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Reli~ious School Pupils Order Commission To Participate In R. I. Bible Contest To Review Aramco The Rhode Island Bible Con­ test, sponsored by the Bureau of Hiring Policies Jewish Education and School THE "ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH WEEKLY IN R. I. AND SOUTHEAST MASS. Council will be held this Sunday ALBANY - The New York State morning, at 11 A.M., in the school VOL. XLV, No. 2 FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1961 36 PAGES Commission Against _Discrimina­ auditorium of Temple Emanuel. tion was ordered recently by the More than 25 students from re­ New York Court of Appeals, the ligious schools in the Grea ter Servatius Objects To Televising CouJ)cil Affirms Right state's highest court. either to re­ Providence area are expected to view the anti-Jewish hiring pol­ participate in the Hebrew and Of Dr. Joachim Prinz icies of the Arabian-American Oil English divisions of the contest Of Courtroom Proceedings Company or to act to stop them. which will center on the following JERUSALEM - Dr. Robert Ser­ Attorney General said that the To Express Viewpoint The state's highest court af­ vatius, the West German attorney Eichmann trial, as an event of Books of the Bible: Genesis, NEW YORK - The national firmed in a six-to-one decision Exodus, Samuel I and Samuel II. who will defend Adolf Eichmann great historical significance, re­ Gove rning Council of the Ameri­ an order of the Appellate Divi­ quired being recorded on film . in the Nazi's trial here next can J ewish Congress recently said sion issued last April which or­ Winners in both divisions will month, expressed strong objec­ Sixth Bureau officials. it was dis­ receive awards from the Hebrew it "fully affirms" the right of Dr. dered SCAD to abandon its "ar­ tions to plans to televise the trial closed, have prepared charts of bitrary and capricious" refusal Culture Council and all partici­ proceedings. Eichmann's position in the Nazi Joachim Prinz of Temple B'nai pants will be presented with a Abraham, Newark, to express his to act on Aramco's hiring policies. He said that witnesses, reacting machine a nd surveyed his role in The Aramco appeal had been Certificate of Recognition. All to the publicity of being televised, introducing the gas chambers and views "from the platform of the contestants will be given a pre­ AJCongress, as its president, for opposed by the American Jewish would exaggerate their roles in his contacts with the former Mufti Congress which originally launch­ liminary written examination in the European holocaust as well as of J erusalem. the purpose of prompting a dis­ advance of the oral contests. The cussion of a vital issue in Jewish ed the legal fight against the hir­ their claims and charges against Except for Deputy Commander ing policies of the company which two top winners in each of the the former Gestapo colonel ac­ Avner Levy, who investigaLcd him, life." English and Hebrew divisions will cused of directing the extermina­ a nd Dr. Servatius, Eichmann was In a resolution. the organiza­ operates extensive oii extractions in Saudi Arabia. The AJCongress represent Rhode Island in the New tion of 6,000,000 J ews in Europe. not permitted to speak to anyone tion's policy-making body noted England Regional Bible Contest Bringing up the subject at a pre­ during his incarceration at Camp that during his address to the or­ charged that the oil company was to be held the end of April. trial meeting with the three judges Iyar. Guards in the cell and out­ ganization's Governing Council in in effect "the tool and agent of Judges for the local contest in­ who will sit at the trial, Dr. Ser­ side the door had strict instruc- Philadelphia last month on the Saudi Arbia in barring Jews from clude Rabbi Jerome Gurland, vatius contended televising the tions not to answer his questions. status and future of Zionist or­ employment both there and in Rabbi Donald Heskins. Rabbi trial would be beneath the court's Eichmann was given the regular gan izations Dr. Prinz had said he the United States. Morris Schussheim, and Rabbi dignity. The trial will open April prisoner's ration of eight cigarett­ was putting forward only his own Policy Defended Pesach Sobel. Members of the 11. es a day, but during his question­ personal views, not those of The company has defended its local contest committee of the Attorney General Gideon Haus­ ing period, received a more liberal AJCongress. policy of asking job applicants if School Council are Rabbi Akiva ner who will dlr.ect the prosecu­ ration. A doctor visited him daily. The resolution said Dr. Prinz's they were Jewish as essential to Egozi, Seymour Krieger, Joel tion, replied that the presence of He ate the same food as his statement did not commit AJCon­ compliance with the ban on en­ Sharir. Dr. Aaron Klein. Rabbi t.he cameras would !!ctually force gu.:. r1s, the cort.mandcr cf· the gress to his position. It reaffirm­ trance-- of Jews into Saudi Al·abia. Saul Leeman, and Rabbi Sobel. ,witnesses to think twice before guards selecting his plate at each ed the declaration contained 1n The company also has argued that Winners of the ,contest on Sun­ speaking. Noting that the Nurem­ · meal in order to prevent at­ the organization's constitution American foreign policy interests 1 · (Continued on Page 2) berg trials had been filmed, the tempts at poisoning the prisoner. (Continued on Page 2) in the Middle East justified an exemption for lt from the State Fair Employment Practice Law. Sign Contract For Construction The Court of Appeals declared SCAD had two courses. One was that Commissioner Elmer A. Car­ Of Providence Hebrew Day School ter, "shall immediately endeavor The contract for the construc­ right are Joseph W. Ress. presi­ to eliminate the unlawful employ­ tion of the new home of the Provi­ dent. General J ewish Committee; ment practice complained of" and dence Hebrew Day School was Arch ie Smith, first president of the other was that he could refer signed recently. the school; Mrs. Archibald Silver­ the issue to the commission for a Members who · attended the man, Judge Frank Licht; Mrs. further hearing. ceremony are shown below. Seated, Samuel Bresnick, president, La­ The question of United States from left to right are Jerome dies' Association ; Rabbi Eli A. foreign policy issue was brought Feinstein, building chairman; Bohnen; Dr. Joseph Fishbein and up in the lengthy dissent of As­ Joseph Dubin, president of the Archie Bellin, members of the sociate Judge Van Voorhis who school; Vincent Nanni, contractor, building committee; Llyod Turoff, said AJCongress was "plainly Nanni Building .Company; Lewis architect of Barker and Turoff, seeking to put Aramco out of bus­ Korn. treasurer of the school, and and Archibald Silverman. iness in Saudi Arabia." He de­ clared that about two-thirds of Rabbi Akiva Egozi, director of the On the left is a sketch of the school. Standing, from left to proposed new building. (Continued on Page 2)

For Tfie Ladies . . . . . Pages A, 8, C, D After The Children Grow Up Page M-1 The Music Group Page M-2 Bob Borod Directs Page M-4 Center Rehearsals Page M-5 For Teen Agers ...... Pages M-6, M-7, M-8

Columnists Leonard Lyons - Sylvia Porter Beryl Segal - Barney Glazer Is Born in Fall River, a son of the N Open Frankfurt R t f B. . Oft agents of segregation. And it 00 S O las · ~n shameful that the · rift of the Re- late Samuel and Taubel Luber, he B'nai B'rith Lodge Planted By Chlitches 0 formatlon is ~ing widened by IC LA SS I ·F I ED had lived in Providence for more i WASHINGTON - B'nal B'rlth NEW YORK - Bishop James some churches. than 50 years. He was an Army ... announced recently It had charted A. Pike last week charged that ------i OPPORTUNITIES veteran of World War L He at­ .,: Its second postwar lodge In West the seeds of racial and religious Bible Contest f Claulfled Advertising Rates: le per · tended Brown University . "' Germany, to be opened this month hatred are aften planted by the word· $1 .75 minimum for 11 -rdL He is survived by two brothers, (Continued from Page 1) ' 25c discount If paid befOre Inser­ : In Frankfurt, following several churches themsolves by "what tion. Call UNlon 1-3709. Deadline and Dr. David Luber, both day will appear as special guests IWednesday noon. , ~ visits by Maurice Blsgyer, execu­ they teach, what they fail to of Providence, and two sisters, on the• TV Bible Program of the "' ·,' ... < tlve vice-president of the organ­ teach, and what they are." - Mrs. Sadie Rosenthal of Provi­ :.! zatlon. B'nal B'rlth Is also con­ Writing in the new issue of Rhode Island Rabbinical Associa­ SUMMER HOUSE for sale, Narragan­ tion on Sunday April 9, at 9 A.M. sett, furnished, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms dence and Mrs. RQse Siegal of lloi' siderlng activating lodges in Look Magazine, Bishop Pike, the large living room electric kitchen, New York City. on WJAR-TV (Channel 10 >-. near beach, shopp1 ng. 40' x 125' lot. < Munich, Stuttgart and Hamburg. Episcopal Bishop of California, PL 1-7971. . . . 8 "This Is In accordance with declared that many people re­ This contest is part of a nation­ wide program sponsored by the MURRAY STECKLER 1111 B'nal B'rlth's traditional policy of sponsible for acts of hate are AUBURN-5 room apartment for rent, Funeral services for Murray "" organizing abroad as a part of Church members. Department of Education and 3 bedrooms, tile bath, tile kitchen, Culture of the American Zionist parking facilities.. Stove and refrig­ Steckler, 72, of 45 Anthony Ave­ =" the Indigenous Jewish communal "The sad and shocking truth is erator optional. Near busllnes.. HO nue, Pawtucket, who died March Council and the Israel Bible So­ 7-'482. ~ str,ucture," Bisgyer said. In 1937 that the roots of bias often reach 4, were held the following day at i the nazis outlawed ,B'nai' B'rlth. back to. the pulpit and the Sun­ ciety. Over 500 schools in the r.:I United States are participating in Pythias and What Cheer Lodge at the Riverside Chapel in New day School class," the bishop York City. Burial was In Brook­ = Dr. Prinz noted. this Second Annual National Bible #24. Contest. Dr. Harry Elkin is dis­ Besides his wife, Bertha Abrams, 62, of 1831/z of mankind. in the crucifixion of Christ. the currently known oil deposits of Boston, Mass. Byfield Street, who died March 14 "The American Jewish Con­ Addressing himself then to the in the world are contained in the . . . were held the following day at gress will assist the people of Is­ general problem of discrimination Middle East. the Max Sugarman Memorial MRS. FRANK GOLDSTEIN real to develop In freedom, secur­ by church members, he said: "It State Dep't Position Chapel. Burial was In Lincoln Funeral services for Mrs. Min­ ity and peace, and will promote is disgraceful- that people are be­ "The importance of these oil Park Cemetery. nie (Kessler) Goldstein of 26 mutual understanding and co­ ing barred from neighborhoods and reserves to the United States, as Mrs. Abrams the wife of Mau­ operation between America and Il!­ clubs on a basis that would have Donelson Street, who died March rice Abrams, was born in Russia, well as to the other nations of 8 after a long Illness, were held rael and between the Jewish com­ barred Jesus Himself - due in Europe, Asia and Africa, has been the daughter of the late Perry munities of both lands," the res­ strong measure to the influence of emphasized by the State Depart­ March 10 at the Max Sugarman and Dora (Silverstein) Klien. She Memorial Chapel. Burial was In olution quoted the constitution of His own church. It is distressing ment.'' Van Voorhis wrote. He had lived In Providence for 50 Lincoln Park Cemetery. AJCongress as declaring. that regular church members are added that the State Department years. Mrs. Goldstein, the wife of had not changed Its "essential She was a member of the Con­ Frank Goldstein, was born in position" since the issue first came gregation Sons of Abraham and its Providence, April 6, 1907, a daugh­ before SCAD in 1950. Sisterhood. ter of the late Benjamin and Ida CAD at that time and later ac­ In adition to her husband, she

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That's wh y you ALWAYS Save Here' Free Delivery Tuesday and Friday t I • BATTLE IN ISRAEL I the firing began when the Syrians TEL AVIV - One Israeli soldier shot at a tractor working on Is­ l \ was wounded in a four hour battle raeli land southeast of the kibbutz Handlin Hits Ue Se Jews On Israel i between Syrian and Israel posi­ Shear Yasliuv on -the east side of ... tions near the demilitarized zone the Jordan River. An Israeli pa­ NEW YORK - Dr. Oscar Hand­ That element survived even crimes against Jews, punishable by l!n questioned last week "how long ~ in northerq Israel. trol returned the fire. ·The shoot­ through the war. In a diminishing a Jewish State, would constitute "" The Israel Army spokesman said ing ended when night fell. American Jews can continue to minority it still survives. an abandonment or qualification accommodate themselves to the "However, since the creation of of the rights of Jews to full and expediencies of Israel's policies the State of Israel, th~se consi­ equal citizenship. It would leave without offense to standards which derations have shrunk in impor­ the way open to the implication they hold in their own lives." tance. through the pressure of in­ that the countries in which Jews i The Pulitzer Prize-winning his­ creased nationalism and garrison live do not owe them protection torian of Harvard University, ad­ conditions under which the state other than as foreigners in their ~ dressed a meeting of the New exists. The contrast between ideals midst." We Serve Good Food! York chapter of the American and actions is strikingly demon­ The historian observed that the e! Council for Judaism. strated in tI:te Eichmann case, Eichmann trial is not an isolated Dr. Handlin described the which flouted many . values and case, but "falls into a pattern of Lester Delicatessen changes in character and purpose concepts that Jews had traditional­ internal and external acts, that Kessler's Luncheonette of . The Zionist move­ ly held." show the same disregard for ethi­ ;i ment he said, "constitutes an in­ Dr. Handlin shared the revul­ cal values. The resort to preventive 122 Orms Street Open Weekdays escapable problem" for Jews in sion of the civilized "!"Orld at the war, the inability to solve the Arab Comer Devis St. at7 A. M. America, because they have "a enormity of the Nazi crimes, but refugee problem, the uncertain ; great emotional and sentimental declared that the way in which character of civil, mil1tary and ..;a stake in Israel and cannot tum the Eichmann affair unfolded church-state relationships - all 00... their backs upon it." "provides substantial grounds !or these demonstrate the difficulty Zionism "was at first a highly the fear that justice will be the that Israel has experienced in complex movement," he noted. least of the ends at which the meeting the expecations that "Among the motives that drew trial will aim. The mode of the Zionism had originally held." BRISTOL BOAT SALES, INC. Americans into it were the desire Nazi's capture, the claims of wide to use it as a means of supple­ POPPASQUASH ROAD, BRISTOL CL 3-7569 Israeli jurisdiction, and the vio­ ISRAEL PROFITS menting their humanitarian con­ lence to well-established principles sciousness." Hence, according to indicate that other than juridical JERUSALEM - The West Ger­ -- Features Dr. Handlin, some Jewish leaders considerations will be preeminent man revaluation of the mark has "conceived of Palestine as the in the Jerusalem courtroom." beneficial results for the Israel THE COMPLETE 1961 LINE OF setting for a great social experi­ Israel will prosecute the Nazi economy. FAMOUS POWER BOATS BY ment of universal signiflcence. leader on the pretext "that · the The State Bank of Israel an­ State speaks for the Jewish peo­ ticipated this move and built up ple who were the victims of Eich­ a reserve in marks amounting to PEARSON Increase Sought mann's offenses," continued the 40 percent of the country's total historian. Dr. Handlin rejected foreign currency reserves. It stood PEARSON 21' - 27' - 30' - 37' Atomic Program this contention whic,ll , he said, to make a clear profit of $5,000,000 rests upon the general claim "that through the 5 % increased valua­ • HERRESHOFF - BUILT • FIBERGLASS CON$TRUCTION By UAR In the State alone is competent to tion of its holdings in marks. • MAINTENANCE FREE e OUTSTANDING VALUE C A I R O - Secret talks are represent the J ewish people as a Recipients of German restitu­ underway on making the United national entity." tion payments, compensation and Arab Republi<; an atomic power, At this stage of history, Dr. pensions will automatically re­ according to a dispatch filed from Handlin warned, "to acquiesce in ceive a 5% increase through the here by Joe Alex Morris, Jr. of The the claim that such crimes were revaluation. New York Herald Tribune. Ex­ perts of several nationalities have Jewish Youth Oppose been called in to help preare an Bonn To Improve atomic program but so far it is Inter-Dating, Want not known whether Cairo author­ 'Nazi' Lessons ities are asking for peaceful or Kosher Homes m!l1tary atomic capability.', Morris BONN - New recommendations I ' SEE THE PEARSON LINE AT THE reported ,Indications, he stated. NEW YORK - The majority concerning the teaching of con­ are that they want both. of Jewish boys and girls in Con­ temporary history in West Ger­ NARRAGANSETT BOAT SHOW -- MARCH 22 - 26 servative congregations in the many's school system, aimed at r I UAR President Nasser has in United States and Canada are op­ demonstrating "Hitler's false aims, the past said that if Israel ac- posed to inter-dating, plan to keep his extravagance, his criminal quires the atomic bomb so will kosher hom·es when they marry methods and the castrophe which the UAR. Israel has declared of- and do not approve of active at­ resulted from his system," were is­ ficially that all its activities in tempts to convert non-Jews to sued last week by the standing EUROPE- $10. a Day the area of nuclear development Judaism. These were some of the conference of the State Ministries are for peact!ul purposes ex- results in the first student opinion of Education. INCLUDES: elusively. The objective of the poll conducted by Our Age, the In an introductory statement, discussions. Morris stated, is ob- teenage magazine of the United the conference, a consultative body 1. Twin R~om at Standard Class Hotel scured from the publ!c by Arab- Synagogue of America commission which coordinates the activities Israel politics and by security on Jewish education. of the education department of measures. the various West German states. 2. · Two Meals Daily One report is that the UAR Over 2,800 boys and girls be- tween the ages of 12 and 16, in stated that "concern with totali­ 3. Complete Sightseeing Program wants to build a medium-sized so American cities and Canada, tarianism is one of the basic tasks atomic reactor for peaceful pur- were questioned. Sixty-nine per­ of the political education of our poses and another says the gov- cent are members of United Syn­ youth." 4. Services of Expert Guide ernment at Cairo wants a so- By using concrete examples, the called breeder reactor which· agogue Youth Leaders Training statement continued, the curri­ 5. Entrance· Fees would be more than just an ex- Fellowship or other Jewish youth culum should depict human suffer­ groups. perimental project. Although the mapority of those Ing during the Third Reich, and 6. All Service Charges and Local Taxes Two West German nuclear sci- sampled opposed inter - dating, teachers should present as an entists are in Cairo taking part "ideal" the attitudes of resistence 7. $10.00 A Day Applies to Virtually Any in the discussion. They were pre­ boys had more liberal views on fighters and victims of the nazi ceded by Canadian atomic scien­ the subject than girls, 43% be- regime. While previous educational lieving it proper for Jewish boys recommendations were merely con­ City in Europe tists and, Morris stated, "it is to date non Jewish girls. On the cerned with specific school grades, assumed here that Soviet bloc question of kashruth, however, the new program ts to be applied You may pion your own itinerary. Visit only those experts have been called in as boys and girls joined in favor of to all school levels. well." cities you like. This is not a group arrangement - you keeping kosher homes after mar- According to the recommenda­ The two West Germans, Dr. riage. Most prominent among the tions, contemporary history in­ may, leave any day and return any day. Just tell us the Alfred Boettscher and Dr. Wal­ reasons given were, "It's a Jew- struction is to be divided into five ter Schnurr, were sent to Cairo !sh law' 'and "It's one way of parts: The destruction of the con­ cities you wish to visit and the number of days in each - by the Bonn Government at the showing I am a Jew." stitutional order since the nazis' request of the UAR and have Other questions dealt with seizure of power; the persecution we'll do the rest. Cost - $10.00 per day plus air fare. been instructed not to talk to compulsory attendance at religi- of terror against polltical oppon­ the press. They are said to be ous services for synagogues officers, ents and the churches and the interested also in a plan to pro­ and the effectiveness of teen-age racial politics comprising the ex­ CONTACT , US NOW duce and package heavy water curfews. Sixty four percent felt termination of Jews and the eu­ in Egypt. synagogue officers should be re- thanasia crimes; Hitler's "politics According to Morris, "No one quired to attend services at least of conquest" and his deceitfl,ll expects the UAR to use the heavy weekly. The poll disclosed well foreign policy and the prepara­ Tourist Travel Bureau, Inc. water in a bomb production pro­ over half the students are op- tion for World War 2; the invasion 776 HOPE ST. g,am of its own, but it is amarke­ posed to teen-age curfews as a of neutral Poland and other table item in the atomic field, means of curbing juvenile delin- countries and the nazi terror in PROVIDENCE GA 1-9422 whether peaceful or m111tary." At quency. occupied countries; and finally, the present, he stated, the UAR While 70% expressed a desire to resistance movement and the role I.A.T.A. and A.T.C. Appro,ed Sales Agency atomic program is a low-level re­ visit Israel, few planned to settle played by the "inner and outer search effort. there permanently. immigration."

