R.I. JEWISH HISTORICAL ASSOC. 130 SESSIONS ST. PROVIDENCE, RI 02906

,... JERl)SALEM: Shimon Peres( as solution to the problem of the 's new ~abor Party candidate ·stateless P11lestinians must be found X ~ "'..-,- <~ for Prime Minister, is attempting to in the framework of a link with Jor- rHF .l/\.' 'r fl\iGLf,H JEW1SH vVEE' needed Jo cli:an. the buiiding slaff mell)ber~ h_ave_'already. begun Melvin G. J,\lperin • .bonorar vlce lion, Mr_ Peres assured factions a,iil ready it for_ reoccupancy, ac: detaileaplallning (oi:, the mo~e. president; Harris N·. Ros.en, vice • · within tli'e Labor alignment, par- cording to Mr. Alperin. ' Y Following the residents' transfer "president, and ren. .omjn;,ted as vice .-iicularly left-wing e)emcnts, that he ·.,whe.!' completed, the new Je-~• to their new · quariers, 'the' west presidents ~were Stanley P. Bia- · adhered to the Labor Party plat­ ish Home for 'the. 1ged will be the wing I the Home, constructed• in c!Jer, ·Mrs. Leonard. I. Salmanson, form a nd that the label of largest skilled nursing.:Care lacility 1932, will be razed and the. space Herman· C. Selya and Edwin S. "hawkish" was erroneous. in Rhode ,Island ~nd is expected to used for the main entrance, a Soforenko. ' - In some measure, the label was meet the needs ol the state's Jew- parking lot and gardens. Remain­ · Also named were. Louis Baruch applied to -him by the left-wing ish community for many years. ing- rooms in the east wing arc Rubinstein, secretary; Mrs. Man­ ~apam Party - a part of the The formal dedication ol the scheduled for complete renovation, fred I. Weil, assoc,iate secretary. Labor alignment that voted to stay structure' is scheduled to .take with part of the structure being re- . and. Joseph Galkin. executive vice with the Labor Party despite president.emeritus for lile. previous antipathy toward Mr. place in August,- served for the use of the Home's P-eres. . Accordin·g to Mr. Alperin, Day Care program. Mr. Holland was vice president of the Federation from J 969 to · Th.e Mapam members have been 1975, · In 1962-63, he served· as critical of Mr. Peres because they Beth El Sisterhood Plan_s, chairman o[ the Rhode Island Is­ Honorary vice presidents are _,feel _he is mon;.Javorable to con­ rael ·Bonds drive. He is a member· Benjamin Brier, Ira S. Galkin, tinued Jewish settlement on Arab · 4,nnuaf ln·terlaith Day of the· e)(ecutive committee of Stanley Grossman, Samuel Rosen, lands than either Mr: Allon or Mr. Temple Emanu-EI and a trustee of Alexander Rumpler and Melvin . Rabin. "Social Dilemmas- A Jewish the Jewish Home for the Aged. ' G. Alperin. While Mr. Peres says he opposes View" is the th.eme of .the annµai Presently -serving as chairman. Newly 1:1ominated· members ol settlements in the West Bank that tnterfaith Day which ~ill t,c.spon- of the Howard Development Cor- the board ol directors are Mrs. are not authorized by the sored by the_Sisterhood of Temple poi:ation, a non-profit organization Max Alperin, Gerald · Arbor, Government,. he is' reported to have Bcth· EI on Monday, April 18. . ·founded to ·-develop the· Howard Abraham I. Aron, ·stanley I. Co­ discnetly abetted the ul­ ~ This day long program will _ faciliJy. he was r.ecently also ins hen, Alan S. Flink. Stephen 'M. tranationalist Jewish -settlement of I ~start with registration at _8:45 a.m, volved in forming the Governor's Garfinkel; Edward Gol\lberg, Ed'. Kadum, near Nablus, by permitting ward A. Greene, Mrs. Merrill L. a defense subcontract for a I and- will continue through 3:30 Commit'tee-...on _ the HEAT Pro- I p.m. gram which ·raised m9ney /or Hassenfeld, Stephen Hassenfeld. weapons-part plant·oper,ating there. - ·Following remarks by Ruth H. , people in need of oil to heat Lawrence Hopfenberg. Sanford I. Kadum•was not approved by the Wolf, Pearl M. Pitterman and _· hol)les du'ring the recent winter .. Kroll. · government, although it is now Bonnie N. Goldowsky, coordina- A graduate of Brown Univer- Afso, Michael Marks,. Mrs. more than a year old and thriving. .tors of Interfaith Day, and a film sity and Boston University. Law Benjamin Mellion, Prolessor Ja­ Co1mll-1eM...- "A . People Reborn", wor,kshops .Sch_ool, Mr. Holland has been a cob Neusner. Richard Oresman. The Labor Party platform, which will be held on several subjects. member. of the Rhode Island Bar Richard M. Oster. Bernard R. Mr. Peres ~as repeatedly said he en­ Pollock, Sol L. Resnik, William dorsed in recent days, contains Among the workshQps• subjects since 1951. While serving in the L - Robin. Leonard M. Rurnpler, some concessions to Mapam by will be "Evolution of the Jewish United States irmy, he also -at• · Dr. Michael Ryvicker, Dr. Steven sanctioning the return of occupied Family," 1 "Love, Sex and Mar- tended the University oT Mt1ine Sack. Lawrence Sadwin. Charles territories to Jordan in -a settlement riage," "The Seekers: Today's- and Amherst College and received Samdperil, Meyer S_aval. Irving · and, in effect, barring further Youth," "The American Jewish· a degree in civil engineering. He is · Sigal, Howard D. Silverman. Shel­ Jewish enclaves in sections of the Woman- A Changing Role." "The president ol ·ttie E. Rosen Com- th don S. Sollosy and Norman D. West Bank likely to. be restored to Aged;' "!\merican Judaism: The ilLeednt, Temple ~-= - El; Victoria pany and 1he American Chemical the Jordanians. · Jewish Dilemma in Affiliation," erberg, associate professor de- Company. Tilles. · Members ol the board w!Jo have But he · has disturbed some "Israel: Dilemmas of a New Na- partment of psychology,' Rhode ls- Other nominees include Martin "dovish" elemen~ in the party by tion,.. land College, state· representative I. Djttelman. treasurer; Leonard been r.!inominated are Samuel Bel­ General Assembly of R:hode Is- Granoll, associate , treasurer. Continued on Pa e 22 Continued on Page 22 Speakers for the workshops l~nd; lrvi'!g Kronen~erg; executive . Named for area vice presiden will ipclude Paul L. Segal, execu- director, J~with Home for the arc· George Miller. 'Burrington, tive dircc:tor of the Jewish Family Aged of Rhode Island; 1Seymou Everett ~erlinskY., Cranston; M.i- A Children·s Service; Dr. Harold Krieger, director of education of ,c,hael Josephson{ ,Newport; Samuel , SEE OUR Musiker, director. department of Temple Beth El, and Geraldine Shlevin~ Pawtucket; Di. Alden H. 1 • psycholOI)', Rhode Island Hospi- Faster, president of the Bureau of -Blackman, .Providence; Dr. Robert SPECIAL NEW CAR AND CAR CARE 1al; Rabbi Leslie Y. Gutterman of Jewish Education. G. Weisbord. South County; Mit- Teinple Beth El; . Rabbi Ricl!ard Mrs. Norma U. Levitt, vice chell s. Rillkin, Warwick, an.d SUPPLEMENT IN THIS WEEKS R.I. HERALD Marker, llSIOQate chaplain and di- chairman. Union of American Le1.1er A. Macktez. Woonsocket rector of Hillel. Brown Univerlity; Hebrew Con1retation1, past presi• Honorary prcsideJits besides Muine Kronish, auociatc direc- dent, National Fecleration of Robert A. Riesman arc Mt1K Al- PAGES 9. 16 ler. chaplain'• ataff• . Hillel. lrown Temple Siaterhooda, will be auest perin, Merrill L, H1menfcld,- ~~1ity~ Rou1- ,(:phn, pre1i· . ,~~er. · , , :,,., : . •:. ~ra_11k ~!chi alld Je11eph·W, RIii. ••••t M~•..,.A '· •. / .\ ,J / 1:::-t':c,>J ii IUl"IA VAO!Sl"{ <1 IMl"H M'/~PRI .,, rm : Hcral4 _advertiee.~ ~~ng to1 van!apofthe.Heraldbefoi:e,you~o .) N ' . ;}t'·• • · • . ~0~,.*- -. ,...,..~.. ..,.,,,...,,.'. .-. .. ~ , :ro·-OPEN. .~uu,1noN--, rour doo~tep .•· wid§.• var-iely of out on· rouP!:nex_t;;id)~tns, tnp. ' '. . ".",· . "s·~~-- ..,,. . ·.' .. : ....:.--Mi;::.C,xtii6i1id'n',(if •. prints. · lirilw- mcn:hand·se and''services. Take ad-- You may be pleasantly surpnsed, , ,: ,. ,0 .1ee . .:'.;.·-.' t•:"·-.,:::~ ..." · - ings abd collag_es by: Riva.·Lewite~: · · paintings by .cia,re~A._~Ra~toul. PARK AVENUE KOSHER ·SALE-A-BRATIOr,1 ' AFfERNOON OF JAZZ .·· and. kinetic aluminum· sculplure by A Sab:~a-'Bration ,w.ill be held by · The P.trivin ~1he ·lawn of· Inc John . dence Ari <;:iub on.Thomas Str~L enue· ,on Friday. Apdl · 22, from . Brown House on, the corn~r of Mrs. Lcviten, now a Prnvidence - G ALS APRIL 15 APRIL 21. . 9:~0 :i.m: to 3 p.m. Mrs. Max Benefit . a.nd Power Streets· on •csident, was raised in ·ealifornia, COOKE_P IN OUR KIKHEN - RAIi Fainiych amt Mrs.· Theodore F. April 11 _at 1'2 p.m.1 (Rain -date is ·;.,here she graduated from UCLA . low are eochairwomen for the·af- • April 23.f · · • {a rii'ajor in apparel . design), and . ra;~ ·. , Featured will ' be · The Mike also studied at C:hoinard Art ,In-· ROASl'BEEF , . $4~u;_ Featured · will be · ha~d crafted Renzi Trio; Rose Weaver: The siitute of·Los Angeles, California. items such ~s iote'-bags. ·canvas log Ger~y Gentry Quartet, and the Mrs, Rantoul · also lives- in a-.,;.... carriers. hand .decorated boxes. Bob Davis Quartet. Ant.Fnlt"-n aprons. quilts, knit go~s, summer • . • • Providence. -Now primarily a hats, needlepoint pillows, door· PL,\N DANCE · · paint.er. she majored in .sculpture stops a,nd accessories. Also.

,IDA FISHl:R· - man or Ne"'.ton Highlands, dence for more than 70 years. ' · Sugaflllan· Memorial Chapel con­ Massachusetts; a sister, Mrs. Lillian Mrs. -Fisher was ii life member \, dU:cted funeral services on' Friday';" Vine or Florida; two brothers, Dr. of Temple Fmanu-EI, the Jewish .' April 8, ror· Ida Fisher, 93,. or 393 Malcolm Winkler or Providence · Home for ihe Aged of Rhode ls­ L~oyd- Avenue, who died in Fall and El[ Winkler or Pawtucket; and land and Fall River, Massachu­ ;River, Massachusetts, April ·7. She three grandchildren. setts, and' The Miriam Hospital. was the widow, of .Harry Fisher. ••• She also was a mel\lber of the ·Bu'rial was ·-in ', lincoln Park BENJAMIN S. MALIN Provi~ence Hadassah, Congrega­ ,"cemetery. · . · Benjamin S. Malin, 66, died·tn tion Sons of · Zion, the Pioneer Mrs. Fisher war a life. member of the-air crash in the Canary l'slands Women's Association and the Na­ . - Temple Emanu-EI,' th·e Jewish on M_arch 26. Services will be held tional Council of Jewish Women. -,Homes, for the Aged in Provid<;nce in California, The son of Harry She leaves a son. Sidney G. - and Fall River, and The Miriam and Gussie Malin, he was born Fisher of Providence: two daugh­ · .Hospital. and educated in Providence public ters, Natalie Percelay of Provi­ She was also a member · of schools. He studied at the Univer­ dence and Zelda Gourse of Fall · Providence Hadassah, Congrega­ sity' of Michigan and graduated River: a grandchild and two great­ . · tion ·sons or Zion, the· Pioneer from Massachusetts Institute of grandchildren . .: w~m·eQ's Association . and the Technology as a mechanical engi­ . . . National Council of Jewish neer. JOSEPH FOX _-·women. · His· career starte include·11 son, Neville Winkler' er ' late Nathan and Lena (Gordon) Fain. He was a lifelong resident of ~rovidence; a daughter, Lois' W~\i!: Zurier. She· halAIMY' ,liJBI . · ~ JE'RUSA).:-EM (JTA): Rabbi J Gad ,N,von; ! SS, was appointed i · 'cblef army i,abbj. He " replaced c. ;--wlio took 11 post in 1h11 Ni:tiolfal $ilcurit~ ·Gotlege. · J Navon, who.owasbor_n in Mbr,oc­ c9, -is the lint,Sej,liardi ra.bbi in thi~ . position. He h.elp~tl'lind the halach1 solu1ions.. fqr .allowing , '.'iigunot" ·~ (wa,, widows), -~h!)SC · husbands'. , -bodies had not been-founll, to

