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City Commission On Hu man Relations Asked To Check CORE Anti-Semitism NEW YORK - The Antl-De­ Another statement related to a faination League of B'nal B'rlth demonstration held outside Public has turned evidence ot Negro School 40 In Queens by members anti-Semitism over to the City of Jamaica CORE. It charged that THE O N LY ENG LI SH- /SH W EE KLY IN R. I AND SOUTH EAST MASS Commission on Human Rights, when the white teachers entered which It asked to Investigate such the school, the demonstrators -behavior In tour recent school­ shouted, "Why don't you white VOL. LI, NO. 18 FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 15¢ PER COPY ' 16 PAGES community controversies. The go back to Great Neck!" evidence Includes statements by other schools are Involved In prln<;_lpals, teachers and others In disputes with alleged racial over­ BVCAP Accomplishes Much, Involves the school system about' anti­ tones. Officials of the Brooklyn Semitic remarks made by some CORE chapter have charged persons connected with the repeatedly that many white prin­ -Community, Kn_ows Of More To Be Done Brooklyn and Jamaica chapters of cipals In Bedford-Stuyvesant and the Congress of Racial Equality. Brownsville had failed "to teach A manpower program for the as chlldr!n accepted the condition of public and private agencies and Robert Carson, ' community our black and Puerto 'Rican chil­ underemployed and many more of poverty and had very little clergymen. One of the things ac- relations director o! Brooklyn dren" and had "unprofessional day nurseries for working moth- hope of not being Impoverished. compllshed by this mixer Is that CORE, said they Intend to ask attitudes toward black teachers ers are the biggest present gaps The forces acting In urban areas, people have become aware of William H. Booth, chairman of who are trying to do a job." In the Blackstone Valley Commu- especially In recent years, ac- problems which they did not know the ,Human Rights Commission, to nlty Action PrograD>, according cenruated the contrast between existed and which the community Investigate racial prejudice In the They have denied, that the to Mrs. Aaron Cohen, as•lstant those In need and those who are must face. scllools against Negroes. He chapter was motivated by anti­ director of BVCAP. The Neigh- not. Community Action began· In added, "We are sure that the Jewish and anti-white feeling. borhood Youth Corps and the Community action's most Im- Pawtucket oneandahalfyearsago, commission will conclude that Earlier this month the Ja­ Head Start program are Its most portent philosophic contribution and about six months ago added those principals and certain maica, Queens, branch of the Na­ obvious successes. has been Its Involvement of the three new communities, Central teachers have conspired to mis­ tional Association for the Ad­ Community action Is a direct total community, so that not only Falls, Lincoln and Cumberland. educate the black and Puerto RI­ vancement of Colored People federal-local relationship which those who traditionally have been Vincent S. Ceglle, executive di- can children and are hurling strongly upheld the white princi­ forms a new approach to urban on boards are active In It, but rector of BVCAP, said that a real charges of anti-Semitism to try pal of P.s. 40 after having In­ ~ problems. It was recognized that also the persons who live among · beginning has been made In get- to hide this fact." vestigated complaints by the -~ l . there are many people, partlcu- the problems which community tlnJ the poor Involved. Many One statement charged that a Queens CORE chapter. The larly In urban areas, who face action seeks to alleviate or wipe times they are non-participating Brooklyn CORE representative NAACP criticized the CORE ,­ economic problems. More simply out. For the first time the Ideal, members of the community, and said at a meeting last month with group for the "viciousness" of put, there are poor people who In practice as well as In theory, they are used to this. Often It Is a school officials: "We've got to Its attack. The chapter, In turn V' have not been affected by all the Is to Involve everyone In the matter of finding a key person, get these Jews out ot Bedford­ charged that the NAACP branch's -.,,,. , economic progress of the coun- community. For the first time, and the neighborhood aides help Stuyvesant. It's the Jews who are action was "dictated-" by white ,) try. people with agenctes are sitting In this (at first, before there to blame." slave masters." Poverty has Its own cycle, down with the people they have were aides, Mr. Ceglle and Mrs. \ ' too, so that tliose who were poor served • .. the superintendent of Cohen had to find representatives schools next to someone on wel- without any sort of starting base). Permission To Go To Israel Arab Restaurateurs fare. By going back two, three and even .l Find Business Down This has led, of course, to an four times, by making sure that For Jews unwieldy board. Just working with they get across the opportunity Withdrawn Soviet NEW YORK - Middle East them takes much time, said Jud- which Is being offered, "the ma­ MOSCOW - _ Israeli diplo­ Last December, Premier restaurants In the United States Ith Cohen, but each point of view chlnery begins to fall Into place mats about to leave the Soviet Aleksel N. Kosygin said In Paris are among the economic victims Is expressed and somehow each and the leaders emerie," He be- Union said that Russia had with­ that "the road Is open" for any of the Middle East conruct. A sees the other's problems. One- gan doing this alone, handing out drawn - at least for the time Jew to rejoin relatives In Israel. "Wall Street Journal" survey third of the board consists of flyer: to children a•.,d mkklng an- !,elng - permission for Soviet However, this statement showed that many Arab restau­ persons elected from local low- nouncements In newspapers and Jews to leave the country for Is­ caused no substantial Increase In rants here complain that Jews Income communities. Other at housing projects, and gradually rael. emigration, and those Jews who actually left were said to repre­ have stopped patronizing them members Include representatives (Continued on page 14) The diplomats and their fami­ and business has fallen Off badly. lies were leaving because of the sent only a small percentage of The manager of New York's l22QW5>525>5>5>Si'li!2S?~X>5i5'9995i'5?SX?99SN9S?S?9< break In relations ,between Israel all those seeking to obtain per­ ( Mecca Syrian Restaurant com­ and the Soviet Union. They said m lsslon to leave the Soviet Union. plained that Jewish customers Pledges, Contributi".:>ns To Drive that they had received hundreds Some of the 40 Jews who were were staying away In droves. of calls at their embassy from barred at the last minute from "It doesn•t seem fair," he Of GJC Reach $2,473,000 Russian citizens who said "We leaving had already given up their said. "I don't know anthlng about are with you'• and "We under­ homes and sold their belongings. that part of the world." He was Pledges and gifts to the I 967 campaign of the General Jewish The break In diplomatic rela­ stand the truth." I quoted . as saying that business Committee for Its regular drive and the Israel Emergency Fund tions between the Soviet Union A spokesman for the Israeli (,/ was down 50%, have reached $2,425,000, but more Is needed. Judge Frank Licht, and' Israel came after Israel re­ Embassy said that some 40 Rus­ Phlladelpbla, the Middle GJC president, called this "one of the most exciting campaigns In fused to comply with Russia's de­ In sian Jews held exit visas and had East restaurant which says It the history of the GJC" and Joseph Galkin, executive director, mands to surrender all · of the already bought tickets for their serves Israeli fare "Identical to noted that It Is probably the most rapid. terr Ito r y gained during the At a meeting last week of the Physicians Division, five times as trip to Israel, but were Informed Middle East war. food served In Israel" said It had that permission for Immigration to much was pledged or contributed as In previous years, said Robert The departure ot the Israeli lost 40% of Its business because Israel had been withdrawn, pend­ ] of the war. Its manager said a A. Rlesman, general campaign chairman. diplomats was delayed for two Louis J. Fox, president of the Council of Jewish Federations and Ing a flnal disposition on the mat­ days so as to coincide with tlle number of J ewlsh parties had ter at higher levels. cancelled out. Welfare Funds, to which the GJC belongs, wrote of his "unbounded departure o{ Soviet diplomats But Son of the Sheik, an Arab­ admiration" for the fund raising In Providence. He and Philip Bern­ Last year, about 1,500 Soviet from Tel Avlv. ic restaurant In the Wall Street ·steln, executive director of the Council, al so thanked Mr. Galkin Jews were permitted to Immigrate In a Pe!ated development, the area, said business was as good for his help In drawing up plans for the lsr,ael,,Emergency Fund at to Israel, and figures were run­ Israeli Ambassador to Poland left as ever and "If any of our Jewish an executives' meeting .at the beginning of June, and for his direc- ning about the same this year un­ Warsaw recently amidst Jeering customers have been staying tion of the Providence campaign. • til the Soviets announced their and whistling that were part ot an away, we haven't noticed It." recent ban. authorized demonstration. ~ I 'What We Need Is Sympathy And Money,' Writes Te-I Aviv Surgeon· ' (Editor's note: Dr. and Mrs. magic word today ••••") our hospital only the more severe Caroll Sliver of Providence re­ Dr. Fried wrote the foll owing cases. I am still unable to do ceived the following letter from letter to the Slivers on June 16: normal orthopaedics, but hope to Dr. Amnon Fried of Tel Aviv, "Thanks for your kind letter. return to that in one to two weeks who visited them here In I 958, We are all well and safe, We , that from now. There have been many Dr. Sliver said In the note which means our children and <''Jr fami­ volontlers from abroad, coming accompanied the letter that Dr. lies' children. There Is a lot of In after the war. They may work Fried "Is a highly skilled ortho­ sorrow around us, and we cannot as pioneers. But In the medical pedic surgeon who Is the chief of enjoy the victory too much. We field there Is no need to encour­ orthopedic surgery of the Bellin­ have known some of the boys age people to come, son 1-lospltal In Tel Aviv. For which are not more and It Is "We expect a good tourist many years, he was the president heart breaking to see the parents. season now , as all holy places of the Israel Orthopedic Society. The time after the war, when ev­ are now In Israel and we hope , "Ruth Is his wife. He has 2 erybody waited for news of them, that this will stay sp and that we , daughters, Miriam (20) and Dinah was very hard on all of us. Often shall enjoy safety and for (17). there was a time Interval of 10 many years to come. What we "I wrote to him when hostil­ days or more, until first letters need Is sympathy and money. 1 ities began, asking If he neede!l or regards arrived. But that Is am no specialist on money, but orthopedic help. His answer came war and we know very well what Israel was In flnancl'al crisis the very promptly. Indicating that the was In waiting for all of us If the 1est ,year -and now this w8.r, young children who acted as Arabs had' won. Thank God they people In the army , not working mall-carriers were very ef­ did not. normally and so on, we shall need \ - ficient; "We really don't need any­ world Jewry to help us win the "As you will note from the thing for ourselves, We have been peace too, , letter, they don't need ,orthopedic prepared well enough for this "Miriam Is In the army, doing surgeons or other medical men. · emergency, the Beilinson was clerical work as social worker. Their main needs are •sympathy emptied before the outbreak of She seems to like It. Dinah going and money.' war and transformed In a war again to school, the seventh "Sympathy Is easy to give, but hospital. Of course we have been grade. Dinah and Ruth have been It doesn't supply bricks for working hard during the week of wbrklng during those hectic days houses, gasoline for buses, or ho•tllltles, but now most or the In the Beilinson, helping In nurs­ DR, AND MRS, AMNON PRIED Photograph taken In I 958. help create Jobs. 'MONEY' Is the wounded have left and we treat In ing." -~

2 TiiE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 Subscribe to the Herald. I HOW MANY STATES? -· · HAIFA-At a closing ceremony tor Afrlcan and Asian students In Israel, Abba Eban, Israel's foreign minister, said that when Israel joined the United Nations, she was the 59th member to be accepted 1- and that today there are 123 mem­ ber states. "Really" someone c asked. Mr. Eban replied: "Any­ way, there were 123 member states l I when I left mr office ln Jerusalem an hour ago I' l

I I ON CLOSE-OUT ON l' 1967 WALLPAPER j ;.J Slacks NOW IN STOCK AND Values up to Slack Sets ·1.89 ALL SIZES & COLORS 59(~~

