was posed by its editorial board_, the state scientific body contended that the seminar had been organized "without the knowledge and consent of' Soviet scientific organizations." _

The committee declared that "competent Soviet organitions" would decide accordingly how to respond to any attempts toQrry out such an action?''

This was taken as a blunt hint that foreign scientists trying to come to the seminar would be refused entry visas and that the secret police would also be called upon to suppress the seminar.

One of the organizers, Dr. Viktor l. Brailovsky, a cyberneticist, said that the Jewish scientist would meet to decide what actions they should take .

. · The organizers have insisted that the seminar is not politically motivated but represents an effort to save their scientific expertise. Since applying to emigrate, all have been isolated by authorities from teaching and research .

Israelis Ask Parli-ament For Capital Punishment

TEL AVIV : The Israeli Governmen·t is planning to reconsider its policy of_ opposing death sentences for Arab terrorists convicted of musder, the Minister of Justice said . .

The Minister , Haim Zadok, spoke in Parliament in Jerusalem in reply lo motions for debate on the mailer in the wake of the recent killings in the Galilee Argo. Indirectly he was responding to a wave of public criticism of the Government's policy, adopted in 1967.

Mourners at the Funerals of 18 Is raelis massacred in Qiryat Shemona on April i'I and those of 20 teen-agers murdered in a school in Maalot on May 15 shrieked demands for the execution of terrorists . ....-ngry · demo-nstrat_ors later appeared at the Parliament demanding capital punishment. ·

University students gave the Speaker of Parliament , Yisrael Yeshayahu, a petition containing 100,000 signatures demanding the execution of convicted_ terrorists. The students said that they began co llecting the signatures after Arab gunmen -murder~d members of the · Israeli Olympic team at Munich in September. 1972.

Discuss io ns of the iss ue have lilied co lumns in the press. Most articles and readers' tellers ca lled for death .

C apital puni s hment wa s abolished in Israel in 1954 except for Na,d criminal s and their collaborators. genocide or treason in wartime . The only prisoner hanged was Adolf Eichman, the wartime Gestapo leader who was abdu1:led from his hideout in

Argentina in 1960 by Israeli agents and brought to Jerusalem for trial.

But antiterrorist regulations enacted in 1945 during British control of Palestine are still in force. These provide f.or death sentences for such offenses as firing a gun or throwing a grenade at peorle. The sentence may be imposed by military tribunals only if they include at least "iwo jurists.

But the Cabinet ha$ cfirected milit~ry prosecutors not to ask for the maximum penalty .

Explaining the reasoning behind the Government ' s policy, Mr . Zador said terrorists who knew they would be well-treated in prison if c·aught tended to surrender when cornered whereas if they bdieved they would be hanged anyway they 'would fight to the end.

Other considerations( he ·said , included concern that terrorists might seize defenseless hostages abroad in attempts to save condemned men · from the gallows. It was also feared that executions would harm relations between the Government and Arab~ in the occupied territories.

Mr . Zadok said his personal view w as that the Cabin e t in reconsidering its policy, should be inlluenced by the effect the death penalty would ha ve on the struggle against terrorism and on political considerations, rather than by ·the anger and revulsion of the people or in response of the clamor for retaliation and revenge.

Reviewing the argument, he said th ose wh o advocated ihe death penalty for terrorists convicted of murder contended that by sparing them Israel was inviting allempls to _ free them.

- ------ --...

Park Comes Of Age Rebirth Of Older Time TUXEDO PARK, N.Y.

There was a bar mitzvah party in this village, once known only as the melting pot for fortunes, and the occasion represented something of a coming of age for Tuxedo Park as well as for David Haber, the 13-year-old boy _in whose honor· it was given.

David is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Morton Haber, who live in a 26-room (they use only 15, on the first two floors) turn-of-the-

- century house designed by Stanford White. It is one of a hundred or so homes scattered over the hillsides and valley of this beautiful woodsy enclave whose exclusive status is symbolized by a fence around its 1,900 acres, which are accessible only through a guarded gate oll Route 17, just north of Sloatsburg, and another around the other side.

