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~ - --, ... , R.I. JEWISH HISTORICAL ASSOC, 130 SESSIONS ST. uic 1 o19 7& PROVIDENCE, RI 02906

THE ON/ Y EN GLISH JEW ISH WEEKLY IN R I ANO SOUTHEAST MASS

VOLUME LIX. NUMBER 39 FRIDAY. DECEMBER 10, 1976 20e PER COPY I 11 I Jack Gottlieb To Perform At Recently Appointed I Emanu-EI' s Mitzvah ·Event JNF Tree Chairmen Jaek Gottlieb, American Jewish The newly appointed Rhode composer and teacher, will perform Island tree chairmen or the Jewish in his own mu.lti-media production National Fund include Mrs. Harry "From Shtetl to Stage Door" for Finkelstein. Jewish National Fund the annual Temple Emanu-EI Council; Mrs. Alex Goodblatt, Sisterhood Mitzvah Event on Sun­ Mizrachi; Mrs. Harry Sklut, Mrs. day evening, December 12, in the Sidney Jaffe and Mrs. Martin temple meeting house. Written and Mendelson. Pioneer Women; and narrated by Mr. Gottlieb with the following Hadassah represen­ musical numbers by Don Croll, tatives: Mrs. George Ludman and baritone, "Shtetl" is nostalgic Mrs. Louis B. Rubinstein , lecture-entertainment which shows Providence Aleph Group; Selma the i!!'pact of Jewish folk music on Souza, Providence Business & Broaaway and m Hollywood. Professional Gr_pup; Mrs. Richard Glick, Jerusalem Group; Mrs. Mr. Gottlieb is assistant Stanley Jagolinzer, Cranston professor and composcr-in­ Chapter; Mrs. Howard Flamer, AHVI SPINDELL residcnce at the School or Sacred Pawtucket Chapter; Mrs.' Steven Music, .Hebrew Union College, in Gamer, Newport ChaP,ter; Mrs. New York City. Primarily a com­ Harry Baram, Wodnsocket poser of Jewish liturgical music, he Chapter; and Mrs. Richard Gelles, Another Opening has also had broad experience in the JACK GOTILIEB South County Chapter. field: of music production. For ·ap­ 331-1616 or from either or the co­ The tr~ will be planted in the proximately ten years he was an chairwomen, Harriet Miller, 861- Rhode Island Woodland in the assistant to Leonard Bernstein and Of Another Show 6355, or Marian Temkin, 861-Ql38. Bicentennial National Park, . involved in , many phases of By BARBARA WRONSKI New" was written last summer and Bernstein's work with the New The show that opened this time is is still undergoing daily revision. II York Philharmonic. Mrs. Ruth Fixler Will Speak "Something Old, Something New," was cast in New York in early fall The performance is at 8 p.m. and by Henry Denker and it stars Hans and the troupe went into rehearsal will be preceded by a sherry hour at On 'The Impact Of Th·e 70's' Conreid and that all time Yiddish in mid-October. It opened in early 7 p.m. A recepti9n will follow the theatre great, Mollie Picon. "Please November in New Haven, running entertainment. "Mitzvah" is the Late Friday evening services at Rhode Island; The Bureau of stress to y.,ur readership that this is for ten days, and then went to Sisterhood's major fund-raising Temple Beth Sholom on Dece!llber Jewish Education; the Jewish Com- a rare opportunity to see a lady that Philadelphia fQr three weeks. "We event for the support of temple 10 will be conducted by Rob_ert A. munity Relations Council; aod is a is a.~-~-~:.. '::.,.•-Nl--,~1 be -Mr. '(iiat-th;; Starr. Guest speaker will be Ruth member of Temple Beth Torah, in des opportunity to sec her," stress­ ~spi~d~1( ':~'clrJs youth activities and educational would be bringing the show back to Fixler, sp"eaking on "The Impact of Cranston, as well as 0th.er com- l·i! Ahvi Spindel!, who also per­ programs. Reservation information New York the 21st of this month is available from the temple office, the 70's - The Changes and munity organizations. Sl:te is also a ,orms in this livingroom drama and Challenges Confronting the Jewish member of the Rhode Island Jewish l who granted an interview just hours for previews. "Hopefully it will Family Today." !:fu!9.,j)i~~~--M~~. .F..wcr before curtain call on Tuesday, run." He is by all means not trying to Mrs. Flxler attenclecf7Jrande1s Ethnic Sub-Commillee of the their opening night at the Wilbur paint a dim picture of the work. University and graduated from Rhode Island Bicentennial Com- Theatre in Boston. You cannot participate in a perfor­ "Brooklyn College. While doin~ mission. Ahvi Spindeil, 22, is the son of mance without getting excited over graduate work, she par.ticipated in a While living in New York, Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Edward Spindell of it - especially when you are dc;al­ sociological study minority Fixler was a founder of and served the Providence East Side. He has ·or ing with a brand new work, a brand group impact on the develo!'ment as chairman of the Women' s been interested in theatre since his of American civilization. She ts par­ Institute of Nassau County and was early teens and has spent the last 4 new script. "The play is not a heavy play. It's not a critics play. It's ticularly interesteYitzhak Rabin, Finance The VAT, established this year, is ByGISeua currently 8 percent. Other economic YlalmSllaral Minister Yehoshua Rabinowitz and DETECTOR Defense Minister will measures linked to the new budget JERUSALEM (JTA): Tbe meet shortly to try to =ch a com­ include a maximum 30 percent rise in the prices of basic commodities COMPl!TELY Cabinet approved an IL 122.5 promise. Government sources said s_5ftM__ -· INSTALLED billion national budget for the fiscal the defense budget will remain instead of the 40 percent rise .J~- - year 197-7-78 without the en- within the limits of the approved originally anticipated and a ' dorscrnent of Histadrut and with budget. maximum 25 percent hike in IN ~-HOME, N'T., OR MallE l«lME. 11£ SE

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THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER JO, 1976-3 Arms Aid Protects 'Maximum Freedom' ...----~--!""'!• . 0 IC______e S -JI . · TEL AVIV: Addressing the most advanced military planes. I Labor Party's 616-mcmber Central Whereas Israel's neighboring 7 HANUKAH SERVICE synagogue of Congregation Sharah Committee, the forum that selected countries - Egypt, Jordan, Syria 6 The Temple Beth El Shabbat:, Zedek in Westerly. Marc Charash, him in 1974 for the post of Prime and Lebanon - now have fewer 6 Hanukah service on Friday, a URI student and member of the Minister to succeed , fighter aircraft than they had on tlle H Decembe r 17, will begin at 7:45 Hillel Foundation there, will con­ Yitzhak Rabin commented that eve of the war in October 1973, he 0 p.m. The new youth choir and duct the service. Pupils of the South Israel, with United States help, had said , Israel's total of aircraft is 35 to p members of the school will par­ County Hebrew School located in acquired sufficient military strength 40 percent greater. E 6 Kingston will be active participants 5 tictpate. A Hanukah Latke party to afford it " maximum freedom of 2 will follow. T in the service and Lenore Levin, political maneuverability" to meet a 0 principal of the Hebrew School, will R political drive the Arabs arc 0 ROLE OF WOMEN deliver the sermon. expected to begin in 1977. DIAMONDS E Congregation B'nai Israel will The Oneg Shabat following the Mr . Rabin added that th~ E hold a breakfast featuring a special services will be served by a group of American commitments assured T symposium on "The Role of the ladies of the synagogue, headed Israel of qualitative superiority over Women' in Our Synagogue" on by Mrs. Leonard Masofsky. Joseph the Arabs during the next five or ten ~--8.C,., Lewiss, president of the congrega­ Sunday, December 12, at 10 a.m. years in aircraft, armaments and GO El Al-lSRAEL Questions and opinions will be tion, has extended an invitation to naval equipment, but not in Jewelers Since 1818 welcomed. all Jewish families in the South ground-to-air missiles. 270 County Rd., Barr. --.,N1~' County area to attend the service. 245-7777 Rabbi William E~ Kaufman will The Israeli leader, who com­ 11D. TIii', TRANSFERS, HOTELS manded the lcictorious Israeli forocs explain th·e Conservative 'FIDDLER ON THE ROOF' • !lites u !lites 28 _llitas Movement's ·stand on women's role The Temple Emanu-EI School in the war of 1967, said American in the synagogue. Other pa~ F-15 fi ghters would be operational action C Drama Club under the direction of C.■ ~s.• Cuisine a s We ore ~ANTS 6 ticipants, congregation members in Israel shortly and that F-16's p Beto H Maida Horovitz is in rehearsal for long Stending Tradition Special Boston Charter a·nd a .female guest panelist from the performance of "Fiddler on the were promised for the I 980's, which E Jan 1 • Jan. 8 A Providence will share their views. Roor· to be presented by the would assure Israel of the world's __ a,Lee's C ARUBA • _BONAIRE R I T MIZRACHI WOMEN students of grades Vov arid Zay in of • ,CUll~CAO the Religious School. A E The . Providence Chapter of from$~4900 R Mi zrachi Women will hold a The musical, adapted for this per­ FUR PARTY, l s · Melavah Malke on Saturday, formance, will be presented on Sun­ We have s~ce December 18, at 7:30 p.m. at day, December 19, at 11 a.m. in the Southhampton Princess Congregation Mishkon Tfiloh. meeting house, to the Religious BANOUET, Bermuda Supper will be served . School, interested parents, grand­ Dec. 30 - Jan. 2 Mrs. Benjamin Hayman is chair­ parents and members of the com­ RECEPTION Terrace man for the day. Co-chairwomen munity. Mrs. Horovitz is assisted Hamilton Princess are Mrs. Henry Abramowitz, Mrs. by Linda Rudacevsky and m11sical tf you ore looking for a su perio r Chi• Dec. 29 - Jan. 2 Alex Goodblatt and Mrs. Bennett accompa niment is by Florence nese dining experience, the Cathay Ter­ escorted by Gert Glelden Formal. Other members of the Parmct. C] .. . race offen onfy the fineit in quality , Aside from the actors and service and charm that will brill9 you $32500 + 10% ta• CO/llmittee are Mrs. Albert Brody, boclr. again and again. singers, many students will help decorations; Bea Mal, program Mrvic• complete with scenery, props, lighting and ·, . ·- ~ 2099 POST RD. chairman; and Mrs. Robert 1 . Acrou from Sto'- Airport Berlinsky, ex-officio. A Hanukah backdrops, aided by Esther Rob­ WARWICK, I.I. AU CHARTERS! • RIO musical festival is planned. bins. 738-7000 AU CRUISES! • MUUIT BAY / "\. __ , -.. .,J_l:- • AU TOUISI • ARUBA The public is invited to attend. LEUKEMIA soaETY • AU FllGHTSI • EUROPE Reservations may be made by call­ Dennis J. Roberts, general cam­ ~ . 1 - · 1' ~J Daily,_, 4 p.m . ing 831-5079, 861-4997, 274-0496 or paign chairman of the Leukemia o,,_ LONDON SHOW TOUR till mldnlNI, Suncloy - 351-9565. Society of America, Inc., Rhode tillmWnite. $299.00 .. DOROTHY ANN WIENER JHA LADIES ASSOCIATION Island Chapter, recently announced Cecktoll i-,... Daily the appointment of three co­ til 1 a.m, 766 HOPf ST .. PROV . The Ladies Association of the ..Jl-62~- Jewish Home for the Aged of chairmen of the total campaign's in­ RENT! Rhode Island is repeating, by pop­ dustry committee. They are Edwin C. Brown, • Dlahft • GIHaea ular demand, "Fun & Games" HANUKAH GREETINGS featuring numerous prizes~ The secretary-treasurer of the Rhode • BanquetTablH meeting will take place at the Home Island AFL-CIO; William A. • SIiverware on ~nesday, December 15, with Carroll, president of the Lorac • Tablea · all type• IRVING ROSEN MUSIC a tea at I p.m. and the meeting at 2 Company, a Providence jewelry fin­ • Card Table• ORCHESTRAS, COMPLETE ARRANGEMENTS dings manufacturor; and Marvin S. - p.m. • Silver Service ALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS & 'ACCESSORIES Program chairman is Jeanette Holland, president of E. Rosen Company of Pawtucket. • CoffH Makers FOR WEDDINGS, BAR MITZVAHS Saval. Helen Kagan will lead the • C~ira • Table Linen sing-a-long. Accompanist will be AGUDATH ISRAEL AND PARTIES OF ANY KIND Anne Seltzer and the hospitality Agudath Israel of Rhode Island Complete travel arrangements fo, your committee includes Evelyn Blazar, will hold its first general meeting on Dora Dimond and Belle Tuch. Sunday, December 12, at 6 p.m. in honeymoon o, anniversary trip the vestry of Congregation Ohawe YOUNG JUDAEA Sholom in Pawtucket. CALL SANDY The Young Judaca Bogrim Club of the Zionist Youth Movement (for high school youth) meets every 724-8009 Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. at the Society Jewish Community Center in Providence. All Jewish youth are in­ DAUGHTER BORN vited to attend and share in dis­ Mr. and Mrs. Randall Lawrence cussions and learning, dancing, Hozid of 3 Fairfield Road, singing, hiking, celebrating, eating, Barrington, announce the birth of arts and crafts, planting, building, their second daughter, Jaqueline dreaming, camp and Israel Renee, on Dcoember 2. programs. Paternal grandparents arc Mr. WITH Younger group sessions will b1e and Mrs. Joseph L. Hozid of organized soon. For further infor­ Cranston and Florida. Maternal SUCH A mation on eitber, call Don Futter­ grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. man at 863-6750. Dominic Diodati of Barrington. Mo unt Sinai Me111o rial Chapel - The Young Judaea Bogrim Club DELICATE welcomes open. impartial will sponsor a "Fallen Into Winter DOMES BAR MITZV AH comparison of our services with Conventfon" Friday, December 17, The Bar Mitzvah of Andrew H. SUBJECT, through Sunday, December 19, at Barnes, son of Mr. and Mrs. o u.r co mpetito rs .. in prlvacy .. in Camp Spro_ut Lake, the group's Harvey J. Domes of 23 Colgate advance ... o r at time of need. own Junior Judaea Camp. For Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts, IT'S HARD Mount Sinai Chapel provide_s further information, contact Don took place on November 13 at Tem­ the fin est perso nalized se rvice and Futterman at 863-6750. ple Israel on Riverway, Boston, TO TALK · Massachusetts. the mo st mode rn funeral chapel in TEIXEIRA TO SPEAK Rabbi Roland Gittelsohn and Rhode Island. We use ·pricing Professor Warren Teixeira will Cantor Maurice Simon officiated. ABOUT metho ds that are reco mmended speak at Temple Beth El Sabbath Maternal grandparents are Mr. by governme nt a uthorities to be services on Friday, E>ecember 10. and Mrs. Abner Sisson of Woburn, PRICE. His subject will be an artist's Massachusetts. Paternal grand­ the fairest to the Ame rican perception of Israel. Services will ·parcnts are Mr. and Mrs. Julius consumer ... it e mized pricing . begin at 8: 15 p.m. Professor Boines of Warwick, Rhode Island. We pro vide the exact services that Teixeira headed the department of A luncheon reception followed at a family requests in acco rdance textile design al the Rhode Island the temple. School of Design from 1958-72. He with their preferences'. wishes. a nd has · recently returned after five FIRST CHILD, A GIRL Many people might conside r it financial circumstances. - years in• _Israel where he was invited Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cantor of insensitive to talk about the cost of by the government to assist in the Randolph, Massachusetts, an­ a funeral for a loved one. nounce the birth of their first child establishment of a new college of However. the U.S. Federal design and technology. An advisor and daughter, Shira Gabriella, on on art to the US Department of August 3. Trade Commission. the National MOUNT SINAI Education, his· presentation will Mrs. Cantor is the former Sasha Jewish Post Newspaper. and the Ml MORI..\!. CH ..\PU . feature works of art which he (Sylvia) Berlinsky. · National Jewish Monthly B' nai S'l~, IIP:•1· "ht't'f .,1 -t1 ► 1 ""'' painted in Israel. Maternal grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Robert .Berlinsky of B' rith magazine have stated that i'1,"1dc11•1 HI SHARAH ZEDEK SERVICES Providence. Paternal grandmother there are substantial differences in ' .ii ,1,. :,, ,, I .u I TU7 Sabbath eve services for the is Mrs. Herbert Cantor of Miami prices charged by.·different funeral 1 r ,, ,1' 1, 1 , ·1, l I", South County area's Jewish _com­ Beach, Florida. _ : . . ho mes for equivalent services and m unity will be hdd,• filllighr, MalernaJ.,tr.t..,..,.clntother---is­

