R. J. JE11; 1 !I !! I STO'.: ICAL ASSOC. 11 209 Ai< GELL ST. PROV . b, R. I • Orthodox Rabbi CriticizesiReactions To Council Efforts NEW YORK - Sharp criticism flt the reactions of some Jewish THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH WEEKLY IN R. I. AND SOUTHEAST MASS . leaders to the recent efforts by the Ecumenical Co1D1cll In Rome to "retract the old charge of Vol. XLVII, No. 47 JANUARY 24, 1964 15tf PER COPY 24 PAGES deicide" against Jews, has been voiced by a leading New York orthodox who charged that Bridge Player some Jewish personalities had Lazarus Named To Bias Commission; ••over-reacted, occasionally to the point of compromising our Dr. Frischauer prin_clples and our dlim!ty." Resolution· Praises Finkle For Work In an article on "The Jews Confirmation of Governor Cha­ Both the majority and minor­ Dies At 69 and the Ecumenical Council" In fee's appointment of Frank Laz­ ity leaders of the Senate, Sens. the current Issue of JEWISH LIFE arus to the State Commission Frank Sgambato of North Provi­ magazine, Rabbi Norman Lamm NEW YORK - Dr. EdwardM. of the Jewish Center In New York Against Discrimination by the Sen­ dence and C. George DeStefano of Frlschauer, a contract,.brldge ate last week ended a week-long Barrington, respectively, joined City, declares that the Jewish player, former Viennese lawyer reaction to the Vatican proposal attempt by Joseph M. Finkle, one Sen. Irving J. Bllgor, D-Provt­ and retired Hollywood real-estate of the original members of the dence, In sponsoring the con­ concerning Jews was "by and broker, died Wednesday In his large, tmreasoned, unbalanced, Commission whose term had ex­ gratulatory resolution. Hollywood home. He was 69 years pired In July, to block Mr. Laz­ excessively emotional, wi shful It passed the Senate without old. and extravagantly grateful.'' arus' appointment. Dr. Frlschauer was born In Mr. Lazarus had previously discussion, but House Speaker Noting that the proposal has Harry F. Curvin commented brief­ Vienna and served In the Austro­ not even been accepted in prin­ L appeared before the Senate Ju­ Hw,gar!an Army In World War I. diciary committee and the com­ ly on It when It reached that ciple by the Ecumenical Council, branch. He said he had "no knowl­ He was later graduated from the Rabbi Lamm, a member of the mittee by a majority vote decided University of Vienna with a Doctor to recommend confirmation of the edge of why Mr. Finkle was not UOJCA Overseas Commission, reappointed," and that it was a of Laws degree and practiced asserts that "we may perhaps governor's appointment. State criminal law until 1938. House officials believed the de­ perogatlve of the governor with have overrated Christian theology , AND WHAT Is little Barbara Gold­ which he would not quarrel. In the early nineteen-thirties, and especially the accusation of cision was prompted by the fact he unsuccessfull y defended a group man so Interested In? See the that it was the governor's "I am sure it could never deicide, as a source of antisemi­ Herald Magazine Section, Page 10. of Albanians charged with plotting tism." Christian antisemitism, he perogatlve to name whom he have been a reflection on his the assassination of Klng Zog I. pleased to the commission as long services on the commission,'' Mr. declares, "Is not a Jewish prob­ In the same decade Dr. Frischauer lem, It ts a Christian problem." as the appointee was qualified to Curvin said. "He was dedicated successfully defended a criminal­ and gave his best of energy. time He adds: New Jersey Temple handle the position. libel action brought by an educa­ and efforts to do a good job. He "ln our time, the main threat Mr. Finkle later received a tional Institution against a news­ bipartisan tribute In the General did an exceptionally fine job." to Jewls~ survival ls no longer, Plans Racial Program paper It charged had called It pro­ as It once was, the Church. The Assembly. A resolution express­ The speaker said that Mr. Laz­ Nazi. TEANECK, N.J. - The Reform 11 real dangers are, rather, assim­ Ing appreciation for his "long arus has his work cut out for Just before Nazi Germany an­ congregation of Temple Emeth and dedicated service" In the him to equal the services Mr. ilation, the anti-Jewishness of the plans to sponsor programs with nexed Au stria in I 938, Dr. Frls­ Communist c01mtrles, and the ''fight against bigotry and Intoler­ Finkle rendered to the people of chauer, who was Jewish, escaped Negro groups In an effort to ance was passed quickly by both this State.'' string of Arab states rhar encircle establish "positive and meaning­ and went to P arls. He came here the State of Israel. It ls only now, branches of the legislature. It Rep. Bernard C. Gladstone, D­ In 1939 and that year went to ful Interpersonal relationships." late In the day , that the Catholic ,, was then sent for further action Provtdence, sald he seconded the Hollywood. Some ofhlsre&l-estate ",._, Rabbi Louis J. Sigel anno1D1ced Church has begun to rouse Itself­ to Governor Cbafee. statementa ot the speaker. clients there were Important film four-part program following and even then, It has gone back a a people. year-long study Into the problems ro sleep until next September." In 1937, at Budapest he had of racial Justice by the temple's Asserting that, If adopted, the been a member of the Austrian Vatican statement on rhe Jews committee on social action. Rabbi team that won the first world will mark a beginning In the Im­ Sigel said that he had not yet re­ contract-bridge championship of ceived comments from the 420 the International Bridge League provement In Catholic-Jewish re­ families In the congregation, but lations, Rabbi Lamm suggested by defeating by 4,470 total points that "lt ls time we American that he believed the reaction a United States team, whose cap­ Jews began to rethink our here­ ...... -· would be favorable. tain was the late Ely Culbertson. The program has been divided tofore 'official' position on co­ Dr. Frischauer was a member Into these main sections: racial operation with other faiths, par­ of the team that fin! shed second ticularly the Catholic. Today, all Justice In the congregation's ad­ In 1953 In the American Contract religions must work together ministrative policies: racial Jus­ Bridge League's Knockout Bridge tice In Its educational, cultural against the common enemy, that Championship for the Sp Ing o Id and worship programs: coopera­ all-pervasive secularism which Trophy at St. Louis, a major tive relationships with other In­ threatens us all alike. Catholics bridge competition. The cup was stitutions, and the lives of the and Jews can enjoy mutual bene­ presented by the late Nate B. members. fits In cooperating In matters of Splngold, the league's former "The congregation wlll devote public policy on many Important president. sessions to the subject of racial Issues.'' equality In Its educational pro­ From 1946 to I 958, Dr. Fris­ He warned, however, that Jews grams for youths and adults, and chauer was a member of teams must "not suffer from feelings of worship services will reflect In {Continued on Pag_!' 19) _ (Continued on Page 19) prayer, sermon and educational content the congregation's efforts to achieve racial Justice," · The statement urged members HONORED BY SEMINARY - Charles Colten, right, president ot Tam­ to take positive steps to eliminate pie Beth Israel, Is shown with Dr. Louis Finkelstein, chancellor ot the discrimination In business, un­ Jewish Theological Seminary of America. Mr. Coken Is one of 350 ions, neighborhoods and soc! presidents of conservative congregations recently honored by the clubs and to urge and support the Seminary In New York City at a convocation during which Dr. Finkel­ enactment of local, state and stein conferred upon each president a citation for distinguished service Vacations and Travel ...... Pages 22, 23 Federal civil rights legislation. to his synagogue and to the Jewish community. Columnists Leonard Lyons - Sylvia Porter Enjoys Second Successive Boom Year Barney Glazer JERUSALEM - Israel en­ In the first 10 months of last year credit restrictions and compulsory joyed her second successive boom prices were up only 3 per cent, savings plans. Classified, Crossword Page 18 year In 1963 and the expectations bunhere were Indications that the The Intention Is to continue this are for a continuation this year. figure might come closer to 5 per stabilization effort Into I 964. But Prices did not rise appreci­ cent by the end of the year. a cloud Is looming. Wage contracts ably, Imports declined, exports Consmner Restraint come up for renewal this month In The Herald's went up and so did the nation's At the same time the money and It seems unlikely that the foreign currency reserves. The supply swelled by 25 to 30 per cent. Government wlll be able to avoid Magazine Section money supply Increased too, and Tlieoretlcally, this should have the payment of a 4 to 5 per cent this has the experts worried. given a sharp upward Impulse to lncreasement to the cost-of-living All In all, 1963 was one of prices, but It did not. Consumers, allowance and a basic wage In­ Trevelers' Aid ...... Page 9 the best years economically In ls­ reacting positively to the Govern­ crease of 3 to 4 per cent for lower rael' s 15-year history. The ment campaign to Induce an at­ Income groups. For Teen-Agers ...... Pages l 0, 12, 13 economists are delighted, but some mosphere of stability, showed re­ The question Is whether man­ factors have them scratching their straint and the main force of the ufacturers wfil agree to absorb So You're Going To Get Married? .... Page 11 heads. monetary expansion - which the Increase without raising The question of price stability came primarily from German res­ prices. With wages forzen last The Rebirth of a Neighborhood ...... Page 14 bu become the mystique of the titution payments and foreign In­ year, the manufacturers accepted Government. And this stability Is vestment - was directed toward the Government's dictates on A New Reform Tempie ...... Page 15 threatened more than anything else real estate and the stock exchange. prices. Now the situation has by the continuing and excessive ex­ The psychological atmosphere changed, and difficult negotiations Columnists pansion of the money supply. was sustained by Government de­ already have commenced among Consmner prices rose 10 per cisions, backed by both labor and the Government and labor and Beryl Segal - Herman Goldberg cent In 1962, which was considered management, to hold dawn direct management. too much In a co1D1try that has and Indirect taxes, wages and pro­ One of the most pleasant de­ Jeffrey Berger averaged rises of 3 to 6 per cent. fits and to limit liquidity through {Contlnued on Page 19) "

N BRAZILIANS EMIGRATE intending to settle permanently RIO DE JANEIRO - A total In Israel, according to an ... of 103 Brazilian Jews sailed from announcement by the lmmlgratton "' this port aboard the Zlm liner, department of the United Zionist Editor's ~ Or'ganlzatton of Brazil. ..,; S.S Theodor Herzl, last week, all N Mailbox >-a: WI 1-2140 Dyn•flow Service l < BUICK SERVICE , MIRRORS Gives Thanlcs For ....,j Clark's Auto Se"ice, Inc. RESILVERED Specializing In Buick Since 1920 R, I. Glass Works Inc. 33 SEABURY ST., PROV. New Translation ~ Between Potters & Huntington Ave. 375 Washington St., GA 1•4131 9 Dear Ediwr: a: In spite of the objections of ti. the Orthodox to the trans- ci 1ation of the Torah, I owe a great ..J • deal of thanks to the Jewish Pub­ < llcal1on Society for giving me the a: HATHAWAY ELECTRIC CO. w opportunity to read the greatest :c - Electrical Contractors - book I have ever read, and I have read many. Here Is a Book that ~ < 614 BROAD ST., PROVIDENCE Is full · of romance, suspense, ..J mystery and history; a Book that ~ has given me the opportunity to w RHODE ISLAND LICENSED AND INSURED know the History of my religion, Cl 0 ELECTRICIANS a book that I have read over and :c over again and each l1me I find It a: TEL: PROV., S21-6414; E. PROV., GE 4-0180 more fascinating. Without the £'. w :c SEEKONK, ED 6-8688 modern translation that makes CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. J. Samuel Goldman I- this Book readable to readers llke were honored on their 45th wedding anniversary at a surprise dinner­ me, we would probably never have dance given for them by their children at Temple Beth Am on Jan. 12. read the Book of Books. IJustwish Guests attended from Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut and to make one comment to what Pennsylvania. Rabbi Solnlca made regarding the The Goldmans' children are Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Tolman, Mr. · translation. He saJd, and I quote and Mrs. William Garfinkle, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Goldman, Mr. and from Mr. Segal' s colwnn of last Bernard Feld, Mr. and Mrs. David Goldman, Gilbert Goldman, Mr. and week. "It Is full or misinterpreta­ Mrs. Albert Goldman and Mr. and Mrs. Leo SIiberman. tions," Perhaps 1 had misunder­ stood our Rabbi Leeman, but he told me that the Torah Is the Law, the constitution, and It Is the Tal­ DINE IN LEISURE AT mud that was written for the lnter­ pretal1on of the Law. In reference to Mr. Segal's re­ marks that there are differences MRS, LOUIS BUC KBINDER Besides her husband and THE between the Orthodox, Conserva­ Funeral services for Mrs. Ida parents, she Is survived by two WINDSOR G. (Metzel) Buckblnder or 24 Dar­ sons, Neal H, and Steven R, White; tive and Reform Jews , when I am Wo nderful food • de licious ocean fresh seo• quesl1oned about this by my non­ row Street, Pawtucket, who died a daughter, Lynn J, White, all of foods • iui cy prime sieo ks, thick cho ps, llo li on Jewish friends, I always answer, Jan. 16, were held at the Max Providence; a brother Eldon dishes • finest liquid refr eshme nh • a ll mod• A Jew Is one who believes In the Sugarman 1'1D1eral Home on the Goldenberg of Pawtucket, and a ·~ e ra te ly priced . One God; accepts the Ten Com­ following day. Burial wa s In Lin­ sister, Mrs. Samuel Sperling of mandments as the Law of God, coln Park Cemetery. Taunton. 377 MAIN ST ., PAWTUCKET and lives the Law . The rest Is The widow of Louis Buckblnder, • • • I ( FREE PARKING Ju st a way or IUe. she was born In Russia, a daugh­ MRS. ALFR ED F ERSHT Mrs. Joseph Potemkin ter of the late Calman and Rose Funeral services for Mrs. PA 6-9761 148 Grace Street Metzel. She had been a resident Lena Levln-Fersht of S Arlington I DAILY 11 A.M. to 1 Cranston of Pawtucket for the las t 55 years. Street. Yonkers , N,Y , , formerly She was a member of Con­ of Providence, who died Monday, gregation Ohawe Sholom and Its were held Wednesday at the Max Sisterhood, and the Hadassah of Sugarman Memorial Chapel. Provlde·nce. Burial was In Lincoln Park Survivors Include a daughter, Cemetery. Mrs. Marvin Solomon of Paw­ She died of Injuries suffer ed TO DISCUSS 'PRAYER' tucket; three sons, Gerald and Monday In an automobile accident Rabbi Saul Leeman will lead Sanford Buckblnder both of Paw­ when a car driven by her husband FOR YOURSELF or as a G}!T tucket, and David B uckblnder of the discussion on "Prayer - A collided with rwo other cars on the / Bowle, Md,; a sister, Mrs . Freida of INTEGRITY and QUALITY Hwnan Need" at the Oneg Shabbat Long Island Expressway, near follDW!ng Friday evening services Broder of Tucson, Ariz., and five North HIiis, N. Y. This Handcrafted Mezuzah Finished In grandchildren. tonight at the Cranston Jewish Born In Russia, Sept. I , 1900, Antique Silver. Including A Genuine Center starl1ng at 8: 15 o'clock. • • • a daughter of the late Jacob and CHARLES KOSOFSKY Kosher Hand-Written Israeli Parchment Rabbi Leeman and Cantor Jack Bella (Fromm) Sweet, she had FIDleral services for Charles $3.98 plus 12c soles tax Smith will officiate at the services been a Providence resident SO Kosofsky, 68, of 43 Nakomls Drive, and Mrs. Bernard Barasch wlll years before moving to New York i.J Warwick, who died Jan. 16 after an In 1953. be at the organ. Th ;, " GOOD LUCK" Illness of three months, were held She was "member of Hadassah ------the same day at the Max Sugar­ MAZEL PIN Finished PLAN MEMORIAL DINNER In Yonkers. A John F . Kennedy Memorial man Memorial Chapel. Burial was Survivors Include her husband, in 22K Florentine Dtnner, sponsored by the Cran- In Lincoln Park Cemetery,. Alfred Fresht; a daughter, Mrs. Gold only $ 1.00, 1tcm-Hape Lodge #2224, B'naJ The husband of Rose (Zelnlker) ElaJne (Fersht) Vanacore of New Kosofsky, he had been a resident York City; four sons, Herbert taxes included. B'rith, wlll be held Sunday at Johnson's Hummocks, There will of W arwtck for the past five and a Daniel Fersht or New York City, half years. Previously, he had lived May Also Be Hod be a socW hour at 7 P .M. and Irving Levin of Marawan, N, J ,, dinner will follow at 7:30 P .M, In Fall River for 45 years where he Leonard Levin of Cranston and With Chai lnsi9nio Guest speaker will be Hon. had been employed by the Capson Harold Levin of Providence: four Raymond Pettine, United States Hat Company before rel1ring six brothers, Harold and Dollie Sweet, District Attorney of Rhode Island. years ago, He was a member of both of Providence, Maurice Sweet Mail Checks Or Money Orders To His subject wlll be "The Kennedy Temple Beth Am, of Cranston and Louis ). Sweet of Impact on Civil Rights." In addil1on to his wife, he Is Lincoln and lne grandchildren. Reserval1ons may be made survived by two daughters, Mrs. ., Israeli-American Crafts threugh Ollcar Cohen, ST 1-1151; Arden Klar al Riverside, and Mrs. ROOM 14 Cards of Thanks James Censer; WI 2-3089; Sam Selwyn Ackerman of Warwick; two Tlle family of the lest• MRS . ROSE GOLD­ J 1006 Charles St., North Providence Greene, WI 2-0447; Jerry Katz, brothers, Jack and David Kosofsky HEIN wish to extend their sincere thanks to their many relatives and friends for Write for special pri~ IM Ol'9anizations, HO 1-7683: Ed Lyons, WI 2-5256; of Providence; a sister, Miss their kinchteu shown during their recent synogiogues, gilt shops, efc. Marvin Pitterman, WI 2-9026; Molly Kosofsky of Fall RJver, Nr•av•ment. Robert Singer, sr 1-5325, and and seven grandchildren. Irving Slgal, WI 2-3505. • • • wi!..tt:s f:-iia~t t: ~':J~R:~y r~~~t~~ MRS. SANFORD WHITE for their kind expressions of sympathy TEMPLE BETH AM Funeral services for Mrs. dutin1 their recent INreavement. Rabbi Alfred Fruchter w II I Helen (Goldenberg) White, 43, of MRS . GOLDIE IOTVIN B'NAI B'KITH HILLEL FOUNDATION MRS. ,JOSEPH HELICHER speak on "Israel Song" at Friday 53 Colonial Road, who died Jan. Ml. IRV ING IOTVIN of Brown University night services tonight at Temple 16 after an Illness of a year, MR . MAISHAll IOTVIN Beth Am starl1ng at 8:30 o'clock, were held the following day at MRS. SAMUEL BERMAN Sam the Max Sugarman Memorial • Will dedicate a section of the Cantor Berdltch. will chant The fafflily of the late MRS . LOUIS liturgy. Chapel. Burial was In Lincoln ROTH wish to expNSs their many thonlcs HILLEL LIBRARY Park Cemetery. to their friends and relativH for the ••· TO DESCRIBE SERVICES pressions of syfflpathy reuived during The wife of Sanford White, theH' recent bereoverwent. to the memory of Mrs. Alice De Saint, director she was born In Central Falls, of R .I. Division on Aging, will Dec. 16, 1920, a daughter of Al­ In Memoriam MRS. SIDNEY RABINOWITZ describe services offered by the fred and Jl.ose (Leven) Goldenberg, state In the field of aging at a She had lived In Providence most 1963 - JUDITH ROSEN MEDWIN - 1964 meeting of the Older Adult Com­ Dearest daughter and sister, of. her life. So thoughtful, so true, mittee at the East Side Jewish Friends who have contributed or She was a graduate of Colby No one in the world, dear Judi Community Center, Montlay at Junior College, class of 1941. She NoCo:~:riJ::si':!~sh~;: c:~::r•d w ith you. will contribute to the 8 PH, was a member of For the ones you held dear. Always smiling and n•v•r o complaint ICE SKATING PATIO and Its Sisterhood, B'naJ B'rith, Did we hear. MINNA RABINOWITZ MEMORIAL FUND the Colby Club of Rhode Island, God must hove hod a reason As the result of a number of For toking you away, of the requests, the Jewish Community the Jewish Home for the Aged, the But we will never understand, B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Center's Jee Slcatlng· Pal1o will be Miriam Hospital Women's Asso­ Until we meet some day. .. open for Individual "1D1-reglster­ clal1on and Hadassah. MOM, DAD, and FR.A.NI of Brown University ed" skattng three nights a week will have their names inscribed (Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, 7 to 9 P.M.) - weather permitting. Max Sugarman Funeral Home on the books to be purchased Groups Interested In reserving "THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR'' the pal1o rink may call Dick King and placed in the at UN 1-2674. Music and refresh­ 458 HOPE STREET, Providence Minna Rabinowitz Section ments will be provided upon DE 1-8094 DE 1-8636 special request. 1 Excellent opportunlties are In and Mrs. Nathan M. Salter, on Use Herald ads. w the Herald's Classified ads. Friday, Jan. 17. Rabbi Jerome S. A Herald ad always gets best Gurland officiated at the 4 P .M. results - our subscribers com­ COCKTAIL PARTY ceremony at Temple Beth E\ ll(hich prise an active buying market. ;! fl! and was followed by a reception for the Immediate family at the ::,, DANCE Sherat,m-Blltmore Hotel. The :i:: Sunday, January 26, 4-8:30 P.M. bride was given In marriage by g her stepfather, Stanley B. fl! HOTEL BEACONSFIELD Conbelm. 1731 Beacon St., Broolcline, Masa. (Continued on Page 7) Near Cleveland Citcl• Sponsored by :i:: '21-3S' CLUB OF BROOKLINE fl! QUARTER PAST CLUB ::,, Proceeds to Temple B'nai Moshe JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER > Hors D'oe~,._ 6 to 10 P.M. IIY _!; MEMBERSHIP DONATION - $1.50 .,, DANCE EILEEN ::,, .------i Sunday, January 26 McCLURE e I BOOKS • • • I ~ I Everything In book• Crown Hotel ..... I for children ••• all th• I > I best-sellers, for adultsl I Merri-Tones Orchestra AT FASHION SHOW - Lenore ENGAGED -Mr. and Mrs. Mathew ~ Siegel will Introduce the Bridal Friedman of 111 Eldridge Street; FREE PARKING THIRD Fl,.OOR•THIE ARCADE ~ segment of the "International Cranston. announce the engage­ REFRESHMENTS CIA. 1•1917 -< !war-L~j Frolics" Fashion Show In musical ment of their daughter, Miss Lee ADMISSION $1-50 ' N form at the Annual Luncheon of Paula Friedman, to Dr. Robert I...... ! 'JPYSHOP! the United Order True Sisters Krasner. son of Mrs. Lillian which will be held on Wednesday Krasner of. 67 Pinehurst Avenue, ! --~---~·,.·)! at the Sheraton-Biltmore Hotel at and the late Jacob Krasner. Embarrassing. 12:15 P .M. Proceeds of the affair Miss Friedman Is a graduate I• \ . .~, . .. It will be presented to Miriam Hos­ of the Beth Israel Hospital of • • Forever I .rl . i pital and Roger Williams General Nursing In Boston. Dr. Krasner t. ■ • • •• ■ ■ . Hospital received his B.S. from Providence • • • • • T College. and his M.S. and Ph. D. In Biology from Boston Univer­ NOW, more than her b.fore 1he woman of today know1 the sity. He Is now Associate Pro­ impof"tonce of a . well gr~ appearance. Achieve a true BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA fessor of Biology at Providence feminine look- remove unwonted hoir from foce and arms, body ERICH LEINSDORF, Mu•ic Dirocter College. and l11g1 by 1lr.ill.d and com~,.,,; electrologi1t. RICHARD BURGIN, Con,/ualin• A May wedding Is planned. VETERANS MEMORlAL 'AUDITORIUM Mrs. Amy Charnley 295-A Union Ave., Prov. T,!. 944-3694 Tuesday Evening, Ja11. 21 at 1:15 Li~•nHJ El•~trero,illf Tc:llailtoYalty: Symphony No. 6 ("Pathetique"J Sll,eliu■: Symphony No. 5 [:~~:] Remaining Tickets $5.00 Tax Exempt Marriage Announced 1 Mr. and Mrs. Saul Landy of Provincial At AntY pt.~!:'« :~~ 2~"'J:~1:-o•:.i~~~~r. . GA 1 · 10◄ Buffalo, N. Y •• announce the NO ~1r. nv1c11: c!11A1tt:Jo: marriage of. their daughter, Ml•• Beverly 1...&ndy. to Mitchell BEAUTY SALON Sugarman, son of. Mrs. Max 263 BUDLONG ROAD. CRANSTON ,. Sugarman of Providence and the DYEABLES late Max Sugarman. Mr. and Mrs. SPECIALIZING IN HAIR COLORING, PERMANENT Mitchell Sugarman will make WAVING, AND HIGH STYLING from 5.98 their residence at the Wayland Manor. OUR STAFF I NCLUDES: Announce Marriage MR. ARMAND ...... /ormuly at a Gardt!11 City Salon Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jay MISS DOROTHY ...... Manager Waldman of Vassar Avenue announce the marriage of their MR. JAMES . .... Trophy-winning .rtyli.rt •. , .•• OldNt Dloeout lhoo Sloro daughter, Adrienne Lynne, to For Appointments Phone 942-9585 ELKIN SHOES Leonard Enos, son of Mrs. Linda 121 'Wa,ht.. toa St. Enos of Eudora Street, on Dec. 20. 0pea Xo•.-Taea. 4' Tll•r1. Zn•. The bride Is a senior at the University of Rhode Island where she Is a member of Sigma Delta Tau sorority. Mr. Enos anended Rhode Island College and Is now HELENE'S Come To The stationed at Dyess Air Force Base In Texas. OF EAST PRO,VIDENCE MARDI GRAS NIGHT The couple will reside In AT THE Abilene, Texas. Salter-Wade ANNUAL SWEETHEART BALL Geraldine Effendlne Wade of Excellent Selection ,,. East Manning Street, daughter of SPONSORED BY Mrs. Stanley B. Conhelm. became the bride of Elliot A. Salter of of The Sisterb._ood of Temple Beth Am East Manning Street, son of Mr. · 40 GARDINER STREET, WARWICK Spring and Summer SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 - 8:30 P.M. to 1 A.M. WANNA VACATION!! Music By JOE ANDRE and his Orchestra Bridal and Bridesmaids' Refreshments Donation - $3.98 per couple Call TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THE DOOR CAROL GOWNS AT SHERM PRICE'S 190 Taunton Ave. East Providence GIFTS FOR THE 776 Hope Street, Prov. GEneva 4-4370 GA 1-9422 OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9 EXCEPT SATURDAY NEW BABY IN THE FAMILY • Cruisewear OR FRIENDS • Beachwear CALL -~ 0 I p O I A f I D BOUTIQUE IMPOllTS Stretch Playsuit 127 Wayland Avenue from $3.00 up Latest spring clothe~ from the new show en WE MAIL and DELIVER Florence, Italy

OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9:30 - 6:00 . TNt. • S.t. - 10 A.M. • S:IO P.M. FRIDAY 9:30 - 9:00 Friday atilt-. ci.-i· .._., . ... "Marathon '33" Conrad Janis and '· his Tall-Gate Five remain onstage for a Jam session with June Havoc. In Paramus, N.J., Henny Young­ man does his nightclub routine after his r,ertormance In "Thurber i HJf ONLY ANGLO JEWISH WEfKLY IN R I AND SOUTHEAST MASS Carnival.' And onSunday,atSpen­ cer Memorial Church, when the ; 1"'blloll0d B-,, Week By Tbe Rev. William Gleneslc delivered a ~ Jewlab Preoa PllbU.hlng Company sermon on "Chips With Every­ ~ Bo" 8063, Providence, a. L 0290f - Telepbone 724-0200 -, PLANT AND OFFICE: HERALD WAY, OFF WEBSTER ST., PAWT., a, L 02881 by Leanard Lyons thing,'' the producers and some of the actors were there for a panel John Snyder, head of U.S. In­ Jiave been sold since October • • : discussion. ~ ~:~~lNU~~~~-~-- -·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::··Ad::~== dustries, and Nate Cwnmlngs, head It's not Alan Jay Lerner but his Edward Albee, producing Adri­ 9 of Consolidated Foods, are both Second c1 ... Poatap Paid at Providence, Rhode llland neighbor, Gen. David S a r n off , enne Kennedy's one-hour play at I:: SublcripUon Rata: Fifteen Ce~ta the copy; By Mall. •5.00 per annum; oullkie New board members at MGM. Both who's converting his garage Into the East End Theater, Is Inviting have faith In the future of auto­ a swimming pool. the first and second-night critics mation, an'1 believe It can be Jaclc Pearl's current Illness for the same night, two hours apart ~ :l::.:·::~~::::::;~::Lfor \ypographlcal erron In adv..- 0:: mentl, but will reprint that part ol the advertllement In which the typographlcal error applied to movie scripts. They're prevents the veteran millionaire • . • Sidney Michaels, author of ~ =~~ertilere wUI pleue notify the manapment Immediately of any error which working with IBM's Tom Watson star from taldng his customary "Dylan," will donate a percent­ on a machine which will determine, dally walldng tour of the theater­ age of his royalties to the New ------they hope, the success of a film ticket agencies. Although Pearl Dramatists Committee. lbis Is ~ FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1964 script. It will note the required has been Inactive for years, he the group which helped launch him ,------Ingredients - a touch of comedy never has abandoned his hope to on his writing career . .• Rudy iii here, a dash of seoc there, a return In a good play. "And so Vallee, who prefers to be a Hospital Action Not A Solution sprinkling of pathos. I visit the ticket agencies every comedian, made It with a new From the smog that hangs over the report of the Richard Condon, the wildly In­ day,'' he explained, "because I LP, ""The Funny Side of Rudy 8 ventive novelist, was told about meet theater ticket buyers there. ~ United States Department . of Health on cigarette Vallee." the project and gasped: "If this And when, someday, I go back to 1be gunmen who Invaded their ~ smoking, it is obvious from the steady sale of machine works, and the studios the stage I want them to remember hotel room gave Dick Brown five ~ cigarettes and the relatively minor change in the are governed only by Its formulae me." minutes to bring from the vault market value of tobacco stocks that the American for hits, It wlll mean that Holly­ Martyn Green has teamed with the huge diamond ring belonging smoking public is unflinchingly brave in the face w o o d will produce nothing b u t his wife In the Boston ()per a to his wife, Eva Gabor. TIiey of threatened life spans. Doris Day-Roclt Hudson films." Grotq>'s "The Magic Flute" Jan. held Miss Gabor as hostage, and During the past week, the findings have probably Edith Bagnold, the 74-year­ 29. Green, hitherto a Gilbert 8' said they'd ldll her If Brown didn't been the most talked-about subject in America. old playwright, bellves always In SUiiivan star, s ays this Is his return on time • • • Brown went having a new project ready. On first role In which he gets the girl downstairs, headed for the vault Dozens of remedial actions have been advocated, the day her new play, ""The of his choice . .. Mike Nichols, - when suddenly he felt two hands legislation is promised, but when the excitement Chlnese Prime Minister... was who directed "Barefoot In the slip over his eyes, and a girl subsides, little will be accomplished by "quickie" "frozen" - that is, no more Parle," will direct a movie. He asked "Guess who?" The girl solutions, / changes - she started writing has five offers . . . Richard was GeeGee Braun. He rushed · In England, despite the prohibition of day-time her autobiography • • • Vaughn Tucker Is establishing a record from her, silently... My," she advertising, the ruinous cigarette tax, and the fact Meader may Inherit Zero Mostel's at the Met this month: He will said to the man whose wife then role In "A Funny Thing Happened" have sung the leading roles In was being held by a gunrnen, Britons have the highest death rate in the world • • , Mary Martin rem alns unper­ six different operas within three .,touchy, aren't we?" from lung cancer, 5 per cent more cigarettes are suaded about starring In "lbe weeks. • • • being sold in Britain than ever before. King and r' for the opening show Nowadays the play, alone, Is not (DI strlbuted 1963, by The Hall The "causal relation" between cigarettes and of the Uncoln Center Music the thing. To stir box-office action, Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rights Re­ many diseases is not going to be aided by such Theater. the performers do after-pieces. At served) Carol Chamting, star of the decisions of the Miriam Hospital to prohibit the sale forthcoming musical, "Hello, of cigarettes on the premises and to warn the public Dolly!" received an expensive gift of the dangers of smoking. The decisio_n is practically from her producer, David Mer­ an empty gesture. In the rules established by the rick. He sent her an engraved In Miriam Hospital, the patient is permitted to smoke, dgaret box from Tiffany's. Miss but his visitor cannot, Who is going to police the Channing doesn't smoke. She keeps Hollywood the box In her dressing room, as corridors and rooms? Restrictions on smoking are a n,ceptacle for her eyelashes. difficult to enforce even when fire and safety con­ Roberta Peters will be seen In siderations are involved, slaclcs, for the first time In her By Barney Glazer How much better would it have been if the career, at the Met Jan. 23, when Hospital had advanced worth-while long range pro­ she sings the lead In Gian-Carlo grams. One of these might have been cooperation Menotti's "The Last Savage" ••• Hollywood, Calif. - Author When 14, Alex came this coun­ ABC-1V's legal department lnlng Wallace confesses that his try from Russia, worked In New with the school department to discourage the teen­ blooped out the libelous statement books aren't easy to convert Into York as a watchmalcer, moved to ager from beginning to smoke, This could be ac­ about Jack Lemmon and Felicia movies scripts. Wallace should Gary, Indiana, and complished by lectures by members of the staff Farr, uttered by Christina Pao- know. He's an ex-screenwriter.. Kenosha, where he owned and OP­ with visual displays which would dramatize the 1ozzl on "Girl Talk." ... Iggie "I sit down to write a good erated a retail general store. dangers of decades of smoking. Or, as one of the Wolflngton, the fat comedian In the story about people and Ideas that Bessie also came from Russia, other hospitals is planning, to inaugurate clinics Actors Studio production of "Mar­ f asctnate me." he said. "Some of She grew up In a small town only which would help habitual smokers to "withdraw" athon '33," was Just notified that those things are difficult, even Im­ one hour's travel from Alex's he's been accepted as a Studio possible, to put on the screen. birthplace, but they didn't meet from the habit, member. "They are too outspoken for motion until they were In this country. Those who have quit, and quit for good, generally Spencer Tracy had to forgo, be­ pictures ... The couple celebrated their 50th agree, howeve.r, there is no substitute for will power, cause of Illness, his starring role Oddly enough, film versions of wedding anniversary In September. Smoking is simply a strong habit whose roots are In John Ford's "Cheyenne Wal lace s books are usually hits. lnlng was raised In the ortho­ obscure. The iron-willed victors insist that those Autumn." It would have been hs "The Chapman Report" grossed dox manner. His maternal grand­ who want to give up smoking can. Many of them need 70th movie ... When he first went $10 million for Warner Brothers. father was a Talmudic student and to Hollywood In 1930, and was Metro expects to outdraw that his paternal grandfather was a direction and help. Hospitals can aid immeasurablr,, screen-tested, his wife saw the figure with " The Prize." Another doctor. Although Irving received But you cannot legislate or prohibit smoking. It s test and wrote her sister: .,Spen_ book, Wallace's blo of P, T, Bar­ Hebrew training until the age · of the individual's ultimate decision. cer doesn't photograph very well. num, "The Fabulous Showman," 13, he wasn't bar mltzvahed. For the present rm afraid we'll bows at the World's Fair In New .. rm very conscious of my have to forget about talldng plc­ York. Jewish heritage," said Wallace. nires." "The Three Sirens," novel "I think that the advantages of YOUR MONEY'S At the premiere of "Beyond about love customs In the South having been born to the Jewish the Fringe, 1964" Peter Cook Seas, looms as Wallace's big one f alth outweigh ts the difficulties. couldn't Indulge In that casual, for '64. Producers Edward L. As a religion, It's among my hands-In-pocket, style typical of Alperson and Stanley Meyer pro­ favorites. If I can beobjective,lt's WORTH the cast. Cook had bought a new pose to shoot It In the South a free-wheeling, warm religion as suit for the premiere. When he Seas. opposed to other which are more started to put his hand In his The su~essful author's par­ restrictive and authoritative. by Sylvia Porter pocket he found that they were ents, Bessie and Alex Wallace, "I like a warm, family re­ stitched . . . over 2 million now live In Los Angeles where ligion. I think that being a Jew Is paperbacks of "7 Days In May" both are currently hospitalized. more than adhering to a religion. Casualty Losses over a relatively short period of It's adhering to a culture and a 1963 may turn out to be the time could deduct the damage as way of life. · last year In which you can deduct a casualty loss without any trouble Max Sugarman Funeral Home "My wife, Sylvia, ran Into pro­ such minor casualty losses as from the Treasury. blems of anti-Semitism In the damages from scraped fenders, But last year the Treasury Brome and New York where she broken headlights, etc. lbis Is announced that It won't allow any COMMUNITY CALENDAR was raised. Ben Hecht was raised because one of the changes In the casualty loss deductions after 1963 In Racine, 11 miles form Kenosha. for termite damage, nomatterhow I He wasn't constdous of anti-semi• big tax bill on which the Treasury Monday. January 27, 1964 Is now working would knock out a suddenly the damage occurs. Al­ tlsm until he moved to big cities. though existing court decisions 1:00 p.m. - Providence Chapter Senior Hadassah, Board Meeting "My wife didn't believe me deduction for the first $100ofeach 1:00 p.m. - Cranston Chapter Hadassah, Board Meeting separate casualty loss, starting still will support a deduction for when I told her I had the same "sudden" termite damage If you 8:00 p,m. - Mothers' Assn. Temple Beth David, Regular Meeting experience as Hecht. Nine-tenths In 1964. 8:00 p.m. - Sisterhood Temple Beth Israel, Board Meeting For Instance, If you dented a prove that the damage happened In of. my friends In Kenosha were 1964, you'll face a fight with the 8:00 p.m. - Sisterhood Temple Beth Am, Regular Meeting Christian and there was no anti­ fender In 1963 and paid $125 to 8:00 p.m. - R. I, Council Pioneer Women, Regular Meeting repair It, then dented another and Treasury when you try to deduct Semitism there. I became con­ this on your 1964 return -which 8:00 p.m. - Lad. Aux. Lt. Leonard Bloom #284 jWVA, scious of Jewish problems only paid another $125, you can deduct - Regular Meeting the entire $250 on your 1963 in­ you will file In 1965. If you can wlien I arrived In California dur­ prove that the "sudd!m" damage 8:00 p,m. - Pawt.-Central Falls Hadassah, Regular Meeting ing World War ll and observed come tax return. If the proposed 8:00 p,m, - What Cheer Lodge #24, Knights of Pythias, Regular change becomes law and you do happened In 1963, though, you still conditions here." · can deduct It without a fight on the - Meeting ""The entire latter section of this In 1964, you'll be able to 8:00 p.m. - Temple Sinai, Men's Club Meeting deduct only $25 for each casualty, 1963 return you' re filing this 'The Prize' concerns the heroine, spring. 8:30 p.m. - Lad. Assn. Prov. Hebrew Day School, Regular Meeting a Jewish girl who was terribly or a total of $50 on your 1964 Tuesday, January 28, 1964 return, Check back on any minor On deductions for automobile persecuted during the war. In 'The 1:30 p.m. - Pioneer Women of Providence, Regular Meeting casualties you may have suffered casualty losses, a 1963 court case Three Sirens,'' Sam Karpowicz, a •underlined an Important fact for Wednesday, January 29, 1964 central character and a Jew, faces In 1963 and deduct them while you 12:00 noon - Sisterhood Cranston Jewish Center, Luncheon An' still can. car owners. Damage caused to your personal Issues while raising his car's mechanical apparatus by an 12:30 p,m, - United Order True Sisters, Inc., Fashion Show children. In my new novel, ''The . If you're a homeowner and you 8:00 p.m. - Jewish National Fund, Musical PN1gram suapect that termites may be dam­ Internal breakdown Is not a deduct­ Man' a major character Is Jew­ Ible casualty loss. To qualify as a . 8:00 p.m. - Touro Fraternal Assn., Regular Meeting ish and the racial minority sub­ aging your house, find out about Thursday, January 30, 1964 this as quickly as you can. Here's casualty, the damage must be ject becomes an Issue." caused by the sudden Invasion of 8:00 p.m. - Bureau of Jewish Education, Jewish History Course 1be Wallaces have two child­ why. Up through 1963, a home­ Saturday, February 1, 1964 an eocternal · or hostile agency - - ren - David, 15, and Amy, 8. - who was able to prove that . 8:00 p.m. - Sisterhood Temple Beth Am, Annual sweetheart Dance the termite damage took place (Continued on Page 21) They are a devoted family, .... A subscription to the Herald N Is a good gift Idea for the person .... LADDERS who "has everything" else. Call STUDENTS Your Moneys Worth 724-0200. ~ FOR HOME ( ('ontinued from Page 11) a signal to you to weigh care­I Up Through High Sch~I .,.; or penses. The Treasury Insists that fully the tax advantages of any N COMMERCIAL your premiums qµallfy as med­ unusual medical expenses you may >-a: USE ical expenses only to the extent have had: BEST /iit­ BOWLING < that they pay for Insurance For Instance, the rent for 8Jl Any Day Till 6 P.M. EXTENSION• against doctor bllls, hosp it a I apartment and salary paid to a DEAU~ -,~ costs, similar outlays. The courts, shoe • clerk In a store were both or however, are wllllng to classify upheld by a court as medical Plain Facts and Figures :,: STEPLA0D!RS BOWL < your premiums as deductible deductions. Here Is how this Check with Us and Save 9 in WOOD, medical expenses even If they cov­ happened. 25c per game a: ALUMINUM or er payments for loss of limbs, A doctor advised a daughter CENTREDALE t,., loss of earnings, etc. - as long MAGNESIUM that her mother was seriously as your policy Is for accident "SULLIVAN'S" ci ill and would need nursing care PONTIAC and health Insurance. • for an extended period. Since the R. I. RECREATION :;! STAGING A court decision last year went 26 Putnam Ave., Cent. a: doctor said this care could be CE 1-4232 No. Main St ., At Prov. - Pciwt . Lin• w • even further. Many life Insurance furnished better and cheaper away :,:; Fire Fighting policies provide tor a waiver of from a hospital, the daughter EQUIPMENT premiums In case of total and rented a two-room apartment ~ permanent disability. This court w h I ch she transformed Into a ..J ALL TYPES,• decision held that the portion of semi-hospital for her mother and ~ ihe life Insurance premium you w ALL SIZES, a nurse. Then the mother re­ KNIGHT FARM i pay for this waiver provision also Cl ALL PRICES covered s ufficiently to live with 0 qualifies as a deductible medical :,:; the daughter. But the daughter had APPI.. ES expense. If you deduct your In­ to stop helping out in her hus­ a: surance premiums according to MclNTOSH CORTLAND ROME COMBINATION band's shoe store in order to care BALDWIN RED & GOLDEN DELICIOUS ~ the court decisions, though, re­ for her still ailing mother and so f- LADDER COMPANY member the Treasury disagrees the daughter paid a clerk to take "BEST EVER" SWEET CIDER comer Herri, encl Siffll Av,nuM and will disallow your deduction her place. A court held that both (nod lo B.I.F. lndu,tri.,) if it examines your return. the rent of the apartment and the (SPECIAL 35c~R!L~s~~r 53,00) Even more extraordinary out­ salary paid to the clerk qualified GA 1-1330 lays were allowed by the courts Rte. 116, Greenville, R. I. as deductible medical expenses I Open Dail y All W i nter '\II 5 P.M . as medical expenses In 1963 If you're one of several child­ ren contributing to the support •------Free Box of A pples Each Wei!I< ______. and medlcal expenses of a par­ MEE FONG ent, a 1963 tax case has an im­ 772 HOPE ST. portant warning to you on how Specializing In Lobster And Roast Beef CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANT to handle the medical expense deduction. Let's say that you are Open For New Year's Dinner the child who pays more than half AIRPORT MOTOR LODGE • SPECIAL FAMILY DINNER of your parents' s upport, Including all 1he medlcal expenses and then RESTAURANT and LOUNGE • CHOICE OF AMERICAN FOODS Is reimbursed by your brothers and s is ters for their s hare of (Adjoining R. I. Stole Airport) Specializing In Chinese Dishes medical expenses - a common ORDE•s FRESHLY PUT UP '!'O TA a OUT arrangement. 2082 Post Rd., Rte 1 Warwick, R. I. Please Call: GA 1-2075 The Tax Court las t year agreed with the Treasury that you can't RE 9-3009 Ofl'EH 11 :00 A. M. . t:00 p. M. CLOHD MONDAY deduct the portion for which you Pltnly Of Free And Easy Parliing were reimbursed by yo ur brothers and sisters. They c an't deduct their repayments to yo u as med­ ic al expenses. And your parent clldn't pay anything which he or she can deduct as medical ex­ MILLER'S penses. 1n short, the fact that you were reimbursed by the other Going Out Of Business RHODE THE RHODE children for a share of the medic al ISLAND'S INTERNATIONAL ISLAND'S expenses malces It Impossible for any of you to deduct that portion SALE STARTS FINEST FINEST of the medical expenses. DELICATESSEN If your brothers and s isters had paid a share of your parent' s TUESDAY, JANUARY 28th PROVIDENCE - WARWICK - PAWTUCKET support expenses other than the medical expenses, then you, the child who paid the medical CONTEMPORA expenses for your parent, could deduct these costs on your return. 535 S111ltHelcl Ave., P ■ wt. PA 2-8874 SALE of SALES This assumes 1hat you furnished OPEN FRI. 'TIL II P.M. more than half your parent's support or were designated as FRIDAY, JAN. 24 THRU THURSDAY, JAN. 30 the supporting child In a mul­ tiple-support agreement. If you clldn't set It up correctly last HEBREW NATIONAL (NONE BETTER) year, be sure you work out the MIDGET arrangement for maximum tax benefits th! s year. SAVE each • 4Oc 89c When you have paid the first premium on SALAMI (DI str!buted 1963 by The Hall Syn­ dicate, Inc.) (All Rights Reserved) a life insurance policy, you have created an HEBREW NATIONAL (NONE BETTER) immediate estate. This immediate estate can be yours only with life insurance. As a local ORGANIZATION Sun Life representative, I would welcome BOLOGNA·::.· each 79c the opportunity of discussing NEWS this matter with you. l STRICTLY KOSHER BRIDGE WINNERS Winners of the Wednesday Night Duplicate Bridge which was ELLIOT F. SLACK 0 held at the Cranston Jewish 1018 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. DE 1-2422 Center on Jan. 15 were: R0AST BEEF lb.1.97 East and West winners: I) Mr. SAME MILLER QUALITY-SAVE $ 1.00 and Mrs. Irwin Rubin, 117 1/2: SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA 2) Judy Seigel and Helene Silver, FANCY-SOLID PACK 116 1/2; 3) Evelyn Flelslg and ALBACORE-WHITE MEAT Renee Dreyfus, 101 1/2: 4) Selma Alson and Edith Utchman, 97; 5) REG. Ethyl Rose and Bess Robinson, 95. SIZE The average was 90. TUNA CAN North and South winners: I) PACKED IN WATER Mrs. Florence Manekofslcy and Paul Lavalle, 120 1/2; 2) Mr. and KOSHER FRESH MEAT DEPARTMENT Mrs. Elllott Dlttelman, 109; 3) Alfred Colletta and Michael De­ Our Fresh Meat Department 11 Closed Friday at Noon Cenzo, 104; 4) Mr. and Mrs. Hy­ and All Day Saturday. man Katz, 94; 5) Mr. and Mrs. Al Shuster, 91. The average was These specials are in effect SUNDAY-FRIDAY, Jan. 26-31 90. REV. HARDGE TO SPEAK SUPPORT YOUR KOSHER-FRESH KILLED To focus attention upon the Rhode Island Conference on Re­ OLYMPIC SKI TEAM SAVE ligion and Race, Temple Emanu­ 9c lb. 30c El has Invited the Reverend BRO'ILERS Arthur Lynwood Hardge to speak at services tonight. All Stores Open WHl 01ys •nd Sundey1 Rev. Hardage Is the pastor of i!tbe ~ki J!}ouse the A,M.E. Zion Church and Is PAWTUCKET WARWICK PROVIDENCE chairman of the Rhode Island "The Finest In Ski-Wear and Equipment" 142 '•wtuclet Avenu• 1619 W11wick Avenue 776 Hope StrHI Congress on Racial Equality. Rev. Open 9-9, Mon.-Fri .; Sat. 9-5 Gat•w•y Shop. Center N11t t. Korb', hkory (Koohor Only) Hardge Is a friend of Dr. Martin Call 1,73-335,i Honie Four Cornen Luther King, Jr., and has worked 9 A.M. lo 9 P.M, I A.M. te-7:10 P.M, 1:10 A.M. t. IO P.M, with him In the campaign against 12"1 Wilbur Ave., Rte. 103, Somerset, Mass. segregation. Use Herald Classified ads. ,-----=F=o=-R---. ti t,-.-.c,-.-, WEST INDIES I Warwick I CRUISES I Travel I 100 Union St., Providence 103S Reservoir Ave., Cran1ton A Herald ad alway• set• be9t :,: RE 9-48481 reaults - our subscribers com­ m ,I prlae an active buying markeL HO 7-9300 "r> _o Robert J. Cotton I MRS. LlO GLEKLEH DE. 1-7106 .,, I Of Harold L. Kendall Jr. "6 > L..c~~o.J PETIERSON TRAVEL INC. -< Dorrance Street Providence 3, Rhode lslond ONLY 7HE PLANE GETS " BETTER CARE THAN WE DO" MEXICO INC. ACAPULCO & TAXCO, MEXICO 8 DAYS $373.75 ROUND TRIP JEl, TRANS FER S, 8EST HOTELS , MEALS, SIGHTSEEING, IIUlLFIGHT, COCKTAIL PARTY , NIGHT ClUBS & LOTS MORE !

