OCTOBER 2, 1970 15C PER COPY 48 PAGES Will Begin at 8:30 A.M

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OCTOBER 2, 1970 15C PER COPY 48 PAGES Will Begin at 8:30 A.M 1l . JP1S8 n&s:roaicAL ASSp<:- R- 1. .... 209~-- nov- •· R· ,. _. Yom Kippur_. Pbservance Begins With Chanting o·t Kor Nidre Oct. 9 YOM KIPPUR OBSERVANCE Ktppur. BEGINS Services for Hebrew School Services for Yorn Klppur, the pupils will be conducted by Ira Day of Atonement and the holiest Zeidman In the chapel at 10:30 day of the Jewish year, begin at a.m. Mrs. Norman Goldenberg sundown Friday, Oct. 9. Services will conduct the services for ·WU! be held all day Saturday, Oct. Sunday School pupils In Room 4 at 10. 10:30 a.m. 1 CONGREGATION CONGREGATION AGUDAS ACHIM OHAWE SHOLAM (Attleboro, Mass.) (Pawtucket) The Kol Nldre service at An open forum will be Congregation Agudas Achlm, c-onducted by Rabbi Chaim Attleboro, Mass., will begin at 6 Ratzman In the verstry during the THE ONLY ENGLISH-JEW/SH WEEKLY IN R. I. ANO SOUTHEAST MASS. p.m. The sermon will be "It Is a Intermission In services Saturday · Dlfflcul t Task." ·at Congregation Ohawe Sholam, Yom Klppur services Saturday Pawtucket. VOL. LIV, NO. 27 OCTOBER 2, 1970 15c PER COPY 48 PAGES will begin at 8:30 a.m. The Kol Nldre ·services wut begin sermon will be "Significant at 6 p.m., with Yorn Klppur Day Memories." Ylzkor services will services starting at 8 a.m. Rabbi Vermont labor Hits Bias Against Jews be held at noon. The blowing of Ratzman's sermon will be the Sholar will be at 6:45 p.m. "Where Angels Fear to Tread." Soviet Anti-Semitism - The children's service will be Ylzkor services will be held at 11 Faculty-Student Group At eurdue held In the chapel at 11 a.m. Mrs. a.m. BURLINGTON, Vt. - Gerald Rosenthal Is chairman of The forum wlll begin at 3: IS Concern has been votced by the parents' committee. p.m., with afternoon services organized labor In Vermont over Sugg~sts Changes In Admissions starting at 4:35 p.m. the condition of some 3 million Rabbi Phlllp Kaplan and lrvlng Dr. Ellezar Hurvltz, a Jews "trapped In a growing tide WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., - justified by the university with Rabbi Gerald Engel, director of Miller, president of the professor at Yeshiva University, of hatred and anti-Semitism In the contention It was trying to congregation, wlll officiate. wilt chant the services. the Soviet Union." the B'nal B'rlth HIiiel Foundation reduce the nmnber of "disruptive at Purdue University, reported CONGREGATION The congregation Is Invited to The annual convention of the c-ampus outsiders" among Its that a faculty-student conclave B'NAI ISRAEL break the fast In the vestry after Vermont State Labor Council, students. (Woonsocket) the sounding of the Sholar. AFL-CIO, has voted unanimously had recommended to university Both faculty members and Rabbi William E. Kaufman and CONGREGATION In support of a resolution president Fred Hovde changes In students recommended that the Cantor Philip Macktaz will SHAARE ZEDEK submitted In behalf of ILGWU the school's admissions policy letter now being sent to New York which has been criticized as conduct the Yorn Kl~r services SONS OF ABRAHAM Local #341 by Martin Berger, and New Jersey applicants be discriminating against out-of­ at Congregation B nal Israel, Congregation Shaare Zedek­ regional vice chairman of the revised because It discouraged state Jews and applicants of other Woonsocket. Soos of Abraham will hold Kol Jewish Labor Committee. such applicants and made It minorities. The Kol Nldre services will Nldre services at 6 p.m. Rabbi In voting their condemnation Impossible for the university to Leon M. Mozeson will give the of the Soviet Union• s "cultural The recommendations fill Its own established quota for begin at 6 p.m. Morning services emerged from a weekend will begin at 8:30. Ylzkor prayers sermon, "In Quest of Ught.'' genocide," the delegates asked the area, based on the populations Yorn Ktppur services will that the Jews of that nation be discussion on "The Morality of of the two states. will follow the sermon. Purdue's Admissions Policy" at Miss and Miss begin at 8 a.m. Rabbi Mozeson's permitted to emigrate as a The quota system for the two tras Lavine the HIiiel Foundation. Daryl Sherman will offer creative sermon will be "Rabbi-Aklba - "hmnan right of survival." They states was Introduced last Nov. musical selections during the Kol Scholar and Martyr." also asked that the United States Hovde had asked for 19 when Dr. John Hicks, ass! stant ••constructive suggestions'' for Nldre and Yorn Klppur Day Ylzkcir services will be held at 11 government do all In Its power to to President Hovde, advised services. Mrs. Joan Carey Is the