4-THE ~HQDA ISLAND ,HER,AU), FRI.DAY, Df&EMBQ- 1Q...W6_ He's The '. Oldest Fres n1an· FROM·'FRIDAY TO FRIDAY That ·Harvard Remembers Widowed-to -:Widowed CAMBRIDGE, MA: It's pretty ·- of a financial aid pacbgc: a S10,000 easy to pua for a profeuor at Har- grant from the Ford Foundation to A New _Group vard Univenity, even if you arc .. write about his cq,cricnca. ~ only a freshman - that ~ if your auy is unusually lively and , By BE"YL SEGAL name is ~arry Gcnb, 63; and you - intcrcating," explained Paa- ~ sport a. pipe, beard, turtle neck and Janosi of the foundation staff. "Wq . Death is final, unreversiblc and wounds. The scar remains forever, nized under the auspices of the s~rts Jacket. Al far~ can be deter- thought be would P,fovidc some universal. And this is what makes but the passage of days and weeks Rabbinical Association, the Com­ mined, Mr. Gcnb II the oldest useful insights into the cxpcricncca freshman ever to enroll at Harvard. · · of older students." · death. the mystery of death, so and months dulls the pain. People munity Center and the Jewish "Tbeguardsdon'tUIUallyukmc Mr. Genb takes a normal.\ elusive, so baffling to mankind must eat. People must drink. Family & Children's Service. The for my 1.0.," according to Mr. · freshman program oonailting of from time immemorial to this day. People must attend to their busi­ group has been gathering informa­ Gersb, who is the second generation Byzantine history astronomy One can be philosophical about ness. And this is the beginning of tion from many sources before in his family to attend Harvard. His linguiltk:s and A~ history'. death and say that it is with us normalcy. The bereaved seeks a embarking on their work. They from the day we are born. The friend, an understanding soul, a arc training each other. son att~nd~1there before him. Now The only requirement he avoided that he 11 retired and bu the money, was expository writing. " I thought clock of life ticks away the ·min­ kindred spirit. The bereaved wants There are many precautions to he feels he would rather punue an this would be kind of stupid," he utes, the years, as soon as a child a person who has been through the be taken when one approaches a educatio~ than waste time playing said. "Eventually they agra,d." opens its eyes and starts looking agony of losing someone near and' bereaved. One false move on the golf. "I don't want those mush Mr. Gcnb bu found that being at the world. It is the same for all dear, a person who speaks from part of a member '!lay embitter counes that most schools serve up an older student bu its advantages. animals. Man is no better nor experience. a person before whom the bereaved toward the whole to older students. I thought the dis- " There arc certain things I know in worse. the bereaved is not ashamed to group. You cannot be tQo soli c­ cipline of meeting the requirements history became I lived through If one is a religious person he cry; that person will cry with itous, nor is aloofness on the part for a regular degree would be a them," he said. tells us that just as we cannot fath­ them. of the caller the proper manner. more worthwhile experience." But there arc also disadvantages. om the beginning of life, neither Such a person is acceptable to Calling too soon after the loss sus­ ~ r. G.e r ~ h w Bl born in Mr. Gersh says that he occuionally can we understand the end of life. the bereaved. tained by the bereaved is in poor Philadelphia m 1912 and, shortly . gets "absolutely lost" in his A religious person tells us that The Widowed to Widowed taste. The time and the general art_er gra_dua!ion from West 'astronomy class because he learned death is not the end. Just as life movement reaches out to the new­ approach can be obtained from Philadelphia .High School, had to his math so long ago. "The does not consist of material things ly bereaved. The group consists of the funeral director who has dea ll dro~ his studies to help suppo~ h11 professor just assumes everyone only, so life does not end when widowed men and women who with the widowed person in the family . He took counes at vanous knows how to calculate the these material things arc laid in bring solace to those to whom fa1c trying days just passed. As a mai­ times but never completed a college convergence of two stars," he said. the grave. Therefore, we must not has been unk ind . They are not ler of fa ct, the funeral direclor degree. . •eo,i,.... Qadat' grieve. Life is a mystery. Death is professionals. They do not come who was present al the session of For more than four decades Mr. Mr. Gcrsh has developed a a mystery. He who gave life also bearing charity. Nor do they carry the widowed to widowed group Gersh worked as a reporter and somewhat different perspective on takes it away. and we will under­ questionnaires wi1h them to pub­ was very helpful in suggesting who editor, as speech writer for W. the academic world. "I came with a stand the scheme of things-in time. lish papers on the bereaved. They can be seen. when th e ca ll may be A.vercll Harriman, as information kind of visionary image of Harvard But death is the end of the just want to visit with the be­ made. and the chances for being director for the New York State as a community of scholars," be world to the bereaved. The be­ reaved. They want to be of help to accepted. Departm~nt .of L.abor and, for 18 recalled. "The reality is a little reaved cry, protest, refuse to be the bereaved. Thcr~ arc so many II was suggested. for instan~e. years unlll ~•s retirement, as public. different. For example, the confu­ comforted. resent. in fact , every things they can talk over. What to that a week before a holiday is the rclat1ons director for Martin E. sion quotient is quite high. I wanted attempt to comfort them. They do with the house? To se ll it and right time for a visit from the 'Segal Company, an actuarial to take one course, but when I lash out at everything and every­ go live with children. as so many group. It was further suggested concern m Manhattan. On the side showed up there were 100 people body accusing the Creator Himself advise, or to resist giving up their that younger people a-re more fa ­ he wrot.e more than 100 radio and out in the hall unable to get in. for their misfortune. The bereaved home. To get rid of all lheir pos­ vora bly inclined t .. and concepts. This was achieved to . COMUIHTY . . To help pay Harvard's $4,200 tui- years from now was raising the purchase, of arms . a great extent and more quickly lion as well as other expenses Mr. money for tuition. "My son had it For some time now, Israel has ,- CALENDAR than had been anticipated, he said. Gersh managed to negotiate a form much easier," he declared. "He had been heavily dependent upon the A SERVICE OF THE "We have . nominated a new of assistance that is not usually part a rich father.'' United States for much of its JEWISH FEDERATION sophisticated weapons. This generation of commanders," Mr. OF RHODE ISi.AND reliance is expected to last for some Peres said. "Some of the changes in­ and the Tortures Of Life \ time. However, optomistic volved increasing the size of the ar- , I.I. JEWISH HEIAID my, making the military more forecasts, such as the recent one by fo_!. ~ting Coll 421-4111 : Mr. Peres, indicate a new mood in maneuverable, establishing a Within The Soviet the military establishment. greater integration of artillery, in­ Following the 1973 surprise at­ fantry and tank units, re-equipping MOSCOW: A recent incident in­ about 35 to 40 miles outside the ci­ tack by Egypt and Syria, Israel has . the infantry and increasing the volving the beating · of a dozen ty, the men said. frequently inspected her military firepower of each infantry brigade SUNDAY, DECEM8H 12, 1976 Jewish dissidents in a forest outside "They ordered us out of the bus," preparedness, the efficiency of her several times over. 9:30 o.m. Moscow, .where they had been Wa, Mr. Polishchuk reported. "We said intelligence system, the degree of "We learned mainly in the Egyp-• ---...... , #533, - transported, dramatically points up v-... -ldas•MNma we wouldn't leave. It was very dark. discipline in the military ranks and tian theater of the need for more the degree of cruelty and torture , ..... s,.--.... . c.n...... - - .. We didn't know where we were and the adequacy o( the top field com­ cooperation between the armored which can befall the Jew living in 10:30 o.m. we were afraid." manders. units and the infantry," a ranking s.uth Previclence HebNw ,.._ Loan Anoci- the Soviet. The group was beaten by The last vestiges of a euphoric officer said. -. ■-nl plainclothesmen following a two­ The plainclothesmen-pushed and Israeli officials prefer not to use -"912:00 noon · Israel were blotted out in 1973. day sit-in at an adhtinistrativc dragged the Jews from the bus, he Their decisive milital'y victory in the numbers when discussing gains in Hope Chapte< 1735. 1•.,.,; l 'ritt, w-. building of the Supreme Soviet.' said, and for what some of the six-day war of 1967 paled in con: the nation's military might. But Chonulmh Party Most of their injuries were bruises, demonstrators estimated was 30 trast and "hung an emotional some guide to the degree of growth 2:30 p.m. although one man suffered a minutes, chased them through the llhoclo bland O.W.-•s Thoa,.. fl. millstone around our necks," accor­ is available in The Military Balance, C-.nHH1ity Con... J­ broken nose and another a black woods, pummeling and kicking ding to Prime Minister Yitzhak an annual publication of the Inter- I 7:00 p.m. eye. them. Rabin. (Continued on page 16) Temple -nu-B Sls'"""'-d, Mltnah The meQ had been refused exit Vladimir Slcpak, a 49-year-old MONDAY, OlaMaEII II, 1976 visas and had gone to the Supreme 12:30 p.m . . Soviet, which is the country's electrical engineer, said his hands Aleph G,eup ·• - • ....1a, -... legislative body, to ask for written were kicked. as he tried to hang onto 1:00 p.m. statements on how long they would the bus. "Then I was kicked on the __, H- Day School w-. have to wait to leave and what the . back and the head," he said. ■-nl-M"9 . Temple - II, ■-nl - .. rellsons were for denying them per- "Don't beat in the face," one of mission. · 1:15 p.m. the ·plainclothesmen instructed the A former editor of the magazine Temple - A,. Sistod,ood, ■-nl - .. others, 11ccording to Mr. WIDNISDAY. DlaMIEII IS. 1976 Arkady l'uWloho,I~· ... .,n. Asia and Africa Today, Polishchuk's account. Nevertheless, 1:00 p.m. Polishchuk, said the group had ... _.,_ ._,...,._,..._ PIAN11 ...... w.,, ...... St., ...,., .... 02161 Zakhar Teskcr's nose was broken. -- -=- -· --. Jewish ~- ... the stayed in a reception room all day ~-OMCI:. 141 ,__... Awe., ._...... _., I.I. 02914 AIIN, Open --. He -is a strapping, . 30-ycar-old ■-nl for two consecu.tive days. At ap­ c:aJA- ...... -- 1:00 p.m. former army soccer player. He serv­ IAaAIAWIOMSICI ...... p·roximately 5:30 p.m. on the ~ Mhhkon Tlloh, Chooukah ,_,. ·cd-in a missile unit. s...1a...... ,..,,..__, ...... second. day, abou•t 30 ' ' --DayS<'-1.., , bew- plainclothesmen cvicfed them from · ...... ~ "T,liey were beating very =.. _ =.:-=-~~ .!....--.::.'°..::-=..:::::=.:~:o::.: c.mm--.. . the ' building, put them into a bus professionally," ,Mr. Taker said. &:15 p.m: ...... ~...... ~ and let them out at the edge of "They used very sophisticated -... "' .... - ·...... ,..._~ .... _____ - - Moscow. tricks, like beating over the neck in. T-:'" - T- - •■ -nl . . Today the pattern WU repeated, ~-...."'-- such a way u to make the body .FRIDAY, DECEMBER--· 3, 1976 ' except that the bus went to a forest limp.'' mmrn:::a:::::::1 . s11tm.,~ / I

'THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMB,ER 10, 1976-5 ------UNSOPHiSTICATED SUBSCRIBE TO the Herald, and For information, call the Herald at TOK YO: The Soviet MIG-25 receive it in the mail every week. 724-0200. that landed at Hakodate airport in northern Japan is less sophisticated than had been believed, bearing a resemblance more to a "manned rocket," informed sources said to­ day, according to Reuters. FREE, Pickup & Delivery. To the East Side Daily .... ~e:: .. ._ CLEANSERS ,, 1550 Worwiclc Ave., Hoxsie 737-4567

~~ t ! MR. & MRS. MYER PIIITSKER Mr. & Mrs. Pritsker Honored By Hallandale Jewish Center Reflecting· the appreciative have aided many causes and which recognition of friends, neighbors have served as inspiration for their and the Jewish community, Mr. and fellowman . Mrs. Myer Pritsker of Hallandale, Mr. Pritskcr, as a member for Florida, were selected to receive the nine years and as current president Israel Koah Award, presented by of the Hallandale Jewish Center, the Congregation Beth Tcfila Israel and Mrs. Pritsker, as a member of Bond Committee. The Pritskcrs the board of directors and as formerly owned Darlton 5¢ to $ 1.00 president of the Sisterhood, were in Pawtucket and moved to Florida both cited as rcnccting the Jewish approximately 10 years ago. tradition of service in their dedica­ They were honored in a salute to tion and leadership. Both have been Israel on November 28, sponsored leaders in the fund-raising efforts of by the Hallandale Jewish Center. B'nai B' rith, ORT and other causes Special guest at the breakfast in South Florida. gathering was Robert Mayer Evans, Mr. Pritskcr has been the noted foreign correspondent, recipient of the Ben Gurion Award author and lecturer. of the United Jewish Appeal and The couple was honored for their the Torch of Liberty Award from dedication and leadership which the Anti-Defamation League.

Notices OPEN SUNDAY NOON TIU 5 P.M. CAMP REGISTRATION Shaare Zedck-Sons of Abraham. A The Sharon Travel Camp, now in traditional Hanukah meal will be its fifth year, announces that served. registration for its cross-country Kay Spector and Phyllis Boyce, program for the summer of 1977 is who have entertained all over the now in progress. The unique East Coast, with Jewish, Hebrew program _will be under the personal and English songs, will perform. She's the warmest supervision of Mr. and Mrs. The public is invited. Warren Kline, licensed travel 'PARADE OF LIFE' woman you've ever known brokers, assisted by a registered The Looking Glass Theatre will nurse and a counselor staff. present "The Parade of Life," a ... keep her that way. Early registration is recommend­ look at how life evolved, at the fifth ed as space is limited. For further annual Hanukah Festival on Sun­ information, write 23 Lyndon day, December 19, at 11 :30 a.m. Road, Sharon, Massachusetts, or Luncheon will J>c served and a call 1-617-784-2084. Menorah contest will be held. For further information concerning 'LITTLE PICTURES' children's gifts and to make reser­ The Providence Art Club on vations, contact Esther Falk, 171 Thomas Street will hold its annual Meadow Road, Woonsocket 02895, holiday "Little Pictures" show and, Tele: 766-3364. sale. Opening with a tea on Sunday, MAJESTIC SENIOR GUILD December 12, from 3 to 5 p.m., the The annual Hanukah luncheon of the Majestic Senior Guild will be event will continue through held at Temple Beth Torah on Park December 24. Gallery hours are IO a.m. to 4 p.m. daily; 3 to 5 p.m. Avenue at noon on Tuesday, Sundays. Admission is free. December 21. The Hanukah prayer will be ~VT ALEPH GROUP HADASSAH offered by Rabbi Gerald Zelermyer. Highlight of the afternoon will be a A I the regular meeting of the Aleph Group of Hadassah on Mon­ musical program and guest come­ lf day, December 13, at 12:30 p.m. at dian. Reservations must be made by =.~.~,.~ the Jewish Community Center, members. · 400 Westminster Street there will be a Hanukah sing-a-long In charge of the program is Min­ 68 years of fine fur t;adition with Reuben Schwartz and a Lotka nie Dean, past president, assisted by party. Hospitality will be handled Anna Bloom and her committee. by Mildred Tarlow .

.iwv TO HONOR Rhode Island Post No. 23 of the Jewish War Veterans will honor its members who are World War I Veterans at its next meeting. Chair­ man for the meeting is former state senator and State Department com­ mander Paul Robin. An invitation Hanukah has been extended lo wives and members of Post No. 23 Ladies Auxiliary. The meeting will take · place at Eileen Darling's Restaurant in Seekonk, Massachusetts, on December 15 at 7 p.m. All Jewish War Veterans arc Greetings welcome· to join the group at their meeting. Further information is available from Rod Locke, 421- 5751 days, or 944-0488 evenings. ·Columbus National Bank HANUKAH . MALAVAH MALKAH . A Malavah Malkah will be lleld Member Fedetal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Federal Reserve System ' to celebrate the lighting of the Hanukah candles on Saturday evening, December 18, at 7 p.m. in the social hall of Congregation I 6-THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER. 10, 19.76 SHARON TRAVEL CAMP· 'Boston To Have Soviet Exhibt CIOSS COUNTIY CAIIPING' • All-CONDITIONED 1IIS • COID TUNS . · BOSTON: A documentary photo­ 27. It is being sponsored by the Ac­ world the manifesto of twelve panel_cxhibit of a show which open­ tion for Soviet Jewry. Leningrad Jewish artists whose JUNE 26-AUGUST. l!, 1,7!: Niagara falls, Badlands, Mt. work remains behind walls. Rufflmore, Yeflowdone, Virginia City, Son Francisco, Disneyland, · ed in the Leningrad apartment of Following the Leningrad show­ Universal Studios, Marineland, las Vegas, Grand Canyon, Juarez, Ev_geny Abczgauz in the fall of ing of the exhibit, it moved to ~~pids Tr~~~. Swimmit;t9 a,nd much more. 1975, ·"Twelve From the Soviet Moscow where more than 5,000 Soviet'Russia may deny freedom 1'01 C0MPllTI IIOOIUU CONTACT Underground," will be presented at crowded in to sec it. After the show ·of expression to the artist. It may . . WARRE,..- AHln)OIOTlf'LKUNE the Spingold Theatre at Brandeis closed, Abezgauz wasTtrcd from his prevent freedom of exit for the Jew. 23 LY~ IIOAQ, SHAIION, MASS. 02067 617 714-20l4 University on February 6 through job. This exhibit brings to the free But art is free. HEES Ar.HANCE mWIN A Kl1UIEN Cll6'ER'fAI. CLOCK.

TEL1 US HOW YOU CAN SAVE DURltli "THE DEMANlltli IDJRS~..

And we'll give you a chance to win a Wln-of400 clock that will remind you to save Kltct.lConsetvatlonClocllal r------,some hope help electricity. During the winter, elec­ Think up some good ideas and share Here..,. Ideas I will ·tricity usage soars between 4 and them with us! Ideas for cooking earlier, COIINl'V9 electricity betl(rNl'I 4 and 7 p.m. 7 p.m. The Demanding Hours. This is using the clothes dryer in the morning when the most people use.the most or waiting 'til after 7 p.m. before doing electricity. And it costs more to make dishes. To show our appreciation, we'll it during these heavy use hours. award kitchen conservation clocks to Anything you can do to use elec­ 400 of our customers who participate. tri9ity before and after The Demanding Just send your suggestions or simply Hours will help u~ hold back the cost your name and address to: of generating your po)Ver. And con­ Narragansett Electric Co. Name _~------serve energy as well. P.O. Box 6207, Providence, RI 02940 Address ______City ______RULES FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN A KITCHEN CONSERVATION CLOCK: 1. Print name, add,_. and zip code on the coupon, or a requirement to compete in tt,e'sweepstakes.) State ______Zip ______a3"x S" plain piece of paper with your suggestion for 4: Fourhoodrad clocks will be awarded by random SHIC- oonseMngelectricity between 4 and 7 p.m .. if you'd like tion fromOJStorners'MlO parttcipate. This offer expires January 31, 19TT and mail to: Winners will be notified by mall no later than February ~~'.~~Eleciric<;o ~:7i,t~~:,r.z~.;.":':~.::.=~bE~':c°' Mail your suggestion(s) and/or your name and address to: Providence, RI 02940 5. All entries ml.et be poetmarkedTK> later than J_,uary 31 , 2.0ualifiedentrantsmustreside inareas aerved by 19nand~vednolaterthanFebruary7,19n. ~ Electric Co Narragal198tl Electric Company. Immediate members I. Void where prohibited or restri~ by law. Odds of of the faniliesof employees of NarraganNtt Electric winning will be determined by the number of entries I Company and Cabot M,ertisingNO not eligible. receiwd. All prizes wrn be awarded. P.O. Box 6207 3. With yourentryyoumaysendyoursuggestionfor 7. Allentriesandsuggestionswill become the property Providence, RI 02940 ~------C01"198rving electricity between 4 .-ld 7 p.m. (This is not of Narraganeett~----~-----~-----L------~ Electric...... u ...... ,,,, • .•••• ...,.,,._., .,..,, ...... - . - • •• i • • • , . '.' 'J \ f • ..,, ,,,,. ~,. .. •.•'1' •,• •/•'r ,..__.,. "'-• • t I ..-r•.1~ ...... ,, T.Ji',6 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976-7 PATRIOT DIFS • • • • • • -• ~ 1126 ~-_- ~ SUBSCRIBE TO the Herald, and For information, call the Herald at This year marks \he death of receive it in the mail every week. 724-0200. Benjamin Nones, a Revolutionary War veteran, patriot, and president of Mikvch Israel, Philadelphia, in . 8 R . I D G E SPITZ-WATTMAN, REAL TORS the 1790's. • RESIDENTIAL • INVESTMENT • APPRAISALS JOE ANDRE'S STATE-WIDE MULTIPLE USTINGS ORCHESTRA Music lo, thot-,. -ial offoir · .,_ •. • .. .. FOR FAST PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ...... lllbwlls Some· players dread taking fl . pr~bably enJoyell , ne fhrill of the 131~739 ..._ 944-7298 nesses, saying they always lose. gamble. Remember, they arc 50-- CALL: Others take all they can find , 50 propositions unless something 789 HOPE ST . tells you more. Actually a finesse should only be taken when there is PROV., R.I. 272-6161 no other way of making a trick NEW ENGLAND without it, more or less as a last resort although most have to be VISITS ISRAEL tried as it is the only way to catch a particular honor. Every Declarer took one in today's hand and were HomoceMOUS INNIP9: tongresatfeiis, Jiiiffiiiiioiii Chh,o S(l4 unfortunate to find that either of Orga ■izations, Communities, 011bs, Professional• POLYNESIA"' the two they tried failed causing and GoiaaTohnel the ha nd to go down. Had they CANTONESE thought better they had a sure way ~ 13-~ 20-Fourth World Congress of CUISINE Engineers and Architects to play the hand without any finesses. Before goi ng on sec if Dec. 18-Ju. 2-Temple Shalom of Newton, led by Rabbi you can sec it. Murray Rothman · ' North DeceaNr 28-Deceaer 23-lnternational Conference on • J 7 Pedestrian Safety • J 6 5 Deaaller 28-Decealler 27-First International Conference ♦ A 8 3 on Cycling ♦ 87542 Dec. 20--Ju. 3--Third Annual Family Tour of Israel, led by __ ...... ,__.~...hid Wesl East ♦ K 6 4 ♦ 8 3 J-,y ~aaary 18-Anshe Kol Israel, led by Rabbi . . K973 2 • 10 8 4 Milton Stein~ ♦ Q J 10 ♦ 9 7 6 2 · JU: 9-Ju. 19-Fourth Annual Interfaith MISslon, led by ♦ 10 6 ♦ K Q J 3 Rabbi Murray Rothman, Rev. Joseph Bullock, Rev. Alvin Porteous Sooith . Ju. 12-Ju. 16-Temple Israel, led by Rabbi Oscar Rosen• ♦ A Q 10 9 5 2 r.\u.ricbinf baum • AO Ju. 18-Ju. 28-First Congr~gational Church, led by Rev. ♦ K 5 4 James Williams . . . · ♦ A 9 Jaaary U-Fekary 7-Bcth Emeth Assoc., led by Dr. Burt Novitsky East was Dealer. East and West Jaaary 30-Fellnary 9-Adath Yeshurun, led by Mr. Harold vulnerable wit h this bidding: Hoffman E S W N Diaspora Yeshiva Toras Yisrael Jaaary JI-February 10 - p 1 ♦ p INT J-ary JI-February 21 - Fairwood Group, led by Rev. Vic­ P 4 ♦ End tor Abram Fekary 14-February 24 - First Jerusalem Conf. of The bidding provided no prob­ Christians and Israelis, led by Rev. Malcolm Boyd lem . North having just enough to Fellnwy IS-February ts-Temple Isaiah, led by Rabbi Cary respond to his partners opening ·David Vales bid and South feeling that his Fekary 17-Fellnw;y 27-Tour of the Holy Land & Rome, ha nd and suit were strong enough led by Father J.J. Valenti Fellnary 20-February 25--Opportunity '77 Israel American to contract for game even opposite Business Weck, led by Mr. Max Ratner the weakest hand North might Feh ■ ary 20-~arch I-Combined Veterans have . Had they played the hand Pilgrimage-VFW, American Legion, Disabled Amvets, differently they could have been Amvets, led by Commanders J. Burnett, J. Comer, M. Hurley, ri ght. L. Cordeiro February 21-Man:h 7-Temple Beth El/Norwalk, led by Rab- bi Jonas Goldberg . West had a natural lead, the February 23-March 9-Temple Beth El/Portland, led by Can- Diamond Queen and right here is tor Kurt Messerschmidt the time the Declarer should take February 23-Man:h 9 - ~ass. and Conn. Visits Israel, led b) hi s time to figure out just what ,s Mr. and Mrs. Mel. Lepow hi s best lin e of play. Every De- February 28-March 10-JWV Robert F. Kennedy Post No. clarer I watched couldn't wait to 668, led by Past National Commander Albert Schlossberg win that first trick in Dummy 10 March I-March 15 -Temple Sinai and Temple Beth Israel ta ke a finesse, usually the Trump Purim Tour, led by Dorothy Jacobson finesse. which lost and now a trick March 1-Man:h 15 - BBN Jewish Community Center, led had to be given up in each suit for by Mr. Joel Krensky · down one. Actually, ii one were to Much 6-Man:h 12 - Jerusalem Jewelry and Arts & Crafts take a finesse, and with but one . Fair entry to Dummy to use to best ad- March 7-Matth 21 - Temple Ner Tamid, led by Rabbi va ntage, the better one would have Abraham Morhaim been the Heart finesse for even ii March 27-April 1 - International Symposium on Drug Ac- tivity East had the Trump King, he April 4-April 18 - Easter in the Holy Land, led by Father might have had four Trumps and Robert Shannon still make his King whereas if the April 6-April 20 - First International Meeting on Clinical Heart finesse works it doesn't Lab Management · matter for a trick is gained. April 12-Aprll 26 - Union Congregational Church, led by True, it is unfortunate both fi. Rev. Alan Bedford nesses do lose but we might say April 18--May 2 - Annual Spring Tour led by Mr. & Mrs. S. justice prevails for there is a better Heller • , way to make this hand. Instead of April 28--May 11 - Brith Kodesh Center, led by Rabbi winning trick one in Dummy win Abraham Sharfman in South and with that Diamond April Z.May 2 - Jerusalem International Book Fair Ace still over there simply play Ma:, 4-Ma7 19 - American Physicians-Fellowship Tour to the Ace and Queen of Hearts. But Israel - Seminar on Recent Advances in Diagnosis & treatment that woo Id be giving up yqu might of Neurological Disorders, led by Dr. Manuel Glazier say. Look again as West wins his Ma7. ~Ma:, 13 - Jerusalem Conference on Impaired Vision King (the finesse would have_ lost · in Childhood anyhow) and returns another Dia- Ma:, 11-Ma:, 25 - Friendship Evangelizing Mission, led by mond. Wi'n that in Dummy and Rev. Louis Callahan ' now play that good Heart Jack Ma:, 12-Ma:, 26 - Darchy Noam Sisterhood, led by Mr~. discarding a loser. Believe it or Esther Woods Ma:, 16-Ma:, 26 - Adath Yeshurun Club, led by Mr. and · not now you are in Dummy any- Mrs. Milton Silverman how and can still take that Trump Ma:, 21-J- 2 - 8th lnternatl. Cor>.,rcss-World Confedera- finesse. If you can analyze a hand tion for_Phy~ical Therapy well and are a true Duplicate play­ . er you will hope that Trump fi. · 'f1III Is ·a partial llld■a of hoaop■ 111111 p-oap■• . nesse does lose so your good play Aho a•allaWe are El Al'• ull:, ~n. will not be in vain. If it did work FOR THAT SPECIAL HOLIDAY OCCASION ... f« _,e hlf'or■iation, conlad your IDT Ira.el agent or: . now it would mean that those who gambled and won trick one in Gordon's riding blozer topping his long El Al ISRAEL AIRLINES . Dummy to take that finesse would . sl

