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J I < u .D 0 ~ 0- 0 C\I t- 0 en = . . j ::: ...t/1 - Cl> • -;;: ..J e:: 1gland Academy Of Torah &,J t,J • --, C .0 z )ver St. Francis Friary • < • > ,gland Academy of the project. David Hassenfeld, c- 0 took over the own­ Providence attorney, acted as • -= ~ a: N 0. 'ormer St. Francis counsel for the school, with Arthur Blackstone 2oule- Lowenthal, vice president, repre­ l, 1973. The trans- senting the bank. Malcolm Brom­ uu~ lvur.. place in the West­ berg, vice president of the school, THE CJ',, f ENGLISH-JEW/SH WEEKLY IN R. I. ANO SOUTHEAST MASS. rninster Street office of Max L. Rabbi Nachman Cohen, princiqpal Grant who had been instrumental of the school, and Mr. Pearlman VOLUME L VII, NUMBER IO FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 in the negotiations with the Capu­ witnessed the closing. chin Friars prior to the purchase of the building. After moderniztion and land­ Brandt Plans Visit Father Jordan Sullivan, a mem­ scaping, the newly purchased ber of the board of directors, and structure will be used by the New To Israel In June Father Jerome McHugh, secretary England Academy of Torah as a BONN - The government an­ of the corporation, both of the dormitory to house a group of nounced officially that Chancell or Province of St. Mary of the Capu­ young people who come from New Willy Brandt would visit Israel chin Orderm presented title to the York, Connecticut and Massachu­ fr om June 7 to I 0. Friary to Thomas W. Pearlman, setts for an education in tradition­ Government spokesman Ru edi­ president of the high school divi­ al Hebrew subjects as well as the ger Vo n Wechm an told a news sion, and Dr. Joseph Jay Fishbein, standard high school subjects. The conference that no itinerary or president of the Providence Hebr­ dormitory will be known as the agenda has been established ye t. ew Day School. Fishbein Memorial Building in He said the visit should be viewed The closing was held at the In­ memory of Louis and Sara Fish­ in the cont ext of Bonn's '"ba lanced dustrial National Bank which has bein who were supporters of Middle East policy. " agreed to help finance the venture. educational institutions providing Brandt was invited by Premier Dr. Fishbein represented the sons opportunity for the study of To­ Gold a Mei r last year. He last of Louis and Sara Fishbein who rah. visited Israel in 1960 when he was made an initial gift of $50,000 to (Continued on page 12) the Mayor of West Berlin.

YACOV DAN MALKA AMIR Israel 25th Birthday Festival To Offer Activities Statewide A state-wide Happy Birthday first showi ng at 5 p.m. Fes t ival a t Br own S tadi um Cohai rm cn for Israel Expo 25 and Israel Ex po 25 at the Jewish . arc Mr. and Mrs. Charles Swartz, Community Center will climax Is­ Mrs. Samuel Kouffm an. Mrs. rael 25 th Annive rsary Weekend in Benjamin Chin it z, Mrs. Eli ot on Sund ay, May 6. Ciora, Wi ll iam Melzer, Mrs. Mer­ according to plans a nn oun ced by vi n Bolu sky and Sigmu nd Hel­ Manfred Wei l and Joe Thaler, co­ lmann , director of th e Jewis h chai rm en of the R.I. Commiuee Communit y Center. for Israel' s 25 th Anniv ersary Cele­ Israel Expo wi ll cl ose its doors bra tion, and Sol Wh ite . chai rm an fr om 2 to 3:30 p.m. and a Happy J or the day's eve nts. 25 th Birthd ay Festi va l wil l be held Israel Expo 25 wi ll be open to at Brown Stad iu m (o r in Marve l the public at th e Jewi sh Commu­ Gy mn as ium. in case of rai n). Ya­ nity Cent er fr om 12 noon to 9 cov Dan and Malk a Ami r. Israe li p.m. offering th e Rh ode Island ent ert ai ners. will be fea tu red in a community an opportunity to view program of song a nd da nce Israeli prod ucts and art. The set­ created es peciall y fo r Israel's 25 th ti ng will be a Jerusa lem Fair fash­ anni versary. Hy Kalu s, Rh ode ls­ ioned after th e old mark et pl ace land born Israeli mov ie and stage =­ di strict in Jerusalem. Israeli item s prod ucer. di rector. a nd currentl y THE NEW DORMITORY of the New England Academy of Torah, to be known as the Fishbein Memorial Build­ will be avai lable. Cra ft smen wi ll the art is ti c director of the Jeru sa­ ing, in honor of Louis and Sara Fishbein, stands al the corner of Blackstone Boulevard and Magellan Street. dem onstr ate their skills, creating le m Theatre, will be the guest candles. pollery, nietalcraft , and speaker. Greetings will be brought Women's Division To Hold Annual Meeting stained glass. A Jerusalem Cafe by the Honorable Ari eh Bilar, vice will off er food a nd refreshm ents consul of Israel in New England ; Mrs. Jaoob Stone will be in­ tality, heads a commillee which from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. A va riety Governor Philip W. Noel, and stalled as president of the Wom­ includes Mrs. Milton Dubinsky of exhibits dealing with subjects other dignitaries. Group pa rt icipa­ en's Division of the Jewish Feder­ and Mrs. Haskell Wallick. Co­ related to Israel a nd the Jewi sh ti on activities are being planned by ation of Rhode Island at the orga­ chairmen of decorations are Mrs. people will also be on display. Avram Grant, Mann y Perlman, nization's annual meeting on Tues­ David Horvitz and Mrs. Louis A film , BBC Panorama: Golda and Cantor Karl S. Kritz. Roz day, May I, at Temple Emanu-EI. Mirman, and hostesses are Mrs. Meir will be shown at 5 a nd 7 Goldberg, executive secretary of The 10:30 a.m. meeting will be Stanley Blacher, Mrs. Sidney p.m. This 60-minute film traces the Jewish Community Relations followed by a petite luncheon at Goldstein and Mrs. Marvin Hol­ the life of Golda Meir, interwoven Council, is coordinator of the Is­ 12 noon. land. with the life of the state of Israel. rael 25th anniversary weekend ac- Rabbi Leslie Y. Gutterman of Further information may be ob­ A special children's program is ti vi ties. Temple Beth El will act as in­ tained by calling 421-4111. planned to coincide with the film 's (Continued on page 15) stalling officer for the new slate of officers. Israel Amitai, Israeli journalist, Maiority Of Israelis Oppose Return Of Territories TV producer and director, will be JERUSALEM - A majority of Applied Social Research, appears Israeli Cabinet. guest speaker. A tribute will be Israelis oppose returning any part to indi<;_ate broad public support Speaking to newsmen on a tour presented to Mrs. Max Alperin, of the occupied Golan Heights, the for the increasingly hard-line of the West Bank, Mr. Allon immediate past president of the West Bank of the Jordan River or position on territorial concessions called for the establishment of Women's Division, at the meeting. the Gaza Strip - even in taken by the Israeli Government additional Israeli seulements along Mrs. Stone, a native of New exchange for a peace agreeement in recent months. the Jordan Valley and in the area York, is a graduate of New York with the Arabs - according to a This position was redefined only east of Jerusalem. There are University, School of Journalism. public opinion poll newly recently by Premier Golda Meir, already 12 paramilit a ry . MRS. JAC08 STOHi She is a life member of The Mi­ published here. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan agricultural settlements in the riam Hospital Women's Associ­ ation newspaper, The Examiner. An overwhelming total of 96 per and other Government leaders in valley, and Mr. Allon said that ation and has served on its board She has taught English, through cent, according to the poll, are the final session of a six-month­ plans call for as many as 30. of directors. She is also a member the Council of Jewish Women's against giving up Sharm-el Sheik. long debate in the governing In addition, Mr. Allon called of the Sisterhood of Temple Beth program of Teaching English to This is the strategic promontory at Labor party on the territories for expansion of Qiryat Arba, a El, Hadassah, the Providence Sec­ Foreigners, and has also been a the southern tip pf the occupied taken in the 1967 Arab-Israel war. small Israeli settlement on the tion, National Council of Jewish volunteer teacher in the Lippitt Sinai Peninsula that controls the Allon Echoes View outskirts of the West bank town of Women, Brandeis University Hill tutorial program. Mrs. Stone three-mile-wide Strait of Tiran, The ministers reaffirmed their Hebron, into a city that could Women's Committee, and the has been the Women's Division the entry from the Red Sea to the opposition to any withdrawal from eventually be linked with other B'nai B'rith Garden Club. Mrs. chairman for the past three years. Gulf of Aqaba and the port city of the present ceasefire lines before Israeli settlements in the area. Stone originated and edited The According to Mrs. Stone,· Mrs. Elath. peace and called for intensifed The public-opinion poll was Miriam Hospital Women's Associ- Manfred Weil will be state chair­ But, 59 per cent would be willing development of the territories in conducted last Octo ber and POUND DECLINES man of the 1973-74 Women's Di­ to return a part of the vast Sinai the interim. November, when Israelis were still 'TEL AVIV - In the decade vision campaign. Desert to Egypt for a genuine This theme was picked up last recovering from the impact of spanning 1960-1970, the Israel Mrs. Harold Summer is chair­ peace agreement. week by Deputy Premier Yigal the murder of 11 Israeli ahtletes pound declined at a rate of man of the day. Mrs. Eugene The survey, conducted by the Allon, who is considered one of at the Olympic Games in Munich approximately 5% a year. Wachtenheim, chairman of hospi- respected Israel Institute for the more liberal doves ' in the· in September.

