R. I. J e wi sh Historica l Association 1 1 130 Sess i ons S treet Pro v idence , RI 029 0 6

Wallenberg, Swedish Diplomat Who Saved Jews, May Still Be Alive-In USSR STOCKHOLM - The Soviet Union has Board and the World Jewish Congress to try The story was changed in 1957, when been asked to reopen the case of Raoul to save Hungarian Jews from deportation to prisoners of war returning from the Soviet Wallenberg because of renewed suspicions Nazi exte rmination camps. Union said they had seen Wall enberg. that the Swedish diplomat, said to have dis­ Courage And Contempt Some Met Wallenberg appeared in Soviet priso ns after saving thou­ Wallenberg, a member of a prominent Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko said sands of Jews from the Nazis, is alive. family of bankers and industrialists, wo uld be priso n archives showed Wallen berg had died An international panel concluded, after 69 years old today. of a heart attack in his cell in July 1947 at the hearing testimony that Wallen berg had been He managed to iss ue protecti ve passes to aged of 35. seen a live in the Soviet Union aft e r about 20,000 Jews and to ass ist indirectly A man who said he served 27 years for es­ authorities had reported him dead, that about 100,000 more, as a result of what has pionage in Soviet jails from 1930 to 1957 told " tragic misinformation" had been passed on been call ed a combination of"bluff, heroism the panel he met Wall enberg in December by the Soviets abou t the diplomat. and contempt fo r convention." 1947. The Soviet Embassy described the panel' s In January 1945, when Soviet troops en­ Andre Shimkevi ch said" nothing is forgot­ hearing as an anti-Soviet provocation. tered Budapest, Wallenberg and his driver ten in prison," and said he shared a cell with Ingrid Garde Widemar, a Justice of the were placed under what was called " Sovi et the diplomat for two days. Wallenberg told Swedish Supreme Court and chairman of the protection." It was ass umed that the Soviet him, Shimkevich said, that he was a diplomat RAOUL WALLENBERG Swedish Raoul .Wall enberg Association, Union regarded him as a possible spy. under investigation fo r spying. When as ked Wiesenthal, wh o runs the Jewish Documen­ which sponsored the meeting, said the panel In 1947, however, Soviet Deputy Foreign whether he had discussed the meeting tation Center in Vienna. Wiesenthal said a believed Wall enberg was still aljve. Minister Andre i V. Vyshinsky told the before, or, if not, why he had withheld the in­ Soviet general had told an informant in the Wallenberg was sent by the Swedish Swedis h government that Wall enberg was fo rm ation, Shimkevich declined to answer. West that he had spent time with Wallen­ government to Budapest in 1944 at the re­ not in the Soviet Union and was unknown to Testimony From Wiesenthal berg in 1953, 1955 and 1956. quest of the United States War Refu gee the Sovi et authorities. O the r testimon y came fr om Simon (Continued on page 8)