Most of the larger homes in this southern Orange County community date to the years from 1898 to 1914, when rich men built them as oneof the waystops in the good life between New York City and Newport, R.I.

150 Guests Attend Until the nineteen-forties, it was

almost exclusively an upper-crust white, Protestant community. Today, there are perhaps a dozen Jewish families and a number of Irish and Italian Catholic householders in Tuxedo Park, many of them up from the city and still all white.

The afternoon party given by the 42-year-old orthodontist and his wife for their son, who had just participated in bar mitzvah services at Sufferns Conservative Sons of Israel Synagogue, spread over the family 's three terraced acres, and the 150 guests - 50 of them in the most amiable conditions.

Circulating around the lavish buffet table, laden with kishk a stuffed derma, noodle pudding, stuffed cabbage , deliciou·s Hungarian pastries, among other, more•universal, fare , were neighbors making their debuts in a bar mitzvah repast. They were interspersed among relatives of the family from Niagara Falls, Dr. Habers hometown; from Forest Hills, Queens, Mrs. Habers hometown; from Massachusetts, from Florida, and from Brighton Beach, a hometown dear · to any reminiscence of hard-old-days-in­Jewish-Brooklyn.

'Thrilled to Come' The talk was a speech that .

ranged from upper-class school to Hungarian, and there was unanimous agreement that the affair was a conspicuous and gracious success.

"When the invitations went out six weeks ago, a number of friends and neighbors nearby couldn't even say bar mitzvah," said Mrs .. Haber, a warm and outgoing person who seems to be a catalyst for the fusion of new and old residents in the area. "But they· were thrilled to come."

Mr. and Mrs. Beull Hollister, the Habers' next-door neighbors, found nothing but good words for the party and for their hosts.

"It's a great party . The food is fine, " said Mr. Hollister, a retired architect.

The Hollisters moved into Tuxedo Park in 1957 and they think that since then everything has been getting belier in the village , both socially and physically .

" Many of the houses were run down when we arrived, " said Mr . Hollister . "Tuxedo Park has improved. People now take an interest in keeping the homes up. Of course in the old days help was no problem . The house I lived in had eight servants and · three gardeners. But on the whole, the place is losing a lot of the stuffine'5 it once had."

Good Place to live The lines of social friction in the

Tuxedo Park community of less than 450 population seem to be there, although there are different interpretations of where they are drawn.

Some say that ihe front is between the long-time residents and the newcomers. Some that it is between the younger people and the older people. Others sense that Jews and other ethnic outsiders are considered not quite acceptable among the earlier settlers. But whatever doubts and demurrers, there is almost universal agreement that this is a good place to live.

Mrs. Haber said, "Being Jewish hasn't affected us at all here. We love it."

The Tuxedo Club, with its tennis courts and golf club and its waterfront site on one of Tuxedo

- Park's three lakes, is exclusive and has no Jewish members. · No Jewish members?

ChaQge Is Oted "Well, yes and no," said one of

the longer-resident Jewish Tuxed9 Parkers, who did not want his name used. He chuckled and explained, "They have one or two they may not be aware of."

Alfred England, the Supervisor of .the Town of Tuxedo, which covers 45 square miles, including a number of other communities, lives in Tuxedo Park, which is an incorporated village. He is 37 years old, a banker and the first Democrat elected to the job in 83 years.

"The Tuxedo Club is · .an exclusive private club that has no Jewish members," he said. "It used to be upper crust, but now there are a lot of members from outside of Tuxedo Park, too," he continued.

He noted that within the village were a Methodist Church, a Protestant Episcopal center and a Roman Catholic Church. "There are no synagogues, but we'll probably be having that, too," he said.

According 10 town' historians, Tuxedo Park introduced contract bridge to America in 1896. Griswold Lorillard, son ·or Pierre, founder of the village, appeared at the town 's "inaug\tral ball" in 1896 attired in a type of short evening .jacket that he had seen the Prince of Wales wearing. It became known as the tuxedo.