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2 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, F RIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 meet at the leftist-sponsored Bo­ MAY SEND DELEGATION logna Conference on Peace in the ROME - Israelis and Palesti­ Middle East scheduled for May 11 nian guerrilla representatives may to 13 if El Fatab leader Y assir Arafat ·bas bis way and sends a Palatine Liberation Organization delegation. SARAH WEINSTEIN Realtors. He was a past vice presi­ Mrs. Sarah Weinstein of Long dent of Congregatio n Sons of Island, New York, the mother of Zion. SHADES Arnold L. Weinstein of 1363 He also was a member ol .New Store Smith Street, North Providence, Temple Emanu-EI and its Men's in DRAPERIES died April 13 in New York. The Club, Congregation Beth David of funeral was on April I 5. Narraga nsett, R oger William s UNIVERSITY CARPETS Mrs. Weinstein, the widow ol Lodge, B'nai B'rith, the Provi­ Morris Weinstein, is survived by dence Hebrew Day School and the HEIGHTS ND FA I S, 111<. four other children. Jewish Community Center. 1lJS No. Main St., Prov. In addition to his widow, he Hut To Ol'lfil MOJII. THIil ~~ITC>S:30 WILLIAM B. GLASS leaves three daughters, Ruth Rol­ Holler &Mic'-lson TUES. & THUIS. TIU 9 r .M. Funeral services for William B. ler of Cranston, Estelle Resnick of No. Main St.,. GA 1-3955 Glass, 59, a certified public ac­ Pawtucket and Arline Bla nk of counta nt, who died April 21, were Providence; a brother, Irving Rid­ Providence, R.I. held Tuesday, at the Sugarman de ll of Montrea l, Canada, and six SPUKII: Herwt Memorial C hapel. Burial was in gra ndchi ldren. Millman, exea,tive vice president Lincoln Park Cemetery. of the National Jewish Welfare The husband ol Doris (Parson­ MRS. LEO D. WALDMAN Board, will be the guest speaker llorh•• net ) G lass, a nd a resident ol The Funeral services for Gertrude at the Annual Meeting of the II BAKERIES· Jewish Community Center to be Regency at 60 Broad way, he was (Belilove) Wa ldma n, 57, of 447 held on Wednesday, May 9, at 8 born in Philadelphia, Pennsylva­ Potters A venue, wh o died Mo nday p.m. at the Center. nia, a son ol the late Paul a nd after an illness of two mo nths, ~IAJfl.Jclti Mr. Millman is responsible for Lena (Berman) G lass. He had were held Wednesd ay at the Sug­ JWB services as the national a110- li ved most ol his li fe in West O r­ arman Me morial Chapel. Buria l v.;;"ti«, 0 Acal IIOIIINllim "9\ ciotion fo, more lhon 400 Jewish a nge, New Jersey, before movin g was in Lincoln Park Cemetery. community centers, YM-YWHAs to Providence 19 years ago. He The wife of Leo D. Waldman, -P~-omur IYCONTI ~ and camps throughout the world. was graduated from - New York she was born in Fall Ri ver. Mas­ iff4 IUIWOOD AYL, WAIWICI 467-9471 · 1➔e also ·heads ihe government-ac­ U niversi ty in 193 7. sachusetts. a d aughter of Loui s credited agency for providing for Mr. G lass was a resident part­ a nd T illie (Gorshma n) Belil ove. 1he religious, morale and welfare ner o f the Providence offi ce a nd She had been a Providence resi­ neea1 °' Jew11n personnel and FOR THE their dependents in the U.S. the East Bru nswick. New J ersey, dent fo r 55 years. Armed Forces and of Jewish office of the in ternational firm of She was a member of Temple AFTER THEATER CROWD patients in VA hospitals. LKH& H (Lave nthol, Krek stei n. Beth Israel. He has lectured and written ex­ H orwath and Horwath) since Besides her parents a nd her hus­ tenMvely on toeial agency admin­ 1969. band, she is survived by a son, WHY NOT STOP AT istration and on the philosophy of From 1958 to 1969, he had been Robert N. Wa ldman of Pawtu­ Jewi1h community centers. a partner in the fi rm of G lass & cket; two brothers, Morris Beli ­ The evening's program will also Dittelman. a nd fr om 1945 to 1958, love of Houston, Texas, and Wil­ RONNIE'S RASCAL HOUSE indude the annual repo,ts, the in the fi rm of Howard. Cooper­ li am Belilove of Californi a, and a eleclton of officers and board man & Glass. sister, Hazel M . Stilwell of Cali­ members and a special testimonial Mr. Glass was a member of the fornia. FOR BAGELS, LOX OR honoring Harlan J. Espo, oulgoing Ameri can Institute of Certified president. An informal dessert re­ HOME MADE CREAM PIES ception will follow the mHting. Public Accounta nt s and the Rhode Unveiling Notice Isla nd , New York and New Jersey The unveiling of a monument in ORDERS PUT UP TO GO Precautions Taken Societies of Cert ified Pu bli c Ac­ memory of the late LUCY COHEN counta nts. He was a member of will take place on Sunday, Moy 6, at 1 :30 p.m. in Uncoln Parle Ceme­ Against Violence the committee on banking in the tery. ReJatives and friends are in­ - The State Rh ode Island Society of C PAs. vited to attend. 233 THAYER STREET. PROVIDENCE 751-4624 5.4 De partment has protested to the Acti ve in a number of Jewish Algeri a n gov ernm e nt f o r organizations, he was a past vice In Memoriam permitting the Voice of Palestine president of the J ewi sh Commu­ nity Cente r. a member of the t 960-EUGENE S. WEtNBAUM-1973 Radio there to exhort Ara bs to The yean wipe out many thing,, r kill Americans. board of the Jewish Federati on of But this they wipe out Never; Department spokesman Charles Rhode Isla nd a nd a mem ber of The memory of those happy days the National Conference of C hris­ When we were all together I Bray said the VOP radio ca lled on HIS FAMILY I "Ar a b m ass e s t o s trike tians and Jews. He was a trustee l everywhere a t U nited S tates of the Aurora Civic Association and a member of Roosevelt Lodge GLAZER, IDA I interests and k ill and assassinate 1966 1973 I everyone who is American." The 1,42, F& A M , and the Pa lestine There are griefs that cannot find department also sternly ad vised Shriners. comfort, I Besid es his wife, he is survived And wound, that cannot be I Arab governments to immediately stop allowing their offi cial media by two sons, Paul W . G lass of healed, I Fort Lee, New Jersey, and Robert There is a sorrow to deep in our I facilities to spread the "big li e" hearts, invented by Palestinian Arab A. Glass, a student at Syracuse That it cannot 1M half revealed. groups that the U .S. had assisted Universi ty; a daughter, Miss But our greatest grief and sorrow was losing you that day, Israel in its raids. Eli zabeth H. G lass of Miami, I Florida, and a grandchild. It happened oh, so suddenly, Additional precautions are being .. . Seven yean ago today . taken to safeguard American CHILDREN property and lives in Arab SAMUEL C. RIDDELL countries against violence which Funeral services for Samuel C. With Regard to a Card of might stem from the emotional Riddell, 75, of 209 Sixth Street, Thanks, Unveiling Notice or who died Monday, were held upsurge over the raid and alleged In Memoriam U.S. complicity. Lebanon was Wednesday at Temple Emanu-El. Burial was in Lincoln Park Ceme­ Very often a card of thanks in reported as being the only country The Herald mffh a need which to have taken measures against tery. can hardly be solved in any other 1 attacks on U.S. buildings and Mr. Riddell, who founded hi s way. Not only is it a gracious ex­ personnel. own realty firm with offices at pression of gratitude to those who 1074 Hope Street in the early have sent sympathy but also cour­ Call521-1400 lsra-elCHotels Raise 1950s, was a realtor here for most teously acknowledges the services of his life. The husband of Pauline iand kindnn, of the many to Rates By 25 Per Cent (Berge)) Riddell, he was born in whom a personal note of thanks JERUSALEM - Many Israeli New York City, a son of the late cannot well be mailed or whose names and addresses are not CAPE KOSHER FOODS hotels have raised thier rates by 25 Dora (Sincoff) Riddell and Hugo Riddell. Born on January 1, 1898, known. Insertion of a card of 58 WASHINGTON ST. percent as a result of the recent thanks may be arranged by mail price hikes for food, oil and water. he had lived in Providence about · or in person or by telephone to: I.I PAWTUCKET, R.I. The price rises were put into effect 60 years. Jewish Herald, 99 Weblter Street, 726-9393 on the eve of the annual tourist Mr. Riddell served on the board Pawtucket, R.I. 02861, 724-0200 rush that precedes the two major of directors of the Jewish Home '6.00 for seven lines, 40< fo1 "MEAT OF TIIE WEEK" spring holidays, Passover and for the Aged, and he was a mem: · each extra line. Independence Day. ber of the Rhode Island Board of Payment wit~ orde!. WEEK OF SUN. APRIL 24 -FRI. MAY 4 The director of the Hote: N. Y. STYLE -LEAN TENDER Owners Association, Dr. Kurt Licht, said "the price of meat just 1.3S lB. rose by 50 percent. Basically, Max Sugarman FLAN KEN SAVE everything has gone up in price. 20' lB. What do you expect from hotel Funeral Home owners? - that they will absorb "OUR OWN" FRESH MADE -FRESH SLICED all these price increases themselves?" . "THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR " A check of 30 hotels in Israel DE 1-8094 458 Hope Street Providence ROLLED BEEF 1.19 ½lB. indicated that hotel owners had SAVE 40' lB. already imposed indirect price FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM OUT-OF-ST A TE increases by abolishing special CALL COLLECT ALL. au,s AO POUlTliY AIE ■ADE IOSHEI reductions for children and by . raising food prices. The largest price increases were at hotels in Safed , Tiberias, Ashkelon a nd - MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION - "KEEP KOSHER WITH CAPE KOSHER" Natanya, usua lly in the mod est two star and three star hotels. ,-,