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VOLUME LXVIII , NUMBER 9 THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 30¢ PER COPY Dona ld Dwares Named Director HIAS Sets New Procedures To Of Federal Home Loan Bank Of Boston Donald Dwares, president of Slater Dye Process Soviet Jewish Emigres Works, Inc., Pawtucket, has been named a ·' director of the Federal Home Loan Bank of NEV\! '\' .)R K (JT."i ) -- New procedures going to the United States wi ll be assisted by Boston. He was appointed as one of the for processing Soviet Jewish emigra nt s that, l·IIAS. r Bank's seven public sector directors to a four­ \ if successful , mi ght reduce the number of Hopes To Reverse Trend year term ending Dec. 3 1, 1984. Soviet Jews who choose to settle in countries Dwares has been with the Slater Dye other lh an Israel was announced by HIAS. Jacobson sa id he hoped that under the new Works since 1959. H e is also president of Address in g a press conference at HIAS procedures, two-thirds of future Soviet Jew­ Slater Screen Print Corporation and the Tex­ headquarters here last week, Gaynor Jacobson, ish emigranls wou ld choose to settle in Israel ti le Investment Company. execulive vice president of HIAS, said that and one- third in the U.S. , Canada, Australia Dwares is on the board of trustees and a uµder th e new plan Soviet Jewi sh emigrants and other countries. At pres&nt, the figures member of th e executive committee of ,vo uld spend only two days in Vienna, their arc exactly th e reverse, he srdd . Miriam Hospital, Providence. He is also on first stop out of the Soviel Union, instead of He added that he believed the expert coun­ the board of overseers of Moses Brown eight to JO.days as heretofore. seling to Soviet Jews in Rom e, wh ich is to School, a trustee of Temple Emanu-EI and Those who opt for settling in Israel will fl y begin in a few weeks, "will help many refu­ director and member of the executive com­ there fr om Vienna. The others, according to gees make better informed choices than in mittee of Jewish Family and Chil dren's Ser­ the new plan, will go to a hotel north of the recen t past. " Israel, he said," has a great vices. Rom e where, during up to a week's stay, deal to offer, especially for people in certain Dwares and his wife Bonnie live in lhey wi ll receive ex pert " joint counseli ng" professions. Bey:md this, Israel possesses a Providence. They have two sons, Dav id and from representatives of HIAS, the Joint Dis­ reli gious and cultural environment that Jews Marc. DONALD DWARES tribution Commi ttee and the Jewish Agen­ from th e Soviet Un ion have never been per­ cy. The counseli ng wi ll consist of providing mi tted to enj oy." up-to-date inform ation about life in Israel Jacobson also announced that H IAS - Soviet Dissident To Speak and the opportuni ties Israel has to offer to through local Jewish community organizations the individual Soviet emi grant. an d Jewis h Federations - was encouraging " Those with close relatives in ,the U.S. .or American Jews (especially recent arrivals) with About Human Rights In U.S.S.R. .other countries wi ll be helped to be reunited cl ose relati ves in the Soviet Union to send " letters of invitation" to their kin desiring to Professor Eduard Lozansky, a Soviet dissi­ practi cal step. with their families," Jacobson explained. " For leave the USSR. dent who was permitted to emigrate in The Soviets are now using the same all th e oth er emigrant s, a consci entious and " In recent times, an average of 500 Soviet 1976, will speak at Shabbat services at Tem­ reasoning to deny Tanya pe rmi ssion to leave sensit ive effort wi ll be made to help them choose to go to Israel." Jacobso n sa id in Jews a year has come to the United States in ple Bet h Torah, Cranston on Friday, Jan. 30. and join her husband in Rochester. " He is response to a question from the Jewi sh Tele­ this manner," Jacobso n reported, "and we A physicist at the Un iversi ty of Rochester, not yo ur husband anymore," Tanya was graphic Agency that the new procedures do believe larger numbers will arrive here if there Lozansky faced seven years of employment told. not indicate a shift in poli cy on the part of is an increase in invitati ons from close rela­ discrimination in th e Soviet Union after he Lozansky, wh o lives in Rochester with his HIAS and that an y Sov iet Jew who insists on tives.' ' completed fo rmal training in his specialt y .. parents and two sis ters, has launched a per­ He was unable to fin d a permanent job. sonal campaign to inform the American Whe n he req uested pe rmiss ion to public about the abuse of human rights in emigrate, Soviet authorities said he had to the Soviet Uni on. divorce his wi fe first because, they said, "Ask them," Lozanksy says, " to ex plain " We don' t split up fa milies." wh y my wife, chemist at the Institute of Lozansky received permission to leave Organi c Chemistry Academy of Sciences, three months after divorci ng his wi fe as a U.S. S. R., for more than two years has been trying to get out of Moscow with our daughter who is seven years old , to be. un­ inside: ___--, ited with me in the U.S.; as k wh y the direc­ tor of this institute, N. Kochetkov, also a · ve ry frequent and smiling visitor to the - Genetic West, threatens to fire my wife and has or­ Update dered that her mail be opened and con­ page 9 fi scated. My wife has never worked in any secret area of research and, therefore, the Soviets have no legal reason to detain her in New Jews Moscow.'' page 8 Rabbi Gerald B. Zelermyer and Cantor Aaron Ma rcus wi ll offi ciate, accompani ed by organist Joseph Di Biase. The service is at The Modern 8 p.m. f~ Oneg Shabbat in the Irvin g Shechtman MIRIAM HOSPITAL'S Chris De libero, R.N ., coordinator of the Nursing Staff Develop• Matchmaker ment Bake and Craft Sale, presents a check for the proceeds to Paul Segal, executive ' page 12 Auditorium wi ll fo llow . The co mmunity is in vited to att end. director of the Jewish Family and Children's Service, this year's beneficiary. 2 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JAN UARY 22, 1981 Arrangements for the funeral were made by Funeral services were held at the Fisher the Max Sugarman Memorial Chapel. 458 Memorial Chapel, 422 North Main St. Burial Hope St. was in Temple Beth- El Cemetery. Obituaries In li eu of flowers , contributions in his FANNIE HORVITZ memory may be made to the R.l. Heart PROVIDENCE - Fannie Horvitz 94 a Fund. Shiva will be observed at his late resident of the Jewish Home for the Ag~d, 99 JORDANJ. KAUFFMAN RUTH J. BRODSKY residence, 225 Summit Ave., Providence, 2-4 Hillside Ave., died there Wednesday, Jan. 14 and 7-9 p.m. through Thursday. after a three-month illness. She was the wife PROVIDENCE--Jordan J. Kauffman, PROVIDENCE - Ruth J. Brodsky, 59, of the late Jacob Horvitz. 67, o f 54 Holly St., owner of Jo rdan of 60 Broadway, a fo rmer associate of Acme REBECCA PACKER Kauffm an Associa te s, m a nufacturers' Beauty Supplies, died Sunday, Jan. 18 at the Born in Russia, a daughter of the late Jacob representatives, for the last 10 years, died Massachusetts Rehabilitation Hospital, FALL RIVER - Rebecca Packer, a char­ and Miriam (Borodulin) Krasnow, she had Saturday, Jan. 17 at Rhode Island Hospital Boston, after a 2 1h month illness. She was ter member of Temple Beth-El and its lived in Providence for 75 years. after a two-week illness. He was the husband the widow of Richard Brodsky. Sisterhood, died Saturday, Jan. 17 at Mrs. Horvitz was a member of Temple of Molly (Fertman) Kauffman. Mrs. Brodsky had been a resident of Charlton Memorial Hospital. She was the Be th-El, the Miriam H ospita l Ladies A lifelong resident of Providence, he was a Providence for more than 50 years. She was wife of the late James J. Packer, founder of Association and the Pioneer Women. son of the late H yman and Sarah (Frank) affiliated with the Acme Beauty Supplies fo r the Independent Laundry of Fall River. She is survived by two sons, Dr. Abraham Horvitz of Providence and David Horvitz of Kauffman owned the former National Paper six years until her retirement a year ago. Born in Russia, she was a daughter of the Cincinnati; a daughter, Mrs. Celi a Zucker­ Co., Pawtucket for 35 years. Born in Madison, Wis., she was a daughter late Mendel and Shandel Sklarov. • of the late Louis and Gertrude Wolfenson. berg of Providence; a brother, Herman H e was a member of the Jewish Home for Mrs. Packer was a charter member of the Mrs. Brodsky was a member of the Krasnow of Warwick; six grandchildren, and the Aged, the New England Toy Represen­ Jewish Home for the Aged, li fe member of American Contract Bridge League and the two g reat-grandchildren. tative; Association, the H ousewares Club Hadassah and member of the Brandeis Un­ Bridge Club of Rhode Island. She had also A funeral service was held at the Max and the Joslin Clinic of Boston. iversity Women's organization. Besides his wife, he is survived by a son, been a sales woman at Claddings fo r 20 years. Sugarman Memorial Chapel, 458 Hope St. Michael Ka uffman of Providence; two She is survived by a son, Robert L. Brodsky She is survived by two sons, Max and Burial was in Lincoln Park Cemetery, d aughters, Phyllis Kauffman of Providence of Malden, Mass.; a brother, Jack Wolfenson Henry Packer of Fall Ri ver; two daughters, Warwick. and Mrs. Barbara Garsfon of Brookline of Miami Beach, Fla., and a grandchild. Anne Packer and Mrs. Gladys Sugarman, In li eu of flowers, contributions in her Mass.; two sisters, Mrs. Helene Rosenberg of A funeral service was held at the Max both of Fall River; nine grandchildren, and memory may be made to the Jewish Home New Bedford and Mrs. Ethel Ludwig of San Sugarman, Memorial Chapel, 458 Hope St. five great-grandchildren. for the Aged. Diego, and a brother, Everett Kauffman of . Burial was in Lincoln Park Cemetery, Barrington. Warwick. A funeral service was held at the Max In lieu of fl owers, contributions in her Sugarman Memorial Chapel, 458 Hope St. memory may be made to Omega, "A Pope: Mid-East Crisis Unsolvable Burial was in Lincoln Park Cemetery, Hospice Program," 2-70 Washington St., Warwick. Somerville, Mass. 02143. Shiva was observed Because Ideals Are' Misinterpreted In lieu of fl owers, contributions in his in Malden, Mass. memory may be made to the Joslin Clinic, I MARY BERKOWITZ ROME (JTA) - Pope John Paul II has which start from the idea of justice and which Joslin Place, Boston. referred lo the Mid die East as a " typical" ought to assist its fulfillment among in­ PAWTUCKET - Mary Berkowitz, 88, crisis that appears to be "chronic" or ·· un­ dividuals, groups and human societies, in GERTRUDE SYNDER of 61 Dartmouth St. , died Friday. Jan. 6 at solvable" because the ideals of justice are be­ practice suffer from distortions. Although PROVIDENCE - Gertrude Snyder, 74, Miriam hospital after a three-month illness. ing improperly interpreted. The pontiff they continue to appeal to the idea of justice, of 243 Smith St. died Saturday, Jan. 17 at Born in Baltimore, she was a daughter of made the reference in a sermon delivered to nevertheless, experience shows that other Miriam Hospital after an eight-week illness. the late Barnet and Sarah Richmond world diplomatic representatives accredited neg~tive forces have gained the .upper hand She _was the wife of Benny Snyder. Berkowitz. She lived in Pawtucket for 13 to the Vatican. · over justice, such as spite, hatred and even Born in Russia, she was a daughter of the years, moving to Providence from Baltimore H e quoted from his recent Encyclical, cruelty. In such cases, the desire to annihilate late Louis and Tama Gershovitz. in 1960. ·· Dives in Misericordia" (On the Mercy of the enemy, limit his freedom, or even force Mrs. Snyder, a resident of Providence for She is survived by a sister, Mrs. Helen Lip­ God), which dealt with the errors or" distor­ him into total dependence, becomes the fun­ more than 50 years, was a member of Temple si tz of Baltimore, and a niece, Mrs. Regina tions" of justice by mankind in these times. damental motive for action, and this con­ Beth Torah. She was a member of the Eisenberg, with whom she li ved. Expanding on that theme in his address to trasts with the essence of justice, which 1/y its Pioneer Women, the Majestic Guild and the A funeral service was held at the Max the assembled diplomats, the Pope ended his nature tends to establish equality and har­ Carroll Towers Tenants Association. Sugarman Memorial Chapel, 458 Hope St. quotation just short of a paragraph in the En­ mony between the parties in conflict. " Besides her husband, she is survived by Burial was in Sinai Memorial Park, Warwick. cyclical that drew protests from some Jewish circles because of its reference to the " Old two daughters, Mrs. Shirley Shapiro of IDA RITER FRUCHTER Taxi Drive, Killed, Cranston and Mrs. Lenore Gross of Baton Testament attitude . manifested in the PROVIDENCE - Ida Riter Fruchter, words an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth."" Family Injured, Rouge, La.; a sister, Mrs. Fanny Kofman of 89, a resident of the Jewish Home for the Cranston; a brother, Benjamin Gersh of The Encyclical intimated regret that ·· to­ In Gaza Strip Aged, 99 Hillside Ave., for 6½ years and life day's forms of justice continued to be · North Miami Beach , Fla. , and six member there, died Tuesday, 1Jan. 13 in grandchildren. modell ed on'' the "form of justice at that ()TA ) - A tax i driver from Miriam Hospital. She was the wife of the late (Old Testament) time." A letter was sent by Rehovot was shot and killed when he took his A funeral service was held at the Max Josef Fruchter. Her first husband was the late Sugarman Memorial Chapel, 458 Hope St. Rabbi Henry Siegman, executive director of ca b for repair in a garage in the Gaza Strip Phil ip Riter. . the Ame ri can Jewi sh Congress, to Father last week. Burial was in Lincoln Park Cemetery Born in Russia, she was a daughter of the Warwick. Jorge Mejias, Secretary of the Vatican's Yehezkel Mizrachi, 29, had just entered a late Louis and Pauline Zaber. She was a resi­ Commission on Religious Relations with the re pair shop in the Jebaliya refugee camp on dent of Providence most of her li fe. RITA GERTSACOV Jews , asking for clarification. So far there has the outskirts of Gaza when shots were fired at She is survived by four daughters , Mrs. been no reply. him from short range, apparently from a PROVIDENCE - Rita (Zetlin) Ger­ Kathe rine Kortic and Mrs. Re becca In his discourse the Pope said, " How can pistol, arm y sources sa id . He died instantly. tsacov, 80, of230 Laurel Ave., died Saturday, Grossman, both of Cranston. Mrs. Lillian we, in effect, think of establishing a stable The arm y imposed a curfew on the camp area Jan. l 7 at Miriam Hospital. She was the wife Koffler and Mrs. Diana Sanders, both of peace without taking into equal considera­ and searches were carried out. of Irving Gertsacov. Providence; nine grandchildren and 18 tion the requirements of all the people"s con­ Israeli drivers fr equentl y use repair shops Born in Paterson, N.J., she was a resident greaf-grandchildren. cerned, of their existence and their security, and garages in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, of Providence for more than 75 years. Arrangements for the funeral were made creating the possibility of building a basis for where prices'are lower than in Israel. Mrs. Gertsacov was a member of Temple by Max Sugarman Memorial Chapel. The future cooperation? In another incident, three members of the Beth-El and its Sisterhood, life member of funeral and burial were private. " It is obvious here, that by expecting the Golan family from a village near Hadera the Miriam Hospi tal Women's Association MAX BECKER absolute fulfillment of one· s rights, peace were injured in a grenade attack on their car and a former member of its board of direc­ will never be achieved because this expecta• as it was passing th rough the Gaza Stdp last tors. She was also a member of the Jewish PROVIDENCE - Max Becker, 83, of lion presupposes the negation or the ex­ night. The husband, Asher, was seriously in­ Home for the Aged, a member of Brandeis 225 Summit Ave., a former shoe salesman, cessive reduction of the rights of others. jured. His wife, Zvia and their four-year-old University and Hadassah. died Sunday, Jan. 18 at Miriam Hospital af­ Thus, only equity, or the abili ty to balance daughter, Limore, were slightly injured. A graduate of Hope High School, she also ter a three-week illness. He was the husband advantages and sacrifices by all parties can This attack was the first on Jewish attended Simmons College, Boston. of Rose (Freedman) Becker. open the path to a globa) accord for living travell ers in the area for some months, Besides her husband , she is survived by a Until his retirement 18 years ago, Becker together. This means, as I said in the En­ though about a dozen local Arab residents son, Lawrence S. Gates of Providence; two worked for Coward Shoe Inc., Washington cyclical, there is no justice without comple­ have been kill ed in what officials believe was brothers, Dr. Arnold Zetlin of- Norfolk, Va. St. , Boston, fo r 30 years. tion by love." poli tical action against people accused of and Benjamin Zetlin of Miami, Fla.; a sister, Born in Gloversvill e, N.Y.. he was a son of See Veiled Reference collaborating with the Israeli authorities or Mrs. F lorence Brown of Boston ; six the late Benjamin and Ida (Faber) Becker. To Palestinian Problem c ha rged b y re li gious extremi sts with grandchildren, and a great-grandson. He lived in Providence for a year after mov­ Observers here believe the Pope"s remarks operating bars and trading in drugs. A funeral service was held at Temple Beth­ ing from Brighton, Mass., where he lived were a vei led reference to the Palestinian El, Orchard at Butler Ave. Burial was in the most of his life. problem . The paragraph from the Encyclical temple cemetery. Besides his wife, he is survived by a son, that he quoted said that in contemporary Arrangements for the funeral were made Steven . Becker of Berwick, Maine; two stay informed man there is an "abuse of the idea of justice" by the Mount Sinai Memorial Chapel, 825 daughters, Gloria Becker and Mrs. Phyllis and a "practical distortion." READ THE HERALD Hope St. Dubinsky, both of Providence; three sisters, It continued: "\/ery often, programs In lieu of flowers, contributions in her · Rose Becker, Mrs. Anna B. Berlenstein and Mrs. Lena Paris, all of Washington, D.C., memory may be made to the Miriam Can't Figure Out Your Next and three grandchildren. Hospital or Temple Beth-El. Memorial ob­ Move? ... Read This Week's servance will be at her late residence through A graveside service was held at the Baker Bridge Column By Robert Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Street Cemetery, West Roxbury, Mass. FRED SPIGEL'S Starr. KOSHER MEAT MARKET 243 Reservoir Ave., Providence Max Sugarman Memorial Chapel Homemade Chopped Liver 2. 99 lb. Rhode Island's only home Empire . .. of your family traditions and records Chicken Wings 49 ( lb, fresh Baby 331-8094 Steer Liver 1.39 lb. 458 HOPE STREET, PROVIDENCE Ribsteoks (,u11 ••n1.r) lb, Corner Hope 8- Doyle Avenue 4.29 Delivery Wed_ & Thurs. 461-0425 IN FLORIDA (305) 861 -9066 Ll~S t. B?SLlR, R. l. Inside Store Specials Every Day! THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 3 received warning letters were issued for late 5 Held In Slaying reporting on possible violations. In the last Commerce Sec'y Klutznick quarter of the year, under Klutznick, seven Of Bedouin Leader enforcement actions were taken. - A Jerusalem judge last Coincidentally, Klutznick is being sue­ week extended the detention of five men Goes Home To Chicago ceded as Secretary by the son of an old friend arrested in connection with the murder of in Omaha. Malcolm Baldridge, his successor, WASHINGTON (JTA ) - Secretary of lion in Chicago again." Hammad Abu Rabia, a Bedouin Knesset is the son of Malcolm Baldridge Sr., who is Commerce Philip Klutznick, after ad­ Position Of The Jewish People member. now 93. The elder Baldridge was Klutznick' s ministering for almost 14 months one of the Discussing Jewish matters, Klutznick said Police repo_rted they had found the suspec­ Congressman and maintained his law office Federal Government's most diversified and " it is lacking in objectivity to think things are ted murder weapon, a pistol, and two the same as 30 years ago. The position of our three floors above Klutznick' s in an Omaha military rifles near the scene of the shooting. complex departments, is going " home" to building. · Chicago soon and may never take a job again. people has deteriorated in recent years due in According to Israeli radio, the suspects in­ Asked to state his proudest accomplish­ Now past 73, the oldest member of Presi: the main to changes in forces internationally. clude four inhabitants of the Druse village of ment as Secretary, Klutznick replied with dent Carter' s Cabinet, Klutznick will leave One can say he won't exchange Jewish blood Yarqa in the West Bank. The fifth was said to characteristic wit - "I'm still here." Told Washington to "spend a little time doing for oil but the fact is the oil-producing coun­ be an Arab from central Israel. A sixth that his was a good response, he shot back - nothing" and later to do "some writing." tries are powerful. I regret Israel is not one of suspect, a Jewish man from Tel Aviv, was " it's a Washington answer." After that he " When the boss leaves, I leave," he said. them. released . spoke proudly of the "somewhat unique'' " I am going home - which I never really " The re's been a comple te shift in economic influence and at least in their per­ relationship between .businesses, labor and left . I'll take a few months thinking about my government during his time as Secretary. " I future. No one has offered me the respon­ ception in political influence in the world. Torah Thefts It's not as deep as some think but you cannot hope it carries on," he said. He and Labor sibility of heading a major company and I Secretary Ray Marshall " behaved like twins" wouldn' t accept if anyo ne had. Not at 73 and cure it by strong words. This has influence on Prompt Call For minorities wherever they may be. We' ve and " most business groups with whom we one-half. Perhaps I'll go into competition had to work in delicate situations were com­ with you fellows and write. I'll try an original blinded ourselves in a way and we have some Registry System catching up to do." pletely .. supportive as indeed were labor idea. After being president (of a junior Jewish groups. club in Kansas City) and chairman of a board In discussing the ri se of religious feeling NEW YORK (JTA ) - In the wake of or both since I was 14 years old, I'd like to here and abroad among Christians, Moslems Israel Unemployment numerous thefts of Torah scrolls from the spend a little time doing nothing. I won't and Jews, Klutznick said " we ought to worry New York metropolitan area congregations, take a job - voluntary or involuntary. I want less about anti-Semitism and more in what At 5.4 Percent the Jewish Community Relations Council of to spend time with my grandchildren and do we - as a community - are doing. Getting TEL AVIV (JTA ) - Israel's unemploy­ New York (JCRC) has reiterated its call for a what I want to do for the first time in my frightened by anti-Semitism is going to hap­ ment rate now stands at 5.4 percent of the national Torah registry system. life." pen from time to time but we must consider work fo rce, with 72,000 men and women out Will Teach For A Few Weeks what our own community is doing. Is Israel of wo rk . Aharon Hare!, chairman of Louis Weiser, chairman of ihe JCRC Actually, Klutznick will do something im­ as forthcomi ng as it should be? Is our Jewish Histadrut, said yesterday this was an increase Monitoring Unit, announced a major effort mediately upon retiring from the Carter community li ving in the 1980s rather than in of nearl y 70 percent over the 36,000 fi gure at with synagogal and rabbinical bodies to es­ Cabinet. He will teach for "a couple of the 1960s? Some leaders ought to retire and the end of 1979. About 60 percent of women tablish a system for marking and registering weeks" at the Wayne Morse Institute of Law let younger people take over. They might workers were without jobs, he said. Torahs for identification. The Monitoring and Politics at the University of Oregon in hav e better ideas. We've got a big job ahead But while 72,000 persons are out of work, Unit is a project for the JCRC 's Commission Eugene, but he has not made other commit­ of us. We are facing a cri sis of greatest onl y 36,000 are registered with labor ex­ on Jewish Security and Police Liaison. JCRC ments besides some speeches. proportions because we haven't caught up changes as seeking employment. Others are vice president Peggy Tishman is chairperson. Before he was sworn in as Secretary of with it. " between jobs or li ving on sa vings while they The Monitoring Unit has consulted with Commerce Dec. 19, 1979, he took a leave of Developments Under Klutznick seek work privately. synagogal and rabbinical bodies, and is absence as president of the World Jewis h Among Klutznick' s responsibilities was An other 20,000 people employed in the awaiting answers from authorities on Jewish Congress. When the WJ C meets in enforcement of the U.S. laws against the defense establishment are expected to lose law regarding permissible means of per­ Jerusalem, Edgar Bronfman of New York will Arab League's boycott of Ame ri can their jobs under budget cuts. They will in­ manently marking Torah scrolls, Weiser said. be nominated president. "At the moment, businesses that trade with Israel. Under his clude 4,000 civilian employees of the army, Weiser said that "the theft of Torahs is a I'm president on leave and he's acting pres i­ aegis, U.S. activity against American firms 3,000 employed directly in military in­ problem that has reached serious propor­ dent," Klutznick said. that held the boycott has increased. " It's an dustries and about 5,500 regular army per­ ti ons. More than 30 scrolls have been stolen "I remain concerned with the Congress as operating Department ," he said. " Nobody is sonnel. Others are employed by the Israel from metropolitan area synagogues in the with B' nai B' rith and other organizations but complaining except those wh o are charged." Aircraft Industries and other milita ry­ past year. Valued at thousands of dollars I am not comr'nitted to day-to-day work," he A Department official in the year that en­ associated industries, but their dismissal or each, these handwritten scrolls take more said. He then added, smiling, " I probably ded Sept. 30 (more than 9 of the 12 months continued employment depends on export than one year to complete, " Weiser said. will attend meetings of the Jewish Federa- under Klutznick), the Department handled orders, including the Kfir fighter aircraft now 33 enforcement cases and 12 resulted in fines being examined by the Mexican Defen se and compliance actions while 21 companies Minister presentl_y visiting Israel. Move To Delay Election Fails JERUSALEM - An effort by the not changed his position favoring early elec­ ·w'\vieiierE -- - - Congregation Mishkon Tfiloh 1 "r_,,,.. •.., ,-. ·y government's right wing to keep Menachem tions. Begin in power through November failed to Deputy Prime Minister Yigael Yadin has 203 Summit Ave. S GIFT CERTIFICATES R win Cabinet support las t week, with opposi­ threatened to resign along with Social Affairs At a m eeting he ld Jan. 6, 1981 , the following of­ E AVAILAIU A tion from most Cabinet ministers and Begin Minister Israel Katz if elections are not held ficers and board of directors were elected: himself. by June. Sam Rotkopf, President ~ r-suPii'si'vlisl ~ AMERICAN AIRLINES l Attempts to prevent Begin from calling Chaim Corfu, the whip of Begin's Likud Harry Bornstein, Vice President I I A BOS-lOSANGIUS-RD. TRIP general elections in June were headed by bloc, said the elections would be postponed Jack Wilkes, Treasurer I I Housing Minister David Levy and supported until November only if all members of the Be rnard Engle, Recording Secretary ~ L__ s2a,.oo _ _J : coalition agreed. Dorothy Berry, Financial Secretary by three other right-wing members of T BOSTON - CHARTER E At ·least two parties in the coalition, the David Krasnoff, Chairman of Board of Directors Cabinet. R IRUP~~~it'llTIS N Democratic Movement and the Orthodox Honorary presidents for life: They want Begin to hold his job as long as A 2/14-2,'19TRANSFIR Agudath Israel, have come out in favor of Nathan Gorin T possible to complete his program of settle­ V Tl.l'S-TlllS early elections. Milton lsraeloff ments in the occupied territories and to keep E. AROWU HOTR SSISJO The Labor Party was expected to present Edward Spencer the opposition Labor Party from power at its own bill in the Knesset next week calling w BOARD OF DIRECTORS for Three (3) Years: L u~~:'~':!Js least a few months longer. for elections within 60 days. Labor is favored COMPLOI I Ed. Spencer A Begin aide said the Prime Minister had in opinion polls to win any electoral contest. • MEAL ·PLANS AVAllAlll E Rose Bernstein C WEEK DAY SPECIALS N Samuel Guttin TRIP E David Krasnoff R RD. BERMUDA Israel Cabinet Agrees U S155. RD, TRIP R UNEXPIRED TERMS for Two (2) Years: I HOTELS EXTRA Samuel Bernstein s ___..,,..,,,...,.,.---• To Elections In July Jessie Connis E GOEL Al TEL AVIV - The Israeli Cabinet has colle~gues so desire. It has been suggested Eugene Freedman S SUPER APEX ISRAEL H agreed to hold national elections on July 7, that if Begin heads the Likud bloc for the Benjamin Greenberg • BOSTON -$699 RD. TRIP 0 pushing up by four months the end of Prime next elections, he would step down soon af­ Gerald Shaulson WE SEU All CRUISES T Minister Menachem Begin's government. ter the vote in favor of another Likud leader, UNEXPIRED TERMS for One '(I) Year: All TRAVEL E Gegin had indicated his preference for possibly Foreign Minister Titzhak Shamir. Robert Berlinsky · I All FllTES l early elections for some time, but some A proposal for the Knesset to dissolve it­ Jack Brier T CALL TODAY S coalition members wanted to delay the vote self and call elections must obtain a majority Louis Miller as long as possible. in the house to be passed. Coalition parties Henry Abramowitz will be trying to gather support because :._1ener Morris Tippe The proposal for July elections will be Begin has a minority government following debated in the Kn esset sometime this week. the resignation of finance minister Yigael Begin said he would run again is his Hurvitz. MOUNT SINAI Jean Pierre-Bloch MEMORIAL CHAPEL Appointed To Legion Of Honor Rhode Island's most .modem funeral . a branch of the Free French operations. PARI S (JTA )- French Jewish leader Jean chapel providing the finest professional Pierre-Bloch has been appointed a Grand Of­ He has played a leading rol e in Jewish de­ ficer in the Legion of Honor, one of the mands for more energetic government service, including any concern you•might highest ranks in France's prestigious order. measures in the fight against anti-Semitism President Valery Giscard D' Estaing per­ and was one of the main organize rs of the have for your family traditions and sonall y pinned the medal on Pi erre- Bl och at a mass demonstrations which followed the Ru e records_ ceremony at the El ysee Palace. Copernic synagogue bombing last October. Pie rre- Bl och, 75, is the president of the In­ Our director, Mitchell, his father, and grandfather have tern ati onal League Against Anti-Semitism It is generally beli ev.ed that Pierre-Bloch's · been serving your family and other R.l. Jewish families for promotion to one of the hi ghest ranks in the and Racism and president of the French over 100 years. federa ti on of B' nai B' rith lodges. A form er Legion of Honor is partiall y due to the min ister in Gen. Charl es de Ga ulle's wartime government's attempt to improve its rela­ 331-3337 government , he playe d an acti ve role in the ti ons with the tra ditional Jewi sh establish­ 825 Hope at Fourth Street Call Collect from out-of-state ant i-Nazi resista nce move ment d uri ng the ment and to defu se the tension in their rela­ occupation of France and at one time headed tions. 4 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 , Miracle of miracles, it seems to be work­ but there is no doubt about it - the mood is ,. ing. The atmosphere is improving. To be sure changing. People are discovering how good Israelis Learn To Say there are still numerous violations. One and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell Knesset member may still label his colleague together with mutual consideration. " infantile," and one excited motorist may Thank you. Please, Thank You still yell Hamor! (jackass) at another driver,