''. t , , THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976--9

l i . l~ r f

SHARE CHANUKAH WITH THE CHILDREN · OFISRAEL ·

WeAreOne • I THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF RHODE ISLAND 130 Sessions Stl'fft, ProvW.nce,, I.I: 421-4111 ··

. ' 10-THE RHODE ISLAND H.l;KALU, l:'KIUAY, u~u:.MJ:SJ:.K 11!,.lY.lb American diplomats to open an of­ Mizrachi Women -Cite Abba Eban Asks Ford To Prohibit fice in Washington, D.C. · NEW-V-ORK: American recently at the New York Hilton. "Surely thc~c is a law or principle Mizrachi Women presented its The ward is presented annually to PLO In of law that can be invoked to Golden Jubilee Rambam Award to "distinguished teachers, writers, Office Capital protect the American people from Israeli statcman Abba Eban at its educators and scholars who have NEW YORK (JTA): President dismay" at a State Department the criminal conspiracy that Golden Jubilee Scholar~'!!J> Qinncr_ contributed significantly." Ford was urged Dec. I by the comment last week that there was constitutes the PLO. We urge ·you Conference of Presidents of Major no way to prevent the PLO from therefore to issue instructions . 521-1192 . American Jewish Organizations to opening an office in Washington as prohibiting the PLO from opening prohibit the opening of a Palestine long as it complies with regulations. an office in Washington." Liberation Organization office in The telegram, signed by Rabbi Commenting on the statement, Washington. Alexander Schindler, chairman, the telegram said: "In our view it is ~LUELLA'S In a telegram to the White House and Y chuda Hellman, executive not a question of what is the Conference voiced "profound director, said "In the interest of 'propitio.is' but rather what is the , public safety, and the cause of peace principle involved in permitting an Vf!!!f POTPOURRI in the Middle East, our country avowedly terrorist organization to must not permit killers of Jewish open headquarters in our nation's children and the assassins of capital." .. 1 ~ 1 ATWELi.S -AVENUE, PROVIDENCE

TkUR5DAY 5P[CI AL OPEN EVERY SUNDAY TIU XMAS StuHed pepµPrs and Notices • ,Come Br~.. thi;ovah out Merry I , Mo co ron, $1.95 Assortment of btciFashioned BETif EL BROTHERHOOD Princeton University Art Museum. Christmas Gfft Ideas Lincoln C. Almond, United The Art Association is open to Fealurinf1 a Unique Colfedion States District Attorney, will be the the public Monday through Satur­ S 2 8) of Handcrafled llems and Se/eel Giffware speaker at the Brotherhood of Tem­ day, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m ., and Sundays ple Beth El breakfast meeting, and holidays from 2 to 5 p.m. On Tues.~Sat. 11-5 Fri . till 8 Sun. 1-5 December 12. December 25 and January I, the The mccti ng is open to the public Art Associatio n will be closed . and will begin at 10: 15 a.m. PMffllCIEn U11CES1' IESTMIIMT Attorney Almond is a practicing FAMILY POWER DYNAMICS attorney in Rhode Island, has serv­ A one day workshop entitled 725-3550 - 72"151 ed several terms as Town Ad­ "Power Dynamics in the Family" ministrator of Lincoln, Rhode will be held on Saturday, January 8, Island, and has been a United from 9:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the • ._...... ,,...... ,•c.....a-1 , States attorney for Rhode Island Central Congregational Church, since 1968. He is also a member of 296 Angell Street, sponsored by the FACILITIES FOR PAltTIES FltOM 2 to 500 the Attorney General's Advisory Metropolitan Cooperative Exten­ Our Menu Boosts Some of the Flnesl Committee of the United States At­ sion Service of the University of Ito/Ion ond Amerlcon_Food In Rhode lslor'-5! . torneys, serving in that capacity Rhode lsland, under the direction S._,.IZ._•llP.1.,latlnt...5-llP.I. since 1973. He has also been active of Dr. Saul A. Silverman and Mr. • DINING ROOM a&ICIOIIIPAMIL'f lTYLI in the Industrial Foundations of the Leonard Anderson. Pawtucket areas for several years. Their hypothesis is that mental • YINTAGI ROOM His subject, "You and Your health is rooted in the family. The •BALLROOM CHICKErf CAPRI .=a Federal District Attorney," will workshop is designed to help dis­ explain and clarify the role of the cover and work with the power PAMOUI POii OUtt federal attorneys in the criminal dynamics in families in order to in­ LOISTER •2J'5 I •i:95 justice system. crease the humanness, sharing and -ONNPOIIWNCNIDA&'f - Pl.....,_n's ltyte relatedness for all family members. 1 Now ...... ,.Qrla&au p~ 1 HANUKAH PARTY For more information or for A Hanukah party and dinner registration, call Sue Barker at 521- will be held at the Joseph H. Ladd 6443. School in Exeter on December 20 at BETH TORAH BREAKFAST 12 noon. Rabbi Saul Leeman will The Sisterhood and Men's Club conduct services. of Temple Beth Torah are planning SCHWINN. BICYCLES. Chicken dinner will be served, a joint breakfast to be held on Sun­ followed by refreshments of cake day, December 12, at the temple, AT and fruit, to approximately · 60 330 Park Avenue, Cranston. Ser­ residents and attendants. vices will be held al 9 a .m., Gifts will be distributed to breakfast at 9:30 a.m., followed by SPECIAL LOW PRICES residents and attendants. Mrs . . guest speaker, Dr. Phillip Very, Albert Cohen, chairman, will be professor of psychology at Rhode .AT assisted by hostesses including Mrs. hland College. Sigmund Abrams, Mrs. Milton Dr. Very is recognized nationally E.P. CYCLE SHOPS Silk, Mrs. Ellis Rosenthal and Mrs. as a leader of research dealing with SPORT ABOUT Louis Gladstone. The event is spon- birth order and its effects. He has a sored by the Jewish Federation of doctorate in clinical psychology NOW THERE'S NO REASON- NOT TO PUT A Rhode Island. from Pennsylvania State. University SCHWINN UNDER YOUR TREE - ORDER NOWI -::: j) and is a licensed psychologist. His FREE 0 SPE~~~ RISELFHELP topic will be "Birth Order and Your • STORAGE • ASSEMBLY . • :r, _j •• f Rhode Island Selfhelp will hold Personality." LAYAWAY • SPRING CHECKUP • its next meeting on Sunday, The morning's program is being NO Tl~E LIMIT WARRANTY \,\ ~JJ:: \$118 95, December 12, at 2: 15 p.m. in the arranged by Corinne Lamchick, Jewish Community Center in the chairman of the Sisterhood, and ."-...-/·• ~ Federation's board room, 401 Herman · Pavlow and Frank WASHINGTON PLAZA Elmgrove Avenue. Guest speaker Prosnitz, co-chairmen of the Men's 414 WARREN AVE. will be Abraham J. Aschkenasy, Club. President of the Sisterhood is E.P. JCT. 1A & 123, director of the Women's Division EAST PROVIDENCE, 434-3838 Renee Dreyfuss and Men's Club SO. ATTLEBORO 399-7888 and of Public Relations for the OPEN 6 DAYS 9 TO 6 president is Ernest Namerow. OPEN MON.-FRI. 10 TO 8. · Jewish Federation of Rhode Island. TUES. & FRI. 'TIL 9 1 SAT., 10-6 . CYCLE SHOPS· He will present an analysis of LUPUS ASSOCIATION current political events. Mildred Kraft, a representative Mr. Aschkenasy was teaching at of the Lydia O'Leary Cosmeiic the Hebrew University in Jerusalem Company, will be featured speaker and at Tel Aviv University and for the December meeting of the Have u,e got plan~ served as- lecturer on Israel and Lupus Association on Wednesday, Mid-Eastern affairs for the United December 15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Jewish Appeal in New York. Kay Auditorium at Roger Williams . :/. / · · for , Guests are invited to attend the General Hospital, 825 Chalkstone meeting and refreshments will be Avenue. · served. ~ Mr. Kraft will demonstrate the cover mark products that are ·NewYearsEve! BETH AM SISTERHOOD available for men and women. The The Sisterhood of Temple Beth meeting is open to the public and Am is holding its annual holiday $55 per couple. . · r free of charge. . -~ ·.f Plan L5aper Party! ba-zaar .at the temple, 40 Gardiner , . '. · Your choice of three entrees: Roast Prime Rib of Beef, Baked Stuffed Street, ·warwick, on Sunday, ~ •. ; , '. • Shrimp, or Half Chicken with wild rice stuffing. Champagne toast, TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS December 12, from 10 a.m. to 4 J ~ ·. favors, the wod!s. ., , The public is invited to a one-day 14 p.m. There will be Hanukah educational workshop entitled •· ;~-· Plan 2. OwrnlghtPartyl $79 per cquple. candles, wrapping paper, holiday ''Transactional Analysis" on Sun­ gift items, handcraft items, \ \k • · "Super Party,"double room and New Year's Day Champagne breakfast. day, December 12, from 9:30 a.m. ' - Tupperware, silhouettes by Carrie to 4 p.m. at the Jewish Community · Plan 3. 1Ueel1end Party! $97.50 per couple. Gardner, an artist doing scrimshaw, · Center, Providence. The workshop _,.,. ,.,.,....:,__: Includes "Super Party," double room for two nights and Champagne plants, cosmetics by a home is being co-sponsored by the Family breakfast New Year's Day and"Sunday morning. demonstrator and sandwiches by Life Education_Program of URl's Sccna's Luncheonette, Metropolitan Providence Greet 1977 with one of our Super Party Plans ... caD ~neat (401) :· Cooperative Extension Service, and 467-8800forfeservatlonsorstopln. We'reat ·.. WALT .OISNEY·ART will be led by Marc Silverman. Mr. The Art Association of Newport Silverman holds a D.S. from will present the art of Walt Disney Cornell University a11d is a master's ~rre~~=lA),CmnRDn,~-~-- •~· , in their inain building, Cushing candidate in group dynamics and Gallery, 76 Bellevue A venue, with organizational development at . RANST0N . . .. an ·opening rcccpiion QR Sunday, Campus Free College. f' December 12, from 4 to 6 p.m. The Scholarships arc available for the ! HI.TON INN . .. . . :° _~ exhibits will run through January 9, workshop. ·For further information, Als9 on llisplay will be "Christo: contact Sue Barker at 521-6443 or Oceanfront," assembled by the Bobbie Carichner at 861-8800 ...... ___...... ,.______...... :...-.. ..,,,, . ... ---~---·-~----· THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976-11 LaJt Major Worlc Given To Jerysa/em By Calder to Jerusalem last year, He picked ON Promptly Amend·s Plan the site himself. T)le sculpture is JERUSALEM (JTA): The last Square in Bcit Hakerem, Jerusalem now being completed at Tours, major work by the famed sculptor ' next May. '· France. It is being paid for by For A Mideastern Parley Alexander Calder, who died recent- Calder donated the model for the Phillip Berman of Allentown, Penn­ ly at 78, will be erected at Holland 'work during his first and only visit sylvania. UNITED NATIONS, NY: Israel peace talks. offered a resolution recently in the Within two hours, Jndia, Sri General Assembly of the United Lanka and Yugoslavia introduced Nations calling for a Middle East an amendment after consultations conference on its own terms, in an with the Arab states . The apparent attempt to COIHltcr an amendment would add the Egyptian diplomatic initiative. - Palestinians to the list of parties at Promptly. thereafter, an Arab- the conference. It also refers to a backed amendment was introduced third resolution, adopted by the to redefine the conference along General Assembly last year, lines favored by the Arab· side. recognizing the "inalienable Specifically, they wish to include national rights" of the Palestinians, THALL' the ·Palestinian Liberation including their participation in any , Organization among the official negotations. , HAS Everyone's Favorite Gift!! participants. Since both of these points arc un- Outsidc the hall of the General acccptablc--to Israel, it seems possi- For Hanukkah Fri., ·oe(?, 17 Assembly, jockeying dominated the ble that the Israeli resolution will be various strategy groups as the scs,. withdrawn before being voted up- sion went-through the motions of a on. ' series of set speeches on the Middle The maneuvering is an attempt East. by each side to circumscribe the Prior to this action, Egypt led off diplomatic dialogue in terms moat ~uwm 81tn>fJL the debate at an earlier session with favorable to its own position. Clear CANDIES Cards a proposal to summon the Geneva momentum has developed toward a conference, choosing ambiguous reconvening of the Geneva terminology that it hoped would conference in the early months of make the resolution acceptable to the Carter Administration; the issue LARGE SELECTION OF the United States and other sup- is, in what form and under whose OPEN NIGHTS & porters of the ls_racli 'position. auspices. CHOCOLATE NOVELTIES It was to this move that Israel Mr., Herzog, in introducing the ISRAEL SUNltA YS FOR YOUR responded today, introducing a resolution, told reporters tha~ he F~OM FOR resolution of its own for the first expected Arab attempts to THE YOUNGSTERS SHOPPING CONVENIENCE! time in General Assembly history, "torpedo" the resolution . according to Chaim Herzog, the "But we felt it was worth putting Israeli delegate. in, terms exactly what we arc . THAll'S PHARMACY, INC. - 5H Reservoir Ave. - Cranston, R.I. Amendment Added prepared to do," he added. 711-S'9S J- & WM. A""-s, R... Phann. No. lff (NNr l'arl Ave.) The Israeli resolution would pin Arab speakers in the debate have down some of the earlier am- frequently accused Israel of dclay- biguities by calling specifically on ing tactics to stall off a Geneva Egypt, Israel, Jordan and Syria - conference. Replying to this contcn­ American Bicentennial not the Palestinians - to reconvene tion, Mr. Herzog said a conference in Geneva for a conference based organized along the lines of the THIS National Park In Israel on the Security Council resolutions Israeli resolution "could open to- Celebrate Our Glorious Bicentennial of 1967 and 1973 that created the day, tomorrow, whenever you _ generally accepted .framework for wish." By Planting Trees in Israel - On All Occasions • BIRTHDAYS Refugee Relocation • BAR MITZVAHS HANUKA • ANNIVERSARIES • WEDDINGS Has Become An Issue • MOTHER'S DAY • FATHER'S DAY GAZA:Many Palestinian Gaza housing as makeshift as. what they GIVE • IN MEMORIAM Strip refugees arc the subject of a had left. In 1972, the Israeli • AU OTHER FAMILY OCCASIONS pending resolution in the United Government began to get involved • CONGRATULATIONS Nations General Assembly as the in creating housing projects for the TREES • CONDOLENCES result of Israel's government aiding refugees, partly, Major Cheshin • HOUDA Y GREETINGS them to move from the densely pop- said, as a preventive security IN ISRAEL A GROVE, 1()()!a TREES ...... , $3000 ulated -refugee camps to modest measure, partly so they could start A GARDEN, 100 TREES ...... ~300 government housing. The resolu- normal lives. 50 TREES ...... 150 lion is critical of Israel's relocation H-allltarlu Mod.e1 HONORING 18 TREES ...... 54 of refugees from the squalid U nitcd The idea behind the projects is 12 TREES ...... , .. , • ...... 36 Nations camps they have inhabited I cs s sec u r i I y and mo re THOSE YOU LOVE 6 TREES ...... 18 since 1948. It calls on Israel to cease humanitarian, Major Cheshin said. 1 TREE ...... , , ...... , 3 moving the refugees to new housing There are plans for 2,900 housing and to return the thousands who units that Gazans may purchase for have been relocated to the camps S 4 , 000 . I n a dd i Ii o n , th c TAX DEDUCTIBLE operated by the United Nations Government is offering vacant Relief and Works Agency for tracts of land for sale for tire ADD SIGNIFICANCE TO HANUKA JEWISH NATIONAL .FUND Palestine Refugees. construction of homes. GIVE A TREE CERTIFICATE Send your tax deductible check to On the surface, Israel's position _ Several thousand families arc "For he who plants trees plants the JOSEPH TEVEROW can be clearly defended, since they now living in the new projects. future ... " 95 Burlington Street are replacing miserable dwellings While hardly more than substan­ Providence, R.I. 02906 with liveable housing. However, dard, the

12-THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976 Former 'Soviet Jew Urges That All Jewish Emigrants Get Aid NEW YORK (JTA): A Soviet ed by the Greater New York they will·be Jews again." awakened by the Soviet invasion of of New York to coincide with a immigrant now living in Israel said Conference on Soviet Jewry. Mrs. A former philologist at the Czechoslovakia in 1968 and the symposiumpn Jewish culture being that all Jewish emigrants from the Rubinstein, speaking for herself, Pushkin Memorial Museum, Mrs. "anti-Semitic" Leningrad trial in held by Jc:.ish activists in Moscow USSR should be helped regardless said it was urgent to get Jews out of Rubinstein and her husband, lJoris, 1970. Dec. 21-23 . of whether they go to Israel or not. the Soviet Union before they arc all and their two children, immigrated M a r g y- R u t h Davi s, th c ----- Mrs. Natasha Rubinstein, who is in assimilated and Soviet Jewry dis- to Israel in 1974 after a three-year organization's executive director, SUBSCRIBE TO the Herald, and the United States for a lecture tour, appears. • struggle. She said that she and her announced upcoming events, an all­ receive it in the mail every week. madc. her remarks• in response to "In Russia they can't be Jews," husband had been assimilationists, day symposium Dec. 21 at the For information, call the Herald at questions at a press conference call- she said. "Maybe in other countries too, until their Judaism was Graduate Center of City University 724-0200.

