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R.I. J EWISH HI S TORICAL ASSOC. 130 SESSION S S T . / PROVIDENCE, RI 0 2 906

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, . Read By Support · · Mor.e Than Jewjsh ;35,000 Agencies People With Your Membership

20¢ ~ R COPY ·~ices Scheduled For Second Half Of Passover CONGREGATION Sons o r Abraham there wiil be a AGUDAS ACHIM candle lighting at 6:00 p.m. follow­ AttleNro,Mus. ed hy a service at 6: 15 Saturday. April 17. morning services will be al Congregation Agudas Achim will 9:00 a .m. wi th sermo n at 10:30 a.m. continue wilh Passover services this evening service at 6:00 p.m . Tues­ week beginning with this evening. day, candle lighting at 6:00 p.m .. April 16. wilh a 6:07 p.m. service evening service at 6: 10. Wednesday . and Sabbath. candle lighting. Ser­ and Thursday threre wi ll be a mor­ vices will continue Tuesday even­ ning service a t 9:00 a .m. sermon at ing. April 20. with a festival candle 10:30. Wednesday candle lighting al lighting at 6: 11 p.m.; on Wednes­ o:25 p.m. rollowed by an evening day. lhe seventh day or Passover, ,crvice . Thursday, April 22, Yi , kor servi,-.:s wi ll be at 7:30 a.m .. evening memorial service al I 1:00 a .m. and servi<.-.:s al 7:20 p.m. for restival can­ and evening service at 6: 15 p.m. dle lighting: April 22. final day or Passover. first service will be al 7: 15 CONGREGATION a .m. with a sermon at 8:00 a .m. SONS OF JA COB rollow,-d by a YiLkor memorial ser­ Pro,ldence vice. CONGREGATION E vening s e r vices Tuesday B'NAI ISRA EL thro ugh Thursday. April 20-22, at W.-l

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Sta'te· College, ·eig . Rapids, Michigan. He _was named J-0r LEGISLATION D)lAFfED scholastic excellence during · the · WASHINGTON: A l:i1-partisab coalition of 11 Senators led by Sen. TEL AVIV: The Israeli Minister winter quarter on the 1975-76 of Absorption, Shlomo Rosen, has academic year. Abraham Ribicoff (D. Conn.) has drafted legislation that would deny issued figures that some 15,000 major tax benefits to any American Israelis will emigrate this year. This MITZVAH BERGEL BAS company that cooperates with the number is some 5,000 less than Lor_i Ellen Berge!, daughter_ of Arab boycott of . Israel by dis­ earlier estimates, he said . A total of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Berget of criminating against American 27,000 Israelis have left the country 71 .Vassar Avenue, Providence, conL-erns blacklisted by the Arabs. permanently since 1948. became Bas Mitzvah on Saturday morning, March 27, at Temple Emanu-EI. Guests were present YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE from California, Maryland, Connecticut and New York. Siu ,ll#Uldt 71M Su/eti ~ Sunday Evenirii~pril 18, 1976 at 8 o'clock . ~ Temple Emanu-EI Morris Avenue GUES·T SPEAKER THE HON. PINHAS EUAV ,0 ~- . Ambassabor Extraordinary--P1enipotentiary 5 ~-- Deputy Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations "'$ HISTRADRUT AWARD OF HONOR TO. MR. AND MRS. MANFRED WEIL Outstanding Guest Artist ~£-AR Chairperson: MRS. JOSEPH TEVEROW "-.. UftlNGTON · Honorary chairman: HARRY FINKELSTEIN ~ COUNTIY SHOP Wine and Refreshments Contribution '4.50 223-A C:.Unty load Checks payable to, ~liii#tel DVORAH DAYAN CLUB, PIONEER WOMEN 96 SAVOY ST . PROV. R.I. 02906

NEW LOOK FOR YOUR HOME OR OFFICE MRS. PHILIP CRAIG IRVING WARTED! JACK'S FABRICS Elizabeth Mae Kaskowitz of Agawam, Massachusetts, was wed to Dr. Philip Craig Irving on April 11 at Temple B'nai Israel in Willimantic, STYLISH ••• FOR Connecticut. The service was officiated by Rabbi Amos Edclhcit. MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CUSTOM DRAPES Mrs. Irving is the daughter of Mrs. Milton Kaskowitz and the late Mr. AND CHILDREN'S SLIPCOVERS Kaskowitz of Columbia, Connecticut. Dr. Irving, of Glastonbury, Connec­ WEAR FOR ... ticut, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Irving or Sumter Street, WINDOW SHADES Providence. SPRING & SUMMER IEDSPRUDS At the ~:00 p.m. ceremony, the bride was given in marriage by her UPHOLSTERING mother and brother-in-law, David M. Wolf. The matron of honor was her ACT II sister, Mrs. David M. Wolf. Maid of honor was Marlene 8. Bongiovi. CALL Brides~1aids were Lori J. Kaplan, cousin to the bride, and Beth E. Irving, 802 HOPE ST. sister -of the groom. The bride's niece, Robbin S. Wolf, was a junior PROV. R. I. 725-2160 bridesmaid. Dr. Irving's brother, Russell A. Irving, was the best man. Ushers were Opp. CINERAMA 274-2223 725 DEXTER ST. Ors. Ellis H. Hall and Michel A. Jusscaumc. Daily I 0-5: 30 CENTRAL FALLS Following a wedding trip to Washington, D.C., the couple will reside at HOURS: 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 140 A Autumn Street, Agawam, Massachusetts. _ Society WOLF-DA VOLi year's class gift will be selected from one of the following student selcc­ Deborah J. Davoli, daughter of lions: art sculpture; two ne~ tennis Mr. and Mrs. Al Davoli of Utica, courts and lighting for all the courts By the time New York, was married to Stuart on campus; a carillon for the new M. Wolf, son of Mr. and Mrs. student center; and inside and out­ theheatof Sidney Wolf of Warwick, on Sun­ side landscaping for the center. day, March 28, at a I :00 p.m. Mr. Winkler is the son of 1Mr. Swnmer rolls ceremony at Temple Emanu-EI in and Mrs. Milton H. Winkler. He is Utica. Rabbi Howard Schwartz of­ ' majoring in marketing at Bryant. around ...you'll ficiated the services. Wedding attendants. included the T)VO BAS MITZVAHS wish that you had bride's sister, Dawn Davoli, as maid of honor and the groom's Paula Bellin, daughter of Mr. and added central air sister, Donna Wolf, as bridesmaid. Mrs. Arthur Bellin, arid Sharon Best man was Russell Morris of Steinberg, daughter of Mr. and conditioning this Spring. Bristol. Usher was James Smith of Mrs. Towia Steinberg, will become Warwick. Bas Mitzvah at Saturday morning ~e· The groom is a graduate of services, 11 : 15 a.m., at Temple , ~ not too late to avoid a mis\6 Bryant College, class of 1973, and is Sinai. Rabbi Jerome S. Gurland \,\-" - presently associated with K-Ma,rt will officiate. Stores in Rochester, New York. Complete Central Air Conditioning. The couple will reside in Rochester. MILLER BAR MITZV AH @ILBANE'S installation & service FIRST SON Elliot Miller celebrated his Bar for home or business Mitzvah on March 6 at temple 191 Pawtucket Avenue, Pawtucket, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Levine Shalom in M ii ton, Massachusetts. of 9 Cliffside Drive in Cranston an­ He is the sorf of Mr. and Mrs. Rhode Islcmd 02860/Tel. 725-4422 -~ - nounce the birth of their first child, .Milton Miller of Canton, and son, Eric Nelson Levine, on Massachusetts, and is a seventh March 25. · grade student at the Wilfiaih Maternal grandparents are Mr. Galven School in Canton. and Mrs. Howard L. Nelson of 425 • His maternal grandmother is Meshanticut Valley -Parkway, Sarah Miller of Canton. Paternal Cranston. Paternal grandparents grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Levine of Ralph Miller of 156 Sixth Street in MOL~T 55 Sheffield Road, Cranston. Providence. Great-grandparents arc Mrs. SIX\I MEMORIAL Boris Nelson and Mrs. Samuel Alt­ 50TH ANNIVERSARY ~ CHAPEL man. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller of "The Jewiob tunenl h'!me" CHAIRS BRYANT GROUP 156 Sixth Street celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary at t)le Larry Winkler of 60 East Bel Air Now al 825 .._ St. al FC>lrlh home of their daughter, Barbara St. Rhodo Island' 1 - 11111 Road, Cranston, and a senior at Goodman, of Providence. Joining -· "--al home. Nnling lhe Bryant, has been named chairman . the celebration were their children, Jewish Community al -- of the. 1976 Student Class Gift Ad- • Mr. and Mrs. Milton Miller of Can­ Rhodo Island. Ewy prily. ton, Massachusetts; Mr. and Mrs. Al.....,.. directed by its Jewish This week the committee began Sanford Miller of Warwick; Mr. lwwal-. , . Mitchell . . . ndid its campaign to raise $15,000 for a and Mrs. Ho'iirard Miller of Paw­ his F-and Undo .. . and Gr- Bicentennial year class' gift. The tucket; six grandchildren, relatives 1-... ainot lhe 1870's. campaign will run for live• weeks and friends. and will raise funds from their classmates and friends w'ith raffles, SIEGEL ON DEAN'S LIST 331-3337 · ptrsonal. solicitations, phonothons In Fk>nd1. call 1305) 921 · 1855 - , GWit and by mail . . , . Harlan P. Siegel of C_ranslon ·w~s Acxording to _M':. Winlder1 tlli1 , , named to the de1t11 li, 1111, at Ferris '.: ~~}'~. JI l : 4.!2 -rtCE-llttBOB 'is~J\D •tfERACD, 1FRR1ii~' A'.PRIC it 1976 ; The JeW~,Of Iraq FROM FRIDAY TO FRIDAY I Bl' DR, JAY N. ·ftSHBEIN { . during the reign of King .Faisal, Iraq is asking the 'Jews to return, from 1921 until his death in 1933, The Third Seder " stating that Jew . and Arab had Jew.s enjoyed a period of relative - _., always lived in harmony; that there pea,ce. The king was aware of,the had been no need for them to leave extent of Jewish contributions to· By _BERYL SEGAL the country, and were welcome-to the economy, and. favored 'them. l return. The facts _alas, belie the His death scaled the fate of the Jews statement. or all Ar!lb countries, of Ir.lg. Although technically the Fifty years ago a .group of land have seen what~thc Hista­ the Jew was . subjected to the laws gave Jews equal rights, the • them at work' next Sunday night people banded together to in­ at Temple Emanu-EI. They will druth means for the economy of harshest treatment in Iraq. Oc­ treatment accorded them was far augurate a new festival, the Third start their Ycar One and not for­ Israel and the role of the Labor casionally a benign ruler would worse than that given other Seder, While the First and Second get the Fifty Years that preceded government of Israel. treat- bis subjects with considera­ min,oritics, the Kurds and the Seder is established by command­ tlrcm. • Let the speakers at the Third tion. but this rarely extended to the Christians, although life for these ments and reinforced by ancient How different is the world we _Seder on the brighter side or peasant, who took out his disap­ minorities was neither easy o·r

__l ----""'- 1111 - , , -nw attooE-'1sLt,Nt;> E:RU>AX, AMD, 1,;,, ~976 c s- , WOMEN VOTE' Kww. KEEP IN TOUC!f with your ~~munity. Read the Herald. JERUSALEM: West Ba~k Arab women will be voting for the first time in the municipal elections to be 'WANTED .held in Judea and Samaria in April. REPORTER-CORRESPONDENT ·JOE ANDRE'S to handle special auignments ORCHESTRA part-time for w,eekly, newspaper Music for that very ,peciol affair · WeMitits hr Mihv■lis CALL 724-0200 831-3739 Res. 944-7298 for interview "

WELCOME TO ISRAEL: Clarence H. Giffl!.rd, Jr., left, chairman of the board of RI Hospital Trust National Bank, Providence, is greeted by Prime Minister during his recent trip to Israel. Mr. Gifford was among members of a national bankers' delegation which toured lstael under the sponsorship of State of Israel Bonds, the principal source of funds for Israel's economic development. Mr. Gifford also met with other Israeli government leaders and has given an in-depth report on the country's development.