by Carl A_lpert municatiol)s media, police, army, civil ser­ - It's almost too good to be true. vice, transport industries, Histadrut and Israelis seem to be responding with a will to a others, will cooperate. new campaign to improve .public courtesy In the past, bad examples have been set on Letters To The Editor and good manners. several levels. The debates in the Knesset fre­ In public places today one finds posters quently featured free exchange of juicy ex­ with the slogan: "Don't forget to say thank pletives and uncomplimentary insults which you. " And in that spirit they' re beginning to radio and television considered "good" say "please," as well. One cannot claim it is listening, and therefore presented the nation "Legacy In Good Hands" reaching epidemic proportions, but there is with the choicest extracts. EDITOR: need to remember that leadership is not a no doubt that folks are beginning to lower Another example had been set by some of One of the overwhelming concerns of the trait which suddenly occurs at thirty years of the tone of their voices in public conversa­ the more prejudiced TV journalists who of­ Rhode Island Jewish leadership, and age. The qualities whi ch demonstrate them­ tion. ten outdid themselves in their contemptuous rightfully so, is the question of our future se lves in a commitment to community and More and more one sees motorists slowing treatment of the public personalities they Jewish leadership. " Where are the young leadership are nutured and educated from a down at intersections and courteously wav­ were supposed to be interviewing. The bad people?", " The average age here must be very young age. ing another driver to take precedence. The manners and utter lack of courtesy, not to 60, " " What are we doing to get more young We are fort unate, here in Rh ode Island, to queue at a bus stop will remain in good order, speak of lack of respect toward Prime adults involved?" are questions I hear from have a new generation of leaders who have each-passenger awaiting his turn to board - Minister Begin by a couple of these TV repor­ concerned community members at Israel been gift ed with the desire and ability to except where the thoughtless driver stops his ters not long ago was so obvious that there Bond affairs. serve our community and Israel. vehicle with the entrance door plumb in the was a refl ex reaction of disgust on the part of To this vital issue I wish to share three Kn owing this, I hope the senior leadership middle of the line. Then watch the pan­ the public. things. First, remember we most often tend of Rh ode Island will feel their efforts and demonium that ensues! Matters had reached such a state that in his to sociali ze wi th people our own age, and that legacy are going to be in good hands. Ex­ The Israeli is beginning to recognize that Rosh Hashana greetings to the nation Presi­ age is getting higher (and better) each year. perience has taught our leaders that they can there has been much truth in the assertion dent Yitzhak Navon spoke little about Secondly, at State of Israel Bonds, we have not give up the res ponsibility to serve this that we are brash, loud, pushy, un­ national security or the economic situation quite an enthusiastic cadre of new leaders in community and Israel; they can only share disci plined. Not all of us, of course, but and concentrated instead on the need to ra ise thei r twenties to earl y forties. This leadership the opportunity. Res ponsibility lies in the enough 'o make the reputation stick the level of the day- to-day relationship be­ does not always participate in traditional hands that have demonstrated their concern nationally. tween one Israeli and another. community activities, and as with other in­ and effectiveness; opportunity is open to all. Perhaps the change began with the Rudeness and lack of consideration should volvement tends to be peer oriented. launching of a safety drive to reduce highway be rooted out, he said . A great national effort The final point has stuck with me si nce my HARVEY COHEN accidents. It has been working so well, that to raise the level of human relationships recent trip to Israel. Of the 450 or so Regional Director maybe the Israelis are simply getting into the needs neither a decision by the Knesset nor passengers on the El Al flight , at least 400 State of Israel Bonds habit of being polite and having some regard allocation of budgets. It requires only a bit of were youngsters in th eir teens or less. We Providence for the other chap. initiative on the part of each ci ti zen. The ministry of education has latched on It appears that people are learning that if \__ to the program and through the school one says "please," the other wi ll learn to say system is now intensifying an awareness of " thank you." If one smiles, the other will Bronze Plaque Overlooked public manners. Representatives of the com- smile back. ED(I'OR: a memorial service was held in the synagogue I'm writing with regard to the interview of the Home For The Aged with Mr. Raymond Eichenbaum published At first a mon ument of stone was con­ in the Jan. 15 issue of The Herald . In this in­ sidered, but since at that time the Home For terview, Mr. Eichenbaum states tha t no The Aged had a drive for a new wing, the ·vour memorial ex ists to the memory of the money was donated for this purpose. The Moving In '81? Holocaust victims. That is a_ complete money was collected from survivo rs of Do It Yourself misconception. families and member of R.l. Self Help. MOne\(.s Since Nov. I I , 1953, when it was At first the bronze -memorial plaque was dedicated, a bronze memorial plaque exists placed in the old synagogue of the home and Sylvia Porter in the Jewish Home For The Aged. It was th en transferred to the present new Wo rth-----bY placed on the date of Nov. 11 , the sanctuary. I have in my possession the Kristallnacht, which started all the horror original dedication program from Nov. II, An astounding 84 percent of the more than b locks between it and si de wall. You also can and destruction of six million of our people. 1953, which also holds the names of all con­ 22 million of you who will change residences use heavy fabrics for this. The idea was conceived by survivors of tributors plus Rabbi Eli M. Bohnen and Can­ in 1981 will be (to some extent) do-it-yourself (6) On yo ur stove, pack loose pieces, such families that belonged to the organiza­ tor Jacob Hohenemser, who officiated at that movers. (I us e the word " astounding" secure burners, elements and trays with ap­ tion R. I. Self Help. They had come from time. because I at least had no concept of how propriate tape. Europe from 1934 on, fl eeing the horrors MRS. HENRY D. (TRUDY) SCHMIDT deeply this phenomenon had caught on.) (7) Ory and air your refrigerator and there. Its presidents were then Dr. Ludwig Cranston By doing it yourself, authoritative es­ freezer completely. Remove shelves and Regensteiner and Mr. Igo Wenkart. My dear timates are that you frequently will save be­ trays. If yo u have an older model, it will need late husband, Henry 0 . Schmidt, was chair­ ED. NOTE: Mr. Eichenbaum has acknowl­ tween 50 to 75 percent of the cost of a van bra_ci ng with blocks of wood wedged be­ man of this memorial committee then and edged the plaque and the memorial service line operation. Individual savings by not hir­ tween motor and sides. If your refrigerator remained in that capacity until Nov. 1978. in the letter which follows . ing van lines are put at $291. In many in­ must be placed flat for moving, check your He saw to it that on or about every Nov. 11 stances, savings realized by do-it-yourselfers local dealer to make sure the model can be are estimated at above $1 ,000. put in a prone position. Use the insides of all And a total of $5.5 billion was saved by the large appliances for storing small items. "Cemetery Site Misses Point" 19 million Americans who moved themselves (8) For books , use special book cartons. during the past 12 months, says L.S. Shoen, And strong tapes will make the moving and EDITOR: We Jews know well the pain caused by the founder of U-Haul International, the world's storing even easier. - In reply to the letter from Michael Fink, Holocaust. It is the "outside world" which largest supplier of equipment for self­ (9) Remove the drawers from desks, which appeared in the Jan. 15 issue of The has to be reminded of this dastardly deed. movers. chests of drawers, etc., for loading and un­ Herald, concerning the site of the proposed RAYMOND EICHENBAUM Just renting the equipment - whether it loading. Replace after your chests and desks Holocaust Memorial, we the undersigned LENKA ROSE be a trailer as small as 102 cubic feet or as are aboard the van or trailer. It's wise to pack survivors of the Holocaust would like to voice HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL large as .378 cubic feet, whether the carrier drawers full - making sure that breakables the following : COMMITTEE has space for just a few of your personal are well-protec.ted. Face units against the belongings or can transport up to 12 rooms of van or trailer wall, or flat surface such as mat­ I. We have no objections to "sanctifying" EDITOR'S NOTE: R~aders are invited to furniture - is merely the beginning. (In fact, tresses to prevent drawers from opening. the Lincoln Cemetery, or any other worthy send comments on matters of local, national U-Haul is Ford's biggest truck customer and ( LO ) Pack all kinds of dishes in super­ place, in memory of the Holocaust. As a mat­ and international interest to: Letters to the apparently can supply you with dizzying strong cartons especially designed for this. ter of fact , we attend an annual com­ Editor, 99 Webster St ., Pawtucket, R.I. combinations of trucks and trailers. ) Nest cups and bowls. Stand plates, saucers memorative service at the Jewish Home for 02861. If you are to get the maximum in savings, • and platters on edge. Stuff dish towels into the Aged, which has a memorial plaque put are to make sure your household belongings remaining air spaces to insure safe packing. up by the R.l. Self Help Organi~ation. are safe and secure, you must learn and (II ) When possible, remove table legs Candlelighting Time scrupulously obey the basic rules for do-it­ from tables, lamps, etc. If not possible, load 2. The Holocaust Memorial should have a yourself movers. tables on top surfaces, legs up, and try to "symbolic significance" for the living. It Friday, Jan. 23 (I ) Plan well ahead and select the equip­ protect finish with bla11kets and padding. should remind all people living in Rhode 4:31 p.m. ment you have agreed you will need well Wrap large lamp bases individually in fur­ Island (and those passing through) of the before moving day. You can get an easy-to­ niture pads. Do not use newspapers ; ink may horrors which one group of people can perf use chart from a local dealer or by writing U­ smudge. pertrate upon others. This " living memorial',\ Haul International, 2727 N. Central Ave., (12) Protect mirrors and pictures in can then be possibly expanded to include a Phoenix, Ariz. 85004. special cartons. Cardboard can be cut to or­ library, archives, etc. der and tape used for protection. 9J11RILD (2) Total the number of items you'll be moving and determine the cubic feet of space (13) Discard flammables in advance for 3. The proposed Holocaust Memorial can (USPS 414-780) in no way be equated to one erected in a Publlehed!WWJWNk ■JThe to be occupied by each piece. The moving safety. Jewteh ,.,_ f!ublllNng Company guide list will help give you most cubic (14) Load a van or trailer, one quarter at a cemetery since we would like to memoralize HEATHER MAGtER Editor measurements you need. time, top to bottom. Tie it down, then start innocent human lives which were brutally LINDA A. ACCIARDO Assistant Editor (3) To determine cubic feet for pieces not on a new section. Load heavy items first ; 60 extinguished, as compared to honoring lives MAILING ADDAEIS: lo• IOII, Provklence, A.I. 02940 which " passed on" in a natural way. TetephoM: (401) 72'4-0200 li sted, multiply length of the item times percent of cargo weight should ride in PUNT: Hereld ••, . oft Webtter It., , ..... A.I. 02M1 width times depth. trailer's front half. Therefore Mr. Fink's response appears to OFFICE: 1n r ....ton ...... !Nt Proridenca, A.I. 02114 be mi ssing the point of our endeavor. At a (4) Add cu bic feet figures to find sub­ On rates, the basic one-way rental rate . :=:.~!,U:::=!:.~:;:i:;:•& .~~'::.":.o. totals to determine "total cubic feet" so you time when people with anti-Semitic Bo• .IOl3., Prov., A.I. 02N0. covers · th e use of the equipment for a teridencies are once more raising their ugly SubScrlptlon Ra(is: Thirty C8-nts theC opy°; By Mali $9 .00 per know the size of the veh icle you need to specified number of days to a designated annum ; outside R.I . and southeastern Mass. $14.00 per an­ transport the contents of various rooms. After voices, trying to destroy the positive lessons num. Bulk rates lln request. The Herald assumes subscrip­ ci ty. On truck rentals, specified totals of learned from the Holocaust, we the Jews of tions are continuous unless notllled to the contrary in writing. that, si mply match the proper equipment mil es are allowed: ex tra miles are charged at Th e Herald assumes no financial responslblllty for loading capacity with your total cubic feet Rhode -Island have to assert ourselves once typographtcal errors In advertisements, but will reprint tha1 a flat rate per mil e. There are no hidden more by honoring the martyrs of the Holo­ part ol the advertisement in which the typographical error oc­ and thus decide the right size van or trailer to curs. Advertisers wilt please notify the management Im• charges. caust in a proper manner with an imposing mediately ol any error which may occur. use for you r move. Sure, it's an adventure, and probably fun , edifi ce in a prominent place. Building this (5) Washing machines must be secured so THURSDAY , JANUARY 22, 1981 that spring-mounted motors do not vibrate. too. But tally up the savings - and the ex­ memorial in a cemetery would defeat this The tub should be braced wi th padded pe ri ence takes on much bigger significance. important purpose. ~ A j THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22-, 1981 - 5 I I j Abuhazira Immunity Lifted j j I To Clear Way For Trial <<.:,.:·~z- j j TEL AVIV-- Minister of Religious Af­ 63 to 33 to lift Abuhazira' s immunity, with I fairs Aharon Abuhazira will soon be put on five abstentions. The outcome was closer 4 trial as a result of the Knesset's decision to lift than expected , possibly re fl ecting dissatisfac­ 4 his immunity from prosecution. ti on with the methods used by the police in Abuhazira will be tried for corruption in the investigation. • Jerusalem District Court along with Moshe Herzl Shafir, recently dismissed from his Gabbai, an adviser in the Ministry; Shemuel post as Israel's chief of police, reportedly told Daskal, director of a re li gious school in Bnei the committee that police had planted fa lse Brak, and Rabbi Amram Korach, the informa ti on in the press in an attempt to in­ ' treasurer of the Yemenite Heritage Center in fluence potential witnesses. Bnei Brak. Abuhazira, a leader of the National Daskal and Korach have been charged Religious Party, has said he is the victim of a 7 days / 6 nights - round trip air fare, selected 1st class & deluxe hotels.­ with paying sums totaling about $15,000 to " political libel. " MANY MEALS, rum swizzle, airport / hotel transportation, discount for V Yisrael Gottleib, the Deputy Mayor of Bnei Moshe Meron, chairman of the House boat cruise, admission to Crystal Caves, Dolphin show, Aquarium & Marl­ Brak, who in turn passed the money to Gab­ Rules Committee, reported to the Kn esset, time Museum, pool, beach, marina, tennis courts, gratuities, taxes & more. bai for Abuhazira. Daskal and Korach work however, that the committee was satisfied Weekly departures. ALSO 7 DAY/ 6 NIGHT BERMUDA BARGAIN FOR for institutions whi ch receive a ll ocations that the accusations of the Attorney General $314. from the Religious Ministry7 were not politicall y motivated and that the Ew ■ BERMUDA FOR GOLDEN AGERS Gottleib has agreed to give evidence for evidence showed there was a case fo r an N ■ WITH RENDEZ-VOUZ featlvltlea 11'dltl the prosecution. indictme nt. - . . - ·- ---· Abuhazira, who remains a member of the MEMORIAL DAY, MAY 21, 6 NIGHTS, HAMILTON PRINCESS • • • • ••• $697 Vote Closer Than Expected Kn esset, said he would take a leave of ab­ COLUMBUS DAY, OCT. 8, 5 NIGHTS, HAMILTON PRINCESS , , • . ••• $597 The secret ballot vote in the Knesset was VETERAN'S DAY, NOV. 11, 5 NIGHTS, HAMILTON- PRINCESS ••• , •• $499 sence from the Cabinet duri ng the trial. NEW: • HAWAII THREE-A (SmarterthanCharterl) •• • $1197-$1346 15 days/14 nights - Waikiki, Maui, Kona & Hilo.Round-trip air fare, se­ State Dept. Mid-East Personnel lected standard 1st class & superior 1st class hotels, traditional Lei Greet­ ing, sightseeing, AAA TRAVEL GUIDE BOOK; Get-acquainted briefing, ., AAA OR LOCAL HAWAIIAN TOUR ESCORT, service charges, taxes & Will Remain In Administration more, Selected departures. WASHINGTON (}TA ) - Present person­ take up that post until late spring at the nel of the State De partment's Middle East earliest. Sherma n, a former diplomatic • AAA BERMUDA & CARIBBEAN CRUISES SAVE$$$ Bureau, headed by Assistant Secretary of correspondent of the Washington Star, has (WITH SIZEABLE AAA GROUP TRAVEL, REDUCTIONS, AAA ESCORT a PARTIES) Mar. 15-27, Grand Caribbean CrulH, SS VOLENDAM SAVE $178-442 PER COUPLE State Harold Saunders, wi ll continue to for­ been closely associated with Saunders and Apr. 29-May 5, Bermuda Crulae, TSS CARNIVALE •• ..•••••• • •• • .. .. • •• • • • 10% REDUCTION . mulate U.S. policy in affairs concerning the other top officials at both the State Depart­ May 3-10, Bermuda Cl'\>I18, SS VOLENDAM .• •. . .. •.• •• •• ••••• • •• • SAVE$100 PER COUPLE MayS-11, BermudaCrulse, TSSCARNIVALE •.•• •• . . •••••••••••••• . ••••• 103/oAEDUCTION area from Morocco to India including the ment and the White House and has trave ll ed SS VOLENDAM a TSS CARNIVALE are registered In Panama. Arab-Israeli dispute after the Reagan Ad­ with Secretaries of State on Middle East jour­ ministration takes offi ce. neys. • CLASSYGREATBRITAINwlthDorisRounds .,, .. ,,$1997 Secretary of State-designate Alexander May 14-31, Channel Islands, London, Devon, Cornwall, Bath, Shakespeare Haig reportedly has selected most of his Haig: Would Have Favored Planes To Country, Wales, Lake District, Scottish Highlands & Edinburgh. Round trip senior aides and while Saunders is apparentl y Saudi air fare, 1st cl. hotels, MOST MEALS, compreh. sightseeing & lots more. not one of them, neither has Haig indicated Meanwhile, Haig' s confirmation hearings his replacement. " The simple reason may be proceeded before the Senate Foreign Rela­ SNAP, SNAP; SNAl', SNAP that Haig has not yet settled on Saunders' 4 professional color passport tions Committee today with the principal photos for only 99e (when you TRAVELERS CHECKS successor," a State Department so urce said. emphasis still on his association with the make your foreign tour WITHOUT SERVICE CHARGE Saunders, 50, well known as "even­ Nixon White House. However, in response to arrangements with us.) hand'ed" on Arab-Israeli affairs, has been Senators' questions yesterday, Haig said that Assistant Secretary since April, 1978. H e suc­ if he had been in authority in I 978 he would ceeded Alfred Atherton, presently the U.S. have favored the sale of 60 F-15 fighter Ambassador in Cairo. H e was promoted from planes to Saudi Arabia. Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Middle That transfer was presented to Congress East to Assistant Secretary for Research and by the Carter Administration as a package Development in 1975 by then Secretary of deal that included the provision of military \ State H enry Kissinger. equipment for Israel and Egypt. It was seen In the latter post, he set forth before Con­ at the time as an Administration maneuver to gress a shift in U.S. policy toward Palestinian avert probable rejection by Congress of the Arabs and the ir " legitimate rights." aircraft for Saudi Arabia if they had been Kissinger dismissed it as academic. However, presented separately. the tilt toward Arab perceptions of a possible In other response, Haig said that the U.S. solution to the Arab-Israeli impasse con­ should attempt to "develop a consensus'' tinued to prevail. Saunders' presentation to with Western Europe and Japan about Congress appears in retrospect to be con­ protection of Persian Gulf oil " but must be sidered U.S. policy approved by the Ford Ad­ prepared to act even unilaterally to secure ministration and not altered by the Carter our access to those vital resources." He said Administration. he favored continuing and expanding the

George Sherman, the chief information of­ Carter Administration's recent efforts to FOR RESERVATION PlEASE CONTACT ficer of the State Department on Middle East develop an American military presence near GAIL RUBENSTEIN affairs, has been designated U.S. Consul the Persian Gulf but would not indicate 1035 AESEAVOIA AVE General in Calcutta but is not expected to specific sites for U.S. forces. CRANSTON RI q44.7300 OTHER OFFICES IN PROVIDENCE. BARRINGTON NEWPORT WAl