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PIDIIIAL LAW AND IIIGULATION PIIOHletTS THE PAYMENT OF TIME DEPOSITS PRIOR TO MATURn:,v UNLESS THREE MONTHS o, THI INTI~ THIIIION 18 FORFEITED AND INTE[IEST ~N_.T~, AMOUNT WITHDRAWN IS REDUCED TO THE 1~AS8BOOK RATE . Member FiO.l,C. 1 ,-t•'t'.'..:,·.': .. ·.;• .,, ,,,: , , '-sJ >>--· .'1" , 1 I THE 'RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976-13 Construction For Center To Visit Israel English theater group from EXPOSURE TO NEWSPAPER JERUSALEP.f°(JTA): Playwright Rehovot will present one of Miller's AD pages in newspapers is con­ Arthur Miller is expected to arrive _plays at the Jerusalem-Theatet. . sistent by day of the week . Due To Begin Next Month in Jerusalem soon with his wife. NEW YORK (JTA): Construc­ ~x..hibit areas and galleries, and four Miller will write a book about tion is- scheduled to begin in classrooms. The synagogues will Jerusalem and his wife will take the January on a $4.5 million Jewish have 15 classrooms, offices, youth photos for the volume. cultural center which will house recreation areas and ll roof During his two-week stay, Miller three institutions near the Lincoln playground. will be May.or Teddy Kollclc's guest , Center on Manhattan's West Side. Also to be included in the Good­ while in Jerusalem and will also Tht seven-story building, to be man House arc a 475-seat concert meet Israeli writers and artists. An completed early in 1978, will be hall, a I SO-seat recital hall, an art named for Abraham Goodman, an exhibition section and a Judaica CANT'OR industrialist and Jewish communal library. Also planned are an out­ Temple Sinai (Reform) of leader, who provided $2.5 million door garden and a memorial to the Sharon, Mass. is searching for six million victims of the European for design and construction. a full- or part-time Cantor. The land was purchased by the Holocaust. Qualified candidates should Hebrew Arts School for Music and Mayor Abraham Bcame send a resume as soon as Dance for SI million in 1966. The presented the 86-ycar-old Jewish possible to: school will be one of the three ' leader with the city's Scroll for institutions lo be housed in the Distinguished and Exceptional Ser­ Dr. Morton Z. Hoffman, Abraham D. Goodman House. The vice to the city at a crowded City Chairman others are the Tarbuth Foundation Hall ceremony. Bcamc lauded • Cantor Search Committee Goodman for his generosity "and Temple Sinai, Box 414 1$8Hoc> According to the results or' a study recently completed at Butler United Nations officials say that Hospital, "do-it-yourself dieters" this view is espoused verbally by the Bookstore who use only diet books as a guide Israelis but does not exist in writing > not only lend to lose less weight and that the Israeli position could than professionally guided groups, change at any time. but they are more likely to regain One United Nations official said the lost ·weight. Research psy­ that so long as the camps exist, the chologist Kelly D. Brownell, direc­ Palestinians can still claim a right to tor of Butler's Weight Control return to their original homeland Cli nic, recently presented the and that by moving to the new research at the annual meeting of housing "the Government could Give the gift the Association for the Ad­ claim the people are reseuled in per­ vancement of Behavior Therapy in manent1homes ." New York. Pa i:J.rc ularly distressing, said Ronald Davidson, deputy director that's tasteful, In an attempt to determine the effects "of do-it-yourself diet books, of the United Nations refugee agen­ Brownell and his colleagues, Dr. cy, is the fact that a refugee family Carol L. Heckerman and Dr. relocating to an Israeli project must demolish his camp shelter before inside and out. Robert J. Westlake, compared a group receiving no treatment to two leaving. These shelters arc needed other groups. The do-it-yourself for other refugees because of a group received a weight reduction growing population, Mr. Davidson manu~I by mail while the other par­ said. In addition, the shelters are ticipants received the same, United Nations property. progr~ms in group treatment U.N. Aide Crldcal sess ions conducted by " We're not objecting to the new professionals. houses themselves," Mr. Davidson said. "If lhe host government wants Memhers receiving no treatment to construct better housing, let gained an average -of two pounds them. But we do object to the fact during the program. The group that people are being forced out of treatment members had an average the camps." loss of-ten pounds and maintained The Israeli f!lilitary command most of this for six additional and the United Nations agency are months. In comparison, the do-it­ bickering on a number of issues. yourself group lost an average of The Israelis say that many Gazans only two pounds after the program. no longer eligible for sustenance The participants receiving group food rations still receive them. The sessions lost significantly more refugee agency says it works hard to weight than the . do-it-yourself screen ineligibles and the Israelis . dieters. are not helpful at providing infor­ mation such as the precise number !Jrown~II pointed out that of Gazans employed in Israel. ''recurrent weight loss and weigllt This is so, the United Nations gain has been shown to have a bad agency says, because many Gazans influence on emotional and physical work for Israeli employers who do health. not _register them with the state for "Each· year', millions of worker benefits and the military Americans buy popular diet books. does not want to call attention to In addition, popular magazines this embarrassment. continually offer abbreviated _ While Mr. Kahlout, a·resident of 'miracle diet' cures for the-obese. one of the more .iortured arenas of Unfortunately little personal international politics, worka on· the professional guidance is available extension to. his new house and with these diets," he noted. plants'his · greenery, his fate con- "People get quite discouraged on tinues to be debated in forums like do-it-yourself programs when they the United Nations, which has talk­ work very ha~d and· fail to lose ed of hfs plight for 'years and so far ,weight, or ccg■ in it quip~ly. ", .. •, · '. · r.econciled nothing. , , , , , • t - .. _JI

14 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976 ti ons wi th Abraham Sachs. I real­ ized that, even within the limited agendum I had set for myself, there were a great many empty places. In conversation with col­ ~ y J ~ F,9-•::p~:bb;s h:~ t~; ,A~ s \:Y9ro! ~,~,,Th!!,, ,!,}!! !!! leagues in my own department 1n ~f~ · ber/J,/976.J orex ._ . ~~~~u~~ University Proressor, Prof es- / Addres.r to the first Faculty • • • consider the s1t uat1on or the Jews New Testament, I learned a great sor of Religious Studies, Colloquium. organized by in Babylonian lile and in the Ira- deal about the critical scholarly The Ungerleider Dis, Dean of the Fa_cuhr Mau- (Continued from last week) nian state. The Talmud's fables on methods worked out in New Tes­ tinguished Scholar or Judaic rice Glicksman. Brown Uni- Before me was a chaotic situ- this subject are not illu_minat- tament scholarship, particularly in Germany, and with Ernest Frer­ - "'"'"" -~.. ~ .. ,..... ation to which I wanted first to ing- even if they were credible. bring some order. Specifically, the I wanted to know a great deal ichs I talfced forever about similar Babylonian Talmud, which I then about the cultural ·and social life issues in Old Testament scholar­ (falsely) perceived to be the prin- of the ordinary folk . not merely or ship. (II I have published a lot and I FUNCTION LED _ cipal document or Talmudic a handful of religious viruosi. The my colleagues less, it is because I Judaism, was produced in Baby- Talmud is remarkably uninte- write down the things they say to DIGITAL WATCH lonia, yet we had no clear and de- rested in the ordinary people, ex- me.) · It also became clear that I • HOUIIS • MV ,.;;!!£>00 . tailed history of the Jews in Baby- cept in relationship to its paragons had come to the end of the first • fllNUlts • Mil ·1• ·0 ,._ decade of work and had no reason • 9lCONDS • IOtTH 11110.oo·v;.. Ionia. themselves. It would be easy to Accordingly, we had no con- compose a long list of top!cs whatsoever to pursue the same line in the future. A History of the ...... c...... ITACKM CMIII crctc notion of the historical con- which any historian expects to ID- text in which the Talmud took vestigatc, and about which the Jews in Palestine, composed along l'OIMDWAUIITIIATI.- a shape. I could not sec how any Talmud is silent. For. as I had to the same lines as the one for Ba­ ltC...°""'- II"\ progress was possible without admit, the Talmud is simply not a bylonia, seemed to me an exercise some account of " the world of the historical document. and it can be in doing things I had already 21" ' ~ done. Too many questions lay be­ CCMl'Mf I \ .. I Talmud," that is to say, the Baby- made into one only by violating ~f1J Ionian Jewish community which . its own authentic character and in- yond. a·l3 Mnlta, _; -5'" produced the Talmud. In under- tegrity. Skipping rapidly by some work taking that work .:.... which resulted It is a law-book. in which prin- which completed questions on the in five volumes, begun in 1961 and ciples, cases and precedents arc Babylonian matter. I turn directly completed in 1969, I recognized extensively analyzed through the to the issues which have engaged ' that I had to study Iranian history discipline of practical, applied log- me for the past six years. Progress and language, for the Talmud was ic. Along the way, it contains 0th- has been exceedingly rapid. but produced in a community under er kinds of materials. But it testi- v_ery uneven. and not ve ry exten­ lranian rule. This led to a number fies- through its own contents, se- sive. "' Jllll­ At this point I should note that ~ DMW GIIII or bywa;ys, but also brought me lection or materials ror pre- munntn into contact with some wonderful ; ervation and analysis principally the sizable number or my books has been made necessary by th e f NAlf scholars. to the Slate or mind or its own au- ~.!°i65 As the wo rk unfolded. I began thorities. I stress. the state of sizable range of sources which re­ •nus•SHIi i- quired translation. discussion. and to get some clear sense of the sort mi nd. moreover. because even ta.eor.--;_ analysis. in preparation for the ,.. ,.. . of historical materi als I had ID here, the Talmud has no interest flH hand . This was the beginning or in such matters of ci rcumstance as necessa ry studi es of their charac­ ter and critical content. A philoso­ .,...... consciousness. the nature of the in stitutions l recognized. first of all. that which produced it. the lives and pher in ten pages may print ten IA-1111 pages of his own. hard won in­ •1-wu,.._ we could not even speak or "Tai- thoughts or its indi vid ual ,4uthor- ·-­ mudic history" any longer. For ities. and so on. sight. I can sca rcely clear my 1111 171 throat in under three hundred, the Talmud is a document. It is In the late nineteenth cen tury. si mply because o r my very not a hi storica l period and is not when Talmudic hi story was well fundamental conviction that be­ definitive of a historical period. It underway, the Orthodox pietists fore ana lysis (let alone sy nthesis) would be equivalent to writing a criticized the historians bitterly. must come the source. The reader history of England defined by the They had good reason. because must have the source in hand . The lives or the great writers, e.g., hi storical studies were used as an source must be translated- as best Shakespearean England. Milto- instrument in the legitimation or one ca n- so that the reader sees ni an England, or Chaucerian Eng- the reform of Judaism . So they exactly what is there and can fol­ land. While literature plays a prin- / wanted to emphasize the triviality low what is said. The work of cipal role in the study of the cul- and worthlessness of hi story. They translatio n is not one at which I ture of diverse periods in English would then say, "Graetz ca n tell claim to excel!. But my reader hi story, books do not impose the yo u what Rav or Samuel (great dqcs have everything in hand definition of the epochs of that authorities of the third century) which is needed to follow what I history or of the chief points of ate for breakfast. or what kind of sha ll then propose to say about historical interest therein. clothes they wore. But we can tell the sources. Keep in mind that Not only so, but I gradually re- you what they thought and what most of the rabbinic literature has alized that the Talmud is not a they stood for. " In_ my Judgment not been put into English. and ii I public document, but is a particu- that bitter observation on the tn- range over a wide va riety of docu­ lar and very special creation of a viality of historical stud y was ac- ments, even what is in English is small group or people. This be- curate, reOccting as it did the cen- not apt to be consulted. This has came clear because the things I tral interests and tensions or the been a labor or responsibility, wanted to know simply do not in- literature itself. motivated by the insistence on ex-­ For my part, I too wanted to in­ plicit statement of the character or vestigate the things important the evidence, as well as on con­ not only to me but also to my crete relationship between that so urces, to find a point of contact, evidence and what I · propose to therefore or mediation, between say about it. SEE ALL THE NEW '77s the Talmudic literature and the The next projects. aftet Baby­ contemporary ac~i:lemic concerns lonia, treat both a theme and a which brought me to it. problematic, deal both with a set That point of contact proved, of sources and a series of ques­ NOW ON 0/SPLA Y in my History of the Jews in Ba­ tions, of a very limited character, bylonia, to be far removed fr~m addressed to said sources. I shall the insights of Max Weber with locus upon the questions rather which I began. Yet Weber meant than the themes. . ~ /.!J" . much, and people I read there­ The problematic of the first after, mainly historians of religion was: What shall we make of di­ ~t,.t.C . ~CoL . and sociologists and anthropolog­ .verse versions of a single sal,'ing or ists of the same area, even more. story appearing in several com­ 0 From them I worked out an agen.­ pilations' Are these unrelated, or • CONTINENTAL MARK V: II dum of problems to which the Tal­ do they show signs or amplifica­ mud indeed could bring some tion and development0 illumination, for example, the .1a­ The next was: What are the ture of the holy man, \he religious principal literary traits of diverse yirtuoso; the role of the holy man stories and sayings? Are sayings in society; the relationship be­ and stories assigned to a given au­ tween ordinary folk and the holy thority essentially the same in lit­ man; the legal activities of lawyer­ erary character as those a_ssigned magicians of Babylonia; and sim­ to some other? Do sayings and ilar matters. Here the evidence stories in the names of authorities seemed to \me appropriately used, assumed to have lived early in the because what I wanted to know formation of , the lierature as a was what was\ in my hands; the whole exhibit traits different from viewpoint of the people who" wrote those ·in the names or later ones?_ the document itself. The third was: What is the Whether or not Mr. X really shape of the materials attributed said what is assigned to him, or in successive ages and documents Mr. Y really, on such and such ,a to a single authority? Do we see CAPRI day, decided a case in this way an inner discipline within the ma­ and not some other, was not a terials, or is there no cogency .AT SHORE CITY "QUALITY" IS STANDARD EQUIPMENT compell ing issue. I rramed the whatsoever in the diverse mate­ agendum in l'erms-ol what diverse rials bearing a single name? people in a given stratum all eged The statement of these ques­ was the case, and what sorts of tions, which I asked in sequence, stories people told" about a situ-· shows that the historical questions ation about which, by definition, with which I began had been set they were well informed. aside, to make place for a differ­ Dµring this project, I was for­ ent set. of historical questions. I tunate enough to be appointed to had come to realize that analysis the Brown faculty. In conversa- Continued on Page is . THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMB.ER: 10, 197~15..! 'SOLIDARITY DAY' When i~ doubt, you need look no .Former Indian Jewish Official BRUSSELS (ITA): The Jewish further for the perfect gift. The Students Union held a "Solidarity Herald subscription is always ap­ Day with Soviet Jewry" at Brussels preciated for birthdays or holidays. Is Seek.in_g Asylum In The_U!S. University recently. CaU the Herald at 724-0200. By J-,11 Polakoff . . U.S. Solicitor General, filed a brief . out for its enemies no matter where WA S H I NG TON (J TA) : that the U.S. government neither they may be or the cost entailed _to PROFESSIONAL WAXING: Whether the United States returns supports nor opposes· the Jhirad •punish them. These friends also fear for gentle removal of all Elija~ Ephraim Jhirad to India to petition against extradition. that if Jhirad is returned to India, face criminal charges as the Indian · Claiming innocence on all · harassment of him there would unwanted hair the .. government is demanding or allows charges, Jhirad declares the; Indian result in his early demise. safe and painless him to remain in this country government is politically motivated Jhirad, whose counsel is the law _way .. E~ because he believes he is a target of against him. It is persisting in its firm of Tenzer, Greenblatt, FaUon political vengeance in his native · charges, .he holds, because of his and Kaplan in New York, contends for appointment call ... East Side \ land is now headed for a Presiden- outspoken defense of Zionism and that two other co-administraton tial decision. Jhirad, a Judge Ad- Israel at a time when the Indian and a secretary. were involved in HAIR DESIGNS vocate General of the Indian Navy government staunchly supports the handling the prize fund. These three 155 BmeNlft Ave. for 18 years and -a president of the Arab. bloc, and for his pro-Western are in India, it is said, and have not Prov. R.I. Federation of Jewish Communities anti-Communist views when the In­ been accused. The Indian 421-19fs (next !O .Hall'! Drug) in India, came to that crossroad on dian government is closely allied government; it is also said, has Oct. 4 - Yom Kippur- when the with Communist and anti-Western never shown proof any money is U.S. Supreme Court declined to countries. American friends of · missing nor ever produced a revi;w his appeal to stay the Jhirad also contend that a purpose claimant for that money. extradition proceedings that he has in the Indian government's pressure The Navy has never made an Do your Heating bills leave •you COLD?? fought (n the federal district and cir- for extradition is to demonstrate to audit of the fund, named a board of cuit courts in New York for more its political op,poncnts in India or inquiry to examine the charges, nor than four years. abroad that its long arm is reaching Continued on Page 17 let us inspect your heating system. Ordinarily, the Deputy Secretary of State - at present Charles W. We will help you find ways of reducing Robinson - would determine an 1st Jewish Meeting Ends issue of extradition. In this case, fuel costs. At today's prices, every gallon however, considering the currently On An Inconclusive Note saved is a lot. cool . lndian-U.S. govern'!'ental~ MADRID: An inconclusive note Juan Carlos. " relations and the change .'" the ended the first international Jewish Foreign Ministry officals declin- ABSOLUTELY NO OBLIGATION char~cter of the govcrn,:n~nt !n New meeting ever held in Spain, u some ed to comment on the reports of Del ho towards authontaroanosm, of the local Jewish leaders withdrew Arab pressure, but an official infor­ for this servic1. Scc~etary ?f Sta_tc Henry A . a request for a meeting with King mant acknowledged that there had , Kossmger himself. 1s expected to Juan Carlos which bad threatened been considerable disquiet in the r~om!"cnd a d~1s1on ~or President 10 become controversial. ministry, particularly after aome Enterprise Fuels, Inc~ For_d s cons1dcrat1on. St~tc Those in charge of organizing news reports SUQCSled that the (serving tit• public OVER 50 Years) Departme~t sources told the Jc.wish this recent meeting of the European Government viewed the holding of Telegraphic Agency that the issue branch of the World Jewish the congress in Spain as a gesture to has _not yet ~ormally reached th~ Congress arranged a meeting world Jewry. Department_ and,. contra~ to a between the King and Dr. Nahum It appcan, however that at its 723-8282 report published m . media other Goldmann, the congress president, higher levels the Government was Iha~. JT ~• the case 1s not on the and delegates from some of the 13 barely aware that the congress was JN Gladstone - Roy Peltier • Howanl Glaclstone Pr~odent s. desk. . countries which were represented at going to be held in Spain, which .ner~. ,s .J!/ · mag,c da~c for_ a the three-day gathering. gained a lasting reputation for anti­ dec1s1on, a hole House aide said, However, the publicity given the Semitism after the expulsion of the after .the. case do~ arnv_e there. The , meeting stirred up adverse reactions Jews in 1492 and their persecutions formaht,es of transferring the case in the Foreign Ministry, which under the Inquisition. fro~ the U.S. courts to the places great importance upon MISSFS SFSSION Department of Justice for reman- S ain's "special relationship" with The first. indication of possible dong Jhorad to. the custody of _the le Arab world. · government concern came when U.S. lmm.1grat1o n and Naturahza- In an interview Dr. Goldmann, Rafael Mendizabal, under secretary !_Io n Service 1s expected to take 8 I, commented that "I Qndcrstood at the Ministry of Justice, failed outlet place soon .. At that pomt, the q~es- that there was Arab intervention to appear as expected to address the t,on of pohtocal asylum for Jhorad because the press did some stories. opening session of the congress. He department.stores enters. Jh'.~ad,. 63, ha~ been under My personal opinion is that the was said to be "out of Madrid," ac­ $50,000_ bail _smce India sought an government shouldn't have given in cording to congress organizers. extrad1t1on warrant _A ug .- 9, 1972. to the Arabs. " Maj. Abdul Salam Jalloud, Prime The New Delhi government · Minister of Libya, with whom alleges that 15 years ago when A GOOD ARAB Spain has profitable trade tics, was Jhirad was a co-administrator of In­ D,. Goldmann said that he in Madrid on a private visit and met dia's Naval Prize Fund, he misap­ expected shortly to pay a visit to Prime Minister Adolfo Suarez on propriatc;_d money to ineligible King Hassan of Morocco, whom he Friday and the King on Saturday. recipients. In its extradition suit - called "a good Arab." "I don't There as considerable speculation wj,ich was filed in federal court in think the Spanish have to be more among the congress organizers that New York City ' four years after Arab than the King of Morocco," Major Jalloud · expressed dis­ charges were brought against Jhirad he said. ple.asure over the gathering here, in India - the Indian government 1 But said he had acceded ~o the though this could not be confirmed. listed 52 allegations bfa these were !le' decision of the local community to Local Jewish leaders said that the narrowed during the le.gal withdraw the req!!_esl for a meeting meeting between the King and Dr. proceedings to two counts involving with the King to avoid an em­ Goldmann has been arranged rupees to the equivalent of $1600 . . barrassing situation. privately through a Spanish According to the allegations, the One leader of the 12,000-strong intermediary, who indicated that Naval Fund totalled $500,000 in Jewish community in Spain said, the appointment had become em­ rupees and there is no rec~rd of an " We are concerned with main­ barrassing to Juan Carlos. For this accounting or audit for the three­ taining the excellent relations we reason, they said, the request for the year period 1959-1961. have had-always- with King· meeting was_withdrawn today.- The Indian.government contends that when Jhirad left India in July, · 1966 for stays in Europe, Israel and Tzur Says That ~umors in America, it was his ·intention BE SURE never to return out of fear of persecution. However, charges were Should Be Re.~Evaluated not filed against him in India until JERUSALEM (JTA): Yaacov ban on Jewish emigration from TO VISIT more than two years later - ii) Oc­ Tzur, ncwlf installed chairma_n of Syria, Tzur said. - tober, 1968. The extradition case the Council for Jews in Arab coun­ 'Rarely Allowetl' appeared to turn on the question of tries, said here that Jewish leaders "Rarely have th,c Syrian OUR whether it was Jhirad's ,intention, in the U.S., Mexico and other coun­ authorities allowed Jews to leave when he left India in July, 1966, to tries have fallen - into tl!e trap of the country for commercial or reurn to his native land or whether rumors· propagated by Damascus medical reasons" and when they did his departure was for the purposes that Syria's Jews. arc no longer the. allow it, the authorities kept their WINE·. of attending the World Jewish targets of persecution and dis­ children hostage until the traveller Congress in Brussels and then take crimination. Addressing the first returned to the ghetto, he said. Tzur a long, delayed vacation in Europe. meeting of the Council under his noted that some 4500 Jews present- CELLAR The federal court in New York leadership, Tzur said it was ly live in Syria, confined to three held that while his departure was necessary to bring . the pressure of ghettos, mainly in Damascus. Syria not for the purpose of avoiding world public .opinion to bear is actually.a prison for· Jews and "it CH01CEST WINES prosecution; the court ruled that the against the intolerable conditions of is our task to call upon the Syrian AND LIQUORS last two counts were still valid Syrian Jews. authorities to epen the gates and let because the statute of limitations the Jews out 'Of that country," he BEAUTIFULLY PKGD. still had two weeks to run when He said that while it is true that said. Tzur stated that he was not President Hafcz Assad of Syria has AND REASONABLY Jhirad allegedly decided not to suggesting at the moment to permit · ended the torture that was the lot of th~ Jewish population to emigrate PRICED · •. return. Syrian Jews until 1973, they arc stiU to Israel, "though this might be the · In view of the Supreme Court's discriminated against with respect Street Floor most simple solution." But, he said, .refusal to review the case, the to employment and their "What we demand is fr.dom to 1 defense counsel indicated it would movements inside Syria arc sevcrly leave the country to any place in the . not take further judjcial action on restricted. - the extradition. Jhiiad's appeal world." He added that this was not against extradition was opposed in He said . that any Jew wh10 wants a political demand: President the Supreme Court by Edwin to travel more than three kilometers Ephraim Katzir of Israel Steinberg, a New York attorney, from the Damascus ghetto must g,t congratulated the Council and representing the Indf an a special permit from the expressed hope that it wo._!ld government. Robert H. Bork, the authorities. Even worse is the total succeed in ill difficult mi11ion. l6~THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976 .. , The prices of basic commodities, More Devaluation public transportation and fuel were JERUSALEM .(JTA): A new not affected by the latest devalua­ devaluation of the Israel Pound, the tion which is intended to spur second in less than a month, went exports. into effect. The Pound now stands at IL 8.70 to SI, a tw.o percent Those prices rose by an average depreciation frol!I the pervious rate. , of 20 percent earlier in the month . plea,e join us R UE DE L'ESPOIR f or a traditional french CHRISTMAS DINNER