\' , 20 years Hpetience l . :CALL 723-3498 , GO El AL-ISRAEL. · ~N1vi'' Visit - CELEBRATE 10th YEAR .Our NEW' REUNIFICATION OF JERUSALEM T- - NO FRILLS FAREii Shlrt :, · HOTELS $5,00 & UP Restaurant · CALL•TODAYI Ml!, AND MRS. 'HARRIS N. ROSEN have been ·appointed chal~n of the & . Corner: Jewish Feclenation of Rhode hlancl'1 ·1977 Annual Meeting., It.ha\-~ . Cocktaii ·Lounte '·· }~;,- _;;, ·:,->\' ' an-need by _RolMrt A. R~n, preside_?-! ~n,tlon. ,, $, ,_ .!' -~ ··~ -!, - .... - • < ' ,. ... "SUPER SPECIAL .Gf AU.1111DS NIGH.TS" ·· ·· · -·-- ?-- ... A'-1-C · GOURMET BUFFET ', ...... hliy ' 7, TO OBSERVE HOLIDAY and> one each evenin·g. for teen­ ALL YOU CAN EATII' -~:=--~ · Israeli · Independence Day and agers and adults. · · · •SIZES· · Aa,lllce ' ...... $ffl the Day of Remembrance-will be • · FuFther information may .be - WEl;W~SDAYS 5-9 5' 5 -., c, ..... ,,...,$459 observed on' Wednesday,· April 20, obtained by- calling Carol Palombo: SC!t.!DAYU-8 _ / ...... H,,.....,...... $219 at the Jewish Community Center. at 737-0010: Allawtill A memorial service for Israeli • • • .au. R ...... soldiers who_have (ought and diM ·•HAPPY llOUSE_- PLANTS' "ITALIAN NIGHT" ·· _Tl...... _ sn, will b!; held at -7 p.rrl. Readings Brend~ Korn will speak on . COlOltS E laV.... fna$239 from traditional pFayers and He-' • .. Happy House Plants''· at the ITAUAN R ...... fnlll $2" brew poetry, literature, and _also. meeting of th~ ladjes' As~~iation SPECIALS .- 4,s Fun Is The Nome Of _S lNA..-. fnnt$1 · readings from ' the soldiers' own or the _Jewish Home for the Aged The Game At writings will be prese·nted . . Judy on Wednesday. April 20 at 2 p.m. Pl\JSI . Paris ..... $ffl Berman and Amy Silverberg, stu- Tea will' br;: served at I p.m. · TVISDAYS 5 to 9:45 Bobby's S. Fraclsce fna $1ff dents at the New England Acade- Tours of the new building will A Fun Place to my of Torah, are coordinating this be conducted after the meeting by Roller Skate service. lr,ving Kronenberg. executive di- TWIN LO_BSTERS lHJllsa,-t .... Pllt. Following the service. an Isa rect11r'of the Home. , BOILED- 7 .95-- 721-4260 raeli cafe, Cafe Atarah will be Chairman is- Ruth Katz · an.d BROILED· . . opened to celebrate Israel's 29th members or the hospitality 'i:om­ RSHERMAN birthday and the 10th .anniversary ' mittee are Evelyn Blaz.ar, Eleanor or the reunification of Jerusalem. Bohnen and Selma Fishbein. · f~AY_ NIGHTS . ·-('I The cafe· will reaiure Israeli ·mu·sic ·•. • · • • I and dancing. a strolling guitarist, OLD TIMERS NIGHT · and Israeli food and wine. . An Old Timers Nighl for mem- i\ACK. ANGUS Chairmen of the commihees bers· only ,will be held .by the 20 oz. 5,s. preparing· for the evening are Joan Touro Fraternal A~sociation ·on­ STEAK · Bork'ow, Julie Gulterman, Bruria Wednesday,. April 27. at Temple With Potato & Salad Bar lmber·and Amnon lnbar. Beth ·Am. . Monday thru Thursday . • • • -- Dinner will be served· and en- YOUTH FORUM tertainment will be presented by A Youth Forum, pan or Boston comedian Mel Simons. PRINTING Wt,dv-Q-W1al Volunteer Voi'ces '77, an all-day • • • 1 lb. N.Y: SIRLOI Specialists in Fast, Low­ conference on volunteerism, has ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE Cost, Quality Offset Printing completed its plans focits segment Temple Beth Torah and the ·Bu- 1 Jb •. DELMONICO of the seminar. The Youth Forum reau or Jewish Education will ob­ With·Pot9to 595 will explore volunteer opportu- serve l~raei !~dependence Day at and ·Salad Bar 100 c~":· s3~~· nities for and with students from 4 the temple on Thursday, April 21 Th" price hasn't changed SINCE"19651 Fri., Sat., Sun. _ to 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 28. at 8 p.m. - • 8½ "x 11" page, black Ink, one side. The conference itselr will start at 9 Rabbi Gerald B. Zelermyer ESERVATIONS SUGGESTED Additional 1OO's Just 1 ½ ¢ ea. or less. a.m. at the Central Congrega- will conduct a ceremony com­ . ~ .oe!as Available. tional Church on · 296 Angell . memorating Israel's 29th Ann/­ '42-1211 12111 No. Moin · Reiervoir Ave., s1.;itrowldonoe 274.0t44 · Street. • • • versary. Dr. Robert Weisbord, a Opp. Garden City : 11231'111tRd.• WlfWicll 73Nl30: · professor at the University of 10~St.. l'Nwldoncie S1-6111i; DINNERS SERVED 5. to 9:45 TO HOLD EXHIBIT Rhode Island, will speak on .. '[he. !)YER HO PIP"S NATIONWIDE Max Rosen· will hold his first Law or Return- Racism or 'His- · gallery exhibit of his photographs torical Necessity," . LUNCHEONS through Thursday, April 21, at the Dr. Weisbord has been teach­ DAILY from 11 : 30 a .m. art gallery or the Jewith Commu­ ing at URI ' since--1966. He holds a nity Center of Rhode ·1s1a'nd. PhD in History from New York The Center's gallery will host a University ·and is a specialist in. wine. and cheese reception in hon­ African Histo.ry and in the Arab.; - '. - - or of Mr. Rosen's exhibit on Sun­ Israeli conOict. ·, · day, April 17 from 2 to S p.m. • • • ·If you· lose a )oved one... The Jewish Community Cen~er MELA VEH MALKA - art gallery is.open to the publfc six The Bureau of Jewish Educaiion Sympathetic help: is available immediately days a week, Sunday tlrrough Fri­ and the Jewish C9mmunity Centet.._ , . ,' , day, and 'four evenings, Monday will cosponsor- th~ir .'annual Me.la­ •' : through Thursday. veh Malka oo Satu.rday, April .23, ,j 331-3337 - , I at 8 p.m. at the Cen'ter.' . ' day or night Dr. David Neimun. guest l · PWP speaker, ·will present ..The Impact . ' ' - ~ The Provicjence Chapter or Par­ of the Bible ·on Americurl His-· ents Without Partners'· will hold a tcry... ' : · · ·, ' ,. · ,Mourit-i w M~morial Chapel gene,al business meetina., . on ; As professor ·.of theology"· a.I "' ,1- ' • • .• Sinai., , Thursday, April 21 at 8 p.m. at Boston College. Dr. Neimun wus : !he Prudential Building in' Garden the first rabbi and Je\\"ish thco- · ,City, Cranston. logian appoinled us ii full time fac­ '' ... for'the same-funeral director who has been serving Jewish families The guest speaker will expluin ulty member ,ul uCalholic Univ.cr­ the use of the small claims courfs. sity. He was- fQrnierly i,roressor of of Rhode Island for 'thirty. years ... Mitchell... as.. did his father ... and his biblicul studies iit Brandeis, and ' • ' I I 1 1 'ARTS WORKSHOPS received his PhD in Ancient Near ·grandfather::.. since the.1870's. I , ' . The Wa'rwick Museum. located Eustern Studie at Qropsie College .• ' in 1he Pontiac Mills Historic Site, in Philadelphiu, Pennsylvaniu. 3)4 Knight Street, Warwick, will orrer u special series of one-day Lookin& for an apartment, 825 Hope Street, corner of Fourth in Providence 331-3337 workshops duririg the spring somethina used, 1 aervlc:e'I Find it in· In Florida call (305) 921-1855 P. Ganz vacation, April 18 lhrough 22. the Herald Cluailied section. To . There will be morning and :if- plat:e a Cluaifled advertiaement in tcrnoon· wo! ks~OI)! for children .,_,~,!'l~?td..~~~~~!;!:!};~:. .._ . . ·,_-l"t'\>'t ,1 · m1q-A YfCJ.JQ"I .(IJfvl".IH"CT\'fA 1?11'(101-!Sl "l!·ff ~T.!:1£.&HQPE H~R~~~· ~~~RAY. _,4,PRIL"rs, 1977 • lsrt•l1s' ·D~v•ur.~p op: _-_. · :· . · .- · ·· .- . . -fR_Q·MFR .ll>AY TQ ERl~AY I Electron.it} -· Deviee~ ...... I· To Reliev.e:·- .Pain:- .. ·~- . .. 1 , ·'--- .Th•y A_re' ~~I Je,ws ··jeRUSALEM: A _portable elec: in th~ man~~ent,?f~ wide range . ( °Ironic pain-r.elieviilg machine,. .0f1>ain CQnd1t1ons. . ·ay BER'Yl S~GAL I . which works · on batteries and Gue ~ .(!I Pala . ·, · weighs las tha'n'halfa pound, took.r· ;, :Dr.: , Mago.r.a. sa,d ' ~hat t_he . · ing much like a very small, atteam- machine operates ,a~rding •to the_' . Recently I ·lieard -a lady tell of · ·, He · is not observant, but he The reason fo~ the subsiding lined radio transbtor, has been · Gate.~~eory of_Pain advanced ~y · -her .trip_10· 1-ong tslatjd-to attend _a · wants. to know that somewhere in · cry ·,about intermarriage · in recent designed and built by electronic · the. Bn!•sh p~ys•olo~t. Dr-, Patric . Baf Mitzvah celet,ration in one ol the city there is a Jewish syna­ years, says one authority on this engineers at tjie Hadassah-Hebrew' Wall. According to this t~eor.y, the the· Relorm iemples ol ihat city. gogue-.or temple to which he can matter, is ,because oL the revela­ University Medical ·center in · la.rge A ~erve. ~hers a~e·st•mulated, The service was, as she iold: it: ' come if he wants to come, and tion that most children born of Jerusa)em. It· is being used· ,n~ .th•s &llmulallon has. an very formal° and. on the cold side.. when he has the need to enter its such marriages· ;ire ·brought to ·succcssfullybyhund.redsofpati~ts. tnh1bitory ~ffect .on· t~e ~pmal ."'fhc; ,Hebrew in ihe services was doors, he can count on it. Jewish Sunday school ')"'lien their I at the Hadassah Hospital and in c_hord, the 'stimulus s_toppmg m t_he . limited·to Shema Yisroel, Heat'-O He is not at home in Hebrew, times arrives. The home remains other hospitals in Israel. · cord and not reaching t~e bram-. · Israel. and ol ·the English 'mo·r,e l!ut he sends his children, at great the. sam·e. The living patterns are The apparatus is known commcr- Dr. ~all '1as also· citplained the · was· skipped than rea~ It was inconvenience .~o himself and his the same.. But Sunday morni_l!gs cially as Neurogar and is manllfac- effectiveness of ..acupuncture th8t brief and chilly .. The Bar Mitzvah · family, to -Hebrew School. . are dilferent. There. is ·bagel and lured by the Agar Electronics Com- way. . • was dressed in ·a black robe, and · ·1n his dress and manners, the lox for breakfast and Jhc little pany of kibbutz Ginnossar. 0 One )'oung man had 10 .st0P spok1; only ·ilbout · thr~e lines of the Jewish physician: lawyer or busi- ones are dropped !)ff :in the Sun­ Thc Ncurogar applian~ can be . work _becau&e of. &evcrc headaches service. · nessman docs not differ from his day school. used for the .:. treatment of pain, a~d had s~bsequcntly suffered from The lady_ was 4isappointed. She · colleague non-Jews, but he · rushes There is little correlation be- sci~tica, int_crcost_al an~ other · kidnc~ _falluf~ beca:&e 0~ 1~ la~c belo~gs to a ·Relorm temple her- to his temple to name a new-born . tween most Jewi~h American peripheral pains. It 1s used m some... quanlllles O ~gs c too · c "'.~• self and her knowledge of Hebrew child 'and is careful to name the homes and what the children are malignancies where the-pain is well th~rcforc,, forbidden all analgesics. - is scant - 0 ut s~ e p cted more chil" after deceased grandparents told at Sunday school. Never­ · ' - There was no way to relieve his Y• v x e ,. localized. It also helps athletes who , . · .· · . · than what she I und in that ultra or uncles or aunts; though the giv- theless the pa.rents are glad ' to are subjectto musclc spasms11unng . ··pain. After t~catm~nt wi~h t~e Reform -service;. Though the new, en name hardly resembles the hear their offspring come home competitive matches. Ncurog,r .appliance, thc· rchcf was · Reform, Prayer Book was_out at' · name by which thc.• dcceased was and tell them about a Mezzuza on Ncurogar functions on~thc prin- · so great th•I he was able 10: return tl\at time'. it was not introduced· in known. the doorpost. candles on Friday 10 ciplc. of. . transcufaneous. electrical · Neurogarwork. atl:lc home now uses his own th·a 't . t emp Ie . A nd wh . y sh ou Id th c night, Hanukah menorahs on or The home of the American Jew about the Christmas season, ·and st1mulat1on. It, waa originally' s· . f - 1b 11 1 f Rabbi introduce the new book? may be devoid of any sign or sym­ designed for treating patients suf- ~ IX young 00 8 Payen su • The Shema Yisroel can be found Hamantashen on Purim. . . , ,.. fcring from -migraine and tension > ~cnn$ from sudden muscle spasm_s in· tlie ·old l>rayer Book·. bol by . which Jewish homes were Watch the beaming faces of headaches, and promising··results. in th.C l~s do no~ ~an~ to take an_y _ ''If so- I asked- why have Bar known, but.he will make sure that mothers and- lathers during a were obtained. It is now being u&ed med!callon or !nJ_ections before . Mit1Zvahs in, .the temple · at all? during the Passover holiday he school play, a consecration and for-the treatment of pain in . other pl!lXmg. They come rcg_ularly to the H· .. b. thd· . . . th b . will take the family to an al)cestral confirmation ceremony or a grad- - · ' · chmc to use the appliance before ave a 1~ ay party '" e oy s home for a Passover Seder so parts of the body. · · . honor, give· l)im presents, and en- uation from Hebrew school. Their The machine functions by means . their games. and they have good joy a good dinner." - • that .the children "may remem­ delight is as great as that ol par­ of the electrical stimulation of local rclaxauo~ of thc _111uscl~. . "Oh . .. . · - d _ber" . · . • Stoke patients with pain in , no, someone interJecte , enls whose sons were graduated superficial nerves running under the · th . rt' Ir I zed r b "they arc good Jews. They· want a In a recent survey among stu­ from a or were ordained skin and°'of nerve rccepton. Elcc- ~r pa 18 Y pp.ra Y_ •m 5 arc ·ear'Mitzvah" dents at a Hillel House in a uni­ for the Rabbinate ' in the little trodes arc placed near the nerve ' relieved. These patients USl\ally All h' .h h. 1· . versity in Baltimore, a liigh per- 1owns of the Old Country. . . . . have &evcre heart di&ease for which t 1s s ows us l e re 1g1ous cn~rvatmg t~c painful area or in the . they are g·ivcn many drugs. The ad- styl_e ol the American Je_w. a style - centage of those interviewed ad­ Should we be satisfied wi1h the painful area itself, and then the clec- , f b . . • f 'th entirely his own and. ahen to tlie mitted that °they do not object to state of affairs in the . American 1 1 I trical current is switched on and v~~!aget Q th r:fging ~~e 1 "'. ou mind of the Jew' brought up in the intermarriage provided . . . that Jewish home as regards obser­ allowed to pass through. a mg o. e rug -sc u c is very Id t . d·r 'l1le Dellpel' , great.. _ o_~!I 1 10n. the chi14ren shall be Jewish· . vance, and. above all, knowledge of Jewish law and letters'! The machine was designed and ~ I n1cases of the acute stage_of Let us open a book by an au· built by Jo&eph Tannenbaum, 8 SO- shin~les, Herpes Zoster, and II!'· ,Your thority on life of Jews in Babylon year-old, Hungarian-born, bioclcc- mediately after the acute ,st~ge, m and read in it Ironies engineer on the -staff of the the first few week~ of. the d1~c, When a scholar from the neigh­ Elc~tronics Department at the Ncu~ogar appliance.may bnng Money's boring Palestine came to Babylon Hadassah , great relief when the electrodes. arc to talk to the people. he- spoke in · ' , , . applied to the area above the , . Dr. Florella Magora, anest1ies1st h' 1 11 •. th ht th I r fat " ,1,c,,.· I • Worth Hebrew and a transla1or. a Turge­ and head of the Hadassah Pain · s !ng es. is oug 8 re 1~. · mon , stood by his side _and ex• Clinic,' who pioneered th·c research - this stage ~rcvcnts t~e · cond111on _By ,jylYla Porter. plained to the audience the es­ into lhc little portable pain-killing froms becotung c~romc. sence of the spe4er's 1alk in Ara­ machine says, "This machine, • omc !mes, .in cancer cases, maic. So little did the people un­ which we designed, was among the · small l~lized bone m~tastases oc­ WuttDBllys.r,Iu Hawaii. A centralized mailing list is derstand Hebrew, that a trans­ first of its kind. It · is now an . cur which are _very painful, as for GoftrUNllt Property? maintained for sales conducted by lalion, a Targum, was necessary. accepted additional form of example, loca(1zed nb or vertebra Are Y08 In die -ket for a ued these Dcfcn&e Property Disposal Nevertheless, that Aramaic was treatment for, pain. The method is • mctast31CS. Pam fro~ these has been car? Aa alrcraf't? Plambhla ... Sales Offices. the language in which the Talmud used all' over the LIS and Europe, fou~d to be relieved by the 11ea11aa.....-•1 NOTE TO YOU: Get a w&s written. a treasure which the wlterc there arc sim_ilar ai?plianccs. · aoohanccTlle Applleadoii Or perlllpa y08're lookla, for a Department of Defense Surplus . 10 this very day, place at "Property Bidders Application to Ho"'.cv~f, we bcl_ievc that our . Mr. Tcnncnbaum explains how aooli •Y la a typewriter or U offlee lhe head of their curriculums . madllae for yoar i..i-? Me41cal .have your name placed on the mail­ There is hope for American apP.llance has certa!n advantag~: the machine is appHcd: "The ing list by writing: Do_D Surplus We gc! the desired e~ect "'.1th ·patient can use the little nachinc·by Items, textlletP, hanlnre, fulllture? Jews to write their own "Talmud" less electrical (Current stimulation himself. This small apparatus, The U.S. government may have Sales, P. 0 . Box 1370, Battle Creek, · in the language>· in which they . Mich. 49016. becau&e the for~ of. current u&ed . which acts as a source of nearly a good buy for you. A wide variety speak. and in 1he scholas1ic of personal property located the na­ When the classes of property you achiev-emenl of this generation. p~cvcnt_s _hab1tuat1on t_o _!h~ square current, gives 100 pulses per specify on your application arc stu!'ulus. :Because of this, the &eeond. Each pul&e has intensity tion over is continuously being­ No need for despair. Dor offered for sale by the federal placed on sale in the geographical ve:Dorshov. Every generalion has patient has ncr n~ to change !he grades up to 20 m.A. The patient areas designated, you will be sent an current and adJust the machine can find the correct position for the government, with the General Ser­ its interpreters. searchers. schol· Invitation For Bid (IFB). IFBs con­ knobs. Moreover, the type of treatment electrodes by means of a vices ~dministration and the ars. authorities. They are also department of Defense the prin­ tain descriptions of the property, Jews. modul_ating cu~rent has a small survey clectro~c, ·1ess than I spccifi!= locations, dates and time ·. mechanical massaging effect_that inch in diameter which is moved cipal governm~nt agcnciCl6 engaged I fv!r. Se.~a/'s opinions are bis ou·n for inspection as well as other produces. increased local blood across 'the surfa~ of the skin. and in selling personal property. and 1101 nece.uarily 1hose ol 1his deiailcd information about the supply:'' · . . enables him to find. the triggering· The condition of the · property Continued on Page 18 ne,npaper.J Asked whether_ the patient may point of tlic .pain. offered for sale may range from . i I lilll -llllilaillllllllllllllllNIIIIUIIIIIIIIINllNN-l•ININ•••Wlllli!·~ bcc~mc too dependant ~n. the "He· then places the three good 'to poor, Dljly ·be new or used, appliance, Dr. Magora explained treatment electrodes made of very may require minor or extensive . that, "Everything used in the thin conductive sili~nc·rubbcncc­ repair. It. may not even be treall_ncnt of chronic pain is-habit- tangles, measuring half an inch by sa,lvagcablc, have only_SC J BP val.uc. A SRVICI Of THI fon:mng. _The bat ~c can hope Jo one -inch, in position on the trigger Bui sales of civil agency personal I.I. JIWISH talAID do _11 to $1Ve t~c patient g~ habits · point, switches on the machine, and . propet1y arc fC!!ularly cond_ucted by ,_ 111t1,. Call 421-41H 0 wh1~h. allow _him ~o be active and to slowly turns two current-regulating -the GSA, the giant purchasing !1r.m SINiiY, - 17~ 1977- -SDAY, APIIIL 20, 1977 part1C1pate •n h11 treatment, and knobs until he feels a prickling &en­ of the ·federal government - ..so ..... 9:30 a.m , which arc not injurious, as arc cer- sation. A- second switch cau&CS the including ·a l'ong list of consumer: -- - 1533, - w.. T-,lo - J.,.h Sil-, Rum­ tain dru~. N«:'lrogar is non-to~ic prickly &ensation to disappear an~ a type items. Each of the 10 GSA ...... s.Po ,.....,_ and non-invu1vc and has, no. side · mechanical, vibratory massaging regional offices conducts sales and v--.----IOl:00 • ·"'· w-n•, Amodcan___ OIIT, Ful .._. - cffcctl whatsoever, even after con- &ensation to oi:cur. This penetrates each office· maintains a mailing list Tomplo--. - -,. - for _ihc geographical area it serves. · 2'00 p.m. ... tinuous ahd prolonged trcatm~t. It deeply into the 'tiuuc, (ll!Using relief _a...... ,..-.,of-h, 12,30 p.m. is a useful and safe thcrapcu~ool.. from in .." NOTE TO YOU: Obtain a mail­ ing tist application to have your ...... Ap,1...... - .. name placed on the GSA ' mailing · - -·--.--.tholr.00 p.m. list by writing to the GSA, Federal · ..... --CheplOr, ..... l'rith ·-· Supply Service, Personal ,Property -~Dinner Department in the· regional area ' 9:IO•-"'· 7,30 p.m. _,__oflhMololend, r..-AI- serving your locality. (See your · Tomplo - • _.._., _,,, In-th Doy -- Sut.-Comffll-, -tine pho-n-e, book under U. S. . Seuth-HolNew _ ,__ - Government.) 12,,0 p.m. •-,INNI-M"I . The Dcfcqsc Department handles c..- a.,.. .. - ...... 1,00 p.m. . -~""'" sales of its own property and is the Cont...-- Mllhkon Tlloh Sh...... ,, - - :::=.....-~.:-:-:::,.,._ 71.-0 -... ,wn, - ..,, "'-"·· - .. LI.., .. , · source of large quantities of varied ...... 120011-m, THUISDAY.. , APIIL 21 , 1977 types of property, including com­ - of ..... ~n:=.::~:~t~=t~~:::~·t:7:'.~:: .: ~~-= mercial, industrial and consumer ___ ...... _Che _ _...... 9:30 a .m. -...... -y- .,..__ .. Tomplo loth TONh Sklorhoo4, lum­ -...... -,_c..,.,__,.,_,,,.J0,--,--~.110.00,- merchandise. s.Po __,__ ...... ,....,...... ,..._ ...... ,...... _..-...... _ Property designated as surplus by eo..,-... __ _- _.__ of Allro· ... ,....,...... ,...... ___7,30 of..,.. p.m...... ,._ __ _,, ...... , ---·----- the military is sole! through Defense ...... _,..,,,,.,._.. ~ - ,.___, .... . Property Disposal Sales Offices . ---...... -... - ..... - _____...... -...... -S...C-,.1-, -· There . arc fi\lc offices: Columbus, _, ' -Y, - It, 1'77 SANIOAY, - 23, 1'17 ~...... , .,_,... ---· Ohio;-Portamouth, R.1 .; Memphis, ...... l ,OOp.m. ~ • j FRIDAY, APRIL IS,---1917 · Tenn.: Ogden, Utah; Pearl Citj," ,..,... .._..,_..,_....., . - .. -.. ~---- \ .

1977- '

_j . .l • _: ,· . ,. .·, ..:<--. ,,: f{B -~ . ANOTHER NEW ADDITION~TO - ­ . · tHE ~ ~ ST_Q.RE$,;. · 1 I

LOCATED"JN DOU9LAS--~ DR Uv· What next? People are ~king-about all the many thing• Douglaa Drqg StorN otter their cue~. There'• a almple ana-r: "MORE OF WHAT YOU W~NT ..:.. FOR LESS-. Ifs our slogan and - mean lt.... Every customer la a valuable · -one, h-he or she looka and !Nia la lm~rtant to UL Our drug storN are the largnt In Rhode lllanci, every name bral)d product and-<88"'1ce we offer Is deslg!)ed to satiety ihe needa 91 YOI/, 011r cull~.... Tlie D011glas Optlcal ;Center Is one more example of Ol/r desire to servlce·Ol/r customen. If YOI/ are one of the many lndlvlduals who need or-areye gla-, stop In to any of Ollr -new Optical Center In our drug 1torN.-THERE'S MORE·TO GLASSES TMAN MEETS THE EYE - LET US OPEN YOUR .EYES TO A TOTALLY NEW CONCEPT IN BUYING .QUALITY EYE GLAS$ESI .,

GR-AND OPENING IN OUR · . -- ' .. . NORTH PROVIDENCE .STORE . . .~ ' ., -· ,. -NOW GOING ON! . ~· .., .. Come in and· say· hello!"

® ·"'(· .. ·. J{)·. '< w

1E : • '·.· /4 . '- - - - . Here's some of the 9:9rvlcea Douglas Optlc:al Center offers•..• OUR CENTER IS STAFFED WITH 1. DUPLICATE PRESENT EYE GLASS -~ FULLY TRAINED : PRESCRIPTIONS . . REGISTERED OPTICIANS You-,-·-•=----Our ·Located In . ..,._your-'-~ ~ plO NII. wfll .Dovor.as~ 2. REPAIR YOUR PRESENT GLASSES ~c1up1-. r,.,,.--. quick .... STORE NORTH PROVIDENCE 3. SUN FASHION TINTING (plallc orglale) . 1115 MINERAL SPRING AVE. ------~:,'":.,~..:-'~ · orlll _ . Tel. 353-3113 our Tinting f:i::t:-wtnk - .::'t~ .CRANSTON, 4. MULTl•VISION_PRESCRIP,;IONS ..; ,WOONSOCKET A -FILLED (BIIOcala l Jrlfocala) ·· -, WARWICK LOCATIONS WILL .:-i...:::r::=-=-~---...... OPEN AROUND MAY 5. FILL NEW PRESCRIPTIO'NS ·. · Moil. Tua Thurs. Fri. ··--..,~-plecellln•at,le 11 a.m. to a p.m. afr,iurcholc!I-Ou,~11 ...... Saturdaya 10 Lm. lo 3 p.m. I. FREE ONE YEAR INSURANCE ON-- ...... ,..or...,._...... ,_,_,,.1o-,.,.,FRAMES ..__.A LENSES...... _...... ~Dope.---·- ,-a11or~ . . 7. OFFER THE LARGEST IN STOCK SELECTION 0 1; FRAMES . Our __ ll_af ...... ln ... •• w.-oallldtoNO APPOINTMENT·--_.,,our IS NECESSARY -·--wllli - ;or no...... _ ·

,.THERE'S MORE TO GLASSES THAN MEETS THE EYE.... • Let Douglas Optlc:af Center open your eyN to a totally new concept In buying quality eye gia.... , '