~ Colorado. The bride is a graduafe of Brown University. The groom is a graduate Soviety of Wesleyan College in Middletown, Connecticut. The cou­ ~ ple will spend the Passover holiday . with the bride's family and will then ELBOT-MARGOLIS visit with the groom's family while Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Margolis touring Europe. of Calaman Road, Cranston, an­ The couple plan~1I0 sc.t up per­ nounce the marriage of their manent residence in Boulder, daughter, Martha Ann Margolis, or Colorado. Boulder City, Colorado, to Charles I'. Elhol, also of Boulder City, on April 2. He is the son or Mr. and Mrs. Hugh El bot of Munich, Ger­ many. Rabbi Harold Krantzler of­ lkialed al the ceremony which was held al Temple Micah in Denver, t1 ■e1110, werltl Boston To Mark Somerset Plaza, Rte. 6 Israel's Founding This year's celebration by the Greater Boston Jewish community Somerset, Mass. of the 28th anniversary of the foun­ <)ing or the State of Israel will feature an expanded and authentic Israeli shouk, according to Expo 28 co-chairman Bernard Garber, ~l president, New England Zionist Federation and Abbotl N. Kahn, vice president, Associated Jewish C:ommunily Center. l The shouk, a colorful market in­ FAMOUS MAIi . dicative of those found in the mid­ easl, will be held al Temple SHORTS M ishkan Tefila, Newton , Massachusells on Sunday, May 9, $3.00 from 12:00 noon lo l0:00 p.m. REGULARLY $9 .00 Visitors lo the fair will be treated lo a shopping adventure amidst the exotic sights and sounds or Israel. The shouk will feature girtware, JUMP ON THE glassware, clothing, batiks, l~ather goods, an Israeli drug store, art, BANDWAGON TO photography, Ja!Ja orang,es, jewelry, crafts and much more including Israeli cul nowers which ...t11., \Verld arc being nown in especially for the TOPS Somerset Plaza, Rte. 6, Somerset, Moss. occasion. Somerset's Newest and Most Exciting Adding lo the a uthentic at­ "WOMEN'S SPECIALTY SHOP" mosphere of the exposition will be $2.00 & $3.00 ,esty Israeli foods, si nging, dancing, VALUES to $12.00 · cultural and craft exhibits, and many special events. Israel Expo 28 GRAND OPENING is a fine way to celebrate Motber's Day. There will be hundreds of "It­ SALE tractive and timely Mother's Day gifts and numerous events to enter­ ALL FIRST QUAUTY MERCHANDISE tain the entire family. Participants with booths in the SAVE 40%-80% shouk jnclude the American Jewish Commillee, the Amerizcan Zionist NYLON PRINT Federation, B'nai B'rith, DROR, Hadassah, Israel Aliya Center, BLOUSES Israel Bonds, Jewish Community Council or Metropolitan Boston, $6.00 Jewish National Fund, Joint Israel VALUES to $16.00 Programs, Lubavitch Chabad­ nikim, Mizrachi Women, ORT, Pioneer Women, Student Slrle for Soviet Jewry, Young Judea, Israel Book Shop, Shalom Imports, Shachna Galleries, Mr. Balkan (stamps and coins), Pucker-Safrai Gallery, Deerskin Trading Post, p.obert International (sterling silver from Israel) and Mrs. Michaelson BAIIKAMIRICAAD (vases and ceramics). STORE HOURS When in doubt, you need look no ,. Mon.-Sat., 9:30 A.M. 9:30 P:M. further for the perfect gift. The - - Herald subscription is always ap­ 617-678-1796

' preciated for birthdays _or h10,lidays. 6 -.THE RHODE ISLAND HERAto FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1976 - . , F,nner local Will Appear fam.ous soprano Eileen Farrell will traveling around the world appear­ called "l.'ve Got.a Right to Sing the and cooking talents as well as her appear with the orchestra as· the ing with all the major opera com­ Blues." ability as a dowser - that. is the art At RI PhilltcJr.M9f!ic. Jean Madeira Memorial Soloist. panies and orchestras. In 1959, she --·-"l-- of finding water with a forked stick . The Rhode Island· Philna'rmonic Eileen Farrell, well · known to substituted for an ailing Louis Tlie N~w York Tim~s wrote that Tickets for both concerts arc Orchestera, under the direction of Rhode Islanders since she grew up Armstrong at the Spoleto Festival "the grandeur of the singing and its available at the office of th.e Rhode Fran13is Maileira, will present an , in Woonsocket, has had a in Italy singing pop songs, and was sheer size were enough to transfix Island Philharmonic, 39 the Ar­ all-Wagner concert on· Friday, phenomonal career !!l all aspects of the hit of the festival. Her perfor• every listener within ·earshot, which cade. Providence, or can be reserv­ April 23, and Saturday, April 24. show business. During the. l940's mance was taped by Ed Sullivan for all one knows may have been ed by calling 831-3123. This concert The concerts will be held in . she had a successful radio show and shown on his Sunday eve'ning Times Square." Besides her singing is sponsored in conjunction with the Veteran's Memorial Auditorium, which'·ran for five years. Then she program. Later, Miss Farrell career. Miss Farrell is known to her Fine Arts Series of Rhode Island beginning al 8:30 · p.m. World , embarked on her concert career, recorded an album of popular songs . family and friends for her golfing Colle~.

/ G~A GARDEN ON US. At Narragansett Electric we've noticed a lot of enthusiasm - Most of these plots are located near water lately among people who've been growing their own food supplies. We will plow and test the soil It- occurred to us that some of our customers for you. We can also help you with infor­ might want to grow their own garden this year. mation on planting and growing. Then and don't have the land to do it you're on your own to till, seed, feed, Well, we do. And if you nee_d some land, weed and hoe. And of course, we're making available plots of open land near whatever you produce is all our facilities-up to 1000 sq. ft per plot yours to enjoy. Just call your depending upon location. The land is Narragansett Electric Office available as long as it lasts, to the first to learn about the land avail- people who apply. able near you. Or use the coupon below. If you wish, you may get together with neigh­ bors or friends. You'll be surprised at how much fun you can have, · gardening on us!

Mail to: Namigansett Eiectric c/oBillHogg · Box 1438 Provl4ence, Rhode Island 02907

Yes, I'm interested in II garden plot

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' ' '·.. • \ 'I • I ~ •• ~ ' • • J ~ . I • ./ 16 197 - 7 works, too, so this hand should be .. . -. . -. - made. · Moral: Never panic just be­ HAVE A HAPPY cause .you think you are""100 high . Play each hand to the best ol AND JOYOUS PASSOVER. your ability. Yoil never know what might happen toJ,ail you We Open Every Day _out if needed. Are , ( / s KOSHER • • • • • • • •• BUY MOM JU LIE DEL CATE'.:,SEN In Rubber Bridge, 'when one is which, or course, he didn't have. in a precarious contract, he must He should have simply rebid his A-GIFT OF LUCITE I, l HOPE STREET - .-MO~R ISON & SCH lff... ~ do whatever he can to make it. Spades, bwas they were, at the ·At RETAIL PRICE 62 l 9396 ' ' Down one extra 1rick doesn't two level: North, trusting her part- make much difference ii it gives . nee naturally was interested in And We'll Give Her him a chance 10 make a contract. Slam and checked for Aces. When A Gilt ol Equal Value 01 course, ii one is playing lor she found that two were missing MS. GAIL E. POWASER M.A. high stakes and can sellle for she had ini§givings lor they might AT NiO CHARGE down one doubled vulnerable, a have been the wrong Aces, her bid ANNOUNCES "Tl!E CffNING OF HER PRIVATE PRACTICE /IS loss or 200 points, whereas ii he was in the • suit her partner had A FAMILY COUNSELOR FOR "Tl!E TREATMENT OF MARITAL makes a certain play he either opened. She might have senled for STRESS PR08L£MS OF PARENT~HILD RELATIONS. AND makes his contract or goes down ASSOCIATED five No Trump but then decided GENERAL OR SPECIFIC ANXIETY. 1700, he might just settle for the 19 SUMMER ST. to go all the way and pray. down one rather than lose a small PAWTUCKET The North player ·was abso­ fortune. Thal is one big dilference· lutely right, there was a Slam in GAILE. POWASER M.A. between Rubber and Duplicate for 726-0038 Clubs. But the Declarer not only MOSHASSUCXroMl'Ul the same situation in Duplicate TED SHELDON •16 NORTH MAIN STmT bid the hand badly, he also PIIOYUNCl RI. 0290< ln-310< wo~ld cause no change in attitude. played it that way. He received LOEBENBERG BLOOMBER Down one or down live might be the best lead for him, the Spade the same poor score so the De­ King, which he ruffed in Dummy. clares might just as well go all out. From here on he seemed over­ Today's hand was not quite so whelmed by where ~e was and I radical lor the Declarer couldn't won't even mention what he did. go down much and · he wasn't Needless to say, he went down doubled. Nevertheless, he was in a when actually the hand is there What .About contract that not many were going to be made.· All he has to do is lo get to so had to go all out · to count hi s tricks and go for them. make it. He should have made his He has four high trumps and six even ii he were in live but be- can ruff two Spades. Between the came panicky. • King and Queen of Hearts he has St. Dunstan's Day School North another trick. This adds to seven so if he can cash all the five Dia­ ♦ Void Tim may be the right school for your boy or girl • K 10 9 8 monds he ha s hi s twelve trickf Furthermore, he has to play the ♦ A Q 10 9 3 hand for that Diamond J ack to At St. Dunstan's we believe that small classes lead to the best ~ible educational ♦ K Q 7 2 fa ll somewhere along th e line. All relationship between teacher and pupil. West East he has to do is time hi s play cor- Our aim is knowledge. wisdom, respect and self-realiza tion for each student. ♦ AKJ862 ♦ 10 4 rectly. . We have a limited number of openings available for September (Gracb 6-12). • 6 3 .AJ 752 Hi s best bet after winning ♦ J 6 4 ♦ 7 5 2 trick one is to go after his Heart Write or call for more information about us: ♦ 10 9 ♦ 6 5 4 trick while he still has control of South every suit. If East happens to have the Ace. as he does. his 111omu Mmphy, ~Director ♦ Q9 753 Queen will become an entry, 4 • Q also. East will most likely d~ck St. Dastu's Day School ♦ K 8 and the Queen wins. Now the ♦ A J 8 3 220 Ulifflsity Annue (oo the East Side of Providence) second Spade is ruffed low and East was Dealer, East and the two high Trumps cashed in Proridmce, Rhode Island 02906 I, West vulnerable with this bid - Dummy. To gel back to draw the (401) 421-4414 -~ ding: last Trump the Diamond King is cashed. Now all that has to hap­ E s w N p p pen is the Diamonds are all good I ♦ 2 ♦ and as the cards are, they are. p 3 ♦ p 4NT p p This is the best way to play this 5 ♦ 6 ♦ ·hand even if the contract were le-ss would not re~ommend bid­ than Slam. With no entries left in OPENING ding as South did. Hi s opening Dt mmy you have to play to catch was all right' and elfectively that Diamond Jack, after doing all ENNIS IN . SEPTEMBER 8, 1976 stopped West from coming in but those other things. By the way, I it is hi s rebid that is wrong .•The wo uldn't blame anyone for playing three Club call is what is called a for the Diamonds lo break 4-1 and reverse bid showing great strength finessing for that Jack but that ECONO TENNIS Saudi Arabia Threatens To Switch To New Trade Partners Norwich. Conn. OF WARWICK SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi Arabia though partisan estimate - if the will simply switch lo new trading United States antiboycott measures Framingham partners if the US takes measures to not lead to a curtailment ...9 f Randolph against the Arab boycoll of Israel, United Stales business here. But Danvers INDOOR TENNIS ONLY it was recently disclosed by iwo there are already predictions that w.-1po1e cabinet ministers. the measures will cost at least S/0 Woburn Speaking of American C6lmpanies billion · in business one way qr Hudlon . s5so PER HOUR in view of antiboycoll efforts in the another. ' \ United States, one of the cabinet Information Minister Mohamm-·'- Warwick· - Opening 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. members, Commerce Minister cd Abdu Yamani said in a recent Sept. 76 MONDAY Thru FRIDAY Suleiman Abdel Aziz al-Salayim interview, "If we don't find the said in an interview, "I couldn't say right companies in ~he United PRIME TIME $7" Hr. (after 6:00 P.M.) with assyrance that there's been an States we can move to the rest.of the avoidance here of doing business." world and fi~d the same standard. He added, "th& element of uncer- Many industrial companies all over I •. tainty is not helpful for the at- the world are competi·ng." \ ECONO~TENNIS FEATURES mos p here of economic Dr. Yamani indicated that there High-Lob Gambrel Roof i:ooperalion." wa~ , no thought here of deviating * Several moves have been made in frorJl Saudi Arabia's adherence to * Plexi-Custiion Courts the United States in recent months boycoll measures. * Pro-Shop , lo prevent companies from comply- Stand Outlined to U.S. * New Indirect lighting ing with elements of the Arab The Commerce Minister, a * Show_ers * Saunas hoycoll program, which seek lo graduate of Johns Hopkins Univer- Lounge Viewing Area prevenl concerns in non-Arab lands sity, told a visitor 19 his Riyadh of- * * from doing business with Israel. fice th at a g roup of Saudi business * Baby Sitting Available These measures arouse particular leaders had met in Riyadh with i·ntcrest in this Arab kingdom, Treasury Secretary William E. NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION whi ch imported $1.5 billion in Simon earlier this year and had goods last year from the United made their position "clear to him." States. its largest source of imports. Already, one well-placed business Open 7 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Many Billions ln•ohed informant reported this week, the In ' addition, Saudi officials and Arabian American Oil Company, ', ,r Now Boolcing For · A rab and pro-Arab business the giant concern that accounts / sources ~sserl that in the next five from most of Saudi Arabia's oil 1976-1977 Season years United 'states business produclion. is)ooking more- to ' . Ca// J-800-225-2811 concerns will be awarded dozens of Eur9pean µnd JaP.anese suppliers ,. , Occupasst·uxet Rd. billio ns ol dollars )!,'Orth of rather than to •ihe United States Government and private construe- - suppliers, from which Aramco has OFF AIRPORT RD. tion -contracts in Saudi Arabia - been buying $300 million in goods- $50 billion by one Jrnowledgeable or more in recent years. (, - ,I, ' I • _ \ ' J J. I t 't T I J f ~ "\ • , e , • f ~ , , , , # , • , ~ o· f ~ 8 - TH~ RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1916 Jhird -Se.der Will Be Sponsored B.OWLING LEAGUES By Dvorah Da,an Gr~up ' 24LANES CHOICE NIGHTS AVAIJ,Jli FOR ~ SEASON MAKEY~ RESERVATIONS !2m , Call 725-1077 OR 724-4447 Lurite Gift Item• at ''IUUNAN"I'' ASSOOATED ,It__ SUM11111a .... ,,St., ... PAWTUCUT , ...... , R.I. RECREATION 726-0031 111 Prr wt I • A-:....At f!rfllll./~ Line l'IIISIIIT TIIS