,~RAVEL SERVICE l ATTENDS SCHOOL AT SEA - Mrs. Zelda Kouffman of the Cran­ 170 WESTMINSTER Sf. ston Travel Service has recently returned from "A Schoel At Sea" PROVIDENCli on the Ocean Monarch, sponsored by the Furness Une and the New TEmplo 1-7676 England Chapter of ASTA, American Society of Travel Agents. While ~< elf. April I, 64• Round ♦ r i p kounC, ♦rip New York to: ..onomy 21.day h,o ~Ii_ In Bermuda the .group was a guest of the Bermuda Trade Develop­ ~ ment Board which arranged a complete tour of Inspection of alJ the leading hotels and sightseeing facllttles of the Island. 'l TEL AVIV ...... $798.00 $699.00 ; SHANNON • .. .. • • .. .. • .. • .. • ~...... ~~!,~,...,...... , ..... ~,1,--~ ll' $353.40 $256.t0 ;i Travel Fashions Three Routes ?:: LONDON ...... • • .. .. • .. .. $399.00 $300.00 i' ON THE GO? l (Continued from Page 22) ' PARIS, MADRID ...... $440.80 $341.80 I similar to Puerto Rico's short ROME ...... $544.40 $445.40 All Airlines, Hotels dresses generallr, long ones for To Florida il VIENNA ...... , ..... $526.30 $427.30 ~ ' balls during Rio s carnival. The 1 Cruises, Honeymoons women of cities like Lima, Peru, There are three orten-used ll~~ GENEVA ...... $478.80 $379.80 f' and Rio de Janeiro are very so­ routes between Delaware Memo­ \ rial Bridge and Jacksonville. phisticated about fashion, do not ~} Group fare to Israel Round trip $535.00 Call .. Mildred Chase ~ wear slacks or stmdresses except Uacksonvllle ts used as a ter­ at the beaches. minus because that serves as a J with one stopover privilege in Europe divergent point for traffic to the ,, Hawaii ts considerably more ,l casual, United Afr Lines reports, Miami or St. Petersburg areas .) I The three routes are as follows: ll Slacks and sandals, Slmdresses and ~~ shorts are seen wandering through I. OCEAN HIGHWAY: Between , DE1·3200 ,~s-aa•1 the shops. At night, dresses are Del. Mem. Bridge and Jackson­ usually short linens or stlks or vllle, U.S. 13 , Kiptopeke Ferry, •SubJect Gou. apf)roual sometimes the long "pation dress U.S. 17, mileage: 881.4 (Ferry , stateside women wear for informal mileage not Included.) Driving parties. Hawaii Is likely to have time: 20 hrs., 49 minutes. Tolls: rain In February and breezes that car and driver $4,35._ make a wardrobe of head scarves a good Idea. 2. TOBACCO TRAIL: (Now The exhilarating climate of called 11M1ss lmiverse Highway") Scandinavia brings out skiers who between Del. Mem. Bridge and 33 Westminster St ., Providence, R. I. prefer things good and cold, Mrs, Jacksonvllle: U.S. 13,301, Cheu­ Eira Bnmner, co-ordinator of peake Bay Bridge, Richmond­ Petersburg turnpike, U.S. 301, to women's activities for Scan- UN 1-4055 jllllctlon with U.S. 1 at Folkston, ~~~ , . 1 dlnavian Airlines System, has re­ - cently returned from a trip to Gorgla and then U.S. 1 to Jack­ , Sweden and reports that ski cos- sonville. Mileage: 887 .8. Driving 1 time: 19 hrs., 46 minutes. Tolls: I ' N>tiAD rumes are similar to American car and driver $2. 90, 3, COMBINATION TOBACCO TRAIL AND OCEAN HIGHWAY: Between Del. Mem. Bridge and fiPl\1~6 , Jacksonvllle: U,S. 13, 301, Chesa­ pealce Bay Bridge, Richmond­ Petersburg turnpike, U.S. 301, to -I~~ Summerton., s.c., U.S. 15, alt. l'olond Spring,Main• U.S. 17, and U.S. 17. Mileage: 864.8. Tolls: car and driver $3,40• .PREMIER SEASON of ALTERNATE ON ABOVE: Between Del. Mem. Bridge and NEW ENGLAND'S FINEST Richmond there Is an alternate using U.S. 40 and the Baltimore WINTER RESORT 1\mnel and Maryland State 3 to FtaturiAI u.~. 301. In mid-November of 1963 : • GrOlljl Pacup Rates . k a new toll road was opened be­ • Delwxe R11m Accommodatltns . • tween Del. Mem. Bridge and Balti­ . • Saperb Cuisine more Harbor Tunnel. 1bis parallels U.S. 40 and the additional i. • Oa11Cin1 l Entertainment toll Is $1.30. At Del. Mem. Bridge • Coclltall l Hors d'oeurres Parties • the highway Is nwnbered 1-295 • lloarinc Heartlls which talces you to 1-95 and the . • Artlficlally-llluminated Baltimore Harbor Tunnel. 1bis • Sllat1n1 Rink route Is about a half hour less driving time than U,S, 40. • Toboaanlnc • Sleigh Rides After driving through Bal t. • Slliinc - Two Slopes : Harbor Tunnel take Exit 4 for ONCE A-POND A TIME. A family came to the Nevele .• , fell under Maryland State 3 to U.S. 301. If the spell of an enchanted, 1000 ac(e playground .. . skated, you decide to drive through Wash­ skied, sledded,- in an indoor pool fit for'ci princess, joined in fairy ington, D, C,, use Exit 5 and the tale entertainment and lived happily ·ever after • Artificial Out­ Baltimore-Washington Parkway, door Ice Rink • SOON! Skiing beginners and intermediates • and from Washington U,S, to 1 Indoor Pool • Health Club • Safari Lounge • Show Center • Dance Richmond. To 3 Superb Bands • Enjoy Great Entertainment. Mileages between Providence tnd Del. Mem, Bridge (to be added I WINTER SCHOOL HOLIDAY SUN. FEB. 23-SUN. MARCH I I Call or Write: POLAND SPRING INN. to all above mileages) Is 312.0. Poland Sprlnc, Me. - 207-998-4301 : Tolls: car and driver (using Conn. In Boston: Liberty 2-7326 ' Turnpike, Tappan Zee Bridge, 1 All Super-highways to Our Door; Garden State Parkway, and the New M~~ltNe!·t!te~Jir,F: 3~ic~1~ Your Host SAUL FELDMAN . Jersey Turnpike) - $5.00 (to be INI Hotel Tel, Ellenville 2100 •,• .... --. added to above tolls) EH•"111U•. New, Yorilr . ]