GJC CAMPAIGN TELETiiON-Volunteers In the telethons of the General Jewish Committee campaign, which 4O%0FF combines Its regular drive and the Israel Emergency Fund, are, from left, seated, Joe Thale_r , Initial Gifts chairman, Prof. Harold N, Organic, Martin I. Dt n elman, Jacob N. Temkin, Bertram L. Bernhardt, Ernie! ADLER Freedman and Benton H. Rosen; sr:andlng,Harold l. Tregar , Harvey Millman, Louts M, Morse, Nathan New­ burger. Harold Ratush, Cranston chairman, Joseph Galkin, GJC executive director, and Charles SWartz. HARDWARE The telethons began several weeks ago. Fred Kelman Photo r & PAINT CO. RUTH'S t o UN R WA radio tele­ - . ... 'I 198 PRAIRIE AVE. communtcat!ons and landing fa­ APPAREL Israel, UNRWA lo Cooperate cilities. I, WILLARD SHOPPING Pending a further settlement 764 '. Hope St . 3 3 1-403 0 CENTER or agreement, the Israel Govern­ ment al so agreed to exempt UN­ In Relief Of Arab ~efugees RWA from customs duties taxes r UNITED NATIONS-An the Israeli parties In the west and charges on the Import of sup­ Represented by OIL 421 -4641 agreement has been reached be- bank and Gaza Strip areas." For plies and equipment: to provide MAX ROTHKOPF Res.: 941-4810 tween the Israel Government and Its part, the Israel Government UNRWA free of charge the ware­ \ the United Nations Relief Works will facilitate the task of UNRWA housing facilities, loading and THE LA WRY COMPANY Agency for Palestine Refugees In to the best of Its ability, subject handling and transport by rail or the Near East whereby Israel has only to regulations or ar range- road In the areas of the Israeli Est. 1922 agreed to cooperate fully with ments which may be necessitated patrol, and to meet such other Monuments - Cemetery Lettering UNRWA In Its relief work for the by consider ation of the mtlltary UNRWA costs as were previously Arab refugees In the Gaza Strip security. met by the governmental _author­ 440 Cranston St. and on the west bank of the Jor• On this understanding, Mr. ities concerned. 9 a.m. · 5 p.m. dan River. Comay wrote, Israel ts prepared Providence, R.I. The United Nations announced Eves. and Sunday by appt. The announcement was made tn prtnctpal to agree: to ensure al so that "where conditions per­ two weeks ago by the United Na- the protection and security of mit, limited services have al• lions, which Issued an exchange of UNRWA's personnel, Installations ready been starred and now are letters between La\lre!!ce Michel- and property; to permit the free being expanded" by UNRWA. The NOW OPEN more, UNRWA _ Commissioner movement of UNRWA's vehicles United Nations said that UNRWA General, and Michael Comay, po- Into, within and out of Israel and expects that essential food sup­ 1 lltlcal adviser to Israel's Foreign the areas In question; to provide plies for the refugees can be re­ Minister and Its Ambassador-at- UNR'7'A's staff with Identity stored and maintained for those Under New Management Large. documents and any other passes_ refugees who had previously re­ In his let11er to Mr. Michel- that might be required: to provide ceived b'aslc rations. more, Mr. Corttay conftrmed1 the Israel Government's aggreement WAYLAND MANOR that "UNRWA would continue Its assistance to the Palestine refu­ gees, with the full cooperation of I J MEN'S SALON HARRY H. SHAFFER etery. He was the husband of Rae Funeral services for Harry H. (Solomon) Goodwin. \ Voice Print Analyst Shaffer, 66, of 95 Woodbury Born Aug. 25, 1901, In Russia, Registered Hair Stylist Street, who died June 22, were he wa s the son of the 1at e David Attests Conspiracy / held the following day at the Max and Rebecca (Kofsky) Gubernlck. Sugarman Memorial Chapel. Bur­ He was a resident of Providence MR. JOHN S00 Angell Street, Providence MR. VINC!NT NEWARK, N.J. - A New Jersey expert In the science of ial was In Lincoln Park C eme­ for 40 years until he moved to voice print analysis has verified tery, He was the husband of Edith Florida six months ago. (Hazen) Shaffer. Mr. Goodwin was part owner Mr. John and Mr. Vincent would like to an Israeli tape recording of a conversation between Egypt's Mr. Shaffer was born In Rus­ of the former Goodwin Fur Shop invite you to their newly remodeled President Nasser and Jordan's sia on Sept. 26, 1900, a son of the on Westminster Street. He re­ men's hair stylist shop. King Hussein. late Rubin and Sarah Shaffer, and tired 15 years ago. He was a During the conversation the had lived In Providence for 2 5 member of Touro Fraternal As­ OPEN 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. - Saturday 'til 5:30 two men conspired to blame the years. He had · previously lived In soctatlon. Arab defeat at the hands of Israel Pawtucket for 40 years. He ts survived by his wife; He was the proprietor of Sha!-. two daughters ,I Mrs. Norman ,· l on United States and British air PUBLIC INVITED FREE PARKING 'power. fer Furniture Company, Pawtuck­ Ttshchenkel of New York City and Lawrence G. Kersta of et for 20 years , retiring three Mrs. ·Robert Moll of Forest Htlls, Branchburg Township, a Jormer years ago, and was the proprietor N. Y .; a brother, Max Goodwin of Bell Telephone Laboratories re­ of the H. & H. Meat Markets In North Hottywood, Calif.; two sis­ searcher, sl\kl, "I am 100% sure Pawtucket from 1924 to 1945. He ters, Mrs. Anna Kelman of that this Is t!fe voice of President was a member or Congregation Cranston and Mrs. Jack Schlacter Nasser on this talMt_" M lshkon Tflloh and a member of of Long Island, N.Y., and four Pssat! Kersta made a 12-hour study Touro Fraternal Association. grandchildren. of the tape of the telephone con­ He ts survived by his Wife, * * * Have you heard about the versation; reportecily monitored two sons, Robert Shaffer of Paw­ MRS, WILLIAM UNOFSKY In Tel Aviv. An American tele­ tucket and Burton Shaffer of Funeral services were held In deal you can get at Pete's? vision network had supplied Ker­ Miami Beach, Fla.; four broth­ Bridgeport, Conn., on Sunday for Why not stop in and listen sta with an earlier recording of ers, Jacob Schaffer of Pawtucket, Mrs. Anne (Wilker) Unofsky of Nasser's voice for comparison George Schaffer of Lincoln, Ber­ 266 Gallatin Street, formerly of purposes. nard Schaffer of Scottsdale, Bridgeport, who died Saturday. See our fine s e I e c t i o n of Ke_rsta says that voice prints Ariz., and Mathew Shaffer of She was the Wife of the late Wil­ T.V.s; Stereos, Radios, Air are 99.65% foolproof and as accu­ Boston, and five grandchildren. liam Unofsky. She ts survived by a daughter, Mrs. Benjamin Pitner rate as fingerprints. The system IRVING* GOODWIN* * Conditioners, Ranges, and all of Providence. has been accepted In American Funeral services for Irving courts of law. other Eledrical Appliances. "KING PETE" Goodwin of 1481 Miami Garden Unveiling Notice The United States had no ob­ Drive, North Miami Beach, Fla., jections to the study and sept an formerly of 278 Hamil ton Street, The unveiling of a monument in observer to aid Kersta In his lab­ memo,y of the late WILLIAM ROSS Providence, who died Monday, will take place on Sunday, July 2, GO SEE PETE oratory. were held on Wednesday at the Making use of a device called at 11 a .m. in Lincoln Park Ceme• Max Sugarman Memorial Chapel. tery. Relatives and friends are in• a spectrograph, Kersta translates Burial wa s In Lincoln Park Cem- vitttd to attend. ,._ voice patterns on paper. 11You PETE'S PRICES match patterns and look for sim­ ilarities Just as you do In finger­ . ~ printing," he explained. m Max Sugarman Funeral Home CAN'T BE BEAT He has In the past worked with ~ ' law enforcement agencies " THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR" throughout the coun!i")', What made his research of ttte Nasser­ -MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION- Hussein conversation particularly r''T''£'C" ELECTRIC significant was the fact that both ~ DE 458 Hope Street DE 1-8636 P the U.S. a!]d Britain disclaimed 1-8094 L .L .i tJAPPLIANCES any partlclpdtlon In the Middle East fighting. FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM OUT-OF-STATE He ts sure that Hussein was 414 SILVER SPRING ST. Prov., R.I. , the other party as references CAU COLLECT 861-2340 861-6074 were made to "his majesty" and Amman, Jordan's capital. , nrn RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY. JUNE 30, 1967 3 10 IN SERVICE tary service. Of her nine broth­ JERUSALEM - If there is a ers, two are paratroopers, one II family of the year in Israel, It is in the Air Poree, one is a tank BRIDGE probably Mr. and Mrs. Rahamlm commander, one Is a section of Haifa. Every one of ,their 10 commander of infan try, another 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111m)1111111111111111111111111111111111111111u11u11111111111 children is now In military ser­ is a regimental sergeant major; · By Robert- E. Starr vice. The youngest child, an 18- one Is in the air defense and two year-old girl, is In regular mill- are in the infantry. In today,!s hand some of the West had now showed out of both declarers had the twelfth trick red suits and now was marked handed to them on the opening with only black cards. Gala July 4th Week End Fri. June 30-July 4 lead. others, not getting that fa­ With this knowledge, Declarer r vorable lead, had to work for -It next turned his attention to Clubs MIWS, MASS. but only one of them was able to for If that suit spilt, he had his 376-8456; KE 6-1011 tullfil his contract without the co­ contract. But East failed to follow NOVICK'S operation of the defense. on the third round. At this time Pool, 160x40; Every Sport and Activity; Show; Dancing; Teen and Chil­ North . dren's Supervised Programs; Nite Patrol; Special Kitchen for Weight the other Declarers took the Watchers and Diets. · ♦ 6 5 Spade finesse with West cashing Dietary lows Strictly Ob,erved-Dates Open For Parties .K 7 2 the good Club after he won the ♦ J 10 6 4 Spade King; Our Declarer did not '------RESERVE DIRECT OR YOUR TRAVEL· AGENT------♦ A K Q 4 take that finesse for he knew that West Ea st West had no red cards left and ♦ K J 9 7 2 ♦ 10 8 3 .5 3 .J 10 9 8 4 was going to take advantage of ♦ 5 3 ♦ 8 7 2 that fact. He played his fourth ♦ J 9 7 2 ♦ 10 8 Club, giving the trick to West but EJIKJAGED--Mr. and Mrs. lrv!ng at the same time end-playing him Fishman of Calla Street announce South the engagement of their daughter, ♦ A Q 4 for poor West had nothing but .A Q 6 Spades left and had to lead from Janice Laurel, to Pfc. Stanley A. ♦ A K Q 9 his King right Into South's Ace­ Mlller of Fort Di x, N .J., son of ♦ 6 5 3 Queen. The contra,s:t was made. Mr. and Mrs. Norman H, Miller Moral: On defense, leading the of Honeysuckle Road, Warwick. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Grabel fourth from one's longest and Miss Fishman Is a gra-duate of L of Providence were South and strongest suit Is only good when Classical High School (I 964) and North, East, dealer with this bid­ a senior at Russell Sage College, ding: one has enough entries to be able to cash the suit after It has been Troy, N.Y., where she1s an Eng­ E s w N set up. Also, when there has been lish major. Mr. Miller, a 1964 p 2NT p 6NT a very strong bid by Declarer, graduate of Pllgrlm High School, p _ p p p try not to give up a trick, in this anended Rensselaer Polytechnic lnsrtrute, Troy, where he was a Because the Grabels were· us­ case, do not lead away from the King._ member of Phi Sigma Del ta fra­ Ing "Weak" Two Bids, their bid­ ternity. ding was very simple for their Fred Ket man Photo Two No Trump opening bid Birch Society Exploits showed 21 or 22 points and a bal­ anced hand. Those not using them Vietnam, Says Schary needed 22 to 24 points and hence RESORT NEWS the partner was somewhat In the NEW YORK-The John , Birch dark as to exactly what type of Society was charged todaywlthex­ hand the opener had when the DI ET AT TIIE CONCORD ploltatlon of American anguish KIAMESHA LAKE, N. Y ,­ opening bid was one of a suit. 13 over Vietnam" through a nadonal "The Concord Is a glamorous points opposite at least 21 should campaign to convince the American resort hotel, not a health­ produce a slam so with "that In people that the United Stares war spa," said Raymond Parker, gen­ m Ind, Mrs. Grabel did not beat effort is under Communist con­ eral manager of the Catskill re­ around the bush for she was not trol. s ort, ' 'but we've proved ro thou­ worried about Aces, there were sands of people that they don't · not enough points In the oppo­ The charge was made by nents• hands to have two. Dore Schary, national chairman have to stay at home to stay on a diet. We've been handling special Many Wests, on lead, adhered of the Anti-Defamation League of IMMEDIATE RESERVATIONS diets as a personal service to 'to the supposedly correct theory B'nal B'rlth. He said that ..the guests for years. . • .After all, "Absolutely No Extra Cost To You!" that they should lead their fourth Birch Society which has Its na­ from their longest and strongest tional headquarters in Belmont, Ju st because a fellow Is on an ul­ All Leading Hotels Personally Inspected f Mass. , has shifted emphasis from cer diet doesn't mean that his suit and led a Spade. This, of Complete Information on Typ of Resort "Its war on the civil rights move­ meals_ have to be dull . course, ran · right up to De­ Age Gro11p11, Rotes• .eb: • . clarer• s Ace-Queen tenace, giv­ ment" because Robert Welch be­ lieves the Vietnam war uthe most TENNIS, ART AT BRICKMAN ing him his twelfth trick. Under SOl.TfH FALLSBURG, N.Y.­ BANNER GROSSINGERS TAMARACK - certain circumstances this might fertile ground" for Bir ch maneu­ BALSAMS KUTSHERS TAl!ETON vers. Arthur Cowan of Brooklyn's High­ be a good lead but not In a slam. way Tennis Courts was director BRICKMAN' S LAURELS TED HILTON' S At any rate, our Declarer was not In Boston A: Raymond Tye, BROWN' S MAGNOLIA WENTWORTH and coordinator · of the- Hotel CONCORD MT. WASHINGTON WALDEMERE so fortunate, he received the lead chairman of the New England Brlckman's fourth annual Tennis of a low Heart. FAUSVIEW NEVELE HOMOWACK AOL Regional Board, said that Festival, staged this week•on the GRAND VIEW SEA CREST JUG END / That lead did not help and now the Belmont-based Birch oper­ clay courts of the resort. Arr GRISWOLD SINCLAIR STEVENSON' S he counted his sure tricks, three ation was extremely active In classes are also avallable at the Hearts, four Diamonds, three circulating petitions, literature Brickman, indoors or outdoors, for POCONOS • AND MANY OTHERS - FREE BROCHURES Clubs and one Spade, eleven, with and propaganda on the Vietnam novices and for experienced art­ a twelfth possible with either the Issue that accuse President John­ ists·. Joe Hing Lowe, painter In Spade finesse working or the son and the federal adminis­ pastels and oils, will conduct the Clubs breaking 3 - 3. The other tration of being participants In a cl asses and will al so paint Indi­ NEW - Providence -California Declarers tried both ·and when Communist plot. viduals, couples and family neither was successful they went groups. down. Mr. Tye said that the New Eng­ ONLY S200 ROUND TRIP* \ Our Declarer decided to give land AOL Investigation of the GRAND VIEW SEASON OPENS himself every possible chance Birch Society had noted Intense MOODUS, Conn.-The Grand •Jet from N.Y. • P'kt• 5% gov' t lox. exc. fare and not put all of his eggs In one activity In Connecticut and growth View Hotel opened Its 55th con­ basket. He first ran his Dia­ in western Massachusetts. He secutive season today. June 30. A monds, West discarding two said the Blrchers have made little new 18-hole championship golf Spades. Next, he cashed his other Impact in Rhode Isl and, Maine course, 40 redeCorated cottages, and Vermont. FLASH! (. two Hearts, West discarding an­ a theatre, teenage club rooms and ,I other Spade for, looking at the, The ADL will release a new a complete children's day camp four Clubs In Dummy, he could study next month, "The Radical with a separate playhouse are ORIENT Al CARNIVAL certainly not discard one of those Right-Report on the John Birch features of t.he resort, managed or the little 4 would become good. Society and Its Allies," by the Irv Plvnick family. THE GREATEST VACATION VALUE EVER OFFERED TOBIAS AT WENTWORTH HALL TOKYO - HONG KONG - TAIPEI - HAWAII JACKSON, N.H.-Henry Tobias, author of the uBorsht Belt," is director of social activ­ 17 DAYS & NIGHTS ( 1199 ( For And About Teenagers ) ALL-INCLUSIVE ~ ities at Wentworth In Jackson, JUST and Harry L. Scheiner Is manag­ ing director. Irving Fields, "The VIA NORTHWEST ORIENT AIRLINES Man With The Fabulous Fin­ gers," will be there wl th two or­ INCLU0ES: Round trip vio jet; 3 nights in Toky.:,'s new chestras, and Danny OeSalvo wlll Otoni Hotel; one night in deluxe Taipei Hotel; 7 nights at be back with his Dance Unit. La luxurious Hong Kong Hilton; 3 nights llikoi or Hilton Ho~ Scala tenor Rene Castelar, golf woiion Villoge in Honolulu; sightseeing tour in oll four · pros Ted West and "Murph" and cities; all breokfosts, oll dinners, ot your hotel or your Sam Jones, sports and tennis di­ choice of leoding restourants from list provided for you; tips rector, wlll also be at the White and tronsfers ,included. " Mountains resort this summer.

THE WEEK'S LETTER: If you 'were twenty the story JET FROM "Do you think it is ridiculous would be different. Bible Book for Children MIAMI SPECIAL PROVIDENCE $102* for a girl of fifteen to date a boy The drinking is another prob­ via N.Y. - Round trip • who is twenty? He is really a )em. You cannot stop him from May Appear In USSR • plus 5% Gov't tax - new exc. fares - Aslc for details nice boy, but there is one prob- drinking~ 'This is something he !em. He drinks too much. I like has to do for himself - and be­ LONDON - For the Hr.st hbn very much and I hope to cause he wants to rid himself of time since the communist revolu­ H 9neymoon Trips Oµr Specialty marry him someday. How can the problem ratherthantoplease tion of 19 I 1: Soviet children w111 I stop him from drinking? I someone else. be able to read Old Testament Bi­ Call us for all trips advertited in N.Y. Times Ji:now he likes me, but I don't And, in summary, the girl ble stories In public schools, li­ FREE & IMMEOIA TE CONFIRMATIONS like boys who drink. I told him who sets her sights on a man braries and homes. An 1llusrrated I wouldn't go outwlthhimagain she has to change in some way book, "The Tower of Babel," edi­ Call Anytime unless he stops drinking. But I to bring up to .the standards of ted by Kornel Chukovsky, has been don't want to lose him. Do you a good husband Is setting out submitted for publication, It was think I am rlghtr on a heartbreak mission. announced this month In Moscow. ZeldaKouffman c.r.c. OUR REPLY: We think you ' Chukovsky, 85, Is Rqssla's ( Certified Travel Counselor) will be lucky if you lose him. • , •• '-• • -• ,...lent ,.. ..;,., .._ most famous children's poet. The CRANSTON TRAVEL~ 801 PARK AVE. CRANSTON. The difference In age Is too much .._.,~ ., •• ..._._. '° - -- book Is written In poetic style. A­ - not because It la five years, ~~~ :: :i,,:~~m:-:.: mong the Bible stories told are the Eves. by appointment' 781-4977 but because you are only Meen. FIANIFO«T, n . 01!1 Testament accounts. 4 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY,JUNE 30, 1967 Publishers Hurrying To Deal With War NEW YORK - Several local The New American Library In publishers are nishing through has set for July publication a vol­ the publication of a number of ume entitled "Six Days In June: 'books dealing with Israel's Israel's Battle for Survival." Au­ Hollywood ... phenomenal victory over the thor of this work ls William Ste­ Arabs. venson, correspondent for the I C anad1an Broadcasting Corpo­ ration who covered the war. By Bamey Glaze,, ( l( (> I R( 1/J'tl ( 'I' .! /\ ( 11 1(' ) !;1, fu1.1, A mllltary historian. 1s work­ Frequently, I revise a col wnn: victory as we never would haw M OODUS S CONN ing on a book for the American seldom, do I klll one In entirety. acted In defeat or adversity. We Heritage Publishing Company and ConnecUcut'1 Ftr,e1t J'amUti Rnon I Just did. ~never told funny stories about the e FUte,ed Illuminated ,oot. 40d5 UPI. I tore It up In self-depreca­ extermination centers In Poland, • 3 Air-Conditioned Dini"9 Room, tion. Random House also plans a the wearing of the yellow Star of • Top Notch DAY CAMP-NITE ;,UIOL It was an Arablan-Israell David, Auschwitz, or other incon­ e PRE-CAMP N\JRSERY-S.pa,ote Dinint Rm. book on the Israeli victory. e TEEN AGE program-Ra.c:ol Room chronicle of jokes that I had col­ ceivable Nazi crimes against hu­ e Air-Corwt. NITE CWB ROOM.LOUNGE lected from colwnnlsts, comedy manity. • Entertainment Nitely JOE ANDRE'S writers and comedians. At the There ls a time and pl ace for • P-wt . O.l1,1xe Cottage.,.HEATEO, CAIN:TED time, they struck me as being • Pvt. LAICE-1wimmi"9 , boali"t, fi1hing everything, Including Israeli­ e NEW TENNIS court . ORCHESTRA very funny. In their rereading, Arabian hwnor. For example, • FREE GOI.F on premiMt Music for that very special attoir they sounded sick. during the period of non-hostil­ e JEWISH-AMERICAN cuill,-lox to lobster Tragically, we Jews are at ities, Danny Thomas stood on the COLOR BROCHURE write or phone Weddings Bar 944-3344 Res. ST 1-9080 fault by writing and tell1ng these stage of the Sands Hotel, Las 203 873-8649 GRADUATE - Leslle Berger, jokes In the flush of Israel's vic­ Vegas, and affectionately patted a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter tory. Some of my best Jewish Jewish comedian on the cheek. J. Berger of 928 Hope Street, was friends had the bad taste to use "You saw it, folks!" howled NOW OPEN graduated as a nurse on June 22 slmll ar la ugh provokers during the comic. simulating injury. "An from the Jewish Hospital of the Hollywood Bowl benefit for Arab hit a Jewl" Brook! yn , She will work at the raising funds for Israel. CUrious about the complete The Massasoit Hotel New York University Hospital. Comics keep adding dally to absence of Danny Thomas' name Miss Berger Is a graduate of the stockpile. In the press during the Mid-East NARRAGANSETT, R.I. Hope High School. This Is a case of acting In warfare, I set out to locate the popular star. Danny fitted the upheaval per­ Continuation Announced fectly. He Is an American, having ANTHONY J. YEAMAN, Owner won his U. S. citizenship by birth Of Program In ,Deerfield, Michigan. He Is Res: 783-7229 Hotel: 789-9131 Israel CARE proud of his Lebanese extraction. BOSTON, Mass.-The CARE Haifa and Tel Avlv. His social and business l Ile In RESERVATIONS ARE NOW BEING ACCEPTED program In Israel Is being con­ The Israel Government has Hollywood has been caught up tinued. At the outbreak or war, Increased from rwo to three the with dozens of Jewish Intimates . CARE had on hand In Israel 13,000 nwnber of packages per month Convalescing from an Injured ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• frozen rood packages and Ameri­ that recipients may receive In the right knee, Danny was unable to 1 cans on the CARE staff remained light of the present emergency. come to the phone. I asked an as­ on duty to process the orders and CAR E guarantees delivery In sociate how the star felt about WHY DRIVE keep the facllltles and frozen food the following way: recipients are finding himself squarely In the warehouses In operation, notified of the avail ablllty of a mldcDe of his allegiance to his Leon M. Blum, New England package fo r them. They must country, his heritage and his HUNDREDS OF MILES director of CARE, reported th(»Cape Ann - where the Countryside Snmned, Dan!))' shot back, "I find Meets the Ocean your suggestion highly repul­ * Your hosts, FRED A.HD CAROLE BLOOM, would like to welcome you to Mognollo Manor,. where yo,u ore neve r o stronger; personal ottenlio11 sive." will be shown to your every need. Magnolia Manor Is small In sin but Acrually, be didn't say It that large in focllltles and pleosure,--minutes from historic Gloucester and politely. It was one of those rare Rockport art colony. occasions when a Danny Thomas * Modified American Pion rotes Include Deluxe Breakfast and Gourmet HOW THE RICH · RETIRED DO dinner * Heated Indoor and owtdoor ocean-fed swimming pools * Pool­ quotation was thoroughly unfit for side Barbecues and gala Hors d'Oeuvres Parties * BIiliards, ping-pong, • - AND HOW YOU SHOULDN'T publication. shuffle board, badminton, horseshoes, volley boll, Rock Finnish boths, and Later, Danny put It pointedly massages ovolloble, golf and tennis nearby * Summer the atres, antiquing, YOU are going into retire- ·, They emerge from their cot­ sight-seeing, boating, and world's best deep-sea fishing all claH by I~, when he said, .. Jokes about war * Social Direction * Delicious Jewish-American Cuisine * Entertain­ ment with an income of less tages about 10 A.M. (This colony ment Movies Dancing in new Celebrity Raam. and disaster are in the worst * * than $500 a month, then listen to 1s composed of a group of luxury possible taste. Old anyone tell Super-Highways via Route 128-Exit 15 the story of a man who is re- cottages on the grounds of a jokes about Pear Harbor? Are we tired on $19,000 a year. country club. Rents run from For Reservations ar1d Rates l aughlng It up about Viet Nam?" It is a story of one of the $500 to $750 a month. Ren_t~rs Meanwhile, back In Hollywood, CALL COLLECT ( 617) 525-3411 richest retirement colonies in the have full use of the club fac1hlles the comedian stands alone as / r OR SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT - country, and it may give you the a_nd hobnob with . other rich re­ convincing proof that the Arab best perspective you've had yet llred people who hve m the club­ Write Magnolia Manor, Box P, Magnolia, Mass. and Jew are ready, wllllng and on the "barren" life you'll have house and with natives from the able to work and live together ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• on your smaller income. surrounding area who belong. harmoniously. The $19,000-a-year man wants First comes golf, usually with To achieve that end, many • FREE GOLF to be known only as Mr. Mark• a foursome and usually with Jews In Hollywood remain In full THE NICEST THING • Sun terraced ham. He lives in the plush drinks at the 9th hole and a dis­ agreement that we should enjoy, 1utdnrpnl colony. cussion of the stock market. never flaunt, the fruits of victory. YOU'LL SAY ABOUT • lndmpnl He says: "The most important There are tenms courts, but the • Health Club thing I can tell other people of retired men. as a rule pass them THIS SUMMER! • 5 clay retirement age is that a lot of up. Some m1sgu1ded soul also m­ Shelling Damages You could rhapsodize about the tennis c1uru money simply does not produce a stalled a lawn bowling game I new kind of fun you found at a very • Rldinc acade ■y good retirement . . . and that the which, as with almost every sport special place. Where all your an premises more money you have the more except .golf, is beneath the status Hebrew University favorite kinds of stretching under - • B111dway . you become obsessed with it, until of_ a rich retired man. The swim- nothing else matters. mmg pool 1s for the young. JERUSALEM - The Hebrew the sun-swimming, rldluir, entertainment ■ itlly "In the colony where I live are The men go back to the cottage University of Jerusalem suffered tennis, golf-seemed to have a • 4 creat buds considerable damage during the • Late, Late Sllews 37 retired men. Every morning after golf. have lunch with their special measure of magic. three-day Jordanian shelling of • Terrlllc 32 of them get a New York finan- wives, take a nap, emerge again Jerusalem. Where the food was fabulous and teen precra■ cial newspaper. The tenor of their I only when. it is considered dig­ the friends you met made every Several buildings on the • 10 acre childraa's breakfast and their day depends mfied, which 1s usually about campus were directly hit. One meal a memory. Where nights were dayca ■p on what the paper told them 14:30. Then there_are cocktails at mortar landed near the syna­ all too short-every night, • Duplicate bride• about their particular invest- the clubhouse, dinner at the cot­ gogue, but did not go off. It was ments. tage 6r at a party, then TV, then new entertainment, new tunes to • ArtcllSSH later exploded behind sand bags. dance to till the dawn's early • Deluxe acetmmodatltns "When the Magic Fives - the bed by 11 or so. Another shell hit the roof of light. Where you came back feellng witbT.Y. U.S. Treasury notes that paid 5 1 "These people wear the best the gymnaslwn and a third came ii per cent interest - matured in clothes," Mr. Markham says. down on the Jewish National and like a new person, eager to go ~ August, the colonists were loaded ''Most of them . drink to_o much. back again. And.if you'd rather say , University Library. with them and they threw the All of them drive 1>reshge cars. An exhibit honoring Nobel this all in just a few wor_ds, i.\h\l\llll ,, place into doldrums for three They give or attend parties maybe ~l l' . how about: we spentlt at prize winner s. Y. Agnon had ~~-.J. · . weeks as they scampered for new three times a week, often to meet been removed to a safe J)iace The Brickman! • ~~ .,_ t .:,/1 investments that might pay them somebody's home-town friends. rrom the ground floor of the li­ as well ..." They live by a set of unwritten brary bulldlng a few minutes be­ Mr. Markham thinks the pre- rules that somebody has decided l ~ fore the bombardment began, and HOTEL ' -- occupation of these rich people civilized people should live by. fortunately sustained no damage. ·I · with money is largely fear. They observe_ _these rule's - as During the height of the mlll­ "They'd die if they lost what they they watch their money - to pre­ tary action, the campus of the have . . . and always they're serve their status. Status as a Hebrew University found Itself thinking that if only they could rich. civilized, successful person playing an unexpected role - ill _!r,t::::11/1n accumulate a few thousand more is vitally important. one of Its tennis courts was used Br.ic--==i_ mlll//Tan they'd be safe for sure." The pre "And it might interest some t_o by the Army as a transit camp occupation also is a compensation know that these people await for scores of Jordanian prisoners - a substitute for the hi~h- ' their Social Security checks - of war. Std,__.:;N:_ powered business careers that I c~rtainly they accept them - made them rich. with almost the same concern as RISE IN EXPORTS- ffottl Ill, (tl4) 434-5000. Or your travel apnt. While worrying about their in• the coal miner in West Virginia." TEL AVIV-Exports for the GROUP CONVBNTION DATES AVAJ~IJ!: vestments, and scheming to en­ period January-April, 1967, to­ Sherman Price • TE 1-5200 large them. here is how the men New GOLDEN YEA.U st-Dase MOklet talled $325.S mllllon, IS . I% more Reservations: 'Zelda Kouffman • STua,t 1-4977 spend their days, according to now read,-. lend 50e lll a.la (n• a&amvs>. than In the corresponding period te DeDt. C8P8, •• 1t1'!, Graad Ceatral Mr. Markham: 8laUe■, New Yerll IT, N. Y . for 1966.