l I j I I

' f .J t...:r I I I ( I

6-TtlE RHODE ·lb~1WpAY, AN.ru·131·,m ' .- ..< • ...tJNDEODm .. . TEL AVIV:, A ,ooi-.trich wu lNl'II ~ .Swflll at the fast.Sjde) ,.. ...,,,­ . taken by_Po ri->Jll ititutc found that 38.3% of die population bu as yet AIJ Spring programs sta~ April 25 not decided for whom to vote in tbe Recreation swi91, -- cmt classes, Yogo, dance, coming. Kneuct elections. swim !essons, gym, woa'd working & Judo FOR INFORMATJO,t CA.LL ·MARION WALKER ·restore east.sideyr,,~ . 421-6917 . 'YOl!II'· fumitln , eOIFinllll ' ••11 al h'I ,...... •Anliqlling ...... '. CalllALPHIIEIIENGElr 781-7569 ..__.hi .. ,ENGAGED: Dr. and Mrs. Sidney ENGAGED: ·Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Mondschein of' St. Louis, Mlssauri, Cohen 'llf New. Castle, Pennsylv:a­ .c·111CE1McuDOIIAw...... anno,unce the erigagement of their nia, announce the engagemen.t of daughter, Marla Sue, to Kenl)eth their daughte,, Sandra Wendy, to .... CNnalon,R.L Michael Lury, son af Dr. and Mrs.· Charles Leonard Traugott, son. of Jahn J. Lury of Cranston. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Traugott of Mi11 Mondschein is the grand­ Providence. daughter af the late Mr. and Mrs, Mi11 C::ahen, a 1974 graduate ~.Cuisiaae a Rubin Levy af St. Louis, and the of Case Western Reserve Univer­ late Mr. and .Mrs. Mases Monds­ sity with a Bachelor of Science de­ lHg StandintTratlilioa · - chein of Staten Island, New York. gree in Medical Techn!'log_y, is cur­ ·[_ __.,lee's Mr. Lury Is the granclson of the rently a coagulation supervisor at late Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Cokin Uni,,ersity Hospitals of Oeveland, f of Pawtucket, and the late Mr. Ohio. _( and Mrs. Frank Lury of Pavidence. Mr. Traugott, also a graduate . .. ·- . ' \·, ~ Miss Mandschein wa; gradu­ af Case w.,.•ern Reserve Univer­ · ~ CUSTOM-M'ADE, -_ .,,... .,. ,... . ated from the University of Mis­ sity in 1975 with a Bachelor of sauri and. is currently a sophamare Arts degree in Biology, is working ) .DRAPERIES medical student at St. Louis Uni­ towards a Master's degree in busi­ .FROM '. Terrace vanity School of Medicine. Mr. n811 and. .is employed al Oeveland Lury is a graduate of Brawn Uni­ Me!rapolitan Genei:al Hospital JACl('S FABRICS' If you ore looking for a ,wperior Chi· vanity and is also a sophamare An August wedding is planned. oese dining experience. the Cathay T., . medical student at St, Louis Uni­ Will BRIGHTEN roce offers only the finest in quality, vanity School of Medicine. YOUR HOME OR OFFICE ~servic_e and charm that will bring you bock again and again. A winter wedding, is planned, 2!)99 POST RD. I Society Acrou from State Airport - WARWICK, R.I. . 738-7000 SECOND CHILD BORN ,~1 INotices I• Rabbi and Mrs. Bernard Rot- Decora_tin6 ;~ \ man of Warwick announce the Open Daily"- 4 p.m. PLAN QUOTA DINNER birth o f their second child and Problem•?· .CALL 725-ZI·H · 11!!-mlclnl .., Sunday_ Ill mlclnl ... Roger Williams Chapter, B'nai daughter, La uren, on March 15. HOURS: CoclctaU IAlunge DailJ B'rith Women, -will hold its An­ Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. 9:30 a :m.-5:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 725 ~TH ST., CINTIALFAUS tll 1 a.m, nua,I Quota Dinner on Wednesday, ' Israel Bass and Mr. and M rs. April 20, at 6 p.m. at Temple Em- Mu'rray Rotman, all of Worcester, anu-EI. · Massa9b~setts. , .. Carol and Sandy, a nightclub _ G reat-grandmothers are Dora act which performs throughout the Slonimsky, also of Worcester, and Rhode Island area, will entertain. Sarah Kaplan of Hull, Massachu­ Mrs. Harold Klcgman, presi­ setts. dent of District #I. B' nai B'rith . . . take it frqm Women. will be the guest speaker. TO BINS HAVE CHILD Further information may be Mr. and Mrs. Norman I. Tobin obtained by call'ing Mrs. Benjamin or 83 Foxcroft Avenue, Warwick, G ruber at 861-3079 or Mrs. J. announce the birth of their second Harold Klibanoff at 521-0977. co­ child and first daughter, Meredith "THIS IS the sign chairmen. · Jill, on February 22. . . . Maternal grandparents arc Mr. and M rs. Josep~ Scavitti of Crans­ OF' Fast aCTIOn!'' SINGLES' BRUNCH ton . P a t ernal grandpar e nts There will be a brunch and lcc­ are Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Tobin tu,c and demonstrati on on ~ypnot­ of Warwick. ism by professional hypnotist Al Materna l great-grandmother is When it comes to buying Krasner at the Jewish Community Anna Jampolsky. or selling your home, Center on Sunday. April 17 at I . . . we're second. to none! p.m. DUBIN-BRA UDE With our Homes For Living magazine The brunch is for singles 35 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dubin of and our ·team of more than years of age or older. Montreal, Quebec. Canada, a n­ 800 Homes For living members . . . - in all 50 states and Canada, nounce the engagement of their we reac h out to find buyers . . . HERITAGE EXHIBIT daughter, Lois Carol. to Benjamin wherever they a re! Temple Habonim of 147 County Meir Braude, son of Rabbi and Road, Barrington, wi ll hold a Jew­ Mrs. William G. Braude, and And we.offer complete real e state service, grandson of Mrs. Joseph M. Fin­ whether you're moving across the street ish Heritage Exhibit on Friday kelstein of Providence. or across the nation. evening, April I 5, following ser­ Miss Dubin, a graduate of If you're thinking of buying or selling a home, vices. and on Saturday and Sun­ day, April 16 and 17 from 10 a.m. Magill University of Montreal is presently a second year graduate call us tor _fast action! to 5 p.m. · student in the Department of Near / Featured will be books. pic­ tures, ritual objects and memo­ Eastern La nguages and Civ­ rabilia reOecting J ewish li fe of the ilization of Harvard University. past in the United States and Mr. Braudc, a graduate of abroad. Harvard College, is completing his The public is invi ted to attend. doctoral thesis in the Department . . . of History at Harvard Universi ty. A June 19 wedding is planned in Plannl119 lo rJtlOCale? TO HOLD CONFERENCE Montreal. We have Homes For living magazines A conference on retirement . . . with pictures. prices and descriptions rno planning for teachers wi ll be held FIRST CHILD BORN of homes for sa le from mor,e than 800 ~~~~~~~ Tuesday. April 26 from 3:30 to Homes For living members in a II 50 Mr. and Mrs. Stephan Ell iot states and Canada: Ask for your copy._ 8:30' p.n\ . at the Cranston-Hilton Goldman of 268 Merry Mount _HOLLAND - Hotel. Drive. Warwi~k. announce · the For this conference sponsored - TORS/DIV. OF DAYDE N CORP birth of their first child and son, by the Rhode Island Retired Kevin Andrew, on March 26. Teachers' Association, speakers Maternal grandparents are Mr. have been invi ted from the Rhode and Mrs. Herbert Schindler of Island Pension Office, Internal Roslyn Heights. New York. Pater­ Revenue Service, Social Security. nal grandparents are M r. and Health Insurance Programs, Na­ Mrs. Leona rd Goldman of Paw­ tional Retired Teachers' Associ­ tucket. ation and Volu nteers in Action. 'Further information may be obtained by culling Mrs. Joseph EXPOSURE TO NEWSPAPER Carollo, 50 Loring Road, War­ AD pages in newspapers is con­ wick. Rhode lslund 02889 . sistent by day of the week ...... , ...... ' 11 1. , , , , , . ..._.":,.(.

THE RHODE·1st:'ARl'.1'HERALtr.;FRl!:1A.Y;J\Hil!'Y! llt7.., '1 . = ·- >c >C 1 IHGH'.,'RODUCT INTEREST · '

/ Ch;n~Se4 : ::cc >< .·>C >C --#C POLYNESIAM We all kno\\'. h~· important have to fall by the third round. and CANTONESE Aces and Kings are but the little That 8. was the key card. So I won . CUISINE spot cards have their own sha{e in the first trick in Dummy and led . almost. evfry hand. They can sig­ the Spade Jack covered by tht nal. g•ve count and even take· Queen a nd Ace carefully noting, tricks. The .better the pl~yer the West's 6. Next a Spa~e back to more carefully 1' he watches those the 10 unovered West's- 8 at which spots. They can make a fantastic point'( claim~ the balance. East difrerence. Today's hand should won his Queen-at that point but have been 'easy, for the Declarers my own l1 and 7 were the eleventh RECEIVES PRIZE: . Mn.' Sandra who counted their tricks, saw the and twelfth I.ricks. Sharp of Philadelphla, Pennsylva-­ best way to obtain their extra trick There was really nothing the nia, daughter of f!\r'. _ancf Mrs. Abe and then watched to see if this •Defense could do to s,top this no Shuster of Providence, an art would materialize. I happened to matter what they led or played on teacher at Upper Moreland Senior play the hand myself and was any trick as long as East bas at High Schpol received first prize for amazed to find that I was the only least one of the Spade honors and "Teachers' Choice _Art Contnt" Declarer to make the hand. the '!! shows up by the third round. sponsored by The Ivy Schpol_ 'of When you think of-it as the cards Promsiorial Art -in Pittsburgh, North are the Slam isn' t really that b'ad Pennsylvania. .• J 10 a' contract. I don't know how the 11,is is a new national high • A Q 4 ·other Declarers played the .hand school competition declicatecl to t Q J 8 7 except, that none of them went a f- . recoJniu~, ex_hibiting and + ·K 6 5 3 ter Spades until - too late. Their awarding the excellence and achievement of high school artists, West East ·• feeling had been that they _had less + K Q 4 3 2 Spades than the opponents_ so hpw their art · teachers and their +86 schools. • • 10 9 7 5 • 1 3 2 could that ·be the nght su,t to at- t '9 3 t 10 6 5 2 tack. The sp~ts m .Spades should Of the 800 e!ltrai,ts in the con­ __' have po1nted'it out to them ... , tnt, Lynn Bush, ch-n by Mrs. + Q J 9 8,2 + 4 · Moral: To be the favorite to Sharp won first prize for a colage South make a Slain in No Trump with entitled "Bucks County Bam" + A9 7-5 no long suit ' in either hand you clone with different' textv'- and • K 8 6 ' should have more than 31 com- colon of leather. The colage wil t AK 4 bined points. The longer the suits be on display·ulitil April 15 at The + A 10 7 the less points needed. Ivy School in Pittsburgh. South was Dealer, no one vulnerable with t-his bidding:

s w N E INT p 2+ p 3+ p 4NT p B'nai B'rith 5+ p 6NT End

The bTuding, of course, did not GREATER J>ROVIDENc.t?' Co-oRDINATING COMMITl'EE always go exactly as shown. In B'nai B'rilh Men B'nai B'rilh Women checking later, I found · that every Henry Friedman Lodge #89!1 Hope q>apter #755 Soutli .had ·opened the same and Plantations Lodge #2011 Hope Lodge #2224 that, apparently each North bad Roger Williama Chapter #181 fallen in love with his hand and ' had made some kind of slam try 1logrr Williama Lodge #list _.,, which South would··natiirally ac­ cept with his maxiinuin li'and. Ac­ tually even though North does Dear Friend: have thirteen points opposite a strong bid, ·1 feel he shouldn't con­ We've always said that a ,rian's hO"."e is_his casf1e. We never expected his. office would be ,. sider going to slam even opposite the top of South's bid. He should his fortress. - ., · realized that neither partner has a • suit longer than four cards and The rec•nt nightmare, where more than fOO of our B'nai B'rith lnternational;staffwere with that •kind of distribution } I points is a very tenuous amount at held hostage at gunpoint, has not yet faded. For many, still iuffering '!lfOUnds, mental best. But that' didn't deter too anguish, and physical injury, the-memo_ry will not be easily era~ed. many for nine of, twelve pairs got to the slam. However, once in it What happened in- )Yashington, D.C. -must not be allo~ed to happen anywhere again. they should make it. / My opponent led the Heart 10 Now is the time for us to show as a family. We are concerned Jews in control of our future, and on seei,!lg-i)ummy I could be sure of ten tricks in high cards. . It to speak with a stronger voice, with solidarity. We are repelled by terrorism, willihgly in is easy to see that the only place the forefront of the forces of decency and community responsibility. · to obtain two more is in the Spade \ suit, no ,where else. True. if_Clubs break evenly and a trick is lost Only this week we celebrated at the Seder the liberation of our fathers from bondage and there that would get one more but · servitude. In the H~gada it is said.. by ou,r Rabbis, that each one of us was redeemed from one isn't enough and remember no · servitude. In retrospect, therefore, every _one of us should look upon himself as though more than one trick can be lost. As far as the Spades were con­ having been held hostag~ himself fo..- our way of life, our tradition, and our cultural cerned, there were two parts. First values. . " the honqrs had to be divided, one with each opponent, or both with ' East.· Normally one honor should Each one of us must r.ise to the challenge and accept it. be with East and I intended to fi. " nesse through him twice. But that B'NAI B'RITH as the chosen representative of world Jewry, has accepted this challenge wasn't enough somewhere along the line the little 8 spot would and needs YOU, YOUR SUPP9RT and YOUR WIWNGNESS TO IDENTIFY. SEEK INFLUi;NCE ·1 am taking the· liberty to enclose a special issue of THE METROPOLITAN ST AR which con­ NEW YORK : Almost one thousand scientists attending the · t~s an application. Please read it carefully and I am sure you will want to be counted as centennial meeting of the American' a member. The annual dues are $28.~ for Lodge membenhip and $12.00 for Chapter Chemical Society in New York call­ Please ed on the Soviet Academy of membership. return the application and your check to the address on the Sciences to use its influence in urg­ letterhead. · · ing the Soviet government to "allow Dr. Benjamin 4vich and his wife to join their two sons in Israel at the April 24th is "Mobilization For Jewish Survival" day. Our Chapten and Lodges are urliest possible date." In a petition holding a special meeting at 9!~0 A.M. at Hillel .House, 80 Brown St., Providence, R.I. addressed to Dr. Aleksandrov, president of the Soviet Academy, the American scientists conveyed Declare younelf, join us and help us to combat those who wish to destroy our values. their deep concern about the fate of I "our colleague, Dr. Levich, noted · Youn in B'nai B'rith, electrochemist and Corresponding Member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences." Contin refuni to grant ~/.}~~­ pcrmiuion for Levich'1 emigration would, they feared, "lead to a ~~ - ~,~~-. deterioration in lhe rel1lion1 between our two 1reat 11c:ientilic Street Pawtucket, R.I. 02861 communilie!I." ;i-11~~,H~:R~ {(ultif~:Ar&V.~"lii-~£i977 ~~. --~~1ft , ~-:::::t'' , '';_z ______~ ...... • • -~-T.... .J TO PElf'OllM- will be lecl'~y Cantor Er!!estt'o1e- ..~ ._ ~..,,. _ , . ---- The ~ookin, Glass , theatre man. The Oneg Sllubbat follc.winl! • · . ~ . -.-, _ Weekend J011ring .Co~.J will the. services will ·be in charge or oum..... c»-19 CAM1W ,oa 11n ·a.·MS · , l!ive a .,"bonus" . performuice or the Synagogue' Ladies headed by . 1-11 YIAIS ft MIi . · ~ ~- The l'art1de, o/Lf/r on. Saturday; ' ' Mrs. Morris ltchkaw-ich. _· l.ocaledon~.. of woodlondaclft '" Srinii Ma;,,a. April' 16 at 3: IS p.111. it Rhl?'le 1s- ~ ANN~-;:C~NtENTION IINwtilul Lolln - '~• Aquot,cs ,,__ Al' lond. •--, land School Qr Design auditorium, - Piontet o,,cj _f,ioPing P,og,_ __ Jtw,lh.,.._.. c~1r....- ' _ Oieto,y-· 1mme· d 1a' t e Iy ro II owing· · th e pe r- The South ~rovidence Hebrew. lOW1 ObstMCI _ Piofnsionol Stoff -E...... ,;, on,,.__ Livwo lormance or Alice in the American Free · Loan Associa.tion will : h.old · T.,io,.-·Awoiloble _ Eac,two oo,d v~. ,~:..,~:, __ --.. •-·ovn· -;,: Wonderland. ·* • • its 71st annual co.nvention a·nd .... ··-. -- ... .,.._.. 01 ,,., -· · election or ollicers and board Acaediled Camp :. AnwiCIIII Camping Auciciotion · · ' GROUP THEATRE " members on Sunday. April 17 at 2 LIMITED VAC.ANCI_ES AVAllABLE , wl\:t:- h~:0::iu:~at,: .!;~:::;{; P·r;.;; ::ii~1:s ~;~~1!0~:h~itend. - JIWISH COMM NITY CINTII CAMPS, 'IMC. _ alter several years' absence, will · • • • present Samuel Beckeu's End- PLANNING MEETING ~/;,~:, .;:.•• : ' . - .· .,. ' .,,' • <,s ', ' -680 liope Str~eJ, -P-ro,vidence, 274- '' ,T.L:C.. (!or single~ to 39) h_as B. ecame".us Citizens •' · - · '· ·• " ·-, - · •· • ·' • ··. 6685. ' · • - · . ' ,announced the "Qrr1c1al U119(1ic1al 8~~ or llll(a ~ -._:-;;_k petiod1 ,, -- ,·. ·. , --•, ;''"•'. ·.,-'·,, .. _~ Grand OPc;ning." , or th,e Travel & ' NEW Ya°RK: The "New York • • • ~ ,._ ,,. . ·¾-. .- - <- ; - ..,;: , .~ • 'ART SHOW: . '< ., .. ·-;' -\eisure (Jub. The arlait Wil~· be. ... -P,ost'' reports that of the ap- Full Range ofland_S~rts : 8. Tiriffls,¼aui,q'? Golf G~~~ :'·Out-\ . The·,:East ·Greenwich An ··:Club . held on -~undey, April _24, at ~ pr.o'xitnatejy, 200,000 Israelis who standing Red Crass ,W~ter'frant rrogram ~\!lt:.G:ultuf.Ol'P"?Qrarn! - , 'wlil sponsor their ··sixth ~nnual . P-1)\ ~t tlie Chestnut Hill Motor live in the United States, only 1844 Israeli Song & D~e.• •Oi~,,ylaws: - Arts& ~~ Q~m.atic_s .- " ~)1 llhode Island Art Show-at the . Hotel, Route 9. Newton,__ M,as- became American citizens in 1975. Mature,and dedic,a..a~stoff : ._· · · •• -.,,.7 - 0,;;_ , ':"'-;:: • W~twiclc' Ma ll'o\i- thursday .. Fri·-·· sachuseus. '. • ·- -s'ince 1948, 50,064 became ·-?,.' . -- ,. , ,, , ,. { _ . . ,.J. , : .ty ~<1;5.atUrilay, May'5, 6 and'7-. Furt~er mlormauon m~y be _Americiih citizens, that represents Conta~t: Gerald Kohl'·· Dlrectot· . - _ .,.' ·r~orii''.flra-:m liU0 p.m. . . ,obtatned . by calhng H0w1e . m 25% of the overall group. \ - _ .~7 l:fancpck Av\. _ , · , ~ -r ·--FL~--"',,.,. Almost 100 Rh'°;ide-lsla"nd 11rf'.' ,-~~forth Attleboro. Massachusetts, . Dis_cu~sing !he ~roblems of the '. Brcickton' t,iaii'. "02401 - . ~~cl .~ ·''istl 'aml'.:craftsme°n' ~ II exhibit · at 611-695-7735. . Israelis m t.he United States, the Tel. (617) 587~138 ., ~- ,_ their works includi~g orfg/nat' ' .,,. -- - • • • newspaper comes to_ the foll?wing -. . · , , __ ;· paintings;-.gr,\Qhics, ~ ulnture and ANNOUNCES ~WARES conclusions: The maJority 1s tied to . ' · --~ . · r "'' .' •" -:c. •, - ''· , .,. • Israel and in the case of an ACCIEIITOCAMP , era ts.Further informa'tion ·may be ·s 1m· ~h a· _ 0-1mtz.· • I srae· _I',; Am- emergency_they wo~ld_return there. A ,non-profit camp , _. ...._,, .... , .... obtained by calling Mr. and Mrs. bassador_to the UNITE_D States. has T~e lsraehs have hm1ted contacts & sponsored by the Eli' Bessie Cohen_Fo,1:1nd ,ajion Car.nps Jonathan Peservich ·who' are co- 'announceil, that Apnl 1s Ambassa0 with American Jews because of the r ______.,. ______.., ··chairing the show. - · · dor's Society or l'rustees Month dffference in t~eir mentalities_. . ,f - _. __ • ·• • le r the. State or Israel. Ambassa- Most lsraehs are not rehg1ous - - ',' . - . - ; • ; 1rttt.ur Falashas· had come to Israel and "classified information" and that some 25,000 were estimated to thereby denied permission to JIWI ... COMMUNITY cuna CAMPI Of MW IWUND, INC. be living in Ethiopia. emigrate, have appealed to the @ SO ,.,.ff IT., watllTOWN, MMI. n112 • (617) "4-IOH ' Replying, Mrs. Aloni told the United States to seek an inter­ JCNS' that the Ministry's decision l\•tional ruling on what constitutes ....-~nt"~fit -arlll!r' ,talT.'"·-\',..*"""'°""'_ts,"

L --· ~~~ho,.,. ,f ~~~~-~-~.~~--~~=~·~·~~-~-~-~~~-••m~~--~-~-~-~--.. - -~~- -~·~· ~-~- ~~~~~~~' =.~ 1 - ·, _ •:tf(E R'.ff'ODE ISLAND-HERALD, FiUDAY1 APR'.IL '1'(1'977-9 , . - : ·111e Cham~'lparlc _Plug Company Car ~r• Newpper ~ic• ~, ...., . . , , . . :. ' , ' . . · .

,. C~r,;.e, for Your Car - ,. · S!-Rl~SUMMER 19-77 Eight Pa...

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,. I t · ·(>t i" ~ ·i:: ,tut-. f ~ ,--:. -- ,... • :. , i., · , -:... _10-THE RHOl;lE 1SLAND.H:ERALD1 FRIDAY, AfRJL ·1s1 1971- ·1 , , , , . . , . • , . , . . . ~ l;lonrl!I . adv~r-e11,II 'b{iq. lo, . ,n.tfflC,UGID'S IN aro:s , e,. q_blervi'1i' tlJe ' 1)1'!)1111!"' iJleed Hou· sew1fe's .Tune-Up Center' your doontep a · wide vtriety' of . Remember tl!at'moi~ traffic li,tit lim_it u ~ b)' the'lipla; you_CIII . • .-. · . . · . ·• ~erchandi~ _and ser,viqJS. "Take ad- :sys¥ii. in citiel are t!_ined . t~ ... ,JVOid_ IU~den lltOpl ~nd thus 18\'tl Mak',· s· Wom· en' Feel 'At. Ease· I • vantageofth~Reraldbeforeyogjo speciricspced.uamean1ofkeep1ng gasolme III the liargaen. . . . , . . .• QUI on your· next lh9PPing_ trip. the" trafTIC ftowing a! en:rcient ~II-, . There is no poifll. in lfting·to ~t .Two·YCJIR agb, Catherine ''Kay" easy ' ...., did talkirlg . to service You .may ~pl~ntly •ierpnlCd. !!nd·to:sa(eallll(d croqinp. , ,hem. , _Butler _wa, just another housewife managen and mechanics about who dreadoihaking'bei' car'in-for · repair ·work we didn't understand,'