Younger People Called Friendly One of the newer residents of

Tuxedo Park is Jerry Swartz, a 30-year-old engineer who moved into a big old schoolhouse with his wife and 3-year-old daughter from Riverside Drive last November. Houses, he noted, range from perhaps $80,000 to more than several hundred thousand .

"The younger people - those under 50 anyway - are warm and

• friendly ," he said. "It 's the old money that doesn 't want to let go of things. "

Despite mixed feelings, he finds one great virtue: "When I get up in the morning, I realize I don' t have to move my car to the other side of the street. It's in my driveway."

Falashas Authentic Jews NEW YORK - The chief

Sephard ic Rabbi of Isr ael, Ovadiah Yosef, stated at a press conference thal the Palashas are authentic Jews, descendants of the tribe of Dan which was dispersed into exile after the destruction of the First Temple. Rabbi Yosef noted that this ruling was first made by Rabbi Yaacov Kastrow some 330 years ago. He conceded that there are only 20,000 Falashas left in Abyssinia and that they are being subjected to an intensive missionary campaign seeking their conversion to Christianity.

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Shevuos Traditions Date From Present Generation

The festival of Shevuos, which this year will be celebrated on May 27 and 28, has few special rituals. Those which it does have, says the . authoritative Encyclo­pedia Judaica, are of late origin, and many were established in the present generation. This is in sharp contrast to Passover and Succo, which with Shevuos con­stitute Judaism's three main pilgri­mage festivals. The explanatioD for this can be readily found when one traces the development of this festival. ·

Shevuos marks the end of the barley and the beginning of the wheat harvest and, according to the Bible, is consequently nothing but an agricultural festival. The earliest clear reference to Sbevuos as th.e anniversary of the giving of the Tablets of the Law says the E/ J , date to the third century C.E. The harvest associations no longer -had much meaning once the Temple was destroyed, and there are obviously no Biblical, ceremo­nies connected with the giving of the Torah· since this motif is post­Biblical.

In the synagogue it is customary to read the Book of Ruth on Shevuos. Among the reasons given are: that the events recorded in Ruth took- place at harvest time; that Ruth was the ancestor of Da­vid who, traditionally, dies on Shevuos; that Ruth's "conversion" to "Judaism is appropriate reading for the festival which com­memorates the giving of the -To­rah; and that Ruth's loyalty is symbolic of Israel's loyalty to the Torah.

In Israel's kibbutzim, says the E/ J , Shevuos is celebra_ted as "Hagigat ha-Bikkurim," the Festi­val of the First Fruits, a name

Shevuos Services (Continued from page I)

Tuesday, May ' 27' ~nd 28 at 9:30-a.m. and 7:30 p.m. There will be Yizkor memorial services at both Tuesday services.

TEMPLE BETH DAVID­ANSHEI KOVNO

Prorideoce . Shevuos services will be held at

Temple Beth David-Anshei Kovno on Sunday and Monday evenings, May 26 and May 27, at 7:30 o'clock.

Monday and Tuesday, May 27 and 28, services will be held at 9 a.m. Yizkor memorial services will be held on Tuesday at IO a.m.

Services will be conducted by Cantor Charles Ross.

TEMPLE BETH EL Prmldeoce

At temple Beth El Shevuos will be held at 10 . a.m. on Monday, May 27. The Yizkor service will be at 5:45 p.m.

TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL ProrideRCe

Services for She vu os wi II be held at Temple Beth Israel on Monday and Tuesday, May 26 and 27, at 8 p.m. Morning services on Monday will be at 9 o'clock. On Tuesday Yizkor services will be at 7 a.m. with a sec.ond minyan at 9 a.m. Yizkor services will be on Tuesday at 10 a.m.

Confirmation services will be held on Monday, May 27, at 8 p.m.