Tl:f.E RH.ODE ISLAND HERAL,D, .fRIDA Y, APRIL 27, 1973 - 3 Old Stone Warns PREPARE FOR DAY will be sound and light JERUSALEM - The fireworks performances on the mountain Aged On Cotf~en for _the forthcom ing Israeli fortress of Masada depicting the last struggle of the Jewish Old Stone Bank, worlcJng in Independence day will cost over $130,000 nearly twice the amount defenders where before.the Judean conjunction with the Rhode t~land mountaintop was captured by the Department of Community, Af­ ~pent in previous years. In addition to the pyrotechnics there Romans 1,900 years ago. fairs-Division on Agi~g. has pro­ duced a give-away brochure de­ signed especially to warn senior citizens against the con artists who MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS specialize in bilking elderly depos­ itors out of their savings. See our selection of beautiful The Rhode Island Division on nightgowns, robes, and other items. Aging has made a special mailing of the brochure to golden ager groups throughout the state, and Old Stone Bank is making copies ALL AT DISCOUNT PRICES available to the public at all their branches. Special requests for bulk copies of the brochure entitled Miriam Kagan Open Thursdays "Beware! Not All Robbers Wear Marilln Goldfine 942-1122 Masks and Carry Guns!" may be - --- directed to the Marketing Depart­ ment, Old Stone Bank, 86 South Mai n Street, Providence, Rhode BROWN'S HOTEL MAY 25-28 Island 0290 I. DEPARTING FRO M PROVIDENCE STUDY PLAN JOIN THE TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL GROUP TEL A VIV - Israel is studying a plan to construct a unit that • EVERYONE WELCOME • would supply nuclear energy to re­ INCLUDES: Deluu air-conditione-27-l8 ZELDA KOUFFMAN setts. A July wedding is planned. DECOU TION DAV CELEBRATION THE MEN ARE HERE! CRANSTON TRAVEL. 801 PARK AVE.785-23 THE GIRLS & WOMEN ARE HERE! Planned Social Progrom1 •Morning Afternoon -Evening Cocktail Portie, JOIN OUR GROUP! ORGANIZATION NEWS Food ot ih Best -3 Meals o Doy -late LEAVE PROV . JULY 1 Night Snoclu -live Bonds -Name Enter ­ RETURN PROV. JULY 16 I tainment -Games -Prizes -lounge -Danc­ ART SHOW Friday, April 27 . at 2 p.m. on the ing -Free Golf -New Indoor Ice Skating . 1 5 DAYS INC. AIR FARE An Art Show and Auction will grounds of the Jewish Home for Every Sport -Health Club • Tenn is -Bowl ­ be sponsored by the Barrington the Aged. ing -Ping -Pong and much nrt,ore $785* Jewish Center Sisterhood on Sat­ Two trees will be planted. A urday, May 12, al the General u.,. s43so ALSO INCLUDES BEST FIRST CIASS mountain ash will be planted by 2 .....h HOTELS , 2 FUU MEALS DA/LY, Hamilton Hall on Roffee Street in Mrs. Jerome Feinstein in memory TRANSFERS AND FUU PROG/IAM Barrington. A champagne preview OF S/GHTSEE/WG of her mother, and a dogwood tree GET-AWAY WEEKENDS at 7:30 p.m. will be followed by will be planted by the Evergreen •MIDWEEK• VACATIONS -3 Meals a the auction at 8:30 p.m . Nursery in hon or of Arbor Day. Doy -Plus Fun Free Golf -All Sports . The auction will be run by Ge­ Cantor Ivan E. Perlm an of New Indoor Ice S.oting 25th ANNIVERSARY rard Galleries, Ltd., of Lake Temple Emanu-EI will present a Jiloy, -2..,...•31 •:• s14so ROUND TRIP -AIR CONDITIONED MOTOR Drive, New York . musical program. (Does Not Include Holidays) COACH FROM PROV. TO JFK AIRPORT INCLUDED. DONOR DINNER Mrs. Joseph Katz and Mrs. Ber­ wuu,'99" "-le '110 ,__ The Sisterhood of Temple Sinai nard Podrat are chairmen of the ESCORTED BY RABBI AND MRS. SAUL LEEMAN will hold its annual Donor Dinner affair. lloppioess ;,. sioy II NOVICK 'S at the Ramada Inn in Seekonk, TO PRESENT PLAY YN'II FNI •t ..._. N«e -W•,. -Fri ...y - ZELDA KOUFFMAN Massachusetts, on Monday, April The Academy Players of East lles,i,_1, -Iii--, l-• RA~STON TRAVEL, 801 PARK AVE. 785-2300 30, at 7 p.m. Greenwich will present "archy and A fashion show will be present­ mehitabel," a musical comedy ed by Barbara's School of Mod­ don.e in cabaret style, at the East eling. Cochairmen are Bernice Greenwich Civic Ce nter on Fri­ Shapiro, 944-6571; Elsie Weiss, day, Saturday and Sunday. May 4. Big Sur. You've had a sun~ ride. 944-9017, and Millie Sct,uster, 5 and 6. For this first production You First Canadian. 942-9013. of this play by a community the­ deserve Seagrams V.O. The GOLDBERG EXHIBIT ater, the Playe rs have chosen to First in smoothness. First in lightness. First in sales throughout the world. An exhibit of work by Chaim stage it on a series of ramps and Goldberg, Israeli artist, will open platforms surrounded by the au­ All the others come after. at the Jewish Community Center dience. Seating will be at tables on Sunday, April 29. There will be . and wine, beer and soft drinks will a coffee hour at the show's open­ be served. The author of the show. ing, from 2 to 4 p.m. The exhibi­ Joe Darion, and the composer, tion will continue until Friday, George Kleinsinger, have given May 11 , and will be open to pub­ special permission for this produc­ lic viewing during the Center's tion. regular hours of operation. Starred in the show are Charles : 'fhe coming exhibit at the · Cen­ Harrison and Bobbi Ray as archie tet' " \\'ill arrive directly from the and mehitabel. In the cast are Ed Smithsonian Institution in Wash­ Manning, Bob Hargraves, Sam ington, D.C., where it has been on Beltrami, Tom Pezzullo and Steve display for several weeks. One of Jennings. A chorus of alley cats the works to be exhibited here, a and ladybugs of the evening is di­ line drawing entitled "Shtetl" will rected by Carla Doctermann. Lee be copied in oils and is scheduled Tracey is solo dancer and cho­ to be hung in the Metropolitan reographer. Phyllis Gunion di­ Museum of Art in New York. rected the production. · City. Friday and Saturday night per­ IN SET DANCE . . . formances start at 8:30 o'clock: The In .Set,. the· Jewish Commu­ Sunday's performance starts at 7 nity Center's young adults singles' p.m. group, will present a Dance Extra­ TO OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY vaganza on Sunday, April 29. The · Congregation Mishkon Tfiloh program will begin with a kosher will observe the 25th anniversary buffet supper at 7 p.m. following .of the State. of Israel. during Sab­ by dancing to the music of Maze bath morning. services on Satur­ Crawford and his orchestra. day, May 5, at 9 a.m. Rabbi Ema­ ISRAELI FASHION SHOW nuel Lazar will speak on "Survival An Israeli Fashion Show will be Albeit Insurmountable Odds." presented at the meeting of the TO SHOW FILM Pawtucket-Central Falls Chapter The film, Memorandum, will be of Hadassah on Monday, April 30 shown at Temple Beth Israel on at 8 p.m. at the Jewish Commu­ Sunday, April 29, at 11 a.m., to nity Center. commemorate the 30th anniversa­ Members of the chapter will ry of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising model fashions which have been and Yorn Hashoah, in memory of designed by students in schools the Holocaust. supported by the Hadassah Israel Another film concerned with the Education Services. Holocaust, Night and Fog. will be ARBOR DAY CELEBRATION shown on Sunday, May 6, also at The Emanu-El Garden Club will II a.m. hold an Arbor Day celebration on The public is invited. CAJIADl!N WHISKY-A BlEND OF SElECTED WHISKIES. SIX YEAHS OlD. 86.8 PROOF. SEAGRAM OISTlllERS CO .• N.Y.C.