6 -:- THE RHO DE ISLAND H ERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 :. __ Parnesses Concoffs Announce Birth Barbara and Wi ll iam Concoff of Los Announce Birth Angeles, Calif. , ha ve announced the birth of Mr. a nd Mrs. F loyd Parness of 17 their first child, a daughter, Lisa Erin on Lakeview Ave., Northford, Conn., have an­ Jan. 18, 1981. She weighed in at 6½ pounds. nounced the birth of their first child, a son, Lisa's maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Seltzer of 139 Sessions St ., . - -- David Scott on Dec. 29, 1980. ~IETYNE\Xffi Dav id's maternal grandparents are Mr. Pro vidence. and Mrs. Jerome Sternberg of Derby, Conn. - H e r pate rna l g ra ndparen ts a re Mr. Patern al grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Concoff of Santa Barbara, Abbie Lynn Siegel Weds Steven Ganin Charles Parness of Cranston. Paternal great­ Calif. Her paternal great-grandmother is grandmothe r is Mrs. Emma Glantz of Mrs . Ruth Concoff of Los Angeles. The ma rriage of Abbie Cra nston. Lynn Siegel of New York, Dembys Announce Birth daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Millens Announce Birth Maurice A. Siegel of Cranston, Deborah and Steven Demby of 138 Har­ Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mi ll en of 33 Deer to Steven Lloyd Ganin took va rd -St., Cranston, have announced the Run Dr., Randolph, N.J., have announced place on Nov. 1, 1980 at a 6:30 bi rth of thei r first child, a daughter, Arielle the birth of their fo urth chil d and third Helene on Jan. 12, 1981. p.m. service at Temple Si nai, Cranston. daughter, Dara Beth on Jan. 17, 198 1. Ma ternal grandparents are Pauli ne and Patern al grand parents are Mr. and Mrs. Kortick and the late Harry Ko rtick of West Officiating at the ceremony Louis Mi ll en of Barrington. Paternal great­ Warwick. wer e Rabb i Geo r ge J . grandmothe r is Mrs. Bess ie Hell er of Arie ll e's patern al grandparents are Mr. Astrachan and Cantor Rem­ Providence. and Mrs. Harry Deniby of New Rochell e, mie Brown. Dara's matern al grandmother is Mrs. N. Y. Patern al great-g randfather is Aaron The groom is the son of Mr. David Fishlin of Lexington, Mass. Demby, also of New Rochell e. a nd Mrs. Sau l Ganin of Lawrence, N.Y. and Boca Raton, F l a. He is the grand so n of Mrs. H a rry Debowsky of Miami, Fla. The bride was given in marriage by her father. She wore a gown of whi te chiffon featuring pink roses ci rcling the de coll etage and hemline. Th e s heer e lbow le ngth sleeves were edged with pink sati n. A pink satin ribbon at the waistlin e held a bow and streamers fa ll ing on to her chapel lengt h train . Her head­ band of pink sil k roses held a cathedral length ve il of silk illussion. The bride carried a bouquet of white stephanoti s, baby's breath and pink tea roses. Bo nni e Mae Siegel, sis ter of th e bride was maid of honor. Other attendants were Terry Zegans and Beth Ganin, sisters o f th e g r oo m . J uni o r bridesmaid was Melissa Ann Siegel, sister of the bride. Robert Kau fman, vice-president of The Miriam Hospital, congratulates Deborah Cotrone (center) on her graduation from the Hospital's Pharmacy Technician Training Best m a n was Je ff rey Program. Looking on are Pharmacist Gail Urban (left) and graduates Kathleen Weber Zegans, brother-in-law of the MRS. STEVEN GANIN (second from right) and Catherine Sivo (far right). groom. Usher was Harlan For her outstanding performance in the Program, Deborah Cotrone was awarded a $50 Peirce Siegel, brother of the savings bond by Smith, Kline and French Laboratories. bride. Acapulco, Mexico, the couple Lakes Celebrate 25th Anniversary plans to make their home in Kew Gardens, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lake of Sharon, celebrate the anniversary and honor the cou­ The Mass., were honored at a surprise 25th ple. Hostesses for the evening were the wedding anniversary party on Jan. 10 at the daughters of the couple, Debbie, Sheryl, Dead sea Venus De Milo Restaurant, Swansea, Mass. Beth and Rhonda . Lives! Sixty friends and relatives were present to The Dead sea, a resource of Newspapers bring you closer to your community. food and energy. Can the Joint owners, Israel and Jordan, put Treat Your Tootsie To Valentine Balloons, aside politics to benefit from Sweets and a Love Song. its abundance? Don't miss this Intriguing program. Nova~ TUesclay • 8pm ,

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467-8903 88 1 1 Rolfe St., Cranston, R.I. Tnf\ad maoe P<:Ks•ble 1r1 D¥t DV a gr.mt from t"' coroora tton for Puohc Broaoc as ttng I I Academy Of Torah Sam Shlevin To In Basketball Address Ohawe Sholom Congregation Ohawe Sholam Ladies Aux­ Tournament iliary and Sisterhood and Men's Clul5 will host Sam Shlevin at a breakfast to be held The basketball team of the New England Sunday, Feb. I at 10 a. m. in the main Academy of Torah of Providence wi ll be in meeting room of the temple, East Ave., Paw­ New York City later this month for the 4th tucket. Annual Yeshi va High School Invitational Shlevin , the National Commissioner of Basketball Tournament, sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League, will At hl etic Association of Yeshiva University. di scuss the subject of " Anti-Semitism in our Preliminary pair-offs begin Jan. 24, Community," brginning at 11 :30 a.m. The fo llowed by semi-final rounds Jan. 25 program is free and everyo ne is welcome. and the final tournament battle on Jan. Donation for the breakfast is $1.50. 26, as the afternoon opening feature of a New York Knicks- Phoenix Suns NBA Hebrew Speaking Class season-schedule square-off. The Bureau of Jewish Education will con­ An awards banquet will be held Jan. 25. duct its annual Winter Semester Ulpan class Seven other schools will be sending basket­ for adults. Pre-requisites for the intensive ball teams to the event, including defending Hebrew speaking class, are reading and class B champions, Maimonides High School phraseology ability in the Hebrew language. of Brookline, Mass. The class is scheduled to begin Thursday, Jan. 22 and wi ll be held from 10 a.m. to 12 noon in the Bureau building. Those wishing Rabbi Gutterman Elected to enroll may register anytime during the 10 Member Of Committee week session. Mrs. Rebecca Twersky will in­ For Humanities In R.I. struct the class. For additional information, ca ll the Bureau office at .33 1-0956. Rabbi Leslie Y. Gutterman of Providence has been elected a member of the Rhode Brailovsky Ailing Island Committee for the Humanities SIDNEY DRESSLER, (left), Rhode Island State of Israel Bonds chairman, and Harvey (RI CH ) NEW YORK (JTA ) - Viktor Brailovsky, Cohen, regional director for State of Israel Bonds, review the results of the 1980 state­ He is currently the Senior Rabbi at Temple held in Moscow's Butyrka Prison, is seriously wide campaign to provide urgently needed loan dollars to strengthen Israel. Last year Bet h-El, Providence and a former com­ ill , according to the National Conference on the sale of the 4% Israel Bond, described by Dressler as the "Bread and butter of missioner of the Providence Human Rela­ Soviet Jewry. Israel's development budget," Increased 7.5% or about $50,000 over the 1979 sales tions Commission. The rabbi presentl y Brailovsky, a leading activist of the Jewish figure. serves on the Board of Directors of Miriam emigration movement, and editor of the The Rhode Island leader expressed his confidence that even greater bond support Hospital, Planned Parenthood and Hospice journal " Jews in the USSR," was arrested would be forthcoming In 1981, adding that Jewish dedication to Israel Is greater than Care, Inc. Nov. 13 on charges of " defaming the Soviet economic, political or other obstacles. state and public order." Cohen stated that many gala national and International events will be held to Rabbi Gutterman was elected to the com­ According to his wife Irina, the interroga­ celebrate the 30th anniversary of the launching of the Israel Bond program. mittee to fill a vacancy made by the depar­ tion has been suspended temporarily because ture of RICH member Steve Caminis, fo rmer of his serious medical condition. She report­ News Director of WJAR-TV. ed that this latest news contrasts sharply Temple Emanu-EI Men's Club Sponsors The Rhode Island committee, affiliated with the information she had previously with the National Endowment fo r the received from prison authorities, assuring her Hospice Care Of R.I. Meeting Humanities in Washington, D.C., awards that her husband was receiving appropriate The Temple Emanu-EI Men's Club will comfort at home, rather than in the hospital grants to organizations which sponsor pro­ medicine and was well. Efforts to ascertain sponsor a community- wide meeting, environment. Individualized service enables jects to advance public scholarship and learn- the nature of Brailovsky's illness have been highlighting Hospice Care of R. I. , on Sun­ every patient to live life to the fullest up to ing. · unsuccessful. day, Feb. 8 in the Ru th and Max Alperin the moment of death. Meeting House, corner -of Morris Ave. and Hospice also ex tends emotional a nd Sessions St., Providence. spiritual support to the family throughout Guest speaker is Robert J. Canny, ex­ the patient's illness and during the period of ecutive director of Hospice. A continental bereavement and grief. breakfast will be served at 10 a.m. followed Dr. Bruno Borenstein , medical director of by the discussion at 10:30 a.m. The entire Hospice, wi ll join in the discussion. Dr. Eliot Calendar B: Barron is chairman of the meeting. He wi ll · program is open to the community free of charge. - offer insights into the psychological dif­ Hospice Care is a medicall y-directed, ficulties, . which hospital physicians and I I multi-disciplinary program, offering nurses face, in treating and dealing with \ Allard, on Tuesday; Jan. 27 from 7:30 to 9:30 terminally- ill patients and their families terminall y-i ll patients. Social Seniors p.m. at the center. Limited enrollment is of­ The Social Seniors of Warwick will hold a fered. social meeting on Wednesday, Jan. 28 at 7 :30 A " Relaxation Workshop," sponsored by p.m. at Temple Beth Am, 40 Gardiner St ., the singles, will be held Thursday, Jan. 28 at Warwick. 8 p.m. at the center. The leader of the Entertainment for the event will be program is a specialist in relaxation methods. In Black William Gilstein and his friend " Vel-Vel. " No reserva tions are necessary. Gilstein is a ventriloquist and has performed before many groups in the Massachusetts Spring Green ORT and Rhode Island areas. Refr eshments will & White be served after the meeting. The Spring Green Chapter of ORT will Pierre Cardin has done the Edna Fleisher, program chairman, re­ hold it s regular meeting Wednesday, Jan. 21 asymmetric suit. A wool quests that deposits be brought to this at 8 p. m. at the home of Sara Weiss, blend so superb it will go Warwick. meeting for the trip to Nevele County Club from the conference room from May 11 through May 15. Ph yllis Taylor, a representati ve of Candi­ Works of East Greenwich, will demonstrate to cocktails. Just one the process of candy making. For further in­ from an exciting spring Shachar Chapter Of formation, please ca ll 463-7135. suit collection! Mizrachi Women $250 Beth-El Sisterhood ,1 The next meeting of th e Shachar C hapter I , of Ameri can Mizrachi Women will be at the The Sisterhood Study Group of Temple home of Rabbi and Mrs. Sholom Strajcher, Beth-El will meet Thursday, Jan. 29 at 10 21 Lin.coin Ave., Providence on Tuesday, a. m. at the temple. Mildred Blumenthal will Jan. 27 at 8 p.m. _ speak on the topic Confucianism. Coffee will " Behavioral Principles With Children" be served at 9 :30 a.m. Eve ryone is welcome will be the topic of discussion, presented by to attend. Dr. James Rubovits, psychology professor at Rhode Island College. Hus bands are en­ Jewish Subcommittee couraged to attend. For further information call Elaine at 274- Of R.I. Heritage 8017 or Karen at 941-1791. The Jewish ·subcommittee of the Rhode Island Heritage Commission wi ll hold its monthly meeting on Monday, Jan. 26 at 7:45 JCC Singles p.m. at the Jewish Community Center, 401 Elmgrove Av e., Providence. The Jewi sh Business and Professional Anyone of Jewish heritage who is in­ Singles of the Jewish Community Center will terested in the cultural development of the sponsor a Brunch Sunday, Jan. 25 at 11 :30 Jews in Rhode Island is we lcome to attend. a. m. at the center, 401 Elmgrove Ave., For further information, call RIHC at 277- Providence. 2669. Guest speaker for the Brunch is Rabbi Chaim Casper, University of Rhode Island Hillel Director. Rabbi Casper's topic wi ll Hope Link No. 46 deal with " The Jewish Vi ew of Sex." Hope Link No. 46, Order of the Golden Babysitting is available for the Brunch, Chain, wi ll meet Jan. 24 at 7:30 p.m. at Doric but rese rv ations must be made by Jan. 21. , Temple, 12.37 Reservior Ave., Cranston. The singles wi ll sponsor a playreading A memorial service will be held for Leon group on Monday, Jan. 26 at 8 p.m. at a Roseman, Right Worthy Associate Grand member's home pl ayreading will cover plays Patron of the Order of the Golden Chain . by Oscar Wilde. Reservations are needed for The program for the evening wi ll include a this program. Mock Wedding. Hope Link is participating 400 Westminster Ma ll , Providence Open daily 9-5:30, Thursday 'ti! 8 The g roup will a lso hold a Da nce in the WPRO Community Club Awards Rt. 2, Warwick, Opposite Midland Mall Open daily 10·6, Mon ., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 Workshop, " Joy of Move ment," led by Al Program. ------·------

8 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JAN UA RY 22, 1981 Jewish Converts: Intermarriage, Conversion And The Jewish Family

by Linda A. Acciardo fo addition, the reduced participation in ~ • ·· Many people are choosing Judaism and organized religion by Jews, Catholics and we have an opportunity to respond with Protestants has dissolved the barriers be­ -- wa rmth and hospitality," says Josephine tween people. Narva, the mother-i n-law of a converted Jew " As people met each other wi th different and a member of the National Task Force backgrounds away from home, they shared on Reform Jewish Outreach. ideas and lifestyles and in some cases Welcoming a new convert to Judaism can married each other," Narva said. be a strengthening experi ence for the born Although marriage seems to be one of the Jew, Narva told a group of over 100 members primary reasons people decide to convert, a of the Providence section of the National study assessing the impact of the conversion Council of Jewish Women. ex peri ence showed that 32 percent of the The recent program, entitled " Inter­ converts found Judaism more acceptable marriage, Conversion and the Jewish than the faith with which they were raised.

"A convert shouldn't feel singled out, pointed out and put on the spot - the point is to become a part of the Jewish community," says Dru Greenwood.

Famil y," dealt with the reality of inter­ " l found myself at home with Judaism. It marriage in society today, the acceptance of felt comfortable. When we decided to marry the convert and the impact the conversion I fe lt it was the right time to make a commit­ experience has on the Jewish fa milies con­ ment. My husband, his family and my MRS. JOSEPHINE NARVA and Dru Greenwood speak to the National Council of cerned. fam il y supported me," Greenwood said . Jewish Women on the topic of "Intermarriage, Conversion and the Jewish Family." One such family was represented at the However, Greenwood was also warned by program by Dru Greenwood, a converted her Jewish in-laws about the prejudices both Jew of 10 years and coordinator of the Post­ within and without the Jewish community. The new Jew must assimilate into the children who are inter-dating, inter-mating Conversion Program sponsored by the Un­ There are many uncertainties th e convert Jewish communit y. "What is the point of and int er-marrying, Narva added. ion of American Hebrew Congregations. must face : How wi ll the convert himself calling yo urself a Jew if yo u're not going to Greenwood is proud of where she ca me The process of conversion is a long, soul change? What will this mean for the family be invol ved?" as ks Greenwood. from and where she is today. "When l first searching one. For Greenwood, it began and friends of the convert? Will the convert "Converts are involved with Judaism as converted, I felt I had to tiptoe around. I when she rejected Jes us Chri st as the be rejected? Will there be a way to back leaders and take active roles in the temples don't fee l that way now . Converts shouldn't Messiah and the basic tenets of Christianit y. out? How does one choose among reform . and organizations. They make great Jews, " fee l si ngled out, pointed out or ·put on the " I couldn't accept Christianity per se. I was conservative and orthodox branches of says Grace Alpert, a member of the NCJW. spot," Greenwood adds. She feels that once searching through the philosophies of Buber Judaism? Is the convert a real Jew?" A convert wi ll a person has converted, he or she should not and Kirkegard. If I had not met my hus­ " Like the newlywed couple, the convert band, who gave me the im petus to study spends the first year exploring and chang­ Judaism, it's very likely that I would not be ing, but the basi_c va lues which ori ginall y "As human beings we are all in a continual process of Jewish today," Greenwood said. drew the convert to Judaism have not · The children of Dru Greenwood and her changed," Greenwood said. becoming and in that sense we can all become new husband take their Jewish identities for The idea of conversion becomes a reality Jews," says Mrs. Narva. granted. "They, being born Jews, are an af­ when the individual approaches a rabbi. fi rmation of our Jewish life," Greenwood This is the fi rst step - making contact said. with the Jewish community. " Your fi rst never be a born Jew. He must accept his Meetings between Jews and non-Jews reaction is panic. You have an urge to be call ed a convert, but a new Jew. "But who eventually marry have resulted from further explore Judaism, but ther;,, is an un­ identit y as a convert , but we are all part of converts will always be considered that by "factors _beyond our control," Mrs. Narva certainty as to what will be encountered," Israel and 'Your people shall be my people,"' so me people," adds Greenwood. The term Greenwood sa id . said, among them, the increase in business says Greenwood." " Jews by choice" has also been used to and industry after World War II , the jet age, Once the rabbi has been found, an inten­ The National Task Force on Jewish Out­ describe the convert. traveling and increase of exchange students. sive 23 weeks of the study of Judaism reach, sponsored by the Union of American For Dru Greenwood, conversion is "an fo llows. A few of the cou rses are Jewish Hebrew Congregations, was fo rmed to deal ongoing evolutionary process that will co n­ history, Theology, Hebrew and current with the needs of couples, non-Jews con­ tinue all my life." sidering conversion and the· needs of con­ Jewish li festyles. Regul ar meetings wi th the " As human beings we are all in a co n­ ve rts, according to Narva. "We need to also rabbi take place to guide the convert before tinual process of becoming and in that sense a final decision has been made about con- develop support groups for parents of adult we can all become new Jews,.' Narva said. version . _ The rabbi has an obligation to determine the sincerit y of the convert. He will ask questions such as " What would you do if yo ur spouse died. And for the single convert, "What would yo u do if yo u fe ll in love with a non-Jew? and ·· How d_eep is your commit­ ment to Israel?" The conversion ceremony itself includes a Mikveh ritual for women and a ritual cir­ cumcision for men. "Becoming a Jew is a process. There is now a Jewish li fe to lead. The process is a slow ac­ MRS. JOSEPHINE NARVA AND DRU cu mulation of an individual Jewish past. The GREENWOOD excitement of newness turns into the comfort of fam iliarity," Greenwood said. Watching her 23-year-old daughter-in­ law li ghting the Shabbath candles, revived Wallenberg old memories of how awkward Mrs. Narva * continued from page 1· felt as a young bride learning her role as a The general, Gennadi N. Kupri ya nov, had Jewish woman. Her daughter-in-law's con­ version has not only added someone very been sentenced to prison for participation in an alleged plot. The name of the informant special to the Narva family, but has was not disclosed at his request, Wiesenthal stimulated the born Jews. :· It can be a said. The general, it was said, who had been meaningful exchange. Give yourselves an released from prison, died in 1979 after being opportunity to reach out. It's not the end, hounded by Soviet secret police for discuss­ but the beginning of the process," Narva "MANY PEOPLE are choosing Judaism and we have an opportunity to respond with ing his acquaintance with the Swedish said. warmth and hospitality," says Mrs. Narva. Dru Greenwood (right) and Elaine Hoffman diplomat. of the NCJW (2nd from left). Also testifying to the panel was an American, Marvin W . M akinen, a professor Handwriting A Snowshoe Isn't 152 New War Crime of biophysics at the University of Chicago. * ·continued from page 14 Makinen was arrested by the Soviets in 1961 all ex perts in graphology even agree on the A Snowshoe Cases Filed In Germany and served 28 months in prison on spying symbology of the handwriting." MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. BONN (JTA) - In 1980, 152 new war charges. He said a cell mate had spoken to In June of last year, Wilson and his wife Madeline Mishel was inspired by snowshoes crimes cases were filed in West Germany, it him about the presence of a Swede at a time moved to Atlanta in order to be closer to their while a graduate student at the U. of was reported by Adalbert Rueckerl, head of when officials in Stockholm knew of no other son and his family. Although _semi-retired, Pennsylvania in 1976. the central office for the in vestigation of possible Swedish prisoners in the Soviet Un­ Wilson still devotes time to research in his After two years of staring at the weave of Nazi crimes in Ludwigsburg. ion except Wallenberg. fi eld, often giving his findings in lectures to decorative snowshoes on the wall, she When the Parliament abolished the more Gideon Hausner, chief Israeli prosecutor professional societies in the fi eld of Police devised a hexagonal design for racquets used than 100-year-old Statute of Limitations for in the Trial of Adolf Eichmann and panel Science. for tennis or racquetball . The six-sided base murder las t year, it left the door open for a member, said there had been no satis­ Although there will probably never be a design, instead of the traditional four-sided continuing investigation and bringing to factory evidence from the Soviets about television se ries devoted to the adventures of design, is call ed " Mad Rag" stringing and is trial of Nazi war criminals. Wallen berg's fate, a1_1d much evidence a Questioned Document Examiner, Simeon used now in Omega'snew Galaxy 21 racquet­ Had the statute not been abolished, onl y indicating the· diplomat did not die as re­ Wilson has spent the last three decades in­ ball racquet. cases already filed with the courts would ported. The panel therefore, Hausner said, volved in one of the more fascinating, if little The pattern reduces vibration and allows have been subject to prosecution and there " clings' to the idea that Wallenberg known, aspects of the science of catching the ball to stay on the strings longer fo r more would have been no further investigations to , is still alive. criminals. power and spin, the inventor said. uncover unknown events in Poland. _j THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JA NUARY 22, 1981 - 9 Genetics Update: The Present: Understanding Genetic Diseases And Hoping For A Cure The Future: The ·Feasibility Of Cloning People