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1976 - 9 NEW CEMETERIES The Veterans Administration's .iWIITYOI/ W/INT National Cemetery System has an­ · · ISI-IERE.1 nounced plans for new cemeteries in Massachusetts, California, Penn­ w sylvania and Virginia. CABINETS . 111B. • • ITEAL Having A Party? CALL U RENT-ALLS

Tables Chairs Dishes Champagne Fountains 725-3779

i, ~l\OJISJo~ 0 st- PPC ..s>e>0 BUILDING FUND: Leaden in the CraMton, Warwidi and East GrNnwich ..,_ plan 19 reactivate the llullcling f Restaurant t Fund Campaign for the Jewith Heme for the ~- Shewn above at a _, bNakfost fflNling at the Heme are, o • Salad Bar • ?;. Specialty Dining • Mai.cl left to right, Harold r,...,, Ma• Alperin ( preoident and ..,,...,a ~n), .loMph Galkin ( campaign con• f • ~ sultant), Sal White ( chainnan), Walter O.ucnin ( co-chairman) and lrvlntJ K-berv (.. ,ecutlve directer). Stan• Served In the • Marriott Tradition • ding left to right, 0...,.. Kah, Dr. Samuel Pritzker, Fredric S. Kamin, Harold l'ansy, Samuel Flelsltl, Abe Aron ~ of Elegance ~ (Warwick chairman), Howard Sllvern.n (lqst GrNnwlch chaltrnan), Sanford l'erler (CraMi.n co-chairman), 0 / Milton Dubinsky, Ha-rd Basa, Gerald Kaplan ( Cranston co-chainnan) and llchard Kaplan. i p~~nc~°'!~ a leacling Schelan To Examine Jewish Ethics 8 Top Entertainment l:'l Some of the world's leading associate dean of Hebrew College. rn This Week Featuring ~ scholars in Jewish thought will be This conference continues a series ~ BOURBON 'N SPICE gathering al Hebrew College in of major academic events, designed oo THRU APRIL 17 Se4 to provide the finest in scholarly in­ Ch;n~ Boston on Monday, May 3, for a POlYNl!SIAN ond day symposium on the theme sights to the broad constituency of >0 and Hebrew College - its faculty, Cl: CANTONESE "Jewish Ethics: an Inter­ 0. disciplinary Analysis of the students, alumni and communal CUISINE leaders - as well as for the general WoS.Wtho-Oolicioooo Traditional, Theoretical and Prac­ tl academic community. This year's ,oir-Orinkland~ tical Dimensions." this event is ~ designed to bring together major conference has been made possible ORDERS figures in various disciplines to by a grant in memory of Abrahm ~ TO TAKEOUT share the findings of their teaching Cohen. and in honor of Mrs. Fran-' ~ and research in the areas central to cis C. Cohen. by their children: Mr. 0. the proper understanding of the and Mrs. Bernard C. Cohen, Mr. Jewish ethical traditions. and Mrs. Julian Cohen. and Mr. It is being convened at Hebrew and Mrs. Lester Gi lson. College for the general enrichment Admission lo the conference is by of its own faculty and st udents,

• 10 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1976

BANNING THE BOYCOTT League, has declared that reliance NEW YORK: Seymour on voluntary compliance with the Graubard, national chairman of the Administration's anti-boycott B'n'!i B'rith's Anti-Defamation policy ha:,. failed. He said "new, strong legislation which bans American participation in the Arab boycott is essential."'

fine FOR•••••~••• hand-painted SINGLE , porcelain M&N . - AVAILABLE ONLY (NO PEIPING, EXCLUSIVELY WOIIBII IN PAWTUCKET AT .. i ■ ..... ,. ,.,, ■fl""' -ilol - ., tloe l■■i f,- <■

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1976 - 11 HERALD ADS bring to your of the Herald before you go out on BATHTUB$ doorstep a-'Alide variety of merchan.• your next shopping trip. You may REFINISHED disc and services. Take advantage be pleasantly surprised. 726-4302 LOVE-LI LOCKS · The Salon for LANDSCAPING very line c....,i... ._._. COWRINC • CUTilNG SlYUNG Spe:cializing in WASH and WEAR PER­ Shrubbery and Trimming MANENTS and MOREi RAILROAD TIES LOAM 181 Wlet A,r., RMrSide SOD, TREE WORK 437-001 ROTOTILUNG 726-0466 IPERMS ••• 'llSO EVFJtY ruaj or {617) 695-3014 POSITIVE PARENTING CLASSES ------/ '~:_: Instructor: GAILE. POWASER M.A., ~ ·,: PARENT CHILD COUNSELOR -- . ~ ... 10 WEEK COURSE FOR SINGLES OVER 30 Beginnining the week of April 26th GETIING ING.161O Ii IASYI Ii""! llfn4 IN IIAI ZION COClTAll rAlll & DANC{, s. ..,. A,,il ll, Offerings: Monday 8 :~0-10:00 P.M. 1971, MO P.11., ltt1tolt llislibo Ttfilt, JN .... EQUl,MENT DONATED: Hyman S. Goodwin,,,...... ,_, Klein c.rp., left, mood Ptod P■rltwty , ilmH, .., . llo,i, ~ ltfry his daut1hter, Felice Wie..., of Wynnewood, .....nsyf,,ania, and ._· I. or Thursday 9:30-1 1 :00 A.M. 0o¥is Onlttstrt, lftllf11i1M1t, rtfrnat... h, pri11S, ,n,. Nr, •• ,-rki11 Ill, fr• ce,t Sapolslcy, executive vice ..,....., of Miriam Heepital, an pich,Nd with the COST: 35.00 per individual ti 7,31. (~, respiratory equipment given to the ....,..... lty the Goedwln family In or 40. 00 per couple jt

SALE! Terrace THIS WEEK ONLY LANDLUBBER If you are looking for a ,uperior Chi­ nese dining experience, the_Cathay Ter­ JEANS race offers only the finest in quality, service and charm that will bring you back again and again. SOUDAIITY MONTH: Mitchell S. Riffldri, left and Bonnie llyvicker, roprnon­ 2099 POST RD. FAMOUS BRAND Across from State Airport · ting the Commi11ion an Soviet Jewry, recolve a proclamation declari"I April 4 to May 2 at RI Solidarity Month far Soviet Jewa. Govornor Philip NEW WARWICK, R.I. STYLES 738-7000 Noel made"the preaentation ta Mr. Riffkin and Mn. llyvicker, co-chairmen of the Commi•1ion on Soviet Jewry of the Jewi1h Community Rolationa Coun­ IN BEGGAR'S ~ cil. Mr. Riffkin it a Providence attorney and preaiclent of the Roger William, CLOTH Open Daily from 4 p.m. Lodge of B'nai B'rith. Mn. Ryvicker it a1toeiated with the Jewith Home for till midnite, Sunday noon the Aged of RI . Mr. Riffkin and Mn. Ryvicker announced that a new project till midnite. corner of Cocktail Lounge Daily of the commi11ian i, being launched in conjunction with the Solidarity MINERAL SPRING AVE. till I a.m, Month. It will tot up carreapondence botwoon Soviet Jewi1h famlliea who have applied for exit vit01 and RI individual,, familiea and groupt. and WOODWARD ROAD NORTH PROVIDENCE Pell ~cclaims 353-5470 Program Coo,en,enr Layaway Plan Senator Claiborne Pell has sent a warm lelter or support for the work - or Operation Recognition, which A ~ seeks to secure international Red INsuo Cross recognition for Israel's Magen David Adom {Red Shield or UNDERWV-\NCE David) Society, SPRING'S TRIUMPID Rabbi Rubin R. Dobin, national