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THF ONLY fNGLISH JEWViH WfFKLY IN R I t.NO )0t Th[!,)-.- '.U,~'::i A Miracle and a Legend

MAILING ADDIISS: ... 6063, ~.I.I. 02904 T~ 72,6.0200 By BERYL SEGAL PLANT1 HeNW Wey, .HW.._St., ,._,,, ■ '. I . 02161 ~==~141 Towfttefl AM., I.I. OfflCE: Iott~. CIUA ZUCKUUIQ...... •. . ... Monei'"9 _.._ The town of Zanz (pronounced they were astonished and they al­ days. fathers and sons, mothers s.cenc1a..,-..._.,.....,,.....w.nc...... w.tt4 Tzanz) in Poland was liquidated owed the Jews to drink. They and daughters walk in unity. SYINcrip"-n latfl: ftftNft c:.nt1 the c.,y; ly Mail, '6.00 per onnwffl; wt.we New ~. '7 .50 pot" OMUffl . .,. ,...... ,..,..., The ...... _,.,.. wlNcriptioint .,. Wftrinuout una.. Mtifio4 .... by the Nazis as were hundreds of were also told that the Rebbe of Kiryat Zanz has many in­ cenffluy In wriffll, towns and villages in Poland and Zanz directed them to the spot ol stitutions and industrial estab­ Galicia. The Rebbe of Zanz, Reb. the spring. li shments. famous is the Yeshiva J . J. Halberstam, together with The Rcbbe of Zanz explained it and the dormitories and the spe­ most of his Hasidim, were taken this way: cial houses for married young men to the concentration camp in There is a Midrash that as long who continue their studies. They Auschwitz, there to awail the fate as Miriam the sister of Moses arc building now a hospital to FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 of all the Jews. One day the Ger­ lived a spring ol fresh water was which the people of Kiryat Zanz mans transferred, for reasons no­ running through the encampment hope to attract medical and scien­ body knows, about 5000 Jews of the Jews when they marched tific personnel. The U.S. Abstention from the in famous camp at from Egypt to the Promised Land. They form a model community. The hypocrisy with .which the Security Council condemned Is­ Auschwitz to the equally infamous That spring ran through the desert The Rebbe is the final arbiter and rael's military actions in Lebanon came as no surprise in the camp in Dachau. The long march ol Sinai to quench the thirst ol the adviser. He is the spiritual pillar wake of a debate dominated by anti-Israeli bias. The only unex­ was on foot. On the journey the Children ol Israel and their cattle. of Kiryat Zanz. It is truly Zanz pected feature of the vote, with eleven members favoring the res­ Jews were given salted herring and The Midrash further tells us that transplanted to Israel. Hebrew is olution and four abstaining, was the fact that the United States no water - one more of the devil­ when Miriam died the spring dis­ used for prayer and to study the chose to abstain rather than to condemn what was clearly an un­ ish devices ol the Nazis. On the appeared underground. But when Torah. Yiddish is the language ol third day they were brought to a Jews arc greatly in need of water the market place and of every day fair judgment against Israel. Poli sh vi ll age where a brook ran the spring reappears again. dealings with one another. In response to American pressure, the resolution did pay lip through the pasture. The Jews fell This is the spring of Mi,iam you And they spin legends like the service to even-handedness by also condemning .. all acts of to the ground and began to drink dug up here in the field . miracle ol the spring related here. violence which endanger innocent human li ves." But such unction the water. The guards emptied Thus far the miracle or the Do I believe in that miracle'> obscures the fact that the Israeli rais which the resolution so their guns into the kneeling multi­ spring of water in the fields of Po­ Belief in a miracle depends on sharply condemned had been carried out as carefully pointed tude. Five hundred people were la nd . the person who tells it and on the reprisals against la unc hing pads of a worldwide campaign or ter­ shot at that brook. But even a grea ter miracle is people who li sten to it. II one has ror. Those who voted for the resolution, sponsored by Britain The march was continued after the' establishment of the vi ll age in perfect faith he ha s no doubt as to the Jews buried their dead. a nd Israel bearing the name Kiryat the ve racit y ol the story. We can and France, must surely know that Lebanon has been host to the when they came to rest in a field Zanz. onl y marve l al the birth of a leg­ Palestinian terrorists. the Hasidim ca me to Reb Hal­ Reb Jekuthiel Jehudah Ha lbers­ end in our own times. John A. Scali, the United States representative. explained 1ha t berstam asking what to do. The tam lost hi s wife and eleven chil­ There is some local color to the the American abstention was intended to protest agai nst the res­ thirst was unbeara ble. The Nazi dren in the Nazi holocaust. He community of Kirya t Zanz. olution's a nti-Israeli design. But so mild a n objection to obvious guards surrounded them so that no came to the United States alone A young ma n fr om Providence bias m ay raise the question whether such caution might imply a one could get ou t in search ol wa­ a nd with the aid of hi s foll owers came to Israel and was captivawd c hange in the Administration's a ltitude. Could President Nixo n's ter. he started life again under the by the life in Kirya t Zanz. A son concern over the deepening energy crisis, ror example, have set Reb Halberstam knelt down to name of the Rebbe or Kl ausen­ of a profe ssor at one of the col­ the ground aod began to dig with berg. His philosophy ol Hasidi sm leges in Providence. he did not in motion new efforts a t appeasing even those Arab countries hi s bare linge rs. was a combination or piety a nd know more about Jewishness th an who g ive aid and sanctuary to terrorists? " Let us dig here." he said to hi s work . He sent some of hi s Hasi­ the average American Jewish boy. Hints or an American retrea t from the commitment to Israel' s Hasidim : dim to Israel and he bought land He matri cu lated in the Yeshiva legitimate claims to security could easily embolden t ose who a im They did. and soon others near Neta nya h. on the Mediterra­ and has become a Zanzer Hasid in at exploiting violence a nd turbulence in the Middle East. The joined them. and, behold. they nea n Sea. The vi ll age began with all details. fact that the Soviet Union a nd C hina a lso abstained, but on ly be ­ found a spring ol water. Word was about fift y soul s. and now is a When you are in Netanyah you cause they considered the resolution a n inadequ ate condemnation passed around and the marchers prosperous town of nearly 360 may take a bus to Kiryat Zanz ru shed to the spring. The Nazi Hasidim with their Rebbe, the or Israel, suggests an a la rming readiness to give Arab extre mists and you may see the community guards came to see what the com­ hero or the spring th at stilled the saved from the fire of Au schwitz a free ha nd in their worldwide war against Israel. Any weakening motion was and when they saw the thirst ol the marchers to Dachau. a nd Dachau. You may even hear of the American resolve to oppose such a dangerous gam'e could spring ol water gu shing ·out ol the The spirit of the Rebbe pervades the story of the spring of Miriam destroy the tender chances or a peaceful A ra b- Israeli seltlement ground. fresh. clear cold water. the village. Kiryat Zanz is an en­ told in many ol its va riations. which the Administration has up to now so carefully nurtured. lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIII tity by itself. The Hasidim wa lk in the wa ys of their Rebbe. A Sab­ (Mr. Segal"s opini ons are hi s COMMUNITY bath is Sabbath. Holidays are own a nd are not necessarily those Your CALENDAR Holidays. Not a soul stirs on these of this newspaper.) A SERVICE Of THE The JEWISH FEOEIIA TION Money's Of IHOOE ISLAND and the I.I. JEWiSH HffAU, Worth Fer-U.ting Cal 421-41 n