by Linda A. Acciardo itself would have produced if it had in fa ct At the moment a child is conceived, infor­ had the proper gene, Sheff said. mation from his parents in the fo rm of genes Rather th an using drugs, artificial sub­ determines the color of hair and eyes, how stances which affect the cell s of the bod y tall he will grow and every combination of and prod uce side affects, geneti c therapy traits the individual will possess. If a gene is "allows us to naturally replace what is miss­ defecti ve, the effect may be either harmless ing with what should have been there to or devastating: a genetic disease can occur. begin with."" " Through geneti c engineering, we have "" In the last ten years insulin is the most finall y reached th e point where we know spectacular example of what we" ve been what a gene is,'" Dr. Michael F. Sheff, able to do."" associate biochemist at Miria m Hospital and - Since- Tay Sachs affects the nervous associate professo r of pathology at Brown sys te m , this gene tic the ra p y is not Medical School, told a group of Miriam ameniable to the disease, because " it is dif­ Hospital' s ·Women:, Association members. fi cult to get substances from the outside into The genetic code creates a " blueprint" the brain,'" Sheff said. The brain has for the making of the proteins of the bod y. tremendous defenses. " If it didn"t we would " With this blueprint we can make genes,'" be walking around stupified or partiall y in a Sheff said in his talk entitled "Genetics Up­ coma from the things we"ve eaten,'" he date." added. " Kn owing the blueprint mechanisms, At this time the obstacle to building the puts us in a position to start looking at gene for the exact problem in Tay Sachs is geneti c diseases as a whole and solve the insertion into the embryo . .. It has been ac­ problem of curing them." complished in ex periments with mice, but "KNOWING THE BLUEPRINT mechanisms, puts us In a position to start looking at the differences are so enormous that with genetic diseases as a whole and solve the problem of curing them"' says Dr. Michael F. Fifteen hundred persons have undergone prevailing technology it can"t be done."" Sheff, associate biochemist at Miriam Hospital. genetic screenings at Miriam Hospital' s Tay Unfortunately, most obstetricians do not Sachs Program. Fro m that total, 70 persons test fo r Tay Sachs disease because they are Gerry's Ask About Our Special have been diagnosed as carriers of the dis­ reluctant to alarm the pregnant woman. If 8 P.M. - 8 A.M. Rate ·Mccrudden ease. Tay Sachs is one of the seven diseases the husband and wife are both carriers, am­ Fruitworks For Elderly which affects primarily those of Jewish des­ niocentesis, the withdrawal of a sample of Radiator Repair cent, said Sheff, who serves on the Geneti cs amnioti c fluid in whi ch the fetus "swims,'" FREECIDER! •Cleaning •Repairing Advisory Council of the State of Rhode can be performed during the 14th to 16th 727 Hope St. Prov. •Recoring Island and is currently the coordinator of the week of pregnancy 751-6257 Tay Sachs Program in conjuncti on with the " The odds are four to one that the baby Jewish Family and Children"s Service. will be okay,'" Sheff said. However, the one in four which does have the disease, when PAINTING. carried to full term, a characteri sti c bright 0\ ,"...: /. inter ior o\ exterior· cherry spot can be seen at the back of the in­ -(€ l~_,.. fant" s eye with an opththalmoscope. No ~ <;:_1,!5.JOt,t" . 738-2550 known treatment can reverse the condition PAPER HANGING 835 West- Share Rd., Warwick and life ex pectancy is short, about two years. Low Prices The other alternative is to abort the fetus. Free Estimates In the general population one in 300 per­ Guaranteed sons can contract Tay Sachs. In the Jewish Workmanship population, the incidence of the disease oc­ MRS.ROMANO curs among one in 25. Pierce Painting The Tay Sachs Program at Miriam 737-7288 Hospital serves the main function of screen­ ··············· ing the Jewish population in Rhode Island. In Narragansett They determine whether or not a person is a Construction is SPIRITUAL carrier of Tay Sachs. flying along. Units READER From $649.00 AND The Tay Sachs line is 274-3700 (ext. 481). have two bedrooms, Via EL AL C o mmunity te stings are sc hedule d studio, eat-in kitchen, From New York ADVISOR periodically and the next screening will be all applianced, large held at Brown University"s Hillel House on ...... living/dining area, PASSOVER Feb. 22 from 11 -3 p.m. Another screening with balcony or PACKAGES & TOURS will be held at Temple Emanu-EI on March CATSKILLS She has succeeded . 29. patio, from $80,900. MEXICO where others have Feasibility Of Cloning Call Mary Lyle or MIAMI failed. Bill Lepre CARIBBEAN The increased knowledge concerning the BOSTON/LOS ANGELES All readings private makeup of genes and how they function (401 I 789-1035, 11 :oo $286 Round Trip and confidential. raises serious questions as to the technical BOSTON/HONOLULU feasibility of cloning. AMt• . $566 Round Trip Hours 9-9 Putting genes where they have never been before results in cloning,'" said Sheff. .... WINKLEMAN FOR A clone is an identical monovular twin. Condominiwns TRAVEL INFORMATION: After conception the fertilized egg divides Of Distinction Lid. DR. MICHAEL F. SHEFF -~ 720Reservoir into two parts. The parts are absolutely Swte E·69, 4430 Post Rd ., Ave:, Cranston 861-9817 identical in regards to the protein made by Warwick, R.I. 02818 The Tay Sachs disease (Amarotic familial 4011884 •1700 - 943-7700 idiocy) is manifested in earl y infancy and the body. "" Human clones exist as part of the c h a r acte ri zed by muscle weakness, natural system .with the use of fertility drugs - - prog ressive helplessness and blindness. producing three, four, five and six births. Although not exclusively restricted to the Three and four of the offspring will be Jewish po pula tion , as a g roup, the monovular and identical. " predecessors of the Ashkenazi Jews in With mice, cloning is a process which Eastern Europe are generall y more suscepti­ removes the nuclei from the mouse eggs. A ble to the disease, Sheff said . seri es of nuclei (all from the same source) ·· Among the carriers of the disease, there are then inserted into new eggs. Every is "a gene which doesn't function properl y,'" single member of the multiple birth will be A gene in the famil y lineage of the carrier identical. " has been altered. A change which oc­ Another method of cloning involves tak­ curred in the structure and composition of ing the gene (the chemical substance) and the gene rendered Jews less susceptible to producing copies of it. The cells, by means tuberculosis in the 18th century. However, of genetic engineering, are inserted with the Sale! the descendents now carry the gene and, gene. " We want what this gene produces." when two carriers have children. one in four " Cloning for experimental purposes is tends to contract Tay Sachs disease. useful, but for practical purposes cloning is Although there is no known cure for Tay quite impossible with humans," said Sheff. Sachs and the other six hereditary diseases, What a mother digests during pregnancy Entire Winter Collection through gene tic the rapy the missing produces various hormones which influence proteins can be made to build the genes that the development of the brain. These hor­ have been altered. mones would have to be duplicated. "But, • MASTER CHARGE • BAC • JACKIE CHARGE This treatment can be attempted with a an individual is unique and his ability and number of genetic diseases including temperament are unreproducible,'' Sheff Gauchers disease whi ch affects organs that said. can be injected such as the liver and spleen. From the human point of view, " the reac­ CENTRAL PLAZA-SEEKONK " When the brain is not affected, we are at a tion to cloning in society today, and most stage where we can make the missing scientists would agree, would be to ab­ protein and give it to the person. We are solutely object to the concept of cloning 711-7117 people" making the actual substance which the body 10 - THE RHODE· ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 Successful AJC Urges Reagan To End Portfolio Review Affirmative Action Abuses Investing NEW YORK - The American Jewish that non-race specific affirmative action is Congress has call ed on President-elect avail able in m ost cases in lieu of race con­ ------~--bY David R. Sargent Ronald Reagan to e nd the .. abuses .. of .. race­ scious programs. conscious" Federal an ti -discrim inatio n Squad ron noted that several race-based programs while retaining the principle of a f­ Small Business Administrati on programs firmative action to promote equal oppor- were less successful than simila r state and tunity. · Q - I a m 53 years old and pla nning to those companies with active exploration private programs that had more neutral work for 8- 10 more years. I hold the follow­ programs have greater long-term growth In a letter to the Pres ident-elect, Howard e li g ib ili ty requirements a nd d ealt w ith ing stocks: D iamond Shamrock, Occide n­ poten t ia l. Northwest En e rgy ra t es a M. Squadron, president of the American problems more specificall y. ta l Pe troleum, A. H , Robins, N orihwe st b uy/ hold along with Houston Natural Gas, Jewish Congress, defended the affirmative He ci ted, too, an Internal Revenue Service E ne rgy, Schering-Plough, and 400 sha res of Pa nha ndle Easte rn Pipeline, Sou thern action concept as a "necessary part of the ruli ng relating to d iscriminati on by private Windsor F und. I am thinking about buying Natural Resources, Texas O il & Gas, and Un­ national com mitme nt to full equali ty... It schools tha t hurt J_ewish and other religious Rore r Group. Please comme nt. J . R., New ited Energy Resources for good growth would be a .. serious mistake for this society to schools that were not guilty of racial dis­ Je rsey prospects. abandon these efforts now, .. he said. crimination, and the success of a non-race­ " The need to "do something,' has led to conscious a ffirma tive action admiss ions The onl y proble m stock I see in your A -All b ut one (Robins) of the stocks you abuses and overreaching by the Federal program imple mented by the Temple Un­ hold are well situa ted for furthe r growth over portfolio is A. H . Robins. Despite the relative governme nt," Squadron said. "Government iversit y Law School and used by other the next 8- lO years. I have commented success of its pharmaceutical and consumer has m ade race, sex or national origin the institutions. favorably on DIA OXY. Sche ring, and products li nes (which include Robitussen crucial determinant in a wide varie ty of " These instances, and there are others; in­ Windsor Fund recently in this column. You cough med icine, gastrointestina l disorder settings, .. he explained, and this approach is dicate that affirmative action has all too oft en might consider using additiona l funds to add treatments, C hap Stick and Sergeant pet care "inherently divis ive" and .. an important ·been race-conscious." Mr. Squad ro n con­ t6 yo ur present positions in these stocks. prod ucts ), Robins is still consid e red a cause of the palpable inte rgroup tension tended. problem com pany due to uncertain ties sur­ whi ch exists today. Northwest Ene rgy is a natura l gas pipeline The proble ms tha t have resulted from .. the rounding the Dalkon Shield IUD litigation. .. Government cannot be blind to the company with an active oil a nd gas explora­ continuing failure to overcome fully the e f­ Earnings growth in the past fi ve years is in­ problem of race," Mr. Squadron asserted , tion program. As such, it should benefit from fects of official racial discrimination urgently fe rior to that of Rore r Group, which is and .. it must ana lyze all tha t it does to insure de mand solutions," he said. the positive trends in its industry. Since oil bene fiting from ongoing growth in drugs a nd that no group is even inadvert ently excluded. prices substantially exceed natural gas prices "Non-discrimination alone is not suf­ surgical lines. The stock is attractive for its " It is our view that some sort of affirmative on a n e nergy equivale nt basis, gas has a com­ fi cient' ' to overcom e p ast injustices, own growth pote ntia l and as a takeover can­ action is necessary," and that there are pe titive edge, a nd pipeliners should bene fit Squadron concluded . " W e believe that a ffir­ didate. I would ad vise switching out of .. instances whe n it is appropriate for the from increased use of gas. At the same time mative action must not be a n abandoned as a Robins and into Rore r. The resulting governme nt to resort to race, nationality or social policy."' the new Administra tion is expected to ac­ portfolio of g rowth stocks should do we ll for sex in designing remedial programs," he told He urged the President-elect, .. to see to it celera te the d econtrol of this industry, so that you over the next 8- 10 years before your Reag a n . But "we b e li eve tha t a re­ that the misuse of affirmative action does not prices will go up along with volume. Al so, retirem ent. examination of affirmative action will show continue."