• president of the Pawtucket Chapter LANDS.CA PING of Hadassah will attend the UPHOLSTERY Notices conference. .SPRING CLEANUP I The banquet will be held at the B'NAI B'RITH ,WOMEN BICENTENNIAL GLIMPSES Jewi sh Community Center, May 3, K.J. STANNARD The Roger Williams and Hope at 6:00 p.m. The Pittsfield Chapter, FERTILIZING, MONTHLY On Sunday evening, April 18, at which recently observed its 50th an­ LAWN MAINTENANCE . VISIT OUR SH OWROOM Chapters of B'nai B'rith Women 7:30 p.m .• Temple Judea will AT are holding their annual quota niversary will give excerpts from SEEDING, PLANTING present a look at some of the well­ their anniversary musical program. CRABGRASS CONTROL 4'., WARWIC~ AV E dinner on Thursday, April 29, at known and not-so-well-known Jews C RA N STON R I _6:00 p.m. at Temple Emanu-EI in TREE WORK of Rhode Island from the Revolu­ MEMORIAL SERVICE M(Jr"~ WED ~R• 8 Providence. tion to more recent times. SA J 8 lC The 27th day of the month of 20 y-rs experience Sol Kollack, director of the New Speaker will be Dr. Seebert ruF) THURS 8 ·io ' I'~ England regional office of the Anti­ Nissan has been designated as the CALL 723-3498 4 61-0970 Goldowsky of the Rhode Island Defamation League will be the Jewish Historical Society. official YaJrrzeit for those Jews who speaker for the evening. Refreshmenls will be served. died during the Holocaust. Temple A fashion show will be presented Emanu-EI will hold a special Yizkor by "Shiny Stones" of Wayland QUILTING BEE service on Tuesday, April 27, al Square. 7:30 p.m. in the Main Sanctuary in PRE-SEASON SALE The third annual quilting bee and memory of all beloved dead who Dinner cl,airman is Estelle For­ exhibit will be held April 24 and 25 man., Co-chairmen arc Marilyn were annihilated by Hitler from at the Varnum Armory, Main 19 38 to 1945. A special service has •◄IP► Berlinsky, Ann Davis and Ann Street, East Greenwich. Hours on Sholes. been prepared for this occasion. CENTRAL AIR co·NDITIONING the 24th will be from 10:00 a.m. to All Jews of Rhode Island are in­ '100 REBATE.Ji.US YOUR FIRST TON OF CARRIER AIR CONDI• 5:00 p.m., and on the 251h from vi 1ed to this Yizkor service. CONVENTION-ELECTION 12:00 noon until 5:00 p.m. TIONING FREE ... WHEN YOU INSTALL CENTRAL AIR CONDI­ The South Providence Hebrew TIONING IIFORE APRjL 30, 1976. Over 100 old and new quilts, INSTALLATION F rec Loan · Association hclil - their demonstrations, antiques and more Frn Estimates • No Obligation 70th annual convention and elec­ On March 31, the officers of Residential and. Commercial will be on display. The event is tion of officers, who were reelected sponsored by the East Greenwich Hope Chapter. B'nai B'rith Women HEATING o AIR CONQITIONING o SHEET MET AL for a one year term. were installed by pasl president (Div. of BRUNO Oil SERVICE) Preservation Society and They included John Margolis, Narragansett Bay Quilters. Roberta Nachbar. Individuals · president, who will retain his office installed were Eunice Kalver, .1 GLENN ENGINEERING SERVICE until a successor is elected; Jacob LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE president: Faye Goldman, Robin 24 Hour Service 769-1555 Gordon. I st vice president; Louis Weissman and Barbara Zcnofsky. Sacarovitz. 2nd vice president; Israel. power politics and Arab vice presidents: Barbara Bram, Abraham Charifson, treasurer; propaganda will be the central treasurer; Susan Brown. Shirley Samuel Kattfman. financial issues of discussion al the 3rd an- Galkin and Lillian Mcndclowilz, secretary; Ira Stone. recording nual New England Leaden ip secretaries; and Arlene Chorney, secrelary; and Samuel Ja111nik. Conference lo be held Sunday. cou nselor. Trustees installed CHOOSING A REALTOR? The board of directors elected for April 18. 1:00 p.m., al Temple incl ude Lois Cohen, Judy Dogon. one year are Harry Akerman. Ir­ Mishkan Tefila iri Boston. Marlene Hecker. Harriet Krasnoff. ving Adler. Qavid Berger, William Dr. Arnold M. Soloway. co- Roberta Perlman. Bella Porath, WE HA VE SOME GOOD ADVICE! Bolski. Samuel Buckler. Ira Bazar. author of Truth and Peau in the Merry Shlessinger, Gloria Staub Morris Charifson. Jack Grabowski. Middle East, will provide the and Sena Yamudcr. Abraham Grcbsticn. Samuel Jam­ keynolc address. Following, the The Chapter celebrated its 25th n ik . Herm a n Israel, Henry group will break up inlo a variely of birthday as well as 1he counlry's Kozerowski. Alen Kirshcnbaum, workshops. 200th birthday. Mayor Eugene Selwyn Kirshcnbaum . Max Members of the community McCaffrey, Jr.. of Warwick cul the Kerzncr. Nathan Miller. Benjamin including students arc inviled to birthday cake and members were Klchr, Joseph Margolis. Theodore a ttend the conference free of entertained by their ow n "Bicenten­ Reuter. Judah Rosen and Louis charge. Refreshments, observing nial Belles."' Chairlady for the even­ Kashruth. will be served. Further ing event was Sena Yamuder. RESIDENTIAL o COMMERCIAL o INDUSTRIAL o RENTALS o APPRAISALS Soren. Honorary board members arc information may be obtained by / MEMIIER STATE-WIDE MlS AND Cltitrlcs Bressler. Samuel Jacobs. contacting the Jewish Community HISTORICAL SOCIETIES COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT DIVISION Abraham Paull and Abraham Council at (617)542-7525 . The 12th an nual meeting of the Sholovilz. League of RI Historical Societies 728-5000 The convention was held on ART EXHIBITS wi ll be held on Sunday. April 25. at April 4 al Temple Belh Am. The Anyart. the contemporary arts, Glen Manor House in Portsmouth. financial report for the year 1975- center in Warren, will be holding Registration for the luncheon 1976 was read and other business three One-man art exhibits April 18 meeting is from 10:30 to I 1:00 matters were taken up. through May 21 from 1:00 p.m. to James Garman. chairman of the 4:00 p.m. daily at no cost to the history departmenl at Portsmouth Paper FESTIVAL OF SONG public. Paintings by Ross Eadie and Abbey School, will discuss "A Pic­ A "Sprina Festival of Song" will Paul Gagliardi will be shown as well torial History of Portsmouth and be presented at Temple Shalom in as constructions by Marlene Malek. How to Conduct One in Your Milton. Massachusetts, on Sunday, The center is located at 259 Water Town"' and Richard Rice Long, April 25, at 8:00 p.m. Participating Street. Warren. Further informa­ A.I.A., president of the Portsmouth clips guest artists will be Cantor Michal tion may be obtained by conlacting Historical Society, will speak on Hammerman of Congregation Anyart at 245-9005 "The Mott House - 1638 to Now, A (and thousands of other 1tatiorwry item~!) Kehillath Israel, and Cantor Ivan Treasure Found and Lost." Our huge ••~lc•oo~ i1 1tod1ecf E. Perlman of Temple Emanu- DR. DOCK TO SPEAK Following lunch and election of El. They will be accompanied by William Dock, M.D., director of hfeh with the 111uol 01 well 01 directors, tours of the Portsmouth Mrs. Miriam Hammerman. The cardiac laboratiorics, Lutheran area will include the Quaker unique in stotionery neech. hery• Shalom Chorale, under the direc- Medical Center, Brooklyn, New Meeting House; the Historical thin9 priced right, delivered fost. lion of and aecompanied by Sylvia York. will present the Dr. Alex M. Society Museum and the 1716 . , Rose Pitnof together with Cantor Burgess Lecture on April 22 at 8: 15 Southcrmost School; Butt's Hill Col -or ,top in. , Irving Kischcl of Temple Shalom , p.m. in the Sopkin Auditorium, Fort, site of the Battle of Rhode will present a program of musical Miriam Hospital. Dr. Dock's Ice­ Island; and the museum, country variety - from modp:n Israeli and lure is entitled, "Is George Bernard store, windmill and herb garden at Yiddish compositions, to the music Shaw ~ight - Arc We Doctors Prescott Farm, a Doris Duke of Leonard Bernstein and Jacques More Scientific Than Your restoration project. Brei. · Tailors?" The public is invited to The meeting is open to the public ~dil!?tMUMOllffOMCIMNGO..IIC. Mrs. Pitnof, a former resident of attend. and members of societies which 11' Wisllllinter St., PrevW..Ce, R.I. (481) 521-SIOO Providence who received her AB Dr. Dock has served as professor belong to the League. Reservations degree from Brown University and of pathology and professor of may be made through Norman MA degree in music from Wellesley . medidne at a number of dis­ Wright, Box 6, Lincoln, RI, 02865. College, has been temple organist tinguished -colleges across. the na­ Glen Manor House is an 86- since 1954, and music director since tion. He has served as chief of car- room French Chateau on tile 19.74. diology service at Palo Alto Clinic Sakonnet River. It was built in and chief, medical service, at the 1923-25 at a cost of $5,500,000 for FREE LOAN ASSOOATION V.A. Hospital in Brooklyn, New the president of the First National Noah Temkin was reelected as York. He is a Master of America'l Bank and was designed by John president of the Hebrew Free Loan College of Physicians and is an Russell Po.e.e, architect of the Association of Providence at the Emeriius member of the Associa- National Archives Building in 73rd annual meeting held on Sun- tion of American Physicians, Washington, D.C. day, April 11. , American Society for Clinical Other officers elected were lnvesticgation, and the American MAJESTIC SENIOR GUILD Sidney Pickar, Isl vice president; College of Cardiology. A regular meeting of the Majestic Alexander K. Gladstone, 2nd vice· -/ The Dr. Alex M. 18urgess Lec­ Senior Guild will be held Tuesday, president; Samuel Stein, secretary; tureship i§ an annual lecture cs­ April 27, al 1:00 p.m. at Temple ••. in your business or in the bank -. . Samuel Grossman, treasurer; and tablished by the colleagues and Beth Torah· in Cranston. not in a car or truck. · Jack K. Stallman, custodian, friends of Dr. Burgess in his honor. Guest speaker will" be Mary Directors for the term ending The lectures are held at the Miriam Mulvey, 4th vice president of the LEASE YOUR NEXT CARI April 1978 are Simon Chorney, Hospital where Dr. Burgess served National Council of Senior Citizens We IPIIQllize · in Mscedes. BMW, Lincoln; Cadillac end William Melzer, Irving Mittleman, as the first chief of medicine when in Washington, D.C. odllf knign o, clomNtic quality car ie-. Lilt us de9ign • · Leo Pickar, Jack Resnick, Harry the hospital opened in 1925. Refreshments will be served by leNe PIOWlffl to flt you. Stairman, Edward Waldman, Ir- · the hospitality c hairman and her ving Zaidman and Arthur Poulten. ANNIVERSARY CONFERENCE committee. Directors remaining for the term Stephen S . Rosenfeld, an ending April 1977 are Arthur editorial writer and columnist for\ MATHEMATICIAN BAKER LEASE CORP. Berge), Joseph Connis, David the Washington Post who began hif EMIGRATES Broomfield, Herbert Meister., Ber- journalistic ·career with the 1876 nard Rosenfield, Morris Tippc, Bukshirt Eagle .of Pittsfield, James Josej>h Sylvester came to C:AI I HOWARD MYFRS Nathaniel Swartz, Benjamin Mas'sachusetts, 20 years ago, will be the United States this year to tea_ch &011 711 1800 Weiner and newly elected Herliert the featured speaker at the 25th An- mathematics at Johns Hopkins Gold. niversary Conference banquet of University, He is probably the Attorney. General · Ju-Hus C. the Western New England Region greatest mathematician of his Mic_hael•on ad~~ the aroup. of H11d11saah. Mra.:,Mervin Bolusky, , J'e~' •··· · ,.. -, = THE RH09E ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY. APRIL 16, 1976 - 13 headquarters arc in Warwick. · MEMORIALS DEDICATION As executive director. Mr. Ross comers Night, Thursday, April 22 LAW AND ORDER !Notices will supervise ll worldwide staff of On Tuesday, April 20, at 8:15 at 8:00 p.m. at Howard Johnson's I I, I 00, a majority of whom arc p.m. - the 12th annual memorials Motor Lodge. Jefferson Boulevard, TEL AVIV: According to a SCHOOL'S OUT natives of the countries served by dedication service will take place at Warwick. Follow the signs to the recent editorial in Ha'aretz, a sub­ · Foster Parents Plan. More than 100 Temple Sinai in Cranston. All the Gold Room. Any interested single stantial number of Israelis now School's out a half day in Paw­ are employed in Warwick. gifts received by the Congregation parent is welcome to attend and yearn for a firm hand at the helm tucket on Tuesday, April 20. The A San Francisco native, Mr. in memory of those who have pass­ learn what Parents Without capable of bringing law and order Lincoln Room of the Pawtucket Ross now resides in Wakefield with ed away since last Passover will be Partners can offer them. to the country. Public Library' will hold a special his wife, the forl!ler Evelyn Sharf, formally dedicated. film program at 2:00 p.m. in the and their four children. In addition, plaques will be HACARMEL HOSPITAL, HAIFA auditorium. dedicated in ilic memory of Max A. Films to be shown are The Golden-- HOWCAUST OBSERVANCE · Cohen, Jennie S. Grinkcr, Reuben se4pks physicians and medical personnel Fish. The Steadfast Tin Soldier, Goldberg, Gertrude Lang, George OPENING: OCTOBER, 1976 John Tabor's Ride, and Billy the Members of the community arc Miller, Annette Rouslin, Harry NATURE: GENERAL HOSPITAL Kid. Children of all ages are invited to observe a day devoted to Schwartz, Dorothy Solomon, Jane SIZE: INITIALLY, 210 BEDS; Will EXPAND TO 4oo·aeos welcome. commemorating the Holocaust on Catherine Turilli, Jack A. White, Interviews will be conducted in Boston Sunday, April 25, under the Shirley B. White and Bennett Yctra. April 26, 1976 LIBRARY DAYS auspices_ of the Jewish Community Rabbi Jerome S. Gurland will of­ by Dr. M. Scheinfeld, Director General, Council of Metropolitan Boston,, ficiate. Hacarmel Hospital , Children's librarians from all the New Americans Association of for further information contact: over the state will be participating Greater Boston and the New CWTHING SALE Israel Center in the celebration of' "The Year of England Zionist Federation. ~50 Park Square Building Boston, Ma . 02116 the Young Child" to be held in Yorn Hashoah will feature a mor­ The Wheeler School will hold its tel: ( 617) 423-0868 Warwick Mall April 26 through 29. ning session, 10:00 a.m. to 12:30 28th annual clothing sale April 28 The event is sponsored by the p.m. at Zionist House, , 17 Com• and 29 in Wheeler Hall, 216 Hope National Association of Education monwealth Avenue, Boston, which Street, Providence. of Young Children, and many will focus on "Learning About the Clothing, arts and crafts, spor­ organizations serving pre-schoolers Holocaust." A debate, "Is Stressing ting goods. homemade baked will have exhibits. .the Holocaust Desirable," will be goods, and plants arc among the " Profoundly moving and beautiful to all who are Libraries from the Northern conducted as part of the New many articles available from 9:00 swept fnto its passiooate Interrelated Region will be staffing England Zionist Federation's Herzl a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday embrace · .., ,_ oa ,. , ...-,.- the display on Wednesday, April In stitute Lecture Series. Two film s and from 9:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. " HESTER STREET s 28. Three story-telling sessions win will also be shown and followed by on Thursday. _ be held, one at 11 :00 a.m. with discussion. Sponso red by the Wheeler School Emma Baron, children's librarian A service of remembrance will be Parents Association, the proceeds at Pawtucket Public Library; one at held at 2:00 p.m. at Temple from th is fund-raising event will be 3:00 p.m. with Janet Smith of Kehillath Israel, 384 Ha rvard used for a school improvement Woonsocket Public Library; and Street. Brookline. For further infor­ project. Mrs. N. Evcrcll Picchionc one at 7:00 p.m. with Joodie Perlow mation on the observance of Yorn and Mrs. Henry E. Kates. both of from Pawtucket Public Library. Hashoah, call the Jewish Com­ Providence. are co-chairmen. • Sound film strips will be running munity Council at (617)542-7525 or continuously, pamphlets and the New England Zionist Federa­ SLIDE PRESENTATION reading lists dealing with resources tion at (617)267-2235. for pre-schoolers and their parents A slide presentation on Who KIii­ will be available and an enormous TOURO DINNER ed JFK7 will be presented by the birthday cake will set off the theme Assasination Information Bureau of this year's exhibit, "Birthday The Touro Fraternal Association at Tolman High School. Exchange Parties Arc For Kids." The exhibits will sponsor a dinner on Wednes­ Street. Pawtucket. on Friday, May will be open from 10:00 a.m. to day, April 28, at 6:30 p.m. at the 7 at 8:00 p.m. The slide program is The Latest Styles In ... 10:00 p.m. each day from Monday Chalet on Mineral Spring Avenue being sponsored by the Northern through Thursday, April 26-29. North Providence. Interrelated Library System and the The full course Italian dinner will Pawtucket Public Library. For MEN'S & INTERNATIONAL CHIEF be followed, at 8: 15 p.m., by a further information call 723-5350. WOMEN'S business meeting at which the first George W. Ross has been ap­ and only nomination of officers will l\!EWCOMERS NIGHT SHOES pointed international executive take place. New members will be AND director of Foster Parents Plan, the ·initiated. Single parents arc invited to non-profit child welfare agency Touro Hall will be closed attend Providence Chapter 77 ACCESSORIES with worldwide operations whose Wednesday, April 28. ·Parents Without Partners New- The Shoe-In 272-4299