L \.·., .... , • _,.f.1' ,. ------_ __:i _____ I West North East South A · subscription to the Herald is c,, lNT Pass 3D 3H a good gift idea for the person Linder To Head Board Pass 4H 4S Pass 5D 5H 6D 6H who "has everything" else. Call ..;i Of Export-Import Bank Pass Pass Double Pass UN 1-3709. =t!l Pass Pass ~ West decided to lead a small WASHINGTON - Harold F. role in the Senate Banking Com­ spade because of his strong hold­ 0= Linder, vice president of the Joint mittee controversy over the ap­ t:, Ing in his partner's second suit. t!l Distnbution C o m m i t t e e, was pointment of Charles Meriwether. This is open to criticism: the cor­ ,o sworn in here last week as presi­ Alabama racist, as a director of rect lead in such a case is the CONN. MUTUAL LIFE dent and chairman of the board the U. S. Export-Import Bank, king, which would at least give of directors of the United States said he would wage a vigorous West a chance to hold the trick Export-Import Bank. He was ap­ fight on the Senate floor against and then review the situation. pointed by President Kennedy to final confirmation. East took the first trick with the this post to replace Samuel C. Meriweather told the Senate ace and chose to return a club. He Waugh, of Nebraska, who served Banking Committee, under cross­ did not realize that he was pre­ during the previous Administra­ examination, he saw no reason senting his opponents with a tion. why he should not accept the sup­ slam that had been meant as a AU. S. Naval commander during port of the Ku Klux Klan in Ala­ sacrifice bid. South, who was ~ Consult1nt for income, corpora• tion, est•t• and gift taxes. II, be­ good player, took full advantage World War Linder, shortly bama politics. He also admitted Approved company •nd print. fore the end of the war, went to working with Rear Adm. Crom­ of this lapse. He trumped the pensions. London to serve as a volunteer melin, retired. who sought a Sen­ club and could now enter dummy Executive compensation pl•ns. representative of the Joint Dis­ ate seat and is notorious for pre­ often enough, with trumps. spade Nan-Can Sickness •nd Accident ruffs, and the ace of diamonds, Cover•v•. tribution Committee with the Re­ judice against Jews and Negroes. Engaged - Mr. and Mrs. parations Commission and the Sen. Javits said that despite to establish one club winner, and Myron Gorodetsky of Fourth thus get rid of the loser in Inter-governmental Committee on Meriwether's victory by a 5-4 vote BERNARD ROSEMAN Street, announce the en­ diamonds. He therefore came to 732 Industrial Bank Bldg, Refugees. Linder served in 1952, in the Senate Banking Committee, . GA 1•5401 under appointment by President he did not feel Meriwether quali­ gagement of their daugh­ 12 tricks. Truman, as Assistant Secretary of fied "for a high policy-making po­ .ter, Enid Sharon, to Alan • '::f0'::1.'::1.et=:'""1e

"'----,--'------c------~~------~-----,,------,-~....,....----,,...._,--_-~------~--:---~~------1 ,_ - . . ------~ ...... , . •r------Tiger Brand Cheese Advertise in the Herald. Unwraps Easily ...co "'... The very first bite of Tiger COME TO ..: FAIN & FAIN Brand Swiss Gruyere Cheese will ... 1217 Industrial Bank Bldg. 'MATZOB BALL' Mr. Gendel is a product of the tell you the difference. ZAIDMAN 'S Yiddish Art Players and is the Most folks enjoy a wedge as a Providence 3, R. I. Young adults and holiday home­ coming collegians have been in­ authox: of most his own sketches. snack . . . all by itself. And Tiger BOOK STORE vited to the Jewish Community gathered chiefly from New York Brand is easy to unwrap - Just . PL 1-1505 Center Young Adult Association's Jewish life. pull the red tab on the back of 308 North Main Street "Matzoh Ball", to be conducted at He has appeared in recitals and the wedge and the foil will unwrap DE 1-5560 Providence the East Side JCC · building next programs at Carnegie Hall and itself! This is an extra conven­ Sunday, March 26, beginning at Town Hall and has toured the ience when you buy Tiger Brand THE BEST PLACE TO United States and Canada. Gruyere Cheese. 8:30 P .M. BUY YOUR Admission will be open to young Admission to Mr. Gendel's pro­ Each box contains six one ounce adult men and women aged 18 to gram will be by Jewish Arts Series foil wrapped wedges. Also avail­ 30. High school students may not season ticket. able in boxes of twelve portions PASSOVER INVESTMENTS attend. and a variety pack of assorted Will Review N. Y. flavors - all different. Religious Goods ART SERIES • Hagodos • Taleisim ZIONISTS UNITE Jewish comedy star Hershel Jewish Education • Matzoh Bags • Tfilin Gendel will appear in person at NEW YORK - A program NEW YORK - Mrs. Siegfried Kramarsky, president of Hadas­ • Seder Candles • Mezu101 r.;i Nathan Bishop Jr. High School marking the 50th anniversary of organized communal Jewish edu­ sah, has urged all Zionists regard­ • Seder Plates • Records Ci MUTUAL FUNDS auditorium Sunday at 3 P.M., as less of group affiliation, to unite in 0 the final presentation In the Jew- cation in New York was held last • Greeting Cards week, at the High School of Art implementing projects that will be ; ish Community Center's Jewish a benefit to Jews all through the Ill Arts Serles, jointly sponsored by and Design . The program featur­ • Kiddush Cups ing eight concurrent morning world. Mrs. Kramarsky made her : the Center and Its Golden Age appeal at the opening of Hadas­ meetings for educators and a REMEMBER - Buy Your Rellglous E--4 ~::;:::;:~~~~~~~~~~~C~l~u~b~s.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; plenary session, stressed the ad­ sah's three-day mid-Winter con­ ference held at Hadassah House In Goods In A Store That Is CIOffd R. I. LICENSED And INSURED ELECTRICIANS vances made In Jewish religious On Saturday! education in the past half century, Manhattan. and was conducted under the auspices of the Jewish F.ducatlon HATHAWAY ELECTRIC CO. Committee of New York. Chair­ IT'S LATER THAN YOU THINK! man of the event was Judge Sid­ PUCE YOUR PASSOVER ORDER MOW ... at Wiring For Home and Industry ney Squire of the N . Y . Court of Claims. KELLER'S Kosher Meat Market FOR THOSE EXTRA OUTLETS o• The theme of the afternoon ses­ 218 PRAIRIE AVENUE SERVICE CHANGE sion was "Fifty Years of Organi­ zed Community Jewish Education" TURKEYS - BROILERS - ROASTERS - SPRING PULLETS ED 6-8688 Call Us: "" 15 WINTHROP STREET and ottered addresses by Dr. Os­ - NO 1/J POUND ADDID - GE 4-0181 SEEKONK, MASS. car Janowsky, professor of history THE HIGHEST QUALITY AT THE LOWHT PRICES POSSIBLE at City College and Dr. Joseph H. We Carry Farm Fresh Jumbo and Xtra Large EGGS Looksteln, rabbi of Congregation - Call JA 1-0960 - Kehlllah Jeshurun. FOR FREE DELIVERY TO CRANSTON, GARDEN CITY, - FOURTH ANNUAL ...... NORTH END, EAST SIDE, WARWICK PAYS DIVIDEND REMEMBER : "The Proof of the Puddinv Is In the Eatinv" PASSOVER APPEAL NEW YORK - A total of $662,- 410 In dividend checks was mailed 1 ::11 ■ 11 11 ■ 1 1 11 ■ 11 u ■ 11 11 ■ 111 1 ■ 11 u■ 1 111 ■ 1 m ■ 1 1u ■ n 11 ■ 11 11 ■ 11 1 1 ■ 1111■ 11J la l D l ■ I Ul ■ I - IUl ■ ll lla l m u u ■111 1111w1 SEND YOUR CONTRIBUTION last week to some 10,000 United TO AID THE NEEDY IN THE COMMUNITY States stockholders of Palestine AND THE RESIDENTS Economic Corp. This was the lar­ I LEAGUE F~~,~~~~. N!~0~CCEPTED I gest single dividend disbursement 62 AT THE STATE INSTITUTIONS In the 35-year history of PEC, re­ UNITED MOES CHITIM FUND presenting a 5% return for 1960 t~ OF GREATER PROVIDENCE on the $25 par value common stock I T~ Ne!a~~caut~u~i!n~tt~ G • I ROOM 402, 100 NO. MAIN ST., PROVIDENCE outstanding as of last Dec. 29 . John Newman, Treasurer Edmund Wexler, President Dividends for the previous year 1 "-----~-l. B _n 1 were at the rate of 4%. I ~~ 01AIC, I

· :·-===::;; 1450 ·ELMWOOD AVE • •• :_ON ROUTE #1 MUSIC-MUSIC-MUSIC I J f very Fri. & Sat. Evenin"i71 f Ho 7-8850 In the Sunburst Room I DELICATESSEN f r f I u1111 MIDNITE DINNERS 111111 I Table Luxiaries f 25:o~:::~~ - POLLACK'S I TI TO 5:00 P.M aJ·li1do!t~~nday . I i f J J 230 Prairie Ave. In the . Willard Shopping Center f ~ U ll ■ lll l ■ lll l ■ Ull.■ lll l ■ ll ll ■ ll ll ■ ll ll ■ lll l ■ U ll ■ ll ll ■ ll ll ■ ll ll ■ lll l ■ ll ll ■ lll l ■ lll l ■ lll l ■ llll ■ llll ■ lll l ■ ll ll ■ llll ■ IIII ■ J ! For_The Most Complete Assortment of u WARREN M. PULNER rr~-~ and {~ JACOB D. PORTNOY We Have All Matzoh Products ATTORNEYS AT LAW wish to announce their association Delicatessen and Dairy Products -- All Kosher For Passover for the general practice of law • BEEF FRYE • BEEF STEA~S • A FULL LINE OF CHEESES under the firm name of IMPORTED Complete Line of Fresh • SOUPS • CANDIES • Others Passover CAKES - COOKIES PULNER and PORTNOY FROM ISRAEL CANDIES with offices at POLLACK'S OFFERS YOU THE FINEST SELECTION IN PASSOVER DELICACIES AT THE LOWE.ST POSSIBLE PRICES . 621 - 622 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. , , Providence, Rhode Island DELIVERY TO ALL PARTS OF THE ~ITY AND VICINITY- FREE CALL MAnn1ng 1-2834 Telephone POLLACK'S IS OPEN SUNDAY -- MONDAY -- EVERY DAY! DE 1-6266 DON'T DELAY -- ORDER EARLY FOR A FULL SELECTION! Subscribe to ,the Herald. A subscrip.tion t'o the Herald is the birth of their th4"d child, a her parents at the Colony Motor II> a good . gift idea for the person son, Richard Alan, on Feb_ 23. Hotel on March 11 . Grandparents are · Benjamin Sixteen teen age girl friends who "has everything" else. Call attended. QUALITY UN 1-3709. Blacher of Wayland Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shuster of (Continued on- Page B) PHIOTOGRAPHERS Marion Avenue. Since 1938 Sixteenth Birthday Susan Lynn Gentile, daughter PARK BEAUTY SHOP Re-$tyling of Dr. and Mrs. Herman A. Gen­ 860 Park Ave. Cranston HOME OR STUDIO tile of 38 Beachmont Avenue, Cranston, celebrated her sixteenth BRECK PERMS SITTl~GS FQR CHILDREN is an ART birthday at a luncheon given by ... and we are master fur artists By Appointment $10 Complete Mark CUSTOM OPEN Weinberg FURRIER SAMMARTINO Monday Thru Sot., 9 - 6 DIAMONDS - HALF PRICE Thurs. 'Til 9 9tz.~':'::~.~n 290 WESTMINSTER }T. MR. PETER MISS ANN .DE 1-5946 1468 Elmwood Ave. MISS VERA GA 1-8096 - OPEN EVERY EVENING - WI 1-0411

Engaged - Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mayer Goldstein of 16 Eames Street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Rhea Diana, to Richard Allen Skolnik, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isidor Skol­ nik, of 215 Oak lawn Ave- nue, Cranston. ' ' Miss Goldstein is a graduate of Boston University, School of Pub­ lic Relations and Communica­ tions. Mr. Skolnik Is a graduate of Washington and Lee University In Virginia and a graduate of Boston University Law School. all lir$t quali!y ~:ss•HOUSE of SHOES SomtiJ.J Wedding Announcement 636 R cservofr Aveni:~, c,-a;iston (Across f r om L .'n dy's D i,:er ) Miss B e r n I c e Snell Chase, Open Th1w~c/a y mu! Friday Eve,,i,igs U?!t i l 9 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. Chase of 233 Deer Field Road, Cranston, was married to Daniel Jesse Adler, son of Mrs. Milton Adler ot 218 Waterman Street and the late Milton. Adler, on March 11 at the Metacomet Country Club In East Providence. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of ice blue peau de soir, with full skirt, ¾ sleeves, illusion yolk, and collar embellished with seed pearls and crystal beads. A circular veil was a ttached to a matching Juliet cap. She carried a cascade of orchids and stephanotis with a Bible. The ·matron of honor, Mrs. Marcia Chase Katzoff, sister of the bride, wore a gown of light blue peau de soir, ¾ sleeves ap­ p!iqued with matching lace and a matching Juliet cap. She carried a flower cascade. The best man was Lawrence P . ~( Waldman. A reception was held at the Metacomet Country Club. Following a wedding trip to Miami Beach, Florida, the couple { will reside at 1690 Broad Street, Edgewood. ~ Second Child Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Alperin announce the birth of their se­ The Rise Of cond child and first daughter, Judith Ellen, on Feb. 26. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Newman of Paw­ tucket. Organdy Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Max Alperin of Provi­ dence. Second Son 5.98 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fink of Open Yonkers, New York announce the birth of a second son, David A petaled pixie of soft rosettes in Spring's Fri. Michael, on Feb. 24. Mrs. Fink is Eve. the . former Diane Huddish of favorite fabric. A little charmer with flat­ Providence. tering eyeliner, that looks so much more Maternal grandparents are Mr. u and Mrs. Louis Huddish of Fos­ expensive! dyke Street. Orange Ice Velvet Collar Dramatizes the Classic White Third Child hat bar, first floor Chest~rfield in Forstmann's l 00% Virgin Wool. 99.95 Mr. and Mri Mathew Shuster garden city and wayland square of 549 Wayland Aven~e announce CQ POLICE HOLD RAJ>P First -Daughter Subscribe to the Herald. Saturday Evening 5-8 P.M. BONN-Police officials in Essen Mr. and Mrs. William Revkin of :.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.=. BUFFET SUPPER are holding Albert Rapp, aide to 140 Lexington Avenue; Cranston, DORIC DAY NURSERY and ... By Candlelight Nazi S, S. chief Heinrich Himmler announce the birth of their third KINDERGARTEN O> Accredited by R: I. Board of '°... FABULOUS DESSERTS on charges of complicity in the child and first daughter, Diana Education - State Licensed .; MISS DUTTON'S wartime murder of 1,500 Jewish Beth, on March 5. CERTIFIED TEACHERS ... Paternal grandparents are Mr. All Day Or Half Day Sessions DE 1-5995 · women and gypsies. BALANCED HOT MEALS Rapp's identity was established and Mrs. Barney Revkin of 906 Ages 3-&-=-Boys and Girls =0 145 Pontiac Avenue, Cranston by an old photo. Hope Street. WI 1-6051 Transportation ~ ( Continued On Page C) ~ "Z" DAY NEW YORK - The Zionist Organization of America has set ~ aside Sunday, March 26, as "Z" NEW ENGLAND . ...= Day, climaxing a nationwide cam­ =~ paign for 20,000 new members ded­ STATIONERY CO . icated to the Israel Bar Mitzvah .l. 9 -Year which begins on April 21, it < was announced by ZOA president ='-I Max Bressler. = ~ - ANDRE'S .;i< 00... BEAUTY SALON Engaged - Mrs. William J . '-I 176 MATHEWSON STREET Goldsmith of 191 Lincoln Avenue, Fall River, Mass., \~ ", 0= MA 1-3611 announces the engagement CONVENIENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS = of her daughter, Bayle Lee, GA 1-1192 PA 2-3526 ='-I -= to Richard Cornell, son of 263 Weybosset St. 41 Brood St. Pawt. E-< The Friendly Shoppe Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cornell at ..... of 37 Shawmut Street, Fall 313 Washington Ave. e PLANNING e LAYOUT • DIIIGN Washington Park, Prov. , ST 1-8723 River, Mass. Miss Goldsmith is a sophomore • LINGERIE • HOSIERY • LARGE SELECTION OF GIFT at the University of New Hamp­ ITEMS shire. • HOME and · HOSPITAL FITTINGS Mr. Cornell, a senior at Bow­ • Famous Name GIRDLES doin College, will enter Harvard and BRAS Medical School in September. Alterations At . No Charge MIAMI -1 FREE and IMMEDIATE RESERVATIONS :'J./'Jin'J :J-in'Jerj AT OVER 100 HOTELS--MOTELS (Continued From Page A) 11 One of a collection Wedding Announcement HAPPY HOLi DAYS" of Imported Knits Yarn S~op Miss Esther Rose Melamut, 7 DAYS PLUS daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack MIAMI BEACH 6 NIGHTS $19.50* AIR FARE 3 pc. 8-18 59.95 • SMART FASHIONS Melamut of Irving Avenue, was 7 DAYS PLUS BERMUDA 6 NIGHTS $48.50* AIR FARE • • • • NEW FASHIONS married March 12 to Charles EDITH FEINBERG of Boyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael 7 DAYS PLUS • EASY-TO-KNIT PUERTO RICO 6 NIGHTS $63.00* Afll FARE FASHIONS Boyer of Great Neck, Long Island, New York. 7 DAYS PLUS MEXICO 6 NIGHTS $69.00* AIR FARE Personalized Instruction Rabbi Eli A. Bohnen performed • Prices per person-2 in room-most rates ell. as early as April 30 By Appointment the ceremony at Temple Emanuel. A reception was held at the home Call of the bride's parents. PACKAGE TOURS EVERYWHERE PHYLLI~ VICCIONE \ Mrs. Murray Kaufman, sister of New Low Spring Rates DRESS SHOP DE 1-9344 the bride, was matron of honor. Bruce Jay Boyer, brother of the Jamaica - Nass.au - Haiti - Virgin Islands 5th Floor • Lapham Bldg. 201 Wayland Avenue bridegroom, was best man. 290 WESTMINSTER ST. (Above Ann Gerbers) Closed Mon. • Open Thurs. Eve. The bride, given in marriage by BACHELOR PARTY TOURS her father, wore a ballerina Tours For Single Men and Women -- Why Travel Alone? length gown of silk organza. Her Travel With Your Own Age Group - silk illusion veil fell from a crown of rosebuds and she carried a 21 to 33~ 28_to 48, 45 to 65 /,. Bible with stephanotis and an ISRAEL -- ESCORTED TOURS • I • . orchid . :· .: ;·/ Following a wedding trip to TRAVEL WITH GROUP -UNDER EXPERIENCED LEADERSHIP fresh-as .. paint· .,· Ellenville, New York, the couple EUROPE-12 Countries-$685 up ~-: '. / ; . ... ·:: ,,- ;, ·.. will reside in Forest Hills, Long •• .,- '. I Island . AIR RESERVATIONS --Around the World . / I •.•, Jt Wedding Announcement colors / ,.(/; ,:•~ / ,, Official Agents All Airlines Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Lipson of Ivy Avenue, Cranston, announce Official Rates - No Extra Charges ... . to wm your '/:/:~'.:~ the marriage of· their daughter, I ,> \ . admiration! \__. . Ruth Tamara to Harvey Levin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Levin of CRUISES Beautifully Raleigh Avenue, Pawtucket on shaped ... doll December 7. Ask For Our Free Booklet Listing All The ceremony took place -at Cruises, Ports and Rates silhouette! Temple Israel, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, with Rabbi Aaron Wonderful Goldin officiating. • TEENAGE TOURS - U. S. and EUROPE for juniors Bar Mitzvah • HONEYMOON TRIPS OUR SPECIALTY Howard Rogers, son of Mr. and ' 3 to 13. Mrs. Bruce Rogers will celebrate PLAN NOW FOR his Bar Mitzvah Saturday morn­ ing at the Cranston Jewish MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND $5995 Center. BANNER LODGE - CONCORD - GROSSINGER'S Birth Announcement MAGNOLIA MANNER - NEVELE - Others Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Dorsch of _, Fords, New Jersey, announce the Don't Forget - "WE'VE BEEN THERE" birth of their second child, a daughter, Susan, on Jan. 20. Maternal grandparents are Mr. Zelda ~Kauffman and . Mrs. Louis Wine of Provi­ dence. Paternal grandparents are CRANSTON TRAVEL SERVICE Mr. and Mrs. Max Dorsch of 801 Pork Avenue, Cranston Second Floor, Alice .B1111. t.akewood, New Jersey. . ST 1-4977 Eves. By Appt. ST 1-4977 ?. 3 6 W e a.l :11' i•w, t e r I S t • Maternal great-grandmother is - ATC and IATA APPROVED SALES AGENT - ~ ;.: .~ .. .. ~ ~· . . . . Mrs. Elsie Wine of Brooklyn.

! .J.' w: ', -I • Lena Miller of All organizational news MUST ~ I Soror!ty Sh0.p Celebrates be in the Herald offices before Twins Born noon of Monday each week. It will NOT appear in that week's paper ~ Dr. and Mrs. Nelson H. Kemp if it• is received later than noon. 28 Years In Business of Newton, Mass. announce the = l'l Simon Lessler, owner of the th_e topmost designers from all birth of twins, Deborah Ellen and :======- :,:, Sorority Shop, tells us that he is parts of the country to give the Ira William, on February 27. DON HAL Paternal grandmother is Mrs. =0 now c.elebrating their 28th year in customer the best selection and t:, ~e women's apparel business at save you the expense of traveling Clementine Kemp, of Miami Orchestras l'l the,Union Street address. _to Boston or New York. Most of Beach, Florida. All Occasions the -styles advertised in fashion Walking into this modern shop magazines are to ·be ~ound at the -where they sell dresses. gowns, . Sorority Shop and price~ range bridals and lingerie you are en- from _moderate to expensive to ~;;:iii:~:j_;~,_~,_~i,i:i,i:~.,:.,:.,~iii~~:j_;:,.~..:i,i:i,i:i,i~_i,~i,~iij:~ril:,.: ..:i,i..,._~ ...-~~~~~~~:~:~~~ .~...._~...-~ ...-~ ...-~ .. ~D~.c~r~.-~ ... -~:~..,._~~~~~:~:~:~ ...:· ~ 6 l'l chanted by the larg~ mirror; set suit the individual budget. Sizes at the foot of the terrazo spiraling run from 5 to 20, and even larger stairway which leads up to the for the hard-to-fit. EXQUISITE HAIR FASHIONS ·· gown department. Here also are Women who are planning wed- 636 Hope Street MAnning 1-7317 ! - the dressing rooms --done in pink dings are advised by Mr. Lessler ; :-- where the customers have pri- to order at least four months in vacy in selecting tlie gown or dre~s advance. For that "Exquisite Look" 8 ~ of their""choice ·with' the lielp of "~xperienced gown consultants who Sorority Shop has a layaway EXPERT HAIR STYLING, CUTTING, COLORING ~ ·have been with the firm for more plan as well as charge and budget ! than is years. accounts. The store Is open Tues­ AND PERMANENT WAVING day and Thursday evenings until The large assortment of brid­ 9 P .M. and Is also open on I ~als, gowns and dresses come from M_ondays.

Fred Kelman Photo MISS ESTHER MISS BERTHA Mrs. Charles Boyer, who was married on March 12 MISS FAYE at Temple Beth El, is the ARE HERE TO ACCOMMODATE OUR RAPIDLY INCREASING former Miss Esther R o s e NUMBER OF STYLE-CONSCIOUS CUSTOMERS Melamut.