Confirmands are Ruth Marcia Fradin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fradin; Marilyn Paula Kor­tick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Kortick; Robert Bennett Ladd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sey­mour Ladd; Alan David Lury, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harris Luty; Ronnie Rae Saltzman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Saltzman; Neil Howard Weintraub, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Weintraub, aad Gary Stuart Wine, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Wine. A recep­tion will follow the servkes.

UMPLE EMANU-EL SeYices for Shevuos at Temple

Emanu-EI will be held on Monday and Tue,d■y mornings. May 27

which appears in the Bible. ~ib­butz celebrations originated in the 1920s and · I 930s as an attempt to recapture the "ancient Hebrew" - mainly the agricuJtural - char­acter of Jewish holidays. Over the years they acquired a tradition of their own, as _nearly two gener-

- ations of kibbutz children grew up cele,brating them. When the fitst · _ kindergarten ·and school were es­tablished in each kibbutz, the set­tlers became aware of a need for festive occasions, both as an educational experi~nce for the children and to relieve the mo­notony of daily life. The tradition­al festivals thus served as- a basis for a revival enrtehed by Biblical and mishnaic sources. The Festival" of the First Fruits marks the peak , of the first grain harvest and the first ripe fruits. The seven species mentioned in the Bible (wheat, barley,_ vines, pomegranates; ·olive· trees, fig trees .and honey) are rep­resented graphically as well as through song and, dance. There are also mass rallies to bring offerings of first fruits to the Jewish Na­tional Fund.

In some -medieval communities it was customar-y to introduce chil­dren to the Hebrew School on Shevuos, the season of the giving , of the Torah. At this initiation ceremony, the child, at the age of five or thereabouts, was placed on the reading desk in the synagogue and from there was taken to the school where the first attempts at reading the Hebre~ alphabet be­gan. The child then was given cakes, honey and sweets "that the Torah might be sweet on his lips." In many modern synagogues, par­ticularly Reform, the confirmation of older ·children takes place on Shevuos.

and 28. On Monday confirmation exercises of the 47th confirmation class will be held. Ori tuesday Yiz­kor. will be observed and the me­morial tablets will be dedicated . Rabbi Joel H. Zairnan will deliver the sermon.

Evening servics will be held at 7:45 o'clock.

TEMPLE SINAI Oanston

The Shevuos evening service at Temple Sinai-will be held Sunday, May 26, at 8: 15 o'clock Rabbi Je­rome S. Gurland's sermon will be on "The Chain of Tradition."

The 13th annual confirmation will be held at services on Mon­day, May 27 at _10:30 a.m. / Confirmands are Marcia Ber­linsky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Everett Berlinsky; Holly Cohen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Barry Cohen; Lucille Gertz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gertz; Kimberly Hecker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Werner- Hecker; Mark Hornstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Hornstein; Stanley Reichhardt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reichhardt.

Also, Steven· Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shayle Robinson; Jeffrey Salk, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Salk; Bonnie Siegel, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Maurice Siegel; Linda Silverman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Silver• man; Gary Siperstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Harry Siperstein, ·and Debra Strauss, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Strauss.

ISSUE STATEMENT NEW YORX - Eleven Soviet

Jews have issued a statement protesting the detention by the KGB of Gordon Joseloff, a UPI correspondent in Moscow, after be met with the Jews to discuss the government refusal to give them exit visas, according to the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry.

' The statement noted that the KGB confiscated "the notes which each of us had written about his own personal situation about the difficulties he had encountered on tltc difficult road of emigration to Israel. Each of us described his personal attitude toward the ell.isling situation.''

RABBI JACOB HANDLER IZAK BERGER SAMUEL TIPPE

Three Men To_ Be Honored At Reception Rabbi Jacob Handler of -Temple

Beth Israel, Samuel Tippe, presi­dent of Temple Beth Israel, and Isak Berger, president of Congre­gation Shaare Zedek-Sons of' Abraham, will be honored for their leadership at a champagne reception in behalf of State of Is­rael Bonds on Sunday, June· 2, at 7:30 p.m. at Temple Beth Israel.