FINNISH JEWRY The Jewish Community o f TE~A~E~~~:il~ous ~.:. ::r1:i~ald s~:r.: r- fash1·ons f!"r-lrave1·1ng Finland, which dates back to } youths, convicted last October for Haifa, were re-arres~ .this ,weet. ·. . . _ . . · : . V 1825, numbers some 1,500 rsons • ..N CRUI.SES :--,· . ,Outlined By A'irlines WANNAGO!! ~~ • · NEW YOR.K - If the airlines were the rule when Miss Rivera Puerto Rico ?J/i.1, had their way, New York would be was there recently. · deserted In winter. lbelr adver- January In Rio de Janeiro Is Virgin Islands t RAVEL :1111 tlsements keep flashing up visions equivalent to New York In July. Ill of Hawaiian beaches, carnival In A spokesman for Varlg Airlines Package Programs ; Rio and fairy-tale, snowy villages suggests the traveler pack only CALL :a In ScandlnavlL To add to the win- summery dresses and beach "Where your pleasure is our business" -I ter discontent, they dangle lures clothes. An occasional cool evening Never a service charge Ill like reduced fares and special necessitates a light wrap and a SHERM -PRICE excursions during the winter and raincoat wlll be useful. n6 Hope Street, Prov. spring months. Once they have Rule Is Similar Call Mildred Chase=:J overcome one's resistance to The rule for evening dress Is GA 1-9422 ~ time df and finding the {Continued on Page 23) 33 Westminster St. UN 1-4055 wherewithal, they are ready with suggestions for travel wardrobes HONEYMOONS for any part of the world. Trans Caribbean Airways will GROSSINGER'S whisk the traveler to the sunshine ct San Juan, P. R. In about three from ROUND -the - CORNER hours. The line wlll shortly In­ RHODE ISLAND augurate a new excursion plan (late evening flights from New HOLIDAY AND to ROUND-the- WORLD Yor, dawn ones from San Juan) to make a weekend In the Caribbean "We've been there!" plausible. Miss Nilsa Rivera, WINTER FESTIVAL fashion co-ordinator for the air- line, says a woman's wardrobe Sun., Feb. 16 Fri., Feb. 21 should be based on the sort of summer dresses worn In New To celebrate the coming school vacation. Grossinger·s will PUERTO RICO - inc. jet ... from $199 hold a Rhode Island Holiday and Winter Festival, Sunday, lndudM 7 days, 6 ni1ht1 ot beautifvl ...... - Ii,_ Mn"ke 1MtweM ~ . York In June: linens and cottons hotel - compli ....ntory cocktail at two ,..,... ,ant, - Ck,lt H-M tickett te and light wools, not too bare. The February 16 to Friday, February 2 1, with special rates for El Con11111uHlonto Race Trac.It. Air f-• fT ... N. Y. inmdress looks our ct place In fabled fun , food, fillips. frolic, facil ities, and festivities. There'll e SAN JUAN - Special meal plans available. c:oemopolitan San Juan and the be a host of added activities, including separate special events local press constantly blasts at to keep the teenagers and younger children delighted. It's tourists In slacks and shorts In your great chance for a much-needed winter vacation the e CALIFORNIA - LAS VEGAS - 11 days $319 ta,m, she reports. with Includes rowncl hip iet via TWA ., U11kNI - ...... - •i,htM."'9 - .,....,_. fa mily! .... Festival Cocktail Party. Ice Skating on the beauti­ - .ntertain..,.t ~'-• $15.00 tax - CoMpleto .-di ... f.., ...ty $19.U __. Festive Evenings ful Rink. Swimming in the Indoor Pool. Tobogganing, Skiing. than ,-..ular rounc:I tri!J jet fo,o aletM. F,._ Now ,.,.. Miss Rivera points out that Health Club. Teen Center for Teenage Dances and Parties, during the carnival season next e TEEN TOURS - Weit - Canada from $695 Dance Sessions and Contests. Record Hops. Free Ice Skating All loy1 - All Glrle - 13 to It ,-._, month, evenings at the hotels and night clubs will be festive. Classes. Moonlight Skating Party and Wienie Roast, Swim Generally the women of. San Juan Party. Junior Olympics. and ma ny other happy features and i prefer short evening dress but highlights ...Joi n the fun! I wear long dresses to balls and SPECIAL RATES FOR 6 DAYS A'IIID 5 NIGHTS l MIAMI BEACH very gala occasions. Black Is rarely worn because of. Its con­ FREE AND IMMEDIATE CONFIRMATION notation of mourning. "San Juan has gone overboard Air or Hotel Reservations for air-conditioning," Miss Rivera Air Reservations made with or without Hotel Reservations says. "Remember to brl111f a wrap when you go out to dinner. • In Puerto Rican beach resorts, "All Leading Hotels Personally Inspected" dress Is more casual, but the fad ALGIERS DESERT INN NEW YORKH for bikinis has come and gone. ARISTOCRAT DI LIDO PRES. MADISON Covered swimsuits or the more AMERICANA DIPLOMAT PROMENADE sedate of of the two-piece suits A TT ACHE DORAL ROYAL PALM AZTEC DRIFTWOOD RONEY PLAZA BALMORAL DUNES SAHARA BARCELONA EDEN ROC SAN MARINO BEACHCOMBER ENVOY SAN SOUCI BEAU RIVAGE FONTAINEBLEAU SAXONY CA DI LLAC GOLDEN GATE SEA ISLE CASTAWAYS HARBOUR ISLAND SEVILLE CARAVAN HARDER HALL SHERRY FRONTENAC CARIBBEAN HOLLYWOOD BEACH SHORE CLUB CARILLON LOMBARDY SINGAPORE CASABLANCA LUCERNE SORRENTO CHATEAU MARSEILLES STERLING COL ONIAL INN MARTINIQUE SUEZ CROWN MERCURY SURFCOMBER DEAUVILLE MONTMARTE THUNDERBIRD / DELANO NAUTILUS VERSAILLES \' FREE BROCHURE ON REQUEST \ CRUISE HEADQUARTERS When you see how your kids enjoy the OCEAN MONARCH - QUEEN OF BERMUDA 6 day cruises to Bermuda . . . $160 minimum winter school vacation at the Concord ITALIA AND HOMERIC CRUISES To Nassau - 7 days .. $175 minimum Maiden Voyage - S. S. SHALOM departing from New York - May 8, 1964 HADASSAH ANNUAL SPRING TOUR EUROPE AND ISRAEL ' Departing May 8 via S. S. SHALOM

CONCORD - GROSSINGERS - NEVELE you'll wish they could stay all season! Poland Spring - Fallsview - Magnolia LEARN TO SIU on 7 acres of slopes LEUII TO SKATE with Jacqueline LEARN TO SWIM - with Buster (2 T-bars), 2 Rope Tows, 3 practice Zehnder, Swiss Figure Champion- Crabbe, Olympian, TV and Movie areas, 16 certified ski instructors, on the world 's largest artificial out- Star in the glamorous indoor pool. EUROPE ISRAEL Tino Koch, Pro. Snow Makers too. door ice rink ... indoor iceland too. Sun and relax in the health club. When school shuts down the Concord opens up to tourneys, arts, crafts ... and much, much more ... New low 21 day excursion 'tare a whole new world of education. It's the school no exams either. It's a carnival week for Teeners, ·holiday crammed into one great fun week of skiing, Tweeners. •Toddlers ... counselors, baby sitters of skating, tobogganing, snow sculpting parties, the­ course. You'll wish you stayed, and stayed and fione'lmoon :},.ip,s Our S,,ecia/t'I atrical shows, campfires, -story telling sessions, stayed; it's a fantastic winter holiday for the family. CALL ANYTIME WINTER SCHOOL VACATION- Sun. Feb. 23-Fri. Feb. 28...... Zelda Kouffman Write For Souvenir Brochure. • CRANSTON TRAVEL SERVICE ~ ..• • 801 Park Avenue, Cranston .,. ~ -concom.- ''1rni1\~·, Eves. By Appt. _ ST 1:4977- Kiamesha lake, New York. Ray Parker, General Manalfi. p'1one Monticello, New York 1840. or Call Your Travel Agent IJ ~

.tq ..,-----,----.

. A subscription to the Herald Excellent opportunltlel are 1n the Herald's aualfled ads. ild Is a good gift Idea~ 'on -Your Moneys Woith JACK CARMODY SILVER (Continued from Page 4) the taxpayer a c·asualty loss de­ -■- AND MANAOIR OP such as running Into another car or duction. ELECTRIC CO. throwing up a stone Into a head­ This, therefore, puts the ques­ J. F. CARMODY & CO. light, etc. Thus the court held a tion of whether or not to claim RIMINDI YDU THAT NOW II THI TIMI ------. Also - Electrical Contractan - motorist had no basis for deducting such a loss squarely up to you. TO HAVI as a casualtylossthedamagetohls J,•• it, Industrial • Rnlclential If you do deduct the loss and an automobile caused by the breakage examining agent checks your re­ ASPHALT & CEMENT PAVING Seal-Coati•1 of two connectlngrodswhllebewas 621 lroacl St., Pro•. rurn, he will disallow the loss and DON ■ TO driving over a well-paved road. But you will then have to fight the :i: GA 1-616,C If the rods had been broken because dlsallowance or back down. DRIVEWAYS-SIDEWALKS-PARKING LOTS m the motorist backed Into a tree by ,, Here's an Important point on 13 Hartfotd AH. Free 01 • > accident, the same damage might casual­ .,.m. r timing your deductions for TE 1-9599 fstilfHlfes have been a deductible casualty. ty losses as you prepare your VA 1-1988 .o Another casualty loss headache 1963 tax rerurn. Any casualty ..,, lies In the deadly Dutch elm losses occurring up to April 15, ,, disease which has been ravaging 1964, as a result of storms, fires, 6 t-\Jititm beautiful old trees In many sections 35 EAST AVE. floods, etc., In areas officially ~ of the country and causing a sharp labeled disaster areas by I he drop In the value of properties President may be deducted on "Something tells me I For Fine Family affected. your 1963 tax rerurn - even 'The Treasury Insists that the though your loss occurs In 1964. Entertainment disease doesn't create a deductible This gives you an Immediate tax should casualty because the damage Isn't saving, and you need not wait un­ CONTINUOUS FROM 2 P.M. sudden enough, and before 1963 til 1965 to take your deduction a Circuit Court decision upheld on you 1964 tax rerurn. have DAILY 723-1945 this Treasury view. But last year, There were official disaster one courageous taxpayer decided areas last year In over one-fourth to fight the Treasury by submitting of the states. the matter to a Jury Instead of a If In 1964 you are In a dis­ Judge. The Jury rejected the aster area and are affected, take Treasury argument that the Dutch advantage of this advice on timing elm disease results In only pro­ your casualty lossdeductlonsoyou gressive deterioration and doesn't can get your tax saving as soon as kill a tree fast eno h and It ave possible. Medical Expenses Golden Brown Cria p About the only bright aspect of PINEAPPLE PANCAKES our medical expenses Is that the Your QUA.LITY OLDSMOBILE Dealer Treuury bears part of I hem Hot Syrup & Butter through permitting us a tax deduct­ 110 lrt14w1y .P■whck,t.. PA 6.0l00 EAST SIDE DINER ion. I assume you know or easily 360 Waterman St . Red Bridge can find the basic rules on medical coat deductions In any tax guide. 'The following Information Is new. In 1963, the Treasury Itself announced that It wlll let you de­ duct certain medical expenses about which we weren't sure In the past. It long has been clear that you could deduct your payments to physicians, surgeons, dentl•ts, lo, Ladies and Gentlemen FACILl'l1ES etc., authorized Christian Science practitioners, licensed psycho­ Custom made Shirts - Paiama• logists, chiropractors and osteo­ Tux.do shirts • from $10.00 paths. But this raised the question of whether you had to check a per­ With 20 yean of nP9riN1ce son's license or authority to de­ American, French and Italian atyUn9, Semi-Annual termine whether you could claim a We also converu in French, Italian payment to hlff1 u a medical ex­ and Greek. pense. Last year the Treasury answered wtth a clear .. No... ROOM 304 KINSLEY BUILDING You can deduct any outlay for 334 Westminster St. med I c a I treatment even If the Clearance practitioner Is unlicensed and Providence, R. I. ahould have had a license under local law - the one exception Phone 421-9142 being that you can't deduct pay­ OUTSTANDING SAVINGS I/ ments for Illegal operations, such as abortions. So even lf you were TI-IE treated by an unlicensed person, UP TO 50% you can deduct your payment 10 him as a medical expense. NEW In 1963, the courts widened DOWSTOW:-1 WAYLAND I he Ir Important differences of PROVIDENCE . SQUARE 220 Brook St. opinion with the Treasury over Ctr. Dorunc:t 6c Wt) houtt Sir. 180 W1 rl•nd Avt~u• which of your Insurance premiums ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL FAMILY DINNER PLAN are deductible as medical ex- (Contlnued on Page 24) Bristol County's Newest Restaura11t ... featuring fine Foods - Congenial Atmosphere

MORTON SMITH INC.

General Insurance Agents t and ! l MEDWAY MARINE CORPORATION General Marine Agents Ocean & Inland Marine Insurance

500 Doris Building 245 Waterman St., Providence

UNion 1-6800 President, MORTON SMITH Vice Pr•sid•nt, SAMUEL SNOW Vic• Prosid•nt, GERALD C. FINKELMAN Trousurcr, LESTER D. EME~S 0.- DollJ -• tllno PrL et ·Ill• ...._ ,_, L­ Socretnry, HUBERT J. ORTNER - l.-0.-Ullfll--- ~ - • - ~ ot It - Call CAstle 2-0780 . . NOW! A subscription to the Herald 0 A subscription to the Herald who "has everything" eise. Call SYRIANS OPEN FIRE N Is a good gift Idea for the person 724-0200. TEL AVIV - Syrlangunposts Is a good gift Idea for the person located across Israel's border ORGANIZATION who "has everything" else. opened fire against an Israeli DREYFUS HOTEL WALLS-FLOORS WINDOWS FRED'S tractor team at work near the NEWS TRAMSIEMT and !EAi.TN S1UIIO settlement of Notera, on the north­ RESIDEMTIAL ern section of the Israeli-Syrian TO PRESENT PROGRAM Summit - ..I •• Bleelrle CaMMt, auoo ■T RATH G7•.••aaas• frontier. The fire came from Dorothy Winn's singing students Cleaning Co. For R... rvatlons • • U We7MaNt IL Syrian positions at Darbashlyh. An wW present a program ofYlddlsh, - All Types of C'-anin1 - GA 1-6343 X&l..lftt Israeli border-patrol returned the Hebrew and English songs for the AT REASONABLE RATH residents of the Jewish Home for You've tried the Rest - Now fire. Call the BHt the Aged on Sunday at 7:30 P .M. TE 1-6729 JUDGE TO SPEAK Monthly Rates Far Judge Joseph Weisberger, Office or Commercial Cleanln• associate justice of the Superior Court, w111 be the guest speaker at the next meeting of the Nathan Bishop Junior High School P;'f .A. which w111 be held on Wednesday, at 8 P .M. In the school library. O'NEILS His topic will be "The Courts and Our Children." A question RADIO & TELEVISIO and answer period w111 follow. The meeting is open to the public. STORE TEMPLE BETI-l SHOLOM 289 Pawtucket AYe. . Late Friday evening services tonight at Temple Beth Sholom Pawtucket, R. I. will start at 8 :15 o'clock. Rabbi Charles M. Rubel and Cantor Karl PA 2-2561 Kritz wtll officiate. The topic of the sermon will be "The Sabbath of Song." An Oneg Shabbat will follow the service. MEN'S CLUB TO MEET The Temple Beth Sholom Men's Club will hold their breakfast and meeting Sunday at 9:30 A.M. The When borrow you must - come to Hospital Trust Boy Scouts will meet with the Men's Club and the Bar Mitzvah Tails and Tephlltn Club will Join them after services at 9 A,M . If each month you 're faced with problem s, .---..fi,,. __ _ Representatives of the Boy Who to pay and who must wait; Scouts of America will present the RHODE ISLAND Boy Scout charter to the club at Here's a tip we want to rive you this meeting. Why don't you consolidate? HOSPITAL TRUST . There will be no Bible cl ass Individual - Fleet Total all your bills and pay them on Sunday because of the Men's We will lend you what you need. COMPANY Oub program. CHOICE OF COLOR ------AND EQUl~MENT When it's money you must borrow TO BECOME BAS MITZV AH Hospital Trust's a friend indeed! MEMBER Girls who wlll become Bas Cadillac Che., F. 0 . I. C. Mlrzvah at Temple Beth El on Olds Lincoln Sabbath Shirah on Saturday at 10 A.M, Include Loul!Je Hartman, Pontiac T-llird daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Others Hartman; Judith Kaye, daughter S~ciolizi"9 In of Mr. and Mp. Daniel Kaye; Personalizrd ~"'ice Eleanor Pritzker, daughter of Dr. and Mr•. Samuel Pritzker; Ellen Rates Include Robtn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Robin, and Robin Wax, No Capital ln.-estment daughtet of Mr. and Mrs. Ab­ No Insurance hpcnse raham Wax. No Repair or Tire hp. 19 YEAR OLDS CANTC>_R_Y_O_L_K_O_F_F_TO SING Your Special Plates May It Used January 30th is the last day you can get Cantor Arthur Yolkoff of Tem­ Emergency Car A. .. ailable · ple Beth Israel, accompanied at We Buy Your Present Ca~s the piano by Mrs. Irving Fishman, your own Blue Cross and Physicians Service wlll present a program of songs Call PA 3-4700 at the next regular meeting of the Act before the end of this month. Young January 30th is the dead Iine . 19 year Ladles' Association, Jewish Home adults who turned 19 yea rs of age in 1963 olds who don't act by then will have to for the Aged of Rhode Island on no longer qua Iify for benefits under their wait for genera l open enrollment, probably Wednesday, Feb. S. Coffee hour BROADWAY parent's Family Plan. To enjoy the great late this year. Is at 1 P .M. and the meeting wlll value in health protection provided by 19 year olds' Parents' Get complete start at I P .M. AUTO LEASE CO. these non-profit plans 19 year olds must information and an enrollment applica­ Mrs. Edward I. Friedman Is have their own memberships. These days, tion now. program chairman and Mrs. Louis 766 Broadway no one can afford to be without it! Weingeroff is hospitality chair- USE THIS COUPON, or call or visit Blue Cross if you prefer. man • Powt. R. I isLUE cRoss I PHYSICIANS SERVICE I 31 Canal Street, Providence, Rhode Island . I Gentlemen: I Send complete membership information and an enrollment appli- for hospital bills 1 cation for 19 year olds to: I I Name • I I Street... : City ...... State ...... Zone or Zip No. for sur1ic1l-medic1I bills .______------

PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY

HOWARD S. EDWIN S. AND GREENE SOFORENKO

ALL LINES OF INSURANCE FOR BUSINESS, INDUSTRY, HOME AND PERSONAL PROTECTION

211 AMGELL STREET

UMian 1-1923 INSURANCE UNDERWRITERS, INC. A subscription to the Herald ~ -Continued from Page J Seven local Youngsters Take Prizes Is a good gift Idea tor the person who "has everything" else. ...J Dr. frischauer Criticizes Reaction .======:--::::::.JOE ANDRE'S ~ Inferiority In the confrontation and pairs that won about 20 top In Air Mail Athletic Meet At JCC with olher faiths.!' Conversations c.ontract-brldge championships In Results of the October 1963 recommendations. ORCHESTRA with other communions, he de­ state events In California. Air Mall Athletic Meet, sponsored High scorers to receive AMA Music tor that vl!ry special occasion clared, "must not be carried on He was a life master of the by the World FederatlonofYMHAs ribbons this week from Mr. King e WEDDINGS e BAR MITZVAHS strictly In the terms of reference American Contract Bridge League, and Jewish Community Centers, are Richard Sandman, 1st place of the other faith. Nor can such Its highest classification. The were received by the Providence (tie) In 50-yd dash tor boys under DE 1-1403 Res. ST 1-9080 matters be left to secularist Jew­ league Is the governing body In Jewish Community Center th Is II (Time 7.0 sec). Richard Bern­ ish organizations and leaders, North America for almost all con­ week, Indicating that seven local stein, Richard Sandman, Scott for their unders tanding and ap­ tract-bridge tournaments. It ha s boys and girls scored eight places Jacober, Jay Zawatsky, all placed preciation of Judais m leaves so about 150,000 individuals and In competition with youngsters first In the 200-yd s huttle relay very much to be desired." He about 6,000 bridge clubs as mem­ from all over the USA, Latin for boys under II (Time 31.5. added: bers. America, Asia and Europe. Eric Hoffman, 3rd place in stand­ 's "We Jews have, since Ab­ Dr. Frlschauer married three This came as good news to Ing broad jump tor boys under I I raham, been dedicated to the times, the first two marriages Richard King, director of the (Score: 6ft. 0 In.). Bruce Stras­ Almighty, and we have never ab­ ending In divorce, His first wife Center' s Health and Physical Edu­ mich , 3rd place (tie) in 50-yd PROVIDENCE dicated that function , not even was Mrs. Ella Slonitz Frlschauer cation Department, who has been dash for boys 12-13 (Time: 8.0 116 Mathe-ion Stred with the rise of Christianity. It Is and his second was Mrs. Gina stress ing a year-long program sec). Am y Sibulkin, 3rd place in as religious people that we assert Kaus Frlschauer, author and play­ of Physical Fimes s and Testing 12-ln s oftball throw for girl s Quality Clathing and r the common human dignity of all wright. for all children in line with the under II (Scor e: 46 ft.). Furnishings Persanally men. And It Is that dignity which Surviving are hi s widow, Mrs. late Pres ident Kenne d y ' s In 1962 conte sts, onl y one local Selected by Bill Vellella does not permit us to consider Greta Lustig Frischauer; a contestant , Roberta Zelrzer, the end of an injus tice as a favor daughter, Mrs. Dedda Luss at of creased by 20 per cent a year scored Internationall y (a s ixth Ben Feinstein [ . to the victim." '- Monte Carlo: three brothers, Paul and imports held to an increase of place). of Vienna, an author; Willi of Lon­ 8 per cent annually for the next ISRAELI HOOTENANNY don, an author and newspaperman, five years , the trade gap could 0 . C. HUTTER and Dr. Leo Frischauer, a be lowered by 1969 t, what the For over 20 years Junior Hadassah wtll present publisher's consultant editor here; experts here consider would be a FIRE EXTINGUISHER an Israeli Hootenanny at the home and a grandchild. manageable deficiency of $250 SERVICE & SALES lhe leader in of Arlene Feiner of 9 Lowden St., n, "•wtuc:lc•t Av•. "•wtucket mllllon to $300 mllllon. However, Serving lndu1try Since 190 SENSIBLE HAIRSTYLING Pawtucket, at 2 P .M. on Sunday. the economists are not optimistic Second Boom Year about maintaining l ast year's PA. 5-4269 An~!.~r~:~°.';:1c Cater ing mainly l o !he Pro­ We won't offe r you cheaper quality trend. to give you che aper prices. But we velopments last year was the re­ fessionol, the Execu tive ond WILL give you the highest quality duction In the trade deficit. A Citnia and citrus by-products , the Businessman. steer beef at the lowest possible nation deficient in raw materials . cut and polished diamonds and the prices al Israel has s ieadily Imported more met al s industry accounted for WANNATAN! than she has exported. In 1962, about 65 per cent of the Incr ease Tony's Barber Shop imports rose 20 per cent over those in exports . The disastrous winters Call of the previous year. that hurt the citrus crops In Europe 953 HOPE ST . AT EIGHTH ST . KELLER'S Last year, however, imports and the United States provided a DOROTHY WIENER A ppo mfmcnl!> 8 o .m . - 3 pm rose only 5 per cent, or $50 ready market tor Is raeli sales Wlll•rd Shopping Center Bus1neu Hou,s 8 a .m 5 p .m mlllion from the I 962 figure of abroad. AT Open Mondays $950 million. Exports, on the other Foreign Investment In Israel, hand, Jumped from $500 million In despite tatlcal successes by the Sherm Price's Closed Wednesdays Kashruth & Quality 1962 to $600 million last year, Arab League boycott, continued to P. S. We olso speciolize in for an increase of 20 per cent. expand from $52 mllllon In 1961 776 Hope Street, Prov . Fresh Killed POULTRY Thus the trade gap was reduced children's haircutting. NO ½ LB. ADDED to $85 mllllon In 1962 and roughly FARM FRESH EGGS from $450 million In I 962 to $400 $110 million las t year. Opinion Is GA 1-9422 MA 1-0885 million las t year. divided on whether the Increase Special While They Last This has only happened once represents speculative or long­ PICKLED TONGUE before, In 1958-59. Economists are term investment. The Government, not yet certain why all Imports , of course, favors selective long­ 55c lb. except for consumer mark et goods, term investments. NEW YORK DRESS PLEATINI CO. dropped so sharply. One explan­ JA 1-0960 - FREE DELIVERY Another satisfactory develop­ 212 Union St., Providence, R. I. - GA 1~5712 TO All SECTIONS ation ts that manufacturers drew EAST SIDE • NORTH END heavily on the stocks built up be­ ment has been the sustained growth EDGEWOOD • CRANSTON of the nation's foreign currency GARDEN CITY · WOODRIDGE fore and after the devaluation of the \ " Remember The Proof of the Israeli pound In 1962. reserves. They expanded from KNITI4EBS Pudding is in the Eating" Ideally, should exports be In- $400 mllllon In 1962 to an esti­ mated total of $500 mllllon last BUTTOMHOLES-IIIBBO~LOCK-IUTTOMS ( ' year. This made It possible for ls­ 4 DAYS DELIVERY 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 raef to settle debts amounting to $50 million three to five years BUTTONHOLES - SHORTEN LEATHER COATS in advance of their due date. LINE SWEATERS •nd KNIT COATS BACK TO MONOGRAMS Reports Eichmann's Ex-Boss On Albanian LAST TWO DAYS, , -~ ~, Police force Save SOc per lb. --~ -»~·~ -:..,,,__~ . ~ · ; ... , HAMBURG - The former ~';P~~,'"a'::;.._ Gestapo chief, Heinrich Mueller, Baldon~ -~~i, Is In Tiranna, Albania, working CONTINENTAL MINIATURES 1,.. \ \ \ . for that country's secret police, REG. 2. 19 lb. NOW 1.69 \\, ~ It was reported here this week In (t:: "Der Stern.'' Germany's largest )-:;: Illustrated magazine. In a well­ documented article based on In­ ,i; formation from an unidentified wes R~ formation from an unidentified 206 WESTMINSTER ST. (OPPOSITE NEWBERRY'S) ,~¢/ western security service, the mag­ azine charged that Mueller, long the subject of speculation, has ~... . been In Albania since 1956 and uses the name, Nakoschlrl. He Is reported to be a captain In the '~ . . secret police but with the au­ Qualified Drivers thority of a general...... Ftom a E. u1opcan Antique , Reports that Mueller, Eich­ ~~ mann's Gestapo superior, did not die during the last days of the Can Save Up To 44o/o ,~vColleclton ... "e nlfe1 "1th p11de, Second World War, have been cir­ culating In Germany for several months. In September, a court ff' this Diamond and Oriental Pearl hracelct. ordered his body exhumed from On Quality a grave In West Berlin that bears J!1=> One-of-a-kind ... and so right for his name but medical experts de- ' termlned that bones In the grave y belonged to three separate In­ the return to the "grand life." dividuals and no positive Identifi­ Automobile Insurance {jj cation was made that any of them belonged to Mueller. According to the magazine, ©I Mueller, reported to have been YOUR SAVINGS killed by artillery fire In early May 1945, actually survived and ~ J surrendered tb the Soviet forces DEPEND ON YOUR DRIVING ;} In Berlin after having made con­ $785 tact with Russian officials several weeks earlier. For a few years For Complete Details - Call ... i, Fed•ral Ta, lnc/udod su bject lo pr ior sal•I after the war, according to the article, Mueller was active In the -,~ Soviet security service. Because of his close connections with Htm­ INC. gary' s former Communist party JAMES J. REILLY, boss Ernce Geroe, he moved to Budapest to train agents. After 1990 Pawtucket Ave., East Providence RELIA~!I,~E?.~F! j!E- the Htmgarlan uprising In 1956, ·, the article said, Mueller moved GES-6300 181 Wayland Ave., Wayland Square Gi\ 1-'i l 60 to Albania, the last citadel of European Stallnlsm. NIXT TO IAIT f'ROVIOINCI Hl•H ICHOGL 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ·-

ORGANIZATION MR. DELI MAN NEWS Classified ... We have several unusual opportunities avail­ .... BRIDGE INSTIUJCTION able for delicatessen operations. Ideal locations Bridge Instruction for teen age Call 724-0200 with possible financial assistance tor the right beginners In grades 9 to 12 will be given by Mrs. Harold · Baron operators HADENOUGHSNOW!! at the Jewish Community Center 3-Apartments For lent starting Wednesday from 7 to 8:30 EAST Side, nHr Wayland. Six LOUIS NICHOLS & SON 31 MILK STREET P.M. Charlotte Goldenberg maybe rooms two baths. Modern, attrac­ California called at the Center for further tive apartment, first floor. All ap. pllances and conveniences, Janitor BOSTON LIBERTY 2-7717 Hawaii Information. service. PL 1-3692. uln Las Vegas EXTEND DEADLINE EAST SIDE (Pawtucket) ci - Cheep - The registration deadline for Near Providence City Llne ...J the Jewish Community Center's NEW building, deluxe 1 and 2 bed­ < room apartments. Electric range, ct: CALL Swnmer Canteen-sponsored Co­ <1l NEW LOCATION r efrigerator , food disposal, mdl• Ed Ski Trip for senior high school vldual heat control, parking. From :r: $100. Highla nd East Apartments, LOUIS FINK & CO., INC. Sherm Price pupils extended one week, to Jan. 447 East Avenue, Pawtucket. 776 Hope Street, Prov. 27. The trip leaves Feb, 17 for PHONE 724-3313 ufn three days at Mt. Snow, Vt,, and EAST Side, 86 Colonial Road. Six GA 1-9422 Is open to members as well as modern rooms first fl oor. 220 ;• . ,, . JUMK ~UR BUSINESS to non-members of the Center. wiring. Garage. Completely reno­ vated. UN 1-2955, DE 1- 1514. ufn t -. SERVICE FOR OVER 35 YEARS EAST Side - Newly decorated six ·fl wr. rA ,, HlfiHP:~T rR1r.,:,- ►' on COCKTAU, PARTY rooms, second. Three bedrooms. ~ . • ~ <'" 1.tp MrtA I ■ S r111p 11, ,n ■ 11:ol.' • ■ N"'" ' P" ~r• The "21-35" Club of Brook­ Oil heat. Combinations. Garage. ~ era u ■ \ ~i;~1. :~~1~~•·l' ■ ~ ~~ii ~r l'ru:,,•~;::;•: c,1~•M•u-i~~!~, COINS HO 3-8609. Une, Mass., wlll hold a Cocktall EAST s-;d-•-, -s-.,-,-,o-n-, -s-t-, ..- t. - 5-1/-, -,-o-om- ,, Speci1I Attention To Party on Sunday from 4 to 8:30 first floor. P leasant, modern, recent• AND GOLD P .M. at the Hotel Beaconsfleld, ly r e novated. Garage. PL 1-8274. PLUMBERS. CONTRACTORS & IMDUURIAL PLANT SCRAP NO ONE 1731 Beacon Street, Brookline. ELMWOOD, Sumter Stre.t · Available Our Trucks Will Call Lorge or Small Lots soon. Modern six rooms, sunparlor. PAYS HIGHER PRICES Mel Simons orchestra will play. Three bedrooms. Gas heat. Garage. Proceeds wlll go to Temple B'nal ST I-2733, HO 1-2559. LAN!: THAN Moshe. ~ AK Hlll~ A" v~e~n-u~e,- =P-,w- t·u-c·ko~t. LOUIS FINK & co, i Second floor, three bedrooms. Mod­ 0 ern. $120. 421 -6593 after 6. ufn DExter 1-613S ~j\ ~u:~ EAST SIDE TEMPLE SINAI NEW LOCATION Dr. W. Wayne Artis, executive Saab-Business Opportunities ..=,::;=.=.::-i:~~=-,r di rector of the State Council of 2 AMBROSE ST. ,::w•._,.,Nuc. ~ BEAUTY SALON - Established, rep. rRf'JVIOENCE. R I. "•r COIN SHOP Ch u r c he s , wlll be the guest utable going business. Immaculate 287 THAYER ST . OE 1-4394 speaker at Friday night services s hop with 7 operators. air condition• at Temple Sinai on Jan. 31 al Ing, P . A. System. Attached 8 room beautifully modcrnl:r.ed home plus 8:30 o'clock. attached apartment - $70 In come Dr. Artis, formerly Director of per mo nth. Choice location. $10,000 down payment - balance to be ft . Church Surveys at the Bo st on nanced . Eastern Massachusetts - University School of Theology, will $37,500. McNamara - 617-485-5520. speak on "Two Birds In the You never Bush." 21-Help Wanted - Women IF YOU need a good steady Income JCC JAMBOREE and can work only ha lf days, sell The Jr. HJ Providence Jam­ Avon Cosmetics. experience un­ necessary. Ca ll GA 1·2908. boree, sponsored annual! y by Jew­ lose interest ish Community Center tweens, has JO-Painting, Paperhanging set this year's date for Sunday, Feb. 16. Groups from Sprlngfleld, PAINTING Worcester and Brockton Centers Interior, Exterior, Paperhanging will participate In a basketball Carpe ntry, r oofs and gutters repair­ ed. Reasonable prices. Free estimates. tourney, quiz bowl, gameroom pro­ Guaranteed. gram, discussion session, buffet at F. Notarlannl supper and dance, Reservations must be made by Feb. 8. HO 1-4397 ST 1-4690 ufn WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE J Industrial National \ ACROSS 58 Mixture ANSWER TO PUZZLE NO. 792 59 Qualtty, V • L I 0 I activity Grains 'I E V A D E 0~'p AR 6 Trans· or state V '[ N I 0 E R [RIE gressions 61 Animate ~mr I< RE C T E D A II E R I ND 10 Dank 62 So. African T A R L A V A 14 Creek gun Bank D E T 0 N A T E s• Ti, II S 15 Man's name 63 Orient I C E R ■ T A X ■ s C E N I C .~ 16 Arabian 64 Majestic E L 0 E II E R I A D A chieftain 65 Terminates •• T ■ T A S T E D 111 ■ s T A N 11 Money: sl. 66 Mineral •• S T E A 11 ■ S T 0 U T N E S S 18 California springs p I C T L D U city 61 Machine C H 0 R T L E T A R G E T S 19 Snap guns • p A R T 20 Puts in 0 p u R E E L A N E writing ~~ G iliffi s p E E D .!_ L S E 22 Galleries DOWN i 24 Pierces 26 Newest 1 Dodecanese 12 Particles 36 Brown horse 21 Captivate island 13 Advance 38 Laissez - - ..... 30 Before 2 Biblical on wages 39 Forest 31 Contest country 21 Age or·······- 32 Resides on 3 Electrical 23 Proof­ 42 Redactors east coast force reader's 43 Small area 31 Curve 4 Please mark 46 ••• Rose 38 Swiftest 5 Machine 25 Severe 41 Seniors 40 Gold: Span. part critics 48 Love; Italian 41 Practiced 6 Nonsensical 27 Son of Miled 49 Drawing 43 Song 1 ··· Gershwin 28 Organ or room 44 Performed 8 Thatching smell 50 Peered 45 Helmsmen palm 29 Exclamation 53 Cleanser 48 Strive for 9 Reds 33 Dregs 55 Bluster 51 Grin 1 O Contender 34 Standard 56 Man's name 52 sables 11 Chemical 35 Iroquoian 57 Congers 54 Approve compound Indian 60 America: abbr,

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SUBMARINE GREETED sub received a greeting, and the PARIS - The Israel sub­ captain called on officials of the marine, Rahav, arrived last week French base. The Rahav had been In the French port of Toulon for engaged In maneuvers in the a few days' goodwlll visit. The Mediterranean. WHARF TAVERN (ON THE WATER, WATER STREET, WARREN, R. I.)