• Personalized Styling • Permanent Wove 315 WASHINGTON AVE. - WASHINGTON PARK SQ. MJ)Jl 1JfJ.U nJl.QM .ahJJ.ui • . PROVIDENCE 5, R. I. I:: J (ContinuedSo.~:: from Page B) WI lliams 1-9886 Wedding Anniversary luwJl 1JfJ.U nJl.QM .ahJJ.ui • Rabbi and Mrs. Morris Schuss­ heim will be honored at an Oneg luwJl 1JfJ.U nJl.QM .ahJJ.ui • Shabbat t.onight, immediately following the regular Friday night a services at Temple Beth Israel, in our lovely collection of honor of their fortieth wedding ~~ anniversary Casual Wear ' .~ 11) charge of arrangements will be Mrs. Leonard Sholes and Mrs. Samuel Mist.owsky, co-chairmen; For Spring and Summer Mrs. Aaron Cohen, Mrs. Milt.on Goldsmith ,Mrs. Samuel Bochner, Mrs. Irving Kovitch and Mrs. Ben Poulten, ex-officio. $h/J Open 69.95 Birth Announcement 42 Rolfe St. Mondays Mr: and Mrs. Mryon J. Bauman of Garden City Drive, Cranst.on, announce the birth of their second Wonderfut" textured silk with ch!ld and daughter, Tamar Lynn, - Open Friday Evening 'Til 9 P. M. - everything you love - tiny on Feb. 27. Mrs. Bauman is the slHves, graceful pleah; waist belittling tie-belt end • way former Constance R. Miller. of going through day Into Maternal grandparents are Mr. evening with beautiful a11ur­ and .Mrs. J . Bennett Miller of enc:e. Bleck. white,- bone-beige, Highland Avenue, Cowesett. ·Pa­ • Formals • Cocktails • Dressy Dresses ,' wge-green, lilac:, sulphur, or• ternal grandparents. are Mr. and· ange-sherbet, in sizes from 8 Mrs. Abraham Bauman of Doyle Hew England's LARGEST and MOST COMPLETE Gown Shop - to 16. Complimcnlaf31 Par~ing Avenue. Great-grandmothers are /..-. Mrs. Annie Stevens of Sharon, c~J 4 ll /4 IF IT'S FIRST Bridal Sketched I.N FASHION S89.98 ... IT'S ALWAYS AT THE

l'ROVIDENCE .. . at 211 Un ion ~trcet PAWTUCKET .. . at 17 North Union St r ed

E,\STERN

..;i< 00... ! .0 .

=~ r.l =r"'

CHERRY & co

very big! the little doll hot by Miss Solly Victor

All the vogue . .. the doll sized hot you'll wear tipped forward over your brow, or bock as you prefer .. . from our very own collection by Miss Solly Victor . . . in straws, fabrics, flowers.

12.98 and 13.98

MILLINERY-MAIN FLOOR

RHODE ISLAND: PROVIDENCE AND NEWPORT MASSACHUSETTS: FALL RIVER, NEW BEDFORD, LOWELL AND LAWR~NCE CHURY & Wll I CO, MAGAZINE0 SECTION THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH WEEKLY IN SOUTHEAST

After The Children Grow Up • • • What Then?

More than 24 million wQmen a.,re working outside the home now. Although the figure may seem high, it still is not too surprising to most people. Many of these women are working because of necessity-either they are doing it to supplement the family income or because they are the sole support of their family. But what of the women who do not need the extra income and still hold jobs or are doing part time or full time volunteer work. i;\.mong these, of course, are the women who have a specific career or profession and keep at it because theywant to continue. However, there are the women who were married at 21 (and during the past few years there have been many who have married at 18 and 19). By the time these women have reached the age of 45 or 50, their children are grown and are away at school or are married. Their homes are no problem to keel? in order, their hus­ bands are usually still active in -business and so are at work all / day. What is she to do with her time?

always been active in organizations such desire and ability to become or not become inte r ests. Starting with social activities, as Hadassah, or the PTA or the League Interested in outside activities. they develop Interests in psychology, psy­ of Women Voters and continue with their Mr. Kleinberg felt, as did Mr. Sklar, chiatry, an or cultural activities of all interests. that the women who had been active in kinds. But what of the women who had no social work in their earlier years, were There are many areas where women interests outside of their homes and their very helpful and very productive when can be helpful, even those who have had no children? Mr. Sklar feels that there de­ they re-e nte red it. previous training. finitely is a psychological impact when The ones wh o c an become inter ested Mr. Kleinberg s ays that there is a these wo men find themselves with nothing in an outside organization, even in a minor need fo r women who have any craft or skill to do. Many, according to Mr. Sklar, way, are on the road to helping them se lves wh atsoever -- a need for people who can rationalize th eir unwi)lingne s s to join s ince once a member of an or ganization, teach s imple games -- there is a" need for organizations by saying that the r e are the ir interes ts will lead on to mor e varied a sympathetic ear" in many situations -­ cliques within these organizations into ther e is a need for help with tr ansportation. which they would be unable to ente r . He feels that a woman's interes t in Mr. Sk lar feels that the Jewish F amily late r life depends on her past information and Children's Service would be the logical and education -- children should be taught place for guidance in cases whe re such to see further than just the immediate women did find time heavy on their hands future. Nathan Sklar since it "does present a real problem." Of course, many of these women also With the - greater number of adult end up in doctor's offices with ailments education courses and study groups which which to them may seem real enough, but are being formed these days, th'ere' are for which the doctor can find no physical activities open to women (and men, of Nathan Sklar, executive director of cause. course) of .any age. the Jewish Family and Children's Service, According to Art Kleinberg, program ' Another problem which is often found says that many of these women who have director at the East Side Jewish Com­ is that even though a woman is Interested attended collegt will get their Mas ter's munity Center, this problem is going to in working and has some background in a degree and work part time or full time in become bigger in the coming years. People specific type of work, she may find that social work. There are many in the past are living longer now. since she is over 45 or 50, it is difficult to years who have gone back to s chool under Mr. Kleinberg .feels that the women find work. the accelerated teacher's programs and who have no background of working or of Thci"se women who have no previous are now teaching. training are the tougher group to get to. experience are really in trouble. This Is Many of these women who were active Some take up bowling-,- or dieting. He where the volunteer services are helpful. and interested in outside affairs before also sa'ys that the physical changes which Not only does this activity give the one in-:­ their children were grown will continue women undergo at approximately this time volved something useful to do, but it also with volunteer work.· These women have of life also has a great deal to do with their is helpful to the people being served and to the community.

Arthur Kleinberg (To be Continued Next Week)

II Pages For Teen-Agers By Celia Zuckerberg

The music does not serve simply as a Although he says that the makeup of soft, pleasant background to conversation. the group varies from people with a wealth It is played to be heard, to be enjoyed, of musical training, some of whom are and to -be understood. e,ccellent musicians, to people who have Mort Blender, well-known W PR 0 little concert experience and a limited announcer, says that for this reason the knowledge of music, the whole thing recordings are played more loudly tl}an •'gels. • . everyone f e e d s o n everyone is usual. else's experience." The _Music Group (actually the words There is substance and continuity to should not be capitalized since it has no their discussions and to their programs, formal name) meets approximately every Gatherings will be concerned sometimes· three weeks, with no summer vacation, to with a composer, or a certain style; with listen to concert music which ranges a special type of music or a particular pictures of the from the most modern works to the orchestra. familiar old classics. Most of the records which are used music g r o u p were There are no officers in this group, come from Mr. Blender's enormous re-. =--. =-taken at the February except for a secretary-- and according to cord library of over 1,200 albums, All - 12 meeting of the Mr. Blender, this involved no election. the members, according to Mr. Blender group held at the love­ He said that he simply pointed to Mrs. have their homes .fairly well-equipped ly home of Dr. and Mrs. Horvitz and told her she was the secretary. with excellent hi-fidelity equipment (much Morris Botvin, Lowden · Members of the group are Mr. and of which, he mentions in an aside, he Street in Pawtucket. Mrs. Blender, Dr. and Mrs. Nathan installed himself). Mort Blender is seated Rakatansky, Mr. andMrs.JacobGoodman, Of course, although the recordings Dr. and Mrs. Abraham Horvitz, Dr. and played run the gamut from the earliest next to the hi-fi equip­ Mrs. Caroll Silver, Dr. and Mrs.Maurice classical music to the most modern com­ ment of which he was Silver, Dr. and Mrs. Morris Botvin, and positions, it does not follow that all the in charge during the Dr. and Mrs. Charles Potter. members like everything that is played. evening. The idea for this type of group origi­ At times, according to Mr. Blender,'they nated with Mrs. Blender and Mrs. will have violent disagreements as to the Rakatansky, wlio thought such a group merits of a work or a composer or an would prove to be interesting, if Mr. orchestra, The Music Group Blender were willing to guide it. The group is not so set in its ways, He was. To Mr. Blender it is recrea­ however, that sometimes the conversation tion. His interest in concert music started cannot wander away from the main theme with his interest in the history of music of concert music. Many of the members Enjoys Its when he was 14, a student at Roxbury of the group have traveled, some quite Memorial High School, and playing in the extensively, and talk of their tr.ave! ex­ Boston School Orchestra. His interest in periences, leads to interesting conver- ·Regular Concert music has continued since then through sations. . Conservatory and college courses in what All the members of the group have is now termed Musicology. large record collections which contain Sessions He took courses at the Harvard Grad­ items not purely of the classical variety. uate School of Music and in Chicago at Dr. Caroll Silver, says Mr. Blender, Northwestern. At the same time, he was has some "delightful'.' recordings of I • interested in the technical aspects of Portuguese f9lk songs and native Japanese radio and in broadcasting. (He took a music. At one time, Dr. Potter resur­ · course in Physics at Northwestern as rected some old 78 rpm Jazz era records well as in music.) for their amusement, It was in March of 1933 that he started He himself has played some• 'fantastic what was considered then as a most oddities" which he owns - monologues by unusual program. It was a weekly two­ Will Rogers, Gloria Swanson singing, John hour series of concert music emanating Barrymore reciting Hamlet's soliloquy, from a small Canadian station in Saint -and the recording of "Boop-Boop-A­ I Cathartnes, Ontario- it could be heard in Doop" by Helen Kane·. ,J Buffalo and Toronto also. At that time, it Although usually the music is played was unheard of for a local station to broad­ with no interruptions, Mr. Blender says cast classical music - this type of music that such is not always the case. Dr. broadcasting was the prerogative of the Potter has been called from the middle networks. of a concert to deliver a baby; Dr. His next program was a daily symphony Maurice Silver has had to leave to per­ concert which he started broadcasting form an emergency operation on an auto­ from a- Boston station in 1935, and which mobile accident victim; the other doctors he continued for six years. According to are frequently phoned. But with these its ratings at the time, this program was exceptions, their attention is centered on the most popular in Boston. the music. He joined WPROin 1941, and the A great many people have heard of the following year saw h1m broadcasting a music group and have asked whether they late evening concert program daily. Re­ can join the group or whether, perhaps, cently he has started a concert music another group could be formed under Mr. • Chatting before the program on W PF M. Blender's guidance, ' oncert s ta r t e d are Although the music group, which was The answer is a definite no. To make (top) Mrs. Botvin, Mrs. started in September of 1957, has been the group larger would not only over­ Maurice Silver, Mrs. meeting regularly for four years, the burden the host couple each time in the Jacob Goodman and members still feel as though they have way of room and refreshments, but would Mrs. Abraham Horvitz. just started. make the group unwieldy and turn the At the left are Dr. Ca­ Mr. E!lender, who arranges the pro­ meeting into a pedagogical. affair, rather roll Silver and Mr. grams for the meetings, does so from than a group of friends meeting inform­ specific requests, from hearing a chance ally to enjoy listening to music. Goodman, and (in the remark, etc. ToMr.Blender, the meetings And to form another group, Mr. Blender bottom picture) are of the music group give him the satisfac­ says, would be "impossible" with his Mrs. Blender and Dr. tion of "sharing his musical experience present commitments. a n d Mrs. N a t h a n . with knowledgeable people." Rakatansky. J

Dr. and Mrs. Botvin Iisten in to the discus­ son of Mrs. Caroll Silver and Dr. Horvitz. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Potter and Dr. ·Maurice Silver, the other mem­ bers of the group, were out-of-town at the time of this gathering. This one he shot down himself. l\C ' That one was a stubborn fellow. He w' had to run after him and track him down. The one over there died hard. He ran One Man's Opinion half a mile with blood dripping from his mouth. ~ And so it goes from one head to l"'l= another, priding himself on his bravery. The Nimrod of his days. I do not think there are many Jewish =g homes with such displays on the walls. l"'l And, it seems, that the Jewish Law that .. forbids hunting for pleasure is responsible In ~ Hunting for it. Remember the injunction in the Bible: tt:, "In case a bird's nest should happen Hollywood to be before you in the way, in any =l"'l tree or on the earth, with young ~ By Beryl Segal ones or eggs, and the mother is sitting upon the young ones or the By Barney Glazer .="" eggs, you must not take the mother .., along with the offspring. You should send the mother away, and take the Hollywood, California-- You folks re- et:, offspring for yourself, in order that siding In the old hometown will probably ~ The other night we listened to a they are fighting for, they are as good a it may go well with you and you may like to know that I rec;eive many calls • lecture on Jewish Law. In the course of group of soldiers as any. Jews in Russia indeed lengthen your days." from former residents who now live in~ his talk, the lecturer referred, among of the Czars had no cause to fight for and This is the kind of.attitude Jews have the Hollywood area, but still cling to their ;; lived with for thousands of years. And other things, to hunting. Hunting, huntiQg hence the myth of cowardice, The Jews native city by subscribing to and receiving ~ for pleasure, is prohibited by Jewish fought as hard as any Russian in the even though we are unaware of the in­ this publication. They get quite a kick out = Law, he said. Revolutionary wars. junction, it somehow woi:-ks within us sub­ of talking to a contributor back home, but ::: Now, that was a great revelation to But hunting? What reason can there consciously. a contributor who lives here in Hollywood.· Certainly a far cry from the bird me. I did not ask for the place where the be in hunting for pleasure? What pleasure No, they don't wanr to make a soft touch. ~ can there be in seeing an animal trapped, hunts that are regulated. Ducks for two Neither do they want any favors. They just~ law speaks of hunting. I am quite sure weeks. Pheasants for a week, Agencies that the speaker would quote me volume, run for its life, and then suddenly killing want to say hello. it before It knows what was happening? set up to stock birds, so that the hunters Groucho Marx and Dinah Shore, who page and line if I asked, I knew that we may have what to hunt down In season. have very few huntets among Jews. Could There is nothing more cruel than to live on the same street in Beverly Hills, shoot down a deer In cold blood, Imagine Mr. Hemingway Is one of the greats are deeply disturbed because- hundreds of it be that this law against hunting had In American literature, His ''Old Man of something to do with it? The individual Bambi being shot down. And yet, there are autoists use their street daily to drive up clubs all over the country for that purpose the Sea" is being read with pleasure, But to the summit of their hillside where they might be ignorant- of the fact, but the he also wrote last summer of his adven­ people as a whole are aware of it, alone. They even regulate the time and the can stand on a vacant lot and watch the place when and where hunting is per­ tures with bull fights and bull fi ghters most gorgeous view of the city and the In my young days on the , that was as obnoxious to the tastes of the whenever a Jew refused to go on a hunt missible. In the hunting season, they go Pacific Ocean. The lot, by the bye, is out In droves, kill each other, maim one reader as the sight of blood dripping owned by Producer Hal Wallis and his with his non-Jewish friends, he was laugh­ from the mouth of a shot down deer. ed at and accused of being scared. That another, and still they come. wife, ex-actress Louise Fazenda. In northern New York, It Is not un­ I do not remember any Jewish writer was, of course, groundless, as was ground­ telling about bull fights with so much re­ less the accusation that Jews are cowards common to see a car coming out of the woods with a killed deer across the lish as does Hemingway. It Is not in his JERRY LEWIS, who thinks he's tunny and are poor soldiers, That myth was experience, and Is not in his sphere of but isn't, has made some very sad pictures exploded during the wars, especially in fenders. The "hero" has returned. Interest. Jews do not hunt, do not fight of late. His unfunniest to date was "Cin­ the United States, where Jews served in Or look at the homes of Britishers, especially, In the movies or on televisiq_n, bulls. and do not kill animals for pleasure. derfella." Trouble with Jerry is that he's the army With distinction, It was also true - been trying too hard ever since his break of the German and Austrian armies where and see the heads of Boars looking down on you, The host will give you a long, de­ with Dean Martin. Perhaps he's trying to Jews were the most courageous of sol­ prove to Dean how successful he can be, I diers." It certainly was true of Israel, as tailed story connected with every one of (Mr . S~ol's opinions ore /tis """· His l'ifts them. ore not necesorily those ol this IHtWspoper.J · don't think that Dean could care less. we all know by now. When Jews knowwhat Anyway, Lewis should make it a point to see Walt Disney's "Absent-minded Pro­ fessor," starring Fred MacMurray and Nancy Olson. This is the funniest picture· of the last decade and it's all done so on the business cycle. "What distinguishes effortlessly that Lewis should study it long this recession from all others is the be­ and hard. He's a long way from matching ·Your Money's Worth of havior personal income." Disney's production or MacMurray's act­ What, then, are some of the possibly ing genius. brilliant implications? MAZEL TOV to Dodie and Michael Landon on their 5th wedding anniversary. A first implication Is that the base Michael is the young member of the Striking Difference already exists for a big rise in retail starring cast of the television series sales this spring, as the weather clears, "Bonanza." ••.• Dimitri Tiomkin hosted a the end of this recession becomes ap­ party for the Negro gospel and spiritual parent .and consumer hesitancy to spend vocalist Mahalia Jackson · at the Beverly fades. For the great shining fact is that Hills Hotel recently. Out of respect for the money is there for consumer spending Mahalia, Dimitri served nothing stronger By Sylvia Porter when the mood returns. Easter comes on for sipping purposes than tea and coffee. April 2 this year, and surely there will be SHECKY GREEN, the ~omedian who millions who will be in the mood for buying made Las Vegas famous (or was it the all kinds of clothes and accessories. The other way around?) says he hates Mort severe winter has slai>hed sales of auto­ The most striking difference between $358,l billion, up $11,l billion from the Sahl's sophisticated comedy act because: mobiles, but it's significant that the newest "How can I steal what I can't understand?" the 1960-61 recession and the business rate as 1960 began. Federal Reserve Board survey of consum­ -downturns· that have preceded it is the way In view of the fact that wages and •.• Hearing that Gene Barry's wife, Betty, er intentions reveals plans to buy new and played an important role in a recent seg­ our personal incomes have not only held up salaries are down $4 billion from the mid- used cars have come back to the levels of but _also have actually continued to climb 1960 high, how come these major ad­ ment of the televised· "Bat Masterson" a year ago and hints th'at purchases of series, Dave Barry's wife is demanding at a sharp pace. ·vances? The explanations are simple and appliances may be perking up as well. rather wonderful - and the implications equal time in her husband's comedy night A second Implication Is that as the club act. We have been in a recession since the they flash to retailers, businessmen, the recession ends, the rise in personal in­ spring of 1960, and during this downturn entire nation, could be brilliant, comes will speed up and the base for most economic barometers have acted as The total of personal income is way spending will broaden. Industrial payrolls A LOT of puffed heads in Hollywood in previous recessions. Industrial produc­ up because, while industrial payrolls have will increase as industrlai production can take charm lessons from Jeff Chand­ tion has slipped, while bankruptcies have shrunk, other, types, of personal income rises. Government benefit payments are. ler, our filmtown's shining example of risen, manufacturers' new orders have have expanded more than enough to offset slated to go even higher than now. level-headedness .•• Lee Anthony, who has slumped while joblessness- has jumped, this shrinkage. Payrolls in the private We have created an unprecedented played in many movies and television building of houses has dropped while the service fields have been rising steadily society so dominated by service occupa­ series, was Bar Mitzvahed at Temple Beth rate of layoffs has increased. It has been and strongly. Payrolls in government-­ tions that declines in payrolls· in industry Israel in Portland, Oregon, and now is a a mild and short recession -but in most federal, state and local-are up . and can be offset by advances in payrolls In member of the Wilshire Boulevard Temple aspects, i t has followed a classical going 11igher, Payments in interest and services. in Los Angeles. pattern. dividends are running $2.6 billion ahead We have revolutionized our economic BESSIE _ADEL writes that herfamily In most aspects, yes - except the of J amiary 1960. system • to the point where personal in­ knew Herschel Bernardi's parents well profoundly important and happy one of the comes continue climbing in bad times as when they acted on the Jewish stage. "His total of our personal incomes and of the - And towering above all has been the well as good. father was a great artist," writes Bessie. spending money we have left after taxes. upsurge in payments to individuals via "He used to cry with one eye and laugh At the latest reporting date in January, the federal government's benefit pro­ . In oyr high and rising personal in­ with the other at the same time." That personal income was running at an annual grams - particularly social insurance comes lies a powerful force for the end would be a good trick for Liberace to try. rate of $406.3 billion, a full $10.6 billion benefits and veterans' payments. Here the of this recession and 'for the start of a As you will remember, everytime Lib­ above the rate in January 1960, an im­ increase over the start of 1960 is $3.3 recovery which we must this time make erace was panned by a critic, he said: "I pressive $1.6 billion above the rate at the billion. An all-time peak of $31 billion a sure is strong and sustained. cried all the way to the baJJk." Looks like peak of the last advance in May l 960. year is now going out in these so-called poppa Berel Bernardi would have .gone ''transfer payments." · Liberace one better by being· able to cry (Dlatrtbuted lNO, As 1961 began, our spending money .,It is a remarkable performance," by Tile Hall S:,ndlcate, IM,) in one eye ovei: the review and smile in after taxes was running at a rate of says one of our nation's leading authorities (AU Ila.late ReNn~) -the other eye over the bank deposit.