pate de foies ,.,, croute aux truffle.t, potage creme de champignon, ialade fran~aise, oie farcie atlx marro,u (roast goose with chestnut .

SUNDAY, DEC. 19th 6:JO P. /11. prix fix,, J/5.00 please respond before Dec. 15th 75 1-11/190 price iloi'!i not indude wines or gratuities J O>' EUX NOEi.

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HIGH MORALE due to a !Temenclous campaign was the feature of the evaluation mHting that the Women's Divi­ we're a sion of the Jewish Ndenation of Rhode Island held on December 2. Seated clockwise are Ruth Fixler, Ilea Shore, Shirley R-nbloorn, Ruth Alperin, LIiiian Slatoff, Hope Mellion, Molly Gn,noff, Sylvia Strauss, Helene Brodie, &the, Resnik, Fannie Shore, campaign chairman, Rosalind Bolusky and, with backs to camera, Jeanne Weil, HOUSE~@I1I]) prfliclent of the Women's Division, and Maxine Marlis. word in our community · Israel Looks Into Idea !Nazis Go To Jaill Of Manufacturing Arms BONN: Five elderly Germans criticism after the wa r was Israel's who fo rmerly belonged to the (Cont inued from Page 4) intelligence service. which had Gestapo have been sentenced to enjoyed a reputat i on for prison terms by a court at Fiessen national Institute fo r Strategic for complicity in the murder of hun­ professionalism anJ acumery.' Much Studies. The institute, a London• dreds of Poles, incl uding Jews. of the criticism. at least that made based independent center, engages The five were involved in the in research on problems of inter­ public, charged that the service had become rigid and bureaucratic. selection of people for "special national security. treatment" at Gea t apo In its estimates for 1976-77. the In 1hc interview, Mr. Peres said that !here was now a gadny group headquarters al Cienc hanaow, institute listed the total Israeli arm• Poland, which Germany annexed in within the intellige nc e CS· cd forces al 158,500, breaking the 1939 and incorporated in to East tabli shment whose purpose was to fi gure down to 35.500 regulars and Prussia . challenge assumptions based on in­ 123 ,000 conscripts. It said Israel Acco rd ing to the court, the rulers was capable of mobilizi ng it s form at ion compiled b y the intelligence network . Everyo ne can of the Third Reich held the "chief But Our Reputation For Reaulls Has Spread From Coast lo Coastr reserves within 72 hou rs to a respo nsibi lity" for the mu rders. But ring the bell, he sa id. adding that Through our altihahon w,th the Homes For L ,vmg Netwo rk. we a,e strength of 400,000. the court rejected the claim by the hnked w11h more than 1300 REAL TOA• offices serving more than 1973-74 Stn,.tll. assessments of information now left 8,000 commun11tes 1n all 50 slates an~Pue,10 Rico room for surprises. The lesson of accused that they did not know As 1ndependen1 business men and 'l'll'Omen . we've all worked hard 10 In its estimates for 1973-74, the "special treatment" meant execu­ in the surprise allack, said a ranking become e1tperts our o wn ne1 ghb0rh0ods As Hornes Fo, Living institute listed the total al 115,000 tion . Two of them,. Herma nn Members, we work together to oller lhe most comprehensive real military man . is not to rely solely on estate services available • whether you are moving across town or - 30,000 regulars and 85,000 Schaper, 65, and Dr. Erich Bartels, across the counlry intelligence. Summoning the pop• conscripts. Adding the reserve 68, we re each sentenced to six years. Fo, • p ...■■ nl IM»u■e MNh'9 ••perience. ,....,.._, the HOUSESOLD word: ulation to an- alert, he said, has potential, the instit ute arrived at a Both face separate charges in tremendous economic and social strength of 300,000. a nother case being hea rd a l implications, but belier IO false Some estimates here place the G iessen. current mobilized Israeli forces, alarms than one allack by surprise. The past year has been relatively_ Others sentenced were Franz regular and reserve at 600,000 - a Hartmann, 67, to 4 ½ years in tranquil fo r the military, at least considerable figure in a nation of prison; Hans Doermage, 70, and when compared with calamities of 3.5 million people. Kurt Baresel, 50, each to four years other years. Most officials, both The institute's current eatimate and three months. Another defen­ pol itical and ' military, say this is places the number of armored dant, Ernst Schardt, 65, was largely the result of the current 728-5000 brigades at 15, an increase of 5 from acquitted. Charges against Otto chaos in the· Arab world, most two years ago. It puts the number of Roehr, 69, were dropped. artillery brigades at 9, an increase of nota bly in Lebanon . Military 6 from two years ago. Its estimates leaders say that the inter-Arab tur­ of 10 infantry brigades, 9 mechaniz­ moil has given them an added op­ Peres said, have increased during ed brigades and 5 parachute portunity to carry out necessary the last three years by 300 percent. brigades arc the same as those given changes in the defense forces. Israel' s arms and munitions two years ago. The institutc's latest Lieut. Gen. Mordechai Gur, the exports, he said, brought much­ estimates also show large increases chief of the general staff, commen­ needed foreign revenues - $80- in ·tsrael's tanks, patrol boats and ted: "The quiet on Israel's northern n;iillion worth - to the country this aircraft. Current defense expen­ borders with Syria and Lebanon year. The Israeli military industry, diture is· placed at Sil.2 million, had enabled us, the Israeli defense he went on, has embarked on the almost a third of the estimated forces, to worry less about current era of the personal missile. In this gross national product. security problems and concentrate sphere, too, it has registered gains, Figures tend to gloss over' the more on preparing ourselves for he said, although it was too early to commitment that the military has total war. The Lebanese conflict has be specific. extracted from the average Israeli enabled us to concentrate more on Currently, the military is em­ and the tremendous impact the central matters .. " Mr. Peres barking on a recruitment drive to military has in everyday life. That is agreed that conflicts in the Arab beef up the regular army. One of­ driven home when one sees a world had given Israel some sur­ ficer involved in · the effort noted prosperous 53-ycar-old cease but that it was a bonus that that the appeal had to be a non­ businessman, dressed in wrinkled could disappear. material one because "we cannot fatigues, patrolling a city street with Military Ex,.. compete with the market for the a submachine gun slung over his · In a recent speech to workers in best people." Noting a materialist · shoulder as part of his annual the defense industry, Mr. Peres said trend in Israeli society, this officer reserve commitment. that it had taken a long time for the said the strength of the regular A while back, annual reserve rest of the world to realize that the army lay in the fact that Israel still training was limited to men· up to 41 Jews were capable of establishing had people motivated by national EDWIN S. SOFORENKO years of age. Now the limit is 54. an army of their own, one that values, not material convenience. Women reservists train until the age could defend the people and their Recently General Gur recalled Michael H. Silverman .. Ho~ard S. Greene of 34 and women are subject to a · land by itself. " But throughout all the bad press the defense forces Robert J. Janes -~ · Peter E. Fallon two-year draft. Meri arc drafted for these years, we had to curry received after thc_October war and . Murry M. Halpert Edge .. . three years. political favors in order to obtain compared it with the good press -John Look at Ex-,d- most of our armaments," he said. they received after the daring C. Fred_Corb-«ttt, CLU As part of the reorganization, the "What we fail to acquire from military rescue of the hijacked plane Israeli defense forces re-evaluated abroad we must develop at home," passengers at Entcbbe Airport in AU UNIS Of ll!ISURANCI JOI IUSINl55 medical exemptions, and many the Defense Minister said "More Uganda in Julf . INDUSTRY, HOMI AND PIIISONAL 'PIOT.ICTION 'marginal cases were placed on ac­ than half of our defense budget is Three years ago, the general said, tive duty. earmarked for arms purchases. To the problem was the internal image. 211 ANGELL STREET In 1973; according to Shmuel our great good fortune we also The Entcbbe rescue, he said, was • Stcmplcr, a military ~nalyst, the in­ receive financial aid from the the fruit of two and a half years' Ufition 1-1923 . I correct evaluation 01 enemy inten­ United States. But in our long-tcrtn work on the internal image. "It was tions dclliycd mobilization of the policy we should strive as far as a natural continuation of the efforts cfefensc forces' full power, resulting possible to switch the emphasis that have been invested in the army INSURAr,ICE UNDERWRITERS, INC ..- in an · extremely poor balance of from arms purchases to arms all through the years and especially I '' forces on both fronts when the war manufacture." after the Yorn Kippur .war," he I began. A major target of the The nation's ~fenscexports, Mr. said. II 'I 1 ,__ - THli RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976-17 Arab Negotiators. Are Planning that he will be able to form a leadership. They give him eight For Zionist significant alternative to the present seats at the !Tl_QSI. Talks Over ·West Bank State Fulfillment BEIRUT, LEBANON: Talks on Palestinian state under the control TEL A VIV (JT A): Gen. (Res.) CUSTOM-MADE a Middle East settlement next.year of one or several of the moderate announced that the with a proposal for a Palestinian Arab governments, the diplomats new political faction he has formed DRAPERIES state on the West Bank of the Jor­ add. to participate in next year's elec­ dan and in the Gaza Strip, The issue th.us remains unresolv­ tion~ will be called Shlomzion FROM territories occupied by Israel since ed. Syria, through the 30,000 troops (Peace of Zion) and will be a the war of 1967, arc intended to be it has in Lebanon as part of the movement for "Zionist fulfillment" JACK'S FABRICS started by Arab negotiators. Arab peace-keeping force and through peace. Spokesmen for· the Will BRIGHTEN According to Arab diplomats, through As Saiqa, the pro-Syrian various established parties doubt YOUR HOME OR OFFICE some basic conflict continues to guerrilla groups, is seeking to exist between what is labeled strengthen its control over the •SUPCOYBSellD SP11ADS moderate Arab governments and · "{llAlf OER P:!.i·O. ;'If •W..OW SHADES the Palestinian leadership over the PalatlalaM Weakeaed ~.,; ,.._.. If,,,_, •UPHOLSTH..O nature of such a state and the type The Palestinians arc resisting as of guarantees which should be best they can after having been GOOD FOOD f: Decorating offered to Israel. weakened by their reverses in . MODERATELY PRICED The principle of a West Bank Lebanon. The acceptance of a state MENU Problem,? CALL 725-21 &e state has been reluctantly accepted, on the West Bank and in the Gaza HOURS: according to Palestinian officials, Strip was publicly announced in • COCKY AILS • 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 725 DEXTH ST., CENTIAL FALLS by all the major groups in the New York by Farouk Kaddoumi, Palestine Liberation Organization, the head of the P.L.O.'s political notably by Al Falah, the largest department. guerrilla faction in the movement; It had figured prominently as well as by the Marxist already two years ago in the Democratic Front for the Libera­ decisions of the Palestine National tion of Palestine and the As Saiqa, Council, the equivalent of a the pro-Syrian guerrilla group that parliament, which met in Cairo in carries out Syrian policy. June 1974. lo Tacit A-t At that time, however, the The only holdouts are the Palestinians argued that the West Popular Front for the Liberation of Bank state was a step toward their Palestine, headed by George ultimate goal, namely a secular Habash, and various splinter state in all of Palestine for both groups. This so-called "rejection Jews and Arabs. This concept, front" has been weakened by the which implies the disappearance of war in Lebanon and by the presence Israel, was put forward at the here of Syrian troops. United Nations that fall by Mr. Even Libya and Iraq; the two Arafat. It eclipsed their earlier countries most strongly opposed to acceptance of the West Bank state. a negotiated settlement with Israel, What is new now is that the have given tacit agreement to the Palestinians avoid all references to principle of a West Bank state, the secular state without, however, • Palestinian officials say. Thus there formally renouncing it. is a virtual consensus among the Arabs on this point, they added. Fonner Indian Official The crucial unresolved question Is Seeking Asylum in their view, is "who will control this stale?" It is on this question, (Continued fr om page 15) the officials added, that even the offered proof of wrongdoing by moderates among the Palestinian him. no r sent witnesses to New leaders remain in disagreement with York lo testify against him, the the Arab countries and, of course, defense clai"ms. The witnesses, ac­ with the Israelis. cording to the defense, were from The positipn of Al Fatah, the India's special police establishment. guerrilla group headed by Yasir Jhirad has denied destroying any Arafat, who also leads the overall n ..-cords . Palestine Liberation Organization, An Indian patriot with an es­ is that the projected Palestinian teemed reputation, Jhirad was prac­ state must be " totally· ticing law in Bombay when World independent." War II broke out. He was given In a statement last week, the command of a 150-foot boat that P.L.O. leadership once more searched the Arabian Sea for Nazi rejected all thought of a West Bank submarines. In 1946, he was named We manufacture our own furs state as a member of the federation Judge Advocate General of the Why pay more? with Jordan under King Hussein. Royal Indian Navy, the third The Palestinians are equally op­ highest position in the Indian posed to a four-power federation govern91ent. While in that office, he Minks, raccoons, foxes from that would include Lebanon and becal])i! a special isl in the law of the Syria as well as Jordan and the sea. the full-skinned garment to the pieced. Palestinian state and would be un­ Jhirad. who is of the B' nai Israel der the control of Syria. Jews who came to Bombay area Check our quality and prices first. The Palestinians' most effective before the destruction of the Second ally on this point is Egypt. At the Temple in Jerusalem more than Restyling Specialists: Arab leaders' conference in Riyadh I 900 years ago, is ardently Jewish. that brought about the present As a student at Bombay University, from the conservative to the latest fur and cease-fire in Lebanon, President he organized Jewish students there. Anwar el-Sadat is understood to In 1973, he visited Palestine at the leather combinations have insisted that the proposed invitation of the Keren Hayesod. Palestinian state should be Together with his father, he aided 835 HOPE STREET HOURS: independent - without formal ties Jewish refugees from Germany and PROVIDENCE Mon. thru Sat. 9-5 to Jordan and Syria. Egypt, as the Poland who recei ved asylum in In­ largest and most powerful Arab dia from the Nazis. He also in­ country, hopes to have its own troduced programs in India of the strong influence in a future Palesti­ Joint Distribution Committee and nian state. the Organization for Rehabilitation . Prefer a 'Mlnllltate' through Training (ORT) which still Mr. Sadat won his point against operates schools in Bombay. He President Hafez al-Assdad with Ifie was in Israel from 1967 to mid-1972 support of the Saudis, it is reported. when he came to the ·united States. The Saudi Arabian monarchy, for He and his wife have applied for its own reasons of security in the U.S. citizenship. Among those sup­ future, is believed to prefer a new porting Jhirad's cause are Rabbi Palestinian "ministatc" standing Harold Gordon, executive vice- · alone to a strong new cntitity com­ president of the New York Board of bining Jordan and Syria with the Rabbis, who has written two letters TASTEMAKER by $TEVENS Palestinian and Lebanon. lo President Ford; Rabbi Israel The Riyadh decision in favor of a Miller. former chairman of the Palestinian state standing" alone, Conference of Presidents of Major TABLECLOTHS however., complicates the issue of American Jewish Organizations, 50'i1 POL VESTER, 50'il COTTON, NEEDS NO IRONlt,,IG Arab guarantees to Israel and who appealed lo U ndcrsecrctary of 52"x70" Reg. $5. 75 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , SALE $4. 75 Stale Philip Habib; and Samuel further diminishes the already faint 31 •••••••••• ••••• ••.• ••••••• 15 chances that Israel may accept such Haber, ' honorary president of the 80"x84" . . Reg. $7. ~ ~ SALE $5. a state, Arab diplomats concede. Joint Distribu~on Committee, who 68" Round Fri~ Rea. *7.50 -...... SALE $6.15 also has interceded at the White ANOIITl'IJ FLORAL....,. WITH WHITE The moderate • Arab countries, MCKGIIOUND, IIINK, ill.UI. 011 YELLOW these diplomats say, 1ealizc that in House. Harber worked with Jhirad exchange for agreeing to a Palesti­ in India in 1960-62 in setting up a LUXU~Y LACE TABLECLOTHS nian state in . the occupied JDC group there. FAMOUS MAKER BATH TOWELS territories, Israel would demand foolproof guarantees for its own 16 Lonsdale Ave .. Pawtucket. R I security. These Arab countries also SUBSCRIBE TO the Herald, and (NEXT TO NEW YOHK LArF STORE 1 know that it would be virtu_ally im­ receive it in the mail every week.- · OPEc N D Ail '( 8 JO AM to 5 PM For information, call the Herald al possible to give such guarantees to TH UR S T ll L g P M 726-2370 · Israel without bringing the new 724-0200. 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18-THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976 A SUBSCRIPTION to the national news, everything is covered ..... Seys JDL 1i seekillg I I- A d H Herald can mean different things to in your weekly Herald. For sub­ To Infiltrate Jewish Groups $ ( Q e n er different people. News from home, scription information, call 724- NEW YORK (JTA): Rabbi Meir recipes, local happenings, irlter- 0fOO. Kahane, founder of the Jewish Defense League, announced the ARAB Citizens beginning of a new "strategy" for the JDL: the infiltration of "major , By H.O.S,, Gneeway dealt more in imagination· and Jewish establishment groups" in the "Tlte world will jutJ,. the Jewish rationality. United States by trained Jewish ac­ Jtate by what It will do to the Arabs." The reaction lo the report has tivists who "will then take these - Chaim Weizmann.Jim President been immediate and vocal. Arabs groups over ideologically." of Israel. and liberal Jews have called for Mr. Addressing a press conference at JERUSALEM: The "Koenig Koenig's removal from the the Summit Hotel, Kahanc, said report." a confidential memoran­ Oepar1men1 of the Interior.' Arab that this is the reason he joined the dum by an I ntcrior Department dis- editor Emil Habibi of the Rakah National Religious Party in Israel a 1ricl officer in Galilee lo his party paper said that if Israel had a few days earlier. According to superiors, has touched upon one of conslilulion, Mr. Koenig would be Kahanc, the JDL will shortly es­ Israel's most sensitive subjects - behind bars for his incilcmenl and tablish a group named "Circle" the lrcalmcnl of its Arab citizens - his "sick hostility towards the Arab with the purpose of "indoctrinating and the indignation being voiced is people." American Jews and then making carrying the affair to lhc highest A moderate Arab paper in them join the establishment." political levels. Jerusalem, Al Kuds, said the memo The secret report, wrillen six proved that Israel wanted lo drive CRANSTON months ago, lakes the view 1ha1 out the Arabs and that, if curbs Garden City Shopping Center Is rael's Arab citizens in the were being advocated lo "clamp The Talmud down on those who are considered Route 2 (Off IIOUTr37) (Continued lrom page 14) northern district of Galilee arc becoming loo numerous and too citizens of Israel, ii is nol surprising OPEN 9; 30 A.M. to 10: 00 P.M.-Mon.-Sat. ol the traits ol sources took pre­ influential and recommend s that such measures are carried o ul cedence over composition. out measures lo limit their population by the military administration (on ol said sources. ol a historical ac­ WOONSOCKIT IIUMfOIIO growth and power to prevent them the occupied West Bank.)" count ol the age ol which the 1"'91-A from becoming, in the view of the The independent Hebrew ,...... f(w. ~a.ceTwoc-111 HI.,._..._. sources speak. Questi ons ol liter­ newspaper Ha"aretz, while deplor­ .... -0- o fficer, Yisrael Koenig. a menace to --­10 A.M.-IOP.M. IOA.M.- IOP.M. 9:--c-30A.M.-9P.M. - ary analysis, literary hi story. had ing the repo rt's recommendations --•Set. -.-Set. 94 1341 the Jewish state. to be laced belore more con­ The issue is particularly sensi tive as unacceptable and undemocratic, vcntiona I histo rical questions because ii involves no t the Arabs dercnded the right of a civil servant could be lramcd. let alone asked who are under military occupation lo write a confidential working and answered. in the West Bank and in Gaza, but paper to hi s boss. And the after­ You will ol course recognize Israel's own 450.000 Arabs, who arc noon paper Ma'ariv said there was ART'S PIZZA that in asking these questions. I Israeli citizens. no j ustificatio n for lhe demands for was movi ng into the range ol the The reco mmendati o ns in the Mr. Koenig's dismissal. "A public 861-4149 hi stori cal-critical work ol the nine­ Koenig report run contrary to lhc servant should nol be disqualified 83 BURL1NGTON STREET teenth century. havi ng begun in a government's policy o f trying lo because of his views." ( Just off Hope Strut) world in which conceptua l norms integrate lhe Israeli Arabs into the Bui although there are Israelis PROVIDENCE, RI o l the ninth century prc•ailed. A 1 mainstream of Israeli life . The who are worried aboul lh e thi s point in my ca reer the exis­ repo rt was leaked lo the Jcft-o f­ demographic trends in Israel, the featuring tence or my work was an unplea­ ccnter Mapam party newspaper Al mainstream o f opinion here sant lact lo colleagues with a deep Hamishmar. which published the deplo red the document and, while homemade spinach pies commillment 10 the status quo. I document last week as a warning questi o ning whether Mr. Koenig lound remarkably lillle under­ against what ii called the "grave sho uld be dismissed, there were of­ hot oven grinders standing or support on any front. and dangerous nature of the ficials who suggested that a man pigs in a blanket but more among gentile than Jew ­ report's findings ." with such lo w opinion of lhe Arabs ish scholars. and more (to my sur­ " Should lhc recommendations be should be transrerred 10 a less sen­ call ahead for ea~y pick-up prise) among Catholic than Pro­ adopted it would cause a dangerous sitive regio n. testant ones. (The Catholic Biblic­ rifl between Israel's Jewish majority The Arab minority accounts for al Qua rterly has resewed every and Arab minority," the paper said. 43 percent of the population in NOW ART'S PIZZAS COME IN scholarly book I have wrillen. and There is virtually no possibility Galilee and 12 .6 percent o r the pop­ some text books as well. and done lhal Israel will adopt Mr. Koenig's ulatio n o f Israel as a whole. Israeli 2 SIZES so in a reasonable and objective vi ews as policy. Prime Minister Arabs have full rights as citizens, spirit. The Journal o l Biblical Lit­ Yilzhak Rabin said he has never although they are nol taken into lhe for our customers who always erature. by contrast. reviewed seen the document and officials army, an indicatio n that they arc none ol my work for a long lime. explained 1ha1 ii was "shelved" nol rully trusted despite Israeli in­ ask for a smaller size and then gave one book to a per­ because it contained rccommen­ sistence lhal the slate is only trying son known as a hostile voice. then dalio ns that were "clearly against 10 avoid the eR1otional strain of you GOT IT!! reviewed nothing lor another long the democratic policies of the stale asking Arab to fight Arab. period.) o f Israel ." Israeli Arabs are economically I recall asking IWO scholars Bui the leaked repo rt has exposed worse off than European Jews bul who had.' in their areas, succeeded a division between the hawks and belier off than many Oriental Jews. in doing something ol consid­ doves on how the Arab minority They a re far belier off than most erable ambition: " When does ii go sho uld be treated and, although not Arabs in Arab countries bul away'!" even lhe hawks would advocate economic advancement is never a One was Gershom Scholem. publicly 1ha1 the Koenig plan be substitute ror dignity and, in a who lounded the modern study ol adopted, the memo showed lhal sense, they are still second-class Jewish mys ticism and accom­ some of the officials in the field who ci ti zens. plished it. He said. "When I are charged with carrying out the Reprinted from The Guardian. turned lorly. I discovered I had government's policies of Arab arrived ·and they lelt me alone." integration are opposed to these British Consider Harry Wolfson told me. "Ir policies. you wanl lo be accepted by schol­ The gisl of Mr. Koenig's con­ Israel lnvestin,g ars, don't say anything new, don't fidential memo was that the Arab , LONDON (JTA): Fifteen British do anything new. and don't ask minority in Galilee would make up industrial companies are al present any embarrassing questions. 51 percent of the population in the Above all, don' t publish anything. region by 1978 and 1hal combined holding discussions with the Israeli Bui ii you want 10 accomplish with lhe growth of Arab economic mission in London with a anything. just go about your busi­ nationalism, would destroy Israeli view to investing in Israel , economic counsellor Amos Lavee ness and wai1.· ln time. they'll gel control in the vital area bordering disclosed last week. He was speak­ used to you ... on Syria and Lebanon. Mr. Koenig ing in the presence of Avigdor In a long period ol time during also complained of an organized ef­ Bartel, chairman of the Israeli which I lound no fair hearing al fort on the parl of lhe Arabs to buy lnveslmenl Aulhorily, who is here all in my field, except. as _ in­ land in lhe north. as part of a tour of European coun­ dicated, among some biblical To reverse this trend, Mr. Koenig tries. scholars. but received a consid­ suggested lhal the number of Arab In talks with British businessmen ~ I erable amount ol personar abuse workers in industry and businesses and banking circles, Bartel has been so that it was difficult to prinl ar­ be limited to 20 percent of the lolal outlining the attractions of ticles in . the· more political jour­ and lhal preferential treatment in investing in Israel, particularly in nals in my field. I found ii hard to the educational system lo aid Arabs export-oriented industries. British believe Wollson. Bui just now be slopped in order to limit the investors are being encouraged lo having lectuted al the Orthodox number of Arab students by take ~dvantage of lhe special export " Religious·· universi ty in Israel "natural selection." facilities Israel now enjoys in the Arab students should be en­ and been invited lo serve as resl of the Common Market, in the visiting prolessor ol Talmud (ol couraged lo study abroad, Mr. United Stales and other countries. all things) al the Jewish Theo­ Koenig wrote. but their subsequent Smaller, expanding companies, return tp lake jobs should be made logical Seminary (summer school). as well as bigger conce·rns, are being more difficult. Mr. ~