DAR Exhibit AM i C rocos m______P_h_i_ll_ip_s_Le_v_y_, _w_h_o_r_e-st-o-re_d_M_o_n_t_ic_e_llo_;_t_h_e___ se_ c_u_r_ed-th_e_r-ig_h_t_o_f-Je-,-vs_t_o_f_u_ll_c_it-iz_e_n-sh_i_p_in • J T d Seixas family, one of the leading Jewish the Colony of New York. Of A families in early America; and Abraham merlcan ewry O ay Touro, benefactor of the Touro Synagogue in The DAR exhibition, which deals wiih the Newport, Rhode Island. part American Jews played in building WASHINGTON, D.C. - A note d Socie ty, .. ha; we ll-deserved pride in his own Rabbi Stern, who is on the advisory council Colonial Society, fighting the American American Jewish historian a nd pioneer lineage, for they· exemplify the best of of the u. s. National Archives, said that early Revolution, and creating the new nation, in- Jewish genealogist told those gathe red at his Ameri can and Jewish tradition, including American Je ws, too, faced proble ms of eludes paintings, decorative arts objects and talk on .. Early Jewish Families in Ameri ca," Myer Myers, the famous silversmith, Jacob assimilation and intermarriage and they in- documents. · in Constitution Hall, Daughte r of the Phillips who fought in the Re volution ; Judah te rmingled freely with their non-Jewish Jews also were involved in business far American Revolution building, "that the Touro, Rabbi Ge rshom Me ndes Se ixas, ne ighbors. beyond the communities in which they lived . people represented in an early American Supreme Court Justice Benja min Cardozo, He noted that ma ny Jews had non-Jewish For example, Michael and Bernard Gratz and Jewish communtiy exhibit in the headquar­ and Emma Lazarus, who wrote the poem on partne rs in business, such as Asser Levy who, David Franks of Philadelphia were involved ters of the DAR, are a microcosm of the Statue of Liberty." with a non-Jew, o pened New York's first in me rcantile e nte rprises in the Far W est of Ame rica n Jewry today. Among the portraits in the exhibit are sla ughter house in Manhattan, at Wall Street the U.S ... They backed ve nture capital in In- " They were childre n, grandchildre n and Re becca Gratz, founder of the Jewish Sunday and the East River in 1667. It was the same dia na and Ohio," declared Rabbi Ste rn. great-grandchildre n of immigrants a nd they School move me nt in the U. S.; Capt. Uri ah Levy, pointed out Ra bbi Ste rn, who earlier Many of the early Jews in the U.S. were we re quick to ta ke advantage of what Ashke nazim, though the y followed the Ame rica offe red in civil rights, freedom of Sepha rdic ritual. worship and economic opportunity," said Rabbi Malcolm Stern, preside nt of the Most Jews foug ht on the side of the Jewish Histo ri cal Society of New York and Ameri cans in the Revolution, noted Rabbi immediate past preside nt of the American Ste rn. Mordecai She ft a ll , Commissary Society of Genealogists. General fo r South Carolina and Georgia was Ra bbi Ste rn, who is an honorary vice presi­ the hig hest ranking offi cer in George de nt of the Ame ri can Jewish Historical W ashi ngton· s Army. Society, gave his talk at the wide ly acclaimed By 1790, there were 1,500 Jews, in the ex hib it entitled .. The Jewish Community in U.S., out of a population of about fo ur Earl y Ameri ca, 1654- 1830," now be ing held rn illion, and .. by virtue of the fact that it was a t the DAR museum in the nation's capital. a sma ll Jewish community, mostof the peo­ Initia tor of the project was John L. Loeb ple eithe r were blood relatives or related by Jr., American Jewish leader, philanthropist marriage," said Rabbi Stern. and a d irect descendant of the earliest Jewish A highlight of the ex hi bi t is the sil ver families to a rrive in Ameri ca. which has been gathered for the exhi bition The ex hi bition which runs unt il March 15 and which shows the work of the best known is the first major loan exhib it ever held a t the Jewish-A merican craftsman, Myer Myers. museum which is located in t he DAR Natio na l Headqua rte rs, 1776 D. St. , N. W. Loeb fo rmed his interest in American Comme nting on the ex hibit, Rabbi Stern Jewish H istory as a result of his close told those gathe red tha t .. the ex hibition John re-Jat ions h ip w ith his la te Sou t h e rn L. Loeb arranged at the DAR, as well as the grandmother Ade line Moses Loeb. Loeb exhi bit in Fraunces Tave rn Museum in New suggested the idea of the exhibit at the DAR York C it y last year, have presented earl y in honor of his late grandmother who herself Ameri can Jewish history beautifully a nd was a me mber of the DAR. graphicall y. a nd have g iven the American RABBI MALCOLM STERN, noted American Jewish historian, (left), who helped research .. I also initiated the concept of the exhi bi­ Jewish community, as well as the general the exhibition at DAR headquarters in Washington, D.C, meets with former President tion because I feel strongly that the story of community, a far bette r unde rstanding of the Gerald R, Ford, who opened the exhibit; and John L. Loeb Jr., (right), American Jewish the Jewish contributio ns to America, before, role played hy earl y American Jews. community leader, philanthropist and a direct de_scendantof the earliest Jewish families during and immediately after the Ameri can .. John L. Lol'b Jr. ,'' continued Rabbi to arrive in America, who initiaied the project. The three stand before a portrait of Revolution, have never been properl y told, .. Stern, president of the Jewish Genealogical Rachel Seixas by the British portrait painter John Wollaston. said Loeb, a New York in vestment banker. How to Advertise in a Recessionary Period. In a recessionary period, advertising must 4. Track your sales by zip -code. Tracking pass the most critical test of all, the cash continued advertising during the recession 9. Buy media that reaches people who can sales by zips sho\AIS you what arec1s prefer what gained substantial business from competition afford to buy. register. Here are some fine points to Certain zone editions of the merchandise, and it also provides you with a who stopped advertsing. Journal have more purchasing power than ,remember when planning your advertising. way of evaluating your nev.,spaper purchases. others. 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McGraw-Hill . Their fin dings: compani es that ., THE RHODE ISLAND H ERALD, THURSDAY, JA NUA RY 22, 1981 II France To Renew Work On Iraq Nuclear Reactor National Network Combats Efforts PARIS (JTA) - France has decided to renew work on the nuclear reactor it is help­ ing Iraq build in the vicinity of Baghdad. Of Cults To Recruit Jewish Youth The usuall y well informed French weekly, NEW YORK (JTA)-The Task Force on Other Task Force Programs add in g that th e JCRC has done so. Le Point, reports in its forthcoming iss ue Missionary Activi ty of the New York Jewish that French technicians are due to leave for Lachman also reported task force develop­ Missionary Groups Identified Community Relations Council (JC RC), me nt of sem ina rs and workshops fo r Baghdad and resume wo rk on the site. formed to combat efforts of cults in the New professionals in anti-cult work ; continuation Lachman said that Jewish bookstores, Work was interrupted and the French York area to recruit Jewish yo uth as mem­ and ex pansion of a speakers bureau through school s and sy nagogu es throughout technicians withdrawn after the reactor, bers , has developed into a national resource, the Jewish Board of Family and Children's metropolitan New York had been alerted to a known as Osirak, was bombed by two un­ according to Laurence Tisch, JCRC presi­ Service (JBFCS), and implementing a special wide range of li terature, calendars, records identified Phantom planes during the earl y dent, and Dr. Seymour Lach man, Tas k Force 24-hour hotline for Jews needing advice and and cassettes whi ch bear " deceptive" days of Iraq's war with Iran. The reactor's chairperson. other help. Hebrew na mes, Jewish symbols and content, concrete-dome was sli ghtly damaged by the The two JCRC offi cials said Tas k Force ac­ bu t which are produced by Christian mis­ planes rockets and the French personnel ti vi ties were being headed by the Task H e said th e T as k Force a lso was sionary groups. He said the Task Force had were evacuated overl and to Amman, Jor­ Force's full-time coordinator, Dr. Martin " launching a public education campaign, in­ been told that such items have appeared in dan, and flo wn to France from there. Dann, a former American history professor cluding preparation of new materials to stores specia li z ing in Je wish items, Iraq has several times si nce asked for the with a record of " broad and diversified ex­ cou nt e ract mi ss ionar y and cult organ izational giftshops and at Jewish­ resumption of the construction wo rk on the perience in youth and communal work. " propaganda ... He said that under Task Force sponso red fairs around the United States. reactor which theoreti call y should have Dann is coordinating the anti-missionary ac­ auspices, expert s in many fields" are joining become operative later this year. France and ti vities of the more than 40 participating together in a concerted effort to combat the He urged Jewish agencies to publi cize Iraq have claimed that both Osirak and a JCRC agencies and " developing with them critical problems" and that volunteers were such materi als, in addition to bringing them small er reactor also under construction wi ll programs of benefit to all members of our sought " to help us make this program as to the attention of rabbis, educators and be used "strictly for scientific" purposes. community," they said. crea ti ve and effective as possible ... neighborhood merchants. He cited records But Israel and a number of Western scien­ Malcolm Hoenlein, JCRC executive direc­ and cassett es by "The Liberated Wailing Lachman said a special grant from the tists have charged that it could easil y swi tch tor, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that Wall," " Jerusalem Players:· "Star of David to the production of nuclear arms. as the work of the Task Force became known, Federation of Jewish Philanthropies had Singers,'· "The Israelites," " Israel's Hope," requests for information began coming in not made it possible for the Task Force "to in­ "The House of Da vid," and "Shalom only from the metropolitan area and New itiate the full-scale effort" needed to combat Singers." Dutch Court "the scores" of missionary and cult groups York Stafe, but also from around the country "preying" on the metropoliian area Jewish Lachm an also cited organizations he said and from abroad, " indica ting the dire need Upholds Sentence community. He sa id the Task Force would were not easil y recognizable as Christian for such servi ces." seek to "maximize existing programs and missionary groups, li sting Beth Sar Shalom, For War Criminal He reported that" an informal network has assist member organizations in undertaking also kn own as American Board of Missions to been establi shed," which includes JCRCs AMSTERDAM ()TA) - The LO- year new vita ll y needed projects" to combat cult the Jews ; Hebrew Witness, Inc.; V'kol and similar agencies in Los Angeles, prison sentence imposed on Nazi war efforts. Shofar; Peace for Israel; Shalom Center; criminal Pieter Menten was upheld by T he Philadelphia, Miami, Chicago, Detroit, San Jewish Voice Broadcast; Beit Yehoshuah; Hague Supreme Court, ending a 4 1/2 year Francisco, and Miami ; and Montreal and Hoenlein said that the Federation grant of North American Jewish Ministri es; Frie nds legal struggle to bring the millionaire Dutch Toronto in Canada. He said the Los Angeles $45,000 was divided between the JCRC, of Israel; the Tel Aviv Quartet; and Judaism art dealer to justice for hi s murder of Jews Federation-Council had named Jan Kuris as which received $25,000, and the J BFCS, in Service to the Worl d, and the Jewish and others while a member of the Nazi SS. a full-time coord inator of the Task Force on whi ch received $20,000. The grants were Friendship League, the latter two being Menten, 81, was convicted by a special Missionary Activity of the Federation's Com­ provided with the condition that the front organi zations for the Unification tribunal in Rotterdam last June for war munity Relations Committee. recipients match them, Hoe nle in said, Church, according to Lachman. crimes committed in the Polish vi ll age of Podhorodze in Jul y, 1941. In addition to the pri son term, he was fined 100,000 Gu ilders . It was his second conviction on the charge of Mengele Reported Advising Uruguay mass murder. In December, 1977 an Amster­ dam court sentenced him to 15 years im­ prisonment. But the Supreme Court quashed __ Gov't On How To Torture Prisoners that ve rdict on technicalities and referred the ------case to The Hague ,district court. When the TEL AV IV ()TA ) - Joseph Mengele, political prisoner in Argentina, noted that heads of the prison, Fausto Gonzales and latte r uphe ld the earlier se ntence, the who was the chief physician in Auschwitz given the close timing of the two AFP Mario Merinio, Timerman wrote. Supreme Court again overturned it and sent where he conducted ex periments on camp reports, it is reasonable to assume that the Continuing, Timerman noted the AFP the case to the Rotterdam court which con­ inmates, is now workin g for the government reliable source in the Rio dispatch was report stated that Mengele described to the victed him anew. of Uruguay as an advisor on how to torture Pi sma. Timerman wrote that " Pisma has prison officials several scientific methods for inmates, especiall y Jewish inmates, in the good reason to be acquainted with the carrying out torture, using special methods 22.4 Percent notorious "Freedom Prison," the main ' Freedom Prison.' For three years, from with the Jewish inmates in the prison. The detention center for political prisoners in 1976 to 1979, he worked for the construction source said the Jewish prisoners include Rise In Exports Uruguay. service of the Uruguayan army. He carri es Gavriel Mendelzweig, Luis Polakof and TEL AVIV (JT A) - Israeli ex ports rose This was reported last weekend in Maariv with him many photos showing instances of Jacob Schneider. During this meeting be­ by 22.4 percent in 1980, reaching $5,326 by columnist Jacobo Timerman who based torture in which officers wearing uniforms tween Mengele and the prison officials, the billion, the Central Bureau of Statistics an­ his story on Agence France Presse (AFP) of the Paragµayan army are taking part, and chief physician of the prison also par­ nounced. The main increase was in in ­ reports from Brazil. One wire dispatch from also provided exact data about refugees ticipated . . dustrial exports which rose by 30 percent (to Rio de Janeiro quoted a " reliable source," from Arge ntina who were tortured and mur­ Timerman noted that the reports about $3.299 billion) followed by diamonds by 15 who asked to remain anonymous, about the dered by the Uruguayan officers. This is the Mengele appeared to be authentic in view percent (to $1.4 billion) agricultural exports work Mengele was doing. Four days earlier, information he provided (the AFP) without of a report given by Nazi-hunter Simon rose only four percent, to $576 million. a man identified as Daniel Rey Pisma, a anonymity.'' Wiesenthal in Jerusalem last month that About half of the increase in value was deserter from .Uruguay's navy, told an AFP Mengele Met With Prison Officials Mengele is now based · in Uruguay, one of due to dollar inflation, as industrial exports reporter in Sao Paulo that Uruguay's The AFP report which cited a reliable the countries he moves in freely in addition by volume rose by only 14 percent without government is engaged in torturing political so urce said this source reported that last to Brazil, Chile and Paraguay. Wiesenthal diamonds, which rose in volume by eight prisoners. Oct. 20 Mengele was seen in the" Freedom also said at the same time !hat Mengele may percent to 2,326 million carats. Agricultural Timerman, the former editor of La Opi­ Prison" and that he participated, under the be ready to surrender: to West German exports fell in volume by LO percent. nion in Buenos Aires, who himself was a name of Willy Karp, in a meeting with the authorities or to commit suicide. Neo-Nazi Rally Fizzles When Only Organizer Shows Up BUFFALO (JTA) - The hopes of a local of them Black, merely watched, but a few neo-Nazi group for widespread publicity jeered the Nazi. from a planned an ti-Black demonstration The Federation and the city-wide Black here on the commemoration of the 52nd Leadership Forum had issued statements birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr. fi zzled urging Jews and Blacks to boycott the when only the neo-Nazi organizer, Karl Niagara Square event and, instead, attend a Hand, showed up fo r the event. Some 150 city-wide rally today at · Lafayette Square. spectators came to the rally in Niagara Several thousand Jews and Blacks came to Square, most of them white and mos t of them Lafayette Square rall y. Speakers included I 12th out of curiosit y. Mayor James Griffin, Rep. Jack Kemp (R. ANNUAL Gail Kaplan, president of the Jewish N. Y. ), form er Federation president Milton Federation of Greater Buffalo, praised the Zeckhauser, and Mrs. Kaplan. END OF BIN SALE cooperation of city and county police who A joint proclamation was read at the kept Hand completely surrounded until he Lafayette rall y, lauding the career of King. Jan. 17 to Feb. 21 was hustl ed into a poli ce car and taken away Asked for comment on the Nazi fiasco at We're clearing out the warehouse to from his botched "White Rights Rall y." Ac­ Niagara Square, Mrs. Kaplan said that "we make room,for spring arrivals. So, If cording to some media reports here, when are pleased to see the complete cooperation ·-•re down to our last few cases of a reporters as ked Hand where his supporters of all segments of our community, Black, wine, It's on sale now! were, Hand repli ed: "They are here. I just Hispanic and white in this united effort to You'll find great bargains, with can' t find them." demonstrate our solidarity." different selections brought out from There was no fi ghting or any other our storage area every day of the sale. violence during the brief peri od of the neo­ If you're smart, you'll shop soon - Nazi rall y. Hand, who had been arrested Bomb Explodes, and shop often! yesterday by federal marshalls on a weapons H you're shopping somewhere else, possession charge, was released on bail. The Set By Palestinians you're getting leas than you charge stemmed from an incident last Feb. TEL AV IV--A large bomb believed bargained for. 16 in Barnegat, N.J. in which two gunshots planted by Pales tinian guerrillas ex ploded were fired into a Black man's home. Several last week outside the offi ces of the Ad­ Buffalo Blacks have been kill ed in assaults in ministration of Abandoned Arab Property in TflWN Buffalo in recent weeks. Hebron, in the occupied West Bank, military WINE&SPIRITS Hand held a sign, " Whites Have Rights," sources reported . Damage from the explosion 1711 Newport Avenue, Rumford, RI 02916 and st retched out an arm a couple times in a was extensive, but th e re were no casualties, 401 /434-4183 Nazi-style salute. Most of the spectators, few police said . 12 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 The Modern Shadchan: Tired Of Waiting For Miracles, Singles Turn To The Matchmaker