----'-'"-· r,,,,.,... tz:t:ti

•I lll ...... I Something ...r: e I 'Always Cooking' =I In The Theater = ~ =I'll For Bob Borod !... / I'll Q ·" By Celia Zuckerberg 0

=I'll ~ When he's not "minding the store,. Before entering the service, he had and for the fun he'll get out of it, so if a Bob Borod is directing, or acting or de­ been working at the Warwick Musical call is for 8 P .M., he doesn't worry if he . I signing lighting effects, or doing something Theatre. It was after apprenticing there turns up at 9-or doesn't turn up at all ' that pertains to the theatre. The store that he received his Equity card. for some reason. that he's "minding" is a landmark in He recalls that the very day he was Another difference, he says, Is that Pawtucket, the Bridge Tire and Supply separated from the service, he received a professional has a good idea of what he Company, where he is manager. an offer of work in the Miami Music will do ahead of time. He has more It has been the theater in which he Theater where he was stage manager, as characterizations at his call. has been interested and active, since, he well as being an actor and singer. His With an amateur, a director must says, he was four years old, when he mother, he says, wasn't happy when he help teach the characterization to the I performed before a temple group with his said, "Mom, it's great to be home. Have actor, and help him to build . it. He must father. (His parents are Mr. and Mrs. to leave now." help the amateur conquer his inhibitions Morton Borod of Providence.) · From Miami he went as technical and as the character is formed, he must 1 Incidentally, this appearance was di­ director and actor (a technical director, help the actor be willing to "become rected by Ben Kaplan, Bob Kaplan's father. he explained, coordinates the sound, the anything or anybody." The names of Bob Kaplan, musical direc­ set and the lights) to the well-known Still a bachelor at 28, Bob was tor; Doris Holloway, choreographer; and Bucks County Playhouse Summer Theater graduated from Brown University in 1955·. :i Bob Borod, director, have appeared on the where he remained for a season. At college, he majored in Sociology with posters of many local amateur produc­ The Fayetteville Country Playhouse particular concentration In English and tions. Most recently they worked at Brown in New York was his next stop. Here he the theatre. He has directed two previous l University on "Anything Goes" and last was the lighting designer. And then he Sock and Buskin Alumni productions, ·-I ·year's Jewish Community Center's "High came back to "mind the store." "Visit to a Small Planet" and "The Button Shoes." However, besides working as director Rainmaker." This Is their first attempt . I There have been many other produc­ for the various amateur productions, he at a musical. tions which they have put on for temples continues to work during the summer as Bob has also worked as technical and organizations. At this moment, they a lighting designer for the Warwick Musi­ advisor at WJAR-TV and when he was are working on this year's Center pro­ cal Theater (this includes the lighting for overseas, he was sent from France to duction "Bells Are Ringing" which will be the Oakdale Theater in Wallingford, Conn., Germany to help set up the AFN-TV (the presented on March 22, 23 and 25 at the which is connected with the local theater.) Armed Forces Network television station). R, I, School of Design Auditorium. Since he has been everything from an He has also worked in nightclubs as a While this musical is still in produc­ actor to a director--what does he enjoy singer and performer. tion, Bob will have to start his direction doing most? Directing, is Bob's answer. of the Brown University'·s Sock and Buskin "There is more satisfaction in directing Alumni production of "Damn Yankees" a play." One may not get the recognition which will be presented on June 1. which comes of beihg an actor, he goes He says that since his youthful ap­ on, "but the self-satisfaction" is worth pearance before the men's club of the it. Actually, eventually, he would like to temple "something was always cooking be a producer of package shows. Asked if he had any other hobbies or somewhere." The common complaint which direc­ ways of spending his extra t_j. me, he re­ In the air force (from which he re­ tors have against amateurs is Bob's also. plies that the "theater Is so time-consum­ ceived his discharge in 1958) he served The basic difference he feels that there ing that it Is my only avocation or hobby." as a First Lieutenant with the Special is between an amateur actor and a pro­ He does try to get to New York as often Services in this country, in France and fessional is that the latter gets paid, and as he can manage so that he can keep up in Germany, mostly as a theatrical di­ so he treats it as a job. He's there on with what is going on in the theatrical rector. time. The amateur is doing it for "kicks" world. About the Center's production of ''Bells Are Ringing" he is most enthu­ siastic. His leads, he feels, are excellent1 "the finest amateurs he has worked with.' Bev Kwasha, he says, could be a pro­ fessional, if she wanted to be one. As for Sandy Gorodetsky (he is a member of the Barker Playh01.,se), who P,lays the male romantic lead, he feels that his voice is better than that of Syd Chaplin who played the original Broadway role. Arthur Torg, the comedy lead, is "as good as any Sandor who ever played in musical cir­ cuits," Bob says. Hi s enthusiasm extended to the set designer Les Millman, a Providence ar­ chitect, and to Bruce Kearsley who gave the technical advice on the sets. He says that although this was Mr. Kearsley's first contact with the theater, his " grasp of what's necessary is amazing." Although last year's production was held at the Hope Hi gh School auditorium, this year's production will be presented at the R. I, School of Design auditorium. His reason for this is that the stage at Hope is harder to work with . The School of Design's s tage is set up more pro­ fessionally and since they are "using a lot of drops that have to fly," they find it will be easier to produce the play there. · ----- A LOOK AT REHE-ARSALS OF "Bells Are Ringing"

To Be Presented ., MARCH 22, 23 and 25 By The Providence Jewish Community Center

with Bev Kwasha and Sandy Gorodetsky Bernice Gerstein - Sue Franks - Bill Rosenberg Art Torg - Lou Shwartz - Roz Dwares Stan Gilbert - Milt Stanzler Harvey Wagner

) ' Questions and Answers For TEEN-AGERS Are Jewish Par~nts More Indulgent Towards Their Children?

NORMAN SKLAROFF Son of Mr. and Mrt. Solomon Slelaroff 77 Verndale Avenue, Providence Hope Hi9h School No. I definitely do not. think thot Jewish porenta ore more indulgent. I think they are strict with their children and hope for the beat for them and want them to follow good woya.

RONNIE STONE Daughter of Mr. and Mrt. Jay Stone 439 Parle Avenue, Providence Claasical High School. In geherol, I think thot Jewish children are ollowed more liberly, more freedom. Parenti are not as strict and the ,hildren don't have as much responsibility.:.

JUDIE HANKIN Dau9hter of Mr. and Mn. Herbert Honleln 77 Alvin StrNt, Providence Clauical Hi9h School Jewish parents, I think, hove o greot deol of truat in their children and for thia reoaon let ARTHUR LEVIN them go their own way more. Alao, since there Son of Mr. Jacob Levin ore so many affairs sponsored by Jewish or­ 12 Winsor Street, Providence gonizotiona, the parents let them go out more. Hope Hi9h School I feel that in certain aspects the orthodox Jewish porenta are more strict with their chi 1- dren, while the conservative ond reform are less strict. The children are not os restricted.

SAMUEL MENDELOWITZ Son of Mr. and Mrt. Benjamin Mendelowitz 211 Parle Avenue, Cranston Cranston Hi9h School Eaat ANN BETH GOLDBERG I think most Jewish parents ore atricker, not Daughter of Mr. and Mrt. William Goldbers all of them, of course. 227 Warrington StrHt, Providence Cla11ical High School Jewish parents, I think do more for their chil­ dren, because they wont their children to hove If you have any question that you would like to ask whot they hadn't hod. They wont their children teen-agers, please send your inquiries to Teen-Agen, R. I. to enjoy life. Jewish Herald, 1117 Douglas Avenue, Providence, R. I. .- Teen- Age Editorial

Americans, Says Judy Press, Want Security, Worship Success

... :"... ~"'... Americans are just beginning to turn a searchlight on noble, perhaps even brilliant, idea which does not catch the like membership in an exclusive club or society. These themselves and their civilization and to interpret their public's fancy is relegated to the back of the shelf along "diploma elite," as Vance Packard calls them, attend findings to the world. In recent years, they have become with its creator. Suppliers of culture cater to the public at college more often than not, however, merely to obtain a increasingly introspective and motive-conscious- almost the expense of good taste. This so-called culture consists to excess, in fact. Our society is under a constant barrage more lucrative position after graduation. Intellectual ex­ of self-questioning. What incentives propel Americans? mainly of spoon-fed pap, such as television westerns, de­ tective novels, and lavish, superficial movie spectaculars. ploration for its own sake, is still not honored in our What fears restrain them? What convictions animate them? country. It seems that the majority of Americans would rather be What goals unite them? Much current literature is devoted Money and the tendency to acquire material wealth are to s.elf-knowledge and improvement, and the American con­ amused than disturbed by their entertainment. To ~chieve success is to receive the respect and IIP­ recurring themes in the examination of American values science is slowly stirring itself to question shoddy values .and goals. Americans realize and openly admit that money and easily accepted modes of conformity as a result of this plause of one's contemporaries. Today, sources of success and prestige are less likely to be birth and family than isn't everything, that intangibles lilce freedom, love, Justice prodding influence. cannot be purchased with any sum, however great. Yet al­ Americans expect great things of life, and they are one's Job, income, place of residence, and various group memberships. This last element is a particularly im­ though most people say that these other values count more, disappointed if they don't achieve them. Among their they find it difficult to attain them without money. criteria for happtness are money, security, prestige, and portant factor in determii:.ung the well-rounded, success­ ful individual in today's society. The pressure to be a Is money the key, then, to this puzzle of American success. Wary of independence, adventure, and risk­ aims and values? I don't think so. It seems to me that this taking, they would rather occupy a secure niche in a "Joiner" is so strong that it sometimes restricts the development of potentially creative individuals. Measur­ is only a substitute for, or perhaps a stepping-stone to, known and orderly structure than lead a disordered, but something greater. ' creative existence. They would venture little in life, yet ing devices such as this have created a hollowness of values in a system where life is lived in the mirror of how What most Americans prize above all else is that still extract much of its vital Juice. shimmering, elusive quality known as happiness. They may Americans by and large worship the gilded goddess of people rate you. With such a set of values, one's existence becomes a joyless, anxious rat race for prestige. be searching for It In material wealth or security, but success. A respect bordering on reverence is given a Recently there has been a new, vigorous emphasis on these are only the means to an end. That end Is the great _ best-selling book, a candidate elected by a landslide, or a American dream, the Idea that every man has a natural movie star whose picture is on every magazine cover. The intelligence and academic achievement in American life. The college diploma has become a symbol of status, much right to happiness and its pursuit.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• In The Spotlight JOAN LEVEN

By Judy Press

People and prejudice are a matter of They will gather at the Butler Health community work and music. vital concern to Joan Leven, a charming Center on April 22nd and 23rd to discuss She is a volunteer for the John Hope and articulate Classical High School a variety of topics, including the values Settlement House and the Tuberculosis senior. As chairman of the first Inter-faith of today's young people, their tendency to League, a reporter for the • 'Classical Conference of the Rhode Island Youth conform and be apathetic, early marriage Review," a member of the school choir Council, Joan is devoting a great deal of and its consequences, and juvenile de­ and debating society, and first vice­ her time to this project, which she hopes linquency. president of P,J{.O.V.T.Y. She enjoys will eliminate a few of the many barriers The delegates will find themselves singing and playing the piano, and her and blind prejudices which prevent the partaking of a carefully planned program taste in music ranges from Belafonte to meeting of basically intelligent minds. of seminars, speakers, social events, and Beethoven. Delegates representing a comprehen­ work shops. Keynote speaker for the two­ Joan's plans for next summer are un­ sive cross-section of the Rhode Island day conference will be Dr. Kenneth usual, to say the least. She expects to be community will be drawn from the ranks Kindlesberger of N.ew York. In yiew of milking cows and plowing fields with seven of youth organizations all over the state. this advance publicity, the conference other energetic young people in a primi­ promises to be a stimulating and reward­ tive work camp environment, Planting ing experiment, and Joan hopes that it crops and pitching tents will be a part of will be successful enough to continue_on the daily routine. Of co·urse, Joan hasn't · an annual basis. ' had much experience in these areas, but What else does Joan do? Oh, lots of a girl with her potential, shouldn't have things, but her two special loves are any difficu~ty at all in milking a cowl

,_ undertaking will aid in sending Jewish Exchange students to study in Israel. The Council fund is called, Building Spiritual Bridges. A study group has been organized for The Lyons Den - ... any members interested in learning about Jewish laws, holidays, customs, tradi­ Cl> Corner '°... tions, the Torah, and Jewish life in ..: general. The group is conducted by Mr • ... Marvin s. Antelman, who serves as an adviser to the group.

By Leonard Lyons • • •••••

ir.. The Spring Cotillion sponsored by the City Wide Youth Council is an annual 9' ..,.,,CL__,._....,. dance. For two years the Council has pre- Adlai Stevenson said recently he pre- Mrs. William Randolph Hearst dined :S sented the Cotillion, the proceeds of fers to be addressed as "Governor," be- at La Fonda de! Sol, in the new Time-Life r3 which go into a scholarship_ fund. A stu- cause when he's addressed as" Ambassa- building recently. Then she took her guests .:Z: By Enid Kagan dent, chosen in his senior year, will re- dor! ' he always turns around to see how upstairs to-the new Tower Suite. She ask- Q ceive the scholarship which can aid to- many others are there .•• Paul Butler, ed the name of the owner of the building, z wards his college expenses. the former Chairman of the Democratic and was told the titular head is Henry :S Members of the Temple Beth Sholom National Committee, was sworn in to Luce. Mrs. Hearst smiled: "My husband rn youth membership recently formed a new practice before the U.S. Supreme Court always said he'd never amount to any- '"' United Synagogue Youth group from that This ·semi-formal dance will be held recently .•. Bob Hope, scoffing at West- thing." .,.~ temple. The officers are: President, at t h e E ast si d e Jewish Community Cen- erns, boasted: "I've been on TV for 11 Lillian Gish, now in "All the Way o Sharon Bilow; Vice President, Fern ter on March 25. The dance will com- years without once ever having been run Home," is getting fan mail from a new : Strauss; Secretary, Emily Grueneberg; mence at 8 p .M. and a wonderful time over by a horse." generation of moviegoers. It's for "Or- Treasurer, Holly Belilove. will be the rule until the dancing ends At Life magazine's 25th birthday phans of the Storm," now shown on TV, ; The main 'purpose of U.S.Y. is to at ll:30. The music will be provided by party, the Duke of Windsor was introduced which she made 40 years ago ••. Dorothy E-4 bring the members closer to the syn- Joe Markoff and his band. Another high- to John K. Galbraith, the Harvard ec- Louden, the nightclub star, will make her agogue. In doing this, U.S.Y. is conducted light of the dance is that the donation onomist who will be Ambassador to India. Broadway debut in the Frank Loesser- on a three-fold program: Religious, Cul- is only two dollars per couple. This is The Duke said to Galbraith: "India? Oh, Abe Burrows musical, ''How to Succeed tural, and Social. At each meeting a certain a non-floral dance I yes. My niece just took a trip out ther e." in Business Without Really Trying" • •. amount of time is dedicated to each of the During National Jewish Youth Week Herman Wouk, author of " Caine Mu- "Little Mary Sunshine" repaid 167 1/2 folds. Some of the programs are: Panel the City Wide Youth Council hopes to see tiny," lives at St. Thomas in the Virgin per cent to its backers . It had an $8.70 discussions on current Jewish topics, an abundance of Jewish youth SaJurday Islands . Wouk, an orthodox Jew, is or- advance sale when it opened. teaching Israeli songs and dances to the night at the Spring Cotillion. ganizing the new St. Thomas ' Synagogue Before Thornton Wilder sailed for members, and going to a movie or going Jeff Davis is in charge of publicity, ..• Gene Rayburn and Gretchen Wyle r will Europe, he told of his meeting with Dr. bowling as a chapter. and Judy Wattman made the arrangements take over the leads in "Bye, Bye Birdie," Sigmund Freud, who described psycho- On March 14, a Model Seder will be for the music. Toby Demel will be respon- when Dick Van Dyke and Chita Rivera analysis as self-evident truth. Wilder presented in honor of Passover. Fund sible for the refreshments, and tickets leave .•• Tammany Hall is protesting be- asked him: "If it's Self-evident, how is it raising projects are being employed by may be purchased from Toby, the chair- cause Stanley Pleasant, a Reform Demo- nobody hit upon it before you did?" •• .Dr. the selling of gum and personalized sta- man or from any member of the Cit cratic leader in Queens, will get the job of Freud said: "Oh, the poets knew it all the tionery. The money received from this Wid; Youth Council. y Assistant General Counsel to the USIA. time. Shakespear.~ wrotf:aboutinterpreta- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • non of dreams But Shakespeare was • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .... • • • wrong, Wilder pointed out: "Shakespeare interpreted dreams as prophecies. He mistakenly related dreams to the future, instead of to the past." Ex-Sen. Bill Benton's reports on their South American trip are being distributed by Adlai Stevenson and will be published Ulub 46 Opens as a book. Benton probably will accept a UN post ••• Dick Gregory, the new comic, will be seen in one bit of the TV show, I AT SOUTH SIDE CENTER "Cas t the First Stone." He made it while 1. he was a $45-2-week comic in Chicago, ) ' before his reputation soared. George Jessel discussed the frequent fund-raising demands for worthy char­ ities. He told of a man and wife, trapped in a Swiss avalanche, who found a refuge in a s torm shelter. They were holed up there for six days and nights, when rescuers finally reached them. They heard a rap on the door, and the husband asked: "Who's there?" .•. The rescuer said: "We're from the Red Cross" •.• I The husband replied: ''Oh, I gave already." E. M. Forster, the 82-year-old j; scholar, attended the Cambridge opening of "The Guide," the new play by Pat and Harvey Breit. The Lord Chamberlain, in­ cidentally, is trying to censor it ..• Carl Reiner and Mel Brook will make a new r ecording of their hilarious "2,000-Year­ Old Man," adding his reminiscence of Shakespeare, etc ..• • Senay Venuta and Fred Clark, who starred in "Pal Joey" in California, are being urged to do it at the City Center's revival. Billy Wilder, the director-screen­ writer, hopes to do a film comedy in which the noted Hollywood performers will be referred to by their real names instead of fictitious ones. This was a pet project of W .c. Fields, whose theory was: "I did a movie with Mae West- and, in using different names rat~r than our own, we didn't fool anybody." At the Patterson-Johansson fight the national anthem was sung by Patterson's protege, Mickey Allen ••• Columbia artists will book the nation-wide tour of the new Hemingway play, opening in California in July. Rocky Graziano, the ex-champ, is willing to test for the fighter's role in it • • • . Shelley Winters will introduce the new system of flashing simultaneous trans­ lations in other languages, at the Paper Mill Playhouse next month.

(Distributed lNO, by The Hall Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rlehta Reserved) Annou·nce Liberalization - ' ~ Of Currency Exchange 1.11 JERUSALEM - The Israel DE·LICATESSEN, INC. Treasury announced last week MILLER'S ; that effective immediately tourists t:I arriving for lengthy stays will re­ l"il ceive a 20 percent premium over Has everything you need for the Passover Holiday. Our shelves are stocked with ...I'll the official rate for unlimited t"' amounts of foreign currency with­ a compl~te assortment of matzos, mixed nuts, fruits and the choicest delicacies in three years of arrival. Until the change, such a premium was given you can imagine! Whatever you need for the holidays is here waiting for you! i only for the amount of $1,500. =1.11 The step was one of several changes in liberalization of foreign ~ currency ·controls. Under another SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY .!=I Fegulation, also effective Immedi­ '!J ately, Israelis holding foreign cur­ 5 SPECIAL. DAYS TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY rency accounts will be permitted to use $1 ,200 for travel expenses !;a,. abroad without controls. This was ~ interpreted to mean that such Is­ ~ raelis will be able to re-sell at MILLER'S 3 STORES through banks at the free rate _ part or all of such sums to per­ 776 Hope St., Prov., R. I. -- 585 No. Main St. (Next to Korbs) Prov., R. I. sons traveling abroad who do not i... have foreign currency accounts. 1619 Warwick Ave. (Gateway Shopping Center) Warwick, R. I. :a Another change provides that, ...co effective Apr: 1, any person may CID receive unlimited foreign curren­ ... cy for the import of books and STREIT'S -- HOROWITZ-MARGARETEN or GOODMAN'S SAVE 6c A POUND periodicals at a higher exchange rate. At the present time, only book importers receive foreign , currency allocations at higher FOR rates for that purpose. Financial experts pointed out PASSOVER that each such step toward libe11- Le33c alization meant the inclusion of MATZOS other categories of foreign cur­ rency receipts and foreign cur­ rency purchases in brackets high­ er than the basic exchange rate of STOCK UP AT THIS 1.80 per dollar. Such moves, they LOW PRICE! ROKEACH added, brought closer the estab­ PINT QUART . lishment of a single realistic rate JAR JAR of exchange. A report on rapid and substan­ SAVE 10c 49c SAVE 22c 95c tial' gains in export of Israel's pro­ GEFILTE FISH ducts was coupled this week by Trade Minister Pinhas Sapir with a warning against the Israel State Bank's tight credit policy. The Minister told the Knesset, STRICTLY KOSHER FRESH SMOKED NEW YORK'S BEST Israel's Parliament, that almost CHOICE COOKED- - KOSHER - 25 percent of Israel's total output in 1960 was exported and that 90 countries on all continents. now ROAST BEEF featured Israel products for sale. WHITEFISH PASTRAMI He emphasized that 70 percent of ' all 1960 exports were manufactur­ ed products. lb 1.98 Sapir said the export of such Cooked in our own kitchen lb 79c lb 1.39 products had increased in that year by $150,000,000 and that in some cases the rate of increase in exports was more than double the increase in the rate of Israel's production. He expressed the hope FROM OUR OWN KITCH·EN Strictly Kosher FRESH MEATS that the increase in turnover and efficiency which had made the ex­ For Passover port gains possible would not be "swallowed" by increasing profits • Home Made GEFILTE FISH or ·wages. (On Order Only) DUCKS -- CAPONS -- TURKEYS -- FOWL He warned that unless rising consumption and the rate of rise BROILERS and PULLETS in the country's standard of living were slowed, the local price sta­ Home Made PURE CHICKEN FAT Plus The Choicest of Beef bility achieved during the past two • years would disappear. He indicated, however, he did Home Made HORSERADISH ORDER EARLY h ot agree with the Israel State • Check Our Prices On The Best Quality Meats Strong and Tasty Bank credit policy, arguing that At Hope St. Store Only the bank's fear of inflation was un­ justified. He said that an expan­ sion of credit, if properly distribu­ ted, was economically feasible. He added that his Ministry was con­ vinced that industry had to be supplied with enough working capital to maintain and increase MILLER'S production but that he opposed transfering to consumers the credit granted to manufacturers. DELICATESSEN -- INCORPORATED - JOIN ISRAEL ARMY TEL AVIV - The first group of 585 North Main Street 1619 WARWICK AVE. 776 Hope St., Provide-,ce students from the Vizlmitzer Ye­ ,,_ WARWICK shiva took off their traditional Providence Ga teway Shopping Center JA 1-0368 -- PL 1-8682 long kaftans and dark hats and Hoxs,e Fcur Corners donned the khaki uniforms of the REgent 7-3696 Israel Army as volunteers rather MAnning 1-6302 TE 1-9771 · than as conscripts.