,, ' .. ~ __._ THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 5 'CAIRO CHARLIE' For news o! your organization TE[; AVTV - The Arab read the Herald. equivalent o! Axis Sally and Tok­ yo Rose kept Israeli soldiers amused In the cities and at their desert army posts. They tuned In ANNOUNCE DAUGITTER'S BIRTH .for what they called the comedy Mr. and Mrs. Franklin B. hour, starring Cairo Charlie, who Shatz of 173 Sumter Street an­ spoke atrocious Hebrew. In a thick nounce the birth of their second Arab accent. chlld and first daughter, Laurie Rae, on June 12. Maternal grand­ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Murray J. Cohen of 85 Marlon Avenue, ART Cranston. Paternal grandfather Is t'LASSES Harry Shatz of 173 Sumter Street. Monday, at 5 P.M. Great-grandfathers are David ITCHKAWICH Sock of Providence and Philip 5 Medway St• • Pro,. Sloeraton-liltmoN Hoi.l Cohen of Newark, N.J. SUMMER SCHEDULE Wednesday at 8 P.M. JULY & AUGUST (FOi MEN ONLY) OUTDOOR PAINTING 159..,._,._ SON'S BIRTH IS ANNOUNCED (Weather Permitting) Thursday at 8 P.M. Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. WED. MORNINGS East ,,___ YMCA Dubinsky of 42-49 Colden Street, JA 1-S574 1w Furtl,er Information Flushing, N. Y., announce the Wed. & Thu,s. Call Mornings and Evenings birth of their first child and son, 831-0337 Kenneth Alan, on May 29. Mrs. Air Conditioned Studio Dubinsky ls the former Bette Eisenberg. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Eisenberg of 159 Lancaster Street and Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Dubinsky o! 77 Mar­ ).iEE ~; lon Avenue. ~ PRE-MED GRADUATE ,HONG Restaurant Michael Nelson Stewart was Fomor,a lor American ONl Cli/Mu Food among the pre-med graduates of Union College, Schenectady, N.Y., Attention WE WILL PA'I!' H&LP on June 11 at the college's 173rd IN PABKINO Lg~ commencement. He Is the son of WEEIDAYS AFrJ:Bl~ors-:1.:t:r- 6 P.H. Mr. and Mrs. Kirby I. Stewart of &NYTDlJ: SUNDAYS OB HOLmAYI 107 Emeline Street and a grand­ Fall CoUH Su. Dinnen-Tia• K1acl 70• wW COO IN son of Mrs. Louis C. Mark of 180 Mrs. Jacob C. Rosenthal Llb-Perfeet a■ d low prlON. TODAY! Blackstone Boulevard. • Miss Maxine Joyce Macktez, taffeta with Jewelled necklines. Orden lo rake Oat-&lr Coa4Hlou4 Call GA 1-- GRADUATES FROM URI daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip They wore yellow petal nosegay 0PEN EVZBY DAY 11 A.I(, lo II P.H. Michael Saltzman, son of Mr. J. Macktez of 147 Glen Road, headpieces and carried cascades and Mrs. Arthur Saltzman of 207 Woonsocket, and Jacob Charles of yellow daisies. 102. W£STMINST-Elt ST■ Next tv hc.ue Greenwood Street, Cranston, was Rosenthal, son of Dr. and Mrs. Mark Rosenthal was best man graduated from the University of Ellis A. Rosenthal o! 536 Park for his b,;other and the bride's Rhode ·island with the degree of Avenue , Cranston, were married uncle, Lester A, Macktez. was BIG Bachelor of Science In mathemat­ on Sunday evening June 25. The 6 head usher. Other ushers were ics. He was on the Dean's List o'clock candlelight ceremony was George Landow, brother-In-law and was a member of the Math held at Congregation B'nal Israel, of the bride; Jules Ringer, cousin Club at URI. Mr. Saltzman will Woonsocket. William Kauf­ of the bridegroom; Erwin study for a master's degree In man officiated at the double-ring Strasmlch, uncle of the bride, mathematics at the University of rites, which were followed by a Bruce Dav!s, Allan Gittleman and FLOOR COVERING CO. Maryland In September, and will reception. Ronald Magg!acomo. work for the National Security The bride, who was given In Mrs. Max Littmann, organist, SHOWROOM: Rear 195 Cole Avenue Agency, Fort Meade, Md. marriage by her father, wore an and Joseph Conte Sr., Violinist Empire gown of white peau de and concert master of the Rhode CORRECTION sole fashioned with a beaded Island Philharmonic Orchestra, He did it again with drops and ends The engagement of Miss Linda Alencon lace bodice and an A-line were In charge of the musical He'll 1ove you enough till your pocketbook bend• Aleen Koslow, daughter of Mr. skirt which terminated In a full, program for the wedding. Carpet or inlaid it's no never mind and Mrs. Harold Koslow o! 41 detachable chapel-length train. The bride, an alumna of Hope Ta him they handle 01 one af o kind Tallman Avenue, Cranston, to Her short bouffant silk Illusion High School, received on May 28 Your credits no good - So cash you must pay Michael Gershon, son o! Mr. and vell fell from a petal crown of a Bachelor of Arts degree magna But so must his sister or Mom the same way Mrs. Herbert Gershon of 147-21 matching lace, and she carried a cum laude from --Boston Univer­ Quality and Service - 30 years do prove 72nd Drive, Flushing, N. Y., was ' Bible arranged with a cascade of sity, where she was also elected So coll the BIG- T before making your move. ( announced on June 4. Miss Kos­ stephanotls and white sweetheart to Phi Beta Kappa. Mr. Rosenthal MURRAY TRINKLE FLOOR COVERING CO. low Is a senior at Boston Univer­ roses centered with Phalaenopsls attended Brown University and Call me any time at: · 521-2 410 sity. Mr. Gershon, a Boston Uni­ orchids and garlanded with Ivy. received a Bache! or of Science versity, graduate, Is studying for Mrs. George P . Landow, the degree In Business Adminis­ I/ a master's degree at the Univer­ bride's sister, was matron of tration from Babson Institute. He sity of Rhode Island. The Herald honor and Miss Marlene Is currently a Master's Candidate I I regrets the Inadvertent errors In Lubarsky was maid of honor. In the Deparnnent o! Management J. P. supp:LY co. I ; . Its announcement of their engage­ They wore cage g_owns of white at the University of Rhode Island. PLUMBING & HEATING SUPPLIES ment. lace daisies over yellow maize After a wedding trip to Ber­ muda, the couple will return to 2271 PAWTUCKET AYI., I.AST PllOYIDINCI LAST WEEKS Rhode Isl and for the summer be­ 438-2311 ANSWER ... fore leav!ng for Wilmington, Del. I CROSSWORD PUZZLE where Mr. Rosenthal will be em­ 1st .QUALITY TOP GRADE ployed In the Computer Sciences Section of the Treasurer's De­ TOILET I ACROSS 44. Guns: sl. 22. Swing partment of E. I. duPont de Ne­ t 1. Grune of DOWN music mours & Co. " A S TER Fred Ke! man Photo $24.50 chance 1. Falsify 23. Stable FS A H O M E 5. Polar or 2. Foreign 24. Tam­ ER CH I EF MICHAEL GOLD DIES Complet. with Fitting, bour.. DEARER U MB O brown 3.Edge SAN FRANCISCO - Michael 4. Poem ORION l=L O ES 9. Ffrm ine \ MENU SALONS Gold, novelist and playwright, 5. Discloses 25. Sale 10. Terrible P l ETV EA died at the Kaiser Foundation FORMICA VANITIES 6. Lidded notices CAMI SE OF 12. Non-paying Hospital, In nearby Terra Inda. profession pitcher 26.Soak ARIEL RIGID He was 74. Mr. Gold's best known STAINLESS STEEL SINKS 13. Lace again 7. Toward flax NACRE ARETE TRASS GEES work was a novel. "Jews Without 14. Ripen, stern 28. Statute as cheese 8. Destroying 30. Citrus Money," depicting tenement life LARGE SELECTION Of USED BATHROOM FIXTIIRfS 15. Three 9. Begone! fruit on New Yo.rk's Lower East Side. 16. Its capital 11. Shelves 31. Kind of 35. Style of art is Bismark: 15. Vat bolt 38. Gelderland abbr. 18. Hideous 32. Rose-like city 17. Rarefied 19. Tree plant 39. Excavate 20. Large' 20. Kind of 33. Stringed 40. Man's 21. Prate roll instrument name 22. Summer '?, 4 (o 1 8 month I 2. ~5 v½ 23. Approach, ~ as game 't ~•o II 26. Symbols o! He may not shoot m the seventies any more. marriage 12. ~13 but he can still teach his son a thmg or two 27. Neat about golf-a lesson m sportsmansh ip and a II> 28. Gold coin 14 t'.,½ IS ~ lesson in just plain fun . 29. Type ~ measures 17 1& l'I 2.0 He wan1s the boy to have all the good things ~ in life. He is able to provide these now. but he 30. Football ,, , , . 2.1 22. knows that sometime in the future they may pass '/ '// 34. Jewi1h ½ ~ have 10 be provided by life insurance. month 2., 24 zs 2fo 35. Moisture ~ This father is a Sun Life policyholder. 21 2.8 ' 36. Ciimbing ~ ~ ~ ~ He knows that Sun Life is the company with plant 29 30 ?,1 32. 33 the ri11 h1 policy .for every life insurance need. 37. _Reverie ~ 39. Explorer of ?,4 ?,S !ob sunken ~ v0 ~ ELLIOT F. SLACK t vessels 31 '!>8 !,'I ◄O 1018 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. 41. Fonner ~ nrune of 41 4?. Tokyo ~ 42. Girl's ◄'!> .... name ~ ~ ~ · A Mutual Company 43. Thin students or guarantee educational foans. The largest private guar­ antor of !ltudent loans today Is the non-profit United -Student .Aid Funds, supported largely by pri­ vate business ,contributions. The USAF Is not only a major partici­ THE ONLY ENGLISH JEN/SH wEEKU IN R I /,NO SOUTH EA,r M/4,o pant In the new federally-assisted .,._...._-..,c_.,,_ ...., w.. ., n. student loan program, primarily as a guarantor of loans made by Box 6063, P,..W.-, A.I. 02904 -T- 72A-020I PLANT AND OFFICE: HERALD WAY, OFF WEBSl'[R ST., PAWT., R.I . 02861 banks and other !ending In­ In 30 CELIA ZUCKERBERG ...... •...... Maaci• ~ltor stitutions states. It also has LOIS ATWOOO ...... r.i1I1w a separate guaranteed student SOURCES OF COLLEGE LOANS ane nd Is the best source of de­ I oan program with more than 900 ~ Ous P05Uce Paw •• Pr°'idnce, Rbode 1m• If you, a college student, have tall s on such funds. , colleges and universities partici­ S.kcr;lptioa Rales: f1htta Cetits die copy; By Mail. 55.!0 per --•; oabiR ~ Efwlull, $6.50 ,u .. been turned down for a guaran­ 2) -Many banks and other lend­ pating In all SO states. .... Balk ratn OIi rtlfRSC. ~ HtnW as.1u1n ~doe are coatiMs u&tss aodUtd to tlw coatnry la writl •. teed low-cost student loan, you Ing Institutions have special Only the student's signature are not alone. education loan plans under which and a statement by his college Tllr Hffald UIAIN 90 ti,-adal r"f(mibilily for lyposraplliCfl nron ill N,tttltMIHts. .... will re,ri.r tllll Today, banks and other tend­ tuition and expense money Is ad­ that he Is a bona fide student or part of I» N,erdteae•t la wllida lilt typocra,WC.I err« occws. A•ffftbrrs will ,w .. aodly tt. ••-CC-• Ing Institutions from coast to vanced In Installments. 1be applicant are needed. Loan appli­ taffl l•mlliatdy of aay ~ nk11 aay, OttW. coast are participating In a mas­ simple Interest rate under these cations-are available from the fi­ plans Is often well under the nancial aid officer of the college ·FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 sive new system of guaranteed loans under which college stu­ bank's rate for ordinary .personal a student wishes to anend or dents may borrow up to $1,000 a loans. Repayment usually begins from a participating local bank. year at simple Interest rate of 6 soon after the loan Is made and The USAF's address Is 845 Third A Jewish Jerusalem per cent. Loans are paid during borrowers may talce up to six or Avenue, New York City. ~ !m ost everyone; in the world has a different solution fo r peace college -years In part or In full by eight years to repay. Important note: because bank in the Middle East, and quite a lot of the world has been gener­ the federal government and repay­ 3) Many states, too, ~ have funds for all 1ow-cost loans are ous with advice to Israel. Some of it is advisory in tone. some of able over as many as IO years special student loan and scholar­ limited, students should apply for ship funds as do many civic and the loans as early as possible. it quite peremptory. There are dema nds tha t the territory now in after graduation. The program, authorized by private organizations. Again, the And, as a general rule, the larger Israeli ha nd s be returned. al once. Others voice wid espread ap­ the 1967 Higher Education Act, Is college financial aid officer Is the the bank, the more USAF guaran­ prova l tha t Israe l has it to use as a li'lfgaining point for other, aimed at the middle-Income fam­ best source of Information on teed loan funds available. more vi tal benefits. Some pundits balance the cost and trouble of ily which cannot bear the crunch­ these programs. (Dlstrlbutea 1967 by 1be Hall administering her conquests against the former menace of terror­ Ing cost of putting even a slni:Ie 4) Many private organiza­ Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rights Re­ child through college at today's tions at so tend money to college served) ism fr om the Syrian heights. high costs. Its worthy.objective Is One point. may, however, be overlooked. The outside wo_rld to help the student who Is neither which is non-Jewish has spoken a nd written at length about Je­ brilliant nor Impoverished, but ru salem 'I nd what .should be done with the city holy to three who Is Instead one or the vast faiths. Jordan excluded Israelis for 19 years from the Old City majority of middle-grade sons and daughters of middle-Income a deprivation which wi ll not willingly ever again be endured . famllles. More shock ing th an this deprivation. and onl y to be prevented by But the blunt fact Is that many lsradi rule. is th e destruction and defilement of J ewish sy na­ banks are unable to as much as gogues, schools and cemeteries. break even on loans at 6 per cent under today's conditions and thus by Leonard Lyons Eleven which appear on the Jeru salem Municipal thousands of borrowers are being Map of I 945 no longer ex ist. No trace is left of the many smaller turned away. DANCE TEAM: The husband­ of Science, wanted to rush to Is­ houses of worship whi ch dotted the Old C ity. A rubbish dump Congress is now debating ma­ and-wife dance team of Norton rael as soon as the war erupted. jor revisions In the loan pro­ and Patricia performed at Rose­ He was halted by Sir Isaac Wolf­ was found on the ruins of much of the old Jewish Quarter. The gram, Incl udlng federal payments l and Dance City. r;>urtng their s on , who reminded Clore: Haim Talmudic Academy. the Horvat Be1t Yacov Syna­ of extra placement fees to bank s routine they kiss most romanti­ "Charles, fighters they've got. '~ gogue, the Istanbul . the Porat Joseph Synagogue a nd cally. After the final romantic just send money." for each loan made , and reduction I School and the Tiferelh Israel Synagogue were misused. as were of the costly, complicated paper­ dance of their booking, Patricia CHAMP: Edward Bennen Wil­ other Jewish institutions. work Involved In making the loans. left for Juarez to be divorced. liam s sat with Joe DiMaggio In But meanwhile, there are oth'­ The top ballroom dance team P,J. Crarke's and said his first The desecration of cemeteries must have been deliberate. er, private sour ces of college of all, Renee and Tony de Marco, definition of a champion had come '~ When the Pa n American " Intercontinenta l" Hotel was built on loans open to college students al so were divorced. When they from DiMaggio. The Hall of Fame l the Mount of Olives. a .road was cu t through the ancient Jewish from middle-Income famllles. If signed the fin al papers In Louis ballplayer had described a game Nlzer' s office, Renee prepared to at Yankee Stadium, where 61,000 cemetery along the middle reaches of the mount. G raves were you, or your child, are among those who have not been able to leave. 0 Ju st one more dance, people were present as he came bulldozed a nd no attempt made to rebury the remains. The sol­ get a low-cost loan under the fed­ please," said De Marco. He took to bat. "I just had to get a hit,'' diers of the Arab Legion used gravestones from the cemetery to erally-aided progr am here are her In hi s arms, and danced her DiMaggio said. "My fierce pride floor their "qu arters a nd fortify their emplacements. additional posslbllltles for finan­ to the door. made me feel I just had to get a cial assistance. The y paused, a final hit. 0 The restoration of Jerusalem to Jewish rule has also give n I) Many colleges and univer­ kiss-and off she went to The next week DiMaggio came fresh impulse to tal k of the Messia h. In Bn ei Brak, a suburb of sities have their own I oan and Reno, . . to bat In St. Louis, against the Tel Aviv. a woman began hoarding fl our, not against the possi­ schol arshlp funds for qua! !fled HELP: Charles Clore, the Browns, with only 450 In the bility of defeat. but in order to have enough 10 bake ca kes for students. The financial aid officer British Industrialist who gave a stands. "I just had to get a hit," of a student wi shes to building to the Weizmann Institute said DiMaggio. "It was my pride. th e Messia h's coming. or for the great prophet heralding him . I thought to myself maybe there Eve n the non-reli gious Israelis. a nd non-refigious Jews a ll over are two or three people In the the globe, find Jewish Jerusa lem a fulfillment. a completion from stands who've never seen me bat which there ca n be no withdrawal. In a n unsought war. by an and never will again • .." Arab-initiated entry into. battle, the holy city has been returned DiMaggio added one touch: HARRY GOLDEN "It's going to bed knowing you've to it s people:-Whatever arrangements may be made at the forum done your,,fullest. Tiien you can of nations. it is inconceiva ble that Jerusalem , o providentia ll y sleep. , • restored to it s original rule. should be a nother pawn a t the con­ GIFTS: Marisa Pavan and fe rence table. The Wailers and 'Toting' Pier Angell, the twins, had a birthday last week. They cele­ brated by exchanging Identical Hallowing The Ivied Halls diamond clips from Cartier, clips Aldous Huxley smashed a few icons in "Brave New World" which can be worn together to The history of the waiters and ("Haunch, Paunch, and Jowl") In­ form one huge brooch. It would be with its picture of a Utopia most ✓of us hope will never come. their ever-continuing fight · with troduced this conception to the Among the qu a int customs of the world since Our Ford - "or too costly for each, as a br:ooch, 'the Internal Revenue Service will New York law courts. In his ear­ but twins can handle twin clips. Our .Freud. as, for s ome inscrutable reason. he .chose to call him­ one day make good reading for lier years he had been a proba­ ART: 1be Museum of Modern self whenever he spoke of psychological matters" - was that of future philosophers and sociolo­ tion officer. Art's announcement of Sidney gists for nothing will tell us more making the sign of the T reverently upon the stomach . and A Negro wa s brought before Janis' $2,000,000 gift of his about life In the American middle the court one day, charged with dates in the brave new world were according to the number of paintings listed Robert Rauschen­ class than this fight. stealing food from his employer, berg as one of the famed artists years. since "our Ford's T-Model was put on the market." Do tips count as Income? . one of the tmlverslry clubs In New represented In his collection. But Some of the great American idols have been laughed at, but How do you estimate your tips? York. The Indictment charged he J ants had no Rauschenberg, and Do meals count as income? had stolen over $1,000 worth of not destroyed - " Momism" is still the bug-eyed monster Philip therefore just commissioned How do you estimate these? food during his 18 months' tenure Wyli e drew, and reverence . for business per se has spilled over Rauschenberg to do a drawing. To these questions, the tax as a waiter. AUTOMATION: Ephraim Lon­ into reverence for science which, now that they go together so of­ man says yes, all Is possible. Sam Ornltz prevailed upon this don, the eminent constitutional ten , is perha ps only logical. Seemingly minor practices are ac­ The meals are Income because fellow to change his plea to not lawyer, wrote to the Bar Assn!s cepted as inevi ta ble, right and just, although they may add up to otherwise the waiter would have gull ry and helped him get a law­ committee on ethics . . He sought to pay for them. The waiters say yer to base his plea of Innocence a travesty of wh at is intended. permission to , employ someone they'd bring their sandwiches to on the old custom of "toting." ,..,ho'd been disbarred, to help him Such might be the practice of invocations and benedictions work. 1be Negro came from South prepare law brjefs. 1be Bar which Americans seem to feel necessary on every public_o_c ca­ I am with the waiters In this Carolina where 11 toting" was the Assn. refused permission, be­ struggle. Not only logic but tradi­ custom of the land, where It was cause a researcher might In­ sion . Now that the tide of graduations has rolled round again, not at all considered stealing. the custom can be• seen and compared by those fortunate, or un­ tion Is on their side. The Internal fringe on the sensitive lawyer­ Revenue Is trying to drag us back In the university cl\Ib this fel­ client relationship. fortunate, enough to have acquired a basis for commencement to the days of "toting." low had been receiving $25 a London replied by Inquiring comparisons. Surely there weren' t quite as many prayers twenty month which was not at all suf­ "Toting" Is a form of pay­ about the status of law research years. ago, and they were not as partisan. ficient to feed his family and done by the new computers. ment first Introduced · to the since he came from .,toting" MEMOS: Robert Goulet will This June, it seemed especially noticeable t hat clergymen pray­ United States through slavery. It ·COtmtry, he naturally re-adopted was an establlshed custom among return to Broadway for David ing before diverse groups often went out of their way to be offen­ the system. A South Carolina col­ Merrick In the musical version of the Negroes of the South even af­ sive to a ll but their own adherents. The forced audience, heads lege professor was a corroborating "Happy Time" . . . Kenneth ter the Emancipation Proclama­ witness and the Negro was Haigh, co-srarrlng with Kirk politely bowed, generally includes freethinkers. atheists, Jews, tion. Thousands upon thousands of acquitted. He proved that the food and a wild C hristi a n medley of Quaker, Greek Orthodox, Catho­ Do~las In "A Lovely Way to Southerners paid a Negro, say, $5 he took every evening was enough to Die, ' will be a visiting professor lic, Metliodist, Mormon and Holy Roller, with a se-Baptisl or a month for his services with feed his family, no more and no at Yale, , .Simon & Schuster will Anabaptist here a nd there. "toting." Toting was a special less. publish Mickey Mantle's "Educa­ privilege. Not every Negro re­ Now the waiters are being told Under the auspices of th e public school system, on a solemn tl on of a Baseball Play­ ceived It, some worked with tot­ their "toting" should be recorded er". • Julie Styne and Bob Mer­ occasion for the adolescents who have finally made it through ing, some without. on their income tax returns. "Tot­ rill, who wrote the songs for one educationa l level, the eternal non-separation of church and If he had this privilege, a Ne­ ing" was never much more than "Funny Girl," are writing an ad­ state is reaffirmed. The relieved parents watching so proudly gro toted home what food he the leftovers. We haven't pro­ ditional number for Omar . Sharif needed for his family either from gressed so far after all . might give more real assent to a preacher who asked them rever­ to sing, "Temporary Arrange­ his master's store house or from (Copyright by Harry Golden: Dis­ ment.'' ently to describe the sign of the T, than to the -mos: his master's table. tributed by Bell-McClure Syfl- quito-murmurs of a prarer addres!i_ed to. a highly partisan deity. • - The late novellst, Sam Ornltz dlcate), ., ,c sn/J ·' •" - ....: ...... !:...... - ✓. ~- -·-··~- ·~•-.-~"I!•• ~------···---·--=