LEXINGTON BUILDING 1478 ATWOOD AVENUE JOHNSTON, R.I.

FOR THE iJPBUILDING OF ISRAEL: Leonard J. Shofes and Chart.. Dickona, past presidents of Temple Beth Israel THAYER AT ANGELL ST. and Cong,....tion Shoa,. Zedek, respectively; received the 25th annlv-ry award of the 1.....i Bond 0'9Gnlzo• tion at a champagne reception In their honor. The event was apon...... i jointly by the two cong,....t1on1 in behalf of State of Israel Bonda at Temple Beth Israel. Above, Mr. Sholes 1-onc1 from right) receiv• the award from State Senator Richard Ucht, geMNI chairman, RI CommlttN, State of Israel Bonda. Looking en, from left, Samuel LOOK Tippe, p,eaiclont of Temple Beth Israel; lrq Galkin af Beth 1.....i, master of c-oni.. , and Rabbi Jacob Handler, spiritual leader of Temple Beth Israel. Below, Mr. Dickens, center, accepts the award from Senator Licht. Witn.. ,. GREAT ing the pr.. ..,tation from left are, Steve Gaynor, noted humorist and raconteur, gu.. , artist; Mr. Galkin and Izak Berger, president af Congregation Shaare Zedek. Nino's featherweight poplin Oyster, Silver, Navy and Black from our collection starting at $80 Sizes 6-20

8ANKAMERICARD-MAS1ER ~-MUS SISlERS CHARGE --·------__ _,_ ·- ,

• • • _ . '.'. ' •• •••• •• _1 __ 1_ 1.;,. - • ••• • ••• • • • • ,_._,_ • • • •. - • , _ 1__ 1 _ • • • • •. • • • 14 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRID.4Y, APIUL 16, 1976 3 OUT OF 5 ho.usewives read newspaper food ads prior to shop­ PASSOVER ping for groceries. GREETINGS From ... - HOLIDAY GREEtlNGS PRIME - DRUG INC ...... ,.rt.,.,_ ,..,., ,.,...., Chee•'-'"

"In Cranston It 's Prime Drug " 374 Main St. at Park Pl. 82 Rolfe St., Cranston Open Mon.-Sot. from 11 ,30 ST 1-5818 Pawtucket's Y OMf H.altlt Is Our lusineu Gourmet Restaurant

PASSOVER GREETINGS PARFLEX RUBBER THREAD CORP.

50 Volley Street, Providence 421-6261 •~t.' fr!. BEST WISHES FOR THE PASSOVER RHODE ISLAND ELECTRIC PROTECTIVE CO. QUOTA AFFAIR SET: The Roger William• Chapter B'nai B'rith Women met recently at the home of Mrt. David Litchman to diteun their Quota Affair report. The affair will be held April 29 at Temple Emanu-EI at 6:00 p.m. 111 Mathewson Street 274-0250; 274-1270 Seated are Mrt. Yale Udin, pre1ident, and Mn. Lit-ehairmen), Mn. John Newman ( ad baak co­ Richard P. Clark, Pres. & Treos. S.R. Groy, V. Pres . Operations chairman), Mrt. G. Sidney Granoff (quo1a,reo1urer), Mn. Samuel l'erlman (financial 1ecretary), Mn. Emanuel Forman (quota chairman), and Mn. Samuel Michaeltan (vice prftident) . Barry Fain and Mrs. Mac Show­ International House Holds Fair man arc cha irmen of this yea r" s fair. They ,talc that "more than 400 peo­ Two Days To Accommodate Crowds ple from over 50 nations want to ME~ t!_ONG,~~ta'lf;>lL , hare their cu lture with the people '-=--,.."'.~ "'I ,.. 4 i-l- es,•,i --,, I ·<. • r•••• · •;;. , The 1976 International Fair will the International House of Rh ode ~ expand into a two day event and Isla nd which is spo nso ring the of Rhode Island. Our fo reign I ...... mcmhcri;; art! involved in eve ry urea will be held on Saturday, April 24 event. PASSOVER GREETINGS and SuncJay, April 25 in Meehan All previous fairs have been o f the fa ir fr om food preparation to Auditoriun, on the East Side o f ,inglc day events. "We broke all booth design . It ', a fine example of Providence, it was a nno un ced by allcndancc rc<.:u rds last year when "ha t happens when different \.'.ulturc'-1 pitch in and wo rk Gerry Martin. exec uti ve director of over 5000 fl<' Op le came to th e fai r: · toget her: · PASSOVER GR EE TINGS flllllllcd out Mr. M,irtin. "To avoid TO OUR FRIENDS AND STUDENTS Ticket- will be avai lable a l 6 OO K O F THE WE E K over crowding :.rnd to all ow us to present mon.: entertainment and •1ci::h ;.rn Auditorium. corner of ll opc Jnd Lloy d S treet s in HERCI & MYLES MARSDEN 's A TREASURE more nationalit y booths, we feel the FOR MY DAUGHTER extra day is nee4:ssa ry. ." l'rov1dcnce. Children under 12 will he admilled free if accompanied by BRAE CREST SCHOOL OF BALLET By BATIST $3.95 Scheduled fro m I 1:00 a. m. to :111 adult . Picture taking wi ll be per­ 9:00 p.m. on Saturday and I 1:00 LINCOLN , R.I. mi tt ed . All proceeds go to the Inter­ a.111 . until 5:00 p.m. on Sunday, ,1;: .• . ,:, • C ·~ , ._ • ' "' ,, national House o f Rhode Isla nd there will be hooths representing 723-9391 whil:h assists the hundreds tem­ some 50 countries staffed 6y foreign or porary fo rei gn reside nts and ~Brown nationals, many attired in their ~tudents who come to our state na1ive dro ss and offeri ng every yea r. ~Bookstore homemade international dishes. MR. and MRS. IRVING A. ACKERMAN