The announcement was made by Leonard J. Sholes of Temple Beth

. Israel, chairman of the reception. Mr. Sholes is a former president

of the temple. The affair is spon­sored by Temple Beth Israel and Congregation Shaare Zedek-Sons of Abraham. Joseph Thaler, chair­man of congregations of Rhode ls­land Committee, State of Israel Bonds, will be the guest speaker.

Members of the reception com­mittee are.- from Temple Beth Is­rael, Louis Brown, Joseph Corvis, George -Diamond, . Eugene Fried­man, · Hyman Grossberg, Samuel Jacobs, George Labush, Leonard Lyons, Nathan Miller, bavid Morse, Abraham Ponce, Paul J.

Robin, Louis ,Rosenbaum, Bernard Schneider, Samuel Shindler, Max Tippe, Morris Tippe and Edmund Wexler.'

Members from Congregation Shaare Zedek-Sons of Abraham will be Charles Dickens, Morris Gold, Leo Greenberg, David Has­senfeld, Samuel Jacobs, Solomon Kaufman, David Kirshenbaum, Joseph Margolis, Stanley Peirce, William Reich, Herbert Reuter, Louis Sacarovitz, Sheldon Shapiro and Ted Zillman.

Three Rabbis 'Expelled By ·Rabbin}cal Assembly

-KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. -Three Rabbis were expelled from the Rabbinical -Assembly, the Association or Conservative Rabbis, at the Assembly's 74th annual convention here, Rabbi Judah Nadich or New York, president, said. The expulsions had been .recommended by the RA Excu'tive Council and -were a·pproved by the overwhelming majority or more than 1,000 Rabbinic· delegates at the convention.

The three Rabbis are Gershom Winer, a New York Rabbi now settled in Israel; J. Benjamin -Friedberg or Ottawa and Rabbi George Gershon Rosenstock or Chicago. Rabbis Winer and Freiedbert were expelled for Rabbinical Service Beth Tzedec congregation ofToronto, Canada's largest synagogue; which has been

· without a senior Rabbi since the congregations Board or Governors

· dismissed Rabbi Stuart Rosenberg in January, 1973. Rabbi Nadich said that the two Rabbis had violated the RA's code or ethics.

He also said Rabbi Rosenstock was expelled for officiating at a mixed marriage in Iowa and was the first marriage in Iowa and was the first member in the history or the RA to be expelled for such officiating.

The Rabbinica_l Assembly had ruled, after Rabbi Rosenberg's dismissal, that he remain spiritual leader or the congr¢gation and the pulpit continue to be "not vacant." Under the ruling, no RA member could carryout any Rabbinical function without the express invitati_on of Rabbi Rosenberg or the express approval or the Joint Placement Commission or the RA , the United Synagogue or America and the Jewish Theological Seminary which has been seeking for more than a year to resolve the dispute . Rabbi Nadich said the Placement Commission had not taken any position on the merits or the Beth Tzcdec dispute but said both parties had to agree to binding arbitration with conditions.

Rabbi Rosenberg responded to his dismissal by filing lawsuits for damage against the congregational board and individual members totalling 2.5 million dollars. Rabbi Nadich said Rabbi Rosenberg agreed to arbitration without conditions but that the Board of Governors did not.

Rabbi Winer preached at Beth Tzedec during the 1973 High Holy Days, during one or his regualar visits to North America. Rabbi -Friedberg, one or several Rabbis who preached at Beth Tzedec in recent weeks, was named Senior Rabbi by th7 Board or Governors on May 2. .

Rabbi Nadich said that Rabbi Winer had defended his action at a hearing or the RA Committee on Ethnical Practices but was found guilty . The RA Executive Council recommended his expulsion Rabbi Nadich said. Rabbi Friedberg refused to appear before that committee. The ExecutiYe Council held him guilty or so refusing and recommended his expulsion. Rabbi Rosenstock also refused to appeaf before the committee on the mixed marriage officiating charge. Rabbi N adich said.