'BOSTON' RADl·ATOR SPECIALIZES -. IN. Tune.,~ps : Motor Work Brakes ·· Ball.Joints Front -' Enci· Work And:· all· m·echcinical THI MODIIN AND.SPA~ ...,._,,_liuldlntt of tlie CkNnW90II Crecllt Union ls located at 2669 ,_, Raad In W~ at ~iundll!n-~ Main A,,,-, ~hute 11_3). Gtwnweecl Crecllt Union Is an lcleal place tept yeu,M'!f• · probl~m_s. cw loan:._h allo offws excellent :im-t - on-varleut types_of llfflllll -nh. · . · - Expert.Foreign· ~ar .. Mechanics ::Basic:. c."t,:,\core Qui'z Ne~· Yor - c~ Ready to Serve You. -. Sh -· T: ·· -._U · N d Ar.e Polluting Now_You ; Know, .Come To ,, : _o~s, ,une~ ' p e~:-. s sh!!:t::.i~s.:~;i::~~~;J:: Hen .r;- qw.rtiOII ,:ar t:an ~: ago_, the. symbol of a Dounsh1_ng. a,utomobile owners are. needlessly BOSTON RADIATOR . ~ duff hffwflt_ of O; 111M, JIii l.r. . s<;>e,e!y was th~ smoke stack, m- polluting the air \nd wasting gas- ~- Better $,UoliM.lf!lleo,e d1catmg bus)' industry. Now, we oline, according to Commissioner J!. Quicker, more trouble-fne have_ learned of the dangers to Peter),.A.Berle of the Departlllent .rtarting _ . human health and to natural and of Environmental Conservation. C .. Better pick-up and ptu.ring ~an-mad~ assets th~t c_ome from "Some-80-85% of-the polluters I' power . air ·pollullon- Up until_ recently, the could: meet State standards for auto D. Fewer harmful- pollutant.r car h~s been @, ~.ontnbutor. to air emissions and save money · by emitted pollution. · · · - · simple, inexpensive carburetor If you are _an astute obse_rver of . Minimize EmlSllou adjustments," Commissione( Berle the car care. picture, you reahze that Lately, the ~ar· mak·ers hav.e said: "Any garge can test a car at .. there .are no wrong aµs'(llers_to the devised systems to minimize harm- idle to check the carbutoJ.:' ,, ~· question. For other than purchas- ful emissions. But these systems ing a newer car, there is no better must be maintained· to stay eITecc· r------.---~------11!!""------. way lo improve your car's· perfor- live. And the engine -tune-up,- be' it mance than getting. a thorough, performed voluntarily' Ci t mandated professional engine tune-up. by governmental agencies, is the . can ·· ' Up until recently, the tune-up least costly way to keep pollution was virtually a discretionary service· levels manageable. · · or one lo be performed when engine As previously stated, tune-up 1 condition deteriorated so badly that also makes "good citizens" out of / the car couldn't start or continually cars and their owners in other ways. stalled in traffic. A car that bogs down on a busy TAILOR But unlike a disabled car,- the freeway at rush hour due to ignition · world doesn't stand still. failure does not endear itself to the -we are quickly · absorbing the thousands of other owners it may ,1>,ainful lesson that the black liquid inconvenience .. And a car that , \ ··tfiat ''flows •' ftoln ' tlie'1'Nlidale East .. lurches into 'the passing· la9e Dora --.:: a_·ne.vv car loan and other locations is not as abun- attempting .to pass and not having dantly' and cheaply available as it the necessary power is more than a once was. . nuisance; it's a threat to life. Martorell :' First, political instability in the Sprillg T--,e Now just for you world makes oil a fragile, black With the added hours of .pawn in international connict. pleasurable .driving the upcoming Secondly, even if there were no spring and summer. seasons offer, threatening ·crisis on the threshold, there is no better time than now to • the supply of oil is dwindling. lake your car in to your favorite ser-· Therefore, if America and the vice outlet for a tune-up. · rest of the industrial world wants to So, do your car and yourself a do business as usual, they have to service - a tune-up service. pay·· close attention to ways of ' preserving the oil supply. UGHl'S ··. · It is estimated that if all U.S. cars It's a simple matter to see if they, were tuned,-300,000 barrels of fuel all glow but an owner frequently' •could be saved daily. misses the Dasher system that warns This wasted fuel, incidentally, is other traffic when a car is stalled. Pete. costing you and your fellow U.S. The Dasher should be blinking half - * \. car owners an additional two billion , the time as opposed to !!en incon­ Waligowski Our team of new car loan officers can work out dollars a year. sistent pattern. This 'is especially in­ Of comparable importance to the ponant in daylight so the Dasher , a financing plan that Will fit your budget. You'll world's well-being is the role tune­ can be seen. Inconsistency means · find they are courteous and anxious to make up assumes in keeping the en­ the Dasher is approaching its last · vi(onment clean. Only a few years blink. your dreams for th~t 1977 car come _true. Call -Sliap Cra,kle Pop: Dora, Pete, qr Bill at Greenwood Credit ,_Union Fine for ?Cereal,. -but--·- and see how they c'oll fill your needs to a T. Not fo-r CB Owners. If you prefer your snap, crackle the generator· or alternator. and pop with break fast ·cereal • A ragged, rasping sound that oc­ rather than. you CB radio receiver, curs at an irregular ·rate, usyally then listen to this advice. The condi- heard in conjunction with the tion of your car can-affect the quali- generator or alternator whine, is Bill . ty of CB reception . ..,_ · caused by the vibrator type voltage Paulhamous ,, According to Qavid L. WallOd c:are- or the COf1IPOMlltl 'TELEP.HONE TUft,.Frl., 1.m.-5 p.m. \ ·:. At.,ttle Gre_e~ Bridge .-;: . , inllallllJ when 'tbe ipitlon kcy !' involved could eltminate the un- _7)t"4tll, Sit. u.m.-Nooll 1hutof{~J.'¥fif.'i..-.~~f0¥~ ;~~~!~~~:·-•••• •••••••.'..-•_._-•,..•--•••.• .•-.•~-:.•_•_•..,..,~_•_•..._•••_.,.:~:::...::::::::::::::::::::~~::::· ~--•.•_~•-•.--.•r•••r•-••~.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•,.•.•~,•:,11 ---. ------. ------.,------,-----~----~--.---~--~--~~:'.°""--~--~-r-,-~==l"·~-~-~<,N,.,...,.U~W-~'~'------~~

12-THE RHO.DE ISLAND HERALD;F.RIDAY1APRIL LS.1.977 :HER.ALO: ADS. brlng· -icr:your On---New. Tire, .Heed Size, Constru,tion , ' , d?orstcp UVt~e vanety of ~chan- Knowill8, the correct tire· size , somewhat more;,0mplicated. dtse and fflVt~. Take advantage used to be the only criterion fQr Therefore-, the Rubber Manufac- , of the Herald be~ore you go out 0n purchasina n~ rubber for a. car. turers Association (RMA) offers your ~i:xt shopping trip. You-may B11,rrh'e wide variety in_ tire some tips on buying tires. • - · : ''ii: be pleasantly surprised. ' .<;onstructi'on, designation and ,Never select-a size· smaller than • · ratjngs has made tire shopping th051!., wl\ich ~came with • the c;.pr. , .* Ti~es of different size designations, construction anc!, stages of wear _ may adversely affect handling and TRANSMISSION road stability. • · l:or best all-w;ound ciir handling Re.rformance,.tires of'the same type .PROBLEMS of. construction·· should be used on all -fout..J!(h_eel positions unl41ss designed to s:crve a special function such as snow tires. . , Herald .ads br\pg results. - ., ,ALL MAKES •f American &· Foreign Car Special~: FOREIGN·- CARS .SERVICED -· _: ::s~ALL 722-7._151 ' liE1 10WING ROAD'TEST -~~ f'AUL GOLDMAN has cleared his decks for action at the Sauth Attleboro _FREE DIAGNOSIS Dodge dealership, and Paul Goldman Dodge prices wil put a sm~e on TUNE-UPS ·your face too . . ---O~E DAY-SERVICE­ · Paul Goldman can tell a lot Whatever your motoring needs. MAJOR REPAIRS about people _just by looking at Paul Goldman Dodge has a 1977 ·All WOR~ GUARANTEED ,, . sales trends at his South Attleboro model and a deal to suit every - At;L PRICES Guar•nlftd In writing "Spike" Dodge deal_ership. buyer. "We're discounting and lllecl!lre Th'ti Jab ts~Stm~. Paul Goldman Dodge is selling trading from the word go," says D'Al8RA-& SONS almost as many vans as it is cars. Goldman. 1, AUTO IIPAII SERVICE says the owner. People who used And if you're in the market for t> ,, 1't •wood Avo. to buy lull-size stationwagons are a second-hand car, Paul Goldman. I, switch'ing to vans. "They really Dodge has one ol the largest se­ Tel. MA 1-8271' have room for the kind ol lilestyle kctions in the area. Not only are I, R. I. ~ Station •753 I· there is today," Goldman explains. there numerous good clean cars, , . .. ~· .. 1l Paul •Goldman Dodge has one trucks and recreation vehicles on I , , ol the largest selection ol vans in the lot, but there are a lew trea­ the area, everything from econom- sures tucked away, like the 1948 I PAUL GOLDMAN'S T.L.C. ,cal work vans. up to $9.000 play Bentley for $7.500 or the 1928 Bu- I vaos. _ gatti racer for $4,000. I Jhere·s a fot ol interest now, This is new car time, and Paul I too, in the new mid-size Dodge Goldman Dodge is the place to f Monaco. companion to the lull- leok for your dream machine. The I size Monaco. showroom is open from 8 to 9 I No matter where ·you bought your Chrysler Corp. car, Paul Goldman In the compact field, Dodge is weekdays, 8 to 5 on Saturday. The r Dodge will take ca;e tif yo~r warranty work with T.L.C. Daily rentals still turning heads with its Aspen. phone num_ber is 761-5200. l I are available at speci~I rates fo~ _service.· custome~., :· · AAA Demonstrates How To

V ,.-. \ir \ Stem Rising Use Of Gas All service and preventative maintenance work ·ts fast, convenient, An economy driving demonstra­ gasoline, AAA comments. reasonable and gua~anteed. tion conducted by Automobile By Tbe Numben Club of Michigan shows that Six steps to save fuel without cut­ •,. ting down on travel are suggested l motorists can stem what could be a OUR-SERVICE -DEPARTMENT IS OPEN record-setting gas consu·mption by Auto Club: y year by using conservative driving . I. Drive at moderate speeds. Most cars get about 21 per cent I'' FROM 8 A:M. TO 9 p:M. MON.' lO SAT. · techniques and practicing good maintenance. more miles per gallon on the l. highway at 55 miles per hour than I CHAMPION To help combat an alarming rise ! • in gas consumption, Auto ·club they do 70 m.p.h . conducted a: test with two identical 2. Accelerate smoothly - save -cars that showed con;ervative. ver­ engines, tires and gasoline. - _ sus jack-rabbit driving can result in 3. Drive at a steady pace - avoid a 60 per cen_t increase in miles per .stop-and-go traffic, gallon of gas. . 4. Minimize braking - anticipate The cars, 1977 Chevrolet Caprice speed changes. Release the Classics equipped' with o,ne-gallon accelerator as soon as a red light is test beakers, were driven ·over a I0- visible ahead. , mile long freew.ay and city street 5. Don't weave in and out of traf­ course in the Detroit area. fic lanes. One car was driven with jackrab­ 6. Do not let the motor idle for bit techniques while the other, more than a minute if temporarily which started the course at the same stopped at a curb. Turn off the time, was driven conservatively. engine. It takes less gas to restart The test was supervised for Auto than to idle the engine more than a club by Detroit Testing Laboratory. minute. CHARGER SE The poorly driven car finished w /t-bar Roof the course only 25 seconds ahead Periodic lube Job and obtained 10.04 miles per gallon Aids Car's_.Health . while the other vehicle obtained ''For the want ofa nail..." begins I 6.3 miles per gallon. Over a an old saying that traces the fall or Shopping here-is a pleasure 10,000-mile year, Auto Club the kingdom to a missing horseshoe projects that the 11:ood driver would naiL.Substitute the word lubricant save $222 in fuel costs compared for nail and your car could be im­ The selection is· always interesting with the bad driver. mobilized. Auto Club states that significant While car makers recommend ' fuel savings only can be made by chassis lubrication at differing _The prices are always reasonable reducing near-holl)e travel. periods, the service should not be Two persons car pooling to work neglected. Lubrication and periodic . daily would save 25 per cent on the alignment arc virtually the only ser­ fuel used weekly by each person. vices required by your car's steering Car pooling for other near-home system, which includes the steering travel. such as shopping, would linkage, steering arms and ball save even more fuel. joints. 100 Brand new 1976 and 1977 Dodge cars While both cars used in these Failur~ to maintain these com­ tests were in ~imilar mechanical ponents properly .can lead to and Vans - Pickups - Trucks available condition, a number of studies in­ premature tire wear, steering dicates that maintenance is an im­ problems such as road wander and portant factor in fuel economy. For loss of stability. example, a previous AAA study Check you car's owners manual reports a tune-up can-result in an for recommendations of how orten immediate nine to IS per cent in- to lubricate. crease in gasoline mileage. "Once you've had your car Lun- HERALD------ADS bring to your ed, don't forget about it," AAA ad- doorstep a wide variety ormerchan­ vises. Attention · to proper tire dise and services. Take advantage pressure, radiator temperature and of the Herald before you go out on brake· adjustment •also •helps•saw- ..~ur neitl• shopping,1.rip·. . -• .-,• # , ; ... ~ - C~r ·-Experts - Self-Prrotlaimed ·: -- NoJ ~_ ltways·- CerJified · Techs. FLUID CHANGE SPECIAL Next time one of th0$C self- VEHICLE YQU FIND 'f.ffAT (A) To allow th~. driv_er--to pump- Complel e pro1:lai'!'-ed 1:_ar experts begins THE STEERING WHEE-L up the brakes. ' 1 . Filter - Gasket - Band do'!1matmg ab otherwise pl~ant SHAK~ FROM SIDE1'O SID~- (B)1T9 prevent air from entering & Li nkage Adjustment s 9 5 , ~ 9al convcrsati~n,Jry cutting him AT HIGH SPEEDS. . the hydraulic system. · 12 down l!> size .with this quiz. Mechanic A says that static out- . (C) To prevent wheel lockup by • F.REE "ROAD 'JEST AM> • COURTESY CARS Questions are among the easiest of-balance of the front wheels could _reducing the hydraulic pressure, DIAGN0$1.S , AVAILABLE selected f~om a sample ·text created. be the cause. (1)) To reduce pedal pulsation by..:C • DOMESTfC & FOREIGN , • FREE TOWING by the -National Institute for _, Mechanic B says that dynamic. · col)trolling hydraulic press_u_re. - . CARS • OPEN 8 A.M. Automotive Se!"lice EJ\cellence, the out-of-bal;mce of-the front wheels 10. BOTH HEADLIGHTS ON agency responsible for certification _·could be tl)e GllUse. . A CAR, .ARE -DIM lN HIGH PROVIDENCE WARWICK o( automotive mech'anics. , Who is right? .. · BEAM Al:'.ID NORMAL IN LOW 1158 T1lurben Aw. . 1748 W.-wiclt Ave. lnl.'ident;llly, a list of men who (A) A only,. _ . BEAM. WHICH · OF THESE 481-5900_ 739-0100 knowtheanswersto.thesequestions (B) B only. COULD B'E THE C'AUSE? may be found in the "Where to (Cj Both A and 11. ' (I) A' poor headlamp•g round. Find Certified-Mechanics for Your (D) Neither A nor B. (2) A shorted heaillamp switch. >- Car" directory. 11· lists repairs es- 6. ALL Qf THESE COULD (A) I only. . tablishments of technicians who CAUSE TIRE WEAR IF lilOT (B) •.2 only. meet NIASE standards~ To order WITHIN . MANUFACTURER'S (C) B.oth I ·and 2. , '77 PORSCHE the directory, send Sl.95 to NIASE, SPECS EXCEPT: (D) Neither I nor 2. , . 1825 K Street, Sui le 515, (A) Caster. An'swers:1:C; 2-d; 3-b; 4-c; 5-c; 6- Washington, D.C. 20006. (I!) Wheel balance. a; 7-d; 8-b; 9-b; 10:b. TURBO CARRERA See correct answers at the bottom (C) Toe-in. AVAILABtE NOW ' I. AN ENGINE IS USING TOO '(D) Camber. _ Ice 1188/1 metallic 1>3il1t, 4 speed. electric SWl rod. air MUCH OIL 7. A CAR LACKS STABILITY concttioning. sport seats. al leather interior. tinted glass, Mechanic A says that worn valve ON 1 . LEVEL ROAD. · · Frankfwt . Blaupunkt stenio cassette music sy5tem. guides could be the cause. · • Mechanic A says that too much electric window$. . Mechanic· 8 says that tapered negative camber could be the cause. cylindered walls could be the cause. Mechanic e' says that too mucl) FIRM · who is right? positive camber could be the cause. -$29,754 (A) A only. Who is right? .SEE THIS _!lARE CAR AT (B) 8 only. (A) A only. ~ 1401 IIALD Hill RD. (C) Both A ahd B. (8) B only. . ·:'!II_, ~ IRTE. 21 ...... (D) Neither A nor B. (C)' Both A and B. · PICARD .,..,,_, 2 . WHICH O·F THESE (D) Neither A--n6l' B. 318 W. FOUNTAIN ST. ·,3:.~~-!~ STATEMENTS IS (ARE) TRUE . • 8. -THE ·STEERING WHEEL · OF WAR:WICK E,f a2a-1000 ABOUT A LIQUID COOLING "OF A CAR IS NOT CENTERED 274-3684 SYSTEM? - -- WHEN T_RA VELING- Q) A thermo stat that is inst!llled STRAIGHT DOWN THE ROAD. backwards will cause the engine to Mechanic A says that the steering run at a lower temperature than _ wheel should be removed from the normal. · ·steering_ column and its position

(2).A radiator pressure cap that is cJianged. · " j not fully seated • will cause the Mechanic 8 says that the steering ' coolant to boil over at a higher • wheel should be turned to center ' i temperature. - and the to-in readjusted. I (A) I only. Who is right? 1 (B) 2 only. (A) A only. I (C) BotJi I and 2. (8) 8 only. _ (D) Neither I nor 2. (C) Both A and B. . I 3. ALL "·OF THESE CAN (D)Neither A -nor 8. I CAUSE AN AUTOMATIC- - 9. WHAT IS THE PURPOSE TRANSMJ SSlON f O. SLIP- OF THE' MASJER CYLINDER EXCEPT: . CHECK VALVE(S) ON CARS r ,' (A) Hardened servo seals. EQUIPPED WITH DRUM,~ (8) Worn planetary gears. BRAKES? (C) Plugg~ Sump filter. ----- (D) Faulty one-way clutch. DETECl'll'iG LEAKS 4. MECHANIC A SAYS too It takes only enough paper - much clutch pedal free pl,1y. may and old newspapers will do - to cause the clutch to drag when dis- determine whether or not the fluids' RADIOS, ' engaged. , in your car's various safety systems 1VS, STEREOS MECHANIC 8 SAYS not , areleaking.Spreadthepaperunder· AND AUTO enough clutch 'pedal free play ma)::- your car in your garage and.then, i11 AUDIO$ALES 'cause the clutch to slip when engag- the morning when you want to ed, . make the check, carefully drive off· (A) A only. the paper and note where - if any ( 8) 8 only. . - leaks are indi(l8ted. (C) Both A and 8 . ·If any is indicat~, it should ,be (D) neither A nor 8. checked· by a pro. 5. IN ROA!_) TESTING A . ----- AIJTO 1ACTI SEE-ALL ..THE NEW '77s · TELLTALE LEAKS MAY SPELL TROUBLE NOW ON 0/SPLA Y WITH HAlf ADOZEN FLUIDS . AFFECTING THE SAFE'TY AND ·· DEPENDABILITY Of YOUR CAR, ALEAK CAN MEAN TROU~. CAPRI iltr WHAT'S THE BEST WAY TO FIND _ ,%t~ OUT IF AN OMINOUS DRIP IS ~1r / ~ol~1 SERIOUS? SLIDE ANEWSPAPER 0 UNDER THE AREA Of THE CAR WHERE YOU'VE DISCOVERED " CONTINENTAL MARK V ,r THE LEAK ANO LEAVE IT- THERE OVERNIGHT.

TAIE THE PAPER TO YOUR MECHANIC. AFTER EXAMINING THE FlUID. HE PROJIABLY CAN TEU YOU IF THE I.OK IS COMING FROM THE TRANSMISSION. ENGINt RADIATOR. BRAKES, POWER STEERING. REAR AXLE DRGAS'TANII, YIS Bald H,11 Rd ~,, I Wr·1w1f~ R I ij,18 71110 ~~l. . . . I .14-TifE R.HODE,ISLAND'H~LQ; f'IUDAY, 4J>it1l: 1J,; (,fl; · Car' 11.~Manll.ted Safe~iifs- ~-~ed~mtif;t 8ahatenahce;· T091 -' ·:<;, .-.!~o:;:~~=~~1~~~,ii~i'!"!u~ r ,i Much of the.safety equipment on The Aut~-~i:_vtt_'Information Scat :aniJ sl)oillder"bel.ts are ~rie the soutb•westetn par( of the,couir,: nobody 1s dr1v111g .111 back of you, ' I your car was ' 'mandated · by the Council conlflJed og,e of the auto ,llrea you don't have to be eoiicetnod try for m·any years were removed, · "He warni:d',that seat beltJ '\'tlth I Federal ·Gove~ment but it/a up 't!) ind,ust,y's l!i9'!kff~ !~\ 1J(e, 'Yehic~ ') lbout; ,J~ \ ,- · •1 -.t "' '\:'l ~ ,; for inspection., T~~ .pas~ fedcr" . rctract~rs .shqul~ be el'~!llined to I you1·thc motonst, to·m11ke sure the safety 11rca for Jus rccomincn, .: "Tlie'.bdts _'orr.yu-ur car arc -'gooa, standards by a wide margm. , determmc·whcthcr add1t1onal wcb:­ I dcv1ces continue to do their.Job . .' dli~ions,,He !!I, !to)' .ffaeusler, who for tl)e' lire of !he car,' . Haeusler · It's still a good idea to check_the bii:ig can be p~ll,ed whjlc the belt. is Ex~pt for some . Oltor,t1pn m oven bas ~rned tlio pfaudits of't~c say~. T:hc yn:bbmg has beeJ,1- sub-, belt ·ret!ractors, accordi;pgo, to being worn. · ., __ fastening lap and sh~ut~ belts, the indu~try:s SCYC~~· -~~tics.-_Hac_u,ler, j~t,i. to ~r~lo~gea pcri~,s of Br• Haeusl1rr7 H~ cautions: . -- ' .· Herald I advcrtise"!cnts b~ng '-to safety J~aturcs requ1r,: ,ht~c ofTo~ who rcu~ as a· safety'- ehgm~, tdic1,al radiation ·to determine how . • "You~ t_chcck ,sho11ld1yr bcl1s your, doorstop. a · wide v1mcty of on !o~r pan. However, ,that doesn_t was w~arll)JI _belts_)o~i ;.before they, resist ~rilliant :s11nlight. ·The on newcJ. cars by tugging ;it tliefll. !'lc,chan(lise' and services; Take l\d·. !"can -I.hat regular m~intenance or they became~the law o.ftli,e li1ghway belts witlistood all'tests. , , You have, to slam ·thc l;>rakes and vantage of the Herald beforc\you go -ms t1on sh.ould be ignored. · and always wears a safety-h~mel. lnthepaslyear,scatbeltsusedin thatshouldlock _tlu:belt.Aspceilof out ori your next sbo in tri , -~ . ·~ I .~ . ·. ~ ' I

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~ -~- ·' Citizens New Car Loan Plan * Citizens Personal Loan Plan * ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE: 11.50% UP TO 36 MONTHS; 12% OVER 36 MONTHS- ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE: 14.50% 1 YEAR 2 YEARS ·- 3 YEARS 4 YEARS 1 YEAR l½ YEARS 2 YEARS 3 YEARS (12 MOlffltSJ (24 MONTHS) I (36 MONTHS) ' (48 MONTHS> (12 MONTHS) (18 MONTHS ) (24 MONTHS) 136 MONTHSl Tolalol Tolalol . Mo,thly _ lotalof _,Mo>lhly lotalot Mo>thly Totalot Monthly, lotal ot Mo>lh~ Totatof Mo>thly Td:alof Month~ f'l!monls . l'iymenti _ _, , 'Payments ,,_.ts _, Payments _.. l'lyments payment Payments _, Payments -ent (inckldina ·\,:', (ildudin1, (inc~dina {indudina (includin1 linclu