by James Lewin the individual in question is added to the list matchmaking services, although many get • Up two flights of a scrubbed but indelibly Lonely? Bored with the usual round of in­ of names of potential mates. married by other means, noted Gal. Whether scarred staircase in a hallway which hasn't hibited parties where strangers sit in a circle In a nutshell, that is the story behind the or not the marriages work out in the long run seen a coat of paint for many years, a woman mumbling inconsequentially while drinking long li st of adve rtisements in th e is not part of their statistics. All they do is with a strictly tied kerchief on her head, dress soda and munching pretzels? Disgusted with matrimonial columns of th e daily make the marriage possible. tight at the neck and sleeves down to the seedy cafes and dubious discos where newspapers. Teacher-training student {f) The tradition of shadchanim, Gal noted, wrists, with a pale moon-face and shrewd lecherous louts wait to fall upon love-hungry beautiful and gentle; student (m) attractive was brought by Jews from Europe where the twinkling eyes invites the guest to enter. losers? Broken-hearted? Desperate? Think­ sports enthusiast; engineer, handsome, matchmaker went from family to family with Madame A. works only for orthodox ing, Heaven forbid, of the lonely years broad horizons; divorcee, beautiful, very a little notebook, matching sons of one family religious clients seeking to fulfill the holy stretching ahead? wealthy; rich, attractive widow; educated with daughters of another. While modern commandment of marriage and family. It Wait. There's still hope. Even if you' re a isn 't her sole means of support, but she has woman over 25 - an old maid by Israeli stan­ been actively involved for many years and dards. has considerable resources and contacts at Even if you' re so bashful around the op­ her fingertips. She charges much less for her posite sex, you make Woody Allen look like services than the offices in Tel Av iv- $10 for Casanova. Even if you' re so inexperienced or the "down payment" until one finds a have been out of circulation so long that you suitable match and, after the marriage, a can· t distinguish between Elvis Presley and price to be a rranged by agreem ent, Austin Healy. somewhere in the vicinity of $255. Yes, you too can find romance. Confused Madame A. works obviously on a much as you may be, there's probably someone out more modest scale than the large offices in there just as mixed up as you. And, together, the center of Tel Aviv. However, she and you could be a happily married couple! others like her probably do account for a With a little help from the horoscope, large percentage of religious marriages, es­ handwriting analysis and intuition, finding peciall y helping people who can't find a the most suitable mate is largely a matter of partner in any relaxed social gatherings technique, according to David Gal, director where the sexes may meet, since such events of the Re'im matrimonial service. are precluded by a strictl y religious life-style. One of the oldest and most well­ The marriage business seems to be boom­ established of the professional matchmaking ing because new offices are appearing and services in Israel, Re' im (companions) has old ones expanding {even if one well-known been serving the public in this way for 18 matchmaker was accused of cheating her years, with an average of about seven couples clients and another had been linked to a marrying out of their offices every month. brothel). One agent advertises, " We have "People are limited in whom they can been at it for two years, marrying lots of peo­ meet at work, at school, or on the street," ob­ ple." Another boasts enticingly of" students, served Gal. "They can't find whatever they graduates, secretaries, pretty, beautiful and may be seeking. When they come here, they shapely." A third claims vi rtuall y telepathic can tell me whatever requirements they may MODERN MATRIMONIAL servlces,-old-fashloned shadchanlm, or newspaper adver­ powers for their leading lady of situations. have in terms of age, education, background, tisements all have the same goal. This young couple, apparently hitting It off well, may All kinds of lonely people, to judge from special interests, physical beauty and finan­ not .have met without a llttle help. the weekly matrimonial advertisements in cial ·circumstances. Basically, in terms of the newspaper, seek salvation from their meeting someone for the purpose of solitude through matchmakers and private marriage, we can find whatever people bachelor, high quality, witty and serious. professionals have taken over this tradition in post office boxes. wish." They' re all there, on file waiting for their ap­ modern offices furnished with leather up­ According to the Talmut, it is as hard for Does this mean he can find a partner for propriate counterparts to make a life holstery and shag rugs, the older style still en­ the Creater to bring couples together as it anybody? Not quite conceded the handsome, together. dures in the religious neighborhoods of was for Him to part the Red Sea when the athletic looking Gal. He told the story of a Yet, the question remains, how can Jerusalem where Madame A. lives, through Jews left Egypt. Perhaps that helps to explain widower with four children who sought a something so spontaneous and unpredictable narrow winding streets of decrept but quaint why so many people who get tired of waiting woman without children who would agree to as romantic love be "arranged" in the stone buildings with clinging vines and little for a miracle go to a matchmaker to get fi xed help raise his offspring and not have any framework of a modern office or through ad­ balconies and a synagogue or yeshiva or both up with a match. more children of her own. "I tried for a vertisements in the daily paper? on every block. month or two to help him," said Gal. "Af­ " That's our job," said Gal. Recently, he terwards, I returned his money because there recalled, a very tall, handsome young man was nothing I could do in a case like that." came to his office. Gal introduced the Applicants pay the equivalent of $135 to prospective groom to 15 of the most beautiful Bar-llari Univ. Educates be privy to the lists of potential husbands and possible brides in his reservoir, and none of wives in the archives of the Re' Im offices. If them interested the applicant. they do marry under the auspices of Re' im, Finally, Gal showed him several Army Personnel For Business the young couple must .count an additional photographs of a variety of girls, and the $200 in the initial costs of married life, to be young man picked out the shortest and RAMAT GAN, Israel - The aim to business and economic studies. paid to the matchmaker for services ren­ seemingly homeliest girl with glasses, and enhance the efficiency of Israel's defense es­ dered. said, " This is the type J' m looking for, " and Prof. Adrian Ziderman, head of the depart­ tablishment is being served by a program for Bachelors or bachelorettes who apply to eventually, the tall boy married the short girl ment of economics, noted that the "army military personnel introduced by the depart­ Re' im must be physically healthy, with a with glasses and presumably lived happily IrJ.en make superb students," and it is ment of economics of Bar-llan University. good army record, no problems with the ever after. believed that the Bar-Ilan program will make police and available for marriage. If he or she Only about 20 percent of the applicants to One of the largest faculties of any Israeli a major contribution to the introduction of qualifieJ, a_shapshot is taken O!!_~e spot and Re' im do find their mates through the institution of higher learning, with 1,500 stu­ business-like methods in the administration dents and more than a JOO-member staff, this of the Israel Defense Forces. American-type business school, it was re­ Special economic studies offered at Israel's ported, has launched an intensive B.A. pro­ only religious-oriented university, it was gram geared for senior army officers with the noted, include courses in economic thought rank of captain and above. in halacha and business ethics based on A special curriculum now permits them to Jewish law and tradition. These are es­ obtain a degree in economics in just over two pecially popular with the military personnel The Rhode years (instead of the usual three) while at­ and other students with religious and secular Island Herald tending the university's regular classes in backgrounds. announces a special issue: subscribe subscribe How To Have subscribe r- ONLY ENGLISH-JEWISH WHKlY IN RHODE ISLAND -7 subscribe I Please start I subscribe 11 my subscription today A Jewish I· subscribe and send it to: ·-wedd.ing THE I ,, RHODE NAME ------1 I STREET ______, ISLAND HERALD Watch For This 724-0200 Special Section subscribe I, Jan. 29 In The subscribe :1~-T~E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--. :~~=-. 11 Rhode Island TELEPHONE =J Herald subscribe subscribe P.O. BOX 6063 ~•gw,-,- - PROV., R.I . 02940 01111 Slllt lt4.00 ,-,- THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 13 Nazi Collaborator Arrested In Jews Urged To Struggle For Amsterdam Domestic Tranquility In U.S. AMSTERDAM (JTA)- Jan Bulder, a 68- year-old former Nazi collaborator who SAN DIEGO (JTA) - The dedication that previous liberal goals took years to significant." American Jews give to the struggle for the achieve. " So, let's brace ourselves for the rounded up Dutch Jews for deportation to He added that, since the initial studies of security of Israel and Soviet Jews " must be long struggle," he urged. Auschwitz, was arrested at Schiphol Airport the problem were made, " we have identified given also to the struggle for condition that Chemin named the rising level of violence last week as he returned from a vacation in more than 100 groups in the metropolitan will assure domestic tranquility in this coun­ in America as one issue calling for imbuing in Spain. area alone whose primary, or exclusive, pur­ try," Albert Chemin, executive vice chair­ the American people - those who live in the pose is proselytization in the Jewish com­ He is ex pected to stand trial for war crimes man of the National Jewish Community ghettos, those who live in the suburbs, those munity," operating in every part of the committed in 1944 when Bulder was em­ Relations Advisory Council (NJCRAC), told who are Black and those who are white - a metropolitan area. ployed by the "Judenreferat 4-8," the 400 delegates to that organization's plenum, sense that their fate is intertwined and that Hoenlein said also that, initially, their agency charged with deporting Jews from its highest policy-making body. we share a common destiny. emphasis was on Long Island and on college Nazi-occupied Holland. Bulder' s job was to Chemin asserted that " the Bill of Rights is He concluded: " Our earlier vision of our campuses but that "it now appears to have hunt them down in their hiding places. alive and well," and added that " we in the need for a strong, vital, open society has not shifted to the city and includes the high He was charged specifically after World Jewish community relations field can changed. What has changed is our dedica­ schools as well." He added that while "the War II with having arrested at least 20 Jews justifiably claim our share of the credit for tion to the realization of this vision. What is major target population" is 13 to 35 years of in The Hague, including children and many contributing to this unfolding expression of required of us is the same kind of vigor that age, the groups even have programs " for others in different localities. Bulder also American liberalism." But he admitted that characterized Jewish community relations in three and four-year-olds, as well as senior served for a time with the Waffen SS on the there are" chilling elements of truth" in the · the 1940s and '50s. That struggle for social citizens." Eastern front and collaborated with the Ger­ views of groups who see the Bill of Rights as equality and economic justice should be the Hoenlein said that the JCRC noted two mans in other capacities: " destroying the American family, sapping mandate for the Jewishcommunity relations years ago " the increasing politization of American values and leading to the disin­ fi eld in the 1980s." High on the wanted list of war criminal many of these movements and that they tegration of American society." Significant Number of Jews Involved sought to develop national political organiza­ and collaborators when the war ended, He warned· the audience, however, that an Bulder was arrested but escaped before his Hoenlein said that while" hard statistics" tions whose purpose it was to support born­ understanding of these views "should not trial and fl ed to South Africa in December, were hard to get, the JCRC was certain that again Christians and like-minded in­ lead us to disregard the liberal agenda - the dividuals" for public office. He added that I 945 with a false passport. He returned to "a disproportionate number of J;ws were in­ basic protection that every American is en­ volved in the growing number of cult and " while we recognize their First Amendment Holland in 1969 under an assumed name but titled to by the Constitution." later reverted to his real name. missionary groups" in the New York rights, we see their activities as a threat to our Regarding the progressive programs sup­ According to ,State Prosecutor Louis de metropolitan area" and that the number was pluralistic society." ported by American Jews in past decades, Beaufort, Bulder thought he was safe Chemin said: ' We see boldness, brilliance, because of the statute of limitations on the compassion and wisdom in them. Where UJA Sponsors Essay Contest. prosecution of war criminals. He was ap­ would we have been without social security, parently unaware that an amendment to the welfare, SSI, aid to dependent children, food law in 1971 ex tended the period. stamps? But none of these programs came On Jewish Survival In Future Bulder had been living alone in The from Sinai nor were they intended for eter­ NEW YORK (JTA)- The United Jewish lions and other historical, social and educa­ Hague but was under surveillance and his nity." Appeal, in cooperation with the Morris J. tion events. Prizes will be provided by the Kaplun Foundation. arrest was planned for some time. De Mandate for the 1980s Kaplun Foundation, is sponsoring a national Beaufort said he expected to find prosecution essay contest for American university stu­ Feingold said candidates must not be older He recommended "massive governmental witnesses among Bulder' s former colleagues dents on the theme: " Towards Jewish Sur­ than 25 by August, 1981 and that entries be­ action" as a cure for the present ills afnicting in the " Judenreferat," all of whom served vival in the 21st Century: New Visions and tween 1,500 and 2,500 words in length must the United States and reminded the group sentences of 15-20 years. Strategies." be postmarked no later than next March 28. Dr. Henry Feingold of the College of the Contest winners will be announced June 15. City of New York, chairman of the coJ\test, Feingold said the goal of the contest is to announced that the competition was stimulate creative thinking on the perennial nationwide and open to any undergraduate problem of Jewish spiritual and physical sur­ or graduate student at an accredited institu­ vival. He said applicants may approach the Bridge tion of higher learning. theme from the viewpoint of the social He said an all-expense paid trip to Israel sciences, history, the arts, theology, will be awarded to authors of eight winning philanthropy, Jewish communal and essays and that the 10-day trip in August will organizational life, or any combination of include visits with Israeli leaders and tours of those disciplines. Many contracts are made that can be by their partner. A Take-out Double of a border settlements, archaeological excava- defeated with proper defense. The great ma­ Minor should show not only an opening bid Brazil Names Street jority of these are noted by the defenders af­ but tolerance especially for the Majors. With Army Hosts Olim For Golda Meir ter the hand is over and it is too late. That is that knowledge, South should know there TEL AVIV (JTA) - The Israel Army's RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA) - A street in when the most vehement post-mortems and ought to be a game in Spades and his proper northern command played host last week to Porto Alegre, the capital of Brazil's southern discussions occur.. Some hands, such as to­ action is to simply go ahead and bid it. hundreds of olim from absorption centers in province of Rio Grande do Sul, has been day's, are taken as one of those things when Now the play. Every West I watched led the area, many of them Russian refusniks named "Rua Golda Meir" in commemora­ nothing could have been done. The attitude, three high Clubs, East high-lowing to show a who had fought for years for permission to tion of the second anniver;ary of the death of " let's get on to the nex t hand." Actually, to­ doubleton and then discarding on the third. come to Israel. the former Israeli Premier. day's hand could and should have been set Declarer ruffed, drew Trumps, eventually The gala meeting, at Ein Gev on the shores Porto Alegre has 15,000 Jews, the third had the Defenders cooperated and used a gave upa trick to the Heart Ace and made the of Lake , wound up an army " ab­ largest Jewish community in Brazil. Other play known as an "Uppercut." In this case a hand. No one at the table thought anything sorption week" during which the newcomers Brazilian cities have Jewish street names also. Bridge term not Boxing. about it especially when they opened the toured army camps, told soldiers of their ef­ Rio de Janeiro has a Ben Gurion Square, a traveler and noted that every other pair had • North forts to come to Israel, and heard from the Herzl Street and a Zamenhof Street. Sao • Q98 made the same score. soldiers what they had done to help new Paulo has a State' of Israel Square and a ♦ KQ104 Yet the hand could and should have been comers settle down. Habad Street. .a. A Q 10 set. Even if it couldn't have, at least West ... J73 should have made a try. After cashing the second Club, West can see that his partner ntiques West East and Declarer a:, both out of Clubs. He also • J 106 • 73 can see his Heart Ace is a third trick but • A5 • 9 8 7 3 where can the setting trick come from? ♦ 6 5 ♦ 97432 Possibly in Diamonds but if a losing finesse Buy ♦ AK Q 10 8 4 ♦ 65 must be taken that trick won't run away. The South only other possibility is in Trumps. East • AK542 might have the Queen in which case again Herald CROSS COUNTRY TEEN TOUR • J62 that trick will come. But what if a trick has to MOTELS- COLLEGE DORMS- CAMPING- ♦ KJ8 be manufactured. Here is where that Upper­ JULY 5-AUGUST15, 1981: . ♦ cut comes in. Nlag~ra Falls, Bad1arlds, Mt. Rushmore, Yellowstone, San 92 Francisco, Alcatraz, Disneyland, Untversal Studtos, Las Vegas. As the cards are, East's Trump 7 is high Grand Canyon, Me)(ICo, Gateway Arch, Rodeo, Rapids Trip, Both sides vulnerable, West was Dealer @ Horseback, Swimming and much more. _ frft Brochure. enough to force out one of Declarer's honors Classified with this bidding: Personally Directed By Owners if only he will use it to ruff. Certainly he SHARON TRAVEL CAMP w N E s doesn't have to if West leads the third high WARREN AND DOTTIE .KLINE IC Dbl p 4S Club but if West knows the possibility and at 23 Lyndon Road, Sharon, Ma... 02067 trick three leads a low Club, East should be 817-784-2084 9th Year Most of the North and South pairs did alert enough to wonder why he made arrive al:'the same Spade game but not always Dummy's Jack good when he could certainly with the bidding as shown. However, that is beat it. East should ruff high which makes a exactl y h~w it should have gone. Obviously, trick for West's Trump Jack. That is an Up­ West has a normal Club opening bid. North, percut. SAVE$$$ with 14 points and good support for both Ma­ Moral: Never give up but try anything jors, has nothing better to do than Double for · that might work. REUPHOLSTER Take-out. East, of course, has a perfect Yar­ borough, nothing over a nine. Now we come to .South who has an open­ Dial It vouR-oFFICE ing bid of his own including a good five card WAUKESHA, Wis. - Highly visible Spade suit. I have watched for years so many telephones in heavily trafficked public places FURNITURE players who have no idea how to respond to a cause people to make impulse calls, research Take-out Double. They will bid as little as shows. A new booth design with brightly • office • waiting room • treatment room • restaurant • also marine they have to whether they have a terrible colored Marlex polyethylene shells shaped cushions and chairs• bar stools • dining chair.; • living room and den hand, fair one or reall y good one as this South like the hand set of a telephone is based on furniture • WE DO ALL TYPES! has. the universal understanding of symbols, such Remember, the Double forced them to bid as those used for restrooms and traffic direc­ even with zero points. This means they tions. BARTON'S FURNITURE CO. would have bid one Spade with four small 1050 North Main St., Providence, R.I. ones and no other points. I saw more than The easily seen telephones will be used at two Souths respond one Spade with this shopping centers, stadiums and other public Telephone: 521-2828 hand. More jumped to two and were passed areas. 14 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 Finding Fakes And Forgers Simeon Wilson Analyzes Handwriting Anywhere

by Allen Rabinowitz identify handwritings; resolve problems con­ Service's Chicago office, advancing to the the will was indeed genuine. Thanks to the influence of movies, televi­ cerning evidential documents; develop facts position assistant director. In 1966 he was re­ One of the main problems in this kind of sion and popular fiction ; most of us have a concerning era sures and forgeries; and give assigned to San Francisco as director of the case is finding standards of the questioned preconceived idea of the methods of solving expert tes timony in co urt on findings in Postal Service's Western Regional Crime ·handwriting, Wilson said. In the will, there crimes. We picture a Sam Spade, Perry cases. Laboratory. This office served 13 Western were three elements of writing - cursive Mason or Lt. Colombo turning up hidden Wilson first entered the fi eld in his native states as well as U.S. territories in the Pacific. script, block lettering and the signature. clues, surprise witnesses and dramatic con­ Chicago as a postal inspector for the U.S. " Most of my work in the government had Luckily for Wilson, examples of " Uncle fessions just in the nick of time to put some Postal Inspection Service in 1948. He was to do with the identification of malefactors Franz's" handwriting were plentiful. By evil -doer behind bars. ass igned to the Service's Crime Lab in that came within the purview of the postal coincidence, a homestead claim had been In the real world of criminal investigation, Chicago and received on-the-job training in laws and regulations," he says. " This in­ fil ed in Marin County, containing all three the methods are rarely that spectacular. It is a the scientific examination of documents. volved everything from simple robbery to elements, on the day the alleged will was world of trained investigators poring over " The course of study," he explained, "went very sophisticated confidence schemes being dated. pieces of evidence, painstakingly patching through the entire gamut of things con­ perpetrated through the mails. In a great With the examples in hand, Wilson was together the information necessary for cerned with documents - handwriting many of these cases, handwriting and finger­ "able to determine that all three elements of building a strong case. systems; typewriting; and the laboratory, print evidence on documents was most im ­ the wi ll were spurious. They were ve ry One such in vestigator is Simeon Wilson, physical, and chemical elements of analysis. portant to the solution of the case." careful duplications or sim ulations of his the father of Rabbi Marc Wilson of Atlanta's It progressed into the examination of actual Wilson retired from g~vernment service in handwriting." congregation Shearith Israel. Wilson's cases under the supervision and tutelage of I 972 and set up a private practice in San " In order to testify in a case like this," specialization is in the fi eld of Questioned experi enced examiners in th e government Francisco. He went into private practice ' Wilson ex plained, "you have to present Document Examination, more commonl y service." In 1951 , he was introduced to the because " there was quite a demand for it. 1 graphic evidence; to explain, illustrate, and known as handwriting expert . cou rts and permitted to testify as an expert had established a pretty good rapport with demonstrate why something, though it may Questioned Document Examiners are witness. attorneys all up and down the West Coast." look like something else, is not the original. " called in on a case to examine, compare and He spent 18 years at the Postal Inspection One of the cases he was involved with in Wilson prepared charts to back up his pri vate practice pointed ou t why that de­ evidence. " Jn order to recognize a forgery," mand existed : he explained, "one must have studied, "Uncle Franz" was a ship's radio operator, analyzed and seen hundreds of such Israel's· Diamond Industry a job that carried him all over the world. In fo rgeries. Someone without the background the course of his travels, he had accumulated doesn't understand what he's looking at." an impressive, highly valued art coll ection. Although a Marin County Police lieute­ Expects Sparkling Year During a visit to his native Germany," Un­ nant, an ex pert on forgery, declared the will cle Franz" died under suspicious cir­ to be genuine, the court found the will to be RAMAT GAN - The international dia­ Israel specializes. cumstances. A niece and her husband, who fake, and decided in favor of the niece. mond center here is optimisticall y geared fo r Schnitzer said that more than 650 diamond had looked after the seafarers home and Wilson stresses that his discipline is not an a highly competitive year with the recent trading firms from Israel and abroad now coll ection in Marin County, Calif., were ex­ exact science, " the way mathematics or launching of an expansive new wing of the have offices in the combined exchange, dou­ pected to inherit the bulk of the estate. astronomy are, but the cou rts allow for dif­ Israel Diamond Exchange, said to be the ble that of last year. That is, until a German half-sister of "Un­ ferences in opinion." largest, most modern diamond trading com­ Polished diamond exports continue to cle Franz" discovered a will in a hole in one One of the misunderstandings about the plex in the world. represent Israel' s largest single fo reign trade of the wood sculptures. The completely fi eld of handwriting analysis is that a person's Despite universal diamond indust ry dif­ hranch and, according to Schnitzer, Israel handwritten (or holographic) will stated that handwriting reveals something of their fi culties due to high interest rates in principal retains its position as the world's foremost the half-sister was to receive the estate; the c h a rac t e r . Wilson dism isses thi s world markets, Israeli diamond leaders production/ ex port center for gem diamonds. ni ece was totally cut out. belief: " There are a great number of people recently voiced confidence that exports in A sign of the stability of the industry here is Under California law, the will was legal. who beli eve that you can read personality in 1981 will continue to increase due to com­ seen in arrangements made with th e Israel The niece challenged it in court. Attorneys handwriting. This is called graphology. Not petitive advantages in terms of service, price, government by which the Israel diamond for the ni ece retained Wilson to determine if (Continued on page 8) quantities and variety of goods available. trade will for the first time keep books fo r tax Exports of polished diamonds in 1980 ex­ purpose, whi le maintaining the confidenti al ceeded $1.4 billion, 17 percent ahead of nature of transactions - along the li nes of Eban Says Labor Party Would 1979, with the volume of carats at 2.2 million, the Swiss banking community. nine percen t more than the previous year, it The 2,000 members of the Israel Diamond was stated. Exchange are part of a force of approximately Grant Palestinians Self-Rule Overseas sales in November 1980 reached 20,000 production, service employees and J ERUSALEM - Form e r Fore ign accept Labor's plan to resolve the Palestinian $129.3 million, compared to $101 million for merchants in the diamond business here to­ Minister Abba Eban has said a Labor Party issue by withdrawing from major portions of the same month of last year,' with the 11 day. More than 700 acti ve plants include government would begin granting powers of the West Bank. month fi gure, $1.317 billion, 16.6 percent several modern new ones opened in recent self-government to Palestinians in the oc­ Opinion polls give Labor a wide margin ahead of 1979. months in Ramaf Gan and Netanya and a cupied West Bank even before a formal over Begin 's Likud coalition as earl y elec­ Mos he Schnitzer, president of the World number operating in development towns. agreement on autonomy was reached. tions are _planned for this su mmer. It is Federation of Diamond Bou rses and of the Israel export sales are divided roughly be­ With Prime Minister Menachem Begin's thought likely that Eban would become Israel Diamond Exchange, based hopeful tween the Far East, the United States and government near collapse, Eban called a foreign minister if Labor won . predictions for Israel diamond exports in Western Europe. Principal des tinations ac­ news conference to outline a Labor foreign Eban was critical of Begin's refusal to relax 1981 on galloping worldwide inflation, cording to size include the United States, policy he said woul d be more acceptable to the powers of the military government in the which enhances the appeal of diamonds as an Hong Kong, Japan, Switzerland, Belgium, world opinion than the policies of Begin. West Bank and Gaza Strip while he discussed inflationary hedge, as well as on the need by West Germany, France, Singapore, Italy, Eban admitted that his party had no en­ Palestinian autonomy with Egypt and the dealers and retailers abroad to refill inven­ Canada and the United Kingdom, in that or­ couragement from the Arabs that they would United States. tories in the popular-size stones in which der. Shekel Graces Israeli Mails

