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Czech Autopsy Report Oii' Jordan Rejected By Chairman Of JDC WASHJN:lTON, D.C. -;- An the cards sounded -normal and aftldal Czechoslovak patbologlat cheerful ... dectded on Monday that Charles Dr. Alexander Gonllc, repre­ H. Jordan, executlw vice-chair­ sentative of the JDC In Geneva, man and director general al. the and Prof. Ernest Hardmeyer ol. THE ONLY ENGLISH JEWISH WEEKLY IN R I AND SOUTHEAST ti.ASS American Joint Distribution the Legal Medical Institute al Committee, had died by drowning. Zurich were to perform a second He said that found no signs post-mortem examination. 24 PAGES he ot VOL. LI, NO. 26 FRIDAY, AOOUST 25, 1967 lS, PER COPY 'Violence on the body, according to "I consider myself an Inter­ the State Department national ctvl1 servant,'' Charles Mr. lordan, 59, was visiting _Harold Jordan told an Interviewer Workmen's Com pension Expert, Wife Czechos ovalda with his wife as a two years ago. "I go any place I tourist. He left his hotel on am sent to and where the people Wednesday night, Aug. 16, to buy may need me." Honored By Trial Lawyers' Association a paper and was not seen again. In 1941 Mr. Jordan began his His body was found on Sunday In work with the Joint Distribution By LOIS AlWOOD the Vltava River In Prague. Committee as director for the For years Edward I. Fried­ Louis Broldo, chairman of the Caribbean area, with headquar­ man had wanted his wife Nettle to JDC, which helps needy Jews ters In Havana. He had already sit on a jury, 'but when her turn overseas, said that on Sunday he seen service with the Jewish for duty came 10 weeks ago, she asked Czechosl ovaklan author- Family Welfare Society of Phila­ was never picked. As the wife of 1ties to delay the autopsy· until delphia, the Philadelphia County a plaintiff trial attorney, other medical representatives of the Relief Board, the Jewish Social lawyers assumed that she would JDC arrived. Service Association In New York automatically be on the side of "The fact that the Czechs re­ City, the National Committee for the pl alntlff and did not call her. fused to delay the autopsy, we the Resettlement of Foreign Phy­ Her two weeks of sitting there find a highly suspldous circum­ sicians and the National Refugee were very enlightening, and she stance, so suspicious that we Service. has already made several sug­ cannot escape the conclusion that After two years In the Carib­ gestions about the jury lounge. the Czech Government Is cov­ bean area,Mr. Jordan enlisted In She found conditions for ·women ering up for something of which the Navy . and served as a phar­ Jurors not very comfortable, and they must have had knowledge," macist's mate third class before hopes that the Women's Auxiliary he said. rejoining the JDC at the end of of the American Trial Lawyers Mr. Broldo rejected the re­ the war as director of Far Eastern Association may make a donation port of drowning, as did close as'­ activities. From headquarters In (with the court s permission) to soclates and friends of the senior Shanghai, he supervised a pro­ alleviate the boredom of waiting refugee officer, Mr. Jordan was gram, of relief, rehabilitation and Jurors. cheerful when he left the hotel, migration for 15,000 European The ATLA, an association of his wife remarked, and the hotel refugees. about 30,000 lawyers, reelected was at least three miles from the - In 1948, he moved to Parts to Mr. Friedman as State Com­ MR. AND MRS. EDWARD I. FRIEDMAN river. She said that he had looked take charge of the Immigration mitteeman for Rhode Island for forward to going to Israel, where deparonent of the "Joint," over­ two years, at Its 21st national dream when he went back to law form Is still the basic law. he was to address the Inter­ seeing the emigration and In­ convention In Minneapolis, Minn., school, but It was rough going During his tenure on the Com­ national Conference of Jewish tegration of hundreds of thou­ last month, and the women's when he finished NYU law school pensation Board, Edward Fried­ Communal Service In Jerusalem. sands of displaced Jewish per­ group re-elected Mrs. Friedman In 1931. With his wife and baby he man felt It his duty to suggest , Many of Mr. Jordan's friends sons. to a ninth consecutive term as came back to Providence, where lmprowments and ~•tings Ir. and members of the JDC staff had From 1959 to 1961, he\ served treasurer. he served his clerkship, was ad- the Rhode Island Jaw, so annually · recelwd letters and post cards as co-chairman of the Inter­ They have shared his legal In- mltted to the Bar and practiced he wrote a report with the other malled by him on the day he dis­ national Committee · tor World >, , ~ terests since she talked him Into privately until 1940, heads of the divisions which went appeared, said Mr. Broldo. "All (Continued on Page 23) going back to Jaw school; she took The first civil service exam- to the Assembly. When sessions some law courses at the same !nation ever given for any com- opened, he actually drafted time, and at conventions she slips pensatlon chairman or admlnls- amendments, followed them up Providence Council Of Jewish Women out of the fashion shows In order trator In the entire country was w I th syn op se s and ~ffered to attend the legal lectures. "I given In 1939, and he took It. He speeches