, : :• ,-.:. ,i::;:::..._• PA0'✓ 8hJ 1 6t1 Homemade crafts will be on dis­ 75 Oaklawn A.venue. Cranston play, some available for sale. There Ml. and MIS. AITHUI M. ACKERMAN and PAMELA 131 Alvin Street, Warwick wi ll be games and puppet shows for Ml. and MRS. EDWARD D. ROTMER the children as well as movies, a MICHELLE and GREGORY 'isLAHL'ERt silent auction. an international yo 5 Robin Ci rcle, East Greenwich (- .J ,.,,.._ /i,,,_, if yo champion, and continuous live DR . and MRS. HARRY E. PASS entertainment. Included are The JODI and LORI Stamford, Conn. GOOD FOOD f:_ Looking G lass Theatre Company, BEST WISHES FOJ A VERY HAPPY PASSOVER ' MODERATELY PRICED Puppets by Jerri Adelberg, Asian MENU music by the Anklung Orchestra, Scottish pipers, Zambia n folk • COCKTAILS• songs, "Greek dancers, belly dan­ Thank You For Your Patronage cing, Portugese folk dancing, During The Past Year African drums by Olatunji of Nigeria, Turkish folk music and Best Wishes For A Happy Engli s~ and French folk songs by And Healthy Passover Kathy Nelson. re-,l\mhle ,Antiques RHODE ISLAND WOMEN who ll enroll as membert of the National Honor Society of Sponsort of Israel 274-1322 Bonds will be the special guetts ol FRED WCHESI f"@lffoJDe.•Care• Mrs. Chaim Herzog, wife of Israel's 738 Hope Street, Providence, R.I. ambassador to the UN, at a sponsor Open Monday·Sotu rday, 10 fa 5 .30 OOSeffleeS™ luncheon to be held at the UN in New York, April 26/ al 12:30 p.m. THE CARE YOU NEED AT HOME Announcement was · made by . Professional care with warmth and friendly , BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER FROM Mrs. Stanley Grossman, sponsor sympathetic understanding MANAGEMENT & STAFF OF chairman of the RI Wofflen's Divi­ Call us-your loved ones will be in safe, com­ sion, Stole of Israel Bands, who SEEKONK . petent hands. slated that this is the only luncheon Mrt. Herzog i1 hosting for l1rael Bands at the UN. BOWLING LANES Mrt. Gronman pointed out that spon1or1 are purchatert of $1,500 FALL RIVER HIGHWAY, ROUTE 6 / or more in l1rael Band, to enable . NEW HERALD l1rael to fortify ill e

SERVl,E. ~ DIRECTORY 6767. The RI Women ' s Division THIS DRAMATIC 3-COLUMN leadership includes Mrs. Grauman CAMP RAMAH IN NEW ENGLAND and Mrs. David Horvitz, redemption DIRECTORY WILL BE-LIMITED chairmen. Committee members 1 330 Beacon Street TO ONE-Of-A-K,ND SERVICE include Mrt. Samuel Bresnick, Mrt. Brookline, Massachusetts Philip Dorenbaum, Mrt. Arthur Eins­ We extend to you our best wishes for the Pesah Festi­ TYPE FIRMS ONLY tein, Mrt. lewis Finkel, Mrt. Harry val. We pray that this corning year wil! bring freedom Finkel1tein, Mr_,. Joteph G. Fi1hbein, to our oppressed brethren a11d peace to us and all Mrt. Max Greenberg. Israel . FIRST COME i "'. FIRST SERVED Al10, Mrt , loui• Kirthenbaum, Mrt. Max leach, Mrt. Richard Licht, Hermon J. Gor.don Administrator Mrs . Howard Schneider, Mrs . An1el Gladstein CALL.TODAY Sheldon Sollo1y, Mrt. Leo Sonkin, Chnirmun . .,.,-..llabbl,L•onord S• . lerkowlt1: 724-0200 Mrt. Robert Starr, Mrs. Leo Swartz ·· Oirt·l'Lor and Mrt. Manfred Weil. - I THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRll)t.Y APRIL 16 1976 - IS

HAPPY _PASSOVER HAPPY PASSOVER .Jews RHODE ISLAND - LUCIENNE w, Soll Tho Bost .hd Service Tllo Rat Oflraq Tree Service In~. DRESS SHOP "'YEAR 'ROUND SERVICE" EQUIPMENT' CO. (Continued from page 4) • 487 Waterman Ave. They were aided by young Zionists IMPORTED 1&r#~1 Ea'st Providence from - Palestine, who as British ~~ KNITS 438-5507 empl~yees wore the ·Egged uniform D. J. DION which gave them some measure of Proprietor The Newest ii' Fashion ---. "Ho Job Too Lorge or Too Smol·r' security. A MOST HAPPY PASSOVER . · Wealthy and prominent Jews VALlEY 1-8998 2550 West Shore Drive Warwick IEW&USED with innuence, or -by the judicious 275 Sowth Moin St., COV£NRY 739-8686 distribution of baksheesh to .Jhe PASSOVER GREETINGS proper officials, were relatively safe -Largo_ Passover Greetings SOloctlan from molestation. The middle and Alwan· lower classes, less immune, were so HOLIDAY GREETINGS SOnlat on 011 terrified that some became anxious VY'S BEAUTY SALON GRAYSON'S to leave the country, which they Exercisers realized held no future for them. At 373 NARRAGANSETT PARKWAY , WARWICK -· Specializing In this time it was still possible to Coµiplete Women's Apparel secure visas to a European country, 781 -8766 SDKlaJi:zlnq In 5 & lo Soeed Adult Cyclu Sizes 16 ½ to 60 from which they could make their (' Washington Plaza way into Palestine. South Attleboro SO Hillside Rd. Jewi sh drivers bringing supplies PASSOVER GREETINGS 414 Warren Avenue Cranston in from Palestine for the British East Providence Garden City army were often able to smuggle 43413838 944-1750 some Jews out with borrowed iden­ tification cards. An organized un­ derground movement arose and passports and visas could be BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER purchased from black marketeers YARNS AND NEEDLECRAFTS and even the police. Some men were occasionally smuggled out in JEAN TIERNEY'S HAIR FASHIONS Cedar Swamp Road, GrHnville British uniforms. The British soon became aware of this illicit traffic Full Service Salon 231-8570 Rachel Cappanille into Palestine and were determined Christine Vo/my Method Skin Core Treatment to stamp it out. As the trucks had to 182 Wayland Avenue CALL TEl-5666 return by way of Transjordan and Syria. stopping at British army Sanford and Cynthia Buckbinder ,amps enroute. the rigorous inspec­ PASSOVER GREETINGS ' BACK STREET SALON tions shonly put an end to this . mode of escape. Also, in passing G1mt:,-c,1fJa 75 Burlington Street Men\ and Women 's 751 -0365 through Iraq the convoys were Ho,r Cutting Wish their many friends . ,topped at a number of police 2S7 Thayer Street (opp. Avon Cinema) A MOST HAPPY PASSOVER ,heck-points before the border was Providence, Rhode Island 0_2906 reached, 40 l / 861-0778 The Zionist underground was able to forge identification cards BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER and visas. but passports were a problem. Authentic identification HALL'S DRUG, INC. cards and visas were purchased or M05hassuck Prescription & Surgical Center CRANSTON BOWL stolen . Cards were obtained of per­ sons that had died, but for wh om no death certificates had yet been GREETINGS AND BEST WISHE S issued . In time the Iraq authorities FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER 1450 ELMWOOD AVENUE and the British began to plug these 149 ELMGROVE AVENUE CRANSTON, R.I . escape loop holes. The British rea li,ed that PROVIDENCE, R.I. numerous refugees were finding their way into Palestine from Iraq 467-8850 despite increased border patrols, 861-5200 and were determined to put an end 10 this innux of unwanted im­ / migrants, to prevent Arab ri oting. Katling, Chief of British Police and PASSOVER GREETINGS head of the C .I.D. (Counter E. F. O'DONNELL & SONS CO., INC. Enc'-d tool Saunp 8aflt l~telligence) was anxious to un­ cover the Hagana unkerground. He PAINTING CONTRACTORS SINCE 1900 HOWARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE enlisted the aid of Iraqi Jews to and Restaurant s uppl y information . Some 75 DIKE STREET, PROVIDENCE, R. I. cooperated because of the very 2 GEORGE STRHT, PAWTUCKET, 1_.I. liperal pay and others because they Exit 27 off, .... 95 North & South were convinced that the nottng Elmhurst 1-8505 _ 72U700 were soley due to Zionist .activities. Meelin8'-• lanquefs A British intelligence agent PASSOVER GREETINGS ( managed to infiltrate the- un­ derground. He informed on those that had sheltered refugees, who were arrested and tortured· until PASSOVER GREETINGS they revealed the names of the PASSOVER GREETINGS ' Hagana couriers. The British spy who had entered Palestine on one of 1. the convoys-supplied enough infor­ J i mation to place the entire organiza­ the ·Coacknten F'ORE COURT ' i tion in grave danger. The" Hagana I couriers were immediately _replaced by a · new team. • TENNIS CLUB Dangers multiplied. Letters that r,. - . ~- had been sent by Iraqi girls who had I entered Palestine and were living in Kibbutzim were discovered by the Bellingham- Cumberland- Lincoln police in one, of the returning oil trucks. Those fo whom the letters had been addressed were im­ 5 mediat~ly arrested and ·questioned. PASSOVER GREETINGS TO I Finally, after undergoing months of "ElEGANT DINING" ou'R FRIENDS AND CUSTOME,RS ...., ,_ ....., torture, "'ere liberated upon ...... : 11:Jt Ill J P.N. payment of huge fines. . · • . The arrest of tlie girls spread pan­ Na1: J P.M. 1lU. It P.N. •' ic among' rpcmbcrs of the Jewish I sa.,..n llllilll , P.N. m 11 u. Community Council who pleaded -n INIIIEI: n - 1111 )e P.N. with .the·. Hagan a to cease its ac­ ROSS-SIMONS, Inc. tivities. The' unreasoning terror I. .. .which had been building up for Jewelers .- ·--•-.s,~-Cl

CROWNED DONOR QUEEN: On March 31 , Hope Chapter B'nai B'rith Women held their annual paid-up memberahip and in1tallation dinner al the Warwick Public Library. Arlene Chorney of 152 Evergreen Street, Pawtucket, ..1 was crowned Donor Queen by last year's Queen, Florence Nachbar. This honor-goe, to the woman who has amasaed the most donor l:fAGGADAH PRINTS: Seven lovely prints adapted from monochromatic woodcuts of the Prque Haggadah, fint credit during the year. printed some 450 years ago, are on display at the Jewi1h Community Center. Colon have been added by silkscreening techniques. Of the 200 prints in thi1 limited edition portfolio, 150 copies are being offered for aale to the public. Portfolios may be ordered from the arti1t, Alan Melnick, al 272-9899. Mr. Melnick, 34, ha, lived in Providence since 1969 and is an in1tructor al RISO Exten1ion School. The prints depicted are Offenbach Haggadah 1721, l1tanbul Haggadah 1932, Prague Haggadah 1526, Prague Hagaddah 1526, Ba1el Haggadah 1790, Sephar_dic Haggadah c.1500 and the Venice Hagaddah 1629.