20-THE RHOD.!;: ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976 BONDS FASHION SHow· Mrs. Uri Ben-Ari, wife of the con­ NEW YORK (JTA): An Israeli sul general of Israel in New York, fashion show, sponsored by the was guest of honor at the show, Massive Repressions Are Greater New Yor1c Women's Divi­ which featured entertainers and s ion of Israel Bonds, raised $1, 150,- prominent social figures , as _000 in Israel Bond sales Thursday. _volunteer models. Reported In Arab Lands REGISTERED NURSES By Maurice Samael90D to give medical assistance to the No news has been received of LONDON (JTA): Many Arab Kurds. He was arrested in March Albert Elia, former head of the LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES countries arc severely criticized in a 1975 following the Iraq/ Iran Jewish community -in Lebanon, NURSESAIDES - massive catalogue of repressions agreement and sentenced to death who was abducted to Syria in and executions o f political prisoners o n charges of spying for Israel and September 1971. In Libya, from available through in various parts of the world, acting as an advisor to Kurdish where tortu re is increasingly published here by Amnesty Inter­ leader Molla Mustafa Barzani. The reported, there has been a similar MEDICAL PERSONNEL national. The annual report by the Dutch government received confir­ decline in human ri ghts in the past 15-year-old organization says that mation o nl y in mid-March 1976 year. in the fact of dissatisfaction­ more than 100 countries imprisoned that Aronson had been executed -wit h his rule,._ Presiden t Muammar POOL people for their beliefs, and denied three months previously. Qaddafi has ordered the arrest of a ll · Hours arranged to suit your needs. them fair ~nd prompt trials in In Syria his opponents. 1975/ 6. In Syria. where Amnesty Inter­ CALL 272-3520 In many countries, the prisoners national claims lo know of 600 Amnesty is working for about 40 were tortured or executed. The political prisoners. it is currently Libyans arrested in April 1973 for chapter on the Mid die East, working on 34 individual cases. Of membership in illegal political par­ including Israel, says that Iran and 286 untried detainees, 79 have been ties and still held despite a court Iraq give greatest cause fo r concern, arrested since June, 1975, including o rder for their release in December followed by Oman, Syria and Moslem brethren, Communists, 1974. it names three officers belicv- Libya. In Saudi Arabia, the Yemen Nasserists, Palestinians and Iraqi­ . cd lo have died in priso n in March Arab Rcp.ublic and some Persian faction Baathists. Former President 1976, as a result of maltreatment. Gulf states, there is a lack of infor­ Nureddin Atassi. who suffers from Other Arab countries mentioned in mation abou t the plight of diabetes. has spent the past six years connection with alleged prisoners, due to intimidation of the in AI-Mczzc military prison. He mallrcalmenl of political prisoners population and legal profession. and other members of the former are Ba hrain, Algeria, the two Only Egypt and Israel allowed regime, also held there, have still Y cmcn republics, Tunisia, Egypt, Amnesty International to _send not been charged or tried. Jo rdan, Sudan and Morocco. observers to political trials in the past year. (In Israel, the trial was that of an Arab nurse charged with Lebanese Are Armed To membership in El Falah). Accor­ ding to the report, there arc ap­ proximately 2500 Arabs imprisoned Create A Buffer Zone in Israel and the occupied territories for alleged security offenses. RUMA YSH : Here in this region of confirmation of this route could be However, the report fails to confirm Lebanon. close lo the Israeli obtained. One soldier said he had or deny allegations of torture by border. Lebanese soldiers arc carry­ come by sea. Another smiled and Israel brought lo Amnesty Inter­ ing hand grenades, assault rif)es and said, "Let's just say I came." national allention. Israel is also the ot her weapo ns wit h H'cbrcw One of the soldiers said he had only Middle East country out of the markings. All uniforms and other come here after the fighting at Tel JJ states where the Amnesty equipment - right down to the Zaalar. the armed Palestinian camp movement is represented by a rantccns - are standard issue in the outside Beirut that fell to Christian national section, although there arc Israel armed forces. militia forces in August. individual supporters in six Arab In anot her development, a t Quid Israeli Action countries. Dovev. there are telephone lines Western observers in Beirut said In The So•~t from an Israeli command post, the close cooperation with the In the Soviet Union, where the strung under the fr ontier fence and Ch ri stian militias gave Israel an leaders of the Moscow group of alo ng a sandy ditch o n the Lebanese ··early-wa rning system,'' permitting Amnesty International were im- side. The Lebanese soldiers willing­ it to move a task force into prisoned or e.iied at the end of last I y a ck n o w Iedge Io vi si Ii ng Lebanon quickly should it recei ve PLAlA INN year, about 300 Soviet prisoners of American reporlcrs that they have an alert from o ne of the Lebanese conscience have been " adopted" by phone communicatio ns between commanders that a Palestinian unit r"·"tauranl fJUr px,•plf,,n,·,, Amnesty sections. in Bulgaria, the their posts and those in Israel. was approaching. reporl deals with the cases of three T hese are only a few of the visible The Isra eli s are understood to Jews who fa ce death sentences on aspects o f lsraers allcmpt to es­ have promised Christian militia Open Christmas Day espionage charges. Two of them tablish a rapidly growing military commanders that an Israeli force had their sentences commuted: Dr. secu rity zone in si de the Lebanese would reach the scene of fighting in New Year's Eve Heinrich Speller . was eventually territory by organizin g and arming Lebanon within 20 minutes after Route One Wrentham, Mass. allowed lo leave for Israel. But Lebanese right-wing Christian receiving an alert about the Solomon Ben-Joseph is still serving militia units in the border region. near 495 presence of a Palestinian unit. a 12 1/, year jail term (reduced on The o bjective, ii is thought, is to The Israelis appear lo have es­ appeal from I 5 years). prevent Palestinian guerrillas who tablished low-key contacts with Last year, Amnesty also heard pf arc now being hard pressed in some of the Moslem officers of the another Jew, Nicolas Stefamov northern and central Lebanon, Lcbanc.se Arab Army, the largely Chamuriisky, a clerk in a from regrouping in the border area Moslem deserter force that is allied cooperative, arrested in Sofia in and becoming a threat to Israel with the Palestinians and is station­ September, 1974. He was charged once more. ed in the Moslem areas of southern with espionage on the basis of his The Israeli action is an extension Lebanon. contact with an Italian Embassy of a six-month "open-fence" policy With the border region made safe employe through whom he sent o f giving humanitarian assistance to for them, the Israelis are un­ tellers to relatives in the United isolated Christian villages in derstood to be conducting night Stales. However, his arrest appears southern Lebanon. patrols regularly as far north as the lo be related to his allempts to ob- Load Of Arms Litani River, halfway between the AU.TO lain a passport and to his openly After dark, a Lebanese am- border and the port of Saida. critical views. He was sentenced to bulance from one of the Christian The Israeli Prime Minister, 'Burglar Al~rms death and in February, 1976 villages crossed into Israel. It came Yitzhak Rabin, recently declared Amnesty International appealed to back half an hour later loaded with that Israel could never again allow President Todor Zhivkov urging arms and ammunition for the the Palestinian guerrillas to en­ commutation of the sentence. The Christian militia members. trench themselves on the Israeli­ A Great Gift appeal was heard by the Supreme Lebanese Christians drove a Lebanese border. Court in March but the result is not Soviet-made armored personnel 1969 Accord Curt, for Mom or Dad yet known. Chamurlisky' is being carrier to the open gate, apparently held in. the Vratza city prison. forachat.Oneofthccrcwmembers ' There arc two possible ways in In Iraq said the vehicle had been supplied which guerrillas might be pushed A.burglar alarm for In Iraq, where the incidence of to them by the Israelis, who had toward that border. They could be reported executions is probably the captured it from the Egyptians or forced into southern Lebanon by their car--protect highest in the Middle East, Amnes- the Syrians during the 1967 war. military pressure from the Syrians ty International tried to intervene Israeli soldiers standing on the and the right-wing Christians. In mainly on behalf of many Kurds Lebanese side of the border con- that case, they would be caught in a · t·heir investment. and Shia Mosiems. Two members fiscated at gun point a film from an two-front war, with the Israeli- of the tiny Jewish community for A BC crew directed by a cor- backed right-wing Christians in the whom it still works are Shua Soffer respondent, Jerry King. The scenes border area attacking them from • .Installed and serviced and Akram Baher, who were on the film were taken from behind. Also, in the case of arrested in 1968 and 1969. Follow- Lebanese territory. negotiated settlement of the •Key type and keyless ing the Iraqi government's adoption The Israeli order on the film Lebanese connict, the Palestinians on Nov. 26, 1975 of a resolution en- reached Mr. King al the Lebanese would be asked by Syria and • Automatic timing titling ail Iraqi Jews who left Iraq Christian post here. "Our ha'.lds Lebanon lo implement the 1969 after 194g to return home and enjoy reach into Lebanon," an · Israeli Cairo agreements, which restricted control to shut off equal rights with Iraqi citizens un- soldier cxplain·cd. " I have orders to the Palestinian military presence to dcr the law, Amnesty appealed" to get the film." · refugee camps in Lebanon and to after 1 to 5 minutes! President Ahmed Hassan Al-Bakr A few months ago, there were vir- certain regions in the south of the for information about Soffer and tuaily no right-wing Christian ·country. Baher l)ut no reply has been rccciv- soldiers in this area. Now there arc The agreements were never fully ed. Unconfirmed reports say they about 1,800, according to local put into effect. kt.DIA TOR & may have died in prison. political figures. Israel, it would appear from BOS TON ,:< ;fj Y WO~~.. The report also describes the case Many or most of these arc un- today's tour of the border region, of Alexander Leon Aronson; a derstood to have come here from has taken measures effectively Jewish male nurse from The Israel, fransp,;,rted by sea from enabling the Israeli Government to GA 1-26'25 Netherlands, who traveled to -Iraqi Haifa to Junieh, in Christian veto any moves to carry out the Kurdishtan in the summer of 1974 territory north' of Beirut. No direct Cairo agreements.