By Sylvia Porter SUNDAY, ANll 2f, 1t7l 1:00 , .ffl . u:4:.rrm..il™"-..t,1.'"~ Mi,ioffl H•,,ltal w-•n•, A, ..clat l•n, •••~£;;~mi V.... n-...'-ty 0 The Brutal Cost of College 5:45 P·"'· NEW YORK: Joseph E. Le,ineI' by 16► -~hci"-c:;>c~;i,,c:had appeared~,-c:~~:::i,LorJ°"ci=~~ with Dame Pr-w.nm tWwew Day SchMrl, An-I ScW. If you're the parents of a teen­ *If your youngster enters and ...... had an arrangement with Pablo Alicia Markova. Bellini is working ager or two heading for college in lives at a private two-year college, 7:30 P·"'· Picasso in connection with a on a cape for Salvador Dali: ...... _i._ motion pidare the producer is "After I measured him, Dali took 1973-74, you're into the most bru­ his first-year costs will average MONDAY, ANN. 30, 1t73 making with Rlcbard Attenborough my tape ·measure and said that as ii tal financial squeeze ever - and it $2,540, and if he commutes, the 0.MMn 0..,..., !::~t., IN,d MNfins on the life of Mahatma Gandhi. had touched him, it was a sacred will continue relentlessy to get costs will be $2,090. Tuition and -a-p..... - ...... worse year after year, and the soo­ fees will take $1,210. Picasso had agreed to paint a work of art and he would feature it 6:30 P·"'· special trade mark logo for the in a painting." ner you' face the realities, the bet­ • And if your child becomes a T..,,,,. .. 0..- Dln,- ShtiMheecl th ...... film, to be used as a motif in the Bellini's method for dealing with ter you will be able to cope. To­ resident student this fall at a pri­ -- 1:00 P·"'· ,.wtucket-c:.ntrel ,... 0-,ter ef HadaNoh, movie's ad,ertising campaign ... difficult clients is to "gitt them day, from the College Scholarship vate four-year institution, his costs ■..,ka, MNtl.. Service, comes information never will average $3,280; if he com­ TUISDAY, MAY 1, 1973 Jack Albertson, star of The some cognac lo calm them down." before made available to parents, mutes, the cost will be $2,745. At 10:00 a.m. Sunshine Boys, has been named Jonathan Winters will J.wkh ~., ~ W.nd, w-·• Stage Father of the Year by the temporarily leave the taping of his students and the high school com­ these institutions, tuition and fees Drmion, Annual MN'"'9 ond lmtolatien muniiy. absorb $1,725. 7:~5 P·"'· National Fathers' Day Committee. ..Wacky World" TV series to help 1... ..tt Loclp f42, f&AM, ■...lor Meeti"I • At both two-and four-year pri­ Labor Secretary Peter J . actor Jay Silverheels in a fund­ The CSS, a part of the College 1:00 P·"'· Entrance Examination Board, ob­ vate institutions, commuter and ProvWenee HNrew Day Scho.l, a.dilts' Aaod-­ Brennan will be honored as raising campaign for the Indian ation, loard Meeli"I Performing Aris Workshop in tained reports on average student resident students spend the largest WEDNISOAY, MAY 2, 1973 "Irishman ol the Century" by the budgets from the financial aid di- · percentage of their budgets on tui­ Lt. Patrick J. Wash Division No. Phoenix. Silverheels, who played -Jewfth ~ '-~~~·ladie,' Auociation, Tonto on The Lone Ranger, is one rectors of more than 2,000 public tion and fees. loordMNti"I 29 of the Ancient Order of and private, two-year and four­ • And do not pin your hopes for 6:30 p.m. Hibernians in America at their of its leaders The Museum of year institutions in the U.S. from .. cheap" schooling on a public T-,np.. leth Torah, Donor Dinner 100th anniversary banquet, May the City of New York has loaned these, it worked up average col­ two-year institution. The fastest Jerute1'-'n Group J::J:;~h. Board Meeting 19 ... In Atlantic City, the world's the Palace Theater costumes and lege costs for the current year and rate of rise in .expenses is oc­ Tou,o mlternctl Auodation, loord MNtlng biggest Monopoly game will be props from earlier productions of THUISDAY, MAY 3, 1973 Cyrano do Bergerac. to be the basic data for forecasting curring at this type of college. The 9 :30 a .m . played in which people act as trends in costs for different types smallest annual rate of rise in re­ lhode bland-Southern Mol.lGd,uMth hvion, game pieces on a 32-foot square displayed in the lobby when Women'• Americon OH Christopher Plummer's musical of colleges. cent years has been recorded at 10:00 a .m . board. The game is sponsored by Here are the crucial figures: private two-year institutions, a nd Jewi,h F.ct.tation of lhoch hland, Young the Atlantic City and the National version opens at the end of the Women'• Divilion, loord Meeti"9 month. *If your child will commute to a even here, for residents, the an­ 1:00 p.m . Assn. of friends of Reese Palley, public two-year institutiorr - a nd nual rise has been 2.8 per cent. Hope Lodge, 8' 1\111 l 'rlth, Board MHting the man who took 700, people to Patrick Macnee, star of Sleuth. The rise in rates over the period FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1973 Pa ri s to celebrate hi s 50th said his father was a race-horse­ this is by far the cheapest - hi s 12:30 p.m . (or her) fir st- year college costs will 1970 to 1973 at public two-year UOn1ton Chapter of Hada11ah, Installation birthday. ' trainer in England. "That's why I com muter colleges is 7.1. per cent; Evening Designer Jacques Bellini, whose went into show business - but average $1 ,635 of which tuition 25th Anniversary Shabbat ot Rhode l1lond and fee s will total $200. al private two-yea r commuter col­ Temple ond Synagogue• clients include Ben Ve reen, Sonny there's not much difference between leges, 5.9 per cent; at private two­ SATURDAY, MAY S, 1973 & Che r and Ale x is S mith, the tw o professions," the actor *If your child wil l be a resident 25th Annive rsc:iry Shabbat at Rhode l1land student at a public four-year in­ year resident co ll eges. 2.8 per Temple, and Synogogue, celebrated the first ann ive rsari· of explained. Macnee and Lorne cent: at public four-year commuter 6:00 p.m . Sugar at Adam 's Apple. Bcfor~ he Greene were on the first TV show stitution. his fir st-year costs wi ll Shalosh S.'udot Program for Jewish YOi.llti average $ I, 985 , and if he com­ colleges, 6.8 per cent : at public SUNDAY, MAY 6, 19 73 s tarted des ig ning al 16 transmitted in Canada . .. I stayed at mutes to this public institution, four-year resident coll eges, 5.8 per llbecause I was ghen needles and the YM CA in Toronto then," his first-year costs will average cent ; at private four-year commu­ Israe l Expo 25 Fair thread for a present and I didn't Macnee sa id , " to save money and 2 :00 p.m . $ 1,760. Of these totals, tuition a nd ter co ll eges, 6.6 per cent : and at 25th Blr thdoy Fesllvol want lo waste them" - Bellini was support my children." Macnee, who fees will represe nt $465. (Continued on page 8) llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll a ballet dancer. He began at 4, and (Continued on page 7) ....