PABIAN HONORED: local Mida, dealer Harvey Pabian, left, accepts a !SRA.El BONDS AWARD: Rabbi Bernard Rot,,;an,.1econd from left; spirllu~l leader of Temple Beth Am, receives the plaque from Wil~am Strahan, general manager of fronchiH operation, for 25th anniveraary award of the l1rael Bond Organization. Stale Senator Richar.d Licht, general chairman, RI Com­ Mida1-lnlernational Corporation, honoring hi, 20 yeara of aervice to aiea millH, State of larael Bonds, make, the p,...ntatloh. !Aft to right, Abraham Aran, Beth Am pr.. ident;' Rabbi Rot­ molori1t1. Pabia,:, i1 one of 21 Mida1 dealen around the US who were part mar:; Senator Licht; Jack Mo11berg, mailer of ceremonies; and Joey Ru11ell, foremoat American entertainer. The af the company'•- 1956 forffl!lltie!l, _The award wa1 pre1ented at Mida1' occasion was a cocktail reception honoring Rabbi Rotman for hi, leaderahip and Hrvice lo the 1ynagogue, th• national dealer meeting in Freeport, Grand Bahama,, Pabian own, and Jewish people and larael, It wa, hellf under the au1plces of Tempi• Beth Am in behalf of Stale of l1rael Bonda at operate, Mida~ outlets in Pawtucket, East Providence, Providence and - ~~ I Warwick, 'I -, • J : ·,iTHE .R1:I01i>E 1SLANO HiRALD, liRlOA,Y, .APRilL 16, 19.7.6 .-,- 17 POLICE CHIEF A JJW new police chief is David Ep1tein, a ' , .J . Jew, who was formerly chief of ,. e w s BEST WISHES FOR A SAVANNAH, GA: Savann11h's -police in Iowa City Iowa. Epstein, HAPPY PASSOVER who holds . two masters degrees • of I GREETINGS Jrom_ Mich!gan St~te Universi~y raq FOR PASSOVER and ts .workmg on hts doctorate, ts . the second Jew to head the police in y.., 11ST ... the bastion of the old South. The (Continued on Following P:tge) Meir happened to be in the same COMPLITI first was Charles Garfunkle who served from 1903-1907. car and insisted on accompanying MOVING IIIVICI her. When the British officer learn­ C..C..WSllol ed her identity, the girl was tu~ned ALWAYS IN STOCIC · HOUDAY GltEETINGS lillDUtli. RICH LDW-NIGN HASS II ALL ' LANS over to the British police instead. . IAUliES CLOSE TOLEIUC[ S-L-l•T-T-1-1-li There had never been an active WAIIHOUSI CO. Zionist movement in Iraq, and the v(,T.~a,. llll'S•••ts•• people as a whole showed little ~:i Sllll.•Sl'ADUSS ofWAYlANDIQ. CALL • ~c:r'..l GREEN interest in Palestine. At the time 17 ...... St. ,,.,,..IRCI 42l•J&e0 ~- IIOrULYMIZED there were about 225,000 Jews in 400 NAIIIRlS AVE .• PfVl'idfttao, R.I . 0. el Hw E.,,_,, the country, most living in Bagdad. our Of row:, CAI.I. COl.l£CT -----Uffedse.d,el BROTHERS Many were middle class M.W1- shopkeepers, clerks and artisans. WITH BEST WISHES Some were pcddlars who travelled 739-92N INC. FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER '~~..;JS through the villages. The wealthy, were involved in industry, as 861-1110 construction, engineering and banking. Farmers and manual laborers were few and the idea of PASSOVER GREETINGS emigrating lo Palestine ..s kibbutz­ niks, to work in the fields and EVERGREEN TREE orchards, or to drain malaria WITH BEST WISHES infested swamps, held little appeal . & LANDSCAPE SERVICE FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER As a result of the Yishuv's struggle for the folllillmcnt of the dream to liberate Palestine from the SEEKONK, MASS. British. waves of anti-semitism swept over Iraq. The secret police 761-5505 LOUISQUISSET intensified their efforts to ferret out those engaged in Zionist activities. Only the students seemed to take any intercsl. The o~r generation, GOLF CLUB thoroughly cowed, prayed that this GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES unrest would subside and con­ FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR ditions return to normal. Jewish organizations voluntarily raised RICKSHAW INN BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER . · funds for the Arab refugees, making MR. and MRS. LOUIS ROTH of every effort to demonstrate their RESTAURANT loyalty to the regime. "Fine· Chinese Food" Emissaries arrived from Palestine TICKET • Cantonese Style Cuisine with the intention of organizing the AGENCY • Cocktails • Polynesian Drinks ROTH Jews, teaching them Hebrew and MR. and MRS. LEO CHIN 130 Wfttmin1ter St., Providence preparing them for emigration. Your Host and Hostus While the adults fearfully fought to 751-0200 · 751-0202 remain clear of any involvement, 181 WILLETT AVENUE, . EAST PROVIDENCE 433-3685 the children took to the idea with CHOICE SEATS FOR ALL A TTRACTONS enthusiasm. Classes were held • • wherever space was available. Guards were stationed to give the alarm should police approach, in Mr. and Mrs. ALEX GUTTIN which case books were concealed and games started. Many were so and family interested that they joined several Our Sincere Best Wishes classes simultaneously and soon of became quite prolici~t in Hebrew. For A Happy Passover The Arabs demand that the GUTTIN'S BAKERIES United Nations establish a "secular, democratic state" in wish to inform you that all our Israel. They no longer threaten and rant or "pushing the Jews into the sea.'' With tongue in check, they . stores will be closed during seek the formation of a secular state where "Moslem, Jew and Christian the full week of Passover would live in peace and harmony." Congressman and Mrs. To the uninformed public this and we wish you all a modes request seems eminently reasonable. Happy. Holiday Having witnessed the kind of Fernand J. St Germain peace that exists in Lebanon after the Moslems became the majority; the ruthlessness with which they GUTTIN'S BAKERIES overthrew the government and 27 Douglas A•eMte 1095 Broad Street ravaged Beirut, the most attractive, 272-6590 781-8929' the most progressive a•nd the wealthiest Arab city in the Middle , Best ~Wishes East is alarming. Lebanon has been the only democratic Arab country and whose development and PASSOVER GREETINGS TO OUR prosperity was chieny due to the fRIEN0S AND CUSTOMERS for a .happy and ability of the Christian Arabs. The •.. tor,,,, n.s, em-­ Moslem element has made it quite Po1y-;.. r c~ clear that they will either aominate Tllis Sidr of Bosio,, • •• healthy Passover. the country or destroy it. It leaves RICHARD UJNG'S little doubt of what would happen to any non-Moslem minority in the­ Providence "secular, democratic state" the 1301 North Main St. PLO stridently insists upon. 272-5525 On April 12, 1975 Yassir Arafat, the PLO leader piously slated in the London "Economjst" th"at "we . E; Providence have in the Lebanese experience' a · 40 Newport Ave. significant example that is close to 438-7666 .the multireligious state that we are trying to achieve." Yet within a short month brutal war between the ~.: Kingstown __: Moslems and Christians' erupted - 6900 Post Rd . a wa r which left al most 15,000 dead 885-0575 arid thousands of men, women and children wounded, innocent victims or this se-nseless violence; the hospitals crowded to capacity, the - 676 WASHINGTON ST. RTE. I country in ruins and the economy South Allleboro, Mass. utterly destroyed. Despite repeated M ....Thun. 11:.lO 1 ..... 1 1.111. attem pts te arrange a truce, lighting ~-,; le Sot. 11 :.lO 1.111.-l •·"'· continues un abated. The ferocity S... le Holidays N--2 0.111. . with whio'2 the attacks have b~en ' Cal 399-8020 carried out and the savagery· with which the dead have been (Co'ntinud' on Following Pige) / .t,

_.;. ~ · · _.. ,~•:t ,r, f _I~ "t 4,f_ /._, , ,HJ•, •_\ ,, '(_t1-. f. ' 1/ _ .~.' ~1~:l p, 45. _! >;; 18 -'TllE"ltffODtrrsrAND HEl(ALD TRIDAY ··;\PRJL'l6" 1976 .

~ PASSOVfR GREETINGS .Jews_. ·artesian wells PASSOVER GREETINGS ·Charles H. w.., before declding NA'RRAGANSETT , .cau ~ :R.. J Safetv.S9sfems J COllpany Of Iraq us for [UMBER ,CO. ( Continued from Preceding Page) ,aonCT YOUR F~:; CD _.._,....,...... an HOME . ·auStHlSS All Types of _, ..... mutilated, has not been witnessed accurate, sincere • ULTRASONIC Co., Building Materials Inc. anywhere, with the possible excep­ CALL • MICROWAVE tion of primitvive African tribes. analysis of Celell&laleeat ...... 438-3566 • INFRA -RED 550 ·Jefferson Blvd. Iraqi Jews were among the most your well problem •STRBS famous bankers and businessmen in - WarwickA R.I. 111-71U · 111-INI wm. c. ,northup & son • AUTOMATIC DIALERS NldltaNI-MN the Mideast. The first Minister of Fm : t , tirna~ ts . ff'ft Otmon1tt•tlons 739-4000 Finance in King Feisal's Cabinet CE ntredale 1-6590 Ir. Your Homt Upon RtqllfSt - HOLIDAY GREETINGS 600 WATERMAN ~VI.,(.· P,owW..C• - was Hezekiel Sasoon of the famous WE SEil & SERVICE JACUZZI PUMP5 family of bankers. Jews handled TANK5 . WEIi SUPPIIES 95% of exports and 90% of all con­ 230 putnam ave. Member of BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER tracts. As in other countries, the Alarm Assn. of R.I. M&S INVESTIGATORS and SECURITY, INC. Arabs , having won their FREE ESTIMATES independence, refused to tolerate BEST WISHES FOR FREE DEMONSTRATIONS UNIFORM GUARD SERVICE . SPECIAi EVENT5 the presence of nonMuslims, par­ In your home upon request PLANT PROTECTION A HAPPY PASSOVER ticularly any in government 600 Waterman Ave., E. Prov. CALL ANTIIME: 351-1670 positions, and certainly nol the Jew. 36 KENNEDY l'LAV., l'IIOYIDENCE As the situation in Palestine con­ tinued to deteriorate, the British decided to drop ihe Mandate and BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER PASSOVER GREETINGS the United Nations considered par­ EUGENE McCARRON tition as the only alternative. Con­ HARRIS LUMBER CO. ditions in Iraq for Jews worsened. A FLORIST reign of terror began, which Harris at Atwells 421-4200 398 HOPE STREET threatened not only the fortunes but al so the security of 1he Jews, although they were -as loath lo recognize the signs as the German BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER PASSOVER GREETINGS Jews had been. Iraq declared that Arabs would AUBURN FISH MARKET; INC. Moritz Beauty Salon· never permit the establishment of a ' 20a ROlfE STREET, CRANSTON Jewish State of any size on lheir 97 New London Avenue lerritory. Sensing the unrest, the 941-7755 Fo, Appo;n-nt CAIi 944.97j 7 government endeavored to reassure the prominent Jews, fearing that a s udden withdrawal of Jewish PASSOVER GREETINGS HOUDA Y GREETINGS capital would endanger the economy . These received some MONTGOMERY DISTRIBUTORS measure of police protection. The "Who/eso/e Automobile Parts & Accessories " JOE BARRY'S ALL NEW mobs were permitted to vent their 13S Broadway 110 Broadway ALEXANDER MOTORS fury in the ghetto and the police 421-42S3 Pawtucket stepped in only when they had com­ Providence 724-70S0 pleted their destruction, or if the violence threatened to get out of hand. BEST WISHES TO OUR Parliament passed a criminal JEWISH FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS code providing capital punishment for anyone suspected of Zionism. NEW LIFE RUG CLEANING COMPANY After May 15th it became virtually 91 CURSON STREET, WEST WARWICK impossible lo obtain a visa or passport. The street became bare of CALL KENNY WILLETTE 821-1125 Jews except for lhc defense organization which remained in PASSOVER GREETINGS readiness in the event of an attack PASSOVER GREETINGS on the ghetto. The older men shut themselves in their synagogues THE PLANT GALLERY TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS where they remained all night in NOW AT constant orayer. 782 Hope St., Providence 751-6188 With ·the Declaration of House Plants Cacti African Violets BRUNSWICK WARWICK I ndepcndencc, the Arab states declared war on Israel, and martial TEN PIN LANES law was imposed. It touched off the greatest reign of terror yet seen. No Jew dared appear on the street. . , 1160 POST ROAD When food ran short, children were WARWICK, R.I. sent out to shop. It took little time for Moslem children to realize that . Prime Time Still Available they carried money, and the For Foll leagues children were beaten and robbed. · Jews were endlessly harrassed by hoodlums who invaded homes with CALL 781-6969 in.cessant demands for "con­ tributions" for the relief of Palesti­ nian Arabs. Scarcely a day passed without a visit from these ruffians, or the police. The occupantshad a feeling of relief when these un­ welcome visitors came only to BEST rns,n-:s TO Ol.,' R search and not to arrest. Walls were turn apart as they ostensibly looked CRANSTON Jf:JHSH FRlf:,\-,)S & ClJSTOi'HERS · for weapons, but actually for any Garden City Shopping Center concealed valuables. If none were Route 2 (OFF ROUTE 37) , found they became particularly OPEN 9: 30 A.M. to 10: 00 P.M.-Mon.-Sat. - degructive. Anyone foolish enough For A Happy . to protest was beaten and arrested . - - WOONSOCKET RUMFORD MIDDIETOWN ! The Jews were deliberately tormented and terrorized. Woon10<••t 51'1<,pp,"9 Ploro llo.,•.- 1 A Actv ,d-,ed Shopp,.,q ( ,..,.1 ,. • . Healthy lloute 1 14 Dtamo'ld H,11 tood t°"9 Nouo90,.w,tt lto1• l•0