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 7 Grateful Samaritans Meet At Mt. Geriien The Lyons Den \ · JERUSALEM - The head of The Samaritans expressed ·I the Samaritans, the descendants their appreciation to the Israeli (Continued From Page 6) of ·the ancient Palestlnlan sect authorities over the fact that the which var led In certain practices 300 members of the sect, who are' The ABC network Is venturing from , entered Israel to not considered Jews, were Into movie production, for theater meet' with members of his sect· · able to obsene the Sbevuos festl­ release. They've signed Henry for the first time since the ex- val together at their holy place of Hathaway and Richard Quine to tablishment of the Jewish State. Mount Gerlzln, . produce and direct, ••Helen Strauss,Jlterary agent for James Michener, Justice Douglas and other William Morris cilents, will become vice president at Fletcher Preparatory School Seven Arts. LBJ had Invited Yvette Mlm­ An lntle-,,endent Co-educational Dog School leux to perform at the Austin Grades 7-12 - Small Classes party he later canceled, • ,Rita Tushlngham learned to drive a Vacancies Still A vailab/e In Some Grades souped-up hearse for "Smashing For Fall Matriculation Times" •• .Ross Hunter Is In N.Y. to discuss two film deals CATALOGUE SENT UPON REQUEST w Ith Garo! Channing, ••John Steinbeck's son Is home from 136 County Rd., Barrington, R.I. Vlemam •• ,Prof. Stella Adler 245-5400 will star In "The Sea Gull" at Yale next season. TANK: A newsreel man at Lindy's i;eported that the Sinai battle films will show an un­ precedented episode: The Is­ raelis captured a UAR ?atton JULIE'S tank, repaired It and painted an KOSHER DELICATESSEN Israeli flag on It, , ,One hour later the tank was back In action, 731 Hope Street against Its previous owners. 621-9396 DELAY: Dr. Ronald DeMarco, president of Finch College for Women, In N,Y, , also Is president of the American Korean Founda­ tion. He was to leave for Korea recently. Dr. De Marco al so Is Mrs. Albert H. Taubman president of the All-American Miss Ann Frances Gerstein, Miss Bernice Ellen Gerstein open karate championships at the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold was her sister's maid of honor Garden on Saturday night, and L. Gerstein of 225 Fourth Street, and Miss Carole F. Wortmann wants to be there to officiate. became the bride of Albert Har­ was bridesmaid. FOR YOUR CASTING: Twentieth Century­ ris Taubman, son of Mr. and Dr. Paul Taubman, the brlde­ HOLIDAY COOKOUT! Fox couldn't find an fllustrlous Mrs. Abraham Taubman of 59 groo'ln's brother, was best man. British actor needed to play Sir Payton Street, on Sunday, June Ushers were Arthur S. Gerstein, Robert Bates in c. Prudence and 25, at Temple Emanu-EI. Rabbi brother of the bride, Howard FRANKFORTS TONGUE the Pfll." Dame Edith Evans was Ell A. Bohnen ofnclated at the London, Myles Seldeman and REGULAR KNOCKWURST FULL POUND approached, and agreed to star In 6:31) p.m. ceremony, which was Gordon Daglierl, CELLO-WRAPPED the film. That's how "Sir Robert followed by a reception In the The bride Is a graduate of the WHOLE Bates" came to have a sex meeting house. School of Physical Therapy al the change to "Dame Roberta The bride, who was given In University of Connecticut (1967) FULL POUND 8 9 (: Bates." marriage by her father, wore a and of Classical High School. The white sleeveless cage-style gown · bridegroom, also a Classical FLIGHT: Goodman Ace tells of Gulpere lace on English net alumnus, was graduated In 1966 of a pilot over Somalfland who with Jewel neckline accented with from the College of Pharmacy at announced he had good news and lace, Garlands of lace were the University of Rhode Island, OUR OWN bad: "The bad news is we're lost. strewn on the gown and on her where he Is working for a mas­ FANTASTIC The good news is we're two hours TUNA Watteau detachable train, Her el­ ter's In pharmacy adm1nlstratlon. . HALF-SOUR ~' ahead of schedule." bow-length veil of French Illusion , I Alter a trip to Bermuda, they IN WATER (Distributed 196 7, by The HaU fell from a cap of matching lace, will live at 2017 Broad Street, ) Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rights Re­ She carried a crescent cascade of Edgewood. SOLID PACK served) PICKLES l orchids, stephanotls and Ivy, D, A, Gunning Photo Into chunks. LG. ARE NOW Combine all Ingredients, except IN SEASON almonds. Pour iilto casserole. Herald Recipes Top with almonds - bake. ALL SALE ITEMS WHILE THEY LAST Mrs. Merr111 Percelay JOYCE'S MUSHROOM POT In stiffly beaten egg whites and FREE PARKING ON BRAMAN ST . LOT ( IN REAR OF STORE ) ROAST turn Into casserole. Top with corn BAKED FISH __.. l Serves 6 - 8 flake crumbs and bake. Baking dish, greased 3-4 lb. Beef Pot Roast Mrs. Israel Edelstein 350 degree oven Flour I hour Salt and Pepper TUNA AND RICE AMANDINE Casserole "(J.uA 2 Onions, sliced 2 lbs Haddock fillets 375 degree oven 1/2 c Water I can Cream of Mushroom Soup 1/4 c Catsup 30 min. Velvetta Cheese - large slices The Herald is now accepting I /3 c Cooking Sherry Serves 6 I clove Garlic, minced 3 c cooked Rice Place fish slices In baking dish. "Younger Set" Photos 1/4 t each-dry Mustard, Thyme, 2 cans Tuna Fish, 7 oz. size Spoon undiluted mushroom soup Marjoram, Rosemary 1/2 c Almonds, blanched and sllv~ over fish and cover each portion For early publication and For our Files ·1 Bay Leaf ered with a slice of cheese. 1-6 oz. can Mushrooms, stems I T Onion, minced and pieces 1/4 c Butter Mrs. Manuel Bromberg The R. I. Jewish Herald IT Flour 6 T Flour {Rff)rtnred from Temple E­ 2 Vegetable Bouillon Cubes 1/4 c Cold Water manu-EI Cookbook) MAILING ADDRESS: BOX 6063, PROVIDENCE, ll I. Trim off excess fat from roast. dissolved In ) Dredge meat In flour. Brown 2 c Bolling Water Herald subscribers comprise PU.NT AND OFFICE : HERALD WAY (OFF WE~ TER ST.) slowly on all sides In a little hot I c Heavy Cream an active buying market. For PAWTUCKET, ll I. excellent results, advertise In_the fat. Season with sat t and pepper. 2 T Pimento, diced Herald. Call 724-0200, Add onion. Mix and add remaining I T Parsley, minced Ingredients, except mushrooms. I t Salt , Cover and cook slowly 2 1/2 Drain the tuna fish, scald with hot hours or until done. Add mush­ water and flake. . rooms and liquid. Remove meat Saute almonds and onion In butter to warm platter. , for 10 minutes. Stir, In flour - add Skim fat from stock - blend I ta­ boulllon and cream. Cook, stir­ blespoon fl our and I /4 cup water ring, .until thickened. Add tuna and until smooth and gradually stir remaining Ingredients. Pour Into .I this Into stock. Cook and stir un­ casserole. Bake . two fields . READING ELEMENTARY til sauce thickens. Add salt to c Mrs. Leonard Y. Goldman of study taste. IMPROVEMENT READING Raises a mundane pot roast to · TUNA-MACARONI CASSEROLE 01 ymplan heights. for junior high, senior high for grades 4, 5 and 6 I 1/2 qt. casserole., greased and college studen_ts . J Mrs. Paul Schretter 375 degree oven SALMON FLUFF CASSEROLE 30 min. all classes will begin the week of July 9th I Casserole, greased I /2 c Black Olives J' 350 degree oven 4 oz. Elbow Macaroni and will be held at the fol lowing locations: I 1/4 c minced Onions 30 min. Providence -Abbott Park Place Newport- St. Catherine Academy I Serves 6 2 T Butter ' I can Tuna Fish, 7 oz Coventry- Senior-High School Woonsocket - St. Clare High School ,i I c Red Salmon I can condensed Cream of Celery Attleboro - YMCA I Narragansett <' I c bolled Rice Soup 1/2 c Celery, finely chopped J 1/2 t Salt Call 331-3915 for full details .. (Call collect, _if necessary). 1 /8 t Pepper· 1/4 t Worcestershire Sauce 1/4 t Marjoram I pkg frozen Green Peas, thawed 2 Eggs, separated 1/4 c sliced Almonds, unblanched 2 T Butter, melted Cut olives In wedges, Cook maca­ JOHNSON & WALES READING INSTITUTE l Corn Flake Crumbs roni as directed on package, Flake salmon and add milk, rice, Drain and rinse. Satire macaroni ABBOTT PARK PLACE PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND ) beaten egg yolks, salt, pepper, and onion In butter until lightly butter and marjoram. Blencl1 Vold browned. Drain tuna and break . , ,,.,.'-;-, -~• ...... ,,_,...,,....-,,--,,+.,.,....-,-----.,.....-,....,.,_'--r---::-'--'------~------'' 1 8 n!E RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY; JUNE 30, 1967 WARNIN3 0~ NASSER ei;s do ·not c1-:k Nasser nmr, but ' allow him to return· to the status UNITED NATIONS-Dr. he enjoyed prior to his defeat 11t Emlllo von Hofmannsthal, Inter­ the. han4s Qf Israel, he will even­ Hello Again! national legal expert and a corre- tuslly do )IVhat Hitler !,lid by swal­ , spondent for newspapers In lowing up one cotmtry after an- Austria and SWttzerland, has- ex­ . other and even become a threat to pressed the view that If the the Soytet lJnlon by aligning him­ Sports News By Warren Walden . United Nations an~ the Big Pow- self with Red China.