ANNUAL°P~~CTNTAGE RATE: 1.2:50"!, ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE: 13.50% 2vµRS 3 YEARS: 4 YEARS ' 5 YEARS 6 YEARS 2.YEARS - 3 YEARS rnAiis 5YEARS 7 YEARS (24 MOlflHSt <36 MONTHS> . __(48., MOlflHS) (60 MONTHS') (72 MONTHS) (24months) (36 MOIITHS) (48 MONTHS) (60MONTHSl (84 MOlflHS) _ ., __ . .-...,: Totalol ...... , llontllly Totalal llootllly Talllal llilltllly Totalol llilltN, Totalol llaotllly Totalof llontllly Total ot Monthly Totalol . -.t, ,._., "-"' ~ Payments "-"' (ildudin& 151 -*I 1=1 1=. (includin1 lincludin1 lincludina (includint (includillf : """'"" (= (= intnst) intnst) int....U intnsU ...,,_.. iotnsll... (-···=· \ =illlf:lsll· ·=, ""'"""' = -D I= """""" I= $3898.56 - - $2500--.00· $2838.24 $118.26- $3010=.68 $-83 .63 ,:- -·- - - $3000.00 $3439.92 $143-.33 $3664.80 $101-.80 $ 81.22 - - 4000.00 . 4541.28, · 189.22 4817.16 '133.81 $5103.36 $106:32 $5399.40 $ 89.99 4000.00 4586AQ 19U0 4886.64 135.74 5198.40 108.30 $5521.80 $ 92.03 5500.00 6244,5? . 260.18 6623.28 183.9f ·7017.12 146.19 7423.20 123.72 $7844.40 $108.95 5000.00 6108.12 169.67 6498.24 135.38 6902.40 ll5.04 $ 7754.88 $ 92.,32 . 7000.00 7947.36 331.14 8429.~ , 23:'.!6 l8930.88 186.06 944U0 157.~ 9984.24 138.67 7000.00 8551.44 237.54 9097.44 189.53 9663.60 161.06 10857.00 129.25 Boat, campa-,:itav~l-trailer, mot~home , ski mobile, whaiever. We can lend you the ' If you own a home you may be able to borrow more money than you might have money you·need:tor.just about any recreational vehicle, new or used. Citizens can thought, by using the equity in your:present home for any worth_,~hile purpose: an accommodate~ recreatiOfliltvehicle loans in excess of $7, and/or maturities extensive home improvement such as a new room on the house, your children's lieyond6.ye~:: ' . education, purchasing that lot next do and/or maturities , beyond 7 years., '

We know that wnen you apply for a loan, you would like a prompt answer. Write Your Own Loan We try to give you _;m answer on your Citizens loan application in ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE: 12% 24 hours or less. There are other good reasons tor going to Citizens when. you need money. . · Apply_for a Otizens Reserve Line of Credit for use wpenl!l(ef.YOU need it. Use· Like the.many kinds of loans we offer with a variety of repayment part or all oJ it simply by writing a special check called a Reserve tine of Credit pla_ns. We Will help you to choose the one that best suits your particular cl)eclc. These checks look like any regular check and are furnished withoJt ne&is. And, on most loans, life insurance can be obtained through age 65. chargeaspa,tofyouraccount. · • ·. _.. " · We will take ½% off your Annual Percentage Rate if you decide to ,. When you write the check you ;wtomaticallywrite yourself a loan. finance charges are based only on the amount of money in use at-a rate of 1~ per have us automatically deduct your payments on your installment loan month. vou·repay a minimum atnotmt in regular monthly-installments. from your _Citizens checking account. And we will ,take ah additional ½% lt's-a,quick, convenient, g,nfidential way to borrow inoney. Apply for your off if you have a Citizens Key Account. It's easy to apply. Just stop in at' any Reserve Line of Creditatany Citizens Of_!ke. ' , ofour 26 branches. Or call the Citizens Loan Line, 351-2929, Monday thru Friday, 9AM to 9PM, except holidays. ,.. ' ' ... ,. ... ·~ ' *The~~.ioov, are'.estimated on the assurnpiion that ~aremadeonthesc:heduledd~edate. . 1 , ,.,

~ . ,. CITIZENS BANK We try to do things yourwcl)C

J ' j _, -- • ----.~..... - ....

• ... j, , ..... • . - , rtant anti- 52 · B ton t: 27, Feature of. late to the outer air.. :this is the function enuision valve. • a ge 'SOs Cadillacs. of the: cooling system. , ' DYNAMIC AUTO PARTS I!, Heart of a · _ 53, ~~~t bat- .28, "Western Indian · Since engines w9rk more :ef- tune-up. tcry cells get TA'bc, 12. -Part of a .brake this way _ 29. --Wallace, ficiently 11nd give more miles per ; of fuel system. 55_ Moslem ,title Ben ~W: author. gallon at higher rather than lower ·, l!. Late Chinese ·(Fem.). . , 31. Negative answer temperatures, designers have 826 POST' ROAD leader. 56. Car lubricants. to school t~her resorted to pressurized systems in 14. Tum-,(type 58_ 'Electrical ,(two words). which the radiator cap · plays a of highway. .particle. 32, ~ of auto- •• in the WGIWidl Plcaa . . 15. To declaim, Nevada city. , -moti_vc cap. major role. So, too, docs the kind of 17. 11 years before '°· •3. White ch rcb coolant used to transfer heat from Norman Con-. 61. Mr.1liSQCY or " , , t. u Daily M·~·-·· • Sat. 1-6 • 5'Nt 9-1 uest · ,Rostow. . garmcn • the engine to the radiator where it ; ' .., " 62. Direction 34:-. Automotive . • can be passed to the surrounding ,_,.,,.. A Contpiefe IMe 1,, . ang ..or. wbot-•c dcsig o# JG. llleeded tq wash ~ (abbrev.). . . """' . • air. a car (two 63. Tough guy nati~ tor tires, . A coolant with ethylene glycol as • AUTO PAITS • SUPPLIIS '- aWAIS words). . (-Jang). . =:ies. its base not only protects the engine -- -"AT DISCOUNT PIICIS" 2:l. root'toot - 1-, OoodbfC. 37. Source of auto against freezing but against boil­ 24, Oct a lift from electrical power. · ing, too. In fact, 'what for years has • ...... s.mw0n this inventor. DOWN 39. Ignition system beep calleq ·~antif~·: now haf to ' .... On,... 26. Mr. Cobb. must be in top &Dilc ...... 27. Wl111t puge I, How to drive shape.to start : be --an anti-surge, anti-foam, an­ reads after· ·on wet roads. · cars on this tistcam, anti-!=()rrosion, "anti-boil gas stop. 2: Dangerous kind of A.M. ''ilnti-frceze.'' 30. The -- - when worn. 41. FBI Director's 785-2334 lcHAiPlo~I Ranger. 3. The show goes initil\ls. If a SO-SO -mixture of water and a Also located at . . 32. Head covering. - - --8:30 43. Dcf.ensive tennis reliable brand of coolant is used in a · 479 Smithfietd Ave., Pawt. . 35. Adherents. (two words). stroke. system pressurized to about I 5 36. Musical combo. 4. Fuels in Britain. 44. What worn pounds per square inch, the boiling · 3'7, Light source. 5, Afternoon. tires may do. 725-3444 38. ·When shocks 6. Vital engine.. 45. Gov~rnment point is raised to about 265°F are worn you shaft. agency. ( about - 129°C) and the freezing is need--ones. 7. Unit of battery 46. To sort ollt. _ _,__lowered to about · '· 34°F (about 39. How-to stay electricity. 47. Ireland (poetic). wbenina ., · 36°C). traffic Jam. 8. Very· soft to 49. Decorative 4&. _ _ Eban, musicians. molding. Car Care Council points out that Israeli _9. What bitch- 50. Part of ladder.. the.. old iec<>me faulty a9d there ~ay be . times when yqu think the door is · locked, but it isn't: l'his is par­ ticularly true of power door locks. ,.Occaaionally, check the doors on the outside to make· certain 'they lock properly. ~ I _H;,,;:t...~ R;;.:. .:'Rffl:i=;':.=E..::is~LXW::;:" ~ ·~lfi::::ll::::l>-::.:' 1=·));~-·~Fk::.li1:::D~".:..Y,i;.:;·~J:i·P1t~m1,;,1". 1~~:~1"-J97~.1 ; · , ). .~- -_,Ai...... - - - • - - • - off ivithout warning . . ~ -J_.,· ~ouble.shoo'ffn,g ··. f__ o;, Worn . Be_lts_:; &' H_O$e l· · ~-· _·:-: . .gd!JP~~; -~~ttt!:r:fi:~Y.o~~~ · belt have separated. The belt may Neglected· , belts arid hose can · will cause,. tbe. loss of. \eitJICl!Sive : ., car'l V-Belti, make sure you look at This can cause a discharg,=d battery, . ·soon fail . c,,uae a_!ot of t~ouble· if they are cool~nt'-or possible destr.uct!on of the belt .sides a_nd '!<>ttom. ~Here's engine: over:_heating · and premature While you are checking the con- . !lllowecl to ~orate: A loose V- . your ~ngine d'ue'to o~heatm~. what to l(!Ok . for: . , 1 ·belt failure. -. ,. dition of your belts; make sure they Belt ·can cause· your' ef!af~e to·. The G~tes;.._R~b~~- Goi:iipany . I .Cracks on the underside pf the , . 3.A _gre~ o_r oil-softened belt are correctly tensioned. A loose belt ·overheat, you_r battery to .ru~ down_ offers. !h' following checklist ,for · belt can enlarge as the belt ~exes. w!th· sllck sides. increases wear and will cause slipping and slippage 11~~ ~ccesso~ such as ~~ con•' checking ~Its and hose: ~ . · .. Crac~ed belts can break Without slippage. . . causes key ·components - fan, •.d1t1omng _ and · power steering to Most· belts look ~ne on_ the top. wa~mng. ; . . , 4.A belt that 1s frayed or peeling• alternator, water pump, etc. _ to l\lalfunct1on. . , · c~~n when thet_are ·m ter!'ble con- · 2.G~azed ~It sidewalls may shp at ~ttom corners can cause rou~h .slow down thereby affecting their A burst or leaking coolanJ-hose · d1t1on. So when you clieck your and fad. to gnp the.· pulley properly. , running_. The belt may break or nip performance.

I The fresher . ;: :-yout:plugs ' ' ' :~the .J,etteryc,ur mUUge ··'" :• :performance. . · )<:~·:···::-What do.~sparkplugs have to do With mileage and performance? · .- ::._ '.N,spark plug ls -whal-star'ts the bµrn pf gasoline in your car's engine. The better

~, the... spark, the better the. ' burn, . J. ,am,l• that means better mileage and performance.,,,,. How can you·tell when it's'time .- for fresh. plugs? · . A,plug.shmild"be good for'.10,odo to 12,000 miles. After that, it's probably ; ,.z :,:-' ~fime for a-repl~cem·ent ... -. _ . · · · · Could you j_ust clean your plugs'? , . Cleaning .helps, but will not restore a: plug to its new condition. Your best bet

for better_:mileage an~ 1performance is with a fresh set of Champion spark plugs. · · So fill 'er up .with Champions. . Not only have they sparked more ra.'ce winners than any other brand, they,'re made just.right foiyour car. Champion ... the world's best-selling plug. + ; ·. (- ~--~ . " -~ .. ~ . . .• :· :~~ . ;,,...... >ti's.;·-. ~srail ~,gY#HJ:-~, ·. Ove, ··: sea,dt -- for:Oji .. -,: ·:EL ·T.u:R, lsrul-occupiod Sinal: The laraeli politioia on its·daim In the bltJO green waters of the Gulf tochaving a rifft to drill iii the gulf · of S!tCZ a ,skeletal rig has been, lias been a COIIIIStalt on~:-Last fall, erec;ted 'to plumb the depths for oil · an laraeli 1;>atrol boat. shot at in, this area-not far from the jutting, equipment manned by a crew under weatherl;!l and abandoned mosque contract to, Egypt. when-the_crew . on the beach. • -' ignored · warnings. The crew had · The oil probe'by Israel represents· been iiitemptiiig . to install rigging · the country's latest attempt to equipment on what the Israelis _ MOVING,..- STATEWIDE - · lessen it's. depen4ence upon other contend is their side of the gulf me• , woi1t2 ·_ nations for fuel. located.in the Gulf dian line. · DAN SALTZMAN MAYNARD SUZMAN of Suez, off the shores of land it · • . Aadion Iii Area 36 KENNEDY !!LAZA ei RRINGTON OFFICE captured in the 1967 war, this The incident created a diplomatic PROVIDENCE. 'R. I. 02903 . 306 '(:OUNTY ROAD '751,1-113 , BAR'RINGTON, R. I. 02806 current quest by Israel has provided e~change between Israel and the­ ' . ' • 245-3600 the foc4s ofa dispute bet:,veen [s_rael United States that grew a bit ' and. its closest ally, the·· United heated. In.late Feb., the Israelis did States. · · , . . permit lip American crew' working Israel's search for oil in thi;-a~ -under Egyptian'· auspices to· drop where Egypt has long had rigs drill-. · anc~or o.n "the lsriteli side," ing has proven a long -standing . -presuf!lably as ii concession to source of- irritation -between, these -Washington.,_ on the eve _of Mr. -two countries. Am~rica· recognizes )labirfs visit:· ., . , · · ,: Egypt's rights to drill in tf\egulf. ._ At --. The oil prospecting ;in· th~ gulf, the same time, it disputes the lcgali- . .has 1~ -to fuf1hcr speculation that For tradition~! or contem­ ty of the Israeli offshore drillings, Israel is quietly laying claim to porary decor. Monograms contending that lsra~'s occupation strategic portions of Sinai th\lt it available. 2 week delivery. , Ji~ of the• Sinai 111.nds along tqe gulf docs not plan to relinquish . at a . TO• SHQW SUDIS: Dr ~ l) . ,"!It• la'9flt auo,tment of docs not gi~e that country the right ba~aining table. 'fliis speculat~onis _ S. ., • archelil · lit • bHilidii ;;: lucit~ in- ;he a,-." to exploit offshore natural fortified by the.fact that lsrqe[:has · sci!..,,'· and. -his:!«.~ II!( an- rcsources. · built a 60-miie water pipeline along the · coast road from El Tur to tiquity, w• be 'featured at the ' Sharm el Sheik, at the southern tip Temple Jeth . B Brat~- . Calla Drlllllla "Olepl' .of the peninsula. brealcfost on Sunday, -April 24, - The most recent manifestation of Tlfe·Sharm cl Sheik area, whicli at 10 a.m. Dr. Seger wil give a . "G 'ERTR .UDE'S United States opposition to the the. l.sraelis arc promoting as a vaca- . slid~ -prne!ltation _on "Tlie La- . Q!l · . . rFrs- . . Israeli drilling came in Febn1ary tion spot with a special -attraction liciv P~, New Exca_vations at the eve of Secretary of State Cyrus for skindivers because of the Red _ Biblical -Ziqlag." · 9 Lister Drive Ba;rington, .R.I. R. Yance's Middle East fact-:finding Sea's extraordinary corals, is a Dr. ·Seg•r, wlio: earnecl his . Cal/ Gertrude Makowsky at 245-2727 tour. · strategic site. H overlooks the Gulf PhD In Old Testament Studies .. kw Personalized Shopping Service The siate Department rei\erated of Aqaba and the narrow shipping fr!lm . Harvard Unl~ersity In' its contention that the Israeli drill- laries of the Strait of Tiran. 1965, is among the foremost ing was illegal and said it was "not It• ·is considered important for young American archeologish · helpfol . ta efforts to Jet -peace assuring fr~dom of passage of working in Israel today. ~egohaho{'ls und~~ way. The su~- ships going to and from 'ihe Israeli BetwNn· 1969 and 1974 he Jt:<'! came_ _up dunng Mr. V:an.cc;_s , pott'of Flath. · ·: served as archeological directo; v151t to- ls~acl, the fh:st, st0P on hrs·._ The Israelis ha:ve established a of the Nelson· Glueck School of tour, but _it wa~ ·n_ot res_ol~ed. · . Jewish settlement Orf-a promontary Biblical Archeology (Hebrew According to an Israeli ,official al Sharm el Sheik:. The settlement, ' II d M V t lk Union ~ege) In Jerusalem, wh_0 ,o o~e r .•• ance s a_ s ca_ll_ed Ophira,· was very. slow_. in get- th I I I d W d t · and directed Phase II operations w_i. sr~~ 1 ea ers, c agree 0 ting started a few years ago, in P,art ·of the major Ame~can ex-_ disa~ree. . , - . .- it is believed, because. (he cavation at Biblical ~zer. .Prime M1~1ster Yitz~ak Rab!n ,Government · was deliberatel): · ' said ~fore his ~epartur_e for talks,m ·· refrajiting 'for political reasons from Hit is organjzing· director of a Washmgto_n with Pres1den! Carter fostering its growih. new r-o:h project at Tel Halif that such issues were "peripheral" · . ,, ~ ~!>bu~·~hay in, '°"thern to the main purpose of his talks - KEEP.HO'LOCAUST ALIVE ·: 1srael. • - ,;::-· ' · , seeking a common- United States- GENEVA (JTA): A committee Passover $4trvices Rapped , Israeli position on terms for renew- of Yad Vashem has been created in b .J ing peace negotiations with the· Switzerland to support )'ad Y Dissiuents As Sop Arabs. Vashem in Jerusal~m and propose- NEW YORK (JTA): Some 500 The drilling operation here was new I'd eas and programs a d apt...._ _. to Jews took part in P•ssovcr~ services _. begun in Deccmbi:r, off the shores the conditions in this country. The at the Moscow Centr.al Synagogue, of this once thriving Moslem fishing aim is to keep alive the memory of according to reports from ,the / village that now stands ghostly and the Holocaust and the Jewish' Soviet capital. However, many of For Information Call: abandoned. Near it ·is an Israeli . h the city's militant Jews refused to· (401) 831-0337 or write i resistance. T e \:<)mmittee was set · Box 336, Soutti Attleboro, Mass. 02703 military base - hc;idquqrters or up by representatives of the cultural attend tlie officially sanctioned ser­ the military command charged with - and youth departments o(the Swiss vices which some termed a sop by CALL NOW for Class Most Convenient For You! administering the approximately Federation of)cwish Communities .the government in an effort ·10 Barrington Newport Warwick Mall 25,000 square miles of Sinai sand and m~mbers of the rabbinical and denect criticisl]l by Jews in the Bristol · North Providence Westerly and mountains captured from the teachers associations. Soviet UniQn and abroad regarding Burrlllvllle Pawtucket West Warwick Egyptians nearlt a decade ago. the oppression of Soviet Jews. A Coventry Po~_mouth Wickford · Cranston Proviilence Woonsocket Soviet television crew filmed the Cu moorland :~Tt~~~ld Attleboro Lehman Students Demonstrate service which was attended mostly East Greenwich (Greenville) North Attleboro by old men. East Providence 'Wakefield Fall River The television director said the Johnston Warren Somerset For Jewish Studies Tea(her - film was intended for transmission Lincoln Warwick Swansea NEW YORK: An official of tenured professors in the Judaica abroad but would not be shown on Lehman College said some 15 department at Lehmao. Soviet television. students and rabbis ended a 24- According to the JAC, the two hour peaq:ful sit-in at the office of are linguists and Gerber, whq.holds college.· president Leonard Lief a PhD in Jewish and Islamic when arrangements were made for history, is the only faculty· member them to talk to Rovert Kibbee, teaching ancient, medieval, modern Chancellor of the City University. and- Amencan Jewish history' .at The protesters occupied Licrs of- Lehman. She also conducts a course lice in protest against his refusal to tm the Holocaust. l grant tenure to Pc.of. Jane Gerber, Gerber. has the support of Bro_n_x who teaches Holocaust studies and Jewish cour.ses at the collc:ge. Borough President Robert Abrams The protesters, headed, by Rabbi --:ho addressed a campus ra!fy on · Avi Weiss of Riverdale, represented ,her behalf and of the A~erican .\, the Jewish Acti.on Coalition (JAC), . Jewish Congress. On March 9, · Sylvia Deutsch, director· of, tht compr-ising members of Hillel, AJCongress' Metropolitan Council Yavneh, the Jewish Students Union h · p f wrote to Kibbee to reverse Lier~ and . ot er campus groups. ro . decision. Deutsch described the., Alice Griffin, director of the Gerber case as a "litmus test·: of Lehman College relations office, CUNY's commitment to .Jewish · reported the departure of the st.udies and noted that enrollment' in demonstrators . . She said the arrangements for the meeting with Gerber"s courses represented 50 Kibbee were made by Glenn percent of the students in the Jewish Nygreen, Lehman dean of students. studies unit, about a quarter of The JAC charged that Liers. wliom are non-Jewish·. , rejection of a recommendation for "Consistently, Prof. Gerber's tenure for Gerber was the beginning _courses have attracted sizcaplc of an attempt to abolish the Judaica .numbers of students," Deutsch department at Lehman College and wrote. AccordinJ to a JAC eventually throughout the City spokesman, about 168 students arc University (CUNY) system of enrolled in Gerber's courses and which Lehman is a part, Lief 257 are enrolled in Jewish studies at P-uckot lnttltutlon tor Savingoll'ewlucjlot Trull Company-n Office, 29& Main SINIII, -ucltot, R,1./Totepllone: 724-SOOO - localtons /Mlma.. F.0 .1.C., reportedly said that he Kted out of Lehman.- Total enr_ollment in the "institutional llOnlidentiona" and college, located ln, the Bronx, is noted that there wereo41rea~"411"""1!Nl(al•~,. •• l'w ...... ,.w-...11,1.111ttt1t ...... «1.1&1.1t1.1 .. lfi1... ------"''"'·.,,,.,- 0Ms~:;1"1,,-,------,,. ·------~ \.