Rabbi N adich said there was no appeal from the rulings or the RA Convention, the highest body in the Conservative Rabbinate.

At an earlier session, the heads or the Conservative and Reform rabbinical groups agreed here that both organisations should oppose changes in Israel 's Law or Return that would further weaken the status or Conservative and Reform rabbis, particularly in the areas or conversion. ~

Rabbi Nadich and Rabbi Robert I. Kahn ol Houston, Tex as , president or the Reform Central Conference or American -Rabbis, agreed that the Orthodox rabbinate

Sherlock Holmes To Play Through Saturday, May 2S

The Trinity Square Repertory Compuny·s production or Sherlock Hu lm e.< ha s been extended through Saturday. Ma y 25. at the Lederer Theatre in downtown Providence.

S herlock Holm e.< is directed by Dennis Rosa and features Timothy Crowe as Sherlock Holmes. George Martin as Dr . Watson. Richard Kavanaugh as Dr . Mo­riarty and Mina Manentc as Miss Faulkner. Settings are by Robert D. Soule. lighting by Roger Mor­gan. costumes by Betsey Potter and properties by Sandrn Nathan­son.

ShalocA Holme.< perrorm s Tuesday thruugh Sunda} even ing:t at 8 p.m. Further information niay be obtained b) calling 35 1-42-12 .

in Israel was attempting to use the · present Israeli internal politica l

crisis to create a religious monopoly, excluding ~he Conservative and Reform rabbis.

The present Is raeli Law or Return automatically gives Israeli citizenship to all Jews emigrating to Israel , including those converted to Jedaism. The proposed amendment would limit this citizenship and

· right or return to those converted only under Othordox auspices.

Rabbi N a dich, stating that ·Conservative Judaism recognizes the validity or halacha, noted, however, that "the flaw lies in the fact that the Israel Orthodox establishment would place in accordance with Jewish law. Ir the rabbi were not Orthodox, the fact would have at once stamped his c_onversion procedure as invalid . Our position continues to be -that the conversion be performed only in accordance with the Jewish law but let the action be decisive. not the doer of the action."

Rabbi Kahn acc u se d th e Orthodox establishment in Israel or challenging "the right to be non­Orthodox and still be a member or the Jewish faith and people. Tha t right has not been granted to our R e f o rm and Conservative colleagues in Israel, and if the change proposed by the National Religious Party in Israel in the Law or Ret urn is passed by the Knesset, the right will ultimately be denied in the diaspora . Ir it succeeds, it may ultimately, in effect, defrock us.''

Brooklyn CALS NEW YORK: A federally

funded program to provide legal aid to Jewish poor and elderly got underway with the opening or an office in downtown Brooklyn or the Community Action for Legal Services. According to Steven M. Bernstein, the attorney in charge, the service is operating under a $300,000 grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity and is especia ll y designed to assist Yiddish-speaking clients. Its staff includes 10 attorneys, hair of whom are Yiddish- speaking, and the program will engage in outreach activities directed at the Hasidic and elderly Jews who meet the federal eligibility criteria and who may not have been served by existing programs.

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16- THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1974

Dr. -Goodman To Address Butler Hospital Auxili~ry

Dr. Charles C . Goodman, direc­tor of Rhode Island Mental Health, Retardation and Hospi­tals, will be the guest speaker at the annual spring meeting of the Butler Hospital Auxiliary on Wednesday, May 29. A petite luncheon will be served at 12 noon and · the meeting will follow at I p.m. in the· Ruggles Library at the Butler Health Center.

Dr. Goodman will speak on "Evolution in Mental Health." The public is invited to attend.

Officers who will be installed

CONSIDER the

arc Mrs. Charles G . Chason, pres­ident; Mrs. Thomas Gilbanc, first vice president; Mrs. Richard Mcaa, second vice president; Mrs. Frank Jones, recording secretary; Mrs. , Rober-t Rothman, corre­sponding secretary, and Mrs. Pedro Marca I, treasurer.