ON EVERYONE'S LIP-When noble dome. I mean the covering· WE I was · a little boy, one of my fa­ on the arena as well as the head vorite pieces of literary accom­ on the man who pushes the Idea plishment .,Was titled, "The Ani­ across. SPECIALIZE mals' Trip to Sea." It was writ­ . OH, WELL-Danny Norton, r ten Iii a rh~ arrangement and V .P. and Box Office Custodian at one ' une went, "On everyone's Up R. I. Auditorium, wlll be back IN was the name of the ship and the from a Caribbean cruise next talk of the great excursion trip." week. Dan was absent when Mr. APPLIES . TO STADIA-It Pieri left; also when H. Webster NEW PRESIDENT-Dr. Irwin comes to mind every time I hear Youlden passed on. He'll miss Kaplan, Warwick podlatrlst, was about pl ans for a new home for them both as wlll hundreds of recently elected president of the the Red Sox and It came to mind others. . • .Never I ose faith In Randall Holden P.T.A. In War­ back there somewhere when there yourself. Live big, pray big, think wick. He Is a past president of was talk of professional baseball big-and act like a child of the Rhode Island Podiatry Assoct­ In Providence. "If we only had a God.-CARRY ON I at1on. suitable place to play etc.," said the wagging tongues. Time moved alon~ (It generally does) and we Director Of New Jerusalem YM-:-YWHA dldn t get a suitable baseball field and neither did we get a profes­ sional team. Maybe that Isn't dis­ Describes Its Use As Bomb Shelter astrous because ir seems that we BY DR. M. BERNARD RESNI­ ment to the danger of lllness and have adopted the Red Sox as far KOFF even epidemic. as professional baseball Is con­ Executive Director, Jerusalem In personal term s , this has cerned. The Pawrucket Indians YM & YWHA been a harrowing, tense and are trying hard to take their (A day after the alert In Je­ frightening experience. My neigh­ place as professional representa­ rusalem was partially llfted, the borhood was badly hit and one SPECIAL tives In Rhode Island. I hope they following eye-witness account shell fragment landed on my front do. too. was sent to the National Jewish porch. But lt was also an ex­ IN THE MEANTIME-There Welfare Board and the World hilarating experience; to be in Is­ ANNOUNCEMENT Is still talk going on about a con­ Federation of YMHA s and Jewi sh rael at an historic moment, to vendon hell and a sports arena in Commw,lty Centers by the Amer­ see our hol y city mace whole MARIO Providence. And our foremost ican social worker who ls execu­ again. A new book of the Holy Mario Persia is happy to sportsman has passed on to a tive director of the Jerusalem Bible is being written. annc;tunce the association of two new barbers greater realm. Lou Pieri carried YM & YWHA.-Edltor) Thus through the ordeal of on In an out-dated, worn-out Between 1,200 to 1,400 Ori­ fire during the warfare, the Je­ fiockey arena. The R. I. Atfdlto­ ental Jews had been using the Je­ rusalem Y, now nearing com­ • The rlum, small in seating capacity, rusalem Y as a bomb shelter pletion, wa s premarurely dedi­ · since the morning of Monday, SCULPT limiting the encouragement of big cated in the service of lts com­ gates In offsetting the leaner Jw,e 5. I first learned about this munity. • The nights, makes operating a profes­ when, with the alert partially llft­ PROFESSIONAL sional hockey club there a busi­ ed, I dashed over 10 the Y to see • The ness surrow,ded with financial how It fared In the bombing. Students, Faculty CONTINENTAL hazards. So, let's hurry with the The new Jerusalem Y bulldlng proposed new arena, convention locat1;.d on Gaza Road, adjacent to ANGELO hall-or call It what you w!II . the Katamon quarter, was due to Respond To Crisis Let's flll It with conveniences for be completed July 10, 1967. Men who rely on competent and reliable Hrvices will notice the patrons and every modern faclllty The neighborhood In which the WASHINGTON-Jewish col­ professional care and worlc given them in our salon. Miss Faith, Y lege srudents and faculty, many of Manicurist, formerly from New York, is now associated with us. I est hockey go the way of base­ ls located, as well as my own, bal 1. · was heavily and frequently them non-participants in regular DOES THIS MEAN BOSTON? shelled. I was relieved to see that Jewish campus activities, re­ Word from San Diego tells of a the building was not damaged, sponded speedily to the political Persia Barber Salon beautiful new stadium that will be thank God-not a scratch. Then I tensions and the brief war, said 3 BRAMAN STREET (Corner Hope) 621-741S used for football this Fall . An weni Inside and discovered the a B'nal B'rlth HIiiei Fow,datlons 3 Barbers and a Manicurist alarming note In the story In­ Oriental Jews. They were there report. 1lley organlzed rallies , dicated that a major league base­ without any formal approval, teach-ins and mass lener -wrlting ball team Is being sought for oc­ which was hardly needed. campaigns to the White House and DRIVE IN cupation In the Swnmer months. TIiey cook over the entire low­ Congress, circulated fact · sheets AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT It Is alarming because It might er floor: not only the three air and petitions, Initiated fund-rais­ mean the Red Sox. And who could raid she I ters, but al so the youth ing campaigns and volunteered to bI·ame owner Yawkey If he moved loLD1ge, crafts rooms, cafeteria, replace Israeli workers who had to the swmy cl lme of southern locker rooms, basket room and been moblllzed. Cal. from the wet, Wintry, uncer­ other still w,completed facllltles. It was final exams week at tain climatic conditions in Bos­ They had brought In their own most schools, but Hillel directors ton? bedding, kerosene cooking stoves were flooded with thousands of GET BAKING, BOSTON-So and sparse furnlrure. They had Inquiries from srudents asking those folks up In Beantown had even strung up clothes llnes how they could replace Israeli better get baking. 1lley' d better across the youth lounge. workers called Into the army. decide where to locate their much Since the occupation of the At a rally In Cleveland attend­ discussed new stadium and when building was rather sudden, fol­ ed by 500 Western Reserve Uni­ they're going to start building. lowing the Initial Jordanian shell­ versity students more than 200 And they'd better start soon or ing, there was no pl an, no organi­ applications for swnmer work in didn't Mr. Yawkey say something zation. Families took over cor­ Israel were filled out within 15 about trying for about five more ners of rooms in a kind of squat­ minutes. · years? It would be awful, wouldn't. ters' rights. Rabbi Max Ticktln, Hillel di­ It, If we lost the Red Sox? Think The building ls still without rector at the University of Chi­ It over. And whl!e the big moguls llghts or water, and so tt was dln~_­ cago, reported that a voluntary assessment undertaken by the are deciding where 10 locate their ·gy and smelly: almost a min­ new stadium, It would be a good iature umell ah." Since there are school's 300 Jewish faculty mem­ Idea If they gave some thought to no toilets , one room in the care­ bers quickly brought In $13,000. us folks down "Little Rhody taker's apartment was set aside At Northwestern University, Way" as well as in the Taunton­ for bodily needs. two faculty members began a Fall River-New Bedford areas. It There was a small amount of campaign that raised $10,000 as a has been mentioned- here before vandalism and some wall deface­ starter. At Yale It was $16,000. that when the late Branch Rickey ment by the scores of w,super­ The faculty mood wa s ex­ was planning the third major vised moppets. The one Sole! Bo­ pressed at one school by a letter baseball league, Walter SUndlw, neh (construction firm) watchman accompanying a $100 contribu­ IN AN of Provtdence made a survey who was on duty, wl thout rellef tion: "I should like 10 suggest concerning population, parking since Sunday night, told me he that a group of us meet and agree and access to a baseball park was exhausted and could no long­ on a salary level since Israel's Air-Conditioned Automobile from all over New England. Con­ er cope with the protection of needs wlll be a continuing one. I MAX GOLDEN CAN INStALL A . venience was stressed in that supplies and equipment. w,dertake to donate any propor­ survey. And Mr. Sundltm ls per­ I dashed to the phone and tion of my salary that we agree fectly wlll-lng to let the Boston called Sole! Boneh 10 send re­ upon," wrote the professor. planner look at the results. placements, got the Civil Defense Thousands of faculty signa­ HOUSTON DID IT-One more Department to provide services tures to statements of support of suggestion. Whel!_ pl annlng this and alerted the Health Depart- Israel were gathered In dozens of JMARK •V new Boston stadhnn, why not in­ universities and were publlshed clude a roof? Oh boy I Having an Seven European Nations In national and local publications. astrodome right In New England "A by-product of the Middle J East crisis which no one con­ would more than put us on the AUTO AIR CONDITIONING map! It would help In assuring fi­ State Support Of Israel templated was this changing face nancial success In operating and PARJS - Parllamentary of­ of Artrerlcan Jewry as reflected would bring thousands of fans Into ficials from the seven-nation In responsive young people," s aid IN YOUR CAR AND "COOL AWAY" Rabbi Benjamin M. Kahn, HIiiel's UNCOMFORTABLE SUMMER DRIVING our territory. That would not only Western European Union have ap­ help the operators of the stadium, proved a strongly-worded recom! national director. "Each dollar SEE MAX GOLDEN NOW! It would help business In this mendatlon to their foreign min­ given by a srudent, each letter section. ·1t would be a noble ex-. isters, supporting the Israeli po­ written or ·telegram sent, every ,perlment. In fact; Jt would be a sition In the current crisis, al­ Individual act demonstrates our though pleas for moderation had care and concern for the fate of SWISS GIVE MILK come from French and British Israel and the fate of the world. GENEVA - The Swiss Gov­ delegates. We know about Hitler and the Radiator & Body Works ernment has given the Joint Dls- Holocaust. We know that the BOSTON t r I bu ti on Committee 35,000 Approval ofthe document was world stood Indifferent two dec­ 185 Pine St. GA 1-2625 Providence potmds of powdered mllk for use by a 35-10 vote. The Union Units ades ago. '?{e know the price of In JDC feeding programs In Iraq Britain and six members of the silence, and we ,are not willing to_ 1 ,, • , , 1 •• , , , , 1 , , , ,fl)C! _. nan1s1a. , .. •·,., l t:{ , •.,, ,, • E~pel'Jl.Ec;0AWD.lc.Communltf. y that price." 1 71 • '. • J • .... • ...., J .. , i, .. .ip-t[.,: J .. •.•.. •i J•.... •.. • l~.4 ]t4,•}.•1.,"';,•i' ., • ······•.. ,.,t/.".'" • .'..~•.. ♦• 1, ...... -f,'is4.•.. •1•1.jllt1.•i•1•,t,•1. .. 1•/;7!.t~~ •lctJ.•J•,.•,•.◄1';+tt~•; ·J..· ' ~ fj t.,.t.. •.t• .... •"l'J." .. ,.•l· ··•'J•.. •.. •·,.. ~ ., •. 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. ' TIIE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 9 -. Theemergencyisnotover · it-tal

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Write or Telephone GJC Headquarters Room 203, Strqnd Bldg., Prov., R.I. 02903 GAspee 1-4111 ,, · ~ ) I ~ NOW Is The Time To Stand Up And Be Counted­ GIVE MORE Than You Ever Gave Before To GJC l