( __I-Money; s Worth J - . . · Continued from Page 4 , . sales. Notices of sales to the public also may be in newspaper, radio and TV announcements, trade jour­ ~ B l'IIOID TO Nll0IID 11111 OWNi.- Of nals, notices in public buildings such as Post Offices, and through · announcements in the Department ':'BAGELS of Commerce publication, • PlAft • ONON • SESAME "ARE NONTAXABLE A:. Slioahl my atoci portfolio lie "Commerce Business Daily." • POPPY • MARBLE DIVIDENDS DESIRABLET held to offllet lllflatloa after I retire? NOTE .TO YOU: You may ob­ • PlJMIERNICKEL • GARLIC Q: W.. a capuy IIOdfles you I hold America.Siorea, Bucoc:k A tain a subscription ·10 this publica­ · WUcox, Soathen Padflc:, Soathen tion at 575 a year by writing to the ~· ...... 11 IIOlltuallle, wllat . nearest Department of Commerce effect doll 11111 llil,e oil die •al• of Union, Utah Power A Llpt u11 . RAINBOW BAKERY, INC. yeu llianl? If I m,eat S1,000 ud Royal Dlltcll N. Y. lilarea. J. W. . field office or the Superintendent of IDII RESERVOII AVL CRANSTON; RJ. · Documents, Government Printing l401IM4-81IO reeehe SIINI la dl.we.dt, wl.. · S!O Artz.a ll0IJIIS: 7:00 A.II. TO 7:00 P• EVERY DAY IINtuUle, It., capital ,.._. to A: These' 6 NYSE-listed stocks Office, Washington, D. C. 20402. 5950? 11 ..., detirallle? E, L. are well suited to your. purpose. Personal. property is sold to the ,, Maryiull . - . Dividend growth shouJa continue publi~ on -a competitive bid basis, in -A: You are right, the nontaxable at a pace sufficient to offset infla­ quantities to encourage your par­ portion of the dividend is treated as tion. All of your holdings except ticipation as an individual as well as ·. a ret11rn of .capital and your cost Southern Pacific have boosted a business concern. No priorities or _,basis must_ be reduced . by, that dividends more than 45% over ·the preferences are given to groups or , amount in the event of the eventual last 5 years. On _two -of your issues individuals. sale of the shares. Utilities afe the the increases have been at about Property is frequently sold by most freqlleot distributors of such doub_[i:,t/la.t rate. On average, your sealed bid with an Invitations For dividends. These oontaxa-bk portfolio · provides -a respectable Bid mailed to you, a prospective dividends arise from the difference yield of 6%. These 6 diversified buyer. You enter the prices on-the in earnings reported for (egulatory stocks afford you participation in bid forms contained io the IFB and and shareholder use and "those the growth of at least as many in­ return the forms to the specified repoi:ted for .tax pi:irposes. An item dustries. I see no reason to make government office with a bid referred . kl 'as AFDC credits any changes he~. deposit. If you're a successful (all_o'fancc ' for funds used during bidder, you will be notified. oonstruction) is included io the rate To R. M, California: 60% of your Spot bids also are used, with the portfolio's assets are in one holding, bidder writing the bid and submit­ JAPANESE.. ., STEAKI HOUSE , ,. "· base for utilities, which must fund .. 1270-...... AVE. ,,,..::__ , huge constructjon programs over a' Standard Oil of California (NYSE). ting it during conduct of the sale. long period of time. Because this is You should reduce this some and Awards are made item by item as NORTH~OZICM A&·P-­ unearned income, for tax purposes use the procc,eds io diversify. the sale progresses. If you're on the RA11111m - . '. it represents a return on capital. Accepting the loss on your mutual mailing lists, you 'II receive informa­ · If a large percentage pf earnings fund shares to offset the gain in tion on the property and instruc­ ,._ct~-----~...... _ are from these interest credits, then Socal makes good sense. The other tions for placing bids. Provision · IIEIERVA1Dl nll-1'1D it signifies that the company's issues in your portfolio should be even may be made for prospective construction program is high in held. I would add a bank stock such purch)lsers who can't attend the sale relation to net plant in operation. as Continental Illinois, which has 'in person to submit bids. This indicates some risk to the just propo~ed a 2-for-I split. Ear­ Public auctions are another / Wen proud to amocnce investor and is considered· a nings are expected to reach.$8.20 a vehicle used by the government. share this year and a dividend in­ These follow traditional commer­ JAMES P. _WITHERS 1111s joinea die · negative factor. Once a plant becomes operative, that slice of ear~ crease seems likely. Another attrac­ cial auctioning methods. Catalogs profwb~ 111 SCOTT OFFICE INTER~S' nings . which has been coming from tive issue, Pennwalt, is active in are provided. Government­ I' chemicals, health lines and approved auctioneers are in charge. "Jim". formerly with Slate its AFDC credits will be lost. Since new plants normally are not able to specialized eq_uipment: The ~m­ Under the law, state and local _pany has just increased its dividend governments may purchase surplus Office ~-has fiflllen years generate the same high level of ear­ nings, pr.mnpt rate increases are to 45¢ a share from 40¢ quarterly. A property by negotiated sale as well e,cperilnce in the office necessary to maintain earnings. third issue· for your portfolio is as competitive bid. Officials who Pfizer, a producer of ethical drugs, wish to buy .property by negotiation flmitln field in sales, space Thus: it can be concluded that a la!]!C-;,:'J)Ofl;iOn Of nOf!taxab)e, ,eaf• cosmetics, chemical and toiletries. should contact the Regional Com­ plnlingnldasi!,I. nings ,is J!0t desirable. The shares yle1d· 3.4% on the recent­ missioner, Fideral Supply SerVice, - ·-- ~ I To R.. T. New Jeney: The market ly boosted dividend. All three trade at the GSA regional office servicing Comi visit Jim in our valuation of vario~ stocks selling on the NYSE. the a rea where their local beautiful new showroom, at widely divergent "prices ca.n be (c) i977, Los Angeles Times Syn­ government is located. where. you can fincl. readily compared by using price­ d_icate C 1977 Field Enterprises, Inc. everything from a lamp to· earhings ratios. These are Che a complete layout. .-.._•-i....::_ .... . lilare's' trading price divided by Those Rescued File law Suit 274-0355 earnings per share. The resulting -- - - . .,,.... figure is referred to as the P/E mul­ CHICAGO (JTA) : A suit seeking tiffs said they were demanding a SCOTT OFFICE INTERIORS INC - tiple or ratio. For example: stock $,127 million in damages against Air jury trial and that it would be for a A BC sells at $240 and earns $ I6 a France and Singapore Airlines were jury to decide the liability of each furnitureldesign,sp'ace planning· share, so it has a multiple of ISX filed in circuit court here last Thurs- airline in respect to the demand for (times). Another, XYZ, sells at $38 . day by 42 persons rescued last July $28 million in compensatory and earns $2 -a share, and has a 19 from Entebbe Airport in Uganda. damages and $99 million in punitive times (X) P /E ratio. While at first The 42, most of them Israelis, ac­ damages. glance ABC seems higher price<\, cused the two airlines of falling to . based on its earning power th~ take adequate precautions to market has placed a lower value on prevent the hijacking of an Air New Group the shares. · Since the market is France plane by Palestinian generally looking to the future, ear­ terrorists last June 27 after the For Women nings muliiples are usually based on · plane took off from Athens. The 42 estimated earnings- for the current were among some 250 passengers - JERUSALEM: A new religious or following year. and crew members on the hijacked women's Zionist organization has . CONSERVATIVE POUCIF.S plane. Uganda President Idi Amin been established with headquarters YIELD STEADY GROWfH freed some of the passengers, and here. Called "Emunah," its president is Mrs. Sarah Herzog, the Q: I wlD retire a year froa - Israeli forces in the daring raid ... wlD ... _._ to ·-,pt1aeat rescued l02 passengers. ~ widow of Rabbi Isaac Herzog, my peaaloa. I 11o1• Wanbiatoa The suit charged Air France did Ashkenazi of Palestine Mlltllallnelton,llaaptml970.I · not screen passengers boarding the and later, Israel. Emuriah combines religious lill dliitillatloa. Did plane in Athens and that Singapore ••e nlaf__. women's Zionist organizations all JMs-t .. •Y Nlectloa? Airltnes was invo!ved .because the ·-pooro:·P. eauron1a . . , hijackers came from Bahrain on .a over the world (Mizrachi-Hapoel A: By no means. This· high­ Singapore Airlines · plane also un­ Hamizrachi Women), which have quality fund has achieved ,n above­ screened. The suit was filed , here an estimated membership of some average 'growth record, usually out­ because Chicago is one of the few 100,000. , performing the averages in both cities-in -the world where the two The new organization's aims are: up and down years. In ·the last airlines both have offices. the strengthening of religious ,decade W-i15hington Mutual has in­ Relatives of two persons killed education; the narrowing of Israel's creased net asset vallle + 147% com- during· the Israeli rescue mission social gap; the promotion of im­ pared with +89% for the Standard and of Mrs. Dora Bloch, a migration; and the intensification of EDWIN S. SOFORENKO & Poor's 500. Dividends are paid in · passenger who was in a Uganda efforts on behalf of Jews in .coun­ varying amounts quarterly, but hospital at the time of the rescue tries where they are persecuted. Michael H. Silverman Howard s. Greene. totaled 32¢ a share in the most anil believed to have been later kill­ ·Rob~"·~- J~~es . _., Peter E: Fallon recent 12 months for a reasonable· ed by Uganda soldiers, joined in. the ELECTION 4.5% return on the current net asset lawsuit. The suit charged that by VIENNA: The Jewish communi- . Murry-M.~Halpert- value. A capital gain distribution failing to make adequate security ty here elected a new board of C. Fred_Corbett, CLU has' been made in each of the last 21 checks on passengers, each airline governors. The "Union of Working years. Income dividends paid to became "an accessory and an ac­ Jews," a Socialist group lost thrr.e AU UNlf 01' !NSUIANCI POI IUSINISS shareholders have been in an up­ complice in the hijacking" and of their former 14 seats, thereby los­ INDUS-TIY, HOMI AND l'IISONAL PIOTICTION trend in the last few years. The fund "aided and abetted the hijackers." tng their previous absolute majority points out that on 7 of its 10 largest The suit asserted that the airlines on the 21-member board. The 211 ANGELL STREET holdings the dividend was boosted failed to discover that the hijackers, "United Jewi,sh Bloc," headed by in 1976: So far this year, 3 of these seven of whom were killed by the Simon Wiesenthal, which previous­ t,Nion 1-1923 have raised the dividend again. I rescuing Israelis, carried small ly held four seats, won seven seats. would favor holding this fund for arms, one small machinegun, 20 The Zionists won two seats and the moderate growth and income. After hand grenades and four boxes of group of Orthodox Jews won one INSURANCE UNDERWRITERS, INC. retirement, revlac your dividend op­ dyn11mite, first on the ·Singapore seat. Some 5600 Jews were tion to cash payments rather than plane and "then on to the Air France , registered to vote but slightly more reinveatin1. plane. The attorney for the . plain- than half voted. _ THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY _APRIL 15 1977 i9 / 1 1 ' . '\' ~ ' lwicze Reject~-J_s_ .. - T~place a Herald Classified, call ' 724-0200. -c.., Jori '"'' C 4.~ .· Acres .Of-~nd ·'··,------~------·----- I . -·;.------...... Now Choice. -, , ~ To look like Spring l..abot's Davld L. -Golden, president- of · ::,Give . . JERUSALEM: Shimon Peres "!as palpable, but Mr. Peres was Camp Jori, Point Judith. has an­ portrayed himself as the "new face" gracious in . defeat anlf strained nounced JORI's ·recent purchase MURIEL PERLMAN needed to reinvigorate the pl!,rty mi~htily to hid~ his deep disap­ of 4.8 acres of land adjacent to th and to inaugurate change at a time pointment. camp. This new addition will en­ A ringl when Labor's fortunes were ebbing Some Israeli politicians and able the camp to enla"rge its sports a fe)IV months ago, in the heat of the political observers feel that Mr. facilities and enrollment for the . 351-2927 - t politic;al battle to become the Labor · Peres is less ideologically oriented 1977 season. Long term plans call Maybe you can't depend upon the l Party's nominee.for Prime Minister. lhan Mr. Rabin . .Some call it for 1ennis courts a,nd a new base­ weather, but you can depend upon thatf Actually, Mr. Peres is not a new "pragmatism"; others label it "op- ball diamond. Springt!me look with a creative skin care face at all, his political career begin­ portunism." . Paul Se9al (JFCS). adminis­ ning 35 years ago. At the age of 18, But there is little · disagreement trative 8irector. says that there are plan. he was appointed coordinator of that Mr. Peres is better suited to the a few openi.ngs lor the 1977 sum­ ·------~----~------~~--..-·· , __ :.....:....,.__.--~ yputh movement clubs in•what was · use of mass communications than mer season. Further information !hen no~er11 Palestine. . his predeccs$Qr. He is at "home may be obtained by calling 521- · Mr. Peres," who is Polish-born before large audi~nccs, while. Mr. . 2655 _or writing Camp Jori. c/o _ WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT and currently serves as Secretary of Rabin is not, and he has the sort of Jewisli Family and Children's Ser­ PROVIDENCE CHAPTER Defense here, displayed P!llitical features that come across well -on vice, 229 Waterman Street, Provi­ acuity even in this first post, rising television' screens. dence. FIRST ANNUAL _. rapidly in the ranks of the Working SlmllarP~ . MAH JONGG TOURNAMENT :iouth movement. Along the way On major iss11es, Mr. Rabin and Malc:olm Frager he developed a taste for' the Mr. Peres have similar positions, WOODRIDGE CHURCH labyrintfrine intric'acies o[ Israeli alt!:iough Mr. Peres is regarded by To Appear With 39 JACKSON RD., CRANSTON political life. many as more reluctant than Mr. Mr, Peres was appointed head of Rabin is to· make territorial Philhr;,rmonic Thursday, Mav 5 at 7:45 p.m. DONAtlON $5.00 Israel's naval 'service at the begin­ concessions on--Arab lands captured American pianist Malcolni Fra­ ning· of 1948, the year the Jeiwish by Israel in the 1967 -war. For reservations call Ellen Reuter 944-7094 ;ger will appear in concert with the or ·Linda Gentenblatt 738-0537 state was founded. After Israel's In the last two days, he has gone Rhode Island Philharmonic Or­ war of independence, Mr. ·Peres; at out of hi_s ·way l!? counter this chestra on Saturday. April 23. at the age of 27, headed the Defense l?erception, saying that like his 8.:30 p.m. in Veter~ns Memorial Ministry's supply mission . to the predecessor he is committed to the · Auditorium. , · · United States and studied at New party's platform_on foreign policy Francis Madeira. musical direc­ issues. · -· SHALOM York Univ.ersity 'and at the Harvard tor. will ·open \he performance School of Business Administration. During his most recent bid for with the Water Music by George 1 DAY CARE CENTER Pawtucket, R.I. Hip Der- Poat ' the; party's nominatiop, M~. Peres Frederick Handel. Mr. Frager will The decision to send the fledgling pledged that the top echelons of any then appear as soloist in Piano politician on such an' impor-tant government he headed would be Concerto No. I by Bela Bartek. .NOW OPEN FOR REGISTRATION mission was made by David Ben­ more representative of Israel's Malcolm Frager js the only art­ Children Ages 3 • 5 Gurion, and a few years later the women and its youth. ist ever to win both the Leventritt Prime Minister's protege was ap­ Between now and the general FUU DAY PROGRAM FOR WORKING MOTHERS and Queen le.lisabeth. of Belgium HALF DAY .PROGRAM pointed Director General of the elections on May I~. he will need to competitions. He has played with Ministry of Defense. utilize all his political skills in per­ virtually all of the major orches­ QUAUFIED STAFF • WARM ATMOSPHERE suading Israeli voters that .the In that post, Mr. Peres was in tras here and abroad. This will be charge of a substantial part of Labor Party, weakened by scandal, WE WILL BE OPENING MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1977 Jvlr. Frager's fo~rth appearance Israel's total budget aricfhe quickly divisiven.ess and uncertainty, with the RI Philharmonic. . FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT became, one ~f the small group of deserves to remain the country's RABBI YAAKOV UVSITZKY at men who determined the course of governing party: He is efpected to UNIFICATION MOVE 725-5687 or 725~2033 the young nation's industrial emphasize duriifg the short period TUN IS: Close collaboration growth. between now and the election that between the armies of Syria and Reg.arded u an able ad­ his nomination is a sign of change. Jordan is very much in evidence, ac­ ministrator, Mr. Peres played a cen­ And he is·certain to be pressed to be cording to local press accounts. tral role in establishing Israel's specific about what he means by There is -now a common uniform growing electronics and aviation in­ change. fo~ , all members of both armed dustries - fields that still interest Mr. Peres was born into a finan- fom:s, and all military motorized bil))., .Jfi,s, b.u~q~s~~~c;, P!ilCtiCl!-Jity ' ci!ll.ly _ ~ure Ine,ri;~ant fan:iily . i.n , transport of both co1:1"ntrii!:5·· has has earned him t"~· criticism of 19_23 _in the small to~n of beenpaintedthesamccolor: Oflate some left-wing Israehs, who regard W1shmaw_a, P?land. He emigrated there have also been f eint him as something less than strongly to Palestine . m 1934. A popular maneuvers conduded by teai:ns of committed to socialist tenets. speaker, ..he 1s the author ?_f two Syrian and Jordanian officers. The Recently, when the United States ~ook~,. T~e ~ext . Phase .~nd purpose of this ,llnification is the Secretary of State, Cyrus R. Vance, Dav~~ s ' ~~mg, which chronicle strengthening of the armed forces of visited Israel, it was Mr. Peres who . lsracb s m1htary development. both countries. argued that the United States deci­ sion not to allow Israel to sell 20 Israeli-made Kfir jets to Ecuador Soviets Pressure Activists was economically damaging to­ Israel. The Kfir has an American­ To Testify Against Salensky made engine. FaYon Expalllioa \ During his tenure as Minister of NEW YO~K (JTA):• Soviet tral Committee of the! Lithuanian· Defense, Mr.· Peres has often authorities arc pressing two Vilna Red Cross, according to informa­ emphasized the need for Israel to activists to testify against Naum lion received by the Conference. continue expansion of its arms in­ Salensky, leader of the city's _Jewish Bronx Borough President. Robert du st ry, both to decrease its activists who may soon be brought Abrams Conference chairman, an­ dependence· on the United States to trial on serious criminal charges, nounocd that some 200,000 New - and to manufacture surpluses for' the Greater New York Conference Yorkers are expected to march Sale to other nations to aid in over­ on Soviet Jewry reported. The fri>m City-Hall to Battery Park on coming · the coOntry's persistent Lithuanian KGB accused Vladimir May I beginning 12 noon in a deficit ;n its balance of trade. Drot and Vladimir Raiz, of "anti- massive solidarity demonstration He was one of ihe prime movers social and anti-Soviet activities" in for So.viet Jewry. ' - behind the construction of Israel's connection with their Jewish · . ' , , nuclear reactor at Dimona in the c_u1tura1 a~tivities and their ag!ta- ;Beduin Sheikhs Negev. . lion to emigrate, Drot, an a'coustical - ., While he met with favor in the engineer, was accused by a KGB Jo,n Movement eyes of Mr. Bcn.-Gurion, the ain­ agent ·of "unlawful management of . bitioils politician has long been a an Ulpan for Jewish history and JERUSALEM (JCNA) '- F.our source of irritation to two other literature." Beduin sheikhs-arc reported to h~~e Israeli leaders - former Prime Raiz, a research biologist, was ac­ join.ed the Citizens !hghts Minister Golda Meir and the man cused df !'illegal management of Movement" and have declared that - he replaced today for the party's scientific seminars." The KGB they are l)0t deterred that it is Jed by nomination, Prime _ Minister threatened the two activists with a woman, Knesset mem~r. Mrs: Yitzhak Rabin. i01prisonment if they refuse to Shulamit Aloni.\ The friction with Mrs. Meir dates testify against Salensky. Sheikh Nuriel-Okbi told a press back from the I 950's, when she was Soviet Jews have. organized a conference here that they had join­ SAVE 40% - socy;-­ Israel's Foreign Minister. Mr. Peres series of seminars in several cities to ed the organization because it had ON DESIGNER TOPS became the architect of Israel's teach themselves ab2!Jt Jewish life helped them in their fight-for return - .relations wiih France and was and to keep them abreast of or compensation for expropriated - 1 ST QUALITY ONLY! responsible for the purchase of developments in their professional lands in the· Negev. French weapons that were used in fields, the Conference said. Sheikh Salem cl-Huzaye'I com­ Shop ·NYLS and save 40% to 50% over regular the Sinai war of 1956 and thc,six­ Salensky, a 45-year-old physicist plained that some Bcduin who had· department store and specialty shop prices! day war of 1967. Much of his activi­ with a wife and child, has been been transferred to new areas had All first qualtiy. Beautifully made of 1Q0% cot­ ty circumvented Mrs. Meir's office, leading Vilna's key Jewish seminar not been allowed to build there and ton. Designer motifs & monograms you'll In­ incurring her wrath. in his home for several months. He any temporary structures they had stantly recognize! Misses' and junior sizes. The dispute with Mr. Rabin is of is being_investigated on charges of . erec(ed had been demolished on - Hurry! Don't miss this opportunity! more recent origin. In 1973, and "defaming the 1nternal policies of gov~rnment orders. Save. your NYLS sales receipts( Collect $100 again in February of this.year, Mr. the USSR," which could mean worth and get your choice of brand name three years imprisonment. Rabin, with the strong backing of appliances for only 99'. Offer good on sales \ Labor Party regulars such as Mrs. In a related development, the two HERAl.!D ADS bring to your receipts dated Mar. 28 thru May 7. Meir, was able to defeat Mi. Pcres's activists' pregn11nt wives asked for doorstep a wide variety of merchan­ attempts to become Prime Minister permiuion to emigrate even if they dis~ and services. Take advantage IOAM to10PM MONDAY thtu SA TUROAV • t---J[ la] - but by very narrow mar1in1. . have to leave without their · of the Herald before you go out on At the February convention, the husband•. Carmela Raiz and Raiza your next shoppina trip. You may TAKE THE FASHION ROUTE ® LONSDALE AVE. EXIT 26 , PAWTUCKET 4islike both men felt for each other Drot made their appeal, to the Cen-. be pleasantly surprised. ,.. .o ,'J 1 'Hct· 1 1'.itft ~11iqft: .,'lt ,.,, '(tfl l"•!HJ !!~1 I .~t1t;lq ~ .!.,.,...,. ... ~!.,.~... . !.,-• ..,.~-. -:."'.:.s.....:-.....~ ... -. _._ ••~ .·.. · ---- :.,·,: ' :s. • • • io-:tKE.~RffObE' 'M.Mtt;ll'elfACdz'Fkl»:S*; -~P!ll! '. 15.!·1971,,:"'; ' ·: . . . . • . ~ . , FRU_IT VENDORS STRIKE-· ... ·'·mc'N:hii_ntshad joined thes toppage, · ri: ·...... ~~ :",~ ifj .;.;11tC'. r L l'-; •1, L .;-c,,; .. -~ ~ 1&:11:. .., .icts . 1:EL< AVIV'.pt.-.week ,long fjrutat .·. accbril"~n, to •orgaime,S>: of tlR:f n.e ...'1;la ~ u,f u rli.Vl.C n _,. .;,/• ' ~ ... J - - -~ ' ~ -: a'='st ~,~1-:5_,- was.staged.thi, .. strite: ·wh·o ;added ·that this:'coutd · •.• -~ ·, ~""~, -,, ':'#!!",....,,~ · ,·. ,... ·• ~ . lxpetted In 1978 . w as· r~1t ·...,u,vcgetablev~dors ' \c:q,al>o'IIV CJO.~t-'oflsrileli ' .ft·e, • · ,.., . p· ·'." I ,·sm·· ,, . .;,;.j·.-~,, ... ,,,.···, •;.·_ .....,.~··· ·. s·hlit down~ ,open ,.-ir""-milncts ~ ·agriculturaliproduce from ~ng•,,.ff; ,e.. ~s ; r-ose y I . . . ':;.;I,;.-,- cNEW " .Y'O_R,K,dl!,N =: ]s·r_J eb i throughout•, Israel: .-Abo.id 3,000· consumers.: 1 _,c,.; .• / , , -,, ;. ,1.,,.·,;, . • , · . . • · . expects on~m1lhon tourists m 197g, ,...,...._...... ,._'""!_~i!iii""'!'""'I . :,_, NEW: YORK::· (Jr.A): ,Tlit•si11th ~ contribute·ta ·aJd«per··imderstan'- ,. the year of israel's 30th -anniver- · . :'annual.,meet.ing of(hc.lni.rnational ..., ding bet.ween the two religions. sary, it,'was• announced· here by 'CatboliM~is!a f;jaison·Committcc, ,' , f>ror: sliemar.yaliu Talmon; oftl)e Moshe · Kol, !Israel Minister of ,ended with,ao, agrcei:nent thai_t~e ,ijebr-cw ' University ,,in'•.· Jersalenr,. ·Tourism. ''T'he' .celebrations- will' ',Cathnlic ~ church r,~jc:cts,~°a ny:~ descFibed ia- cooperative ·study ,. commence at Rosh Hashanah 1978. J>r'~sel~ism _of.J.ews,'.Thc: meeting, • program :'spbnsored jointly by._ the The ·majority of ·American Jews wb•ch 4.was·. -held in•, Vfi!IICC, , l!Jlly~.. ., Pontifical Biblica'l .lnstitute ~nd. the ·have not · visited Israel and I hope . recently, was reported on ·here· by · · Hebrew University which consists that many ·of those who give so the Synagogue Councl of America o-f two · scme·st'ers ·of Hebrew much of their efforts to the United ~ (SCA) which participated in it.· ' language ·· studies, · Bible, Jewish Jewish Appeal, to the Israel Bonds - - ... In_ the- major pap'er of. t_h~ histo·ry; geo·j!raphy a-nd drives and to. other projects, will NEW ENG LAN D meeting, Prof. T:ommaso Fedenc1, archaeology. show their solidarity with the profes,sor,of Qiblc at the Pontifical · In West Germany, .the Catholic Jewish State by visiting Israel," Kol VISITS IS RAEL _ U_rban:iana Uni.v.er_sity . and at the Bisho~ recently designated a' per: said. · ~ - L1turg1cal Institute of San Anselmo ma-nent work , group on "The "I expect that 1977 and 1978 will . . in Rome, said that the.: Catholic ' Church and Judaism," the goal of be years -&f- political movement in Homog_eneous·1roups: .. Congregatloas,Jnstltutilllis, church's understanding of her mis- which is the promotion of a ihe Middle East," Kol continued, Org"1!iatlons •Communities, O1!,bs, P;ofessjenals . sion precludes proselytism. ·. . dialogue with the Jewish people, "as Arab leaders ar.e anxious to ~ .. ~ .• ~ _· - ... . . ,;.... . 'The church th.us rejects in, _a Bishop Karl 8. Flugel, Auxiliary reconvene the Geneva conference. . '-~ Gol.Tolanel '·"' · c I ear way every . ·form of Bishop .of Regensburg, · reported. This· is a ·process that will' take April 26-May,f -Je~~sale-;;; Inte~national Book F'air' proselytism," he declared. "This He said the . theme " Israel and time." Kol called upon american •~ J • May 4-Mar 19_ _..:.. _fincrican -~hysi~ians. Fello~ship...Tour to • means the exclusion of any so.rt of·. Judaism" .has been a regular feature ·Jew.ry to stand together with Israel Israel - Seminar on Recent Advances m D1agnos1s & treatment . witness and pr'!IBching which in .any of the general assembly of German to demonstrate their concern for the of Neurological Disorders, led by Dr. Manuel Glazier way constitutes ·a physical,, moral, Catholics. country's future, and to siand with Mar. 8-May 13 ~ _Jgusalem Conference on Impaired Vision psychological_or cultur-al constraint Theodore Freedman of. New Israel against pressure to return to in Childhood < ,;i ·,. ;:' .,.,. on 'the Jews, both individuals and York reported · on a. variety of "the indefensible boarders of June ~ay 11-May 21L• .:.:: Fr-icndship· E'fangellzing Mission, led by communities, such.as might in any educational prog! ams presently un- 4,-1%7." Continuing, Kol said: " As Ri:v._Louis Calla~a · . . . . t,_,...... ,' ,;_ way destro>; or even simply reduct - derway to further Jewish-Catholic a dove, I am in favor of a com­ .' May 12-Mar. 26 :,:.: <;:ong. Aha6j11· Slialom, led by Rabbi lheir personal judgement, free will.. understarid[ng. He said special- promise on territories, peace and Samuel Zaitch1,~ . · ..;. ,· and.fullautonomy-0fdecisionatthe a.ttention was being given by c oexistance with our Arab . ~ay 12-~ay ~ -, f · D11r~hy t,loam Sisterhood, led by Mrs. personal. or community level." · Catholic and Jewish institullops to neighbors. But the Arab countries . Esther WoocJ~ · ~·~r ·_-$..:--. l-: -0? -~ • .-~ -~ ~ Federici stressed that "also incorporating a systematic study of must compromise. They must May 15-May: ,D . -:-,:;Isracr.Furnitute Week · excluded is every sort of judgmerif Jews and Judajjm into the recognize Israel, be ready to live in May 16-Miij 26 ··:,:;,.Adath Yeshurun eiub; led by Mr.'and expressive of discrimination, educational institutions of 'the peace and harmony with her." Mrs. Milton ·s,lvcrrrlan .,. - '•.' -. contempt or restriction against the church. K'o l et. to:ott. 2" !...;:Connecticut Visits Israel, led by Madclin,e gate ·in the border sepllrating Israel pordrily placed offlimits to jour- film bore absolutely no resemblance -and Stan .Lichter ·" < •• anet. 17-0ct. 31 - New England Region of Hadassah, led by ly promoted it ..:.. even inviting and fighting. nanie or (as in Menachem Golan's Mrs. Bea Garber . Oct. 18-NOY. 1 - Temple Emanuel, led by Rabbi and Mrs. tourist groups tovisit..:..in its effort. One military official said that Israeli film, " Entcbbe-Operation Harry Roth , to win over the rightists near the precautions- being taken rcnectcd Thunderbolt") had acceded to the Oc:toller 23-0c:t. 28 - .2nd lnternatiobal Conference of Israeli border in order to create a the attitude Israel learned during state of family's request to use a fie- Human Reproduction . ' , _ ·, · .' ·;· . . buffer zone along the feni:ing the surprise atlack of the 1973 war: titious name. Oc:t. 31-NOY. 4 - lnternatl Conference on Meteorology of separating tlie ,two nations. "When in doubt , prepare." On the third point, Hartuv said Semi-Ar id Zones . · ~- · .· ., 1 • • , T,he southern Lebanese ·border A not her official said, of the that the Bloch (amily was acting on ·1111s 11 ·a putlil 111tt• o1 ....,._ _sroups. has been used in the past as a stag- military, "They seem to smell behalf of all the rescued hostages · Alio a,.uaMe ·are El Al'• ally 1f011f ~n. ing area by Palestinians who con- something." for dcfomation of character. for mor~ lnro,.;.tlon, contact your El Al travel 11ent or '. · ducted raids into Israel. for months now, the foreign He said that according to the Israel said it would not·tolerate a press · has reported th at Israel has " Raid on Entebbe" film story, the EL Al ISRAEL AIRLINES , return or. masses of Palestinian been providing heavy military hostages had written a letter, urging 607 BOYLSTON STREET , guerrillas along the border. It has equipment and artillery cover to the Israel's government to free the also said that it would not permil rightist Christi an militia forces. The terrori sts detained in Is rael to en- BOSTON Tel .: 61.7-267-9220 the grouping or Syrian troops close Israeli s o ffi cia ll y have lim ited thei r sure the hostages' sarcty. to the Israeli border, The Syrians discussions of aid to li stings of basic " It is a .known fact, " Hartuv said, - ·· Tnist1;\ 1NG ,s ·A sERVicE oF THE , form the bulk or the Arab peac- foodstuffs, wh ic h the Lebanese pay "that we did write a note th anking 1 JSRAEL GOVERNMENT TOUR1ST OFFICE keeping force in Lebanon and their_ ro r, the provision or medical care Amin for material comforts, like _ . ' EASTERN REGION , move mcnts southward toward the and the availability or jobs in Israeli mattresses and blankets he ' had frontier has led to 11¥.0. illcillMtsr#liJ industries. ., ;-r1 1~11 ,,rt ln prfti1-:,'i1.,,', ,•,•.•.-':~, •. , , •. 1. • ,, ' , ' < · , · : : · . : . ." : · ·. • . · . .) ___.,....______. THE RHODE ISLANt) HERALD, fRJDAY, AP~IL 15, 1977-21 ·w; ¥,German··· vouth-'· Eouna-. Wiir·,x~rie?cfi'.~··/ ··;-=,~BL i.vi~~- --; f -~?zt:·~~~t,_-,n~--Soofa <-~~): •· / • ',· <· • , .. • ' I , · ' llam.e#:for, · . :: , ..(paramiliJary) _1ettlement in the, andth~.foureXJ1lill8~YUDm ~ str·· 'c J:a ' •.J "~.: ',,•Raffah d~~ roudl-of G~-hu the ~arra,h area Will produce .· l .g.-.ora. _n· I ·-o. ;H·11 .. . ·e-- r - .Er · a·~. r,OOting 1.'lCC1,.ent , · been officially transformed ~nto the . greenhouae veptab~, mango, and I · ' ·· -- · · · · - ' 1 • . rqion'1 lint kibbutz. The new - avocad01 for nport to J!urope., · FLEJ!,ISBURG.1 West Germany: ,_ upextrahi1torycounes-tostudythe - ENFIELD,.Conueetic.ut: 'A ·:,(,. · - · · · . · · . ' A sUr, hu result~ from the ig-. N11zi era. · year-old foniter Nazi,concentration· · ,. · G : . 00D·· n~_rance and confusion displayed by _ · The FJens~urg teac~r. who~ 3,2 :. cam~ victim.- apparently ·unnayed · '·, JOl:.• NDRE'S . LAND$CAPING CO. ·, children:· when uked what the, years old, said he first .got the tdea . by a series of harusin1· telephone ·· ' ----ORCHESTRA · Coinplete-fondKaplftfl ~new about Hitlerin a private study for the study when he reac! a seiies · calls, accidentally ihot her 85-year- · Muoio.lo,..,:..,; ..,..icii offai; · .; ·setvictis · · ·. conducted here. - The Flensburg .. of artic~ on :areal_ ~en~an~ their old hus&and while c:l~ing a rifle·.: , , ...... a.;...... :.. ..•: MAINTINANCI , . , teacher w.ho made the study, Dieter doctors, m which Hitler wu mc:lud- late lut.Sunday night, according to.- 131~ 719 hs._.944-_7~ 1 • CONITIIUCTION • PlANTlNG · · Bossmann-, ·di~vcrei,l that . Hitler , ed. _along wit~ Cl\urc:hHI and - local police ·here. . . , 721.:J361 · ofter I P"'!· had beco~e a dill) ~gure of the past Bismarck. ''.Thal seemed absur_d to The police claim· that · Margaret for most rouJigsl~rs. : · · .. · . . ·me and I ·~anted to know whether _Demchen~o· had taken the' .22· . It was revealed m ah mtemew at schoQI ·ch1ldreo nowadays ·con- caliber rifle out of storage to clean it his ho·nie:thai he had collec~ _2,070 . sidered Hiller."· one· of the wor_ld's . for. use as protection ~ause of compositi9ns ·on_the topic: of "What · great men," he •saiil. calls the couple had -Seen recejving, ~'I BET. .MV · l have :heard•about Aiiolf Hitler." _ . D 0-Took Put receotly, from a man.claiming to be ' The average ages of the students -To.· solicit contributions, Mr. a relative. · writing the: papers were between 14. "lfossmann placed an ad in · a Mrs. Demchenko, a prisoner for ·MOTHER $5 .and .16. The teacher claimed he was teachers' magazine. More than a four years in -Nazi concentr,ation . ap~alled by wjtat some oflhem had _hund~ t~chers a~swered and ~-8 camps, c1J1ims she _and her husband .written. He -further added that only had _their classes wnte the compos\· feared the calls were part of an four . of tli,= compositions ·were tion suggest~ ~Y ~r. . Bossm~nn . . e-:iort!on attempt. Po_lii:e . are at­ . ECOULDN' adeqifate. Ac:cordmg- to on_e of To ass_ure part1c1pallon he promised tr1&utmg her fears to the war · the youngster's papers, he believed to maintain the children's anonmi- experience. · Hitl~r was born between 1920 and ty. · - · ._ ', Although Nicoias Demchenko _LOSE 30 LBS.'~ 192~ and "played a loading ·role in , . t difference m a~lltudes between h~s shootings to police departments: like that. Pcople:were not allowed own generation and today s Police could offer no further to go· out int,o the streets at night. youngster5; '.'When I heard about exp I a it at ion as to why . ih e They were shot right .away. Hitler ~he mass killings, I came home cry- Demchenkos waited so long to go was married." ! ,. · mg to my mother to find out why to the hospital, but added that Mrs. · Mr. Bossmann saidJeachers were s~e and other gro~n;,ups h~d not Demc:henko would not be charged. evidently ·"not fulfilling their duty'.' lned to stop the evil, hr satd. in dealirig witjt the Nazi era, which ~~ expressed concern al. the Conservative Book is covered iii ninth or tenth grade in positive values teen.agers now seem / current ·events or history classes. . to attach to-the Nazt era. A 16-year- Defines 'Position· Caroline Kirst a 17-year-old from old described Hitler. as a "military -11· Kiel;' whose 'cl~s \tid'nM take 'pilrf' ', genius "who almost ronque'red· the NEW• YORK: "Conservative ~ in the stl!dY'. said ''we never got as whole ~orld." ~nother boy wrote Judaism and Jewish Law," the first far as the Nazis in school until this that "aside of his many !>ad deeds, , book devQted entirely to the at­ last term." She is in the 12th grade A~olf Hitler also ~id_ some good titudc of Conservative Judaism to of liigh school. - thmgs, such as building the first Jewish Law will be published this Friedo·Sachser an editor of the autobahn." spring by the Rabbinical Assemt;ly, "In April, I bet my mother $5 she couldn't lose Jewish weekly° Allgtmtlnt of Score~ of stude~ts noted _aspects an'nounced Rabbi Stanley D&wtldorf. commented, •'The sin of of Nazi law and order, ':"'th ~p- Rabinowitz of Washington, the 30 pounds on her own in ten weeks. Her weight negligence in failing to give the· parent approval. One girl said, President of the thousand member was 164. She took the bet. ..for many reasons, young generation adequate political "Children were not like today. Tho/ organization of Conservative rab­ one·being back trouble and because fat is ugly. and historical insights are bound to , had to be ~ood and _ he!p their bis. . . ' have negative effects on democratic mothers. Hitler was .strict and Edited b)'l Rabbi Seymour Siegel, Ten weeks went by and she didn't reach her goal. structures and society in our coun- demanded respect." A ninth grade Chairman of the Rabbinical I won the bet. try." boy attending a Roman Catholic Assembly's Committee on JCl!!'.ish I " Mr. Bossmann's study, which he sclloo! observed, "Desp!te a!I the Law and Standards and Professor My mother did,n't give up. She went to Gloria plans to publish in book form, has cru_ellles t~al were co~m1tted m the of Theology and Ethics at the Stevens Figure Salon, starting on June 21. By appeared in excerpts in the Third Reich the social · pr?ble,ms Jewish Theological Seminary, it October, she had lost 30 pounds and looked newspapers, stirring public debate. were not as gr!:8-t unde~ Hitler as contains' essays !>Y 18 leading In several schools, teachers have set they are today. Conservative scholars. great. Now my mother weighs 128 pounds, only / 1"he book will include theoretical -eight more pounds than I. Some people think we essaysonthefoundationsoftheap~ are sisters instead of mother and daughter. Na f· Mem. ·o· rabl,·a ·, 1·s proach of Conservative Judaism to · Z · I just want to say how proud we all are of 'A B · • B • Jewish law as well as a selection of ' ess· teshuvot - responsa "- wtich deal her. Long live Gloria Stevens." Oom'ng- Us'n. , with Sl!Cliissues as abortion, wine p .. NEW YORK (JTA): The some55,000names. - ·~ oducedbynon-Jews,andthestatus Joanne E. Bartels, shooting rampage ' by Nazi- • Many of 'the_items sold by of women in the life of t!J:e syn­ enthusiast Frederick W . .Cowan in Unique and . by scores of other agogue. . ~4-year-old daughter of Mary T. Bartel~- New Rochelle hu focused attention dealers around the country, were "It is particularly appropriate," on a booming business - the sale brought here by World War II ms. Rabbi Rabinowitz said, "that this of Nazi memorabilia. Cowan, a Others are "authentic" replic:u of- compilation of Conservative thinl\­ movil)g van company employee Nazi items and weapons. According ing be published in the_yel!r of the INTRODUCTORY OFFER ~ who shot five personi to dealh io- n,ports, . there is also 8 large 75th anniversJtry.of the coming to before taking hii own life, had ·a business in Nazi-porno boob _ · the U.S. of Solomon Schechter, large -collection of- Nazi helmets, paper !>ac:ki ' offering explicit who ,as President of the · Jewish 6weeks forS25 badges, medals, swutika arm bands descriptions of rape, and ' other Theological Semioary and in his and daggers in addition to an sexual usaulta on concentration many writings, played so significant • At All Participating Salons arsenal of deadly weapons-in his at- camp inmata, most of them Jewish. a r O I e . i n l he Ir O w I h 8 n d Fun Exercise Plan · • No Contrac:u to Sign •-- h d h h f bl" h ded. bi book development of Cpriservative tic:. H.e auu 8 P 0 toarap s O One pu is er icates s s Judaism with its reverence for both Dieu Compiled Exclusively by Our Dietitian Hitler, Himmler and other' Nazis ''to the memory" of concentration traditi_on and djversity. · . No Disrobing • Individual Programming and a collection of racist literature camp vTc:tims. . The book can-be obtained from and rec:ordin'p. But dealers in the Meanwhile, police are tracing 8 the Rabbinical Assembly, 3080 multi-million dollar Nazi artifac:ta· possible li!lk between COwan and Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10027. ' market in1i1t that the vut majority the militant, racist National States of their c:ustomen are. not "Nazi Rights Party. He reportedly carried WAR ON YORDIM kooks." . a membership, card in that JERUSALEM: Uzi Narkis, They 11y that the pu(chuers of , orianization. and r~c:eived ifs director of.the Jewish. Agency's im­ the1e· item, ranae from pre- publication, "Thunderbolt." mi1ration department, has declared adolescent 1boys to ·military After the garnage in N~w war onyordlm. He issued orders to New England'• L-.ot Franchltad W.... t C~111,1I Sywtaft historians and otber scholan of the Rochelle, neighbon of Cowan tord •fire yordlm, their spouses and . 390 FALL RIVER AVE. Nazi .era. Many are legitimate reporters that the killer wu,forever , children from any jobs they may collec:ton. Nazi items are fCIUlarly" rantin1 qalnst Jews and Blackl and hold with the department abroad. SEEKONK, MASS. advertised in 1un and 1portin1 threatenina to "liquidati," them. In a television panel discussion of .(Next to Old Grist Mill Tavern) magazines. One of the blgest out- , His bloodbath was apparently the problem last night, Narkis lets is Unique imports of Alrian- trigpred by a dealre to kill hil boss, demanded that yordlm in the CALL NOW dria, Va., run by Roderick Jones, a Norman Bina, who 11 Jewish. Bing, United States should not be allowed 336-6257 retired Air Force man. He usured who had 1uapended Cowan for to be ,involved in any way that Hours Mon. thru Fti. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 3 reporters this wwll that Cowan wu rudenea to a c:uatomer, wu not one would "legitimitize" their eml1r1- not on hi• world-wide mailifla liit 'of or the Yictim1. , , 1 ' ti0n· rroln ,IJraet: vl • . , • • • · ...... ' .•...... ~ ...... "' .....' ~ I ~-~~ k'H<10l!jst;,(1'0'lf Elt tained ,by P!i!estin~n and Lebi!nese linCS:.r.un tbrough Syrian-controlled · lions being called before the ·lor o( in~ational affair• o(B' na( ber'g, David h M. Hirsch, - Arttiur lellist Moslem militias. : ,, .- _.,..,.. territory. . ~· ' · govern!f1etit agrees to withdraw ,B'r\lh. Jie-.will t;ilk on 'tlfe ''\Jnited- Hurvitz, M'ar1ln Jacobson. Sher}~ .·. There was heavy artipery'sheliing- , A$ Saiql\, the Syrian-1,acked . f{om any part.of the West Bank. ,Natioris-un.d lsr:.ie1 .~: _.._.,. , man · ~ . lHc. and drove Lieutenant Khatib's men support to the Lebanese Christians tor, had ·been a Prisoner of (S2'1. •I lflkitlly)"or ·· opin_ion poll has shown that 6j from Merj 'Uyun. · . last year against the Palestinians, Conscience·- untif his release and ~.~ • l'IIY· percent of·lsraelis are. "convinced" It was no. t clear today whether have been embarrassed .by Mr. emigration to Israel in 1973, the ...... w/lllidtocyl ¥1t1Ml(S2't ,...... ·-· ' or- "think'! 'I.hat· relations 'with the the Palestinians intendec!. to attempt Ch amoun ' s re fusa I to abandon · the · a realer New York Conference on willl ·•ffllltil '"''- · . United · States have worsened-. to wrest control of Merj 'Uj,un and Christian ~ooperation .with Israel, · Soviet Jewry announced. :,:,:~~":,:' 1 ~- ·. Another 39· Jll:rcent believe there Qlai11 from the -Chtistians .or· the diplomats added, . Perniissio~ was also granted to t·lllndlNi. .,., 1. hav~ been no.changes in .relatjona. whether the attacks were meant as laMI Tak• W__... _ t_he 411-year-old ship-building nly SS. ..,i 1w IIIIVI- . The pol~ also found that 43 probing maneuYers. M-ETU LLA, .Israel: Lebanese engineer's wife, Irina, and two llitllf ...._ IIIIKl'¥il per~-ent of ·the public ~ieve that A fut-I . attack on the· two rightist militiamen carried their _ children, Nina, 17, and Vladimir. Ott.o &. =:: U.S. Ambassador William Scran- Christian-held bastions would be i: . wound~ info, Israel after 48 hours 14, thus ending a three-year wait fo; llillli/fl. ·i.. II s1•., Oi~ ton's·speech jn the Security Council major ent_erprise both politically of fighting with Palestinian com- !lermission to emigrate. ::!"Pl~':; ... - 11 criticizing lsr11eli settlements in the and mili~arily and would change the mu ndos fo ~ the Slrategic border · · - · ·· - . --- ,;,; SIU. ,.__, d · ·51 ed t ·1 · h d 1=·•1 balance of power 1'n south village of Taibe. ·---~ tio...W - Otllor ~- m•~• . e.r emory a agreater . Th Ph I ,.,,1 A • At_. "'· · ·,._ 11..-i .Illy -i_mpact than his veto of anti-Israeli Lebanon.~ Both towns ' have- large e a angiSls admitted they . L· *'DERn I, 111" tu. " l.....i. &-IIJ. resolutipn in... the Council while j6 Christian populations. Qlaia is had been forced out of Taibe yester- -..-' ~ lt,At_,,t ,,. 111· .., ' ..,:w..w ,...... , h h h predominantly Christian, while day by a Palestinian counterattack ;• ~