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THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976-21 Argentine Pres._Hosts Gathering BUENOS AIR~ (JTA): Two agogues and by members of the Officially Seek Cardinals of the Catholic Church' Jewish CQmmunity. DR LEONG. BURT, INC. -and rq,rcaentatiVC1 of nine other At al.I times a positive response Observer Office Chri ■ tian and non-Chri1ti1n and support was forthcoming from 1804 MINERAL SPRING AVE.. NORIB PROVIDENCE, R.I denominations, including a rabbi of government authorities, Anidjar VIENNA (JTA): The Palesti ne Liberation Organization has of­ ANNOUNCF.s the Jewish community and a said. He expressed hope that "the Moslem, were the guests of fact that we sat around the fi cially requested permission to .. THE ASSOCIATION OF JOSEPH F. OSMANSKI O.D. open an observer office in Vienna, a President Jorge Rafael Vidcla of Presidential table in a climate of government spokesman said. ANDTHECONTINUATIONOFITS I Argentina at an ecumenical peace, harmony and understanding Farouk Kaddoumi. leader of the luncheon The pthering wu will rcncet on the Argentine OPTOMETRIC PRACTICE here. PLO's political department, and his hailed u proof of cultural and Republic's peace and tranquility as (FORMERLY CONDUCTED BY DR. LEON G. BURT deputy, Zaid Kamal, made the rcligio111 pluralism in this country. befits this generous land. This is the request during talks with Fomgn IN ASSOCIATION WITH DR. JOSEPH F. OSMANSKI) Rabbi Salomon Banhamu wish of the entire Jewish com­ Ministry officials. Anidjar, of the Buenos Aires munity," Anidjar said. TEL. 353-2200 The observer office is designed to congregation, who was provided Others who attended the carry out activities in connection with kosher food, told reporters luncheon agreed that the dialogue with the Vienna-based international afterwards that he was grateful for was substantive, conducted in an at­ organizations to which the PLO is the opportunity afforded the mosphere of cordiality without any PARK AVENUE KOSHER accredited. The organizations in­ representatives of different faiths to moments of tension. volved arc the Vienna-based Inter­ DELICATESSEN meet with the President to consider national Atomic Energy Agency 6-.0 PA RK AVE CRA NST O~ · - problems of the country _and · HERALD ADS bring to your (IA EA) and the United Nations In­ theological and religious matters. doorstep a wide variety of merchan­ dustrial Development Organization WEEK LONG SPECIALS He said he was aware of reports dise and services. Take advantage (UNIDO). DEC. 1~.J.6 _ abroad about an anti-Semitic cam­ of the Herald before yo u go out on "We told them to submit their paign in Argentina and referred to your next shopping trip. You may request to the organizations and COOKED IN_ OUR OWN KITCHEN the aitacks suffered by some syn- be pleasantly surpri sed. they promised to do so," the RRARE REG. 8 spokcsmafi said. "The subsequent oast B su, ll. oNlY 3• 9 la. CANTONESE& procedure is that the organizations then turn to us for permission to CARRIAQ,E TRADE - R_EG. Sf( l!- oz~1.N AMERICAN FOODS open an office." The opening of a 2/1109 hoti< Disltes • DriMs For full PLO office for propaganda was Portuguese Sardanes • not discussed, the tpokesman add­ TIM "Epicur-" ed . REPEAT OF A SEUOUTI 1-tiful N- Coditwil l ...., Kaddoumi"s visit was postponed OUR OWN Takt-Nt StrYict FtJ All FNlls several times because of the PLO's concern over the Lebanon situa­ s,~~i,. Rte. 136, S4t Mttwc- Awe., lristel tion. The Austrian Foreign Chopped Herrin ONLY 1e 79 ll. ~ ' Alllpl, Pull-. 2SJ-4414 Minister, Willipald Pahr, who is currently at the UN General OPEN DAILY A FINE RESTAURANT TO ENJOY Now is the tlmo to orde~ your Assembly in New York, was not 9 AM - 6 PM Wh• Ywl., .... O.~ able lo receive Kaddoumi. which New Y oar's Evo Party Platten. made internal discussions about SAT . 7 AM · 6 PM Compare our prico ■ . We PARTY FAClllTIIS AVARAIU such a meeting purely academic. SUN. 7 AM - 1 PM have everybody boat. S1111. tlin, Fri. 12 t. 11 Selw~ J .. 11 The opposition Conservative CLOSED MONDAY Pcople"s Party has opposed the Holiday Greetings opening of a PLO office and main­ tains that Pahr should not receive RHODE ISLAND PHILHARMONIC Kaddoumi since he represents a F,011( ,, Mo dt>ir a M v\1c D 1rPCf.Jr terrorist organization. )ot,.ire1oy Conct> r t\ V e t eran\ A ud1 t or1un' 8 )C P ~ To Renew

Villages Issue RAYMOND JERUSALEM (JAn: The long JACKSON debat<:d issue of Arab villages of pianist lkrit and Birim in northern Israel is about to be revived. MK Yoss i PROGRAM of the Labor said Variations on a Theme of Haydn ...... Brahms he would ask the Alignment's Cen­ tral Committee to support the Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major .. .. • .... Beethoven return of villagers to those sites Introduction and Polonaise fro111 from which they were evacuated 28 years ago. "Christmas Eye" ...... Rimski-Korsakov The Birim villagers arc Maronite "Nutcracker" Suite ...... Tchaikovsky WmterHours Christians a:nd those from lkrit arc &may 12:00 Noon to 10:00 P.M. of the Greek Orthodox faith. They CAROL SINGING BY THE AUDIENCE LlllCheon served Tues. to Fri. from 11 :;IO A.M. were relocated after Israel's war for Tickets $7-$6-$5 ...... 831 -3123 Omer Tues. to fri. Iii 10:JQ,J>'M./Sat. independence in 1948 on grounds of t• 11:00 P.M. - Closed Mondays security anb promised they could or moil self-addressed stomped envelope to Rhode Island Philhar­ Accepting Clvis1lnas Party Reservations Now! return to their homes once the monic Orchestra, 334 Westminster Mall, Providence, Rhode Island' Valet Parki1g i1 Sena situation on the northern borders 02903 stabilized. _<:2L ftm, .f/1,,/im, ,1,;,,·,~r ~ - But three years later the army 171 AtWells Avenue . Provtdtt1ct Call 751 · 3333 declared the village sites a security zone and razed all of the buildings. The matter has long been a sore spot in Israel's relations with its Arab population, particularly as the SOPHISTICATED SUEDE Birim and Ikrit villagers arc friendly to the Jewish State. A court order GOLD with a directed their return but the governmc'nt decided otherwise in Different Look 1972 despite peaceful protests by Arabs and Jewish supporters. The political climate has changed' since then. For one thing, Israel has opened its borders to Maronitc Christians from southern Lebanon and their co-religionists in Israel feel \hey should be allowed the same freedom of movement. For another, Golda Meir, who was adamantly opposed to return is no longer in office. The Labor Alignment, no longer · under Mrs. Meir's influence, may change its position on the issue and this could lead to a changc,_i n l he government's position, sources here said. a striking carrier that snaps! ALMOGI TOURING TEL AVIV (JTA): , Just one item in the complete line of portfolios, chairman of the ~cwish Agtncy, -is executive diari~s, activifies planners and pocket touring several Latin Amcric\m Jewish communities. In addition to secretaries available at: meeting with communal leaders to discuss aliya, education and com­ RELIABLE GOLD LTD. munal affairs, he will also meet with ·· jewelers t-ERE3ERT'S the World Zionist Organization Offlaa~ Ina. emissaries who were il\•t released . ,,,,-;;it 861-lJ. If ' ~81 W11yltmd Allfflue ... W11yl,md Squ11re 1139 N. ~AIN ST! from detention in Argentina. ot PROV/ P"WT LINE 728-1800 Almogi's visit had been scheduled long before that incident occurred. ' - ·------

22-THE RHOE>E ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976

CAMP NAOMI · ~-.:.Y.).TYc-~ Hebron Events Sharpen Focus "Four Decades" AAYMONO. MAINE ! Vii.~-•~~ Serving' - S.bogo Loh lcgieti Children and Youth of Southem Moine ~~~"'•~lfC\),"""" Upon Jewis~-Arab Interactions OUTSTANDING CO-ID CAMI' f0a IOYS & OIRLI JERUSALEM (JTA): The ugly ing Jewish property destroyed by 1-15 YIARS Of AGI after Yorn Kippur. He described events in Hebron over the Yorn located on hundred1 of woodkmd oc.'res tn Scenic Moine Arab rioters in 1929 when 63 the desecration as "a real pogrom." Kippur weekend have brought into · Beautiful loke1 - Comple~ Aquatics Program - All lond Sport, ~ PK>nttr Hebron Jews were massacred and He said later o n a radio interview and Tripping Programs - Jewish-Culture - Dietary Low, c::>bs.er..d- Profes-­ sharp focus the long smoldering the rest driven o ut of the town. The that if there had been Jewish acts of stOnol Stoff - Emphasis on Group liYN'lg - Tutorir.g AvoiiatMe _ Exciting problem of Jewish-Arab relations most recent confrontations between "foolhardiness" they didn't com­ and Voritid Program of ActiYit.es _ on the West Bank. If anything, they Kiryat Arba Jews and Hebron pare to what he called a deliberate, have hardened opinions among Arabs occurred when the former premeditated Arab a tta c k Accredited Camp -American C~mpmg Associatio-n those Israelis who believe the laid claim to the ruins of the ancient motivated by hatred. for -hure end """llcati.. C--t Y-• . government must be scrupulously Ohel Avraham synagogue razed by Jew,1~ Community C-r or even-handed and others who insist the Arabs 47 years ago . Liberal opinion was equally . JEWi_SH CQM_MUMITY CEMTElt CAMPS, llilC. · that Jewish rights are paramount The desecration of Jewish predictable. "Doves" linked the UOMINI M. K.. owita, laecuti•• DiNC:et and that the Arabs must be dealt religious artifacts in the Machpela vandali sm to "incitement" by 50 H•11t St., _Weteftow11, M~11. 02172_-Tol, 1617) 924-2030 with harshly, in effect, "taught a Cave on ·the eve of the Day of Levinger and his followers. The lesson." Atonement understandably enraged independent newspaper Haaretz The wide gap between "hawks" Jews all over Israel. The damage sharply criticized the government and "doves" has serious political done by Arab vandals was shown today for "appeasement" of ramifications, especially with o n television and in newspaper Levinger and his followers and ac­ national elections due to be held photographs. While for many Jews cused the government of a "flabby" next year. The government has been their initial sense of wrathful in­ s t ance t owa rd the militant walking a tightrope, firmly pulling dignation gave way to mo re pensive Orthodox group. down Arab rioting on the West bitterness. the Gush have seized on The Likud oppositio n bloc, Bank while at the same time, the episode to castigate the which supports the Gush, has called restricting Jewish access to towns government for allege d the Knesset into special session like Hebron which contain shrines "appeasement" of the Arabs and to tomorrow to debate the Hebron holy to religious Jews and Moslems demand "iron-fisted'' measures violence. The Cabinet is scheduled alike. · against the la1ter. to meet o n the matter before the The government's hope is to They are pressing their demands Knesset con'Venes . Defense Minister avoid violence between Jews and for access 10 the Ohel Avraham syn­ Shimon Peres, who was at Hebron Arabs. Critics on both sides have agogue and fo r total Jewish control yesterday in an unusually grim accused the Rabin administration of the Machpela Cave where Jews mood, met today with Welfare of procrastination. The "doves" arc a nd Moslems a rc permitted to Minister Zevulun Hammer of the angered by the government's reluc­ worship at different times, The N R P's "young guard." Hammer is tance to take action against the Gush now insist that the cave be close to the Gush and to the Kiryat militant Gush Emunim, whose base closed to Moslem wo rshippers until Arba residents. Peres apparently is is the Orthodox township of Kiryat after the Succoth festival after tryi ng to enlist his support to cool Arba adjacent to Hebron and who which the government should tempers. USE YOUI IAf« AMIIICAID 01 MASTR CHAIGII have consistently dc'fied review the entire matter of dual Security sources said today that government orders to keep out of prayer rights. ( no changes were planned at present the Arab town. 'Real Popom' in the prayer procedures at Hebron, S.-tten View Religio us Affairs Minister At any rate, changes would have to The recent failure of the military Yitzhak Raphael of the National be decided on the Cabinet level, not [ot[Olll9DiEH authorities lo enforce their arrest of Religious Party, visited the cave by the Military Government. 4S SEEKONK ST .. PROV. ~~..::- Kiryat Arba's leader and prime agitator, Rabbi Moshe Levinger, who entered Hebron last week in Poland Will Restore direct violation of the Military BEDSPREAD Government's orders, is cited as a case in point. The continued 1,000 Jewish Graves presence of Gush Emunim squatters at Kadum in the heart of NEW YORK: The Polish rabbinical a nd Hasidic MILL OUTLET Arab populated Samaria is another. government has committed itself organizations in the United States 3 9 Ke nn e dy Plaza P rov 86 1-95 3 6 The Cabinet decided last May that for the first time to the principle of and Canada, was organized more Betwee n C,ty Hall a n d Post Office , the squatters would be removed to the restoration and preservation or than a year ago to raise the issue an alternative settlement site ap­ an estimated 1,000 Jewish with the Polish government. After a proved by the government. But so cemeteries in Poland, most of which year of negotiations, he said, the far, no attempt has been made to arc in very poor condition, a New committee was invited to send the B£AUTIFUL YET PRACTICAL GIFT IDEAS implement that edict. York rabbinical official has delegation to Warsaw to discuss the • Bedspreads, available in 50 styles. The Gush, supported by religious reported. problem. All sizes from crib to· Icing. and nationalist elements, insist that Rabbi Hertz Frankel, secretary Frankel also said that an effort to the West Bank belongs to Israel by of the Rabbinical Committee for work out details of the implementa­ • Warm ~omforters in 15 styles. divine mandate and that Jews have Preservation of Jewish Cemeteries, tion of the commitment would be • Thermal blankets in 6 colors. the right to settle 'anywhere in that said the Polish government's com­ made at a second meeting with territory and, especially, to worship mitment developed rrom Polish officials by another com­ • Ar..-'• largest select~ of children's bedspreads. freely at Jewish shrines there. negotiations in Warsaw between a mittee delegation. He said the com­ • Brau ·bedspread valet (holds bedspread at night, Although Kiryat Arba is a separate delegation of four rabbis and a position of the second delegation township, its residents have been fayman with Kazimierz Kakol, .ind arrangements for the second folds away by day). demanding the establishment of a Polish Minister of Religious Af­ round of talks in Warsaw should be permanent Jewish presence in Arab fairs, last month. completed by Oct. 25. Moslem Hebron. 1 He noted that the committee, The rabbi stated that the U.S. They say they arc merely reclaim• representing all major Orthodox government, through its am­ OPEN : Mon. - Sat. 9: 30 to 5: 30 bassador in Warsaw, was helpful in reaching the initial agreement. Help Thursday night till 8:30 Rabin: USSR Prevents also was received from William Perry, of New York, a survivor of .' lenty of parking oppos lf e our doorstep the Holocaust, who is · now an of­ ~econvening Of Talks ficial of a local of the International longshoreman's Association. Perry JERUSALEM (JTA)"- Premier negotiate an overall peace was the layman .in the delegation. Yitzhak ·Rabin charged last night settlement with the Arabs at Frankel said the Polish that the Soviet Union prevents the Geneva on the basis of the original government's acceptance of the FRED iil SPIGEL'S reconvening of the 'Geneva peace invitations or, alternatively, to seek principle was confirmed in a letter conference on the basis of the agreements with its neighbors to to the committee, dated Sept. 13, original invitations extended to the end the state of war. from Kakol in which the official MEAT MARKET parties in the Middle East conflict The Premier said the Soviet stated that some of the Jewish by the Secretary General of the Union could play -a role in es­ Cemeteries "will be recognized as United Nations following .the Yorn tablishing peace in the Middle East, historical monuments while the Kippur War. The Russians have "but to do so, it must change its ap­ others will be continuously main­ adopted a policy of total support proach, its policy and its attitude." tained without this special status," for the most extremist Arab states, As of now, he said, the Soviet policy Rabbi Menachem M. Rubin, Rabin said on a television inter­ in the Middle East has been to former grand rabbi of Muzsay, view. propose the military option to the Poland, now of Brooklyn, is chair­ He made his remarks when asked Arab states in their struggle against man · of the committee. Affiliated if Israel's apparent interest in keep• Israel by means · of huge arms organizations are the Central Rab­ ing the Soviet Union out of Middle - shipments to the most extreme binical Congress of the United Arab states. East diplomatic activity might not States and Canada; the former make that country a sworn enemy The interview, conducted on the Hasidic grand rabbis of Bluzsov, MEDI UM CUT · of Israel. Rabin said, "To the best occasion of the first anniversary of Bobov and Novominsk; the Rab­ the Israeli-Egyptian interim binical Alliance of America; the $ LB of my knowledge, it is the Soviet VEAL CHOPS 1.79 Union which, through its policy, agreement in Sinai elicited from the Rabbinical Council of America and decided that Israel would be its Premier an acknowledgment that the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of sworn enemy, not lsr~el that decid• there had been Egyptian violations the United States and Canada. of the accord during the year. ed this." "These are of se<;ondary military ALIYAH DESK OPEN He said the Soviets were the main significance but we should sec that NEW YORK : The United supporters of the PLO. "If the they are corrected," he said without Synagogue of America, Soviet Union continues to cling to elaborating on their nature. congregational arm of · 1.5 million its extremist anti-Israel policy I see However, Rabin said that the Egyp­ synagogue-affiliated Jews in North ' no reason why Israel' need' be tians appeared to be interested in America, announced the es­ interested in its initiatives," Rabin observing the agreement and were tablishment of an Aliyab Desk said ~ On ll\lf ' jftHer "hand, he likely· to col\tiriue· to do so in the within an exoanded I~rael Affairs '• rci'!eraicd iha(Is~ael 'is'prellarcd to fo're.sileaglc''futUrb'.0 '' Depa'rti{li: rii'.' 1"' ,,.-,, ' . · I ,.-~----.. · r-=-···.. ··---- =-----~------,.. ·--o---=--=------=- .:. THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1976-23