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 - 5 40% INCREASE BAN 20 FILMS banned 20 films last year, twice JERUSALEM - The Jewish JERUSALEM - Israel's Film the number it had rejected a year Agency's Department of Missing and Theater Censorship Board before. Persons reported last week a 40 percent increase in the number of requestk to find missing relatives during the past year. In 1972, COOK'S 5000 requests were filed · with the department compared to 3450 in 1971 and 3000 in 1970. The rise in FISH MARKET the number of requests is attributed to . the large number of HAS RE-OPENED ON SMITH ST. Soviet Jews who immigrated to Under New Management Israel last year. The majority of the requests come from people OFFERING THE VERY BEST OF who have lost relatives in the holocaust, the department said. Of FRESH SEA FOODS the 5000 requests in 1972, 1754 were not met. In the last three MANAGED BY years some 4000 · relatives have WILLIAM HOOD been located. formerly of HOPE SEA FOOD MARKET RECEIVES FIIST PIIZE: Marshall H. Cohen, son of Samuel H. Cohen of CALL US AT (our correct number) 26 Leicester Way, Pawtucket, and the late Lucille Cohen, was awarded first prize, a trip to Israel, in a photo competition honoring Israel's 25th anniversary. The competition, sponsored by the Jewish Community 521-1111 Council of Greater Washington ( D.C.). included about 400 entries. The prize photograph was a solarized black and white portrait of a solitary Hasidic Jew at the Wailing Wall. Mr. Cohen, an amateur photographer, was also a first place winner, in color, in the national B'nai B'rith photo awards in 1971. This year he also received a gold medal first place award in a General Washington camera club competition, and a second place in portraits by the Arts Oub of Washington. Mr. Cohen is an agri­ ~e ~&Y'.1 aAd :%,,_, ✓,,,,_, cultural economist with the Department of Agriculture, specializing in Western Europe. He received his BA in Economics from Brown UniverMty Ol'EN EVES. IV Al'rf. '?/~., ,,/1;;,.,am J/;~i/a/ in 1954 and his MA from Georgetown University in 1966. Shown above 808 HOPE STREET are, left to right, Dr. Leon Gerber, chairman, 25th anniversary com• ro,dia1J, IAl't/4Jl"I' /o a//4,.d'd., mittee, Goele Jones, BOAC representative, and Mr. Cohen . PROVIDENCE, R.I. 31- Fascism Erupts In Milan -~-"~ ~,,,,,.d dAu.a/..,/1,.,,4;.jl o,/d,. ~-,,fo,altoA Leaving Policeman Dead 1n de 54,t./i,, /4d'i/o,tam ROME - ··1t was just like the April 25. The ban was imposed o/de Yf:pi/a/ Fascist hooliganism of the 1920s ... because of tension at the State said Sandro Pertini. president of University earlier in the week o,, !¼,w/lljl ,,,,..,.i,,jl, d e ej,,{d o/vRajl the Itali an Chamber of Deputies. which resulted in ri oting. He was referring to the neo­ WONDDFUL WOltLa ,./1{;.,,/.,.,,. /4a,i,/,..,,/ a,id.Je,.e,if,-d.,...,, The ne o-Fascists had planned a IIOfNOMOWACll Fascist riots in Milan last week ra ll y which was to .have been which left one policeman dead - Tennis, Golf, Indoor P'ool '1u1 3 ,d"',?,,( //~,,,. or/or.I addressed by Sen. Ciccio Franco Outdoor root,, Indoor Bowling & ripped by a combat-type .of hand of the Italian Social Movement ke Skating, Children, Doy Comp, grenade - and sent shock waves SufMrb Dietary Cuisine. ~.,.,/ ~eo./w-.· vl't:/c/4el/ /Jla/.,{,;., (MSI). Franco is the political !!J.. Y. around Ita ly . leader of the tough "Black WE "IE FIGHTING INFlA TIONI For more than two hours Up ~/1,V,O:/.Pvec/o, o/!JJ..a Ji.a .. / Yl:pua/ Action·· terror squads responsible Como Mid-Wffk hundreds of ne o-Fascist youths. 30% OFF REG . Wknd. Do;ty Rote' for intermittent violence in the faces covered with black Or Try Ou, as'.,.,/.,,., vRa.1.,ak.,/✓.1 sou thern city of Reggio Calabria handkerchiefs, strutted through Low 5 ~=n~~ Sp.ciol during the past three years. the streets of Milan shouting Holidays & Summer Esduded slogans against "Communists" and The violence in Milan destroyed rff'd'ma,od' ~/a,. "Jews:" They exchanged Hitler­ the claims of the MSI to be the HDMDWAl:It ~~ .. ✓a;:, like salutes and many carried iron party of law and order. For Ol'fN AU YEAR LODGE bars ·and clubs. Ita li ans. it was a new lesson in the The battle erupted when about darker side of the radical right. Sp~:rl~~R~/ Toi. , 914-6-47-6100 .9/4a.Jtl tlld6 $~ .¼,.,,,/ d!va.-11 500 youths defied a police ban on which has been growing virtually DIAL DIRECT 800-431-2212 political meetings in Milan until unchecked for several years Hosts: Irv. & Florence llk:lntein

. '\ 6 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRlL 27, 1973 Herald ads get'tesults. ELECTED TO BOARD TO CONDUCT SYMPOSIUM Volunteers in Action will con­ WASHINGTON - Donald W. l"Jl"J'P,i!Z,l!Z,I~ duct a symposium, "Volunteers in JOE ANDRE;S Jones, 36-year-old Deputy Direc-· tor of Community Relations Ser­ Education," on Friday, April 27, vices in the Federal Justice De­ at the folonial Hilton Inn in r Cranston. Musi~~E,~~!!~l!ffair partment, who is Black and Jew­ i:I Weddings Bar Mitzvahs ish, was unanimously elected to This symposium is designed for A. 831-3739 Res. 944-7298_ the board of Jewish Social Service educators, students and all inter­ ~rm~~~ Agency of Washington. ested citizens for the purpose of exchange of ideas, discussion of programs involving the use of CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK volunteers in the school setting as well as student volunteer participa­ -ALL TYPES- tion in the community as an Free Estimates education al adjunct. Registration will begin at 11 :30 CALL a.m. Further information may be ~ obtained by calling 421-7472. A B CEMENT COMPANY MUSICAL PROGRAM 728-5591 724-7127 A musical program will be presented by Bobby Harrison, singer and pinaist, and George Al­ iNARON rRAVEL CAMP HEAD HOPE TIAVEl: lob.rt L lernatein, right, and Jock Jeaael, Jr., left, len, saxophonist, at the next meet­ JULY 1, 197.3 - AUGUST 11, 1973 are president and vice rresident reapectively of ~ Travel, Inc., do­ ing of the Ladies' Association of CO-ED 12-15 YRS meatic and internationa 9.--p travel apecialiats which has opened for the Jewish Home for the Aged on busineas in the National Building, Suite 301, at 32 Goff Avenue in Paw­ 090 • COUNTRY CAMPI.NO All CONDlnONID IUI Wednesday, May 2, at I p.m. at tucket. The two, formerly govemor and aecretary of the New England the Home. Ml, ...... , Y.._, ...... Virginia Cily, 1-, I.au Tdloe, San Fror,- District of Kiwanis International, wiN work dosely with civic, fraternal, Life members will be saluted ~...... llr, DI...,..,.., 1/tfflnd SMlos, Marineland, OS, las Vegas, Hocltw church and alumni organixatiom and clubs. Judith Buglio, tour travel _, ..,__Ga,en, · G(wnd Conyen, Pllt'fflod For.st, Jucnt. Cartsbad Caverns, specialist will superviae the offiat staff and schedule speakers. and new members will be wel­ comed. --~~~ Coobul1, and many olhori - All .... Mrs. Isador S. Low is honorary chairman of Lile Membership a nd - ,... DOII01Nl' KUNI, DI ...... ORGANIZATION NEWS ] Mrs. Abraham Grebstein is chair­ n ;1.'rNDON llOAD, INAAON, MAIi. 02067 I man. Mrs. G rebstein is also mem­ ~-.714-21114 ACCEPT APPLICATIONS the main gallery of the Museum bership chairman and Mrs. Ben Harold A. Anderson, director of of Art from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Poultcn is cochairman. safety programs for the Provi­ ONE OF NEW JNGLAND'S FINE HAS OPENING S Mrs. Harry Seltzer is program Swimming, diving, water polo - under high­ dence Chapter; American Red Camp Young Judaca. an ticipat­ chairman. and Mrs. Ira Nulman. est At1>. Red CTo88 Instruction. Cross, has announced that appli­ ing its 34th an ni versary season in hospital ity chai rman a nd her com­ Baseball, basketball, soccer, tennis, riding, all cations arc now being accepted for 1973, currently has some avai lable land sports expertly taught. mittee will arrange the dessert tea enrollment in the annual Ameri­ openings for season and second Overnight horseback, sailing, canoeing, crcl· hour which will precede the pro­ &DAR ing, and pioneering program covering .I. can Red Cross National Aquatic period campers onl y. according to CLINTON. CONN. gram. Sound, the rivers, and countryside of 8 and First Aid School to be held Dr. Charles R. Rotman. director. states in the North East. June 10 to June 20 at Camp Ki ­ A new ice skating program and BOSTON CELEBRATION Art, dance, drama, guitar, crafts, wood­ Theodore Bikel, Elly Stone. working instruction. wancc in Hanson. Massachusetts. the addition of four more tennis HADAR is known nationally for its hi~h The school trains enrollees as in­ courts, bringing the total to eigh t. Senator Edward M . Kennedy a nd standards, excellent stall, exceptional facil ­ structors in water safety, first aid will be featured in conj unction Senator Edward W. Brooke, will ities a·nd above all its rep~tatiop. for provid­ and small craft safety. hi ghlight a community wide Bos­ ing children with a truly wonderful summer. with the more than 50 acti vities •• •-' PtiyMk.lltiMfl, Oirtdon Mr. Anderson, who is assistant now incorporated in CY J's pro­ ton. Massachusetts, celebration of •• rKtorit N. Wrile for brochure or ~•II (203) 347-1459 Israel 25 which will be held Mon­ -...... c-. 