The word "shekel" had a long, time­ Before the shekel became kn own as a honnred history in Judaism. It is-; of course, a monetary unit in the 4th century B.C.E., it - monetary unit that dates back to the period was a unit of weight. We read in Genesis ' of the second Temple. There are also many 2-1 :22, for example, that Abraham's servan t biblical references to the Shekel, perhaps the brings to Rebecca" a golden earring of half a most famous is the "four hundred shekels of shekel weight and two bracelets." silver" demanded by Ephrom, the Hittite of Widely circulated in Eretz Israel during Hebron, of a bereaved Abraham for the plot the Second Temple Period, the silver Tyrian in whi ch his beloved Sarah was to be buried. shekel was of such high quality that the Mishna, in Bekhorot 8:7 states that The fam ili ar shekel denomination markes "(Temple) dues should be paid in Tyrian the fin al issue of Israeli stamps for 1981. In­ coinage ... troduced on Dec. 16. this set of standby Israel' s Kn esset officiall y designated the stamps has 13 va lues and feature a common nation 's monetary unit the "shekel" exactly design. 1,900 yea rs afl er the las l Jewish State shekel Can't use it? get rid of Creator of the stamps is G. Sagi. T hey are was mint(:'(! in 70 C. E. prin teci' in photograv ure by lh e Isra el Stamps are ava il ahl e from the Israel Stamp "don't wants" with an "Action" ad. Governmenl printers in sheets of ,50 with 10 Coll ectors Society, P.O. Box 85-1. Van Nu ys, tabs and sh,.ets of I 5 with fiv e tabs. CA 9 1-108. (2 13) 997-6-196 (2 -1 hours) TBY CLASSIFIED! THE RHODE IS LAND H ERA LD, TH URSDAY, JA NUA RY 22, 1981 15 sit v. The . di spla)· of the synagogues, richly colorl'd mosaics with thE" ir Hehrew inscrip­ Golan Heights Excavation Uncovers tions togetlwr with the opening of the El Hama haths to visitors should makt• this, once again . a great intentational tourist at- Third Century Luxury Spa trartio11. · The evidence indicates that tht• haths were J ERUSALEM -People from all over the went from one hall to another, g radua ll y and approaches can be closed off. The ma ny destroyed by an c--ar thquake in the ninth cen­ turv. Hirschfe ld hopes to return for a fo urth ancie nt world cam e to the El Hama becoming accustomed to the increasing heat. intact pottery lamps found he re fit the season in April if funds are found and con­ (Ham mat Cade r) thermal baths on the Golan The mineral'spring on which the main hall description by Antoninus of Placentum, who. tinue the uncovering of this site ri ch in H eights to cure the ir ailments, according to is built has water at a te mperature of up to wrote in the year 570: " The lepers are led history. a rchaeologist Yi zh ar Hirschfe ld of the 52°C. (126°F.), much too hot to bathe in, so into the large bath opposite the hot pool H e brew University ' s in s titu te o f the builders install ed lead pipes to bring in through the gate. with lamps and incense, Magidovich Sentenced a rchaeology, who is excavating this 1,600 cold water to dilute the pools. and the doors are closed and they remain year old si te a nd find ing it to be larger a nd Among the many objects found beneath the re a ll night. When they fa ll as leep, those NEW YORK ()TA ) -A lexa n de r more elaborate than was imagined. the debris that has covered the baths all these who are to be cured see visions. .. Magidovich, the long-time refusenik whose " It was an international spa of imperi al centuries were three marble slabs bearing The main and hottest bath was in the Oval trial began last week in Tula. has been sen­ proportions," he reports. "Built in the third Greek inscriptions of great historical inte rest. Hall whe re the archaeologists found the tenced to two-and-a-half years in a labor century, it remained in use continuall y for One of the m, among the largest ever dis­ walls preserved in some p laces to a height of camp, it was reported by the Student 600 years and was known as one of the largest covered in Israe l (71 x 185 cm ), contains a LO me te rs a nd more. This gives the visitor an Struggle for Soviet Jewry. and most beautiful baths in the world, second poetic text which speaks of the wonders of idea of the grandeur that once was. It is still not clear what charges were only to Baiae a t Naples." The fourth century the hot springs and me ntions the name of the The la rgest hall discovered so far is the lodged against the 49-year-old e lectrical Greek historian Eunapius wrote of these Empress Eudocia who li ved in Jerusalem in Hall of Niches, in which each wall contains a enginet'r, although all evidence is known to baths, famous in the Roman and Byzantine the mid-fifth century. A second inscription central round niche fl a nked by four rec­ be verba l. pe riods. mentions the imperial official Alexandros in tangular ones, two on each side. Along the According to SSSJ and the Union of Hirschfeld and architect Giora Solar have whose days the construction of the tepid sides of the pool are marble fountains from Councils for Soviet Jews, the prosecution conducted three seasons of excavations at the water bath was completed .. which wate r flowed into the pool through the has all eged that Magidovich, who first a p­ baths on behalf of the government de part­ The third inscription describes the renova­ mouths of carved animal heads. This was ap­ plied for an ex it visa e ight years ago, ment of antiquities, the universit y's institute tion of the ba ths in the days of Mu' awiya, parently the coldest pool where the bathe rs criticized the Soviet authorities for exiling of a rchaeology, the Israel Exploration founder of the Umayyad dynasty in 662 CE. could refresh the mse lves. Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei Sakharov, Society, and the governme nt tourist corpora­ This is the first written evidence of coopera­ Tepid water was supplied in the Hall of tha t he admired bourgeois democracies a nd tion which is restoring El H ama as a tourist tion between the Muslim conquerors and the Pilaste rs, where two columns of pillars sup­ their constitutions as more democratic than site. local Christian establishme nt, and therefore, ported an enormous vaulted ceiling some 14 the Soviet Union's, and that he expressed Nearby, the newer H ammat Cader baths according to Hirschfeld, a historical find of me ters high. Beautiful Corinthian capitals dissatisfaction at not being able to emigrate. have been re novated a nd opened to modern great importance. " The Dome of the Rock in were found along the remains of a central Magidovich had been interrogated by the bathers in the last few years. Je rusalem is mute archaeological evidence of coll onade he re. The entrances to the other KGB in 1977 in connection with the trial Working with a team of 30 voluntee rs from such co-operation," he adds, " but here we hall s were ascertained along the southern against Ana toly Shcharansky. In February, i ll over the world, the archaeologists have have it ' black on white.' It even mentions the wall of this hall , beneath three niches which 1980 secret police searched his apartment uncovered 4,500 square meters of the ancient d ate, the fifth of December." he ld statues of the gods. and the following month he was forcibly baths but it is clear there is much more. So One of the bath halls was reserved for The Hammat C ade r baths are near the an­ placed for several months in the notorious far, they found five large bath halls linked by le pers. It is situated in a narrow passageway cient synagogue excavated in the 1930s by Serbsky Psychiatric Institute, the two Soviet roads and lead pipelines. Bathers apparently between two other halls and all the e ntrances Prof. Eleazar Sukenik of the Hebrew Univer- Jewry groups reported .

R New Japan Restaurant -- ~ M-f-11 :30-9 • Sot. 5-10 • Closed Sunday 145 Washington Street, Providence, R.I . , Tel.(401)351-0300-0301 Perennial Raves E and Awards s The Salon Treat YourselfTo The PLAZA INN T· Finest French Restaurant In Town Epicurean Cuisine A Route One Wrenth•m M•s,..chusells b 17 384-2800 PoT AU FEu ,-";r 44Cus10M House STREET u 40~27}.8Ashkelon, with funds were led by a number of self-educated events here in late summer. pick up two other guys, but he saw police ac­ raised in Britain. teachers whose students convened in private Silver Torah crowns, breastplates and ti~ity and tried to flee back to Philadelphia," Since the ITC' s first 16 court center and homes to study bible, talmud and Jewish pointers were reported stolen in the early said the police source. The source explained clubroom was opened in ~amat Hasharon history. They frequently gathered to morning hours of Dec. 29 from Temple that at least two accomplices were suspected near Tel Aviv five years ago, other tennis cen­ celebrate Shabbat and Jewish holidays com­ Adath Israel. According to police, the because " footprints of at least two people ters have been opened in Jaffa and Kiryat munally. Among the teachers of these groups burglary was discovered by a _maintenance were found in the snow." Shemona in Galilee, with construction of yet was Eliyahu Essas, Yuli Kosharovsky, Ze' ev man who found a basement window pried The synagogue alarm was set off and the another set of courts in Haifa. Shachnovsky and Lev Gorodetzky. open, apparently where entrance to the burglars fled, police believe, when a small According to Ian Froman, ITC executive Uniformed KGB officers also physically building had been gained. window in a door was broken. Temple Beth director, North American, British and West disbanded a privately organized Hebrew kin­ One week later, on the morning of Jan. 6, Hillel-Beth El officials refused to comment. European Jewish communities have so far dergarten whose students were four and five silver Torah ornaments were stolen from the The temple had been burglarized previously donated some $12 million for the establish­ years old, according to the CNYCSJ. The ark of Temple Sholom. The theft was dis­ on September 26, when silver Torah orna­ ment of the various centers which have until crackdown on the .teachers and the Jewish covered at about 6:45 a.m. by the congrega­ ments were reported stolen. That incident now provided tennis lessons and playing religious revival began with the arrest in tion's rabbi and cantor. " We found that the was one of seven synagogue thefts which oc­ facilities, at a nominal cost, to about 30,000 November of Viktor Brailovsky, editor of the ark had been opened and silver taken," said curred along the Main Line and in the boys and girls aged 8-13. Some of them have "Jews in the USSR. " Rabbi Pinchos Chazin. " Three Torahs were Philadelphia area during an eight-week already appeared in international junior on the floor, undamaged but stripped of period f 'd A . O b h Wind Chill Tale silver." BERLIN, N.H. - Wind speed can be ap- _ At 3:42 a.m., on Jan. 7, police responded to proximated without technical equipment an alarm set off at Temple Beth Hillel-Beth according to the surroundings. Ten mile an El. Sgt. George Clement, of the Lower CLASSIFIED hour winds can be felt on the face ; at 20 mph, Merion Township Police Department, driv­ small tree branches move; at 30, large ing to the scene, noticed a car making a U­ branches move; and 40 mph, whole trees turn away from the synagogue and become CALL 724-0200 bend, reports the Mount Washington Obser­ suspicious, . He stopped the vehicle and found .,,. ______APPLIANCE REPAIRS FOR SALE SERVICES vatory. the driver to have a variety of "burglary tools K & D APPLIANCE service and CONDOMINIUM: Cranston CARE FREE VACATION: Re­ ports - washers, dryers, re­ Dean Estates. One-bedroom liable couple will house/ baby/ THANK YOU!!! subscribe frigerators, dishwashers. Prompt, carpeting, air, fully applianced plant/ pet sit while you're away. reasonable, guaranteed. Sanded, (washer, dryer). Security. $40's. 724-6217. for booking your winter and spring vacations subscribe insured. Dove Mal 723-0557. 12 ½ % . 463-6565. 1/ 22/ 81 INVITATIONS AND PERSON­ early. This will help insure your choice of ac­ 1/ 29/ 81 commodations. subscribe ALIZE0 ST A TIONERY _ Dis­ subscribe ENERGY count prices, fabulous selection. CALL US AT 831-5200 CONSERVATION RSVP Lynn Grant, 943-2979. Our large qualified staff will be happy to make THE HELP WANTED 12/ 11 / 81 your travel arrangements anywhere in the RHODE SAVE $200-$300 every year TILE BATHROOMS: Regulated, ·world. in water, fuel and energy costs repaired or completely re­ ISLAND just by making o $12.95 invest­ YOUTH ADVISORS needed. modeled. Reasonable. Call Ed at HERALD ment. Write for information Temple Emonu-EI USY program 274-3022. 2/ 12/ 81 about FREE TRIAL OFFER and is seeking advisors for the 1981 - MA~--c.,..808 Hope StrNt 724-0200 FREE GIFT. H.C.P. Box 245 A 82 year. These paid posi tions are Providence subscribe Horwich, Mo. 02645. 2/ 12/ 81 available to young adults or WANTED married couples who will be­ ... Your Pleasure is our Business!" subscribe ENTERTAINMENT come directly involved in plan­ ning and leading activities. PIANO PARTNER wonted, 4 Please contact Richard Rosen hands, amateur to ploy classical. D.J. STEVE YOKEN Profes­ 401 -272-5626 or Temple office Coll 725-4856. 1/ 22/ 81 sional SOUND and SUPER LIGHT 401 -331-1616. 1/ 22/ 81 show for Bar and Bot Mitzvah To place o Herold Classified, parties, organization socials, coll 724-0200. and oldies night. J8-105 ALBUM PRIZES. Coll Steve in Foll River JOB WANTED SEND ALL CLASS8OX COR­ 01617-679-1545. 1/ 19/ 81 RESPONDENCE TO , ClossBox NO. FOR RENT NURSES AIDE seeks · private The R.I. Jewish Herold duty. Days. Experienced and 99 Webster Street :Oelia\l:i'ssen. references. 941-6606. 1/ 22/ 81 Pawtucket, R.I. 02861 CONDOMINIUM: Hollandale, Flo . One bedroom, 1 ½ both, attractively furnished, superbly This newspaper will not, know­ · Where Oua/,ty ,s a Fam,/y Trad,t,on " located. Walking distance to ingly, accept any advertising for necessities and recreation. Fac­ GENERAL SERVICES real estate which is in violation ing golf course. Yearly rental. of the R.I. Fair Housing Act and HEBREW NATIONAL - KOSHar-- Coll evening,-- 617-752-1234, Section 804 (C) of Title VIII of days - 617-754-7253. PAPER HANGER: special­ the 1968 Civil Rights Act. Our izing in Walltex, vinyls, foil. readers are hereby informed SARASOTA BAY. New 2 bed­ Painting, interior and exterior. FRANKFORTS room, 2 baths, furnished condo. that all dwelling/ housing ac­ Quality work, reasonable price. commodations advertised in this Dock, pool, tennis, ,$ 1400/ Free estimates. Call Ken , 944- month. 781-2334 or 434-7939. newspaper are available on an 4872; 942-9412. 3/ 5/ 81 equal opportunity basis. 2/ 5/ 8 _CLASSIFIED AD oRDERSHEe~ Name______Phone_ i Address i Classification ______Headline ______I I Message ______I ____, RATES PAYMENT I · 15 d f $3 00 Payment MUST be received by Tuesday · wor 5 or · afternoon, PRIOR to the Thursday on I · 12(: per word which the ad is to appear. 5% dis- each additional word c~unt lor ads running 6 mo. con- ALL SPECIALS FROM JAN. 23rd TO JAN. 29th tmuously (2 copy changes allowed). Must be received by. · 10% discount tor ads running con• I Tues~oy noon to run m tinuously tor 1 yr. ( 4 changes ot copy PROVIDENCE I PAWTUCKET CRANSTON , followmg Thur.day papo, permitted). ~ 774 Hope SI. S42 Pawt. Ave. 20 Hillside Rd . l 75-1-8682 725-1696 942-B959 - .....-----.WW ~-R.I . JEWISH H!RALD, P.O. Box 6063,WW Providence, ...... _____ R.I. 02940W_