~o THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, PRIDAY,JUNE 30, 1967 HONORS JEWISH SCHOLAR Federal Fellowships Go AMSTERDAM - Queen Ju­ Barrington Jewish Center llana of Holland bas named a Jewish scholar, Dr. GershoJII To Future Educators Scholem, as a member of the Appoints Full-Time Rabbi Janet Zurler and P au! A. Dutch Royal Academy. Dr. Scho­ Hartman of Providence have re­ lem Is professor emeritus of Rabbi Richard A. Weiss has ceived fellowships under ·a feder­ Jewish mysticism at Hebrew Uni­ been appointed rabbi of the Bar­ al program to train adminis­ versity In Jerusalem. rington Jewish Center. 1be first trators and teachers of handi­ full-time rabbi for the five-year­ capped children. Miss Zurler will old congregation, he will be for­ be a full-time student at Boston THE PRICE IS RIGHT mally Installed on Sept. 22 by University and Mr. Hartman, at Rabbi Roland B. Glnelsohn of Boston College. Other fellowships Lete MMel Wltll hy•LNk Boston. went to Barbara Durrell and John :l A native of Chicago, Rabbi J . McKenna of Cranston, who will ,l ~t Paymasfe; Weiss was ordained by the He: study at Boston University; brew Union College-Jewish In­ Elizabeth Ward of Pawtucket, stitute of. Religion In I 964. He re­ Rhode Island College; Kathryn CHECK WRITERS celwd his A, B, degree from the Young of North Providence, Uni­ ttt· DA\' ·IUA~NTIII Unlve,:slty of Chicago In 1958, and versity of Michigan, and Mildred was a national B'nal B'rlth Hillel Flanagan of Central Falls, Emer­ Foundations leader while there. son College. During the vacation and Illness of Senior year traineeships, un­ Rabbi Jacob J . Weinstein, presi­ der the same program, - were dent of the Central Conference of awarded to Helene R. Perler of OUR YOUNGER SET-Gregg Mew American , he occupied the Cran·ston, Bost on University; Howard, aged 3, and Jeffrey Scott, aged 5, are the son s of Mr. pulpit at K, A, M. Temple. Elizabeth Trainor of West Bar­ Prkt and Mrs. David Rosen of Worces­ su,.a In Cincinnati he directed the rington and Gall Henderson of ,I , ...... youth program at the Isaac Mayer Warwick, Boston College, and ter, Mass. Mrs. Rosen Is the for­ Office, Store &- factory Wise Temple for two years, was Sister Mary Ahearn of Riverside mer Joan Gesualdi of Cranston . f111lp•••t At Lesa a member of the NAACP, CORE, RABBI RICHARD A. WE!s.5 and Mary Pendergast of Newport, Maternal grandparents are Mr. j· T••· ANtlH ,,1c •• ACLU, Cincinnati Peace Center Salve Regina College. and Mrs. Maurice Gesualdi of ! and the Jewish Peace Fellowship. Commlnee and directed the Park Forest Road, Cranston. Pa­ MAX & CO. He served on ' the education and American Friends Service Com­ ternal grandmother Is Mrs. Klny POLLACK soda! action committees of Fel­ mittees' workcamps. Lamme Award Made Rosen of London, Engl and. Ma­ Aue ~wnf't•r1n9 So/re,, oo~ lowship ·House, attended the Rabbi Weiss was spiritual To Brown Professor ternal great-grandmother Is Mrs. / j':/ C:hnrl<", S t Prov1d• nc, Group Dynamics Training Labo­ leader of Temple Menorah, Little Daniel C. Drucker, professor Rebecca Mankovlrz of Cranston. l.) Ln H t o 4 Mon th,u fr , ratory of the American Jewish Neck, N. Y. tor the past three of engineering at Brown Univer­ years, and while there was a di­ sity, has received the 1967 rector of the North Hill Coun­ Lamme Award of the American ORGANIZATION WE HAVE RE-OPENED seling Center and the Long Isl «nd Society for Engineering Educa­ • Association of Reform Rabbis. He tion, which recognizes excellence I FOR OUR Is a regular lecturer about In teaching, research and admin­ NEWS > Judaism to non-Jews for the Jew­ istration, and contributions to the TIKVA, CHAI INSTALLATION .. ish Chautauqua Society and the advancement of engineering edu­ The combined Installation of ·20TH SEASON Anti-Defamation League of B'nal cation. officers of Tlkva BBG and Chai B'rlth. Prof. Drucker, who Is L. Her­ AZA was held on the evening of The congregation on County bert Ballou University Professor June 12 at Temple Beth Torah, Road appointed Rabbi Weiss at at Brown, received the award at Cranston. New Tlkva officers are their annual meeting on May 22, the society's 75 th annual meeting Dyann Ross, president; Judi Lip­ at which officers for next year at Michigan State University. He son, programming, and Karen were al so elected. They are also participated In a workshop Bosler, f\lnd raising vice-presi­ of~aris George Graboys , president; Jo­ and panel discussion of the eval­ dents, respectively; Ann Buckler, -1,,11, seph Fath and Herbert Wolk, uation of curricula, for teaching secretary; Ellen Factor, treasur­ vice-presidents; Barnet Fain, mechanics to undergraduates and, er; Mi ndy Cohen, MIT Mom; HAIR STYLIST treasurer; Mrs. Paul Segal, cor­ as chairman, conducted a meeting Maur~n Resnick, monltress, and responding secretary, and Mrs. of the subcommittee on relations Vivian Pact, counselor. Richard Sheer, recording secre­ 5 KINGSTOWN ROAD NARRA,GANSETT, R.I. with the National Science Founda­ Chai officers Installed were tary. tion. Lee Kaufman, president; Fred , 783-4981 Feldman, vice-president; Richard ISO DANISH VOLUNTE ERS "Put your head in Emile's hands" KIDNEY SPECIALIST NAMED Pearlman, secretary; and Allan COPENHAGEN - The first Dr. Robert P. Davis of New Kaufman, treasurer. A social El Al plane with ISO volunteers York, a specialist In kidney dis­ hour with refreshments followed for civilian work In Israel left eases and function, on July I will the Installation. here last week. Additional volun­ Join the Brown University faculty ----- teers will fly there this week. BETH DAVID SISTERHOOD as professor of medical science JACK'S FABRICS and will become director of the Mary Mushnlck was recently SABBATH OBSERVANCE I department of medicine at Mi­ Installed for her 14th year as fOtl DRAPERIES 22 Sivan riam Hospital. A biochemist and president of the Sisterhood of Candlellghtlng Tlme-8:08 p.m. 1 cllnlclan, he Is associate profes­ Temple Beth David. 6iher offi­ For Homes-and Offices sor of medicine at the' Albert cers Installed by Judge Frank Einstein College of Medicine at Licht were Mesdames Henry SLIP COVERS BEDSPREADS AUTO Yeshiva University In New York Brill and Morris Blazer, first and visiting physician at the and second vice-presidents, re­ UPHOLSTERING WINDOW SHADES INSURANCE Bronx, N.Y. , Municipal Hospital spectively; Fred Robinson, Ber­ , Center. He has al so taught at nard Perelman and Sol Pollack, CALL PA S-2160 Low quarterly payments Harvard Medical School and the recording, financial and corre­ -~I sponding secretaries, respective­ FOR AN EXPERIENCED DECORATOR for accident-free drivers University of North Carolina School of Medicine, and was a ca­ ly; David Robinson, treasurer; Member Downfown Park in§I Plan reer scientist of the Heal th Re­ William Greenfield and Abe Kap­ We Will Gladly Help You With Any lan, trustees; Clara Lerner. pub­ INSURANCE search Council of New York for the past five years. licity; Barney Seltzer and Bessie Home Decorating Problem You May Have M & FAGENCY INC Goldstein, hospitality. Call Us Now. No Obligation. LITTLE RHODY BOYS' STATE REDWOOD LODGE PICNIC 331-9427 Among the 40 boys recom­ 725 DEXTER STREET CENTRAL FALLS 131 Washington St The first annual family picnic mended by their high school prln­ of Redwood Lodge No. 35, A,F. & MON., TUES., WED., FRI . and SA_T. 9 to 5,30; THURSDAY 9 to 9 Providence dpal s to attend the fifth annual A.M., will be held on Sunday, July Little Rhody Boys' State at the 2, at the Masonic Youth Center In University of Rhode Isl and on Warwick. Mitchell Sherwin Is So­ l Tuesday and Wednesday were da! Committee chairman, Samuel ,'\ Nell H. Paster of East Provi­ Shindler, co-chairman, and mem­ dence High School, Ira H. Rosen-· bers of the commlnee are Joseph berg of East Greenwich HI g h Cohen, Bernard Gergel, Sruel School and Robert Weisman of Oelbaum, Oscar Levy, Joseph Hope High School. Priest, Samuel C, Ress and Ben GIVEN SILVER BEAVER Rabinowitz. David Torman Is Narragansett Council, Boy publldty chairman. Scouts of America, awarded the WOMEN'S TELETHONS Silver Beaver for Distinguished Substantial Increases In giving Service to Boyhood to eight vol­ characterize the telethons now unteer leaders at Its annual Rec­ going on In the Women's Division ognition Dinner In May. Abbott of the 1967 General Jewish Com­ Lieberman of Providence, Dis­ mittee campillgn, according to trict Committeeman and Neigh­ Mrs. Leonard I. Salmanson, borhood Commissioner, was Women's Division president, and among the recipients. He was Mrs. Edmund I. Waldman, cam­ l awarded the Bucklin Medal In paign chairman. More volunteers I 962. Mr. Lieberman has been are needed for the telethons, ·; active In scouting on the East being conducted at GJC headquar­ Side and with the Retarded Chil­ ters In the Strand Building, and dren's Troop at Fogarty Center.- those who have not yet pledged or contributed may send their gift PHILHARMONIC CHALLENGE there, or telephone GA 1-4111. The Rhode Isl and Phil harmon­ ic Orchestra ·has raised $236,- BKTH SHOLOM SCHEDULE The summer schedule of ser­ , I 431.14 In pledges, to complete the first phase of Its five-year Ford vices at Temple Beth Sholom will Foundation Challenge Fund pro­ begin on July 1. Saturday ser­ vices will begin at 9 a.m., with Enjoying our 93rd and biggest year gram. Some $63,000 of this Is for .the current annual Sustaining Mlncha at 8 p.m. followed by Fund. Under the Challenge Fund Maarlv. Services on weekday terms, the orchestra must raise mornings will commence at 6:45 CHURC~TRAVEL $350,000 In five years which will o'clock, and on national holidays Turks Head Building, Providence 3, Rhode Island • Telephone 421•3700 be matched equally to make a to­ and Sundays at 8 a.m. Mlncba ROBERT T. ENGJ.ES tal of $700,000 available In en­ services will be held dally at 8 dowment by June 30, 1971. p.m. and will be followed by Maa­ . fOI ' \I ALtllO ~■-VICI ASK IOI ILLtl ftN■_-, rlv. Friday evening services will Subscribe to the Herald, '}t C ~ I 1 1,-. ~ ' r, · . ~ , 1 \ t l ,. , 1 ~! b~!\ ~ ~'.~~. ~,~• .. ·.·,,-:,"' .·:.~•c ,, THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 11 Kibbutz Life Fascinates Subscribe to the Herald. COLUMBUS THrE--;_•;RE ' M~ny Japanese Students 270 Broadway Prov 621 9660 TOKYO-'Japanese students many circles In Japan," a spokes­ NOW SHOWING are Increasingly Interested In the man !or the Israeli Embassy said. DOWNSTAIRS SCREEN Israeli col)ectlve farm commu­ He pointed out that a number o! "MADE IN ITALY" nities, the kibbutzim. Last year and young Japanese had gone to Israel Plus Selected Short the year before, about 80 paid their Individually to study the kibbutz. own Wa:/ to study the kibbutz Idea Subjects !lrst hand, and more than 100 stu­ Members o! the Japanese stu­ At Studio Onema Upstoin Screen dents will go this year. •dent kibbutz tours have to pay MAI ZETTERUNG'S the equivalent or about $800 each An authority on Hebrew studies for transportation, and work on "NIGHT GAMES" In Japan surmised recently th·at the !arms !or their maintenance Plus Selected Short at least part of the high Inter­ Subjects est In Israel derives from the his­ while In Israel. toric Japanese curiosity about all socialistic movements. "The J apanese have followed ever ything about socialism through I all Its stages and permutations," he obser ved. "They studied the Soviet version, of course, and the ENGAGED-Mr. and Mrs. Jacob ENG AGED-Mr . and Mrs. developments In Germany and all Katz of IS Bevelln Road announce Rudolph Volpe of 98 OVerhlll the Asian countries. Now the focus the engagement of their daughter, Road announce the engagement of 1s on Israel." Fredda Ann, to Dr. Richard L. their daughter, Susan Lois, to The first or this year's con­ Levitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nath­ Paul William Glass, son of Mr. tingent, eight boys and 16 girls, an Levitt of 1423 East Johnson and Mrs. William B. Glass of 17 all about 22 years old, le!t by Street, Philadel phia, Pa. Wriston Drive. ship to spend a year learning about Miss Katz Is a gr aduate of Mi ss Volpe, a gr aduate of the Israeli experiment by partic­ Classical High School and Bryn Hope High School, Is a junior a t ipating In the Ure or the Yamat Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. the Univef.slty of Rhode Isl and. Rochanan kibbutz. (1 967). Dr. Levitt Is a graduate of Mr. Glass Is a graduate of Moses Other undergraduate groups Urslnus College and Jeffer son Brown School and Boston Univer­ were going last month. All are Medlcal College of Philadelphia sity , and Is studying at the Uni­ sponsored by the J apan Kibbutz (1 965). versity of Rhode Isl and for · a Association, with the appr oval o! master' s degree in business ad­ the Israeli Embassy and the Inter­ A Sept. 16 weddlng Is planned. ministration. national C ooperatlon DI vision or D.A. Gun ning Photo A Dec. 9 weddlng Is pl an ned. the J apanese Foreign Ministry. The Japan Kibbutz Association Is one of several or ganizations of Reform Rabbis Consider Japanese scholars who specialize In Hebrew studies and publish pe­ riodicals devoted to Israeli a!!alrs. Revision Of Prayer Book One or their number Is Emperor Hirohito's younger brother, Prince SUMMEB LOS ANGELE'S - Intensive God correcteth, and therefore Mi kasa, a university teacher who r esearch on how to r evise or r e­ despise thou not the chastening o! Is considered one or J apan's fore­ place the Union Prayer Book was the Almighty." most authorities on Hebrew his­ discussed at the 78th annual Several rabbis voiced strong tory. CLEABANCE meeting of the Central Confer­ criticism of this prayer as a There Is even a small group ence of American Rabbis, held " b 1 as ph em ou s mocker y after of Japanese who adhere to Ju­ here. Rabbi Joseph N. Narot, Auschwitz." daism. Special Group chairman of the committee on lit­ A prayer that appears on page "Our Ideal Is to spread the urgy, who has been working on 20 r eads "Heavenly rather,we r e­ spirit o! the kibbutz, throughout the project !or the last two years, joice that amid the ceaseless Japan," the president or the J a­ TEEN told 500 Reform rabbis that the cares and anxieties, vain desires pan Kibbutz Association, Nobuy­ present prayer book was last r e­ and- wearisome struggles or our oshl Tezuka, said In a telephone DRESSES & SUITS vised 30 years ago " before the earthly llfe, Thy holy sabbath has Nazi holocaust, before the atomic Interview r ecently. b!)en given us a day of rest and Adoption o! the Israeli method bomb and before the space age. r efreshment o! soul." The theological and moral ques­ In Japan Is essential I! vitality Commenting on this liturgical Is to be r estored to a !arming ½ PRICE tions that have been raised by expression, one rabbi r esponded: these momentous Issues call for community that Is now being rapid­ (SOME REDUCED MORE THAN 50%) "It always reminds me of an ly depleted by the exodus to better­ new and mor e relevant liturgical 'allrlghtnlk' (blgshot), smoking an creations. 1 paying occupations In the towns, expensive cigar patronizingly he said. Rabbi Naro! em phas ized that t elllng a down and out fellow that BABY AND had always been things are not so hot." The prospective Japanese kib­ CHILDREN'S the "pioneering, exploring and Rabbi Plaut said that despite butznlks who sailed !or Israel Imaginative force In the Jewish many "fine and upllrtlng pas­ were selected from the Uni ver­ ~~~~ SHOP faith," adding that "It must r eas­ sages, the English text Is often slty of Hokkaido, on the sparsely sert these historic powers In the too wordy and preachy; Its dis­ settled norther n Island to which face of the crucial questions that t Inc t Iv ene s s between reader, the Government has been trying to 762 HOPE ST. PROVIDENCE 421-8856 confront the J ews and all man­ choir, and congregation makes Its attract !armers for years, within­ kind." use for private worship diffi­ different success. A kibbutz on Reform Judaism, which gained cult." Hokkaido Is considered a possi­ prominence In this country In the They want a prayer book that bility. late 19th century through the ef­ will be "more congruent to the "Ther e Is a ver y lively Inter­ forts of the late Rabbi Isaac May­ needs o! contemporary man." est In the kibbutz and Israel among ( er Wise, stresses the evolving character of Judaism and the /~ need !or constant reinterpretation Korean Israeli, Violinists 4 BILL DOT of religious laws In accordance .ffl_ f,j with the need of modern J ewlsh life. Win Leventritt First Prize In pointing to what he termed NEW YORK- Kyung Wha have to be worked out with the Everythings · Gone the antiquated character of some Chung. a I 9-year-old violinist orchestras concerned. I o! the prayers, Rabbi Narot re­ from Korea, and Pinchas Zucker­ "The other two finalists, Serglu ferred to a prayer for coal min­ man, an 18 0 year-old violinist Luca, a Rumanian- born Israeli, ers - "those who dig far away from Israel, were named first­ 24, -and Nejml Succari, 27, of p ~,. ), !rom the sun." Rabbi Narot said prize winners In the 25th Inter? Syria, will each receive $500 and j this might have had relevancy In national Competition of the Edgar for a period of up to three years, 1940 when It was written "but It M. Leventrln Foundation. the foundation will arrange and Is meaningless today." The fourteen judges, all lead­ partly underwrite recital and Ra bbl Narot•s committee Ing conductors and violinists, lis­ symphony appearances for them. presented a "motivational re­ tened to the four finalists for For the first round of the fi­ !◄ search survey" that analyzed about two and a half hours at nals, each contestant played .for ◄ rabbinic attitudes toward the Carnegie Hall, retired to the about half an hour . But after a prayer book. This study was pre­ Green Room backstage, debated discussion break, the Judges were 1 pared by Rabbi Jack Bemporad, for another two and a half hours, still undecided. They asked them 'I 1/ director of Reform Judaism's and then decided to award the to come back for 10 minutes ,: Commission on Worship, and Dr. double prize. This Is the first each. Emanuel Denby, director of re­ year there have been two Lev­ • 'Some of them were too ner­ ,) search !or Fairleigh Dickinson entrltt winners named. vous the first time round," said University. Miss Chung and Mr. Zucker­ Isaac Stern, one of the judges. r, . In reporting on this study man will each get the full first The Leventrltt contest Is held Rabbi Bemporad said the major­ prize money of $1,000, said Mrs. either for pianists or violinists. ' J ity -o! the rabbinic responses to Rosalie Leventrltt Berner, who Among past winners have been ~I the prayer book were sharply directed the competition. the pianists, Sidney Foster, Eu­ critical. Under ordinary circum­ gene Istomln, Gary Graffman, For Instance, a prayer that stances, a single winner would be Van Cliburn, John Browning and appears on page 138 says: "Tru­ g uaranteed a111l!tll!"ances as Malcolm Frager; and the violin­ ly, Thy mercies neyer fall, and soloist with nine major symphony Is ts Dav Id Nadlen, Arnold Th y loving kindness never orchestras, Including those of Steinhardt and ltzhak Perl man. '"I ceases, Therefore do we forever New York, Chicago and Cleve­ put our trust In Thee." land. Mrs . Leventrltt said that It Mr. Zuckerman · began pl aylng • I' Rabblnlc reaction to this was not yet determined how the at the age of 8. He was awarded We'll prayer consisted o! "meaningless symphony engagements would be an Am er I ca-Israel Cultural In everything - language, ex­ broken up between the two win­ Foundation scholarship at the age pression, theology. I !eel like a ners. of 9 and has held the scholarship hypocrite every t_lme I r'ead It. She suggested that perhaps ever since. It's the nrst prayer a con­ one of them would get the full In I 961, he was brought to the firmation class pulls apart." number of engagements this year, attention of Pablo Casals, the A.s another example, religious and the other next year, but she cellist, and Isaac Stern, who rec­ responsive reading on page, 1,1)8 said that this was, by• no means ommell(le_cU h.al -~ -"~ .seJlL to . t,he states: "Happy Is "the· mah wh6rfl · · certain. Any arrangement would lmlted States for further study. ANNOUNCE FIRST CJ,!LD Mr. and Mrs. Frank I, Res­ nick of 66 Ontario Street an- . now,ce the arrival of their first child, David Samuel. Paternal grandmother Is Mrs. Samuel Resnick of Sessions Street, Ma­ ternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs, Louis Vllker of 809 York Avenue, Pawtucket. FIRST CHILD JS BORN Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Nul­ man of 179 Knollwood Avenue, { Cranston, announce the birth of their first child and daughter, Linda Abby, on June loth. Mater­ nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Schwimmer of Fall River. Paternal grandparents are GOING TO ISRAEL - Miss Co- Mr. and Mrs. William Nulman, •rinne Marsha Goldenberg of 13 also of Fall River. Ogden Street wlll leave next week for Israel for a ye ar's study of FIRST DAUGHTER BORN Jewish law, history and culture at Mr. and Mrs . Manfred Ziegler the Haylm Greenberg Institute In of 114 Redwood Road, Ports­ FROM \ ' Je rusalem. A University of Rhode r mouth, annmmce the birth on Island Jw,e graduate with a B. A. PETER CHAN_NELL Jw,e 12 of their second chll d and In education, she will take a sum­ to visit firs t daughter, Naomi Alleen. mer Ulpa,n program In Hebrew. Mrs. Ziegler Is the former Ruth The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ' THE ELEPHANT WALK Brant. Maternal grandparents are Harold Gol denberg, she wa s sec­ Mr. and Mrs . Max Brant of 25-18 retary of the URI P sychology 16 Pine St. 88th Street, Jackson Heights , Club, chairman of the cultural for unusual gifts, gourmet foods N.Y. Paternal grandparents are committee of the Arts Council, and custom designed jewelry , ._ Mr. and Mrs. Max Ziegler of 20 and a member of the orchestra, Park Place, Pawtucket. · the Orchesls modern dance group Mrs. Lewis H. Fine ANNOUNC E FOURTH CHILD and Chi Omega sorority, Miss Susan E. Lieberman, Mr. and Mrs. Ira L . Schrei­ Rabbi Schindler TUESDAY WEDNESDAY daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack ber of 86 Belvedere Drive, Lieberman of Deal, N.J., became Cranston, annow,ce the birth of Named UAHC Officer 11 :00 A.M . 12:45 A.M . their fourth chlld and second the bride of Lewis H. Fine, son of NEW YORK - The Union of Bring For Beginning Mr. and Mrs. James Fine of 40 daughter, Judith Lynn, on Jw,e 20th. Mrs. Schreiber Is the for­ American Hebrew Congr egations Sandwich Duplicate players Richland Road, Cranston, on Stm­ has named Rabbi Alexander M. day, Jw,e 18, In Asbury Park, mer Joyce Muriel Cohen. Mater­ nal grandparents are Mr. and Schindler as vice-president, lt WEDNESDAY FRIDAY N.J. Rabbi Sidney Schulman otn­ was annow,ced last week by the 8:00 P.M . 8:00 P.M. clated at the 5 p.m. wedding at Mrs, Max A. Cohen of Emeline Street. Paternal grandparents are congregational body of Reform Temple Beth El, and was assisted Judaism In this cow,rry and Ca­ by Rabbi Morris Shoulson, cousin Mr. and Mrs. Jack G. Schreiber MASTER POINTS - COFFEE of Edgehill Road. nada. of the bride. A reception was held He w!ll continue as the w,lon's A 1056 HOPE STREET, PROVIDENCE ft at the Temple Center alter the TO BECOME BAR MITZV AH director of education until his V _ROBERT E. . ST ARR, Director 724-1697 · ceremony. Charles Louis Saltzman, son succe ss or Is named, Rabb! The bride, who was given In of Dr. and Mrs. Abraham Saltz­ Schindler Is the second vice­ marriage by her parents, wore an man, w!ll become Bar Mltzvah at president the w,lon has had In Its Empire gown of peau de sole ap­ 8:15 o'clock at Temple Beth El 94-year history. The first was P II q u e d with re-embroidered tonight. Rabbi J ay Kaufman, who held the Alencon lace. Her veil fell from a post from 1957 w,ti[ 1965 • NEIL S. WEINSTEIN & ASSOC. coronet of pearls and she carried a Bible with white orchids and Casemate City Wall He will continue a s the union's 87 ROLFE STREET, CRANSTON stephanotls. director of education until his Mrs. Martin Rudnick was her succe s sor ls named. Rabb! Uncovered At Megiddo Schindler Is the second sister's matron of honor. Brides­ JERUSALEM-The large vice­ maids were Miss Barbara Mesh­ president the w,lon has had In !ts ARE Solomonlc P alace at Meglddo 94-year history. The first was ekow, the bride's cousin, Miss which was discovered some years Susan Grabelle and Miss Sonia Rabbi Jay Kaufman, who held the RELOCATING their OFFICE ago, as well as a portion of the post from I 957 w,til I 965 and who Llpetz. casemate clry wall, were uncov­ Martin M. Rudnick, the ts now executive vice-president ered recently by the Hebrew Unl­ of B'nal B'r!th In Washington. AT bride's brother-In-law, was best verslty' s Department of Archae­ man. Ushers were Alan Mesh­ A refugee from Naz! Germa­ ology, ny, Rabb! Schindler, whose ap­ 108 PAWTUXET AVENUE, CRANSTON ekow, David S. Fine and Albert The dig wa s directed by Prof. Ashuklan. pointment became effective Mon­ Ylgael Yadin, In collaboration · day, served In the United States ON The bride Is a senior at the with engineer I. Dunayevsky and a Army In World War 11. University of Rhode Island. The team which consisted of M. Ben­ JULY 1st, 1967 bridegroom was graduated from Dov, A. Eytan, A. Kamplnsky, Y. URI In 1965 and received his Shiloh, Ruth Yacobl and Y. Zaf­ RUGS & IIPHOLSTIRY Master of Arts degree there In rir. Shampooed WE SPECIALIZE IN INTERIOR DESIGN 1966. He has served In the United It has now become clear, as In Your Home Or States Navy and Is a teacher at was already suspected during last Pin• Of lluslnen CALL 467-4677 Mitchell College, New London, year's dig, that the Solomonlc Wall to Wall or any Conn. Type Carpeting Palace was of the Blt-Hllanl type, F rH Estimates After a wedding trip to Eu­ Le., of Syro-Phoenlclan pal ace CAU NORTH A TTlEBORO rope, they will live In Caro)1na. style. 695-5810 The Department of Archae­ Don Conquest Poses ology Intends to continue !ts ex­ cavations at Meglddo during the ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ next few years, and to concen­ Economy Threat trate particularly on the difficult TEL AVIV-The conquest of ■---- problems relating to lsrael!te WINDOWS WASHED all the Jordanian-held territory M:,glddo. west of the Jordan and_ of the ■ ■ ~ Gaza Strip has posed serious new economic problems for Israel. All forms of personal and business insurance SALE!! - Neither the former J ordanlan nor ■ ON ALL the barren Gaza Strip are eco­ including - Life - Accident - Group - Fire - SPRING AND SUMMER nomically viable entitles. SHOES There are about 400,000 In­ Automobile - Casualty - Bonds ■ ■ OPEN DAILY EXCEPT WED. habitants In the narrow Strip, no 9:30 to S:30 Industry there and only one com­ Murry ~- Halpert FRI. to 9 . P.M. mercial crop, a low-grade citrus 800 Howard Bldg. ■ OPEN WED. WEEK OF which cannot be exported to Eu­ JULY 4th/ . rope and previously fow,d Its only DE 1-9100 Residence: DE 1-6949 Save from market In Egypt. ■ ■ The West Bank area has an Arab population of about a mll­ 20% to 50% OFF Ilon. It Is an agrlcul rural area FRED SPIGEL'S ■ with no surpluses for export and our regular discount price little Industry. Not all sizes in every style KOSHER MEAT MARKET ■ ■ The only possible sources of income are the new tourist re­ HO 1-042S Also on sale gions such as Bethlehem and the ■ Ladies' Golf Shoes Old City of Jerusalem where the Specializing in narrow widths Jewish holy pl aces are now open to Jewish tourists. y I ■ As a result of Its conquests, seth Lewis shoe Israel now has the responsibility ' of feeding some 1,500,000 Arabs. ■ 771 Hope Street, Provlcleeu There are estimates here that Is­ 274-7889 rael would have to allocate be­ All Sales Final tween $15-20,000,000 a year for ■ ■ the new territories. A Herald ad always gets best results - our subscribers com­ ■ ■ • ----■ ■ ■ ■ prise an active buying market. THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 1 13 Thirsty Egyptians Not Surrendering Richard Burtons Cancel To Israelis, Dayan Knesset Moscow Festival Trip Telll NEW YORK - Elizabeth JERUSALEM-Defense Minister prefer to ltve on Jordanian ter- Taylor and Richard Burton wlll Gen. Moshe Dayan, answered rltory, If they have the means or not attend the Moscow Film Fes­ questions on Israel's cooperation the occupation, which would en- tival next month, where "Who's with the Red Cross In tracking able them to re-establish them- Afraid of Vlrglnfa Woolf?" wm down Egyptian sol_diers stranded selves there, rather than live In be shown as an out-of-com­ in Sinai after the fighting, and on occupied territory. Many Arabs petition entry. the movement of Jordanians from of the West Bank request per- John Springer, the Burtons• the West to the East Bank of the mission to cross over to the East press representative, said this River Jordan. He spoke In the Bank since their main source of week that the trip "Is deflnltely Knesset on June 21. • Income comes from Kuwait where off." Asked 11 Miss Taylor's "In the first phase of the op- they have relatives who transfer well-known sympathies for Israel erations, there were many thou- money to them. The personal could have dictated the decision, sands of Egyptian troops whose . bank accounts of not a few such Mr. Springer said: "I otnclally UJ:!1ts had been overwhelmed In people, are In Amman, and only don't know why they have can­ battl~, but instead of giving them- they are able to change their celed, but I would suppose that selves up, the soldiers evidently money received from abroad. would be a reason." belleved that they could make Famll!es tell us that relatives The Burtons are on a yacht I . their way back by foot or by support them, or that the bank "somewhere In the Mediterra­ transport to the Canal and cross accounts of their savings are in nean;'' according to Mr. Spring­ over to Egypt. The same soldiers Arvman. Were they to remain on er, and · could not be reached for who wandered about hungry and the West Bank they would lose comment. thirsty were precisely those who what they have. These are the ~ Tony Curtis has also canceled did not want to surrender," said kind of people who wish to cross, plans to attend the Moscow festi­ Gen. Dayan. · and I see no reason why we val, to be held July 5 to July 201 "An approach was made to us should prevent them from doing because of the Soviet position by the Red Cross to which we Im- so. against Israel In the current mediately responded. In helicop­ "There ls a third catagory, Middle East situation. ters which we pl aced at their dis­ Mr. Curtis and Miss Taylor posal, Red Cross and the Israel and not a small one, of people en­ joying another kind of outside have been strong supporters of Ariny personnel made four re­ IsraeL Several years ago her connaissance flights over various support. They are people listed on the refugee rolls of UNR A and films were banned from Arab areas and hardly found a single countries because of her activi­ lost Egyptian soldier, The reason they w!ll continue to receive this maintenance In Jordan as well. ties on behalf of the sale of Israel for this was that these troops had bonds. The actress converted to meanwhile succeeded In crossing "We have already received Judaism when she was married to the Canal to Egypt, or had made applications of gr<:>ups of people Mrs. Arthur H. Sausmer Mike Todd, the late film and their way to the Gaza strip or to who want to return from Amman Temple Emanu-EI was the Share. stage producer. Mr. Curtis Is El-Ar!sh, or had handed them­ back to the West Bank and I have setting for the 8:45 p.m. wedding Richard Schwartz was best J ewish. selves over to the Israel Army. announced that we w!ll treat such on Jtme IO of Miss Margery Mona man. Ushers were Robert Bomes, Jack Valenti, the president of The statement issued by the Red requests sympathetically, These Bomes and Arthur Haro Id Saus- the br ide' s brother, Larry White, the Motion Picture Association of I Cross confirms that representa­ Include people In Amman who mer. She Is the daughter of Mr. the bride's cousin, Ronnie Mar- America, said that he knew of no tives had visited these locations, choose to join their families over and Mrs. Samuel Bomes of 10 neault and James Galkin. other defections from the Ameri­ with the cooperation and full fa­ here. We will certainly not pre­ Lafayette Street, Pawtucket, and The bride ls a graduate of can delegation because of the po­ cilities of the Israel Army, and vent them from doing so. " Mr. Sausmer ls the son of Mr. Pawtucket West High School l!tlcal situation. had not found Egyptian soldiers and Mrs. Myron Sausmer of 3 (I 964) and Chamber! ayne Junior wandering In the desert." Harriet Drive, Syosset, N.Y. College, Boston (1966). The "The same applies al so with Jewish Scholars Fin ally Rabb! Ell A. Bohnen officiated at bridegroom, an alumnus of Syos- CORRECTION the regard to other accusations the ceremony, which was followed set High School (1 963), will be alleglng to war damage to hospi­ by a reception at the temple. graduated from Bryant College In last week's tals at El-Ar!sh and other places. Study Jordan Scrolls The bride, who was given In next month, and will be a man- Red Cross representatives ac­ marriage by her fattier, wore an agement trainee of G. Fox and advertisement tually visited the hospital s, spoke JERUSALEM - Fragments Empire gown of re-embroidered Company, Hartford, Conn. for the with Arab prisoners and con­ of the Dead Sea Scrolls owned by Alencon I ace on silk organza After a wedding trip to Puerto firmed that the conditions of the Jordan are being studied by Jew­ fashioned with a wedding ring Rico, they w!II live at 50 Hunt- JAMES HOWE CO. Egyptian prisoners In the deten­ ish scholars for the first time. neckline, short sleeves, A-line !ngton Street In Hartford. Jewelers tion camps are In conformity with Dr. Avraham Blran, director of skirt and Watteau train of silk D. A. Gunning Photo the Geneva Convention." · the Israell Department of Anti­ organza. Her silk Ill uslon veil It was slated that In connection with the move­ quities and Museums, led a team fell from a matching lace pillbox DICK SONDLER ment of J ordan!an civilians from Into the Old City, where they en­ accented with seed pearls. She JESSIE DIAMOND the area of the West Bank of the tered the Palestine Archeologlcal carried a flowing ,cascade of will be closed from was formerly with the Jordan to that of the East Bank, Museum for the nrst time In 19 stephanotls and Phalaenopsls or­ July 1·s to Aug. 28 Star Appliance Co. General Dayan had this to say: years. chids garlanded with Ivy. WATCH FOR ,.It ls true that many resi­ Mrs. Robert Bomes, the Mr. Sondler is STILL dents of the West Bank anxious to They found some browntsh bride's sister-in-law, was ma­ ANNOUNCEMENT with the cross the Jordan foufid the way yellow scroll fragments left be­ tron of honor, and Miss Sandra Stock up on some of Jessie;s Star Appliance Co. i open to them. It ls a gross ex­ hind under glass by the retreating Schaffer was maid of honor. delicacies for your freezer \, but is also associated with ageration, however, to speak of Jordanians. The team said the Bridesmaids .were Miss Bonnie 726-6102 the number of such people as Jim Howe fragments are In good condition Sausmer, the bridegroom's sis­ 596 Pawtucket Ave., Pawt. 100,000. On the other hand, the but was unable to tell what ter, Miss Susan Rothstein, the movement ts not yet oVer." scrolls they represented as the bride's cousin, Miss Gall Weitz- "Tbe reasons for their depar­ museum records could not be ner, Mi ss Carole Kaufman, Miss I SELL ALL MRS. LEO GLEKLEN ture vary. There are those ~ho found. J anle Aronson and Miss Susan 421•1229 ADVERTISED TRIPS OF 331-7106 j PETTERSON TRAVEL INC. Automatic Blintz-Making Machine 76 DORRANCE STREET PROVIDENCE 3, RHODE ISLAND