• .i.. · · · . _·.. . ..- . . . ntE RFIODE "ISL?tiNO'ltEltAt.D;Mff>'A~g1AP~IL ' '15, ·!97'7 23 . s~ ~ ~""" ·Normalization ,;;_ ,.,._ ~~;Al(epdppir,~: · ·. . ,TEL-AVIY: ~,acfil-:!111. ~y,:~ _- ears' A er :· a. Pad ~ :~·-;·:, ' JER6§A·,~,.,.:kciordi~g ~ - a ' ••~atzo~~~!!.@Y~ ·~•l:--A_~ -.~:.. ~~car . • · ·. · ... • • , WASHl"'OTON: According to saw no maJor problem. --..., · survey by lsra~ Zi1>riist Cc,uncil, · · · ~ ·.-·. . -. ... · ·:. ~/-.. 1 rcccnt 'i:cpo,~ from' Carter Ad- ·•,- Officials said, that- durlng r.tr: 65.%ofnon.:-abser'v!lntltradi,)'.OjltliS:· · ·Havl• , _,~....,_, ::·: mi.nistration. sources, Pr.ciidc,nt Sad!t's· ~isit, th·ree areas -were wouJd prefer not to have-been born ,-_ ~ · ·,llJl~,..~ J • ' Anwar el_-Sadat of E&Ypt to1cl tl\CJII explored· jn depth· - the nature of a Jews in. the- diaspora, ·In sharp con;. ·• · · CAU : ~-, -' he envjsage,ta full nor(nalization·of final . peace sculemcnt, the lrast, ~ ofJ,r~~·, :re1igiouiyouth ... RE N,T. ALL s~·., relations· with Israel within about i"territorial ·aspects BJ!.d the Palcsti- '!!Oulcj still ~a~e -~ant~f to be born · . . · ; five years a~er a Geneva lll!rC!lmcnt . nian questi~n .._ AI~ discu~ ~re Jews, c.vcn , tf tlietr births .h_ad oc- - 'INC .·.,.. has been , sign~ and that.: some. Mr. Sadafs ·vrcws O{I .Commumst· cured elsewhere in· the'world. • ·. interim steps toward nonnal ~-threats t6 Africa and bilateral ,It '•as futqF fou,nd t~at 25% -of · TaW.. -Chain -~ r~ations ·could take place even . 'economic and military relations. non-observant and IS% of.'reJigjpus earlier. · • · · · · , youth do not feel that emigration Champagne Fountains .Officials expressed overall , w- Rela...... , . from .the homeland' seriously satisfaction with the ,results of Mr. A crucial positive development,- damages thc·Jewi.,h state. 725-3779' ·Sadat's·-missipn, ·at the same..time ·they said, was a warm relationship . The·· cxecut_ive . of . the· World . 244 Th.ayu St., Providma • 863-31d8 d' 1 . th. th 'fi . . · that seemed to develop bet-ween Mr. Zionist Organization ·-reviewed this 1:V~!1 11 ra , er spec, tc trmmg. Sadat and Mr. aittcr, both from study-at one of its meetings. Jewish u~her di~loscd, ,_ho!"C\'.CI', rural backgrounds. On substantive · · · t~i,.t. Mr. Sadat strl_l had srgnrljcant . ·a-• • Mr Sadat adhered to ht's ·n- Agency-treasurer Arych Dulzin, felt d rt, t · h •-, ~ • these findings reveal an alarming .$-TONE'S · K05-HER MARl(ET . 1. erenccs _- not Qn ~ wit Israelis, sistcnce that in a final settlement, degree of alienation on the part of . but al~ wrth ~men.cans, over the_ ,lsra~- must .relinquish- all the lsrael'syouthfromthcstatcand,to·-. 7.8Q tfOPE STREET 421~271 PROVIDENa .shape a final . se,ttlcmc!'l · shoul4 · territory it occupied in· the. Sinai, a degree also, from Judaism itself. · O_ nan Every Mon ay ·Money.Saving S-ia s take. ·:· : · . '. · · • . and ·refused to ael:Cpt Mr. ·carter's · 1---=,.._-______...... -...::'. ---~ . OfC1c1-als vorccd .both. en- con.tcnt·,o· nthatthcrecouldbe ·son1c Du_tzin co·nsid~red ihc m11tter . couruem t th talk th th senous. enough to llf&rrant :cthc SHOFAR : Eg till · ~n · over c ~ !"' . e ininor alterations in the border· attention·· not orily of ·the Zionist Rib ~~ . 0 eaders anci su~nse over , · ·· But oti the nature of peace, bodies but o( the Israel·gov crn·mcnt Chicken · Londo-. Salami-Franks pohll':1ll __dcvel_op~ts ID 1,~acl .. officials said' that ¥r, Sadat as well. . ·chuck _. UP_<>~ .thc . resta,natro~ .of Pr.rmc was quite forthcoming-. . They said ·Haim- Finkelstein, head the · Breasts ·,Broil · Knockwurst of . ,.. ' . &or!• In Mrl)'Sl_cr,.Yrtzbak Rabm-as head ~f thaf he ·had dropped his previous education departrricnt of the World. t!_ie Labqr_ Pany. In ~!Teet, ,this , yicw'that there could only be nor- . Zionist O~ganizaiion, cndor~ )' . :, means· th•t _Mr.:.~a_bin will be 'malization· in ·. thc next gcn&-atiob Dulzin's v·icws: ·He stated .that· :atc·u. Sl.39u. '. ~fcu. s1.o, ·:.:~ ·_reP.laced as-f~mc -ll,'!i~·st~r _after the '· and talked ins.icad of five ·years. emigrittlon· · from'Israel · betrays a · May 17 clectwns. · · fo addition. he agreed, they said, lack of Zionist motivation and that • ~h~ . State '?cpat;tn_icnt an~ ~he that additional steps could be taken . the government ,m.ust seek ways to · 1&.st ·ao~ SJ.. Israel• Am~as~dor, Srmcha 1?10·tz, lo ease rclaiions as part of a process alter the social·dimatc of the coun- . .. .., . __, ...... ·"' ' str~ss_cd. howcv~~, that they drd n.ot toward· a final settlement. · believe the 1><>htrcal-changc would · . · - try. · Under Rabbinical ,Supervision o{R!,bbi Yaakov Uvsitzky . affect lsraeli0 American relations or .the Middle East"pcace· efforts: ' lsra'el,· .Ads· 'Prove· r··hat ...... A°LL PRODUCTS BAKED IN THIS BAKERY • "We h11vc complete confidence H · f p Of t•fe ARE KOSHER EXCEPT THOSE PACKAGED that tsrae1 ·will continue · to umor, S . art . I . AND BAKED IN OTHER BAKERIES. coop.erat~ actively and fully in pur­ HAIFA:· Drama, humor politics a_ulomatic s.ccrctary· who · will suing peace .in the MiddJe East," and_ even ll)YSlcry, !n addition to answer your phone 24 hours a day. said Hodding Carter 3d, the State business and commercial matters, We can atso detect hidden I 463 EAST AVENUE' JOAQUIMG. BRASILEIRO . . OWNER Departmen,t SP.Okes,man, noting ,may be found in Israel-press adver­ microphones that may be planted-in PAWTUCKET, R.I. 02860 that. Mr. Dinilz had said the same tisements. My desk has a sm/l!I your premises ... ". (We're a niodcrn, Phone: 728-0260 Closed Mondoy Open 6 Doys to 8:00 p.m. thing to Secretary of State Cyrus R. compartment labeled "ads" into . up-to-date state.) . ' Vance. · ·· · which I toss all clippings of interest. " We welcome the nudist . par- 1 "V:fc \l.lso 'do not · expect . this · When the section began to overflow ticipants of the Mediterranean Sun search to be interrupted by the I pulled out the following handful Tan Cruise and wish them a MONTHLY SPECIAL working of tlie democratic process to share them with my readers as pleasant exposure to Israel's attrac­ in. lsr.acl," the SP9kcsm.an added. sonic indications of another side of tions. We regret .we were not called FREE SOFA CLEANING WITH ANY "11:ie · United States has had close life. in Israel. upon to handle them, but we would TWO ROOMS OF CARPl;T CLEANING a'nd· friendlY, ·· relatfons witll Prime· have liked to. We deal with tourists . OR 350 SQUARE FOOT MINIMUM Minister Rabin's Government as "I wish to announce that I have in all states of dress or uQlllrcss-. The . .we have had with i~:predecessors· given UP- all my .activity as a Promised Land, LTD. (The naked , CARPETS Will BE BOTH ROT ARY 111)d,we-ful,l!"expect th~c will exist . shadehan (matchlriakcr),;i't'cg arded (ruth "from ari 'entcrprisinjflo\r'ist CLEANED & SOIL EXTRACTED ·.1 II with the next government." .-..... · .the work ·as .a mitzva, but tlie agent.) , , MAXIMUM SAVINGS $35.00 ' Most Administration officials -~ authorities th<;>ught oth~rwisc," (In- "Interested in converting? All • FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATE sai4 that Defense Minister Shimon come tax problems?) who wish to convert to Judaism SATISFACTION GUARANTEED . Peres was the.mast likely successor "Applications are invited for the should apply to the League .for as Prime. Minister and that former cha_ir i_!l _econo_mics at th~ university. Conversion. in . Israel; No charge. -CAU Foreign ·r.,inister Abba Eban migh_t Particulars and an outline of the terms of service are obtainable from P.O. Box 3333, Tel A,viv," (Tiny ad ST ATEWIDE CLEANING return to that office. - repeated often.) Mr. Peres, who is well-known to the Registrar, University of the '-'First International Competition & JANITORIAL SERVICE, INC. American officials, has been public­ South Pacific, Suva, Fiji." (Do they for World Championshi-p in . ly skeptical about the value of know the economic situation in Almond Eating. Big prizes. Wh!> 738-5473 recon_v~ning ,a Geneva conference Israel?) OFFE{I EXPIRES APRIL 30, 1977 but his views. are not seen as • "Sova _ kosher self-service can eat the most almonds in thirty veg· etuian restaurant. Hall for wed- -minutes? Start practicing today!" WATCH FOR OUR NEXT MONTHLY SPECIAL dramatically different from those of (The contest was called off after Mr. . Rabin.. dings. and bar-mitzvas. -Circumci- public protest). - . The main · question was whether sion •ceremonies . with surprises for parents." (It's a girl!) EXTREMISf SENTENCED -- Mr. Peres, if chosen- as the ·new ·· Prime Minister, would need- more· "The New Testament, in various · TEL A VIV: Ludvinna Jcnnsen, time to develop a Midd(c East . languages, for general education 24, a member Qf the Dutch policy) and to -learn abo,ut the religions of extri:mist group Red Adid, has been Talks ..i Vlllu the world. Will be sent to all who sentenced to' six years' im- YOUR LAND Under the timing no.w being dis- . request." (No comment) 1?_risonrucnt by a district EXPLORE THE COUNTRY WITH cussed here, President Carter, who · ''Hamashbir .Dept. Store _ ·court for activity on behalf of Arab RABBI GERALD ZELERMYER . met with ·Mr. Rabin last month: ' 'Special Offers. Men's Sandals - terrorists. She was 11rrested at Ben and Mr. Sadat this week, . will Regular price, IL:50; Speci·al Price, 'Gurion Airport on Rosh Hashanah OF receive Kil)g Hussein of Jordan in I L.50. (For regular customers eve 'last September while trying to TEMPLE BETH TORAH' April 25. only?) · ,, test the airport's security measures. Departing From Boston Then Mr. €Mtcr is due ,to fly to , .'. 'Ciyil Service- Co:mmission: REi>UCEJ) TERM . June 22 'to July 6,' 1977, · Geneva on · May 9 to confer with Positions open for -; Income Tax TEL A VIV (JTA): Ram Li".nch, Presi'dcnr Hafez al-Assad of' Syria ... , Examin.crs. Qualift.eations J,'Cquired: who was sent to jail four years ·ago $1270. per person ( twin basis) Mr. Cart~r will b,c in London ·on ° book.keeping:,cxp.eri~nce, edu.cation, for ,his alleged; membership in an Sin le Accommodations Available May_7 !8 for an economic meeting laljguage; ~nd ljilally, ability'to co°' Aral!-Jewisb cspionag,: ring master, of key industrial countries, and wil_l duct bargaining.'' (That's how mindc\1.-from Syria, was rc;lcascd .. INCLUDED FEATUREl: return to· Lp-ndon on May IO for,a· l~xall'lc· income· is dctcrmi,ned) O~iginally 'scn~ncedto IO years im­ • Deluxe 5-Star Hotels . . mecting o( the North Atlantic 'ftca- ' "We .c;an -accuratelY, 11:sccrtain the , p,rsoqmcnt, ,hrs term .was .reduced • Jet Tran1porteit.ion-Round Trip Bosto... to Tel ~viv (via New ty Organization. l.ater that month,· st} of yoll'~ o,nborii child. Send • __to four years on appeal. ~ York) with El Al Israel Airlines , '·;·-". , , Crown. Prince Fahd , of Saudi ll:30,ilncl: infor,~at!tf!! 0~ .eilpected w,·,, E'm,·g·rate' •. Full ~1raeli Breakfast and Dinner Dally . · · Arabia \\'.ijl~ mc~til WBJhingtori·. . date of birth, ,age .and sex .of your . . · , , .-. . • . Eight Days Sigh,t~ing and Admlnl,on' Fen in Air Con- La.le in. M~y; Mr. Vance plaqs to ' other children 'and. ~~l,l!ils' on your . A Itel' 'Prison . ' ditioned Motorcoach :- ' · · ,,. go to Geneva to discuss Middle brothers\ and srslcr. Refund . . . • , , . • All Tran1fen'· ' · . ,, East and· ,strategic arms matters · guaranteed in case .of ,error." (50 TEL AVIV (ZJ.NS): Members of !I Porterage, · ~ · · · · ·. , · \ ' with' Foreign' Mlnister•, Andrci, A. '. percent is safc·a~raac). Ash.er ,Yadtrn's, family, have • All Gratuitln 'for Above ··s1ghhffin9 ' Gromylo.cif:!Jie.:Soviet j..lnion'. the ·'·',A1nbominable ~~urant, in a df:(;llu~ that _after he is. rcl~ed , Services of .~ngl11h'. Speq,king Guiel• .for ~II SightHelng two effic.irali.aiec:o-c:hairmen-ofthe . r'tin-'down lo,calio·n., ugly at- from .P,rison (he was ~ntcriced·to_a Excunion1 · ' ' -'. · · ··. · ' ' ""iddle Eu~ peace conference· in - mosphere, bad foo_d~e'f ~o'rbitant term of five years), · he. would ,. Bus Service To and "°m ~n .A~ Gen¢va, which convened briefly in. prices. You'll'find out after you cat emigrate to Amcrjca to start "a riew December 1973 and hu · been in at the Balkan ·Coi;n~r Rt;ataurant, life .." l,hcy added that Yadlin !)rop in to Travel-Time - or call - for Detailed ltinerci adjournment ·since then.. . Rokach Ave., ' Tel Aviv::• .(The ad would · -begin writing a doctoral l1raell Night r J After all thls, u the Adminiatra- was never repeat!'(!) · · thesis in prison, which he_ \VOUld A Rim ....-1a11en on "'- elNI .,_ .l ;. , tion 1>lan1, Mr. Vance ii to10 to.the t'Hebrcw Made Easyll Apply to finish. in the United Statea. His dhcualon •i,,ut this trip will ... ~~ ,,,, Middle Eut in the early 1umni~t..:... . •t~ Institute of Educational Hyp- relatives mentioned that Yadlin has held ., , ....;,. leth ,...,, a•,o~.-...... ,. June or Jul_y - to discua concrete no1i1, Tel Aviv." (Spellin1 too?) many friends in America and that ,_,. Avenue, C..Mton on April 25 ~ ~ · steps toward. reconvenini Jhc . ~- "Wllnled:. ·First Class Chef, he would quickly find his .niche •I l iOO PM:,c.tl fw-tlen. - \, Geneva, ~pfcrence. , • , Chinese Cuisine. 'Chinese person there ·with their help. The police If Mr. Peres .,... or some oll1cr. preferred." (You don't look have renewed their. invcsti1ation in , Israeli ln the post of Pri~ Miniitcr Jewish!) . the meantime, to discover if Yadlin - inli111 on hil own meetina with . Je11111 for Mohammed! A_nd othen hai money deposited in ovcneu the President, it· mlpt slow down ' who can not afford to keep four ·.banks, somethina which is qain1t the,,,._, but -ofTtc:ialuakl tti.y · • -womt11-i11-lhe·ho11•. ·Ye11 -need an the law. ..~,... . , •.••, , . ·- · • ., .... t , ... Spa~ish~~ews En:joy Jltfpp!,r.t .Wit~ "' ~ing ·