to back them up; these think a lawyer's wife should be I ater found out he was first on were turned over to leaders In able to converse with other law- the list, and In 1940 the Van- both houses. Gives Israel Emergency Fund SS,000 yers,'' said Mrs. Friedman, who derbllt administration appointed Among the 60 or so actually The Providence section of the GJC officials al so announced a prefers vivid, highly Individual him head of the Division of Work- enacted Into Jaw was the bill set­ National Council of Jewish Wom­ gift of $1,000 from the Ladles costumes. (Her husband de- men's Compensation for the ting up the Rhode Island Curative en I as~ week made a gift of $5,000 Hebrew Free Loan Association of scribed one dress which really state. Thirteen years later he re- Center, the first state-operated to the United Jewish Appeal Is­ Providence for the Israel stood out at last year's con- signed to return to private prac- rehabilitation center In the United rael Emergency Fund, at General Emergency Fund. ' ventlon, and said she dresses for tlce. When the local newspaper States, for tho~e Injured at work. Jewish Committee headquarters Robert A. Rlesman, general him and for other men, rather printed an Interview and editorial Originally It called for leaders In In Providence. campaign chairman, said It Is than for women.) on hi s practical suggestions for all phases of health, welfare, Mrs. Irving Goldfarb, trea­ hoped that other organizations In Nettie Friedman, a "native of improving the workmen's law, compensation, and related fields surer of the Providence section the area will follow the example the Golden West,'' Is from San and said that an amendment to the to cooperate for rehabilitation of the Council, said that the mon­ of the two women's groups. Francisco. She met Edward law should be drawn up which and later for placement of work­ ey was taken from a reserve fund In a letter to Mrs. Joseph Friedman while she was modeling embodied his Ideas, Mr. Fried- ers who could return to employ­ acquired through selling mer­ Schein, Providence section i;,resl­ In New York. A Brown University man decided that "on that high ment, but "we never could get chandise given by members and dent, and Mrs. Goldfarb, Joseph graduate, he had taught school In note I should resign" and did. th! s conglomerate group to oper­ friends to the Council's Thrift Galkin, GJC executive dlri,ctor, Phil adelphla for six months and Governor Roberts asked him ate. Each wanted to do It their Store at 174 Ives Street. She ,said thanked the organization and said then had gone to New York City to to draw up a complete revision of way," so the center operates only the gift was approved by ' the the funds will be sent Immediate­ work In the knit-good business. It the Workmen's Compensation for workmen's compensation ln­ Council's Board of Directors and ly to Israel where they are was the culmination of an old laws, which In somewhat amended (Contlnued on Page 22) the membershlP-at-large. needed • &:525252::.t oo&5oc:5602So&2522i2SWoo&ScScS&5 .:>Q2: 2:: • 52Y995&S2W9SNYYS?95?5?- K- Coed Finds II' s Easier To Make Friends Abroad If You're Jewish LOIS A1WOOD It Is still a children's holiday. The French people have a By The French make Challe, and reputation for being very family- The Jewish college student cook roast beef or·chlcken on the centered and warm, she noted, who spends a year abroad has a Sabbath. Salads tend to be differ- and for her this was true. She ate definite ·edge on non-Jewish fel- ent 4nd vegetables are served every Friday and Saturday with low students. according to Steph- with more sauces than we use. friends made through the syna- anle Zaldman who was, bri!'flY, There -are French fries all over gogue, and during the week could back home In Warwick this sum- 'France, but no baked potatoes. just drop In to listen to records mer. Miss Zaldman especially enjoyed or watch television with them. A senior at Kalamazoo Col- veal cooked with a delicious She also met quite a few Jew- Jege In Michigan, she spent two cream sauce. Jewish culture Isn't lsh boys from various French or quarters of her Junior year In too different, she found, whether former French provinces study- France at the University of Cler- you're In Europe or the U. S. Ing at the School of Taxes In mont-Ferrand. She found that she The families she ate with Clermont .. •and some 20 Mos- got to know more French people bought evecythlng from Vichy, !ems from Morocco. "There was wen than other classmates could about 30 miles away, which was a lot of kidding back and 'torth. I In the six months they were the nearest place where kosher think there was more suspicion there. food could be purchased. She was on the part of the Jewish kids In "Being Jewish, we had the told that up to as many as 5,000 France than on the part of the same'ldnd of basic similarity, the Jews come to Vichy for the- high Moroccans, but we decided that same 'baslo customs and holidays holidays, and a kosher hotel Is Individuals got along fine" even If and the same current Interests. open there from May through the their countries didn't. An Israel! We were Interested In our rel!