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-i-~ 1.ir ~.ti:; __ I GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES ; I , ,,;. ;1:· :-~'',\10..Ni:iiNJ~NANCE COMPANY, - 1, :,..,· TO AU OUR ,.,;,:: ' ::.'";.·~. '"•\ .. ,·. ·,:· ,, JEWISH FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS " :., ····-- •:- • . ·\lnerai Spring Ave. IN WOMEN'S FASHIONS SERVING R,\. & so. MASS. ' North Providence, R. I. COMPLETEl'i IONOED & INSURED 353-4460 353-4462 722-6627 Parking al the Door 38CHURCl:f~~T;, P~WTU~ICET ·--- - ' ' .·, ,~--.. 'li.-4- ' ._ ... _ ..~ .... ·- -:, :[ ' ·.r~~ 'it,,.. ' . . ..- : :· .- •. ~- • ,,/- :_ •t 20 - THE RHODE IS.LAND HERALD, FRIDAY, ,APRIL 16, 1916 is 193}, and he can't !lrfol!I P!:_ with authority as the no-nonsense per). In his garret-like apartment abortionist, wealthy dowager, or Eustache Chisholm And The Works come and go his wile and friends, black seer, and Dart.ict Von Bar­ hetcro and homo. A frenetic, er­ gen is at_his best and· funniest as C~lled Ideal Script For Trinity rective dance number by the whole the Swedish gardener willing to be cast opens, and nicely sets the pe­ all things to all men. Cynthia In Eus1ace Chisholm and 1he riod or the evening (the dance is Strickland plays the artist-whore Works Adrian Hall and Richard staged by RISD's talented Brian with ii rcverish gaiety that also Cumming have finally put together J ones, who in Rhode Island has helps to set an era when the daily to the ideal script for Trinity's meth­ certainly become the specialist unrelieved worry about one's next od. It has coherence and inner ne­ whose dance routines work). Car­ meal was mixed up with personal cessity, a scarfolding from which la, Ace's wife, has just returned insecurity and questions ol identi­ everything else may hang. Its from an unsuccessful \ry at adul­ ty. Margo Skinner (Ace's wire) OUR ADV ICE--DON'T DELAY characters arc acted. not displayed h ry and is settling as the bread­ provides the commonplace anti­ Plan your Spring Vacations now. by declamat.ion. And this produc­ winner. Ace is the maypole around thesis, the American dream (or tion is a reminder that Hall can be whom the others revolve: Mau­ one version ol it) in able fashion. Remember, "it costs nothing to do business with the one- of the finest directors around. reen, the painter turned whore at All the etrccts, the setting, Altogether. it is a memorable. ex­ his suggestion; Amos, the "sun at lights, costumes, and sound, work ii 'BEST' our 14!rvice is en_tirely FREE!" _ I hausting. terrible, wonderful ex­ noon" whose startling good looks together through the shirting, coa­ ,I · Y(E CAN DO ANYTHING IN THE WORLD I perience in the theater. attract men and women: Haws, lescing scenes that pile back­ :I FOR YOU • The script was skillrully put to­ the uptight, upright character ground and future together in a gether, its base a James Purdy whose inability to admit he loves sustained balance. (Scenery design I ...... _. novel appearing in the late sixties. Amos forms a central theme or was .by Eugene Lee; costumes, .* Hall had seen its possibilities but the play; Luanna, the seer whose Betsey Potter; lighting. Mark couldn't get permission to drama­ mantle ol second sight falls on Rippe: and properties, Sandra tize it until ahcr Purdy saw Trin­ Ace, to his dismay; and Reuben Nathanson.) tr there were more ity's Feas1ing wi1h Po111hers and Masterson, the millionaire lush. relier from heavy tension. especia l­ Seven Keys 10 Baldpa1e. The play Richard Kavanaugh as Ace, ly in Act II (in Acl I there is hu­ is more restrained than the novel, Peter Gerety as Amos, and Wil­ mor to break up the long. tense . using suggestion and nuance to at­ liam Damkochler as Haws take no scenes). the play would be kinder tain an astonishing equivalence other roles. but the rive other to the audience but perhaps with Purdy's work. players portray many characters. that kind ol long. slow. intense But the wait may have been In some. ol course, they arc better building up can't be broken with­ worthwhile. Even a year ago, Trin­ than in others. but this production out damaging the fabric. ity couldn't have done this play as is distinguished by a high standard £us/ace Chisholm a11d rhe well as they arc now doing it. The ol acting. In the major roles ev­ Works is one or Trinity's memo­ company had to come to terms eryone is so good that one won­ rable productions: OPEN MONDAY with a number or things that tend ders why. in prorcssional com­ LOIS ATWOOD APRIL 19th to overbalance their productions. pany, this docsn·1afways happen: during They had to learn that, beneath Part ol the magic may be in hav­ DIRECT PRESSURE Sch-I Vacat.,_ the designed pattern or crrccts un- ing the right script. at the right . dcrcutting and overlying other er. time, for the right people. In heavy bleeding, direct pressure on the wound using a clean rccts, it was still necessary to have It is a commonplace to say that Thousands of Sneakers to Choose From substance. They had to relax with Richard Kneeland is brilliant ol handkerchief, cloth or pad is the a lot or concepts. words, and ac­ course he is. He has one gem or a most effective method of control, tions that still bedeviled them. scene as a drunk. so impeccably according to the Nebraska Medical RIVERSIDE SHOE Association. This past year has brought a new played 1ha1 his next scene seems a 1 1 833 WILLETT AVE ., RIVERSIDE ~{i ~1;u!0• ••ut' :i, m ,m ability to play lightly and to mock letdown until one realizes that it in passing. a change rrom the un­ has to be, was written that way, WE'RE MOVING e _BRYAN RICHARD derlying earnestness that could and couldn't have been sustained a1 of April 30th • • make a realistic play grimmer ii played otherwise. And yet. in WINKLEMAN TRAVEL ~tl than it ought to be. And those his other characterization. as an will be at who think Trinity is always ex­ Army captain, Kneeland perhaps 241 RESERVOIR AVE. DOM cessive would do well to read the gives us a liner characterization ol novel and note the excesses that a much more complex man, por­ PROVIDENCE ALBERT• were not succumbed to. trayi ng an ambiguity that neither (next to Spigel's Mkt.) Because the actions or the play he nor Hall, nor even Purdy, ever ,._ WINKLEMAN TRAVEL arc not only acceptable, but neces­ quite figured out. Damkochlcr's sary. When Haws. sleepwalking, growth as an actor has been Qi'.)' ~c ~7~';':..20002901 suddenly appears in Amos•s door­ steady through is years at Trin- · IN PROVIDENCE way naked, the light streaming ity, and his performance as Haws LIGHT CANDLES 4/ 16 1hrough behind him, we know at is splendid. Barbara Meek moves AT 6:07 p.m. once something about him that we could have learned so immediately in no other way. There arc ob­ vious reasons for labeling this · adult entertainment, but I wonder CLASSIFIED ii it would shock any teenager viewer or movies and television. CALL 724-0200 HAIR DESIGNERS Specifically .among the unusual on­ stage events a rc live 5"enes, more FOR THE ULTIMATE IN HAIR CARE or less, in which there is nudity: 2-Alterations LANDSCAPING, SPRING CLEANUP: UNISEX HAIi CUTTING an abortion scene combining tragi­ Fertilizing, monthly \own mointe• comedy with verisimilitudes: a EXPERT TAILOR ovoiloble for men's nonce, seeding, planting, crobgross ·sy APPOINTMENT and ladies' alterations. Reasonable. control. Tree work. 20 years ex­ sadomasochistic scene; and some Call evenings and Sundays. perience. Coll 723-3498. 806 RESERVOIR AVE. 942-9599 sexual episodes. Voisfeld, 49 Savoy Street, 831 · 4-23 Chisholm is a sometimes de­ 1340. CRANSTON, R.I. . 9434999 4-23 tached observer whose magn um · 29-Merchandise for Sale opus is a poem in charcoal pencil 6-Condominiums on old Chicago Tribunes (the time HAND-CARVED WOODEN YAR­ I - MULKE. From South Am~rico. Col• /~GRIM RENT OR OPTION TO BUY . Ve,y lector's item. Best offer. 647•3187. reasonable. Palm Beach County. Seek Witnesses To Spacious, 3 ½ rooms, 1 ½ baths, fur­ Town and nished. Fpyer, screened patio. Golf, 33-Painting, Papering fatal Car Crash tennis, pools, whirlpool, souno. Bus, club h'!"se, MURIEL L. COLE , 942• PAINTING: Interior- and exterior. Countr~ 3155. Wallpapering expertly done. Gener­ BETHESDA, MD: Witnesses-are al cleaning, walls and woodwork. 13S-lll~■,r•II being sought to an_- accident in 19-Generat Services Free estimates. Coll Freemon Groy Rhode Island, December 26, that and Sons, 934-0585. tf •• Wayl■ N S.-,.. took the life of a 14-year-old girl HOME CLEANING: Floors, walls, win• dows, cellars, ... etc. Coll for free esti­ 35-Private Instruction headed for a reunion with relatives mate. Clear Day Jaf\!torial. 861- in Fall River. 3368. Kamy Nathanson of Bethesda, PHOTOGRAPHY: leorn bosic dork­ room technique or basic camera Md., was killed at 11 :30 a.m. in an technique in o comprehensive studio FABULOUS auto accident a quarter of a mile 21-Help Wa.nted setting. Coll King Arthur at Met before Exit 6 near West Greenwich, Photo, 331-7633. WANTED: Experienced Hebrew school JUMPSUIT R.I., on Route 95 North, teacher for subvrbon Rhode Island Kamy was traveling with her congregation. Three teaching days. 38-Situations Wanted parents and younger brother for Must provide own transportation. to take you through a a Send resume to Rhode Island Jewish EXPERIENCED religious teacher desir• holiday visit with relatives and Herold, Box G-22, 99 Websi.r es position either with o temple or busy day. Then with friends in Fall River. StrNt, Pawtucket, R.I . · as a tutor, Please reply to R.I. Jew­ T-'!.e young girl's parents are look­ ish Herald, Box -G-24, 99 Webster the blouse removed, Street, Pawtucket, R.I. 0286.l. you·rc ready for ·a· ing for people who might have seen 25-lawns, landscaping the accident and. ajio might be 42-Special Notices night on Ihe town. aware of some of the circumstances BEi. TERRA and the condition of the road. GARDENING INC. MASSAGES fo r ladies only. Rita at Apricot or gray . the Arena Club. Seven days, five Sl39.95 Although they were hospitalized, Comple~~':'"'°pl"I nights. 10 a .m.- 10 p.m. 861 -2696. Kamy's father and brother, Harlan, . · Main-nee 13, sitting in the front seat and her C-!N