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,~ ./ I :s Whatever Happened To Nathan Sklar? .... It was only a little ov: r a year "I have a staff of seven workers Is In excess of three-quarters of ~ ago, In August of 1962, that Nathan In · my department. I also do Infor­ E, Sklar, former executive direc­ an acre. Forttmately, we have a ...· mal teaching to the third and number of trees but the lawn Is N tor of the Jewish Family I!,. Child­ fourth year med students, Interns ren's Service In Rhode Island, large • •. and residents. The emphasis on "Our eldest, Barbara, Is ; accepted the position of executive f amlly care and the concept of director of the Retarded Children's attending the University of continuity of care Is compara­ Connecticut. BIii is a sophomore i...., Society of Dade Cotmty, Fl a. He tively new here at the Center . has since moved back to New Eng­ (In high school) and Susan is In So, I have to develop program - the sixth grade. land to a challenging position at get Into research - work with ?i - the Yale Medical Center. "Ruth (Mrs. Sklar) has Just 9 a lively group of medical pro­ er: According to a letter rtecently fessors ... turned down an excellent job offer recel ved from Mr. Ski ar: to teach first grade In the Orange "' "I am now Chief Social Worker, "The atmosphere Is most system. It would be too much c Department of Internal Medicine at stimulating. The contrast to a after all of the movtni and ad­ .! the Yale Medical Center. I also family agency or my most re- justment. So Ruth is contending er: hold the Faculty title of Assistant cent experience with the retarded herstelf with some tutoring In re- !I! Professor of Social Work is good . • . medial reading . . . (Medicine) at the Yale Medical uwe have located in a lovely "I am only 18 miles from my School. The position Is new and suburb of New Haven. Our home home town of Meriden, Conn. So ..J~ challenging. Is located on a tract of land which my mother ls happy as a lark ..•" ~ n:-·•rr::rw:w11~uu111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111n111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 LY Cl 0 er:J: LY TRAVELERS' AID J: 1-- (Continued from Page 9)

(Continued fr om Page 14 ) through the help of Travelers' Aid , Travelers' Aid help extends The plans for the future, ac- his parents and a lawyer managed to the airport as well as the trains, cording to the Providence Preser- A~;.,,..-""!'-- to convince him to return; or the bus and highways. vation Society, are broad and am- •111H~ case of thte elderly lady from Nl!w- Among those who receive help bltious. "Many of the houses are port who was fotmd wa nder Ing from the agency It Is found that In near slum areas and In need of arotmd Narragansett Boultevard by about 15% are members of the much repair. Plans for expan- • local rabbi. She had hired a car armed services or are connected slon for the colleges In the area In Newport, loaded it with all her with someone In the armed ser­ Is necessary, while the locations documents and Jewelry and had vice. Veterans comprise another of the freeways and the traffic pet- driven it to the Boultevard where large group. Children make up terns are of grave concern for the she parked it. The rabbi r eferred 25% of the caseload, and the future of the city, as well as for her to Travelers' Aid. Meanwhile elderly make up 5 to IO'X, of those the College Hill area." the car rental agency had re.- needing help. "To tie In with the hi storic re- claimed the car and kept tevery- Where at one time it was the storation of Benefit Street, the So- thing In It In lieu of payment. Individual traveler who was clety and Impact, R. I .. are now Through Traveler's Aid she stranded and required some kind developing plans for an historic was brought back home, and there ol. aid, it Is more and more the waterfront tourist, shopping, bus!- through the help of the family ser- family group now which ha s to ness, residential and studio center vice agency, her luggage was re- be helped. along South Main and South Water turned to her. Travelers' Aid Is doing what It can now to help the lost, the / Streets. The two organizations are Even on what may seem minor also working with the Redevelop- mattters to some, the Travelers' stranded, the confused, who travel ment Agency to create a larger Aid wlll spend the time to help from place to place. As the com­ park along North Main Street at the thoSI! who need It. An elderly Hun- mlmity learns to refer more cases site of the Town Spring, where gartan Jewish lady, with work of this sort to Travelers' Aid, they Roger WIiiiams and his followers promised her In Rhode Island, wlll be able to help these people to first planted the Colony of Prov!- bought a through ticke t from Oslo, solutions of their problems. dence Plantations." Norway, to New York and from There Is a great deal to be done, ~-~~~"1!~,..._ •(li..":[,S..,.,; there to Providence. When she and It will be many years and need arrived In Providence It was found the work of many people before tbat she had paid twice for the Nl!w Call completion wlll be!nslght,butwlth York to Providence ticket. Al- the work and effort of dedicated though the lady wa s not destitute, 521-2255 people there ls no doubt It wlll be the $9 and change which the Thank you! \ accomplished. So much has already View of terraces from rear of 98 Benefit Street Travelers' Aid was able to get been done. back for her wa s Important to her. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111u1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111H1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111m111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 'Hands Of Peace' Created ) I By A~az For Loop Temple CHICAGO - A massive two­ ture was shipped In two sections ton sculpture wa s dedicated re­ for assembly here. Azaz spent cently at the Chicago Loop Syn­ more than two years in the work's agogue. Named ''Hands of Peace,'' development and execution. the bronze and brass creation is ,Only 40, Azaz has been the latest contribution of fine art artistically-oriented since the age to the city's central business dis­ of nine, when he began carving and trict. noting the skllls of stone masons. The sculpture was com­ Later, he attended Hebrew Unl"­ missioned by the Synagogue and Is verslty In Jerusalem, planning to the gift of the Col. Henry Crown m a j or In archeology. However, f amlly, leading Chicago Industrial­ World War II changed his plans ists. It was created by Henri N. and he Joined the British Army. Azaz, Internationally noted Israeli It was at Hebrew University artist. that he .. discovered" sculpture, Cascading letters of the Bib­ and while In the army he began lical text of the famlllar priestly carving small figures In wood. blessing, In Hebrew and In English, At the end of the war, Azaz went to form a major portion of the work, Holland and served steveral years which wlll Join the Synagogue's as apprentice and student with world-famous stained glass win­ various masters, Including those dow by Abraham Rattner. In the field of stained glass. He Max Nierman, president of the not only gained proficiency In this Synagogue, In announcing acqui­ area, but also embarked on a sition of the sculpture, said: "as career of executing expressive a house of worship In the Loop, ceramic figures. the Synagogue Is making stlll an­ Azaz' first large sculpture was other contribution to the cultural acquired by the Victoria and Al­ treasures o'f the midtown area. bert Museum In London, England. The choice of subject, the priestly At that time, too, he received his blessing of the Bible, symbolizes first architectural art com­ our hope that this Synagogue may mission, a mosaic mural for a serve as a source of blessing to Southampton, England, department our entire community." store. The text, from the book of He returned to Israel In 1955 Numbers 6:24-26, Is as follows: to establish a ceramic art factory "The Lord bless thee and keep and school. In 1956, he was In­ thee; the Lord make His face to vited by the Museo Internationale shine upon thee and be gracious de Ceramics In Italy as the only tmto thee; the Lord lift up· His forel!fl exhlbl tor. cotmtenance upon thee and give His most recent fame was won thee peace." by his sculpture which adorns the The metal sculpture of the four huge, structural columns In hands Is executed In stark out­ the Sheraton-Tel Aviv hotel. line. The hands, superimposed on In the Unltted States, In addition the letters of the text, are ex­ to the Loop Synagogue sculpture, tended In bl!nedlctlon over the Azaz created the wrought Iron entrance to the Synagogue. gate for the Museum of Judaic& In Created In Israel, the sculp- Highland Park, DI , ., -I

-"'

PREAMBLE A NEW Feeling a sacred obligation of worship to God in accordance with tlie faith of Judaism; to foster loyalty to this religion, to pro­ vide our membership with anopportunitytocultivatean understand­ ing of and love for our Jewish heritage through learning; to partici­ pate in all community activities that are essential to the continuance of Jewish life; to translate the ethical ideals of our faith into actual conduct in our homes, in our vocations, andin our intercourse with REFORM our neighbors to the end that our society may be enriched thereby and that we may help bring about the establishment of God's kingdom on earth, we do hereby ordain and establish the following constitution for the Trustees and Congregation of Barrington Jewish Congregation in the State of Rhode Island. '­e> TEMPLE ~ -< "What we need Is a religious institution could properly satisfy their needs. This, to Mr-. Fain, they have used the Temple OOlcers ef the Barrington Jewish Cen- ~ that will serve the needs of a young, subur­ he Insists , Is the advantage of such a Sinai equipment and the Temple Beth El ter are Barnet Fain, president; Jacob • ban community," says Barnet Fain.presi­ temple as that which has been started In rabbis. As a matter offact, Rabbi Jerome Portnoy, vice-president: Robert Glashow, i dent of the newest religious addition to the Barrington -- at least Initially, and pro­ S. Gurland of Temple Beth El conducted treasurer; Mrs. Cltfferd Hostetn, cor- ,c:r,. family of temples and synagogues In Rhode bably for a great number of years. "There their services last Friday. responding secretary, and Mrs. Marvin Island and of the third Reform temple In Is a sense of community that C&Mot exist The Barrington Jewish Center held Greenberg, recording secretary. I the state. In a larger urban temple," says Mr-. Fain. their first services during the 1963 High Members of the board of trustees are ,, During the past few years, Barrington, "The 'Heart of Judaslm'talcesltsform Holy Days and at each monthly meeting Joseph Fath, Harry Firestein, Harvey which for most people for many years, was In the relationships of Individuals In the a rabbi fn,m another congregation has Lapldes, Clifford Hosteln, James Radin, equated with Conlmlcut, Riverview, BoMet community -- the sense of participation conducted services. By next year they hope Dr. Kurt Rose, Sherwood Kahn, Alfred Shoes,1 Narragansett Pier, as a resort to and creation, of working together, which to be able to held Sunday School classes for Rosener and Dr. A. J. Shatkin. visit for the summer season only (because makes a better Jew and a better human the children, They have held some social The aim of the Barrington Jewish of the nearby beach), has become a subur­ being." affairs, Including a Chanukah party, In Center as Mr-. Fain sees It Is always to ban center for the young couples who are He cites as an example of the sense the future there are plans for adults point to eventual stability and a secure looking for room In which to live and In of community existing within the family, education courses and more frequent 1 religious, educational program of the which to raise their children, of children and parents working together, services. highest order. This push to the suburbs has, of course, the building of the Succah this past year been going on for many years throughout which parents and children worked to the country, and ln an area on the coast build together. "It's an educative process and as small In size as Rhode Island, the for the parent as well as the child," former beach communities have all be­ CX the approximately 65 Jewish fami­ come permanent, all-year round, residen­ lies living In Barrington and nearby com­ tial areas. munities, approximately 40 families are The Jewish population, as well as that members. Of these members abeut three­ Barrington Jewish Center of other groups, has moved into Cranston, quarters attend the services which are held

EASTWARD CENTER-1960

EAS1W ARD CENTER - (Xflcers of the Eastward Center In 1960 were ' Robert Hodosh, Seymour L. Cohen, Mrs. Robert Hodosh, Dr. Ralph Povar. At the bottom Is the kindergarten class at the Sunday School sponsored by the Eastward Center.

OFFICERS - OOicers of the Barrington Jewish Center are Robert Glashow, treasurer; Mrs. Clifford Hosteln, corresponding secretary; J Jacob Portnoy, vice-president; Mrs. Marvin Greenberg, recording sec­ retary, and Barnet Fain, president.

Warwick, East Greenwich -- and In the each month at the Barrlni,:ton Congrega­ opposite direction Into East Providence, tional Church. Reverend William Tate Riverside,. Rumford, Bristol, Warren, Scott and the members of the Church have Seekonk and In comparatively larger num­ been extremely good to them, Mr. Fain bers Into Barrington. With the growth of says, and most generous. the Barrington Jewish community and ad­ "Having a religious temple In the joining areas, has come the realization for Barrington area." says Mr. Fain, "is the need of a Jewish religious, social and generative of membership in Itself," since educational cente:- - for adults and he feels that the lack ofrellgious facilities ch,!ldren. - in the immediate areas, In many cases, The Barrington Jewish Center, whose has been the only characteristic In keeping Constitution and By-Laws were formally many Jewish families from moving to the approved on November I, 1963, according area. Also, he feels, that many families to Alfred Rosener, a member of the board who have riot as yet joined will do so in of trustees, Is an offshoot of the East­ the near future. The entire congregation ward Jewish Center which was formed In at Barrington, he Is sure, anyway, within 1954. Barnngton vice-president, Jacob the next several years, will probably not Portnoy, was the last president of the grow to more than 125 families since he Eastward Center before It was decided to does not think the population movement to to dissolve the group. Barrington will be too great. The Eastward Center was fonned pri­ "As there are gradations between marily as a social group and also con­ Orthodox, Conservative and Reform, so ducted Sunday School classes for their there are gradations within each, " and he children for a while, but, certainly at the continues, "I feel we will develop our ewn beginning, anyway, ·had no Intentions of type of Reform temple which will satisfy setting up a religious center. our needs." The Barrington Jewish Cent.er, how­ When it comes to building, Mr. F&in ever, has been set up primarily as a re­ estimates that It will be four or five years ligious center which will Include the edu­ (perhaps Jess) before It becomes econom­ cational and social areas as well. ically feasible, or that they will be In a Mr. Fain feels that the Jewish com­ position 111 consider a building campaign. munity of Barrington (this Included also Mr. Rosener pointed out that. finding Riverside, Bristol, Seekonk, and the other the land would be their first concern, and cities and towns in the Immediate vicinity) although he agrees that It will be a while Is unique. He says It Is a homogeneous before a building campaign can be started, group: It is composed of young people -­ presumably the members of the cengrega­ average mld-30s; all are of approximately tion are keeping on the lookout for a likely the same economic status, and on the tract of land on which they will eventually average are more intellectually-oriented. be able to build their temple. He feels that a small, suburban community temple will best serve the needs of this Temples Beth El and Sinai, the two type of person, particularly at the start. other Refenn temples In Rhede Island, He questions whether a large urban temple have helped them a great deal. Accerdlnf '