~ I • \ ' ' I • ~ F.'. ~ ~ '< ·PRICE TRAVEL SERVICE" LONDON·- The row· over the- ;cToday, while Spaniards }J) ' Jew in ToledoT' I asked Zucker- ': · · ·annou~ n•w low r:- _ · holding of ',the World Jewish general anci the Jews _in particular man.:. ,,..~ , · Co'!gress European bra!.lch moetlng {the la~e i;iiajo~ty of ~!i_om. come •"No problems;'' he said. "I'm ~'SUPER .SAVER FARES" " _, ,in Spain .zmouldqr on. Jbose ,nost.. from North Afm;a) retam their psy- Jriends with everyone _ .." He FROM NEW vou 01· NEWARK· To· LOS ANGELES, • affected -,- the Jews ofSpain -, re- chosis of .. latent apprehension, the mentioned some senior officials. . SAN FIAN,CISCO;· OAKLAND & SAN JOSE · main silent. • communities are, well '.established: "Anyway, masses of people here · Had \hey ~ot been confident tbat Snyagogue1 are modern and well · are of Jewish descent anNamaldng, Alterations rounded up victims for the ·mass PAINTING: Interior and exterior, dec­ executions through .,gifis or - EXPIIT AlTUATIONS and dress­ orating, custom p·aperhanging. MADE IN~OUR KITCHEN · , · . ·. Guaranteed workmanship. low cost, promises, by· abusing_his powcr··or making. Remodeling, call -467-9083, :, after 6 p,m. free estimates. Pierce Painting Com­ ~SAVI'.-.• ,' . by providing .:information that led ' pa_ny, 737-7288. POTAlO SALAD ,, c9c to the victims being seized for WITH MAYONNAISE 21c LI. ~ . execution. Menten- is also charged 19-General Services _ .. ,. · with being a .Dutch cit~n in the PAINTING:Wal.-ing -ior ~ - done- .- Geno,.­ service of the enemy. al cloaoing, walh and ...... ,_._ FTw estimatos. <;au Gray . , Louis Van Hcynigen, Mcntcn's STATIEWIDE ,._an GARBICI FARMS-· and s-. 9U05U . If n.cw lawyer, annQUnccd that he will CIIANING& / SAVI call 60 witnesses to be heard by the JANITOIIAL 35-Real Estate _100% . PURE lie, examining ,magistrate !>cfore tli~ SIIVICI start · o.f the actual trial. ·van ia IIW IHOlilt OAK HILL PlAT. Except;onal two fam­ Heynjgen told the hCllring that he !!!!,, ify home. Six rooms each. Two bed­ ORANGE JU·tCt believed Minten was inna<:ent and - rooms, sunny kitchen, fi r:eploced liv­ that the charges against hjm . had ing room,· Florido room and dining GENIRAL ....HOUSfClEANING. room. Many extras. Mid 50s. Call ' - 1.q,t'ondhoo.y . already passed the ~atute of -­ Rhoda or Sheldon Cohen, Realtors, -~ WINDOWS & fLOOltS ' limitations: Menten --said -all the ' woohod 944-9567, 521-5387. evidence , against him should , be CAIPITS , . thrown out because it had- been -~ & _,. cloanid • SEWNG YOUR HOME? Call Rhodo given under coercion or by Soviet IOTH COMMHCIAt & IIEIIIOENTIAt or Sheldon Cohen for FREE'" opprois­ KGB agents. · CAil , ' al. 944-9567, 521-5387. ' 73-.s473 38-Situcitions Wanted .:.. • .,.. .:.. CUT~noil_Ht'AYY snu - . WZO APPROVES BUDGET OBSERVANT GIRL of l ~ wonts job 0 1 JERUSALEM: . An IL 281.3 GINIIAL. CARPINTRY: No job too mother's helper for the summer. small. Quality work. Prompt service . WRITE R.I. Jewish He,ald, So• H-6, -. WHOLE .. _. ::.· 39·~ million budget (or the 1976-77 fiscal R.T. Lea·pman, 295,5708. ' 9:9 Webster St., Pawtucket, R.1 , year has been approved by the 02861. . .SHOULDER ROASTS ,....·1 •· -_., Wprld Zi~nilt Organization's . ' ' budget committeee. The new 30-Lawna, Landscapla9 42-5pecial Notl~ budget is the first in eight years COMPLITI .. LAWN malntenonce . ._ which does not carry an increase Widow wishes to shore .iOsllll .,.. ~ · 2 1s; El""Ol · program, Including ,pring cleonup IA.ST · SIDI: over the previo.us year. and .._ -r1i. Wol!len Londscoping, her own home with woman. Reoson· The largest allocation is IL 90.1 942-~. obit. Conwnient to ,hopping oreo. for the Aliya department. Th~ 331-3886. youth and halutz department will DRTA LANOSCAftNG, INC. -spring 43°5pecial Services ii'IIJ~=E~S ~.1 ~,, receive IL 51.7 million. 'Tho WZO cleanup. Fertilizing, trimming of has also allocated funds to promote ol,rub,. Will maintain lawn on -'<· · BDlllY CARI: w, provide compan- the goal of 500 000 tourists to llracl ly basis. Reosonoble ratn. F- ..,; . jells to the elderly a'nd convolescent d • ' th ' t " jl jlli m-. 521~. , 'r the hour, day or o ..rn ight. We " ' u~•n• 1· le \ .CUifC~ p . ,.. .. !lf.1·,1 ,r-,t.,t.-l.•.~-•.•.•:•: .• •.• t t , f • , • t,,,,.,.fJ9 •.f '. It ~s.r wn,t Fo.,,·i1)" CO-....: .421 -1213. ,: ~ hdarl Y,iear" ,,. ~!""'!'------.. ·