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NEW YORK-Machine-made ery turns out more than 3601000 a (polltlclans running for election blintzes make a better, more uni­ week. still appeal to the Jewish vote by form, thinner piece of dough than "It's a pity they're called being photographed eating can be made by hand, noted Ben­ blintzes," Mr. Grable said as he blintzes), they are apparently PROVIDENCE Jamin Grable · recently as he watched neat little dough-wrapped cutting across ethnic Unes. watched a batter of fl our, eggs, packages roll out of a new auto­ Recently, two dozen nuns attend­ water, salt and cornstarch.cooked m atlc bl!Jitz-maklng machine at ing a convention in New Yor < HEBREW on a revolving drum. It was then the rate of just over one a sec­ lunched at Lindy's. The waite r cut into squares, filled and folded ond. "It's such a harsh word. If recommended bllntzes and thE , by mechanic.al fingers. The they were called cheese pan­ v.;ere enthu~lastlcally received. DAY SCHOOL blintzes are packaged by hand and cakes, they'd sound more edible. And a pries! from a monastery In frozen at 30 to 40 degrees below But then they'd lose their person­ Ogdensberg, N.Y.. , was so enam­ zero. Cheese blintzes, which out­ allty.". ored of them that he wrote asking APPLICATIONS FOR ENROLLMENT sell the other varieties, contain a William Abner, manager of for the recipe so that he could mixture of cottage cheese, eggs Lindy's restaurant on Broadway make-them at the monastery. FOR THE 1967-68 SCHOOL YEAR and sugar. at 51st Street was asked about "They are just like French All the homemaker has to do machine-made bllntzes. crepes, only the fllllng' s differ­ 1S brown them in butter and serve It's just llke making" a suit or ent,•• commented Walter MacGul­ NOW ACCEPTED them with sour cream and, 11 de­ a pair of shoes by machine," he gan, who has been making sired, preserves. replled. "The quallty cannot · be blintzes at Lindy's "on and off" Mr. Grable, who ls known in the same.'' for 19 years. He swirled batter • Pre-Kindergarten / the trade as the bllntz prince, ls At Lindy's, 250 hand-made into 10 pans and kept them rotat­ president of the Old Fashioned bllntzes are served each day, ing on top or the stove, Insisting • Kindergarten Kitchen, 401 Marcy Avenue_, mostly for lunch and late supper. It was easy "if you don't mind the Brooklyn. The 16-year-old com­ They come three to a portion und heat and the quick thinking." are served with sour cream and • Primary Grades 1-3 I pany 1S sell1ng ftve times as The batter at Lindy's Is made , J many blintzes as It did four years strawberry or cherry preserves • with half cream, half milk. ago. on the side. "Water?" Walter reiterated a Herbert Horowitz, secretary­ 'Irving Berlln, the composer, question In shocked tones. "That Grodes 4 through 9 to Qualified students only treasurer, recalled that when he has been one of the restaurant's would make them hard like a joined the company 15 years ago, steadiest customers for blintzes. sailor biscuit." he cried a lot. Part of his job was According to Mr. Abner, when­ The ftlllng · (only cheese FOR INTERVIEW, PLEASE CALL peeling onions for potato blintzes. ever the· composer was In town he blintzes are served) 1B a mixture "In those days," he recalled, would have cooked ones sent to of eggs, sugar and baker's RABBI NORMAN COHEN, Principal "one person made all the pan­ him In his offtce across the cheese, which was described as cakes on a line-up of frying pans, street and would frequently take pot cheese with the water taken Monday & Thursday 1 to 4 :30 p.m . As he peeled them off, Ben and I uncooked ones horn e with him. out. Tuesday & Friday 9:30 to 12 noon would put cheese or whatever "Ten ton" Tes11le O'Shea, the Lindy's has been making 331-5327 else In, roll them by hand and put British actress, Is another good blintzes this way for 46 years," them In boxes." customer for such calorl11c He was asked about machine­ Thls method produced 3,000 snacks. 1 made bllntzes. "Never heard of 450 ELMGROVE AVENUE blintzes a weelt. Today, machln- Orlgtnally a J ewlsh specialty them," he said.

.. ,( :. . .. ~' ...... 14 _BVCAP Accomplishes Much; Involves Com-munity, Knows Of Mor~ To Be Done (Continued from page I) around the country cann9t as eas­ the children from Head Start some began taking part. lly nibble away at the money. He were not as disciplined as they · Many of the Institutions which also finds salaries for the pro­ should be. Those whom the teach­ serve low-Income groups have gram too high, though most are ers complained· of, said Mrs. become unresponsive over the service rather than adminis­ Cohen, had been terribly_ cit§• years to the needs of the poor, trative salaries, and half the ruptlve at the beginning of Head from federal agencies down to the money for salaries goes to tile Start and had, If anything, quieted local level. Community action poor who are employed In some down and become easier to teach. seeks to make them, responsive phase of the program. BVCAP There wlll be a slipping back for and to step up their programming runs service agencies more the Head Start children when they In neighborhoods. Sometimes, cheaply than the Red Cross or go Into public school, she noted, even If there Is perfect group Visiting Nurse Association, for until the schools a.dopt smaller participation, a problem Isn't example, and It runs a school at a classes. From 15 children, one solved, but the very fact that "the much lower cost than that of most teacher and at least one aide, they poor have a voice !n, for ex­ school departments. go Into a , large · class with one ample, getting a recreation area, Mr. Sh!evln, who was board teacher and no aide. Is Important. That they are an chairman when It was the Pawtuck­ Of the Head Start program one element In decision making Is a et Community Action Program, mother said, "It showed us a new factor In the equation. feels that the biggest problem Is world we thought was only In a "People have said for years communication with people of the book." that the poor ought to help them­ target areas. It Is a m~tter of Four functioning community selves, but the minute they get trust, he said, and the distrust on centers and some part time cen­ together, the same people say, both sides has lessened slowly. ters are al so sponsored by This is not quite what we meant," ~me of the people from target BVCAP. These offer a focus for commented Mrs. Cohen, who got areas were difftcul t to commu­ Information, employment coun­ Involved In the program when she nicate with, he added, because of seling and health teams. At the was hired for three months to re­ their lack of education and lack of Prospect Heights housing devel­ search a study of Pawtucket, Its patience, and because they ex­ opment a monthly child , health services and the nature and ex­ pected too much from the pro­ conference Is run by the Visiting tent of Its poverty. In 90 days she gram. Nurses, the Community Action completed her research, wrote Still a member of the board, Program and the State Health De­ the study and . had It mim­ he has Just been elected BVCAP partment--tllree groups worlclng eographed and ready to dis­ representative to the new Legal together to examine and ln­ tribute. Services Corporation. When this noculate children from birth to program Is In effect, there will five years of age. The mothers "I got so enthusiastic no one be better-paying non-professional could pry me loose," she said. She are terribly young, said Mrs. Co­ Jobs avail able for the persons has a master's degree ln poltttcal hen, .,none over 20. Many had science, and Mr. Ceglle, In public who have been trained by Com­ babies three to four. months old administration. He worked for the munity Action. The Neighborhood and hadn't seen a doctor since Planning Department In Pawtucket Youth Corps, for 16 to 21-year­ they left the hospital. Now, with for a year, and when the Economic olds, has an in-school program ln the conference right In the proj­ Opportunity Act was passed, was which youth work 10 hours for ect where they live, they are tnterested In helping the city de­ private non- profit or public bringing their babies to be exam­ velop a program, so applied and agencies which provide super­ ined." BVCAP v1·s1ts the homes was appointed director. Originally vision. They have to be patient, and tells families about the ser­ from Boston, he lived In Rhode be able to counsel and provide vices they are eliglble for; It will Island for five year s. He and Mrs. training ... e.g., In how to use a even drive s omeone to the hospi­ Cohen find the_lr Jobs go home with telephone for those who have nev­ tal or doctor, or arrange for food them. er used one. Boys and girls have stamps. One trend which Mr. Ceglie started out totally incompetent, Judith Cohen described the thinks needs al terlng Is Con­ who later go out and find empl oy­ arrangements: "our nurse takes gress' habit of earmarlclng funds ment. The out of school program hi stories, their nurse helps the for certain programs. He thinks Involves 30 hours a week In the doctor, our girl from the Neigh­ there should be room for commu­ s ame set up and calls for some borhood Youth Corps gives coffee nities to maneuver according to sort of remedial training, such as to the mothers while they wait. their Individual probl,:ms. "Per­ an aduJ t education course. Two neighborhood aides help re­ haps a neighborhood In Pawtucket The other overwhel mlngly cruit the mothers and help pre­ Is the same as one In Pough­ successful BVCAP program, pare the center .•. so this Is a keepsie, but each community has Head Start, (see story on facing wonder f u I cooperative effort. ro make its own response. Some page) not only helped the children We've helped the Visiting Nurse may have more unemployment but got their families Involved. Association do something they and so would maybe want to move "Teachers had to visit homes. couldn't do before. We don't du­ in with more job counselors," he This was the first time this ever plicate, We won't apply for what· said. happened In the city of Pawtuck­ others are already doing. This Samuel Shlevln, past president et. . .. 1l,e morning snack was to local determination Is wonderful. of the board, disagrees on this be given at 10:30, but teachers We can say that we cooperate point. He thinks that federal found-many of the children hadn't with the existing agencies and help budgeting means local fingers eaten, so it was given when they them expand their services." walked In, In the morning." An example of this Is the Con­ Sample testing was done on 36 sumer Education program, run children, whose scores went up for BVCAP by the YMCA. "We BVCAP IN ACTION five months In a brief period. give them funds and they hire Children who tested sub-normal their own staff and run their own I. Two Neighborhood Youth In the beginning tested normal at program,'' which Is In the pro­ Corps enrollees work on the card the end of eight weeks. cess of forming cooperative food catalogue at the Pawtucket Public The medical phase of the pro­ clubs. "This Is one facet of Com­ Library. gram Is continued for six months, munity Action: If you can have · an and an evaluation of Its effective­ existing agency use Its skills and 2. A Neighborhood Youth Corps ness Is attempted, by having kin­ know-how, this Is all to the enrollee writes up a parking tick­ dergarten teachers make reports. good." et as part of his duties as a clerk Many of them, last year, felt_ that (ConUnued_on Page 16) In the Pawtucket Police Statl9n.