- - ,----~------OU--, ...... 0 A subscription to the Herald 1a a good gift Idea for the person ... who "has eveprthing" else: Call ...I UN 1-3709. ..: ... FRED =o· . i:ii-. FIS AN'S ; Fruits· • egetables • Fish ;ii;­ ~ FISH For Q ~ PASSOVER ~ BUY IT NOW .. .. Q ______Fred Kelman Photo ~ The Her ald finds it necessary Honored at Luncheon-A Bon Voyage luncheon was given by the Pioneer Women at the Avoid Waiting Later . Ill". many times to edit or omit news Sheraton-Biltmore Hotel on Morch 9 to hono r two members who ore about to leave for AND SAVE AT ; releases submitted for publication. Israel. Seated fifth and sixth from the left, as guests of honor ore Mrs. David Kelman and FRED FISHMAN'$ Famous The choice of articles to be omit- Mrs. Abraham Bazar. Mrs. Bazar is going to Europe and Israel on on independent tour. ted is purely arbitrary. Omissions LOW PRICES ~ Mrs. David Keln,on, long a worker for Pioneer Women, is leaving on Morch 29 on a ;:j are due to lack of space. NOTE-We Will Fillet All Passover special t.our arranged by Pioneer Women of America to spend the Passover seoso_n in Fish Without Extra Charge -~ r------•,I Israel, which will include the first Seder at the newly opened Sheraton Tel-Aviv and re­ MA 1-6834 served seats for the "Bar Mitzvoh" Independence Doy celebration. Visits and receptions 216 Proirie Avenue O'NEIL'S with Israeli government officials and a special program of sight seeing and visits to Pio- - Willard Shopping Center - neer Women Institutions wi 11 be ~fe~o~t~u~r~e~s~o~f~t~h~e~t~ri~P'.:_· ___11 ;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ RADIO & TELEVISION 1961 RAMBLER CO NV ERTi BLE STORE NOW BEING SHOWN 289 Pawtucket Ave. RAMBLER 2 DR. DELUXE With Heater, "IT COULD BE YOU" Pawtucket, R. I. ing; Nathan Levitt, Publicity; Defroster, Directional Mrs. Joseph Wexler. president David Kaplan, Art; J ack Mellion, Signal, Etc. PA 2-2561 of the Sabra Chapter of Pioneer Frank Licht. and Walter Axelrod, DELIVERED Women, has ann·:mnced the com- Typists. PRICE • Only $1845 , ______.. , pletion of plans for the paid-up Mrs. Henry W. Markoff, director membership affair. and producer will present. "An The program will be " It Could Afternoon on Broadway·• with LA POLLA'S RAMBLER HARRY KATZ Be You! " followed by a supperette Barbara Orson and Byron Tillot­ son playing the leading roles. 1591 Cranston St., Cranston WI 2-3620 I Kosher Meat Market on Monday at 8 P.M. in the Crans­ ton Y.M.C.A . Musica l settings are being arrang·­ at 228 Prairie Avenue ed by Mrs. Louis B. RubinsteiR. In the New Willard Shopping Center SPRING FESTIVAL COMMUNITY SEDER PASSOVER - FOR PASSOVER - Temple Emanuel will hold its The first annual community annual Spring Festival on Tues­ Seder of the Ohawe Shalom Syn­ TRADITIONAL SEDER SERVICES WILL BE Fancy Ducks lb. 45c day at the temple meeting house. agogue, conducted by Samuel S. CONDUCTED ON THE PREMISES TURKEYS At Lowest Prices Mrs. _Max Alperin, chairman, Cohen, educational director of the Fancy CHICKENS will be assisted by Mesdames David Hebrew School, will be held on Enioy the lull eight doy holiday or bring your lamily for Sedorum Horvitz, Arthur Kaplan. Conrad Sunday, April 2 from 7 P.M. to 9 First Seder - Friday Evening - March 31 RIB STEAK lb. 79c Cramer. Co-Chairman; Henry W . in the synagogue vestry, Pawtuc­ Genuine Markoff, Program; Archie Chaset, ket. A light meal will be served. Steer ,:ONGUES lb. 62c Matthew Sherman, Secretaries ; Reservations may be made be­ LAMB CHOPS lb. 79c Weinstein's Lake Pearl Manor Inc. Philip Hak, Treasurer; Milton Du­ fore March 25 by contacting Al WRENTHAM, MASS., off Route 1 A Fancy CAPONS lb. 45c binsky, Hospitality; David Horvitz. Benharris, 128 Hyde Avenue, Paw­ Eli Bogman, Decora t!ons; Adrian tucket. Additional information For Reservations Write or Phone EV 4-3102 - ST 1-9761 FREE OELIVERY DE 1·9675 Goldstein, Albert Kumins. Print- may be obtained by calling Al Ben­ Koshruth Supervision Robbi I. Pickholtz harrls, PA 6-0694; Ed Gershman PA 5-2095 ; Harold Pansy, PA 6-4786 or Herman Geller, PA M. B. .WINE SHOPPE 3-2425. All Needs For Passover 787 Hope Street GAspee 1-6385 Assisting on the committee are Louis Levin, Carl Passman, Ben - Shop at - WE HAVE A COMPLETE SELECTION OF Ferdman, Henry. Shapiro, Mr. and Domestic and Imported WINES and Mrs. Abraham Mal, Mrs. Herman Geller and Mrs. Elliot Berkowitz. MELZER'S DEPARTMENT STORE BRANDIES for Passover The assisting organizations are Big Selection In Complete Line ot From Israel : • CARMEL • BRANDY, 9 yr. old Ladies Aid and Sisterhood and • POTS and PANS • MATZO COVERS AZA of Pawtucket. • SLIVOVITZ • CHAMPAGNE • WOODEN CHOPPING • HAGGADAHS • WISHNIAK • BURGUNDY RUMMAGE SALE BOWLS - 79c and up • ISRAELI SEDER A Complete Line of Carmel Wines From Israel The United Order True Sisters. • WINE GLASSES PLATES A HAPPY PASSOVER TO ALL Inc., Providence # 48, will hold their annual Rummage Sale Mon­ • DISHES - All kinds • WINE CUPS

CUP • ..,.._,.,..,.,_ day, Tuesday and Wednesday. - RELIGIOUS DEPT. CLOSED ON SATURDAYS - Those wishing to make rum­ 238 Prairie Ave. Open Evenings MAnning 1-8524 mage contributions may contact in the Willard Shopping Center COCKTAILS ANYONE? Mrs. Burton Samors at UN 1-9778 . . . . AND DINNER? PIONEER WOMEN The regular meeting of the There's no more intimate or fascinating place to relax Dvorah Dayan Club, Pioneer over a sparkling drink than the brilliant Marco Polo Women. will be held Monday at WILLIAM and GERTRUDE NEWMAN"S Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge at the Colony Motor 8:30 P .M. at the home of Mrs. Joseph T evecore, 95 Burlington Hotel in Cranston. And the meals! Delicious con­ Street. tinental cuisine prepared by exacting master chefs to FISHMAN'S Mrs. Marvin Antelman will · pre­ Willard Shopping Center assure you of a truly memorable luncheon or dinner. sent a program of songs and There's no better place to entertain guests. Drop in music. Plans will be made for the des­ soon, won't you? You'll be delighted that you did. sert bridge being held in April. For Your Passover Meats & Poultry LADIES' P .T.A. _ Select The Best of GOLD-MAN BRAND ColOQYMoTOR HOTEL The Ladies' Association P.T.A. • SPRING PULLETS • ROASTING CHICKENS of the Providence Hebrew Day • FAT CHICKENS • TURKEYS • BROILERS coffee shop • 137 guest rooms ... modern as tomorrow School wlll hold their March meeting on Tuesday at 8:15 P.M. Choice STEER BEEF, VEAL, and LAMB ·Are Our Specialty! , minutes from Providence • Route 1-A in Cranston at Shaare Zedek Synagogue. Fea­ WHOLE RIBS For Your FREEZER , , • Cut For STEAKS and ROASTS Entertainment Nightly Phone: HOpkins 7-8800 tures of the evening will be a For your convenience, we will KOSHER all your meat and poultry film about Children and an ex­ Farm-Fresh EXTRA LARGE EGGS change of Passover recipes. Re­ J. Edward Downes FREE DELIVERY To All Points - MA 1-7596 Gtneral Manarer freshments wlll be served. Mrs. Earl Novlch Is program chairman. Legendary Map Overseer In Subscribe to the Herald. HEADQUARTERS FOR: Nazi -Crime Investigating Office • AIRLINE TICKm • SHIP TICKETS THE ONLY ANGLO-JEW_ISH WEEKLY IN R. I. AND SOUTHEAST MASS. LUDWIGSBURG, Germany - him confident that he could com­ The sparsely furnished office of plete his assignment by 1963. • CRUISES Published Every Week By The Prosecutor Erwin Schuele in this • HOTELS Jewish Press Publishing Company little town near Stuttgart, has a • RESORTS . 1117 Douglas Ave., Providence, R. L • l!Nlon 1-3709 large .map of Hitler's Germany on For Your Publicity and Organizational • VACATION CELIA ZUCKERBERG . . Editor one of its walls. - PHOTOGRAPHS - PACKAGES In a report made by New York CALL Travelers Cheques Second Class Postage Paid at Providence, Rhode Island Times reporter, Gerd Wilche, the Subscription Rates: Fifteen Cents the copy; By Mall, $4.50 per annum; outside FRED KELMAN Go Now-Pay Later \ New England,·'$5.00 per annum. Bulle rates on request. map is dotted with little red WI lliams 1-5402 World-Wide Se"ice The Herald assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors In circles and yellow-black triangles. advertisement&, but will reprlnt that part of t};le advertisement In which the There are so many of them that typographical error occurs. Advertisers will please notify the management is Immediately of any error which may occur. the whole country looks as if it TOURIST TRAVEL suffering from a severe case of FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1961 measles. TROPHIES Open TuH. and Tbun. •tu , P.H. BUREAU .. Inc. But the map's legend explains 776 HOPE ST., PROV, the disease. It says that a circle ROBIN l~nScE~;r:!es~. Max Sugarman Reds Claim Russian marks a headquarters of the Ges­ GA 1-5383 GA 1-9422 Funeral Home tapo, Hitler's secret pol!ce, a "Tro11hl/ C~11 ter of E mJJ ire St." Offlclally Approved Sales Agency Jewry Not Part Of triangle, a concentration camp. COMMUNITY Like the few visitors he receives, World Jewry Herr Schuele frequently stands in ORDERS CALENDAR front of the map as if attempting ACCEPTED LONDON - An article implying to penetrate its shiny surface. that the Soviet Government does All Ingredients Used In PASSOVER MENU GENERAL JEWISH COMMITTEE not consider Russian Jewry as part As head of the Central Office for Foods Listed Below May Be Ordered the Investigation of Nazi Crimes, Our PASSOVER FOODS WOMEN'S DIVISION of world Jewry has been published STRICTLY KOSHER Separately Or A5 A Complete Dinner. For listing call GAspee 1-4111. Ask in New Times, an English-lan­ the prosecutor has been in charge e GEFULTE FISH • SOUP for Calendar Secretary. .Mrs. Bertram of West Germany's first concerted FOR PESACH! L. Bernhardt,. Calendar Chairman. guage weekly propaganda organ • KNEIDLACH effort to round up those responsi­ NOTE: Jessie Diamond wtll be published by the USSR In Mos­ closed Mon. and Tues. (Mar. 27- • HALF BROILER cow. ble for the crimes committed by 28) to prepare our kitchen for e POTATO KUGEL Sunday, March 19: the Nazis. Passover. 1:30 p. m.-Junior Hadassah, Regular The article, written by a Zlon­ Phone orders will be accepted at • KNISHES • APPLE SAUCE Meeting. vly Sheynls, leveled a sharp at­ Since the office was established all times. • Tzimmes or Candied Sweets Monday, March 20: tack against "the idea of the na­ in December, 1958, by the state Beginning Wed. (Mar. 29lh) only - ALL TYPES OF CAKES - 10:00 a. m.-Sisterhood Temple Bet h foods that are Kosher for Pass­ El, Discussion Group. tional unity of the Jews of the Justice Ministers, Herr Schuele over wtll be sold. PLEASE ORDER EARLY! 10:30 a. m.-Prov.-Pawt. Israel Bond world." Such a motion, said Shey­ and a staff of men have conducted Campaign, Pace Setters Committee Assignment. nis, "is empty talk, designed to more than 750 investigations that divert the Jewish workers from have helped to uncover the full 12:30 p. m.-~':ic~~':;{t:1~'::d H~fs'. JESSIE DIAMOND the class struggle, and lead them scope of Hitler's extermination Ing). policy. · 1:30 p. m.-Lad. Ass'n., Miriam Hosp., into the quagmire of natural sep­ Meeting. aration." The Jewish problem, he Questioning hundreds of vic­ 6:30 p; m.-Mothers Ass'n., Temp I e stated, "will be finally solved tims and combing through moun­ Beth David Donors, Ves­ try. along the l!nes of proletarian in­ tains of data collected here and 8:00 p. m.-Lad. Aux., Gerald M. C!a­ ternationalism." abroad, the Central Office has mon Post #369 Regular WHETHER Meeting, 100 Niagara St. Repeats Attack completed nearly 400 investiga­ Sheynls also repeated the cus­ 8:00 p. m.-Sabra Chptr., Pioneer Wo­ tions and sent its findings to lo­ YOU ARE men, Board Meeting. tomary Soviet attack against Is­ cal courts. 8:00 p. m.-Lad. Aid & Sisterhood, rael. The Israeli Government, he Ohawe Sholom, Pawt. Reg. The biggest of these cases - SAILING ular Meeting. declared, "wants to make of the involving more than 900 former 8:00 p. m.-Jewlsh Family and Child­ country an outpost of · United ren's Service, R e g u I a r Nazis accused of crimes comm!~ Meeting. States imperialism, and is trying in the Auschwitz (Oswlecim) con­ OR 8:30 p. m .-Devorah Dayan Club, Pio­ to maintain in Asia and in Africa centration camp - is being pre­ neer Women, Regular the colonial empire destroyed by pared by authorities In Frankfurt. Meeting. the national liberation move­ DRIVING 8:30 p. m.-Slsterhood Temple Sinai, will Regular Meeting. ments." The trial get under way Tuesday, March 2.1: by the Allies during or after the · Do you know that with a wisely war were often unavailable to Ger­ OUR SPECIALTY man legal officials. selected Life Insurance pro­ The prosecutor acknowledge FORMICA TOP - CERAMIC TILE gram your family can ha'te an that witnesses to Nazi crimes, FREE ESTIMATES income of $400.00 per month particularly if they are German * EXPERT INSTALLATION * for 25 yean? witnesses, often do not l!ke to co­ TEL. PA 5-8413 operate with his office. For full details, consult "They may lie to us by say­ ing certain people sought by us have long since died," he said, "If we always bel!eved them we FRA.NK LAZARUS could have closed our office a l.ife Insurance ·- Annuities month after it opened because of lack of work." 635 Industrial Trust Building The prosecutor said the bUlld­ up of the cent~ •s own archives Office-GA 1-3812 Res.--,,PL 1-0716 and the help re~Ved from sim11ar offices all over the world had rriade ------~--_:_~------'-,--~------·-----·---~~-~-"------'--~~-----~~~,-.""""~~------,------···-~--· ------

N The ~erald :finds it necessary Ireleases submitted fo.r publication. Ited is purely arbitrary. Omissions. A subscription to the Herald ls ,.. many tunes to edit or omit news The choice of articles to be omit- are due to lack of space. Drastic Changes Urged a good gift idea for the person who "has everything" else. Call For World Zionism UN 1-3709. NEW YORK - The merger of all American Zionist groups into a single Zionist organization and the severance of connections with political parties was called for in FIRST resolutions adopted at the Nation- CHOICE of • Sensational al Board meeting of the American , the QUALITY-WISE Thie Week's Special Jewish League for Israel. Other Four Jlieoo. AnUque White resolutions urged drastic changes FRENCH PBO\'INCIAL ½ in the structure of the World SUITE PRICE Zionist Organization. by Continental Speaking on the Unity Resolu­ tion, League pres. Samuel H. (m.fm's TIRE FFER Daroff of Philadelphia declared: fUROITUR&1nc. : "non-affiliation is not just a slo­ · ~2 Poua.. 1 An .• TE 1-54!1 t · gan to the League. It is the es­ Open II ed .• T hurs .. ,.J.-ri.. •til 9 ': · sential element needed by Dias­ starts today! pora Jewry to unite behind Zion­ ism and Israel as a whole." Mr. Daroff asserted that, "as soon as other Diaspora groups end their BLACK'S affiliations with political parties in Israel, unity will be not only FINEST DELICATESSEN possible, but feasible and extreme­ AND GROCERY ly probably." In a report on the World Zion­ 1033 Broad Street 10 DAYS ist Congress, Ezra Z. Shapiro of Cleveland, member of the World "YOUR DOLLAR IS WORTH First time ... Zionist General Council. noted MORE AT BLACK'S" that "great enthusiasm was mani­ ONLY fested in Jerusalem for the Lea­ any .size ... all sizes gue's call for one unitary Zionist movement in the Diaspora com­ Now Celebrating munities." Mr. Shapiro also took Our notice of the great importance at­ B. F. Goodrich tached to and J ewish edu­ Anniver3ar'I cation in the Diaspora at the 34/h Congress. We Are Proud To Serve Passenger Car Tire You Again With Standards Stiffened The Finest of For Bar Mitzvah PASSOVER NEW DETROIT - Virtually all syna­ gogues in Detroit joined recenUy PRODUCTS plus Fed. Excise Tax in announcing that effective with At Lowest Possible Prices t he start of the n ext school year • MANISCHEWITZ • STREIT'S TREADS In September. candidates for Bar • HOROWITZ-MARGARETEN Mitzvah in their congregations • ROKEACH'S will be required to have completed • Kosher Chocolates and Candies 0 five years' minimum attendance • Dried Fruits • Conned Fruits White Sidewalls only ~1° more at a regular Hebrew school. • Jams • Gefilte Fish The 23 synagogues, including • Cokes • Chocolate Chip Cookies the only several in Detroit suburban sec­ • Mocoroons---AII Flavors EASY TERMS tions, joined with the United He­ • Baking Chocolate retreads with famous brew School and the Yeshiva • ½ Gal. Fruit Drinks, Sauerkraut at all BFG Stores , Beth Yehuda in announcing the Pickles, Tomatoes, and most BFG Dealers longer ·period of J ewish school at­ Hungarian Deluxe B. F. Goodrich tendance. They pointed out that - Also - this will mean that Jewish boys ISRAELI MATZOS and 11 PAY AS YOU RIDE SAFELY will be reg uired to start their CHOCOLATES QUIET RUBBER" Hebrew schooling not later than the age of eight. Call WI 1-9861 For· The annoucement said t he pio­ FREE DELIVERY ••• silences squeals, grips the road neering step was being taken to better, stops faster, lasts longer! make the Bar l\1itzvah ceremony OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY a truly significant occasion in the March 19 and 26 Jewish education "of our children And Monday, March 27 and. to make the Bar Mitzvah a truly meaningful initiation into Best Wishes To All For A their religious obligations as re­ HAPPY PASSOVER ~ BJ.Goodrich quality on your car for ~ Manufactured with latest BFG factoiy sponsible Jewish citizens." ~ less than $10.00 per wheel. ~ controlled and expert retreadin1 methods. · ~ New, high grade "Quiet (tread) Rub, TO REFRESH YOUR PALATE­ ~ ber," applied to sound carcasses. New tire appearance .•• In black, or SUCCULENT FRESH LOBSTER streamline white sidewalls. MEAT ... savor delicious Lob­ ~ -Extra strong, tough treads, assure ster Ne""burgh, Lobster Thermidor, Lobster Salad, ~ many thousands of safe, extra miles Better value than many new ''bargain Lobster Meat Plate or at amazing low cost. price" tires on the market today. Combination Tray.