US Urged To Stop Flirtation LOOKING FOR an apartment, place a Classified advertisement in Yadin· Forms something used, a service? Find it in the Herald, call 724-0200 to ask With 'Palestinian State' Idea the Herald Classified secti(!n. To about rates. WASHINGTON (JTA): The ground for a relentless irredentist Ne.w Party United States should abandon its attack on the Jewish State," she JERUSALEM: The formation of "creeping toward tacit recognition" · said. a new political party called the STONE'S KOSHER MARKET of the Palestinian Liberati<>n "Even the non-radical Arab "Democratic Movement!' has been 780 HOPE STREET . 421:.«>271 PROVIDENCE Organization and "stop flirting" states," she added, " must by now announced by Yigal Yadin, former Open Every Monday with the idea of a Palestinian state, fully realize that the PLO is more a chief of staff and a world renowned a former U.S. official-of the United threat to their integrity than to archaeologist. Money-Saving Specials States told B'nai B'rith·. Israel." Absorption of the refugees He listed a group of 78 people who will be the "founding group" Chic en Rita ·Hauser, U.S. representative by the' Arab states would "wreck Undercut , Middle teer of the new movement and said they to the UN Human Rights Commis­ the remaining effectiveness of the will seek to win enough scats in next . Roast Chuck liver legs sion during the-Nixon administra­ PLO, allowing Jordan and possibly Syria to move toward a settlement year's Knesset election to be able to tion, also urged a halt to American with Israel," Mrs. Hauser declared. form a government. support of UN refugee camps, Yadin's announcement.has raised contending that U.S. policy of pay­ Mrs. Hauser said that perpetua­ -1.39 u. 89 '.!. 59 'u. 65~. speculation that a center coalition ing the bulk of coats, tion of the refugee camps had made refugee may be created to contest the gover­ however humanitari1m in motive, it easy in the past for the Arab states to exploit the refugees as ning Labor Alignment and the op­ had "substantially contributed" to "surrogate fighters against Israel, position Likud. Suggestions have the lack qf a Middle Easr peace whose blood was cheap indeed·." been made that it include Yadin's solution. A "hard-nosed insistence" Only when the PLO "did the un­ movement, the new party formed on the Arab world absorbing the thinkable" and "tnreatened Arab by Ariel Sharon, the Free Center refugees "would have been the far Party, the Independent Liberals, the wiser policy," she declared. leadership in Jordan and Syria directly, did Arab brotherly support Shinui movement and the Civil Mrs. Hauser's views were in a present another face," s!!_e said. Rights Movement. speech she was to have delivered at the annual meeting of the B'nai B'rith International Council. "Racist' Passage Removed From Film Unable to attend, she submitted the In a response to a suggestion "Having taken the opportunity text for distribution at the opening from the American Jewish to listen once more to the in­ session or the four-day meeting. Congress, Marcel Ophuls, director criminating passage in a cinema Chaim Herzog, Israel's am­ of the widely-praised film "The performance, I've come to the bassador to the United Nations, Memory of Justice," has removed a conclusion that it should be remov­ delivered a major address on the passage from the documentary ed from the film . I agree with you forthcoming UN General Assembly which had described as "somewhat and others that the statement of-the debate. Joseph J. Sisco, former un­ racist" an Israeli law calling for the actual provisions in the Israeli law Expert Service -- 331-5610 I dersecretary of state for political af­ death penalty for war crimes and under which Eichmann was tried is I I .• 1\,0 M -' IN <; T PR O V RI fairs and now president of crimes against humanity. just not accurate enough, in the American University, received the In the offending passage in the context of my casual conversation B'nai B'rith President's Medal for film, the impression was left that with Prof. Taylor, to be a fair re0ec­ his services to the U.S. gover11ment. the Israeli law was directed only at tion of our views. MELZER'S RELIGIOUS GOODS crimes against Jews. In fact, the law ASSESSES PLO THREAT - under which Adolf Eichmann "That's why I cut the entire VERY LARGE • CANDLES e BOOKS. was execut~d - authorizes capital reference to the Eichmann case out AND Mrs. Hauser warned that crea­ punishment without regard to the of my film some ten days ago." • DECORATIONS tion of a PLO-dominated West religion or nationality of the victim. Mr. Schatz responded to Mr. UNUSUAL Bank state between Israel and Jor­ Julius Schatz, director of the Ophuls' actions in an open letter to • DREIDELS • RECORDS _ . SELECTION dan would preclude the stability AJCongress' Commission on the N~w York Time,. The American e ISRAELI GIFT needed for peace between Arab~ Jewi sh Life and Culture, wrote a Jewish Congress spokesman said ·.Q OF ' and Israelis. Events in Lebanon, letter to the director that Mr. " It is good to report that as eminen; ITEMS where the PLO has had an Orphuls had apparently mis­ a fil,:nmaker as Marcel Ophuls will ISRAELI MENORAHS • GIFT WRAPS instigating role in Lebanon's civil understood the Israeli statute. repair a fact ual error in his work Aid electric Menorah1) war, "supports fully" Israel's Mr. Orphuls expressed gratitude when it is brought to his atten­ refusal to accept a Palestinian state to Mr. Schatz "for the courtesy of tion . ... Here indeed is an example SIX VOLUME ENCYCLOPEDIA JUDAICA which "could become a staging your critical remarks. of an artist dedicated to the truth." FOR YOUTH "MY JEWISH WORLD." AVAILABLE NOW AT A 50% DISCOUNT FOR A LIMITED TIME $39.95 W!II Deport War Criminals NOW AVAILABLE: JEWIS_l:L~ATALOGUE VOL. II WASHINGTON: The US Im- sics. Edgars Laipenieks, 63, of San 831-1710 831-5813 migration And Naturalization Ser­ Bolcsslaus Maikovskis, 72, of Diego. who is accused of killings in vice has announced it will institute Minfola, N.Y .. who was sentenced the Central Prison of Riga in I 941. pi;oceedings to deport- three aliens to death in absentia by a Riga Edm unds Gustav Macs, 72, of Seat­ living in the United States and strip Court on murder charges. Karl Lin­ tle, who has been charged with four US naturalized citizens of their nas. 57, of Greenlawn, N.Y., who complicity in wartime murders in ci tizenship as a result of was sentenced to death in absentia Lumbazu, Lativ·a, and Sergei investigatio11_S of alleged murder in the Soviet Union for murders Kovalchuk, also Kowalczuk, 50, of and · atrocities, primarily against co mm itted while he was ad­ Philadelphi a, accused of complicity Jews in Eastern Europe, before and minis~tor of the Nazi Concentra­ in the killing of Jews in Lubomil, ,. during World War II . ti on Camp at Tartu, Estonia. The Ukraine. The INS declined to identify the ~~~·,~ ~~t~ ,~~ ~. seven pending formal start of the Modified Conversion Courts FASHION legal proceedings. A .spokesman 22'9 Minenl Sprin& A.. . Cmtndale, R.I. told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency Opposed By Sephardic Rabbi 231-9340 tha~ the deportation action will begin in about a month. JERUSALEM: Rabbi Ovadia sored by Chief Rabbi Goren. JEWELRY, HANDBAGS & SCARVES The INS said its decision to act Yossef, Israel's Sephardi Chief However, although more than JR. AND MISSES against the alleged Nazi war Rabbi, is opposed to moves to I00 men and women ugraduatc" es­ from the courses every four months, SPECIAL TY FASHIONS · criminals followed the return from tablish special rabbinical conver­ EVENING & SPORTSWEAR lsrael of Paul Vincent, Chief Trial sion courts which would shorten the their· conversions are delayed Attorney who- interviewed 32 of normal conversion procedures to because, except for Chief Rabbi them. In addition, all 32 indicated two years or more through the Goren, few rabbis are willing to Landlubber Jeans 20% off willingness to come to the United regular Biltei Din . speed up the conversion itself. States to testify in person, the INS Rabbi Shlomo Goren, Ashkenazi MUSICAL PROTEST said. Chief Rabbi, who feels that the JERUSALEM : An unusual Rep. Elizabeth Holtsman (D- present conversion process is un- demoostration was staged outside N. Y.) described the INS action as necessarily harsh, supports the the Finnish Embassy in Tel Aviv by "a very important development," proposed courts. , Victor Voran, a Soviet Jewish ,W,t,.'.1t rn.ovi.n.3 up in; the wor(r£. . and "particularly gratifying" since He already supervises a "conver­ emigrant cellist, to draw, attention it is "apparently the direct sion plan" in Netanya and under­ to the refusal of the Soviet nxJW .consequence of my insistence, that takes several dozen conversions authoritfes to allow members of his Jes €n,fant~ is IAfJ r,talr.s­ the service seek witnesses and which, as Chief Rabbi, he is entitled family to Join him. a.t Ca;-r s - Io 1 aajaC st. documentation in these cases from to do. Yoran, 38, who came to Israel in sources in the state of -Israel. But he cannot keep pace with the 1969, placed his cello on the Although the actions," she said, demands and he recently applied to pavement and quietly played pieces "do not make up for nearly 30 years the Attorney-General for -an opi­ of music by Bach, Ravel and other of immigration Service delay and nion whether the establishment of composers. neglect, they do offer the hope that the special conversion courts apart . His wife, Stella Goldberg, his son the United States will no longer be a from the Batei Din would be per­ and parents have been persistently haven for persons accused.of some- missible. denied exit visas by the ~oviet of the most atrocious crimes in Israeli law is based on a 1927 authorities in spite of repeated human history." code which specifies that in- applications by the family and Although the INS refused to dividuals may legally change their appeals by scores of world famous identify the seven, six of them have religion provided that this is musicians. been 1named by other sources as the authorized by the head of the com- "I have tried everything else, following: ' munity concerned. perhaps this will get through to Andria Artukovic, 76, of' Surf- The two Chief Rabbis want to es- them." Yoran said. side, California former Minister of tablish how the term "community The Finnish Embassy has been Justice and Internal Affairs in the head" may be interpreted. looking ·after Soviet interests in Nazi Puppet Regime of. A11te Because of the long delays i~ lsruel since 1967, 'when the Soviet Pavelic in Crotia, who was charged processing conversiori appli,cation.s Union broke 'diplomatic relations by· the post war Yugoslav by the Batei Din, some 80 percent during the Six-Day War. The Dutch government with the murder of of applicants are bei,ig sent to Embassy in Moscow looks after thousands of Jews, Serbs and Gyp•-·:-. special' seminars on Judaism s~n~ lsr"eli interest ill the Soviet Union. - ,------.-- i 24-THE RHQDE 1:~LAN~ HERALD, FRIDAY, DE<;:EMBER 10, 197_!> Are There Sinister Dealings Israelis Shocked THAT'S WHAT WE AIE':d Between Israel & S. Africa By Girl's Suicide JERUSALEM: Many Israelis - VEl UNITED' NATIONS, NY: human rights, the Soviet Union and have been shocked by the apparent __ :!~~~~~~ ~:~!.•~~- Rumor has - it that a sinister Eastern Europe, averse to dirtying suicide by poison of lbtiasam our Association with a Nationw.icle Cooperative of relationship exists between Israel their hands in Soutll Africa trade. A Habashi , a 28-year-old Arab C hri s­ and South Africa, The charge is be­ recent International Monetary Agents enables tian woman of El Arish in northern T~vel (GIANTS) us to give our ing advanced by forces within the Fund study shows that in 1974 Sinai, who was expected to marry a Clients the Greatest Possible Service at· no Extra third world as well as receiving sup­ South Africa exported goods worth 37-year-old Haifa Jew. -Chaige! port from the Soviet Union, The some S5 million to the Soviet bloc, The two met when the Haifa focus is Israel's trade and arms sale and imported nearly S25 million man. who was divorced, was ser­ Come in and ask Mildred Chase and Martha Finger to South Africa, as evidenced by the worth from it. vi ng in El Arish during reserve abou, our cruises and tours throughout the world • or controversial resolution condcm- The same report shows that military duty. call 83F5200. - ~ ning Israel which was adopted by South Africa has trade relations, l_t is understood that Habashi was the General Assembly recently, amounting to millions of dollars, _ under great pressure from her fami­ "You, P/easu,, Is Our iusiness" Commercial dealings with South with four members of the United ly to break relations with her friend. Houn: Daily 9-5:30; Sat. 9-1. Ev ... by Appt, Africa should rightfully be frowned Nations Special Committee Against but she was ready to conve rt to upon alld it is certainly intolerable Apartheid (which recently issued a Judaism and went to Haifa. to engage in arms traffic with the report condemning Israel for its She was returned to El Arish by apartheid regime. However, it relations with South Africa: East Israeli police. o n the grounds that appear~ cynical, hypocritical and Germany, Haiti, Hungary. Peru - residents of the occupied a reas we re down right anti-Semitic to single two rightist dictatorships and two not a ll owed to li ve in Israel without Communist regimes. united in cant out Israel as the main culprit. a permit. She was later found dead. and opportunism. Despite determined and and an inquiry has been opened. As for Israel's small arms trade systematic attempts to suppress it. Police sources said that Habashi the truth may be dpcumcnted that (six patrol boats and a missile was returned at the request of the scores of countries trade with South system for them) - which I do not Military Government. Africa, including 19 black African condone - it is dwarfed into in­ states. This trade, alone, outweighs significance by the South African Israel's si nce it amounts to many arms traffic of other countries. LOOKING FOR an apartment. hundreds of millions of dollars an­ France above all. but also Britain, something used. a service? Find it in nually. the United States. West Germany, the Herald Classified section. To The 19 arc Angola, Botswana, Italy , Belgium , Switzerland. place a Classified advertisement in Central African Republic, Chad. Canada: Jordan, the Soviet Union the Herald. call 724-0.200 to ask about rates. OPEN CHRISTMAS EVE - FRIDAY - DEC. 24th Congo, Gabon. Ghana, Ivory and Czechoslovakia have been in­ Coast, Lesotho, Liberia. Malagasy volved over many years in the sale. OPEN NEW YEAR'S EVE - FRIDAY - DEC. 31st. Republic. Malawi-, Mauritius, licensing or construction of a vast Mozambique. Nigeria, Senegal, array of military-related equipment NEW APEX FARE Swaziland. Zaire. Zambia, amounting to many billions o f TO Their economic dealings with dollars. 'Japanese Steak House South Africa are nourishing and Who are Israel's accusers? India. ISRAEL in Jamco Building growing: large-scale imports and a leading member of the United exports of raw materials, building Nations Apartheid Commit\eC, is a 1270 Mineral Spring Ave., equipment, pharmaceuticals and typical. It brazenly points th!: finger $562 No. Providence, Rhode Island foods; airline passenger and freight at Israel while it secretly makes Subject to Jl_Ovt.~proval connections; rai lway projects; ship-­ atom bombs out of nuclear CALL FUR DETAILS CALL N9W FOR RESERVATIONS 728-7970 ping lines; construction of office materials furnished for peaceful uses. destroys its people's civi l liber­ Mon. thru Frt. - LUNCH 11:30 to 2:30 p.m. buildings, hotels a nd housing; 781-4200 tourism; technical aid in disease ties. and practices its own version of HOURS: SUN. & fRI. Mon. thru Thin. - DINNER 5:30 p.m. lo 10:30 p.m. control; construction. engineering apartheid in the treatment of its 50 Frt. & Sal. - DINNER 5:30 lo 11:30 p.m. and. metallurgical equipment for million _wretched untouchables. 9 •·•· to 4 , . ■. What price hypocrisy? Nothing MON. THRU THURS. SUNDAY DINNER 4 lo I p.m. copper and diamond mines; finan­ cial investments, development loans less than peace and justice. 9 •·•· to 9 ,.11. Proper Dress Requl!ed and long-term credit arrangements. Strlklall..tuce 60% INTERMARRIAGE ore Mozambique is the most striking JERUSALEM: A World Zionist 11 instance of this symbiotic Organization official reported to­ i· relationship. Despite the militantly day that the inter-marriage rate is I soaring in Latin America, reaching anti-apartheid, anti-Western, WINKLEMAN~ TRAVEL Marxist ideology of this newly 60 percent in some places. Haim Finkelstein. head. of the WZO's 241 Reservoir A venue independent country, its economic eductation department who just relations with Pretoria arc varied Providence, R . I. 02907 returned from a five-week tour of and thriving. South Africa is its Latin America, said in a report to second-biggest customer and the the WZO Executive that he was LIGHT CANDLES IN PROV. largest source (nearly one-half) of particularly discouraged by the DEC. 10 - 3:57 p.m. its total foreign-exchange earnings. apathy of many local Jews to this DEC. 17 - 3:58 p.m . ALL STORES - PRICES EFFECTIVE DEC. 10-DEC. 16 The most astounding aspect, situation. economically and morally, of black KOSHER - HEBREW NATIONAL - Africa's relations with South Africa concerns the blacks who work in COOKED IN OUR OWN KITCHEN - SAVE 3 98 South African gold, dia!llond, platinum; uranium and coal mines. $1.~o~~D • CLASSIFIED CORNED BEEF Hundreds of thousands of. migrant laborers from neighboring countries - Botswana, Lesotho, CALL 724-0200 Swaziland, _Mozambique, Malawi, Vl:J A IMPROVED Angola and others - work .under SAVE arrangements that· can only be 3-Apartments for Rent 33-Painting, Papering 20( JAR 1 described as sweetheart contracts TASTEE BITS lhz.JAR between the black governments and FIVE ROOMS, fint floor. Yellow stove ,PAINTING: Interior and exterior. .69 and refrigerator, two oir con<:li­ Wallpapering expertly done. Gener· South African companies. tioners, carpeting. Garage. 751 - al cleaning, walls and woodwork. The nearly 180,000 Mozambican , 75_85. Free estimates. Coll Freeman Gray gold miners are paid, for example, ond Sons, 934-0585. ' tf .· ROKEACH ·- KOSHER only 40 percenT of their wagQ; in• 19-General Services . South African ·currency_ The 35-Private Instruction CHEESE . SAVE rcmain_ing 60 percent is paid not to - CEUARS AND ATTICS cleaned. Rea­ 14( PIIG. the work e1's but to tlieir sonable. 274-7675. TUTOR: Moth a nd all sciences. PKG.65( Grades 7 through 12. Teacher in ·cRAC-KERS Government, in gold bullion. Only public schoo\ system. Available ofter when the miners ·go home after con­ · sc hool hours. Please call 751 -3469. tracts have expired docs their FURNITURE ond n,g cleon;ng, BOB 12/ 31 ..._ Government pay them the rest of SUGG. 17 years with MacQuattie HOPE STAHT ONLY HOPE STREET ONLY Services, Inc . (now dissolved). 433- · their wages; but only in local 20lM. 42-Special Notices currency, while the state keeps the 12/ 31 KOSHER FRESH MEATS gold: This deal gives Mozambique a EAST SIDE: Widow wishes to shore J•'f-h-'-✓ 1--..,,,~~(•• 1,1A,\' -:."i-,1-'\,•-~k',J ~, profit of over 200 percent on the her own home with woman. Private ..,. ~ ,.,. f- , \. i ~ ~ :. • i i F f' ' i , , t '," ~ '.; bedroom. Convenient to shopping sweat of its citizens: a subsidy to the STATEWIDE '• •',I ► -.''.' :, ,'\ "..ii /', [ : ,\ f' ·-..,\ 'lJ i.:', I:, ' · oreo, 331 -3886. black Marxist state for supplying CLEANING & indentured scryants to the white JANITORIAL MASSAGES for ladies only. Rita ot the Arena Club. Seven days, five apartheid state, SERVICE is now 1cc1p1ing n;ghts. 10 a.m.-1 0 p.m.-861-2696. KOSHER - CUT FROM HEAVY STEER IEEF The lraeles 1 39 ROOMMATE ·WANTED: Female (29) Israel's dca~i ngs with South ..... ,...... Africa arc outweighed by black • desires to shore apartment with .MIDDLE CHUCK < GENERAL -HOUSECLEANING same. Hectic schedule be per• :~LUND -• Africa's. But if it is wrong for Israel, IONELESS light and heavy sistent . 885-2569. why not fotblack Africa? And if it WINDOWS & FLOORS is right for black Africa, why not -washed for Israel? CARPETS KOSHER-- · EMPIRE (U) FULLY COOKED . Such are the ironies of the double shampooed & steam cleaned ·1 BOTH COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL "IERNISHIN