Members of the .board are Mrs. Earle Chambers, Mrs. William Considine, Mrs. James Winston, Mrs. Robert Kinder, Mrs. John Barr11ll and Mrs. Pierre Galetti.

Sephardic Jews N_EW YORK- The American

Sephardi Federation, which is the all-embracing organization for Sephardic _Jews -in the United States. has been accepted into members hip of the American Section of the World Jewish Congress.

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BETH EL BROTHERHOOD INSTALLS: The annual installation of offiters and board members of the Broth­erhood of Temple. Emanu-EI was held on May 14. Shown, fram left to ,·ight in the front row, are Raber! L Bernstein, first vice president; Lyman J. Williams, president (incoming); Rabbi William G. Braude; Dr. Jasan Siegal, president (outgoing), and Jeffrey S. Gordon, second vice president. In the back row, lefuo oight, are Rabbi Leslie Y. Gutterman, Elliot F. Slack, financic;,1 seCl'etary; Charles Lindenbaum, recording secretary; Mi• chael S. Meiselman, treasurer; Herbert B. Meister, co,..-esponding sec,·eta,y, and Samuel J. Cohen, publicity.

PLATTER FOR 2 ':!• . . Elazar Sees Peace · Fred Kelman Photo

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TEL A VIV- Rejecting the view of "those who believe ·that peace is unattainable" with Egypt, Gen . David Elazar, Chief of Staff of Israel 's armed forces , asserted that he is optimistic about an eventual peace settlement.

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AJC Reports Support From Other Religions NEW YORK: The American

Jewish Committee reported that Roman Catholic a nd Protestant ch ur ch groups through o ui the co untry had voiced support for Israel during and after las t year's Yo rn Kippur war.

· A 125-page study. released at the d osing sessio n of the 68th annual meeting of the commit tee a l the New York Hilto n Hotel , disclosed that demonstrations of Christi a n support and co ncern fo r Israel were mo re widespread in the Uni ted States than they had been during the 196 7 Mid die East fighting.

The study sa id that typifying the grass- roo ts C hri st ian response was the re so lution ·of th e Nationa l Conference of Catho li c Bishops, after the fighting ended, that called for " recog niti o n o f the right o f Israel to exist as a sovereign state with secure boundaries."

Other state ments in support of Israe l were m ade by Roman Ca tholic bi shops throughout the country. .

Protestant officials of a number of stale, regional an d local councils o f c hurches issued or s igned statements, the committee's study reported . condemning the Arab attack and urgin g continued American diplomati c support of Israel and, in so me cases. calling

for arms shipments. Rabbi Marc H . Tanenbaum. the

comm i ltee's i nlerrelig ious-a ff airs director, reported that recent events in the Middle- East dramatized by Secretary Ki ssi nger's s huttl e diplomacy sign ify that we are crossing a thr es h o ld- into a p o tenti a l e ra of pe ace a nd re conc i I ia t i-on bet ween Jew s . C hri stians a nd Muslims. "

At a nother session. Arie Eliav, member o f Israe l' s Kn esset a nd Miss Sana Hassan , an Egyptian , a Ph .D candidate at H arva rd , sha ri ng the same platform, agreed th a t prospects for peace in th a• part o f the world were improvi ng.

Miss H assa n said th at in inter v ie ws s he h ad h ad w ith ra nk ing Egypt ian journa lis•s and milita ry officers she was "pleasanty su rpr ised lo find a con sensus among mode rates and militant s alike" fo r the eventual diplo matic recognition o f Israel in exc hange for the return of Arab territories.

DOGS ASSIST TEL A VIV - Specially trained

police dogs loaned by Scotland Yard a re assisting the tri partite (lsraeli-UNEF-Egyptian) te ams trying to loca te the remains of soldiers who died in the Sinai desert duri_og the Yorn Kippur War, it was learned here.

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