SEA FRESH FROM OUR - ---- OWN TANKS ... >- ::r_~ =- . Same popular, BOILED OR BROILED proven Tread Designs LIVE LOBSTER. -.c-..,~-...::...... -.,_,~.~ ---s.:.,- -·''-~·-"S....--:;..: ---~--·-" as BFG new tires :";<,-·.1/-.--<...... -.:::,..::.---✓:. ·:.-v.:.:-::;,/,. B.F.Goodrich ~MMOCKS ~80 PAWTUCKET AVENUE AT NORTH MAIN STREET PAwtucket 6-4850 RMU1/ffont - AMPLE SPACE FOR PARKING 245 Allens Ave., Providence • HO 1-6000 - -···- ' , A Herald ad always gets the Jewish fund raising and welfare anthropic funds for local, national ... best results--our subscribers com­ agencies. These central communal and overseas Jewish needs. The Federations And Welfare Funds Council provides central services prise an active buying market. organizations, representing over 95 per cent of the total Jewish for its member agencies in fund ~ population of the United States l'.aising, community organization, ~ JANE MOTLEY Raised $128 Million ·in 1960 and Canada , annually raise the and budgeting. bulk of all American Jewish phil- Jewish federations, welfare ceipts of $1.7 million during the ; SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1-6 P.M. A U T H O R I ·z E D 0 THRU MARCH 25 funds and community councils same period. i::, raised a total of $128 million in Selected portions of the survey Bunnies, Baby Chicks KIRBY SERVICE l:!l WEST SHORE GALLERY Ducklings, Full Song Canaries Parts - Repairs - All Makes 1960 for local, national and over­ will be included in the 1960 edition ~ 1900 West Shore Rd. · Hamsters, Guinea Pigs, Monkeys RECONDITIONED CLEANERS 00 Warwick, R. I. seas Jewish needs, the Council of of the "American Jewish Year­ ALL FOOD SUPPLIES ~ Jewish Federations and Welfare book." FAIRLAWN Funds reported in an annual re­ The Council of Jewish Federa­ PETS' WORLD VACUUM SHOP ~ view of Jewish communal services tions- and Welfare Funds is the 1531 Elmwood Ave., Cranston 31 JANE ST., PAWTUCKET NOW ON SALE Just published. national· association of 216 united ST 1-8700 PA 2-30S0 l:!l= In addition, some $55 million AT ALL was raised by non-local agencies ~ outside of the welfare fund al­ _i::, Plantations Stores locations; another . $24 million c a m e from non-contributor FREE FREE e ;t BIG ROLL sources such as earnings, fees, i::, ;i. SCOT TOWELS 33c subscriptions and investments, and GIFTS GIFTS !< 4-PACK $41 m!llion was realized from the WALDORF TISSUE 35c sale of Israel bonds. With With ~' 2 ROLLS These sums add up to a quarter ~ SCOT TISSUE 27c of a b!llion dollars per year. In­ STAR STAR ~ ,2• PACK cluded in the figures are the in­ GOLD SOFT. WEVE TISSUE 27c comes of the federations and wel­ ...= GOLD ~ 2 PACKAGES fare funds and national and over­ STAMPS! ... seas organizations. They do not BOX include non-contributed income STAMPS! ... Cut Rite WAX PAPER 27c of local service programs. SCOTT Family The sum raised by the 216 mem­ NAPKINS 2 pkgs 25c ber agencies of the Council, $128 WHITE OR COLORED million. compares with $130.7 mil­ SCOTTI ES--4001 27c lion raised in 1959, a drop of 1.5 Make Star Your per cent. It represents an increase, however, of 3.8 per cent over 1958 when the federation campaigns Rival Dog Food totalled $123 .3 m!llion. Headquarters for 1 LB CANS These and other figures are in­ cluded in the annual CJFWF sur­ vey entitled, "Jewish Communal 2 for 27c Services ; Programs and Finances," SPECIAL - MONTH OF MARCH prepared by S. P. Goldberg, direc­ PASSOVER tor of budget research for the CJFWF. It summarizes major de­ velopments in Jewish communal Reynolds Wrap services and analyzes the pro­ grams and finances of leading FOODS ALUMINUM FOIL Jewish agencies. 75 ft. Economy Roll 71c The total raised by federation - campaigns since the end of World . 25 ft. Regular Roll 29c War II (1946-1960) has exceeded at Lowest Everyday Prices! $2 b!llion, the survey notes. .:,·, Extra Heavy Roll 65c The largest single beneficiary of ~w ready for you - complete selection of best-known names in Kosher foods! 25 ft. by 18 Inches wide Come to Star •. cboose from va riety unequalled e lsewhere - at low, low prices! these campaigns was the United -. Try The New Jewish Appeal which received more than 90 percent of its in­ 200 ft. Roll for EXTRA _ come from them. Select From T-hese Famous Brands! American Jewish philanthropic • MANISCHEWITZ • GOODMAN SAVINGS • ROKEACH agencies had about $96,5 million • ROSEN • STREIT available for total overseas Jewish • corr. needs in 1959. This compares with • ROSOFF • SWEE-TOUCH-NEE • FESTIVE - FOODS FOR EASTER $82 million in 1958. About four­ • KOJEL • HELLER • CARMEL fifths of the total was used for Chocolates and philanthropic programs in Israel; the balance mainly in North Afri­ IMPORTED CANDIES FROM ISRAEL! ELITE, LIEBER, DORAN Candies ca and Europe. Plus A Complete Selection of . . . At Real Savings . . . The total income from the sale of Israel bonds was over $470 mil­ Matzohs, Matzoh Products, Specialties, Soups, Coffee, Tea, Cocoa, BUY AT STORES SERVICED BY lion in the ten years from 1951 through 1960. Of this sum, over Spices, Pre~erves and Marmalades, Honey, Relish, Borscht, Juices, $400 m!llion worth of bonds was Fish, Cooking Oils, Fat, Sauces, Nuts, Dessert Preparations, Bever­ PLANTATIONS sold in the United States. ages, Canned Fruits, Canned Vegetables, Dried Fruits, Soaps, Thirteen overseas agencies other Candles, Cleansers, Chocolates and Candies, Macaroons, Cookies Candy, Tobacco and than the United Jewish Appeal and Cakes. Paper Co. showed an income of $24.5 million in 1959 compared with $22.8 mii­ Better By Far! Fresher By Far At Star! Produce Building lion in 1958. The largest sum was raised by Hedassah, $9.7 million. 88 KINSLEY AVE., PROVIDENCE Local services received over $32 million from central communal FRESH WATER FISH Supe~;;:~te;rices Here are a few of the sources in 1959 for operating pur­ stores we service . poses, compared with $30.5 million the year before. All local fields of • Fresh Carp • Fresh Buffalo Carp HARRISVILLE SPA service except refugee aid shared Harrisville, R. I. the increase in allocations. National agencies had receipts • Fresh White Fish • Fresh Pike JOHNNIE'S MARKET of $60 million in 1959, including Franklin, Mo~s. $5.7 million from federation and welfare fund campaign~. • Fresh Mullets PASCOAG SUPER MARKET The national Jewish hospitals Poscoog, R. I. received more than $10.4 million in 1959 but only a fraction of this SUMTER DELICATESSEN figure ($132,600) came from the FREE GRINDING SERVICE! 993 Brood Street federations and welfare funds. Star's fresh-water fi sh - STRICTLY fresh - superior in quality and just Some fifteen cultural agencies caught flavor! Any you select we'll gladly grind fo r you - without charge! L. M. YARLAS raised over $16 million in 1959, 244 Harmony Ct., Hoxsie about $638,000 of which came Except from federation allocat;!ons. Na­ PASSOVER FOODS AT ALL STAR MARKETS Whitinsville ZUSMAN'S GROCERY tional religious agencies had re­ Woonsocket ' 86 Jenkins Street ceipts of $24.4 m!llion and na­ tional service agencies had re- • A subscription to the Herald is Iwho "has everything" else. Call B.B.G. ENDUCTIONS ... a good gift idea for the person UN "'1-3709. Albert EinsteinB.B.O. will con­ ... ~;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;~ duct its "M.I.T. Enductions" for co new members Monday at 7:30 ...Cl> PM. at the South Side Jewish ~ Community Center, it was an­ ... G. BRUNO & SONS nounced by Miss Leslie Jaffa, BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS president. Parents of the new members 61 Broadmoor Rd., Cranston ST 1-4311 are invited to attend the program which will include a skit and re­ Two beautiful split-level homes freshments. (In process of completion) Girls aged 14 to 18 who may be interested in B.B.O. membership in Cranston are invited to attend. Call for an appointment to view these lovely new homes A subscription to the Herald makes a wonderful gift.

Fred Kehnan Photo CHANNEL 12 WPRO-TV Kickoff Luncheon-A "Special Gifts Luncheon" to kickoff the annual Spring Festival of Temple Emanuel on Tuesday, was held March 8 at the home of Mrs. Max Alperin. Shown above are Mesdames Abram Wahl, president; Max Alper­ in, chairman; Henry W. Markoff, programs; David Hor­ witz, honorary co-chairman and Conrad Kramer, co-chair­ man. Mrs. Arthur Kaplan, co-chairman, was not present when the picture was taken. IS WRONG! evenings program is open tee, under the chairmanship of Mrs. Jack Fradin. Since August, 1960, Local Union 1281, 1.B.E.W., AFL-CIO has Excellent opportunities are in sought for its members employed at Channel 12 the same benefits the Herald's Classified ads. NATURE PROGRAM enjoyed at the other television station in Rhode Island. Channel 12 Robert Woodruff. flield worker Dial GA 1-7184 has agreed to none of the union requests, and refuses ·to bring its for the Rhode Island Audubon Society will present a special To Help Continue The employees up to the same standards as obtained at the other Rhode program on "Nature and Wild ' Life" Sunday at 2:30 P.M. at the Jewish Convalescent Island television station in any respect whatsoever. South Side Jewish Community Home of R. I. Center. Mr. Woodruff's presentation will Yet, Channel 12 which pays less wages and employs fewer technical include slides, movies, and live people charges the same advertising rates as its competitor. animals and specimens. Admission C. A. Pettengill to the program will be open to JEWELER all elementary school aged boys 'WATCH, ~~ JEWELRY and girls who are Center members. N- Summer Line of High Faahlon Costume Jewelry CLUB 45 24 The Arcede Providence Below are the union requests and the ~9mpany answers: The "Gay 60's" will be the theme of the South Side Jewish Community Center's "Club 45" teen I.A•• Satur~ay night club, Saturday, Union Reqy.ests Company Answers at 8 P.M. Featuring the music of Roy "MARTY" Cohen and his orchestra, refresh­ o ~ertime for work performed in ex­ ments, and special events, the cess of 8 hours in any day, as paid at No. to Senior High School boys and the other R. I. television station. girls, both Center members and Weissman non members. Paid holidays as at, other television Jackets and ties will be required Kosher Meat Market station. (9 paid holidays.) No, will only give 2 paid holidays. dress for boys attending. Skirts 682 Broad Street or dresses will be required for Next to Shaare Zeilek Synagogue girls. The program will be super­ Where service is TOPS Same wage scale as at other televi­ vised by Edward Goldstein and sion station. No. Norman Lofsky. Committee chair­ A_nd prices are LOW! man is Miss Leslie Jaffa. WE WILL HAVE Pension plan participation as at other television station. No. NURSERY SCHOOL Turkeys and Capons The. South Side Jewish Com­ Weekly or bi-weekly pay. (Other tele­ munity Center's Nursery School for PASSOVER WILL PAY WAGES ONLY will conduct a "Seder in Minia­ CALL IN EARLY vision station pays its employees each N0, ONCE A MONTH. ture" for nursery school children week.) and their mothers on Monday at FOR THE CHOICEST OF 12:30 P.M. at the Sonuth Side JCC building. MEATS Ii Plans for the program are being Special attention will be gr,en made by Mrrs. Israel Tabatsky, to your Passover orders( Within 11 months after absentee, out-of-state ownership pur­ nursery school director; Mrs. GA 1-7513- Phillip Dimond, nursery teacher, FREE DELIVERY chased Channel 12, it fired 46% of all the technical employes at and the Nursery School Commit- Channel 12 (21 men discharged!). Channel 12 pays less, employs fewer people, yet charges the "Q.u/t. ?/DJUUJ111t- Sid- ,, same advertising rates as its competitor. The Herald is now accepting The union is continuing to seek fair and just wages, hours and "Younger Set" Photos working conditions for its members. For early publication and For our Files • Glossy Prints Preferred • 5" x 7" or larger • Snapshots will not be accepted Local Union 1281 I.B.E.W., Henry Ferri, Pres. THE JEWISH .HERALD 1l17 Dou9la Ave. Pro•idence. R. I. .. ) IBB:IGATION PROJECTS ... BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS Steve Feingold and Richard Brod- Cl'l JERUSALEM, ~ , $36:400,000 will The Whirlybirds defeated the sky. High scorers for the losers be Uvested in Israel irrigation pro­ Untouchables, 31 - 27, and the were Frank Geary, Bill ·nenhoff, ~ jects, Agriculture Minister Dayan Globetrotters trounced the Gop­ and William Kaplan. said. hers, 42-20, in last week's Tween =llj Basketball League playoffs. con­ ducted by the Jewish Community BANANA NUT WI 1-2140 Center. These two teams will now CREAM LOAF It:, compete for the league cham­ I.I! BUICK SERVICE pionship in final playoffs to be East Side Diner ...r:n Clark's Auto Service, Inc. conducted ~unday at 2 P.M., at 360 Waterman Street ~ Specializing In Buick Since 1920 Nathan Bishop Jr. High School Near Red Bridge 33 SEABURY ST., PROV. gym. Between Potters & Huntington Ave. ~ A preliminary game between the Gophers and the Untouchables I.I!= wlll be played at 1 P .M. WARWICK SCHOOL High scorers for the Whirlybirds BEST~ ~ In last Sunday's contest were Al .=.., OF MUSIC Cohen and Mike Marcus, and high DEAU scorer·s for the Globetrotters were el ANNOUNCES Plain Facts and Figures t:, Check with Us and Save Students are being ~ · Fred Kelman Photo DREYFUS HOTEL accepted for Council Delegates - Shown above are Mrs. Bernard Carp TRANSIENT and CENTREDALE and Mrs. Gabriel Salk who will be the delegates from the RESIDENTIAL ·1 PONTIAC E0 ORGAN LESSONS Providence Section to the biennial Convention of the Na­ BUDGET RATES For Reservation • •• Enroll Now - Call tional Council of Jewish Women. The convention will open 26 Putnam Ave., Cent. =... ST 1-9225 ST 1-8833 Sunday at the Pittsburg Hilton Hotel in Pittsburg. David GA 1-6343 CE 1-6232 :i 895 Post ·Road _ Warwick, R. I. ... Harman, son of the Israeli Ambassador to the United States, for $500,000. WE CARRY THE BEST IN WESTERN STEER BEEF Choice cattle from Iowa, A CARD OF THANKS The fln~st In the country! You're sure when you shop at: George Berlinsky' s I WISH TO EXPRESS MY SINCERE KOSHER MEAT MARKET 232 PRAIRIE AVENUE APPRECIATION FOR ALL In the Willard Center WASHINGTON TRIP stitute, Israel Embassy, Library or call DE 1-9595 For Free Delivery The Jewish Community Center of Congress, Washington Mon­ GENUINE reg. 98~ lb has announced that it will proceed ument, Pan American Union. Na­ THE GOOD WISHES AND GET WELL STEER LIVER lb 79c with final plans for its 5-da.Y tional Art Gallery, National Thea­ teen "Cherry Blossom Trip" to tre, National Symphony Orches­ MESSAGES SENT ME DURING Finest Quality POUL TRY Washington D.C. on April 24 to tra. and others. net weight, no ½ lb added April 28. MY STAY AT THE HOSPITAL. Full line of MEATS and POUL TRY Trippers w1ll leave Washington FOR PASSOVER Arthur Eisenstein, South Side late Thursday evening. April 27, Center director, announced tnat returning to Providence early MANY, MANY THANKS! enrollment for the trip will be Friday morning, April 28. Super- open to all Senior High School MAKE A PERMANENT vision on the trip will be main­ boys and girls who are Center JOSEPH (Joe) MATZNER LIFE TAPE RECORDING members. tained by a group of adults dl{ected by Mr. Eisenstein. BAR MITZVAH - ' CONFIRMATION Enrollments will be limited to a RECITALS - SPEECHES maximum of 36 boys and girls, This Event Only Happens ONCE with a minimum of 30 required to Even If you don't have a tape make the trip possible. Deadllne recorder now, play It on on registrations will be Friday, See The Fine Specials a friend's until you get your own March 31. Registrations will be ALLAN M. GOODWIN accepted at either JCC building. Leaving Providence by bus on We' ve .. Pr.epared You For 61 Westford Road Monday: April 24, the next three Providence 6, R. I. days will be filled with visits to UM 1-3882 The White House, The U.S. Sen­ ate, Tne F .B.I., Smithsonian In- Sr. PATRICfi'S DAY Opens this Wednesday! THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER'S GAY HIT MUSICAL Delicious., Tender., Heavy Steer IRISH CORNED BEEF ~lt-S {JrJ@irJ& . ' and CABBAGE DINNER 3.f2f BROAg;!v?i BEST! • Vegetables • Garden Salad • Hot Rolls· WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY and SATURDAY MARCH 22, 23 and 25 IRISH LAMB STEW At R. I. School of Design Auditorium - 8:30 p.m. BRIGHT HIT SONGS! with DUMPLINGS DANCES! TOP TALENTED CAST! COLORFUL! • Tender Chunks of Spring Lamb Traditional IRISH MUSIC BY • Feather-Light Dumplings Get tickets today for • Delicious Home Made Rolls CORA BEAUDET TRIO the entire family! You'll Like Our Upstairs FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE TE 1-4143 or TE 1-4576 - Ticket Information - new Colonial Room Gen. Adm. - Wed. & Thun. - $2.00, Sat. - $2.50 Res. Sec. - Wed. & Thun. - $2.50, Sat. - $3.00 The Perfect Place for , JOE SULLIVAN'S Tickets available at Jewish Community Centers, • Weddings Roth's .Ticket Agency, Axelrod's, East Side Pharmacy, Oak Hill Pharmacy, Merry-Go-Round Shop, Sorority • Parties Shop, Melzer's Dept, Store. • Social Functions STEAK HOUSE Mail Orders for . Tickets Accepted • Business Meetings And Our HOWARD JOHNSON'S ROOM At J.C.C.; 170 Sessions St. 1303 North Main Street Opposite Sears ~ TEMPLF; SINAI for all children celebrating birth­ Family Sabbath worship will be days in March. Th e J u n i or Elmer Smith Studios - peld tonight at Temple Sinai at Choir will participate In the ser­ German Educators React Negatively ~ 8 o'clock. · vice, directed by Mrs. Allen White. SINGING ~ Birthday blessings will be given PROGRESS SURE To Science, Says Professor FOR DEPENDABLE KEEN MIND .....: .;;;======;;;; PERMANENT CONSULATE Any vocal need; any age PHILADELPHIA - The Govern­ WASHINGTON, D. C. - A· has met with Chancellor.Adenauer Providence: 385 Westminster St. W. Warwick • Thurs. In Arctic 0 IMPORTED MOSAICS ment of Israel will open a perma­ German rofessor, research scien­ and other German political, com­ =i:i: for the Office, 823 Park Ave., Auburn DO-IT-YOURSELF HOBBYIST ment Consulate in this city, with tist, and member of an advisory munity and educational leaders HOpkins 1-5926 ~ FREE INSTRUCTION • SUPPLIES Michael Deouell, head of the Is­ committee on political education on the issues of German education Best phone times, Tues., Fri., - MOSAIC IMPORTS - rael Investment Authority here to the German government, re­ for democracy. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.; Dally 9-10 a.m. ~ 56 Blalsdell Ave. {Oak HIii Plat) and formerly Vice Counsul of Is­ ported here recently the existence ~ PA 3-2122 Pawtucket rael in Atlanta, Ga., as Consul. of 'traditional negative feelings ! among a section of German edu­ Conciliation With r,;. - FOURTH ANNUAL - cators against psychology and· the HARRY FAIN Q. social sciences generally." He Israel Urged :a PASSOVER APPEAL urged a greater emphasis in Ger­ lnyites You To Check i:i: man education for democracy on FRANKFURT President Sumter Delicatessen's fil MAIL YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS what he called "a human ap­ Heinrich Luebke of West Germany PASSOVER Shopping List = proach to teaching. appealed this week to Christians -- NOW -- The German educator, Dr. Max and J ews alike to "strive toward :,, ; Horkheimer, Professor of Sociology a new era of creative existence." We Carry A ,.;a TO AID THE NEEDY AT PASSOVER Speaking at ceremonies marking UJ and Philosophy at the University ... UNITED MOES CHITIM FUND of Frankfurt, called for "a human the opening of Brotherhood Week, Complete Line of fil dimension" in teaching tech­ Luebke said that "freedom and i:l OF GREATER PROVIDENCE human dignity are still endangered 0 niques which would help shape ROOM 402, 100 NO. MAIN ST., PROVIDENCE the attitudes of German youth In by totalitarian forces." He declar­ PASSOVER ~ Newmon, T reosurer Edmund Wexler, President a direction most conducive to a ed the German people should con­ fil democratic atmosphere. cern themselves with the past and "face the depressing knowledge of PRODUCTS E-4 Dr. Horkheimer, who is director all its horrors squarely." = of the Institu'te of Social Research (Foods And Delicacies) at Frankfurt, was a member of the The Germans as a whole, he de­ To Fill Your Needs- panel on education at the Confer­ clared, became "the guilty instru­ ence on Germany here. He is a ment" of the nazi criminals but At Lowest consultant to the American Jew­ numerous Germans courageously _lsh Committee and in the 'forties and selflessly opposed them, many Possible Prices served as a co-editor of the Com­ paying with their lives. Calling on mittee's five-volume "Studies in the Jews not to refuse German Please Place Your AT WAYLAND SQUARE IN PROVIDENCE Prejudice." efforts at conciliation, Luebke PASSOVER ORDER UNION 1-1926 cited a speech by Prime Minister To counter the authoritarian EARLY 1 orientation of many German Ben Gurion in the Knesset, the ~ FINE APPAREL FOR MEN AND BOYS teachers and students, Dr. Hork­ Israel Parliament, in which the heimer called for the setting up Premier differentiated between For FREE DELIVERY of experimental workshops I.Ii nazi Germany and the Bonn Re­ Coll HO 1-3220 group dynamics. public. These workshops, Dr. Hork­ Bundestag Deputy Franz Boehm stressed that neo-nazi anti-Semi­ OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY· · ~ng • compl,te Hne of heimer said, would be aimed at . _,,, ..... ¥- "showing · the participants the tic theories "still propagated by distinctive, traditional apparel way from the prevalent authori­ small circles in German society tarian attitude to one of demo­ must be isolated so that never for the High School, College cratic cooperation." He called this again will they be associated with change of attitude "the crux of poll ti cal society." SUMTER Student and Young Executive the functional side of political A number of public events as Appetizer Dairy education in Germany." well as several radio and television At the same time Dr. Hork­ programs devoted to Jewish his­ heimer recommended the forma­ tory and Christian Jewish rela­ DELICATESSEN tion of an American-German re­ tions were scheduled during 993 Broad St. HO 1-3220 search group in the field of politi­ Brotherhood Week. cal education. It would deal with "the total teaching concept re­ garding content in political edu­ cation in' Western Germany." DICK FLYNN To develop a genuinely new orientation, Dr. Horkeimer under­ Complete Landscaping Service scored the necessity of "basically 18 YEARS OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE FINER POINTS OF GARDENING new concepts of culture, language, history, geography, biology, etc. LAWN MAINTENANCE By The Month based on the knowledge of man A Specialty and his society." Irving M. Engel, an attorney of e LAWNS BUILT • EVERGREENS e LOAMING New York and Honorary Presi­ • SEEDING e FERTILIZING CHINESE AND AMERICAN dent of the American Jewish RESTAURANT Committee, set forth here a series Free Estimates ST 1-3094- WI 1-8465 - GA 1-1819 IL':J of proposals to develop education I@ for democracy for Germany. Mr. I@] Engel was a member of the panel NOW_ on education at the Conference rc~J on Germany. Why Settle For Less Than The Best? (_@l He warned against the danger 1@1 OPEN of "isolated teaching" of Nazi his­ !®I tory to German youth since by 2003 POST ROAD, WARWICK, R. I. i tse!f "this could only create large [t: ~ scale situations of guilt". He [@J Opposite "New Air Terminal Building" PASSOVER POULTRY ·at !ha Stole Airport stressed that the teaching of re­ .. I cent German history, particularly From Any Kosher Market That Displays The Famous @I We Serve Authentic Chinese Foods of the Nazi period, should be in­ Seal of "GOLD-MAN BRAND" ~ --- Prepared in a Real Cantonese Manner. cluded in a large context of atti­ fE~ tude education. Ask For It By Name, and We Also Serve Excellent American Foods. GOLD-MAN BRAND Poultry, [@] "Facts alone", Mr. Engel em­ raised and processed exclusive• Enhance the Pleasure of ly by GREYLAWN POULTRY Yo_ur Passover Table. Visit------· Our Newly Decoroted phasized "even valid historical CO. of Warwick for Retall Meat facts are not enough. It is of ut­ a nd Poultry Markets, is the COCKTAIL LOUNGE FINEST Kosher Poultry avall­ Processed under the most importance that education able ... direet from New Eng­ Strict Supervision of the ~ in Germany be based on human land's Newest, Most Modem Orders Put Up lo TaA• Out ------· K o s h e r Poultry Processing W AAD HACASHRUTH l'/eos• .Coll - RE 9-2528 relations principles and techniques Plant. All Poultry locally raised. of Providence. ------which would aim at the develop­ I En joy Dining in • Relaring ond True Oritn!ol Atmosphere ment of attitudes among the it • l@i] ·~ - REMEMBER - . youth conducive to the growth of Not Alfili•!td W ith Any Other Redouranh in R.l. democracy". ~ Greylawn Poultry Co. :• If'21 Open Doily 11 :00 A.M. to I :00 A.M; Mr. Engel who had served as ~ I I@) Daily Sp•.ciol Lunchoon, President of the Committe for ~ WARWICK RHODE ISLAND five years has visited Germany, v.l ~ d ~·~@E~f@Ji~F ~ A · Herald ad always gets the In Hamburg, a member of the ..... best results-our subscribers com­ state criminal police headquarters CANDID WEDDINGS prise an active buying market. _ criticized the Bavarian officials for BAR . MITZVAHS from manufacturer to you "talking out of tum." "3 For The FINEST CLEANING Police sources said investlga­ EMBASSY STUDIOS =1.11 only $12.95 installed 820 PARK AVE. • CRANSTON It's tlonli for war criminals have been • Completely weatherst r ipped conducted all over Germany for a ·ST 1-6769 • Operator included TDM'N. A ~-SU· year by various agencies. 0 Estimates - No Obligation CL ■ A ■ H ■ I'" -. -~ =0 . . f.· The· new investigation is being 1.11 Our Prices Can't Be Beat! launched on order of West Ger­ Warwick School ...UJ RELIABLE many's Supreme court. of Music Venetian Blind Co. HOXSIE 4 Corners, Warwick O:pTSPOKEN NAZI ANNOUNCES 1366 Broad St., Providence Route Service to Prov., Cranston and ~ HO 1-2889 Warwick - RE 7-4567 BONN - Willie Brandt, Mayor Classes in of West Berlin, charged last week DICTION, SPEECH, =l'!J that Dr. ljans Globke, Chancellor Adenauer's State Secretary, was AND DRAMA ~ an outspoken Nazi. Brandt said Pri,ate or group lessons .!=' ANTIQUES WANTED Globke was instrumental in de­ Enroll Now/ - Call .., priving him of his citizenship in ST 1-9225 ST 1-8833 e LAMPS, PINE FURNITURE, CHINA, GLASS, 1938 because of the anti-Nazi 0 895 Poat Road r JEWELRY, LINEN, TOYS, DOLLS, activities he was -conducting in Warwick, R. I. ~ PAINTINGS, PRIMITIVE, ETC. Cantorial Music - Cantor Norway. Call or Write M i c h a I Hammerman of Temple Kehilath I s r a e I, All famu of penonal and hulinal uuurunoe s:rERLING 3-2815 OR Brookline, Moss., will be ilttllldi,v • Life • Accidml • Group • Fire• - I featured in "An Evening of ... P.O. BOX 138, WAKEFIELD, R. ~ I. Cantorial Music" to be pre­ Aulomu6ik • Ctw,aUy • Ba,,4a ...co MILDRED C. PECKHAM sented by Temple Beth Is­ c,, rael on Tuesday at 8 P.M. Murry M. Halpert · --~ ... in the temple. GIVE YOUR HOME ... A FRESH NEW 800 Howard Bldg. - ~ DE 1-9100 Re1idence: DE 1-6949 ~ LOOK THIS SPRING ••. Full-Scale Hunt On For Nazi Criminals Replace Your Worn Or Ugly Step With The MUNICH-A full-scale investi­ ISRAEL CARMEL SHAWNEE Precast Unit! gation into Nazi war crimes For PASSOVER: against Jews, Involving persons IT'S SAFE - IT'S MODERN - IT'S BEAUTIFUL believed to be hiding in Germany FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL or abroad, will be launched soon, officials said last week. SOLAR CONCRETE PRODUCTS, Inc. Dr. Hans Schnelder, head of 1 BRIDAL AVENUE • WEST WARWICK, R. I. the Bavarian state police, said VAlley 1-6405 V Alley 1-4815 a special commission would spearhead the hunt. It will question thousands who were persecuted by the Nazis, as well as many others suspected of tak­ ing part in the crimes. A commission set up two years ago has been quietly investigating We also have a large selection of war crimes in the DOMESTIC PASSOVER WINES and Ukraine. Many war criminals fled into north and south Germany at the close of the war. Wayland Square Liquor Store LEO SWARTZ, Proprietor The commission will be enlarged 210 Wayland Ave. at Wayland Square to comprise about 50 men, includ­ ing 20 police officials from Mu­ For Free Delivery call MAnning 1-5216 nich, Nuremburg, Augsburg and - NO ORDER TOO SMALL FOR US TO DELIVER - the state government who have ~===~======~ Pe,formability been called into the hunt. "The new duties of the enlarged YOU HAVE TO DRIVE IT BUCKY'S Mr. Treadwell TO BELIEVE IT commission will consist of in­ • New super smooth AUTO SALES vestigating all crimes against Jews transmission in East Europe, and what is now • 7 styles to choose Crom 205 ATWOOD AVE. :s fis~ing for • 113" wheelbase luxury East Germany," Dr. Schneider ,I compact CRANSTON - WI 2-1800 said. .·.· • , A . ·· , if Gefdte AUrO - /f~ ·PAY YOUR'1REGISTRATION BY MAIL WITH A