a.m., with the conclusion of the rectify the situation and that modification of the admission Rabbi Engel that the blanket no-­ organist. fast at 6:53 p.m. Rabbi Abraham copies of the resolution be sent to policy for out-of-state applicants admission policy for the two Joseph Shprr will chant the Klein will chant the Shacharis President Nixon and Secretary ol after the university had come states was being changed to allow Shacharts service on Yorn - (Cotittrtuecl on page 14) State Rogers. \Sider -re criticism. Initially, admission to applicants, other Purdue U,lverslty had rejected than sons and daughters of almnnl virtually all applications from of the school, few of whom were $.9.enf Summer In Texas students In the New York residents of the two areas. metropolitan area and New Jersey. FROZEN FOOD PLANT Later, the university set a ASHOOD - Sunfrost, Ltd., the 'Mexican-American Migrants quo ta for both states but targf!st frozen food plant In continued under criticism for the Israel, will start production soon. content of Its form letter to The firm was founded by applicants from the metropolitan American experts In the frozen Most Neglected,' Says Miriam l!lew York area and from New food l)ldustry. Most of the plant's :---.c , Jersey. production -will be geared for J By CAROL N. AQUINO The blanket policy had been export. "Mexican-American migrant farm workers are probably even more neglected than the Jndtans and the blacks In this country," Jewish Federation Drive Brings says Miriam Goldsmith. The 17-year-old Pawtucket More Than s1 ,000,000 In Pledges g I r I knows firsthand about problems facing the migrants. More than $I-million was economic and military pressures. She spent seven weeks this pledged at the Jewish Federation Israel must show "It can continue summer working with them In the of Rhode Island's Initial Gifts to survive despite the Arab Rio Grande Valley In Texas under campaign opening dinner threat." the auspices of a program Thursday, Sept. 24. F·lnanclal donations, he said In sponsored by the American This represents· a substantial a direct appeal to those attending Jewish Society for Service. Increase over last year's gifts the dinner, will enable Israel to She would like to return there from the same persons, JFRI meet the pressures from the on her own and work again with officials said. Arab nations. the United Farm Workers Union, To date the total pledges and _ The ambassador discounted which had asked the A.JSS for contributions to the campaign the Idea that Russia was trying to assistance. Including the women's Dlvlslo~ achieve peace In the Mideast. The Rio Grande Valley branch and Newport results stand at "The Russians hold the key to of the union ls headed by Antonio $1,125,000. ' war, but not to peace," he said. Orendln, former secretary to He also voiced skepticism Cesar Chavez. The union Is The speaker at the dinner, about diplomatic efforts by the trying to organize the migrant which was held at the home of United States, the UN and other farm workers In Texas to get Mr. and Mrs. Albert L Gordon of countries to negotiate a lasting them a living wage, said Miriam. Glen Drive, was Lt. Gen. Yltzhak peace. "Many of the people don't Rabin, Israel's ambassador to the Ambassador Rabin wouldn't even realize they don't get paid a United States. say whether Israel has living wp.ge," she feels. "They General Rabin said he sees no considered attacking the missile ju8t gef pall! and that's that." hope for Im mediate peace In the sites along the west bank of the She said they should get paid Middle East, despite efforts of Suez Canal. Israel does expect at least $1.30 an hour, but many opinions they·hear. workers. The union was planning United Nations officials toward the U.s. " .to keep up Its role as a get paid on the basis of what they The union organizers, on the the center for health and child that end. broker betW'.len Israel and Egypt" pick - about $2.50 for a 100-llb. one hand, tell them that the only care. We got there and found that "As long as the Soviet Union In an effort to have the missiles sack of cotton. It takes from four way they can get a living wage the land hadn't been cleared yet," continues to support every rolled back so that ·peace talks to five hours to pick that much and be protected Is to join the Miriam explained. "It was stilt a extremist Arab group," peace ls can continue. cotton, she said. II the sack union;' . cotton field, so they had us tear unlikely, he said. These comments, naturally, brew or something else goes Other people In the area - the d own, houses and buildings The Arabs must want peace were made before the sudden wrong, the worker has to pay.
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