3. Vincent S. Ceglle, executive director, and Mrs. Judith W. Co­ Brazil's Chief Rabbi Describes Need hen, assi_stant director, of the Blackstone Valley Community To Explain Jewish Exi_sf ence To Youth Action program. NEW YORK-"Brazll Is a Dr. Lemle described how In 4. At the Community Action country nearly without any preju­ old Jewish settlements far · from Program Neighborhood Center In dice, religious or racial," the the big cities, where there are no Flrospect Heights, a housing proj­ chief Rabbi of Rio de J anelro said rabbis or trained teachers, he has ect, a resident tells her problems recently, and he predicted that observed famllles performing to tile health team, Alan Hutchin­ the Supreme Court will deal fairly complete rituals and prayers, son, social worker. and Mrs. with Franz Paul Stangl, the ac­ only to -learn that they have been Mary Seccareccta, nurse. cused Nazi war criminal now In passed on from father to son and prison there, whose extradition learned by rote without any un­ 5. Mrs. Rose Ganim of the has been requested by Austria, derstanding of Hebrew. In other consumer education staff teaches West Germany and Poland. settlements, women have assmned a cooking _class at the BVCAP Dr. Henrlque Lemle, head of the obligation of teaching community center In the Pleasant the Asoclacao Rellglosa Jsraellta, and Hebrew to the young. View section. addressed a reception In his hon­ or at the American Jewish Com­ "The Identity crisis amonf the 6. 6. Nursery center operated by mittee's Institute of Human Rela­ youth Is another problem,' he BVCAP at Prospect Heights tions In New York City. said. "Whether Judaism Is a na­ housing project. Nelgbb£rhood Dr. Lemle, who was ordained' tion or a religion Is not half so aide, Mrs. Avis Freeman (White at the Jewish Seminary of Berl!J1 Important as the content. Thia headband), and three Neighbor­ and Is a survivor of Buchenwald, younger generation must under­ ~=f~l~t hood Youth Corps enrollees help Is co-founder of the Christian­ stand that Jewish existence has l ~': .B children at drawing table. En­ Jewish Brotherhood of Brazil, meaning. J\.iX-.n _.;_;;,. rollees are part of the Youth Jewish chapl aln to the Boy Scouts IIOC""'-...,. Ti r ·- . . Corps program "for school drop­ and Girl rudes of Brazil and "Mter reading Jean-Francois \..-~...... ~-.,_ J- outs. Professor of Hebrew Civilization Steiner's • book, "Treblinka," ~~;1 at the University of Brazil. In ad­ many young people have come to --=--= 7. Mrs. Seccareccla, health dition to his own congregation, he me and ·have asked why I sur­ team nurse, weighs a child at serves six others In the Interior vived, why didn't I die fighting? Prospect Heights community cen­ and northern states, where there we inust make them understand ter operated by BVCAP. are no rabbis. Instead of a horse, that we have fought to survive and Photographs by Joseph Paquette the clrcult-rJdlng rabbi travels by will continue to survive as Jew• Jet to the outlying areas two to because we . are deeply com- 7. three hours from Rio de Janeiro . . mltted.'' . THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE ,30, 1967 IS Valiey Head Start Program Needs More Tee~agers To Volunteer Now, Says Enthusiastic PR Consultant Three hundred chll dren In th~ herself so Involved If she hadn't never take It for grantell - and Blackstone Valley area will attend seen how It worked, added enthu­ It's my obligation to •• , • (help) Head Start programs this sum­ siastic Mrs. Goldstein. When her someone who has less." She mer. To h_elp them, 75 teenage daughter Marsha wanted some­ added that she and many others volunteers have signed up for pe­ thing to do for the summer last probably fulfill this obligation be­ riods ranging from one day a -?ear, she suggested Head Start, cause It makes them feel good. week to dally for the · whole peri­ which Is run by her son David's Girl Scouts, - another of her od, July 5 through August 25. sixth-grade teacher, Mr. Edward Interests - all over the country Mrs. Lewis Goldstein of Paw1 Molloy, and "If he was Involved have worked In Project Head rucket, public relatlbns consultant In It, I knew that It would be Start, and the Senior Girl Scout for the program (like the teen­ good." Her daughter was consid­ troop to which she Is adviser may agers, she too Is ,a volunteer), ering an eventual teaching ca­ adopt this as their community said the response to radio and reer: after a summer as a Head project. This Is her fifth year as television appeals . has brought Start volunteer, she definitely secretary of the Council, and she unusual results. "They say wants to be a teacher. Is a delegate to the national con­ It is only through people are unfeeling, but If you The four and five year-old vention. Doris ~ldsteln, who th·e active give "them an opportunl ty, they'll children In Head Start are hap­ calls herself a frustrated reach­ partic ipation of come through,'' she added, and pier and more confident wl th er, was a Girl Scout herself for devoted citizens like cited a sail or from Quonset Point teenagers than with teachers, and four years, starting as a you that this program who wi11 give his day off to help reassured by their presence and Brownle. will grow and be able out in a Head Start classroom, a assistance when they have physi­ When she was first married, to help more children 20-year-old girl who has volun­ cal examinations (Including ear her husband suggested that she in the years ahead. teered, a Brown University grad­ and eye testing). The 75 volun­ get herself Involved In organlza• uate student giving three. days a teers who have al ready signed up tlons. "I didn't know where to be­ week, a girl not yet 14 · (the rec­ are not enough. Three teenagers gin. I always said yes, a bad ommended minimum age for vol­ per class Is the Ideal, and more habit." For five years It was Mi­ unteers) who loves children and boys are needed. Volunteers don't riam Hospital, B'nal B'rlth, she has worked with them, and begged have to sign up for the whole tried them all, but wanted to do for the chance to help. summer, though they will be wel­ something more. Then Mrs. "When you see the returns, comed gratefully If they do. For Goldstein tried Girl Scouts and the letters of appeal from teen­ those without transportation, ar­ found that "this Is where I be­ agers begging for work, some rangements are being made, from I ong. The women can be 90 or I 9, with letters of recommendation.'' the East Side, Rumford and See- but I talk to them about something said Mrs. Goldstein, then you re­ alize that It Is not only ,he young­ Head Start volunteers receive certtncares tuce tnts sters who need the assistance of the ·vohmteers, but these teen­ Pawrucket City Hall switchboard day. Volunteers and prospective agers who also need the challenge was busy this week with Head vol tmteers are asked to bring a and opportunity to help others Start volunteers calling 723-2000 lunch to the all-day session, but a that the program Is offering to sign up. drink will be provided (as a hot· them. Last summer ''they'd come "Teena~ers, head first to I unch Is provided during the Head In not sure what to do, a little Head Start' and "Busy this sum­ Start program). They may bring cocky, but they stuck It through to mer? Have time to help some their filled-out applications with the end of the summer and they little kids? You were a kid them, at 9 a.m., to any of the loved It,'' said Doris Goldstein, once . . . . right? Head Start schools In the program: Winters whose daughter was a volunteer. wants you, Head Start needs you. on Broadway, Prospect on Pros­ The consultant Is tired of Call 723-2000 now" are among pect, Baldwin on Sterry Street, reading and hearing about the the radio and television spot an­ Cunningham on Mineral Spring terrible things teenagers do, she notmcements which Mrs. Gold­ Avenue, Kendall on Kendall said, when the ones she has stein wrote which were broadcast Street, Central Falls, or Clarke worked with have been so differ­ this month. Teenagers made the on Clarke Street, Cumberland, ent. Some of the volunteers last radio tapes - Leon Bl sis and which will serve Cumberland and summer, and this year, are from Christine Gattenell a of Pawtucket Lincoln. Doris Goldstein said C r o o k Manor and Prospect West High School and her daugh­ prospective volunteers should ,. Heights; they "did a fantastic job, ter. Marsha. telephone the Blackstone Valley and not for the glory." But Mrs. A minimum of 78 teenage vol­ Community Action Program at Goldstein "would like to see the unteers Is needed, and If they City Hall for an application or to children on the East Side who are DORIS GOLDSTE could sign up for every Monday Inquire about the program which bored with their swimming or every Wednesday or give a will help prepare 300 pre-klnder­ clubs" vohmteer, and noted that week It would help. Of the 75 al­ garmers, four and five years old, they could still swim and play ready signed up, 70 came to the for school next fall . . . for , the golf In the afternoon, as the pro­ training meeting for volunteers. education which many of them gram Is held Mondays through A second training session, for might find It Impossible to re­ Fridays from 8 a.m. to I p.m. volunteers who didn't get to the ceive meaningfully, were It not The former Girl Scout leader first, will be held on July 3rd, all for Head Start. thinks the teens are the most ex­ citing age of all: teenagers want to be needed, just as adults do, Sen. Pell Offers Program and they are needed In Head Start. "I believe In youth serving for Stable Mideast Peace youth. Teen volunteers are not Sen. Claiborne Pell outlined a Through the United Nations, babysitters, they help the teacher program for Mideast peace this we should Insist that the Arabs In planning the program for the i,veek In a Senate speech, here sit down and negotiate on a tace­ next day. If they play an In-' ,abbreviated: to-face basis with the Israeli strument the kids eat them up, or representatives - thereby se­ If they sing folksongs. They do If ever the Importance ot a curing acknowledgement ot Is­ almost everything the teacher high state ot military readiness, rael's sovereignty and very right does." the quality of leadership and ot to live as a nation. Doris Goldstein used to visit daring, have been demonstrated 2, Rearrangement of Tradi­ once a week. The chi! dren were In the pages ot history, It was tional Trouble ~pots so shy In the beginning, she com­ Marsha Goldstein, a volunteer 1dSt summer done less than a month ago on the A real ettort shoufd be made mented, " but by the time they bleak sands and deserts sur­ In these negotiations to resolve got to know you, they would come konk and other areas. If an adult o&her than clothe• ,~or what yOu're rounding Israel. Now that, be­ the problems ot those areas hug you. From being Ingrown and has time on her hands, here's a cooking that r,'.ght. Half of the cause ot her valor, Israel has ac­ which have proved to be volatile Introverts , they would become perfect opportunity for her, said board of :~rectors have worked quired a position ot strength from and the source ot friction. extroverts.'' the PR consultant, as help Is al so with girls (she was a troop leader which she can negotiate, I believe 3, Freedom ot Navigation When they enter kindergarten needed In the offices, for paper for f!ve years) and so has a right all the countries concerned through Aqaba and Suez Canal work, telephoning and transport. In the _fall, going from a class of to · speak about planning pro­ should concentrate on a construc­ Specifically I would suggest: 15 to a bigger class, they slip One of I ast summer's joys grams. They know what the girls tive, sensible, long-range solu­ -Declaring a demilitarized back, but not to where they were was going on field trips with ~he need, don't ask what return each tion that will stabilize the area zone tor the Gaza Strip, and along before Head Start. The program children and watching their 'reac­ of them will get now . "It's the once and tor all. the Israeli-Egyptian border I ast year showed an average In­ tions. "About 60 kids shrieked only women's organization I know Most Important, Israel must across the Sinai peninsula. crease of I,Q, of 15 to 20% for the ~nd wanted to know w.hef that was, where nobody expects to be patted be permitted to live and thrive In -Relocation ot the Syrian bor­ 180 children enrolled. In this when we saw a cr.·;.i . They went on the back." She has been In peace and security and be tully ders east of Lake Galilee, I would · year's program, 300 children will Into such a par.le at the planes Scouting for 14 years. accepted as an Independent nation urge the boundaries be adjusted meet In 18 classes , staffed by 29 that we had to take them away. A member of United Fund by her neighbors, I believe this, to follow the natural divide of the paid 'professional workers, 28 Some h11.vii never seen a book. Budget Panel #7 (for a fifth year), not only tor the sake ot Israel, ridges and heights, paid non-professional workers , •;You can be poverty stricken Doris Goldstein also does public but because Israel has become a three vollmteers, and teenage tr,many things, but In education It relations for the United Fund and model ot dynamic civilization and -Establishment ot an Inter­ volunteers. Is worse. There will be no pover­ was the first woman on that com­ ot cultural and economic devel­ national status for Jerusalem with "I don't think people r e·ally ty If these children are educated, mittee. Two aurumns ago, she opment which might well be fol­ access from both Israel and Jor­ realize how much pove.rfy there If we get them young enough and dressed as a little green lepre·­ lowed by other nations which have dan, as well as the pilgrims from Is until they go t.n·'some of the set them on a straight road. Edu­ ·chaun to adVertlse the UF cam­ recently achieved Independence, other lands. homes, lmny..culate, scrubbed cation Is the biggest weapon In paign. She also did some public P ~rsonally I wish there were 4. Relations with Jordan down, way.,M down, but with bare the world to fight poverty . . .. relations this year for the Paw- more states In the world as In- I would like to propose a per­ walls ~efd ceilings coming down. The only Illness In this country Is -tucker Llbr~ry Festival. , dustrlous, tree-thinking, and civ­ manent, bl-national organization Our 'children, those who are more lack of education. Educate people Doris Goldstein has always ilized as Israel. to be formed by-Is,ael and Jor­ 1::omfortably off, should know this. and the problems disappear. worked since she was married. It seems to me that the border dan. Its purpose would be to In­ It reaches them to stop thinking "If all the people sitting on Anybody can do It, she told me. dispute resulting from the war tegrate the J ordanlan refugees and worrying only about them­ fences 'talking about things that "You just have to get up 'a ll,ttle can only be resolved It Israel Into those 2 countries. selves, and they open a door to ought to be done, got up and did earlier, and have a family that herselt recognizes that bound­ Unless a close working rela­ another side of the world they them, everyone who's just living approves. That makes a world of aries are likely to be more stable tionship Is somehow reached with can't know until they work with It, or existing . . . from the day difference." She added that "this It established through negotiation at least .one of her many Arab They have a purpose, they get a you're born you have a responsi­ kaffee-klatsch business Is not for and mutually agreed upon rather neighbors, Israel will never have better understanding of people of bility to do more than exist, to do me. It makes me nervous." •than by force alone. true peace In our time• all ages and races, educated and something for others, whatever It Working from early morning I recommend these steps be 5. Refllgees uneducated. They'll see how com­ Is," Doris Goldstein, a member until 10 at nlF,ht as an unpaid vol­ taken to resolve the remaining Refllgee camps In the Gaza mon, not tmcommon, poverty Is In of Temple Emanu-El, said ener­ unteer. doesn t make her nervous. problems that divide Israel and strip and In Lebanon should be our state, and they'll come away getically. "I believe God has been The writing that began with the Arab countries: disbanded and an acreeR\ent with a knowledge of It." good to me. I've got__• good home scripts for Scouting shows edged 1. Face-to-Face Peace Par­ reached as to how the Inmates She would never have !(Otten and good life and good kids and I Into public relations, and the lays should be resettled,

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'· 16 llfE RHODE ISLAND HERALD ..PRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1967 NEW NAVY WEAP.c»IS teal, "Maarachot Yam.'' He also TEL AVIV-lsrael'1 navy 11 reporll8d that the Navy 11 bulld­ HERALD preparlng for acqul1ltion of. new Ing a modern elec:tronlca work­ wapona, -r than "anyweknow shop, as well as port matntenaJic:e to da18,'' Admiral Shlomo Ere!, the · facilttiH to permit operation and Classified Navy Commander, said recentiyln malntenanee of different types of an Interview In . the Navy period- naval vessels. Call 724-0200

3a - Apartments Wanted OAK HIU - PAWTUCKET, Six o, sev• . en room flot or house. For occupan­ cy August 1. Coll 723-0557 ofter 4. 7.7

I 7 - Floor Servicing V FLOORS washed and waxed. Kitchen and hard woods. Machine washed and paste wgxed. Special $4.75 per floo,. 397-5898, 944- 1784. 8-4 / 19 - General Services FLOOR CLEANING ond polishing. Also general home cleaning. lorry Dugan. 3.53-9648. ufn 20aa - Help Wanted - Men

HIGH SCHOOL or college age for temporary work helping owrier fo, up outside property around new home. 942-3613.

IN BANFF, ALBERTA - Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Adelman of 123 Ev­ MALE COUNSELOR for Jewish ori• ergreen Street were In Canada this week to participate In a four-day ented sleep-in camp. Must be e:11 · business conference with officers and fiel d representatives of the_Met­ perienced and over 20. Call for in­ Topolltan Life Insurance Company at the Banff Springs Hotel. Last terview oppointments, 8ryontville, year Mr. Adelman, a member of the staff of the ROS?:er Williams office Mos,. 617 293-3833. on Chalkstone Avenue, placed more than $1,000,000inlndlvldual life 1?­ surance and ranked among the top 400 leaders of Metropolitan Ufe s 21 - Helped Wanted • Women Stores open Regular Hours Monday, July 3rd nearly 30,000 field representatives In the United States and C&nada. TIME MEANS MONEY! Put spo,e CIOHcl All Day Tuesday, July 4'th hours to work and watch the dollars Community Action Accomplishes Much grow ond grow. Coll GA 1-2908. Week-End Meat Specials! 23ad - Houses for Sale BARRINGTON: 118 Governor Brod· In !!!!!Ytrol~!e ~uch t!!~a!~~.!~ooA? unem- ford Drive. Gracious Garrison Colo• There Is a senior citizens ployed who can, with the kind of niol 9 rooms, 5 bedrooms, center center In downtown Pawtucket, help now being offered them, find hall, large fireplaced living room, where they may drop in for rest, work and begin to break the pov­ dining room, kitchen, den or f~mily ROASTS relaxatlon, educational programs, ·erty cycle which has bound so room with sliding gloss doors to io· or and guldanceand counseling with a many neighborhoods across the lou sied porch. 2 ½ baths. Attached TOP BOTTOM ROUND two-car garage. Electr ic eye doors. Boneless, lean Roasts that will bring social worker. They found there nation. Fenced, treed yard. 4 years old. you Fun Eating Enjoyment, Full LB69( was a great need for such a cen- Addltlonal help will come with Low 50s. Call ofter 6 p.m. ter for the elderly to come and the hiring of a Manpower dlrec­ 245-2212,o, 245-3283. Delicious Flavor and Total Value. meet each other. BVCAP also had tor, for the underemployed who a Medlcare-Alert project, for don't make enough money to sup­ 35 - Private Instruction which they hired seven elderly port their families. BVCAP Is GUil AR LESSONS: Folk, Plectrum, people to go from house to house also advertising for a community Classic. Flexible summer scheduling. TURKEY ROAST In a clrywlde canvass. They found organizer to Increase resident Wayland Square. 351-4328. many elderly persons unknown to participation. "We have expanded . ( Social Security, and helped them Into three areas, Lincoln, Central ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 'TEACHER in· "· r ---~~~\!f Meat sign up for It. Falls and Cumberland, with our terested in tutoring grades I through 3½ to 5 LB Average "Poverty In the United States existing sulff," said the dlrector. 6. Hos experience in classroom 1 has been hidden. It's not visible "They were told they couldn't get teaching and tutoring . Call I/ L878( 351-8681. Delicious, Moist Turkey - A as It used to be during the depres=- funds unless they merged with the De~ght to Cook- Easy to Carve ·slon. We're coming to reallze existing program." This brings 38ab - Rooms Wanted that these problems exist, that an obvious administrative saving, because people are not In rags with one Head Start director In ROOM WANTED, Young mon. now, yet a family may have chtl- four areas, for example, and one non-~oker. Write R. I. Jewish Her· Produce Specials ! old, Sox 8-8, 99 Webster Street, dren going to school In turns as Commtml ty Action director In Pawtucket, R. I. 02861. Bursting with Melt-in-your-Mouih Goodness, Freshest Around there are not enough clothes for four areas. When Manpower gets_!,=:=~======-' them all to go at once, and maybe tmder way, the facilities of the authorities. (''Poor" Is a term they have no breakfast. Modern new trade school will be available that people who are themselves Sweet Corn 5 FOR 29' poverty doesn't sh(1w." part-time for training, and It will poor have no hesitancy In using Pawtucket has an unusually also train many who, hopefully, when they speak of poverty, but Red, Ripe and Full o[ Flavor, Refreshing, but Low in Calories high proportion of elderly people, will never be among the un-or people from agencies generally who often live on Incomes fixed underemployed. try to find a euphemism.) When by the standards, of many years "The representatl-ves of the - BVCAP began, there were people ago, whep a dollar purchased poor can do a lot we can't ·do," who just clldn't care what went on. Watermelon LB 4c much more than It does today. said the ell rector, "but working to- They had been Ignored or passed -They may have needs more Im- gether we have brought about · over so often, that apathy re- J.~rtant than jobs and education, commtmlty awareness andhave placed effort. They saw no use In Grocery Specials! sa"ld Mr. Ceglle. Health cotm- helped a lot .of poor people get trying to do anything about their sellng and homemaker service~ together to help themselves. -in problems, or get anyone to help. Always Fresh Tasting and recreational facilities are the Pleasant View neighbor- . Poverty Is just one of the prob- 1Ql probably more important to many hood dilapidated and good houses !ems, but It aggravates all the FINAST JAR of them. were next door to each other. others. Mayonnaise Pawrucket and the Blacksto!Jf the Valley and Al ...... effectlY• llwu ._.,y, July 3, 1967 among them. Community Action's war against it began, but many turn It Into a place In which ev- use of target-neighborhood rest- poor persons did not know where eryone has a chance to live (We R__,. the Right to limit Quanlitios) dents has made it apparent that to go or. ..-ere.afraid to go to ctvl~ decently.