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,I ~BENEFIT

iS-TREET..., <>- I"\ "Since Its Incorporation In 1956 ~ the Providence Preservation So­ t<. clety has helped to save more than • 75 of the nearly 300 Important O houses built before 1830 In the Col­ :.! lege Hill area. Four private cd?n­ !:J panies have been formed to buy and ::Z: restore the houses. and more than o a mllllon dollars has been Invested ~ In the historic area. Benefit Street ..J Is once more becoming a beautiful !!l early residential stree t and res­ t,i tor a ti on Is continuing al I through § the oldest part of the city." :x: To the uninitiated - or perhaps, a: one should say, to the un-notlclng t1l - Benefit Street Is Just another i:; street In Providence; one of the narrower. more difficult streets through which one must maneuver to get some place else. BEFORE AFTER If one does notice any of the buildings, it Is the larger, more NUMBER NINETY-EIGHT BENEFIT STREET Imposing structure which catches the eye. The smaller homes (Which The James Burr House (1786-1798) at a glance seem quite s mall) at­ the rebirth of a tract a passing look only. Perhaps, a new coat of paint may be noticed Owners: Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Levy (and quite a few of them have had In 1786 Jabez Gorham, ('father of the silversmith), and James Burr, that riew coat of paint recently). listed In the deed as a saddler, bought as 11 tenants in common" the land But the beauty of the newly rebuilt neighborhood this house stands on ('formerly the property of the Beneficent Congrega­ and remodeled terraces in the rear tional Society) from Job Shelden for that most valued form of currency, of the homes; the loveliness of "292 good silver Spanish milled dollars." The house, listed in the Direct newly redecorated rooms inside The home of Mr. and Mrs. etc. before the house was even ln Tax List of 1897 as the home of James Burr. was probably built soon cannot be seen in a casual iiance. Theodore Levy at 98 Benefit Street a proper condition for them to move after the purchase of the land. On Gorham's death in 1902 his share was To a native of Providence - who Is one of the newly remodeled into. Although there are fini shing seld to Burr, and in 1806 Burr took out fire Insurance. It remained In has been un-notlcing - It comes as houses. It took the Levys a year touches to add, the house is very Burr's family until 185 4, when it was bought by Stanton Thurber. In 1898 a pleasant shock to see what has of scraping paint (on one staircase attractive and most comfortable. Sarah Thurber sold it, and since that time the property was sold and been done and what can still be done ten coats of paint had robe removed • From Benett t Street, thJ s resold until 1958, when it was acquired by Burnside Incorporated. It was to homes which Just a short time before the original wood was house as well as many others of purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Theooore Levy In 1961. Like William Snow's a~o were no better than fire traps reached) , of raking down walls, the same general architectural house next north , James Burr's house was built on a five-room, central ln many cases or slum clearance building staircases, removing style, seems comparatively small chimney plan, bur with the add ition of a two-story ell in the rear. The material. moldings and replacing moldings, -- one might estimate that It was pedimented doorway, like that of the Sarah Helen Whitman house, Is of a two-story cottage with six or the Ionic order, and ls semewhat more elaborate than the Doric order used for other doorways ~f this type. Here the pediment is decorated NUMBER FORTY-THREE BENEFIT STREET ::;;: n:~~~dA~r~~,1t c~~f;; _~~~ with a modllllon cour se. and the frieze section between the Ionic pilaster rooms in all -- and most of the caps and the pediment Is of the cushion form that is part of the Ionic The John Jenckes House (1773) rooms are quite spacious. A order as depicted In many eighteenth century handbooks. On the Interior, modern kitchen has been built in a the stairway Is original , and like that In the Snow house, is set against room which originally was used as the chimney in the small front entry, rising In three steep turns to the Owners: Mr. and Mrs. J. Kevin Ott a parlor. second floor. Several of themantelsinthishouse had been removed, and The one dlsadVantage which [n 1773 Joseph Whipple, listed in the deeds as a yeoman, sold fifteen some of the woodWork altered In the Victorian period. Mantels suitable may present Itself to the lazyper­ in character to the perlodefthehousehave been ins tc!led: and cerntces, acres of land lying between Benefit Street and Ferry Lane (now Hope son, are the steep, narrow, twist­ Street) to John Jenckes, an Important Providence merchant, who soon window trim and chair rails, copied from the r emaining original trim, Ing stairways running from fl oor now replace the later work. Wainscotting has been added In the northeast built the two story gambrel roofed house with Its great central chimney to floor. They are attractive, but that stands on the northeast corner of Jenckes and Benefit Streets and and southeast rooms on themalnfloor. lnan old house built on this five­ the thought of running up and down room central chimney plan, the kitchen was normally placed In the cen­ fllled it with his large family. (A list of the Inhabitants of Providence them constantly Is tiring. Thefour taken in 1776 shows thatthe Jenckes household consisted of eleven mem­ tral rear room . In the restoration of tfus house, the kitchen has been re­ Levy children, Diane 10, Joslyn 7, located and is now in the northeast ('front) room. The old kitchen has bers of the family and seven "blacks"). It is one of the few gambrel Alison 4, and Jonathan KJm 4, roofed houses left In Providence, since most of the remaining Providence been converted Into a living room overlooking the garden and the view don't seem to mind the stairs at of the city. houses were built after such roof lines were out of fashion. In 1790, on all. John Jenckes' death, his son Joseph drew this portion of the property The surprise, however, to one and was living here when the United States Direct Tax List was taken In who has never been in one of these 1798 , and when the house was described as "self-occupied, 40 x 3?, feet Benefit Street homes, comes In with an addition of one room IS x 10 feet, two stories high, all wood and look out over the entire city below, Not only does the restoration of the remarkable view from the rear there are also the beautifully land­ this and the many other homes on was taxed for $1500. In 1835 the property was acquired by Ebenezer windows of the house. Kelley In whose family It remained until 1913, after which it chaged scaped .. back yards" which have Beneftt Street and the other near­ Besides the fact that from the been made lntoterraces, havebeen hands several times. It was In a very dilapidated condition In 1958 when height of Benefit Street, one can by streets help Improve the ap­ Burnside Incorporated bought It to restore as part of the historic re­ rebuilt and replanted. pearance of the city of Providence, newal program being undertake(\by the Providence Preservation Society. but they provide lovely, com­ The house Is now owned by Mr. and Mrs. J. Kevin Ott who have carefully NUMBER THIRTY-SIX BOWEN STREET fortable and unique homes for restered the building, replacing the front door with one that follows the living. outline of the original doorway discovered during work on the house. On the Interior, the original stairway, which has especially good detail, has The Samuel Richmond House (Continued on Pa11e 16) been carefully repaired, and all the old mantels and trim In the house have been retained. The restoration also broughtto light the huge kitchen fireplace which had been fllled In and conlalned at least two smaller fireplaces. This fireplace, now the outstanding feature of the back living room. has been framed with molding copied on a somewhat larger scale, 'taken from the cornice moldings found In the house. Some of the original mantels had been removed and these have been replaced with mantels belonging to the period of the house. The mantel In the south parlor came from the Daggett house In Pawtucket, andthatln the dining room (north) from a house formerly on North Main Street In Providence.

' M - ►- •- •-~ • - - -•- ... -- _ _... ___ ... - -••

Let's Talk It Over

Just the other day a group of young may sense a religious awakening and have Young people look to achieve three college students brought forcibly to my a surge of Interest In beauty, art, music, things at least, each one of which Is a attention their Ideas of .-esponslbllltles science and other Intellectual adventures. struggle. He must make Independent de­ and obligations for themselves. The So the world around him must be pre­ cisions ~ Importance and Independently strength and conviction of their thinking pared to guide and help him achieve these face their consequences; his desire to be substantiates my belief that young people new ambitions. a sholesome part of society must be try to find acceptable ways of behavior. This must be done with awareness ~ developed, and he must gain the maturity There are, however, concerns not only the young person's questions and In a and ability to take care of himself In all about the hardships Involved In their own cooperative way that allows com­ respects. These adjustments are analned changes and adjustments from adolescence munication between the young and the more on an Individual basis so that some gain to adulthood, but how they can manage to mature adults, because sometimes the these goals earlier or later than others. get the adults and society around them young person Is uncertain whether he This struggle Is at all times a real­ to understand what they are trying to wants to grow up, not wanting to, or not l!ttl.c one for each young adult and for accomplish and the reasons that they, as knowing how. He al so wants to become those others about him. The process of young adults, want to gain their goals. more Independent and less dependent on grC'Wlng up Involves all these people and In. a sense, young adults have to rise others. While he does not lose love for for this reason, while the responsibilities above the setting In which they live. his parents he becomes more questioning and obligations of the young person must Essentially, all young people recognize of them and their behavior. For this be carried out finally by him, It must be By Herman Goldberg the obligation for a good standard of per­ reason alone parents must grow up with done In a coordinated way wl th other N... formance for themselves and their Im­ and to, their children as the young per­ adults who are sympathetic and sensitive Executive Director mediate group of friends. They see re­ son becomes more mature and asserts to the ambitions and desires of each grow­ Jmah Family 1k Children's Ser-nee i sponsibilities to their family, their school his lncUvldua!lty. Ing generation. ... activities, and their religious endeavor,. In all of this they look to themselves first because It Is basically their own adjustment and their own Ideas of how to accomplish these adjustments, that puzzle them. They need and want, at the same time, all the help theycangetfromothers. For this reason parents, educators, coun­ fc;~p-;;-~~--- sellors and rabbis should be considerate, thoughtful and precise In their approach ~ By Jeffrey Berger to young people and their regard of them. Young people and adults need to recognize that In late adolescence and ·10 early adulthood, there Is almost a new News From The University OJ Rhode Island beginning for these Individuals. Great I changes take place, physical and spiritual and the character of young people seems easily affected by events. Young people are strong but sensitive, their emotions , may not be too easily controlled, they have bursts of energy, sometimes fleeting Interests, and yet may question the con­ trols around them. In spite of this the adolescent fights his way Into adulthood. Another controversy on film obscenity ••• Watson What he does therefore Is to achieve House restoration underway ••• new issue of censored ◄ good development, understand and control student literary publication coming. These are the top his new Impulses and desires even If It news stories from URI. Is not done In a smoothly coordinated fashion. At this same time the young adult CHIMES Memorial chimes for the late President Kennedy are the goal of a new organization recently What's formed on campus. The or­ ganization, the John F. Kennedy Memorial Chimes Fund, Is seeking Your Opinion? $7500 with which to erect the memorial. Other suggestions for a campus memorial to the assln­ ated chief executive are. being made. Among them Is the suggestion that the Uniftrslty"s '" new library, under construction. ,. be named for John F. Kennedy. 'THE BALCONY' The Catholic chaplain at URI, Edmund Mlcarelll, NINA HOCHMAN 0 14 Daughter of has condemned as obscene ..The Balcony," a motion Mr. and Mrs. William Hochman picture shown recently to an audience of over 400 1n Lyman St., Pawtucket persons on the URI campus. Rev. Mlcarelll called Samuel Slater the flhn an "obscene and blasphemous excursion Into a world of perversion... Mlcarelll Is the same person I think that because the age Is going by who objected to the showing of "Never on Sunday°" so fast and everything Is maturing around several months ago, The conflict over who should see him, the teen-ager has no chance not to what continues • • • · grow up so fast. I think they definitely are growing up faster. I think because the age Is progressing that the teen-ager sh o u 1 d WATSON HOUSE progress also. Restoration of the 174-year old Oliver Watson House, oldest structure on the URI campus, Is under­ way. The construction started many weeks ago and It Is expected that It will continue for several more weeks. The administration of the University threatened last year to demolish the old structure. When cries of anguish were ral-1, President Horn said that U the structure was to be restored. students and other contributors must foot half of the bill. This they have done, and Watson House Is being restored. Students. generally, are gratified to see the structure being made a permanent reminder of the history of the University. 'PARADIGM' A new issue of "Paradigm,• the student literary publication which caused a furor several months ago when the administration censored It, should be off the press within a few weeks. Ball1n1 , an essay by RICHARD HOLLAND, 16 1/2 Son of student writer Tom Hardie_ was censored because of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Holland alleged obscenities which It contained. The URI com­ 34 Wilcox Ave., Pawtucket munity Is watching with anticipation the publication Pawtucket West of the new Issue, to see U any new policies have been adopted or U the old ones have been more clearly Nol No, I don't think teen-agers grow up outltned. too fut now. They do more than 'they used • • • to and meet more people. I think that parents WRITBR.0S NOTE: - - Although I bad Intended to com­ are stricter now than they were. I don't think ment upon the censorship ol Paradigm, this comrneat that teen-agers should marry ao soon. and I will be delayed 1mtll the new Issue Is published. [)&. d«l't feel that they should have their own cars pendant upon the c:otents ol th! ■ winter 111• Is It 16. whether any comment will be made, Student reacitt.. to the Kmmedy Memorial project will be examined further In the nnt column.

+ JEPF PRILUCK• 16 Mr. and Mrs. EU Priluck ~ TEEN-AGERS 69 HIII'Yard St., Pawtucket P.,.tucket West

I definitely think teen-agers are growing up faster because of the age we're µvtng In. it"s mostly the challenge of the present dsy that makes us mature faster. I think lt"s beaer to mature faster. We become observant of things around us at an earlier age. I feel that the present age presents a challenge. e~ iWhat's Your Opinion? ~ I !

RICHARD WHITE, 17 Mr. and Mrs. Sol White 102 Fowler Ave., Pawtucket Pawtucket West

I think that girls grow up faster than boys. Teen-agers now try to do adult things too soon Uke staying out late nights, etc. It"s a follow the crowd deal - they do It because everyone else does It. I think lt"s all right for the older teen-ager - when 11 he•s 16 or older ~ but not for the younger ones:

JO ANN STONE, 15 Dr. and Mrs. Leo Stone 16 Kenilworth Way, Pawtucket Samuel Slater

MAACIA STONE, 16 1/2 I feel that too many do grow up too Dr. and Mrs. Leo Stone fast and I don't think they should. It" s not 16 Kenilworth Way, Pawtucket the parents who are pushing them but they Pawtucket West think they're growing up and · do what their l friends are doing. They could stop If they I don"t think they grow up too fast. In wanted to, and they may want to at a later the years before teen-agers didn't grow up time but then they can' t change. They feel as fast because their parents wouldn't let they're beaer than everyone else. Their a~ them - they were too strict with them. But tltude ls wrong and only they can Improve teen-agers are more Independent now and them selves. If a child has too much Indepen­ feel that they are older and I think It ls beaer dence, he feels his parents are much more that way. I don't approve of teen-agers gealng lenient and he begins to take advantage of married as young as they do however. them. The children and teen-agers of to. day can"t comprehend adult problems, and no matter how mature they are they do not act as adults would.

ARNIE KOfLEN, 16 1/2 • • • ~ • . . Mr. and Mrs. Irving Kotlen - - • 82 Oak Hll1 Ave., Pawtucket •• - - - Pawtucket West No. In general I don't think so, although In • some things they are growing up too fast. But . fve heard stories about teen-agers who used •• to drive at the age ef 12 or 13. When It comes to dating I suppose they are growing up too • fast, and I don't think lt"s a good Idea. For . some people who mature faster lt"s all right; •• but some people Just can't do It. Children who grow up with older people usually mature faster. · • BARBARA REVICIN• 15 • Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Revkln •• 104 Wilcox Ave., Pawtucket Pawtucket West • . I think there ls no definite cut and dried •• opinion. Each person matures differently. I think socially that teen-agers don't lead quite as sheltered a life as they used to. In some • cases they are capable of handling adult .• problems. I think each Individual case Is different. You can't say which Individual will • be able to handle a problem or not until • , •. he bas tried. . • . -. -. (

t By CELIA ZUCKERBERG So You're Going To Get Married?

A wedding day in the life of a woman is THE day. Regardless of divorce statistics and voices of gloom, every woman intends to marry just once, and she wants that one day to be the finest in all ways. A wedding day to the parents of the bride means, and the temple has been engaged. ;:_, of course, joy and a slight tug at the heart - but He feels that the date should be > it also means money, aggravation, sleepless nights, set eight months to a year In ~ money, despalr and more money. advance. ~ However, although money is required under any Several weeks later he calls -< conditions, there are ways of reducing the tension, again. He also has checked with ..., the aggravation and the despair usually attendant the temple. 1be arrangements ... which he will take care of for the :;; upon marrying off a daughter. . bride Include the date, the hall,? Of course, the major problem is that, unless you the rabbi, the number of people, have five daughters, and this is the wedding of the the Invitations and the malling of fifth one (if you've managed to survive the first four), the Invitations, and goes on to .you have had no experience at planning an affair of the caterer, the flowers, the this sort. liquor and candy and cigars and nuts, the orchestra, the photo­ The question of the menu, the orchestra, the grapher, the setting up of the re­ gowns, the pictures, the rules and regulations of the hearse! party the evening before ceremony, the flowers, the incidentals, etc., etc., the wedding, the rules of eti­ etc. are all new and foreign ground. quette which guide the bridal lrving Rosen, whose name and orchestra have party - and the many other de­ been well-known throughout Rhode Island for many tall s Inherent In having a well­ run, happy wedding. years, was more or less forced into the position "No matter how much money which he now fills - and he wouldn't change it for they pay," says Mr . Rosen, .. they any other. don't pay me as much as I work. But I get a certain satisfaction from the work." A sample of a work-list he has which lncludPC only the Incident­ He Is a consultant on weddings, has heard of the problems of als reads tn part: 8 lbs. assorted bar mitzvahs, and all sorts of newlyweds with friends whose nuts - no peanuts: 2 cartons parties. He specializes he says sense of humor is a little tmu sual assorted clgarettes (and these "In l()(),t Jewish parties - about - and so the poor young couple come In all colors and sizes), 1()0 70% weddings, 20% bar mitzvahs find themselves with suitcases - cigars; form for local newspaper and the rest In showers, engage­ several miles from home - which for write-up. Make sure photo Is ment parties and other lcinds of don't contain their clothes: orwtth at new spaper office JO days prior affairs." newlyweds who have forgotten their to wedding; l bottle kosher wine His work - which consists of tickets , etc. for ceremony. And a little note talcing the load of responsibility off There Is also the couple with at the bottom adds "It ls cus­ the shoulders of the harassed whom he went on the honeymoon - tomary for the Groom to pay mother of the bride - may give He found himself after the wedding for the Rabbi and Cantor, also to him many hours of labor, but he at the Logan Airport getting on the buy the Bride's flowers." obviously has found a great deal plane with the newly mar r I e d Indispensable to him In the of satisfaction In the solving of couple who were going on their office work and other aspects of the many problems of those about honeymoom to Florida. However, this business which since 1953 he to be married. he was really not Interfering - has carried on at an office at His experiences have been he was heading for the graduation 1001 Main Street In Pawtucket amusing, heart warming, and al­ of his daughter. (Where Crossley Electric Is also ways soul satisfying. He says that Mr. Rosen has been interested located) Is Esther Clark who has several of his bridegrooms have in music for many years. He been with him for seven years. falnlted - or almost anyway; he attended the Conservatory of Music She Is the one who, besides has been confronted by a bride who In Boston, where he majored In handling the ordinary routine work has been unable to move at the harmony. He has been playing with of the office In the matter of bill­ proper moment and has to be per­ orchestras since 1928, (When he Ing, telephone answering, typing, suaded to start down the aisle. He was still In high school) though he etc., also handwrites the unusual notes Mr. Rosen sends our to members of the wedding party for Mr. Rosen goes through wedding rehearse! with his the rehearse! party and who puts daughter, Sandra, who was married to Irwin Hazen on the tiny wedding and engage­ last April. ment ring in the corner, or other IRVING ROSEN little marriage reminder; It Is Miss Clark who prepares the place cards. and does any extra work on malcing up !he unusual type of favors which Mr. Rosen uses at his Consultant On Weddings weddings. During the years he has been Insists that when he first started small way at the beginning. He worlcing on the complete co­ playing with his brother, Al Rosen, fotmd that there was less con­ ordination of these parties, Herb whose orchestra is as well known fusion when he helped with some Talon whom he calls his "right as his own and with whom he was of the details. hand" has taken charge of the or­ associated for many years, he A heart attackaboutelghtyears chestra arrangements, which he must have played pretty badly. ago, first stunned him, and then finds little time for now. His brother, however, against the directed him on the path he has He has arranged for the objections of the other musicians been following since. mirrors in various places so that In the orchestra, Insisted his The doctor had told him he the bride may dress and see how brother was going to continue with had to take care of himself, ~o she looks - he has taken care of them. He was playing the banjo, have no aggravation, not to climb such small details as having extra guitar and saxophone at that time. · stairs, and gave him • the usual bobbyplns around, safety pins, all In 1934 when the Dreyfus Hotel sort of advice which doctors have the little things which can be needed was opening and looking for a band, for those who have suffered from and which no one will think of at a he went with four others to get a heart attack. time like this. He makes sure there the job. According to Mr. Rosen, At the beginning Mr. Rosen Is a sheet for the bride to stand "Papa" Dreyfus said "I like this says he sulked around the house on so that the bottom of her gown band, Their music I don't like . • . for three or four days expecting won't pick up the dirt of the floor. but I like the way they dress and to drop dead at any minute, with­ He checks to make sure that the I like the way they're sitting here." out any Interests of any sort, ring and the license have arrived And so they were hired. The one - and feeling as though his life with the bride and bridegroom; he or two month job which started had come to an end, makes flight arrangements, but, In 1934 lasted until 1940 when Then came the Idea. Up to he laments, (except for the one Mr. Rosen was married, His wife this time he had offered a few accidental flight) "They never take was worlcing days and he was work­ services along with the music me on their honeymoon." Ing nights and the arrangement was which his orchestra supplied. Why But although he won't concede not at all satisfactory, he says. not offer a greater service? Co­ the point, what must have been He Is associated with the ordinate everything - from be­ the most exciting and most nerve­ Crossley Electric Company with ginning to end. wracking experience of his life was Horace Crossley - who also And that Is what Irving Rosen the wedding of his daughter Sandra helps out with the weddings when Is now doing. Most of his work to Irwin Hazen on April 7, 1963, help Is needed. Is done with the mother of the He will say that his wife was as During the war, he worked at bride - and the bride herself. nervous (or maybe more nervous) the shipyard, and It was after the "I seldom see the father. I only as the. mothers of brld!!s usually war that he started to play at the get the question - How much? are - and although the wedding Quonset Officers Club where he How little?" went off beautifully, with no hitch was for three years. When he Is first cilled Into or trouble, Mr. Rosen undoubtedly And it was here that he started consultadon, he finds out the date heaved a sigh of relief when ltwas helping with the weddings - In a and checks on whether the rabbi over and well-done. Sy Beryl Segal