But you and I know the place to catch Mother's light, luscious All Whitefish De Luxe Gefilte Fish is at your favor ite supermarket. Fish for the right brand-Mother's ... You '11 enjoy IT'S FASTER ... IT'S EASIER ... NO WAITING IN LINE! Mother's " Old-fashioned" (traditional) gefilte

~ ~.;.=~~==-=- Renew your auto registration by mail the safe r·~--- way - with a Hospital Trust money order. ,' , RHODE ISLAND Only 15¢. Just sign it and mail it. We give HOSPITAL TRUST .M.Ot'h;;. s·t._..· you a receipt. Available at any Hospital Trust COMPANY office - your full-service bank. ALL ·WHITEFISH DE LUXE GEFILTE FISH From the, Spotless Kitchens of Mother's Food Prod., Inc., Newark 5, N. J. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Freel Gefilte Fish r.ecipe folde r: " Delicious Daily Dining." Write Dept. JN-35 =: The Herald finds it necessary many times to edit or omit news MORAL ATONEMENT Subscribe to the Herald. FRANKFURT - Material and S ;~:~~::c~b:it:~c~~~ moral atonement was urged here r:~~c~~~~~ last week by President Heinrich ~ ted is purely arbitrary. Omissions HOPE STREET r.: are due to lack of space. Luebke on the people of Germany ... ;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~====~ for Jewish suffering under the GARAGE Nazis. The West German Presi­ dent spoke at a meeting marking • Delivery Service Clyde Cabinet Shop the opening of Brotherhood Week, • Fireproof Insured HOME REMODELING and held annually to promote German­ 825 Hope Street STORE FIXTURES Jewish understanding. (rear A & Pl For Free Estimate Call MA 1-1794 VA 1-0047 - VA 8-0196 A Herald ad always gets the best results-our subscribers com­ prise an active buying market. BARNEY'S CAMP MENDOTA Have You The Desire To DELICATESSEN RIDE A HORSE? Casco, Maine 98½ ROLFE STREET Here, At Beautiful THE FINEST IN CAMPING Cranston, Rhode lsl•nd WIONKHIEGE FOR YOUR SON ST 1-8744 VALLEY FARM A FEW OPENINGS STILL WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF AVAILABLE To Perform-Temple Emanuel Men's Club will present Mr. Group Lessons In Honeback Riding PASSOVER and Mrs. Israel Berenbaum, stars of the Yiddish Art Thea­ Are Av•ilable To Ages 5 To 50 - - At A LOW, LOW Cost . ters of pre-Nazi Europe, on Wednesday at 8 P.M. in the Starting April 1 Call Joe Schein PRODUCTS temple meeting house. Director LARGE VARIETY OF: - CE 1-0417 - The Barenbaums will combine folk songs with portrayals of LOG ROAD SMITHFIELD GA 1-3943 • Cakes and Cookies fictional characters. • Fancy Chocolates The affair is open to paid up members -and their wives. A social hour will follow the performance. R. I. Represent•tlv• • Kosher for Passover MRS. GEO. (Bell•) TUCK, 111 Fifth St., Prov. · DExter 1-7647 MORRISON and SCHIFF All organizational news MUST Ag~~~16 A~R~!16 be in the Herald offices before CAMP ODETAH MEAT PRODUCTS Fitchville, Conn. noon of Monday each week. It w1ll ORGANIZATION Shop Or Order At Your· (60 miles from Providence) NOT appear in that week's paper Superb_ Ca mp FaclUtles Including all land and water sports - Creative Convenience! NEWS Arts and Dra ma tics . Nature . Tripping and Pioneering • Private Lake - If it is received later than noon. Wate r Skllng • Resident Doctor and R N's - Mature Staff. COUNCil.. OF OPTOMETRISTS Kindergarten To Teen Age Programs Directors Dr. and Mrs. Aaron R. Nemtzow BERTRAM H. WEINGART . SAM MORSE, S5 W. 42nd St., N.Y.C. of Pawtucket attended the 39th FOR PASSOVER Annual Postgraduate Congress of the New England Council of Optometrists at the Statler Hilton GOLDEN RING CAMP Hotel In Boston from March 12 to • e • IT'S On Indian Head Lake, Pembroke, Mass. -1 15. (former site of lndl•n HHd C•mp) More than 1700 optometrists 40 MIies From Providence • At the G•t•w•y to C•pe Cod from all sections of New England, Boys: 6 . 15 CO-ED Girls: 6 - 14 their wives and guests attended - 3-4th SEASON - the Congress. All land and water sports; horseback riding; overnight camping; rlflery; archery; nature; campcraft; dramatic&; music; dance; arts and crafts; GREAT SCOTT ceramics; photography; trips to places of Interest; best In quality food; DISCUSSION GROUP excellent supervision and guidance by'° mature staff. Mrs. Irving Wiener will review Fee: 8-Week Season $450.00 - 4-Week Period $225.00 "Professor and the Fossil" by For further lnform•tlon •nd booklet write to: CARRY I NG A FULL LI NE OF Maurice Samuel at the Temple Mrs. Rose L. Andelman Beth - El Sisterhood Discussion 333 VFW P•rkw•y Tel. FAlrvlew 7-1455 Chestnut HIii 67, MHI. THE FINEST Group on Monday, at 10 A.M. in the home of Mrs. Kenneth Logo­ witz. 525 Elmgrove Avenue. A coffee hour precedes the CAMP MAR-VEN meeting. Boys-Girls Ages 6-13 Foods and Delicacies Wellfleet, Cape Cod, Mass. SYNAGOGUE FIRES Combines best f eatures of ocean location In a country atmosphere. NEW YORK - Police officials Boon for alle rgy sufferers. Bay, pond and pool swimming. are veering to the view that the Program: Inte resting, full and varied, Including all water sports, athletics, and ail ca mp activities. Jewish cultural program. recent series of fires which have Tutoring available. MATURE STAFF. Modern and comfortable facilities. For PASSOVER plagued a Forest Hill, Queens, Tuition: $475.00 for 8 weeks. (limlted number accepted for 4 weeks) synagogue have been caused by anti-Semitic vandals. The latest Saul and Florence Richman, Directors . PLUS of four fires occurred last week, 133 Salisbury Road, Brookline 46, Mass. Telephone: AS. 7-5237 causing damage of more than IN PROVIDENCE AREA, CALL HO 1-9448 At Our Smith St. Store $7,500. A COMPLETE SELECTION OF FISH FOR THE HOLi DAYS Now...interest from the day of deposit at Industrial ,National

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' , Advertise in the Herald. 1 a !o:~bs:;::i:~:a~o!h:h!e:!0! ·1srael, Galut. And Anti-Semitism who "has · everything" else. Call (Continued from Last Week) UN 1-3709. If no .identifiable Jews were there was a minor resurgence of ~ which is to be distinguished sharp­ l!J around, the word Jew would, still squalid Nazi anti-Semitic demon­ ly from the perpetuation of hatted Why wait have a sinister demonologic,i.l ring. strations throughout the world, we of Germans. There would be a kind ·of anti­ witnessed for the first time a And it is here that a gratifying until BIG DISCOUNTS-I I Semitism in vacuo, a 11tency over general revulsion. Had there been paradox issues from Israel. While I PORTABLE the recollection of the·monstrosity a familiar reaction to the first there is a tendency there to tri­ called the Jew, the accursed, the manifestations of Nazi anti-Semi­ vialize the problem of anti-Semit­ TYPEWRITERS God-killer, the frustrated and van­ tism, world history might, Jewish ism, the country has become the CHECKWRITERS ished Elder of Zion, the baffled history certainly would, have taken center of an episode which pro­ And ADDING MACHINES world destroyer. another turn. perly guided, could contribute to a For this, as I have frequently · What we repeated in vain then, renewal of the world's memory. }~ f ! that this assault on the Jews could SHOP WHERE YOU CAN pointed out, is the true and inner The Eichmann trial may do ~ ~·~ l!J nature of anti-Semitism, and not be the beginning of an assault on more than that; it may arrest in SEE THEM ALL the irritations and annoyances ris­ civilization, was now, so recently Israel the tendency to which I after the second world wat"; ob­ ~~- . i t R.I .'s Largest Typewriter Display ing from the presence of. Jews. have just referred. The degree of vious to hundreds of thousands of Easy Terms Indulgence in the morbid epi­ Eichmann's personal guilt is sec­ sodes called anti-Semitic out­ non-Jews. ondary; what matters is the dra­ Prompt action on your part ; bursts have been costly to the They started back. "Wasn't matic revival of the world's aware­ now can hasten the day of S r OODS western world; and whether it has this how the whole filthy business ness of a danger which is dormant your retirement. GUARDIAN'S ~ PEWRITER Co. passed beyond the point of re­ began? Isn't this where we came but not dead. flexible-age retirement plan • 84 EMPIRE STREET currence is still a question. in?" lets you say good-bye to your f When , less than a year ago, I would like to think that what job any time between the ages =" took place was an authentic coun­ of 55 and 70. You don't have b ter-demonstration in behalf of the to decide now. Retire when Jews, or even of abstract justice. ~~A!UIUr Cash Price I cannot pass over the possibility you please-decide when QUALITY Rhode Island's Most Enchanting you know what's best for you. No. 2 FUEL OIL 200 Gallons S26-60 that it was more sin' at Haman than ahavat Mordekhai: loathing and SUPPER CLUB If you are dreaming of the day when you can begin a • Oil Burner Contracts Available If Desired fear of Nazis m rather than \:Oncern features an exquisite cuisine, for Jews or justice. perfectly prepared coclctails new, carefree life, take the • Call Now For Your Winter Requirements And for this too let us be grate­ first step by calling us to- ful--always bearing in mind, how­ JOIN THE day for full information. ever, that the anti-Semites may PREFERRED OIL CO. only have attempted a comeback AFTER NINE GROUP too soon, while the scars of the 413 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. Dance To The Sclntlllatlng Tunes of war were still tender in· too many FRED ANGELONE minds . CALL UN 1-2238 NOW! AND HIS E!AND NEED TO RE-EDUCATE OURSELVES NEW LOUISQUISSET PIKE (Route 146) Lincoln, R. I. Would it have helped the Jew­ PA 6-8893 ish people much if, with the com­ The GUARDIAN ing of Hitler, the vast majority of Credit Cards Life Insurance Company MORE and MORE Jews had foreseen with the utmost Dine rs' Club - American Express 1860 OP AMERICA 1'61 clarity what he and his movement intended for them? PEOPLE RELY ON The ghastly answer is: very little. The world would not have cared enough to believe them, or, believing, would not have taken Just in Time for Easter GALKIN'S steps to save them. The six hun­ dred thousand Jews of Germany, the three and a half million Jews AUTO BODY & RADIATOR SERVICE of Poland, could not have escaped in appreciably larger numbers NATIONALLY than they did. OVER 60 YEARS OF FAIR DEALING The pitiful cry which must have 8RITl5ufwALKERS gone up from millions of lips-­ ADVERTISED GA ·1-6285 "Oh, if I had only foreseen this in MADE IN THE U.S.A. 161 CHESTNUT ST., PROVIDENCE time I'' --applied, once more, to the MEMBER OF THE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU individual, not to the communities as a whole. The nightmare of those years when we went round schnorr­ REGULARLY $22.95-$26.95 ing for visas and for affidavits I (And what a job it was to keep the latter, which Jews had to give, NOW ONLY abreast of the former, which came Compact Motors; Inc. to us from Gentiles. Let us con­ fess, while we accuse the world, that there were cases--1 could testify personally--of visas which NOW could have been obtained if only the affidavits had been there.) s14.es OPEN What, then is to be done? Such efforts as we Jews can put forth should be directed to a confronta­ ALL FIRST FOR tion of the real nature of anti­ Semitism. QUALITY! This is an enormous undertak­ BUSINESS ing, for it means the re-education Joe Badessa Harry Katt of ourselves before we begin on Mgr. Gen. Mgr. our neighbors. I can make no at­ Harry Katt, 30 years experience in car sales welcomes tempt to deal with a program here. everyone to the celebration But one feature may be men­ An Outsfanding Value tioned·, and that is the keeping from One of Country's Save from S to 10% Extra alive of the memory of what Na­ Leading Mfg's. - Made zism did to the world and to us-- from Selecfed Calf Skins A new kind of deal - ask about it. and Full-Grained Leath­ Come in for our special "Get .Acquainted" buys! FUND GOAL ers - Mixed Styles arid TERMS - BANK RATES MIAMI BEACH - The Ameri­ Sizes. can Friends of the Hebrew Uni­ '60 FORD Conv. Sunliner '59 CONTINENTAL Conv. A real versity, at a four-day parley, set ·• .. All equipped. $2095 classic, immaculate. $319 5 a fund goal of $12,000,000 for '60 CHEVROLET Impala Conv. '59 FORD Country Sedan 9 Pass. ALSO completion of the University's All equipped. $2395 Real Nice. $1695 '59 FORD Country Sedan. All black '60 FALCON Compact. Automatic, campus in Jerusalem. Largest ,elec­ tion ol famous beauty, very clean. $1545 radio, heater. $157 5 brand gall / NAZIS'' ARRESTED BERLIN - Two former SS shoes in 30 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM $50 TO $600 Rhode Island. leaders charged with complicity COMPACT MOTORS, INC. in the slaying of more than 30,000 ••• Jews between July 1941 and April 2027 Elmwood Ave., Warwick ST 1-2300 1942 were placed under arrest by 136 Westminster St.-Prov.-DExter 1-3541 West Berlin's political police. ~------·------.------~---- I !

DANCES - RECORD HOPS $2,000,000 In Gifts PLEASE MAKE RESERVATIONS EARLY DISC JOCKEY - Mark 70th Birthday PASSOVER HOLIDAYS MONTREAL - Gifts totaling For All Occasions $2,000,000 were announced last REASON.AILE RATES week to mark the seventieth birth­ NOVICK'S HOTEL, Millis, Mass. FOR INFORMATION • PA 2-1092 day of Samuel Bronfman, presi-· ROP•r Person For Function ■ or Convantion ■ Mld ■t ...utlful dent of Dlstlllers Corporation-Sea­ $67 ;;. Comr,l•ta Country Surrounclin11 grams, Ltd. Hol day SUPERB CUISINE - DIETARY- LAWS Mr. Bronfman, a leader for ATTENTION many years in Jewish and Zionist KEn111ore 6-1011; (Millis) FRontier 6-8456 SPORT FISHERMEN circles in Canada, ls president of the Canadian Jewish Congress and • FISH BAGS • HA.ND LINES chairman of the North American ·• FISHING LINES section of the World Jewish Con­ REge■t 7.1396 40 Years Experleac• Nylon braided for fresh and gress. salt watar • Monofllamant The $2,000,000 in grants are SPEAR -FISHERME_N made up in two seperate gifts, Osear Palmquist Decorative netting for your · each of $1,000,000. IMertuba The first ls a $1,000,000 grant COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE Hope ·Fish Netting Mills by Mr. Bronfman's children and Inc. the second allocation of $1,000, 000 lemodell•t a Specialty Call VAlley 1-6604 - ls by the Samuel Bronfman Foun­ dation. Our Younger Set - Estelle MASON WORK - PAINTING - MODERNIZING Ruth Millman, 2 years old, is the daughter of Mr. and 178 MARYLAND AVENUE WARWICK Mrs. Harvey Millman of DON'T BUY ... 109 G:illatin Street. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Backman of Broad street. RENT IT! Paternal grandfather ls Albert Mlllman of Plain Street. Maternal ~... ~~~~!~c~ WE RENT MOST ANYTHING great-grandmother is Mrs. Mar­ tha Marks of Jackson Heights, Our ·Servic~ Is Complete PARTY EQUIPMENT New York. e R.UG REPAIR.ING TEACHERS STRIKE • CAR.PET LAYING BANQUET TABLES • BRJDGE TABLES • FOLDING CHAIRS • MOTH PROOF.ING COFFEE URNS • DINNEIN(ARE • SERVING T~YS TEL A VIV - Israel's high e FUR.NITUR.E CLEANING school are currently paral.yr.ed by e WALL TO WALL CL£ANING - ALL TYPES OF STEMWEAR - a teachers strike called by the As­ sociation of Secondary School Teachers. The strikers want high­ PROVIDENCE UNITED RENT-ALLS er wages and a status comparable to that of grade school teachers. CARPET CLEANING CO. Rear No. 1 Chapel St., Sayleaville PA -5-3779 Some 30,000 children were af­ 73 Graham St., Pro•. fected.