06457 CAJIP NADAi IS ANAPPY Pua IOI IIDSI director of the summer school. gram . said that men and women 17 years Camp Young Judaea is for boys day, May 7, at 8 p.m. at the Mu­ old and over arc eligible for the and girls, ages 9 to 15 , and has a sic Hall. school. Further information may fi ve to one camper-counselor ratio. The local observ ance is under ' be obtained by calling 831-7700. a modern physical plant and offers the auspices of the Greater Boston Committee for Israel's 25th Anni­ DESSERT BRIDGE an eight week season or two four lM4LLCO\JERINGS versary Celebration which is spon­ The Annual Dessert Bridge of week periods. CY J is located on sored by the Combined Jewish Sisterhood Congregation Mishkon 168 acres on Lake Baboosic in Philanthropies of Greater Boston Tfiloh will be held on Wednesday. Amherst, New Hampshire. and is and the Jewish Community Coun­ May 2. at 7 p.m. in the social hall an accredited member of the to decorate ci l of Metropolitan Boston. your home of the synagogue. American Camping Association. Information may be obtained by Chairing the celebration are EXCIT_INGLY ! Overall chairman of the affair is Lewis H. Weinstein of Waban, Mrs. Joseph Bernstein. Jessie calling or writing Dr. Charles B. Rotman, director. Camp Young Massachusetts, and Robert E. Connis is ticket chairman and Segal of Newton, Massachu setls. From 58' committee members are Mollie Judaea, 8 1 Kingsbury Street, Gornstein, Mrs. Morris Kagan, Wellesley, Massachusetts 021 8 1; GARDEN CLUB lo 1 58 per roll Mrs. Jack Melamut, Mrs. John telephone, 617 237-9410. Eden Garden Cl ub of Temple Beth El will present a lecture-dem­ Newman, Mrs. Morris Tippe and SUNDAY OF BUTLER GREEN Miss Dorothy Berry, ex-officio. onstration by Mrs. Sidney S. Ellis Six Decorating The Butler Hospital Auxiliary of Fairfield. Connecticut on will present its Mother's Day Wednesday. May 2, at Temple Consultants PARENTS' DAY event known as Sunday of the The annual observance of Par­ Beth El. Tea and dessert will be Available Butler Green, on Sunday, May 13 , served at 12 :30 p.m. and the meet­ ents' Day at the Rhode Island from noon lo 4 p.m. School of Design will be held on ing will start al I :30 p.m . There will be the traditional Mrs. Ellis is a master judge on Saturday, April 28. Parents of booths ranging from plants to freshmen and juniors will have the the National Council, a member baked goods and some additions. of her state judges council, a BERREN opportunity to confer witb several There will be a band which will Daily 8,30 lo 5,30 of the administrators in their of­ teacher in the Japanese Sogetsu 'TIL 9 Tl IF.SDA Y be made up of doctors, professors School, and an accredited judge of fices between 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. and a banker. Students of the CLOSED Following luncheon between the American Daffodil Society. 11/[DNESDAY Rhode Island School of Design Mrs. Lester M. Friedman is ~- 12:30 and 1:30 p.m., Dean Donald will participate in the Fair and will 78.1-7070 chairman of the day, and Mrs. 92 NARRAGANSETT A VE. M. Lay will address the parents bring some environmental struc­ briefly. A reception will be held in Richard Lorber is cochairman. tures. Other chairmen are Mrs. Maurice Two groups will perform, Look­ Namerow, hospitality; Mrs. Her­ ing Glass Theatre with Sally Rapl­ bert Scribner, tickets; Mrs. Harry Eli and Bessie Cohen Foundation Camps ye, and The Junior League's Zitserman, raffle; Miss Eunice Ecology Players. Miller, telephone; Mrs. Herbert 43rd Season of Purp.oseful Camping There will also be a band con­ M. Kanter, publicity, and Mrs. cert by the Seekonk School Band Ellis Rosenthal, ex-officio. and the Lincoln Lambrequins. DESSERT BRIDGE CAMP PEMBROKE MRS. BENJAMIN BLOCKER, Director REGION ONE FORUM The Annual Dessert Bridge of Tel. 617-332-5375 ·. Chapter ,l!I of the National As- · Sisterhood Congregation Mishkon Cape Cod --Pembroke, Mass. A Few Openings for One M,onth sociation of Women In Construc­ Tfiloh will be held on Wednesday, tion will be the hostess chapter of May 2, at 7 p.m. in the social hall the Region One Forum which will of the synagogue. , MR. DAVID FURASH, Director be held at the Sheraton-Islander Overall chairman of the affair is · Tel.: 617-275-8307 Inn in Newport on April 27, 28 Mrs. Joseph Eernstein. Jessie CAMPTEVYA and 29. Connis is ticket chairman and Brookline, New Hampshire A Few Openings for One Month The business session on Satur­ committee members are Mollie Youngest and Oldest Groups! day will begin at 9 a.m. and end at Gornstein, Mrs. Morris Kagan, 3 p.m. and will be followed. on Mrs. Jack Melamut, Mrs. John Saturday evening by a cocktail Newman, Mrs. Morris Tippe and party at 7 p.m. and a banquet at 8 Miss Dorothy Berry, ex-occicio. p.m. PARENTS' DAY CAMP TEL NOAR In attendance will be members The annual observance of Par­ MR. GEORGE MA,RCUS, Director of the national organization from ents' Day at the Rhode Island Hampstead, Tel.: 617-598a2758 . · Los Angeles, California, Chicago, School of Design will be held on New Hampshire REGISTRAT.ION COMPLETED! Illinois and Washington, D.C. Re­ Saturday, April 28. Parents of gion One members will be attend­ freshmen and juniors will have the ing from chapters in Buffalo, New opportunity to confer with several York; Springfield and Boston, of the administrators in their of­ Massachusetts; Hartford, Con­ fices between 10:30 and 11 :30 a.m. Office Telephone: 617-438-0003, Mornings Only necticut; Wilmington, Delaware; Following luncheon between Baltimore, Maryland; Philadelphia 12:30 and 1:30 p.m., Dean Donald and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and M. . Lay will address the parents - Washington, D.C. briefly. A reception THE RHODE ISLAND "HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 27 1 1973 - 7 ... Herald subscribers comprise an cellent results, advertise in the - - ·- .. - - active buying market. For ex- Herald. Call 724-0200. / s KOSHER BRIDGE JU LIE DELICATESSEN 731 HOPE STREET 621 -9396 By Robert E. Starr BUSINESSMAN'S SPECIAL ...... ~ ... -.... - one failed to make the hand. It TONGUE SANDWICH ON RYE Finesses are wonderful things to didn't matter whether they ducked gain tricks with, especially when SIDE OF POTATO SALAD-CO.FFEE s 1.3S the first Irick or not the way they they work. When the success of a played the hand for they all first ( NO SUBSTITUTIONS contract is dependent on a finesse knocked out West's Diamond Ace NO CHARGE FOR SECOND CUP OF COFFEE WITH LUNCH then the contract is a good one and then, after their last Spade but sometimes even though that stopper was dislodged, took the ALL BEEF particular finesse did fail maybe Club finesse hopefully. When it there was another better way to lost, as it rea lly figured to do, they play the hand without taking it. felt they were unfortunate and TO SPIAK: The H.torable A""'­ LB_ Such a thing as an End Pl ay, for sK IN LE ss FRAN Ks 1. 