Recently I read an article that astonished me and no matter how late he was at Simi we never dared go disturbed me. The article was written by the able to the table without him, and his place at the head of Journalist Samuel Grafton and It was concerned with the table was always reserved for him. No one would the problems of the so-called "teenagers." even think of sining In his place. We were to wait till Is It the youngsters that have special problems, he was ready to make the Kiddush over wine on Sab- or Is It perhaps the parents of these youngsters who bath Eve. We were to listen quietly when grandfather are In need of counseling and treatment, I asked made the blessing over the bread at every meal, and myself. no one dared to light the lamp on Sabbath night until Youngsters In various parts of the country were grandfather was ready. He had a habit of lingering at Interviewed by experts and what they found about the Shu! on the nights of the Sabbath, and we were sining hopes and fears of the group called teenagers, Is op- In the dark and waiting Jor grandfather. poslte to what we usually think we know about them. And no onewastodlsturbgrandfatherwhenhe took But what Interested me most was what these one of his midday naps. youngsters feel about their grandparents. Mother would meet us at the door and motion "Why don't our grandparents live with us, the to us with a finger at the lip: "Sh••. sh• •• grandfather way they live with their children and their grand- Is sleeping." children In story books? "these teenagers ask. Grandfather was the Shober and Bodek In our GRANDPARENTS AND "They (the teenagers) want grandparents like tawnier. He slaughtered and examined Insides of the kids had fifty years ago, and they feel something Is cattle and the sheep according to the Jewish laws. Ar. missing In their neat little suburban houses without the time I remember him be was no longer a Shobet. TEEN-AGERS them." He disqualified himself when he m>ticed tbat his bands Another expert says: were no longer as steady as a Shohet's bands are "Many of them feel very lonely. They are not supposed to be. But he was still a Bodek. 1be butchers sure who they are, what they are doing on earth, or would bring to him the lung - and - livers ol the room. He would sit at the table, books piled up all where they are going. They are searchlngforldentlty. slaughtered animals and be would examine them over It, and he would beckon to us to come near him. The teenagers Interest In grandparents stems from thoroughly. He would ask the butcher to blow them up He would put the younger ones on his lap, and he would a h°P-" of finding a clue to continuity and purpose In again and again and he would feel every Inch of the put his arm around the older ones, and he would life. • lobes of the lungs and the liver before he would pro- squeeze us to his body and bug us, and be would be- In another place we read this statement: nounce them Kosher. stow a kiss OD the cheek of the baby. He would ask us "They (the teenagers) miss the large, old I knew the anatomy of animals from early child- what we had learned In lieder and he would listen to fashioned family gatherings which would give them hood, by watcblng my grandfather at the Bedllcah, at us recite to him the portion of the week. more Important parts to play In family life and ease the careful examination of the Internal structures of As I recall the warmth and the glow of these the Isolation they feel." the animals. evenings I wonder whether this Is not what the young- I recall my grandfather, the only grandparent I He removed himself from active Sheblta In favor sters of today crave for? knew. He was my mother's father and he lived with of my father who succeeded him. But he was still a It Is worth thinking about. I advise you to read us. Rather, we lived with him. He was considered In teacher of Shehlta to younger men. lbere were al- this report on teenagers. It may surprise you and everything the head of the family. ways a few men aspiring to become the Shober In astonish you and give you a different perspective on He was quite advanced In years at the time I their townlets. They were srudylng with grandfather a the youngsters of your friends and neighbors. Maybe remember grandfather. But his voice was that of a year or so and he would give them the required cer- of your awn youngster as well. young man, and be walked erect, and never used eye tlflcate. Studying himself and teacblng others were the • • • glasses except In reading. He never missed a day at two things I remember about grandfather. (Mr. Segal' s opinions are his awn. His views. are Shu! and he stayed there after everyone else left. But In the evening we were allowed to go Into his not necessarily those of this newspaper.) llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNNHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIRIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

'A Good Service To The Community' 'I

As "a good service to the community," and to raise money for their organ­ izations, the Youth Groups or Temple Beth El and Temple Emanu-El ran a Book Fair during Jewish Book Month. Phyllls Ackerman of Emanu-El was chairman, with the assistance or Rene Sternau and Tobey Hirsh of Beth El. All types of books about Jewish things were displayed - they covered Biography, Judalca, Israel, Novels, Reference books. the Jewish Home, History, Religion, Teen-age, Juvenile and Children's Books, etc. \ The orders for books were taken and placed through a book store. Those ordering the 1· books received them by Chanukah. The Book Fair attracted a great many people - young, old and In-between. Among the very first, and probably among the youngest was Barbara Goldman, shown lower left, with her mother Mrs. George Goldman. Although Barbara let her mother ,1· do the selecting, she was Interested. Another early comer ls shown In the upper right. Brina Hohenemser ls shown surrounded by the members of the Book Fair committee as she selected and paid for her book. Left to right, they are Paula Korn, Charles Brown, Sue Semonoff (rear), Brina, Phyllis Ackerman, RonJad MIiien, Stanley MIiier and Rene Sternau. In the upper left are Rene and Phyllis and bottom right shows how the number of people Increased as the actual opening or the Book Fair took place. because ol Newport and Quonset they are mostly nav_al personnel - who come In asl tors, will confer with Dr. Joseph r Smith, city Health Director, con­ .c sult with Rhode Island Hospital "ll or make a direct referral to :,0 Oiapln Hospital, 6 A recent survey in Troy, Al­ ~ bany and Schenectady, N,Y,, shewed, according to Mr. van Soeren, that $40,000 was being handed out annually by clergymen at all faiths, service station operators, and other groups, to people who had rlUl into problems in traveling. The same sort of thing occurs In Rhode Island. Mr. van Soeren' s aim ls to MRS, EDWARD HYMAN inform the members of the com­ mlUlity that there Is help avail­ Two little boys, nine or ten years old, were searching their pockets for able that many people do not l

By CELIA ZUCKERBERG On Train, Sus, Airplane, Automobile ...

What started originally Just to exceed $25 supplied when worker sitting at the Travelers' He has been an International take the people off the street - neces sary for a meal, a train Aid desk Is very often that of social service worker In occupied a soup lcltchen type of offering - ticket, overnight housing, gas.ollne, evaluating r equests. She must be Germany as a team leader of the and went on to offer Information or for some immediate emergency. able to notice If a seemingly casual Netherlands Red Cross bringing and direction to help persons from The society works with city and request for information ls simply refugees and other victims out of place to place, has now become an state organizations - fa ml I y that, or only an excuse masking the COIUltry; he served In Austria organization which finds the ma­ assistance and welfare agencies, the traveler's real problem. again helping refugees and dis­ jority of its time, 80 to 90%, ls local special agencies, clergy­ Also, as in the case of the placed persons. Only last year, spent on people seriously upset by men, service station operators, man who came to Travelers' Aid he was "borrowed" by the United the collapse of their travel plans. etc, Nationally it works with other with his two children and tickets to Nations to serve In Katanaga in The society's case-books In­ Travelers' Aid societies and if some far off town, and wanted the the Congo, as the chief of a camp clude runaway children, people there isn't one in or near the city agency to make sure the children clearance section. As a member who are traveling because they are or town which they must contact, would get to his estranged wife, of the team of social workers, he trying to r\Ul away from their pro­ they get In touch with YMCA wtlts, Traverlers' Aid had to check. helped bring out of Katanga and blems, older persons who are lost, city welfare agencies, other ser­ They folUld that the wife was In place in other colUltrles, 60,000 and people who have started for a vice agencies, etc, no position to care for the child­ political refugees. destination but for financial or Mrs. Hyman, who with her hus­ ren. In this case the problem was The Travelers' Aid Society has other reasons cannot get there, band and two children, Toby 15, referred to the Children's Friend doubled Its caseload in the last few psychiatric cases who have to be and David 12, lives · on Fosdyl

1003 MAIN STREET WEST WARWICK Students!! GORDON ARGO RENT A -'Under the i~ TYPEWRITER Yum -Yum Tree" Nealer Work _, BAR MITZVAH - Howard Sha­ TO BE SOLOIST - Miss Molly GOOD, CLEAN , NAUGHTY FUN! " Means Better piro of Benjamin Street, Paw­ Stark, concert and opera star, will Adm. $3.40, 2.90, 2.40, 1.75 - Curtain 8:30 p .m. tucket, became became Bar Mltz­ be one of the fearured soloists at Marks ·=-"""""---. vah on Oct. 12 at Temple Beth the Memorial Concert and Con­ SPECIAL BUS SERVICE! • 6 :45 East Side (Thay•,) • 7 :00 Sheraton . 8iltmor• We have lhe largHt HIHtion of David. vocation to be held at the Rhode Dire(t To Pl.AYHOUSE lfondard, and portablH in town. Following the Mlncha service Island School of Design auditorium Round Trip fore 50( • 7 :20 Ga,d•n City a buffet dinner-dance was held In For ReHrvotions And Information • 8:00 THE PLAYHOUSE Lowesl Renlal Rales Anywhere on Wednesday. This affair Is the THE PLAYWARD BUS CALL 128-2443 • 1 :30 Curtain his honor. Out-of-state guests principal event planned by the a 3 attended from New York, New $3.somonth $9.1smonths more than 35 R. I. Jewish, re­ Jersey, Connecticut and Massa­ ligious, social and Zionist or­ RENTAL DEDUCTED chusetts. IF PURCHASED ganizations who are sponsoring Maternal grandparents are Mr. the planting of a 10,000 tree OODS@ and Mrs. Sigmund Dressler of Kennedy Memorial Forest In Norwich. Conn. Paternal grand­ Israel. MUSIC styled by PEWRITER Co. mother Is Mrs. Pauline Kaplan • • 84 EMPIRE STREET Miss Stark has been a soloist of Central Falls. at Radio City Mus ic Hall with the ' New Yerk Philharmonic Or­ chestra. Maurice Samuel, well­ known author, will be the principal speaker. Thomas H, Pearlman Is Glenn general chairman of the com­ mittee.

MAIN S1REET. PROVIOENC[ . R t Jordan "-' ' jf11~ ; O~c~ Supplies .o ,. l{r. · _ "IQ • Sh1pp1n9 Room .,, :,:, - -.....,,,~ - · · 1 Supplies 6 : • Rubber Stamps Attention: Nurses, ~ Beauticians, Waitresses, OFFICE Interns, Etc. EQUIPMENT R.nted & LNMd Po d•o• Sul .. ,._·- ◄- -~·, ...... CONVENIENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS liqht! ' .,_- ... ~,.. ~ GA 1-1192 PA 2-3526 "'... 263 Weybouet St. 41 lroad St. Pawt •t lnow W"ighs Only ~;::Li • PLANNING • LAYOUT • DIIION ' .-~ : C 8¼ I 1· . Ounces Enioy li9hf-w&i9M frMdom ond unmaJch~d cushioned comforl. Available In Sizes 4 to 12 .• • AAA to EEE

Exper'1y Filled of Your Homfl, Office, or 6u1 in•u Eslabliihm•nl. Miss Cecile Galer Married In Miss Cecile Galer. daughter of Island. Florida, Israel and Mr. and Mrs. Morris Galer of Michigan. · 16176 Kentucky Avenue. , Given In marriage by her par­ 40 ORMS ST., PROVIDENCE, R. I. Mich., formerly of Providence, enu. the bride wore a noor length became the bride of Herbert L, gown of silk with long po Int e d Cohen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron sleeves and fitted bodice of chan- CALL DE 1-8086 OPERATORS ON B. Cohen of 24036 Berkley, Oak tilly lace. and a scoop neckline DUTY 24 HOURS Park. Michigan. on Sunday. Nov. 3 fashioned with chantllly lace. . Wes • Tecllfts httteUetiN at Congregation Beth Aaron. Rabbi sequins and pearls. Chantilly lace RUG and C'-ilot fitti"t & leyi"f Benjamin Gorrellck, assisted by and four small bows accented the • • 7 DAYS A WEEK Cantor David Bagley. officiated at hemline of the full skirt. She wore CARPET • a.,.;,;"' • l)ye"'f & Motlll Proofi•t the 6:30 P.M. ceremony which was a matching crown ofchantillylace, • Stor.,. attended by guests from Rhode and carried a Bible covered with white orchids and streamers. S.111uel An4 ..rt1eNI Green Mrs. Shirley Cyldert served u LADIES! Have You Made Your Plans Yet? matron of honor for her sister. Her street length sheath gown of azalea To Attend: United Order True Sisters Annual solk tame was fashioned with a Luncheon Fashion Show - "INTERNATIONAL FROLICS" scoop neckline and fitted elbow length sleeves and a small cabbage Benefittin9 National Cancer SerYice rose accented thewalstllneandde­ rf _( At: Sh~ratan - Biltmore Hotel tachable oversklrt. Miss Phyllls '· On: Wednesday, January 29 at 12:15 P.M . Cohen, sister of the bridegroom, •- I ' was maid of honor. She was gowned : I Grants to be presented to Miriam Hospital and In street length candy colored satin -- ,~ , Roger Williams Hospital and chiffon. Chiffon accented the fitted bodice and neckline and the For Reservations: Mrs. Ben Pou/ten - ST 1-1112 satin bell-shaped skirt was caught 11.S.NAJL at the cwnmerbund waistline with a small bow. Bridesmaids Miss Betty ldelson and Mrs. Ann Chucl­ now wore azalea street length gowns of delune taffeta with de­ tachable side wrap tunic over­ WOOL CHEST, Inc. skirts with large self bows. The bodice featured high front scoop necklines dipping to lowered V 287 lufflntto,t St. backs. Herman Chudnowwasbestman. THIS IS ONE OF OUR Yarns Ushers were Harvey Olson and Ronnie Holzman. Joel Cohen. brother of the bridegroom was 337,111 · BRANCH OFFICES Knitting Instructions Junior usher. THAT'S RIGHT. Sterling Savings is as close as your nearest The mother of the bride wore mail box-a mere 5 hours away by jet. And what's more, Ster­ Woolen Skirt Lengths a street length sheath gown of ling Savings pays Air Mail Postage BOTH ways- makes it aqua silk the bodice of which easier than ever to save with safety. was covered with sequins and Every Sterling Saving's account is insured up to $10,000 by an agency of Blocking and Finishing Work pearls. The bridegroom's mother the federal government. Family members can open several accounts - wore a brocade gown of aqua. individual, joint and partnership accounts. All are fully insured. HOURS Mr. and Mrs.JosephGrossman Sterling Saving' s accounts are a legal investment for Synagogue, co,porate, of 16 Glenham Street, grandparents union. tru::~d pension plans. of the bride, and Mrs. Rose Berlin, Mon. -Sat. 10- 5:30 Fri. 'til 9 grandmother of the bridegroom, I were also Included In the wedding % procession. . i.~~;,,,Cl;.... ~ Mter a weddlng trip to Florida, ~((~ ' BROWN UNIVERSITY the, couple are now residing In 4 their new home at 21432 Butter­ Acconts •P to $10,000 Member et F1d1ral NNII Lu■ lhllk Sytt1111 Evening Extension Division Courses crest Avenue, Southfield, Mich. lns■r1• Q F.S.LI.C. • (Current Annual Divide nd ate) Starting the week of February 3, 1964 HONOR LAWYERS INSURED SAFETY TORONTO - A nwnber of Applications being · received for Extension courses in AN- · FREE NO RISKS FROM MARKET CHANGES Jewish barristers were among the ROCKET COIN BANK THROPOLOGY (Cultural AnthroPOlogy), ART (Painting and 79 named Queen's Counsel In the FUNDS ALWAYS AVAILABLE American Painting-history>, BOOKBINDING, ENGLISH AND New Year's list announced by the 13" high - red, white and LITERATURE , GOVERNMENT , MODERN LANGUAGES (French . vlnter, Mark Orkin, Carl A. Stone, •Thereare337,111 German. Italian, Polish. Po.rtuguese, Russian, and Spanish>, $u//.hmn ${J//)tllZ(/R!i and David Walflsh of 'toronto: and mail boxes in the U.S. ~~D-:,;.:.y AaaOCIATI01/ MUSIC (Singing and Voice Building), PSYCHOLOGY , and MODERN DANCE ( for women). r------~STERLING SAYINGS & LOAN ASSOC. Dept. DM Business courses are offered in DATA PROCESSING , ENGINEERING RIVERSIDE, CALIFORNIA WASHIN'.JTON - Thenational ---~-~-- Please open my account ment - Principle and Practice> INVESTMENTS !Investment origins quota system In U.S. Im­ as shown below, and send your free coin bank and literature. Attach names, Ana lysis Through Industries Studies), METALLURGY (In­ migration laws "has perpetuated a amounts and descriptions for tddltlonal Insured accounts.) . pattern of discrimination that tar­ troductory Physical Metallurgy), PLASTICS (Thermoplastic NAM~------­ Extrusion Technology>. and PURCHASING . globe," Sen, Abraham Rlblcoff, ADDIH,~------CoM. Dem., told the Senate Sub­ CITT------~'ONE-STAT~------For descriptive folder, write or telephone Brown committee ,on lmmlgratlon and University Extension Division, 130 Angell' Street. nPE 0, ACCDUNT, I•-) INOIVIDUA.______,01NT _____ Providence 02912. Rhode Island. Telephone UNion Naturallzarlon as It opened hear­ COll'IIIATE O PAITNEISNIP □ tTNEI 0 1-2900 ;-- Exten~ion 397. lngs.. on the need to revamp exist­ Ing Immigration laws, ---No Chlra1 Par Transfer at Funds From Other lnItitUtions _.:___