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START SAVING NOW AT CITIZENS! :.e+t4-- Coinplete Banking Service .Eleven Banking Oflkes PROVIDENCE: Hoyle Square, Downtown, Mt. Pleasant C I T I Z E N S S AV I N G S 8 A N K Visit the Office CI t I ZENS TRUST COMPANY Nearest You! EAST PROVIDENCE: P~k Corners PAWTUCKET: Darlington, Fairlawn BARRINGTON • CENTIEDALE • CRANSTON GREENVILLE • WARWICK Me~bers Federal Oeposit Insurance Corporation ELKRIEF EXPELLED PARIS - Jacob Elkrief, promi­ nent "mohel," has been expelled by Moroccan authorities, accord­ DINNER SUGGESTIONS ~ ing to reports reaching here from llJ reliable sources in Casablanca. ------e11 Johnson1 s One of America's largest, finest sea food restaurants, ! since 1905. Acclaimed by "Gourmet," Duncan Hines, ~ dine Hummocks AAA. Fabulous I lb. steaks, roast beef. Free Parking .,. 245 Allens Ave. in our Tel. HO 1-4000 500 cars. Cale Midnight-Cocktails-air conditioned. g;l intimate The ROME LA FESTA is held every Sunday evening. Music, gay cos- i atmos- tumes, buffet. Visit our attractive new Cocktail Lounge. g; phere Restaurant Banquet rooms available for parties. We are still serving a ~ Route 1, line Italian Cuisine, featuring "La Carretta." Also delicious ~ with N. Attleboro, Mass. Steaks, Lobsters, Chicken. Roast beef, Saturdays and Sun- t:, MYrtle t-4041 doys. Open Doily at 5; Sundays ot 12. • candle- light -:======::::;:=:::;;;::======i1_.., VI Address Invitations - Shown above are Mrs. Abraham DON'T DO IT YOURSELF! Use "Minute Men" .... 0 charm Grober, Mrs. Herbert Fonger, Mrs. Irwin Siegel and Mrs. 0 at Harold Cohen as they address invitations for "The LoveHest 0 Afternoon of the Year", the Annual Spring Luncheon of the II, dusk Temple Beth El Sisterhood to be held April 10 at 12: 15 :: •~: h;:;: P.M. at the temple. ~~ Ill z Call WORKERS UNLIMITED - UNion 1-6200 ! II, Open at 7 :00 A.M . Rhode Island State Employment Service. •0 Monday thru Friday II, I i day at 8:30 P .M. at the Center. VI ! Dodeem ·B. B. G. will hold a Feature of the evening will be :::, . Fashion Show on Monday at 7 "Talents Unlimited '61", an ex­ 0 1P.M. in the auditorium of the hibition of painting, ceramics, Place Your Passover Order Now For tile arts, weaving, sculpture and ~ , East Side Jewish Community ~ Center. handicrafts. II. Members will model the fash­ Mrs. Harold Frager, chairman, i _ions from Queens 'n Teens. will be assisted by Mesdames I Abram Gordon, Joseph Jagolinzer. TEMPLE BETH AM Harold Israel, Al Roffer and Ellis Royal Crown Sabbath eve services at Temple Rosenthal. Beth Am will be held tonight at 8: 15. o'clock. M'LAVA MALKAH Rabbi Pesach Sobel will give a A M'lava Malkah will be held sermon, "The Month of Months". Saturday at 7 P.M. at Congrega­ Cola tion Sons of Abraham. TEMPLE BETH DAVID Guest speaker of the evening Bottled Under the Supe"iaion of The Friday night services of will be Professor Murray Roston, Temple Beth David tonight will of Brown University. His subject RABBI ABRAHAM CHILL 55 feature the Bas Mltzvah of Miss will be "The Jewish Contribution Fredda Knlager. Samuel Cohen to Freedom and Democracy". At Your Dealers or Call JA 1-4163 MEM0RIAL will officiate. Cantor Eugene Corn- An outstanding member of the DRIVE field and the Children's Choir congregation will be honored. will also participate. --;======:::::::::::::::======:::;;;;;;;---- off Columbus Ave. TALENTS UNLIMITED '61 The monthly meeting of the PA.5·3550 Cranston Jewish Center Sister­ hood will take place on Wednes- MORTON SdlTII INC.

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c-1 ...... GAY PURIM FETE A subscription to the Herald is Free 30 Jews After a good gift idea for the person NI FIGITRE JERUSALEM - Thousands of ... CONTROi.. , I children, dressed as Arabs, In­ who "has everything" else. Call Two ·week Detention dians, cowboys, etc., invaded the UN 1-3709. ~ Sl1 E(~IAI.. • streets of this capital city In one CASABLANCA - Some 30 Jews of the gayest Purim celebrations who were arrested after the dis­ Jerusalem has experienced in ::; t Weight-Watching f i tribution two weeks ago of leaflets many a year. In the annual pa­ Hove You Tried . to Jews in various towns in Mo­ ; Sun-Seekers rade some 4,000 school children f" rocco, have been released by Casa­ • CREPE SUZETTE participatea. Some fifty floats -blanca police, It was reported here added lustre to the occasion. i ·3 Sl~mm~ng DAYS last week. Interior Minister Em­ at Di MAIO'S Trimming barek Bekkai personally ordered RIVERSIDE Open Monda,- Advertise in the Herald. 25 of 65 _Rooms the release of the prisoners, with $2950 Two Nights a view to easing the minds of Mon. thru Fri . Moroccan Jewry. • 900 Calorle Supervised Protein It was learned, however, that a Diet number of Jews charged with an • Rock Finnish Steam Bath attack on the security of the State • Arizona Dry Heat Room • Ext~,!~!! 1!~,~!H~F and who allegedly participated in • Dally Swedish Hand Massage JI • Heated, Indoor - Solt Water clandestine immigration activities PAINTING and DECORATING Swimming Pool and distribution of leaflets to 24 Elma Street, Providence • Vita Glass Poolside 5.olarlum Jews, were still in prison. • TV Lounge • Card Room In Paris, the newspaper Le Fi­ -RE-S-1D-EN_T_IA-L WI 1-9148 COMMERCIAL FRED and CAROLE'S garo reported that eleven Moroc­ Hold Luncheon - To The "CALL US NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATE" can Jews and two French Jews Miriam Hospital Women's MAGNOLIA MANOR were brought before a court in Ass'n membership d r i v e, • ' Phone LAkeside 5-3411 Meknes, in southern Morocco, for under the chairmanship of detention. They had been arrested MAGNOLIA, MASS. Mrs. Joseph Adelson, above, ~ earlier this month on charges of SWAN LIQUOR STORE will culminate at the Paid­ distribution of illegal leaflets. 813 HOPE STREET ~ ...... Up membership luncheon on Comer Fourth StrHt Monday at l P. M. in the Imported and Domestic PASSOVER WINES INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS Sheraton-Biltmore ballroom. - PLUS - Mrs. Oscar Leach, assisted by KOSHER BRANDY and SLIVOVITZ • FIRE • CASUAL TY • LIFE Mrs. Irwin Chernick have planned • FIDELITY ond SUftETY IONDS an unusual Fashion Show to fol­ - MAX SILVERMAN - low the meeting. Free Delivery Se"ice MAnning 1-0980 Be Sure! I NS URE Arrangements for the luncheon With were made by the Hospitality r••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••' ,.-,-.,tA"Y,1, !,',~~__,.;,,.",",',',",",,.~;!,,-','/4' ~1¥,f~~-~,'~, !h . Committee consisting of Mes­ dames Nathan Samors. Hyman SAMUEL C. RESS Cotton, Irving Kritz and Joseph AHOCIATID WITH Smith. HAROLD HOLT II CO. BROWN 10 Dorronce Street - GA 1-7771 - Res. ·GA 1-2652 Arab Censorship On MOVING & STORAGE INC. Opened J.T.A. Mail • • NEW YORK - The Jewish Rhode Island's Most Modern ) Telegraphic Agency filed a com­ Fireproof Warehouse PASSOVER plaint with the United States Storage IN •T~E GRAND MANNER Post Office in New York last week R. I. Agent: North American Van Lines, Inc. against. the non-delivery of air­ mall to its office in Jerusalem. World Wide Se"ice By Land, Sea and Air Traditional Seder Services The complaint pointed out that conducted by Cantor Ab­ airmail addressed to Israel was 360 Warren Ave. East Providence ner Groff. We'll have en­ misdirected to an Arab country tertainment and dancing or countries, where It was sub­ MAILING ADDRESS : P. 0 . BOX 1372, PROVIDENCE 1, R. I. to make this the Greatest jected to censorship before being Passover ever. returned to the sender in the GEneva 4-5100 United States. For your comfort, a new The JTA submitted with its heating system . . . and complaint an envelope malled of course, you will still from New York on Dec. 16 ad­ enjoy our private 2-mile dressed to the Jewish Telegraphic lake, superb foods (die­ LEBANON, CONN. Agency office in Jerusalem, Israel. tary laws) and wonderful The envelope was delivered to Joe & Sylvia Tannenbaum, Owper-Mgt. the postal authorities in an Arab day ~amp for junior. Tel: before Mar. 25: Norwich: Turner 7.7922 after Mar. 25: Lebanon: Niagara 2-7591 State, opened for inspection, re­ sealed with a censorship stamp In Arabic and rubber~stamped, in French, to the effect that there was no communication with Is­ SEE OUR BRAND NEW rael. It was returned to the United '61 States postal authorities and sent back by them to the original send­ er, the JTA in New York, exactly two months after it had first been TIME TO FORDS posted. The JTA asked the Postal au­ thorities to investigate the cir­ POWER or RE-POWER cumstances under which Ameri­ can mail to Israel was being de­ Your Boat! livered to the Arab States and for assurances that mail it en­ trusts to the U. S. Post Office will, in future, not be so misdirected. INTERCEPTOR Marine Engines Horsepower ratings from 85 to 275 Bond Committee Sets $310,000 Goal 80 HF A state-wide goal of $310,000 in State of Israel Bond sales in the Aquamatic 1961 Bond campaign in Rhode Is­ Diesel land, was adopted at the inaugural Caldwell Motor Co. meeting of the executive commit­ Gasoline YOUR PROGRESSIVE FOkD DEALER tee, at the home of Robert A. Riesman, general chairman of We Also Lease Cars the Providence Israel Bond Com­ mittee. 334 PROVIDENCE ST. WEST WARWICK The Jewish Herald serves a VA 1-8900 community of 35,000 - it follows that Herald ads are widely read. N .A Herald ,ad always gets the A subscription to tlie Herald I makes a wonderful gift. w best results-our subscribers com­ Appeal For High Priority On prise an active buying market. Israel-Arab Peace Issue PURE - SPRAY PAINTING - NEW YORK - An appeal to fensive against all enemies and FOOD Specializing In WEY BOSS ET MARKETS Refrigerators • Kitchen Cabi nets President Kennedy to give "high traducers of whatever stripe, with­ Steel Office Furniture priority" to the issue of peace be­ in and without the Jewish fold." Any Color Desired - Work Done On Premises - tween the Arab States and Israel Rabbi Max Nussbaum, chairman MOBILE was made here last week by Dr. of the ZOA's executive council, SPRAY PAINTING SERVICE Emanuel Neumann, president of and member of the World Zionist FRESH WATER FISH GE 4-0180 the World Conference of General Actions Committee, called atten­ tion to Israel's program of &end­ WE HAVE A LARGE SELECTION OF FRESH Zionists. WATER FISH FOR THE HOLIDAYS Dr. Neumann, who is also a ing skilled personnel to aid Afro­ member of the Jewish Agency Ex­ Asian new states. Because of this, Including . .. ecutive, warned that "though the he said, Israel was in need of • WINTER CARP • SUMMER CARP • PIKE problem of peace in the Middle "immigrants and pioneers from East has not been ·exceptionally Western countries." • MULLETS • WHITEFISH acute in recent months, it remains Rabbi Nussbaum said the "de­ critical." mands for such experts, number­ FOR BEST SATIS FACTION PLEASE PLACE Addi,essing the National Execu­ ing hundreds from Israel, have YOU R ORD ER EARL y1 tive Council of the Zionist Or­ been growing recently to such an ganization of America, he main­ extent that today some phases of GA 1-2414 tained that the "precarious bal­ Israel's life are managed by skele­ Weybosset St. Wayland Square Washington Pork ance of military power between ton staffs." HAVE THE Israel and the Arab states is daily ' HH~~!;:j! threatened by the constant build­ up of new arms from the Soviet Your Passover Order NOW With TRADEWINDS bloc to the United Arab Republic." Place GET YOU THERE Dr. Neumann said "President Kennedy was keenly aware of the COMPLETE SERVICE danger inherent in this explosive PARK AVENUE DELICATESSEN FOR YOUR situation when he outlined his 840 Park Avenue, Cranston proposed program of action in his WI lliams 1-9828 TRAVEL NEEDS historic address at our convention last August." • TOURS • CRUISES n,JurUL mul dUW/Rll tBJwadmaJL Last Aug. 26, in a campaign • VACATtoN speech before the convention of the Z. 0 . A .. Mr. Kennedy pledged EVERYTHING FOR YOUR PASSOVER TABLE • HONEYMOONS to set up a peace conference of Israeli and Arab leaders. Including A Complete Line of HOROWITZ ond MANISCHEW/TZ Products • HOTEL RESERVATIONS Dr. Neumann expressed confi­ • BUSINESS dence in Presdent Kennedy's "un­ Candies - Cookies - Cakes - Other Delicacies altered determination to deal with this problem vigorously and -- ZION KOSHER MEAT PRODUCTS FOR PASSOVER -- TRADEWINDS constructively," but, he added, "it And A Full Line of Delicatessen and Dairy Items, All Kosher for Passover must be said that time presses and Best Wishes To Our Many Friends And Patrons For A Very Happy Holiday the tide of events moves on re­ ~'i::)1::)~~~';::0::i=i::.1::).::..Q;:.JQ)::.,i::,~~J=i~,=i;::j:,::n::~J::u;::;J;:::o::,,:~,==••=•i::a·o. Travel Agency lentlessly." W aylan·d Manor Dr. Neumann calling for a "mor­ al rearmament of all Zionist 500 Angell St. forces," said "the movement must War.land Square abandon, once and for all, apolo­ TRUE Switzerland Cheese UN 1-4055 getic and defensive attitudes and resume a vigorous counter-of-

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A /so available in will unwrap itself I boxes of- twelve portions and a Variety This is an extra con­ vefti ence when you .., Pack of assorted flavors-a/I different buy TIGER Gruyere and delicious. Cheese. BOND FOODS, INC. 145 CRARY STREET, PROVIDENCE, R. I. A Herald ad' always gets the best results---<>ur subscribers com­ ATTENTION ... SILVER prise an active buying market. Electric Co. .... WE BUILD CONN. STONE For the Best in Chinese Food ..: Electrical Contractors ... WALLS SPRING DANCE Council of Jewish Women, will be We recommend you to the 628 BROAD STREET SKELLY LANDSCAPE CO. The Men's Club of Temple Beth held on Tuesday at 10 A. M. at Industrial - Commercial 248 HIGHLAND AVE., PROV. Sholom will hold their annual the home of Mrs. Joseph Schein, CHINA MOON and Residential DE 1-374\ Spring Dan(;J! on Saturday, March of 95 Freeman Parkway. RESTAURANT GA 1-6864 - CALL ANY TIME - 25, at the temple. There will be a panel discussion There will be a sherry hour with on "Arms Control". Panelists will 1530 Broad St., Cranston hors d '6euvres and a name band. be Mrs. Caleb Smith, Mrs. Joseph (In Washington Park) Tickets may be obtained by Gurland and Mrs. Joseph Schein. For Take Out. Orders, CULLINAN BROS. calling the chairman, Ben Rabi­ Mrs. George Blotcher will be in ST l-879i ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF A nowitz, or the temple office. charge of the study group. NEW OFFICE AND SHOP AT CAMPERS FUND 324 B WATERMAN AVENUE Cranston Pythian Sisters of JACK CARMODY Temple #1 have started a campers OWNER AND MANAGER OF EAST PROVIDENCE, R.I. fund in memory of the late Lil­ lian Gold who was on the Grand J. F. CARMODY & CO. PLUMBING, HEATING and FUEL OIL Board of the Pythian Sisters. Do­ 24 Hr. Service - All Work Guaranteed nations will be used to send under­ REMINDS YOU THAT NOW II THE TIME I TO HAVE Also GE 4-3013 privileged children to summer camp. Donations may be made by ASPHALT & CEMENT PAVING Jen ■ ite - DISTRIBUTORS OF PARAGON HEATING EQUIPMENT - DONE TO Seal-Coating contacting Ethel Lury, chairman, WI 1-4963, Ann Altman, WI DRIVEWAYS - SIDEWALKS- PARKING LOTS 1-0432, or Belle Goldberg, ST 1-6741. 13 Hartford A•e. Frw OlneyYille TE 1-9599 Estimates VA 1-1988 WHARF TAVERN TEACHERS SEMINAR (ON THE WATER, WATER STREET, WARREN, R. I. Rabbi Alriva Egozi will discuss, "Homework in the Jewish School'' ETelyn B. Tel. Choose Your at the next Teachers Seminar on Anderaon STuart 1-0450 We Use Monday at 8 P.M. at the Bureau Own Lobster library. The Best Beef From Our The seminar is open to teachers In The World Live Lobster in all departments and is part of the monthly seminar program U.S. Prime Pool sponsored by the School Council and the Bureau of Jewish Educa­ Curtain• tion. Bunk and Nylon OPEN EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR Pilot S ..ta Winter CoTer& R•coTeHd ROGER WILLIAMS CHAPTER Mildew and Flame­ YOUR HOST AND HOSTESS : LOUISE AND ED BUSIERE proof Fabrics Roger Williams Chapter B'nai B'rith Women will hold their next FOR RESERVATIONS CALL CHerry 5-5043 regular meeting for paid - up members and their husbands in Ample Parking Fo; Can - Boats - Yachts the Garden Room of the Sheraton­ .uuuuuuuuuu~uuu~uuuul--i)..luuu~ Biltmore Hotel, on Tuesday at 8 P.M. NO ON■ MAK ■ a Mrs. Joseph Cohen, president DUNNE MOTOR SALES, INC. O ■ l'ILT ■ l'ISH will conduct a brief business 700 - 705 Elmwood Ave. meeting. The program will be "Around the World in Song and ST 1-4000 Dance" presented by Mrs. Sydney -LIGHT Factor, chairman of the evening. There will be two groups, the FORD - LINCOLN - MERCURY Southern Jubilee Singers, and the and State Ballet of Rhode Island. The SALES and SERVICE Ballet, under the direction of Myles Marsden, will present a group of folks dances from dif­ FLUFFY ferent parts of the country. Mr. Marsden who was a premier A&?l1M.8'11etf danseur in Yugoslavia before re­ Why Stay in -school? turning to Rhode Island, organized This Is the difference between my the group. "Modern Recipe" Gefllta Fish and any Coffee hour will follow. Mrs. All teen-agers capable of absorbing an education other brand. Ernest Fineman is program chair­ should stay in school until they graduate. The It took four generations to develop this man. secret recipe ••• It took me thirteen problem often is to cof!_vince them why. Sun Life's years of hard work and research to find B'NAI B'RITH WOMEN leaflel, " Why Stay in School? " explains the challenge, ways to seal in the original LIGHTNESS A "Dinner-ls-Served" program and FLUFFINESS. the tremendous promise and the increased· future I personally supervise the preparation, is planned for Tuesday at the cooking and packlnj! of each jar. Strict Cranston Y. M. C. A. at 6:30 P.M. income that are theirs with a completed high school Kashruth is maintained under the sup­ by the Cranston-Warwick Chap­ education. If you have teen -age chilcren: you should ervision of the Union of Orthodox Jew• ter of B'nai B'rith women. . get a copy of this -booklet for them. "Why Stay in lsh Con1re1ations. Tickets may be obtained by ~- calling Mrs. Adrian Horovitz at School?" and other booklets in the Values in Education WI 2-4962 or Mrs. Samuel Bernat series, offered as a public service by Sun Life at WI 1-5862. Assurance Company of Canada, are available without charge or obligation. Just mail the coupon below. CRANSTON JEWISH CENTER Dancing classes, under the direct­ tion of Bill and Romona Chaffin SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY are being held every Monday from OF CANADA 7 P.M. to 9 at the Cranston Jewish Center. I Ceramics classes are held on ·------·I I ELLIOT F. SLACK Monday and Tuesday afternoons; I Jr. Judeans on Tuesday evenings; I 1019 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. DE 1-2422 I PROVIDENCE, R. I. Girl Scouts on Friday afternoons; I Brownies on Wednesday after­ I Please send me a copy of booklets checked: I 1/ev.4tllet~ noons; Boy Scouts on Tuesday 0 Why Stay in School, 0 Who! about Trade and Industrial Schools, MODERN RECIPE evenings; B'nai B'rith A. Z. A. and B'nai B'rith Girls on Monday 0 Scholarships and Student loan Programs O Sports-Tips for Teen-Agers evenings. 0 Whal You Should Know About School Boards OEFILTE FISH A dramatic club and orchestra DISTRIBUTOR: group is now being organized. NAME •••••• ••••••••••••• •. • •• • • ••••• • • • ••.• •...•••••••••••• ••••• ••••••• ADDRESS • •.•••• ••••••• . •••.• • •.••• •• • • ••••• • •• •• • • •• •• ••••••••• , •••••••• N. DAVIS DAIRY PRODUCTS COUNCIL STUDY GROUP A regular study group of the 359 NO. MAIN STREET, PROVIDENCE, R. I. Providence Section N a t i o n a 1 •~••••••••••••••~u••••••••••~•••••••••••••• ------'