19 when they saw that they had done ham Avidar, Minister for Foreign example. This was the case in to­ no worse than most of the other Affairs of Israel, will be the guest day's hand. Only one pair m ade Declarers they figured they had speaker al the Rhode Island Israel the hand although the bidding al­ done the normally correct thing Bond Dinner of Stale in honor .of most told them that the finesse and that the game depended on a Rabbi and Mrs. Eli A. Bohnen to be held on Sunday, May 13, at 6 was not likely to work. Those oth­ finesse whi ch failed to work. su re­ p.m. al Temple Emanu-EI. er Declarers took it anyhow feel­ ly worthwhile bidding it. ing that when it went down it was Mrs. Perlow felt differently. She Mr. Avidar, who has held key assignments in Jerusalem and on FRESH just too bad and they felt justified saw that she had to lose that Dia­ when they found they had lots of the international Kene as a career mond Ace and that when that ha p­ officer in Israel's Ministry for Fot­ company going down for the other pened her last Spade stopper eign Affairs, has served as Min­ LB. Declarers did exactly the same. would be gone. S he felt a lso that COOKED TONGUE 3.19 ister of Information at the Israel North her own holding of the two high Embany in Washington, D.C., ♦ 6 4 2 Consul General for Chicago and SAVE 70' A POUND 8 3 Spade honors would probably .A mean that West would have two the Midwest, and was for three ♦ K Q J 4 other high cards to make up for years senior consul in New York in ♦ OJ 8 charge of political affairs. West Eost that. meaning that the Club fi ­ SOUR CREAM 43c PT. ♦ OJ 10 9 7 ♦ B 3 nesse would not be lik ely to work . MURRAY ROSENBAUM 6 4 .J 10 7 2 How could she play the hand to •o (ZEKE ROSS) ♦ A 8 ♦ 7 5 3 take advantage of this fact and ♦ 9 5 4 2 ♦ K 6 3 was it a fact? The answer. she Antique Jewelry South would not take that finesse at all NOW LOCATED AT SAVE$$$ 's ♦ AK 5 .K95 but try to make West lead a C lu b Antique Village ♦ 10 9 6 2 himself at the right time. Rte. 44, Rehoboth, Man. ON OUR SPECIALS ♦ Al07 Instead of ducking the First Mrs. Albert Berger and Mrs. Spade lead. she won it , and played Nathan Perlow were North a nd a Diamond, sure enough West South, East Dealer, North-South won it and continued another vulnerable with this bidding: Spade which she again won. All with the premise that she would s w N play West for that Club King she l ♦ l ♦ 3 ♦ now ra n her other high Diamonds. 3NT End West discarding one Heart and a Some Wests made no bid at all C lub. Now came the Hearts and because they felt their Spade suit West's last fi ve cards we re always was not worthy of an overcall, two three Spades and the King a nd Wests made Take-out Doubles af­ one Club just as Declarer was ter South opened the bidding. counting on. At this time she When either of those bids were made the key play tha t she had made, North ended as Declarer a t planned from the very beginning. three No Trump and usually East She played her last Spade and let led a Heart. But when West did West win it. East had already fol­ make the overcall, good enough lowed twice so West couldn't have under the vulnerability conditions, more than thr.ee more but after North could not now bid No cashing those what would poor Trump, having no Spade stopper West have left to lead·> Nothing Natio so after North made the only oth­ but a Club from that King. So er bid left for him, three Dia­ that gave South a free finesse and monds, South, with two Spade at the same time h·er ninth trick stoppers, bid game himself in No and there was nothing the Defend­ Trump. ers could do about it. Bank Without a Spade lead, the game Moral: If possible, make the was easy to make no matter how Defenders work for you. Especial­ it was played but with West on ly when you feel that what you lead the automatic lead was the may do yourself will not work let FJoats _,,,1 ·· ~ Spade Queen which invaria bly them play to you. You may not al­ gave the Declarer fits and all but ways gain but often will. The Lyons Den lovv-Cost (Continued from page 4) "Ironically, it was an ad for a bad went back to Canada this week on bullfight" ... The set also had a vacation, won't stay at the Y this lackson Pollock reproduction. time: "From now on, my children 0 1bat was another coincidence," Boat are going to support me . .." Janis said. When his father - art Eliot Elisofon, the Life dealer Sidney Janis, who published photographer who died recently, a book including Pollock's works once photographed tribal King - saw it,, he said: "We bought and loans Nymi Bope Mabinshe in- the sold that painting several times." Belgian Congo. ' "He had 350 The elder Janis was the one who ... to help you buy a new boat, motor, trailer, and all wives · and insisted on posing headed the committee to bring kinds of gear. We'll arrange your financing quickly before a large mirror next to the Picasso's "Guernica" to the U.S. on comfortable terms at any of the 21 offices of camera," Elisofon said. "He Producer Ted Mann said at the wanted to see how he would Pub Theatrical that Joanne look.'" Only two others ever made Woodward and Paul Newman will a similar request · - Ginge_r d O' a show for· him at the Circle-ih­ u Rogers and Gypsy . Rose Lee the-Square-Joseph E. Levine· After completing a European Theater next season ... Bobby The~ assignment, Elisofon · aropped a Short played himself on one . -· National bag of fl ashbulbs in a London segment of the TV serial, As the train station, and wasdetained by World Turns. April 26 ... Producer th"e police, who suspected him of Michael Butler starts filming the Bank story of Stephen R. Timoshenko Member Member being an IRA member. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Feder di Savings and Loon Insurance Corporation " You're wrong," he protested. described by the Russian , " How can I be? My father's a government as The Father of Twenty-One Rhode Island Offices: Providence, Cranston, Cumber1.md , ~ in E,i::,t Greenwich, Milldletown, Newport, North Providence, P,1wtucket, rabbi." Engineering Mechanics Yugoslavia next year. Porti.mouth, Rumford, W.1kdidff, W.irwick, West W.irwi( k, Woonsockel Conrad Janis of the departed No Hard Feelings knows bulHighting, Stop what your doing! Don't having spent 12 months In Spain. wait another moment to call the He was asked if that was why lhere Herald at 724-0200 or 724-0202 to wu a bullfight poster on the wall order a subscription to the Herald of his apartment In the play. "Just for your son or daughter to ~njoy a coincidence," tlie actor explaint!d.' at college. · -" '• '•" 8 - THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDA~• APRIL 27, 1973 Herald subscribers comprise an FOUND GUILTY active buying market. For . ex­ TEL AVIV - Two of the re­ cellent results, advertise in the cent Soviet Georgian immigrants Herald. Call 724-0200. arrested in connection with the death of a Nazareth Arab were Hello Again! found guilty of manslaughter, while three others were convicted of assault. TRAVEL~ News of the Sports World by Warren Walden od/Of,~ KNOWLEDGE DJtd, EXPERIENCE Having A Party? R.I. RED SOX: The Boston Red Sox have belonged to Rhode ls­ ONE MORE: Maybe between CALL now a nd the tim e when you read land almost as much as Boston down through the years. a good this, a special bus may be sched­ uled from Providence directly to URENT-ALLS portion of their support coming from here. Now that we are fa­ McCoy Stadium . If not. it mi ght Tables- Chairs Dishes vored wi th the Pawtucket Red Sox be a good idea to follow because a dozen fans have asked thi s colu mn in the International League. a ve ry how to get to the Pawtucket Red Champagne Fountains respectable circuit that is just a notch behind the majors, why Sox galnes. Some were baseball enthu siasts who do not own au­ 808 HOPE ST., PROV 725-3779 wouldn ·1 it be a good idea to call them the " R.I. Red Sox'" When tomobiles: others didnt wa nt to NAMED CHAIRMAN: Irwin Cha•, drive and park. business and civic leader, has the R. I. Reds hockey clu b was ... been named chairman of the laun ched. it was named "Rhode BIG nominating committee of the Jew­ Island Reds" rather tha n "Provi­ INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE: ish Federation of Rhode Island . dence Reds," not onl y after the The most successfu l Internati onal The nominating committee will se­ famed rooster. but to let fans all League to operate in Rhode Isla nd lect a slate of officen for 1973-74 over the state know tha t it is their was the 1914 cham pion Providence to be presented for approval at team. F'rinstance. ma ybe the fa ns Grays who were. a lmost an all star the 28th annual meeting of the in Warwick and Woonsocket and ou tfit. Several moved on to promi­ FLOOR COVERING CO. agency which will be held on nence in the major leagues in­ June 12. Newport and Cranston would CARPET LINOLEUM -TILE build a pride a nd loyalt y in the cluding Da ve Shean. Ray " Rab­ A meeting of the nominating bit" Powell. Jack Onslow and OF SHOWROOM: Phone day or night committee has been called for Pawtucket Red Sox team if they COURSE. Babe Ruth and Carl Rear 19S Cole Avenue 521-2410 Tuesday evening, May 1, at his knew it represented their commu­ home al 10 Broalcway Road. n-ities. too. Mays. An underhand pitcher. Ma ys was known as a "Subm arine Hello Friends: A graduate of Brown Univer­ Floor coveri119 is my business - my business is to satisfy my customers. sity, Mr. Chase is president of Ann ANOTH ER SUGGESTION: If Hurler" because of hi s different The lowest price will not always answer your problem - th, finished & Hope. He is a U.S. Army the team were to be kno wn a s the delivery. his pitching hand almost produ