- holidays (the tourist season). couple there agreed with a Syrian glon and wanted to learn about It. Stephanie "definitely planned they met In the cafeteria on how "I was "hesitant about going to It this way." She took a Baptist their respectlw eountrles should countries wllere Jews are In a friend with her the first time she behave towards each other, and deftnlte minority, but I found my- went to the synagogue, because the Syrian ~d dlat the branch al. i,elf maldng p,od relationships,'' she was afraid to walk back alone a minority party, which was run• she said. after dark along the deserted nlng his country, did not speak Sabbath food was the same streets, but after that first at- for the majority. general thing In Prance and In tendance at a service she never All the students Stephanie met Outside the restaurant at her school In aennont, Stephanie Rhode Island, but at Chanukah again needed to worry about from the middle east felt thla Zaldman po~s with .her best friends, a young man from Mo­ they eat crepes Instead of latices. walldng home by herself, (Continued on Pap 22) rocco and one from Prance. She had many Arab friends. 2 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AOOUSI' 25, 1967 Subscribe to the Herald. ON RUl'GERS SrAPF INDIANAPOLIS - Theodore Ancient Jerusalem Exhibit . Walden, exeeutlw director of the Indiana and Indianapolis Jewish Opens At Hebrew University LISA'S Community Relations Counclls, has been appointed assistant pro­ JERUSALEM - An exhibl• Other exhibits are two Imagi­ HAIR FASHIONS fessor at school of tion which has Just opened at the native maps of Jerusalem which 1730 SMITH STREET soclal welfare of Rutgers Univer­ Hebrew University's Jewish Na­ describe it as the center of the NORTH sity in New Brunswick, NJ. tional and Uilverslty Library, on world, travel books written by PROVIDENCE the occasion of the relllliftcation pilgrims, photographs of Gobelln of Jerusalem, Illustrates how· the carpets ot Jerusalem, paintings WI 1•2140 ~ !'!ll-- CE 1-9695 area 1n front of the Wall of Jerusalem In anclent books, Miss Elisa Coletti BUICK SERViC• looked in ancient times. etc. Out of tbelr love for Jerusa:­ Clark's Auto ~•• 1ill:. The exhibition, "Ai!clent Je­ lem Jews portrayed the Holy City s,.doli.riDfl In luid S- 1'20 rusalem 1n Uterarure, Art and In a combination of fantasy and ;i-,. ST. PIOV. Maps,'' shows among other reality. There are many paintings ...... ,~&~•--: things, that the houses near the . by Jews where the Mosque of Wall, the destruetion of which Omar Is referred to as being lo­ last month resulted In an outcry cated on "The Chosen Place." ' The exhibition reveals the en­ Represented by Off., 421-4641 In certain clrcles abroad, did not deavors of Jews to return to the MAX ROTHKOPF Res.: 941-4810 exist 125 years ago. A painting made by a pilgrim Old City, to redeem the Western In 1842 shows Jews praying at a Wall and Its surroundings. In THE LA WRY ,COMPANY considerable distance from the I 908, the Assoclation for the Re­ Est. 1922 OUR YOUNGER SET - Andrew Wall; the square appears very demption af the .Western Wall ls­ and Hwy Black are the sons of wide, suggesting that the recent sued a call for the collection of Monuments - Cemetery Lettering Mr. and Mrs. Leo N. !31ack of desrruction of houses actually re­ funds to rent the courtyards and West Hartford, Conn., and the stored the square to the situation houses In the vicinity of the Wall. 9 o.m. - 5 p.m. 440 Cranston St. grandsons of Mr. and Mrs. Sam­ existing before the second half of In the days of the Mandate, proc- E~ s. and Sunday by appt. Providence, R:I . uel P. Black of 23 Warrington the last century. A photograph 1 amations were Issued by the Ir· Street. from the Isner part of the 19th gun ZVai Lemnl Qewlsh Under­ century shows the existence of ground Organization) for Jews to houses close to the Wall . pray at the Western Wall . The USSR Jewish Writers In view of the Interest shown first president of the Hebrew In the exhibition, the Library has University, Dr . •Judah Magnes, added a considerable amo\Dlt of foWlded a group of Jewish stu• Ask Israeli Withdrawal material to the display. An Inter­ dents which was active from 1939 - The Sovietische esting exhibit Is the text of the to 1947 among Jewish youth In the Helmland, the only Yiddish publi­ prayer of the Rambam, uttered Old City. The abundance of mate­ cation In the Soviet Union, pub­ before the gates of a desolate Je­ rial reveals the clty's signifi­ lished In Its current Issue a let­ rusalem, upon bis arrival In 1267 cance to Christians as well as to ter from a gro~ ot SoYtet Jewish - exactly 700 years ago. The Jews throughout the centuries. writers supporting the SoYtet arrival of the RambalJl renewed The exhibition has been set up Government's position In the Jewish settlement In Jerusalem, by Mrs. Odlle Grinberg, librar- Middle East dispute. following the Mameluke conquest. ian. · The lener made a reference to the "aggressive policy of 19- raell ruling circles" In urging the unconditional withdrawal ot ) Israeli foroes from Arab-occu­ pled territories but was generally I MRS, SAMUELBERNHARI1I' Eva (Goldberg) Welner; a son, much milder than current Soviet Mrs. Rose Bernhardt, 86, for­ Robert, of Los Angeles, and two propaganda blasts against Israel. merly of Brookline, Mass., died brothers, Irving Welner of Wood­ It made no reference to the on Monday. She was the wife of bine Street, Providence, and Ar­ charges of Nazi-like atrocities the I ate Samuel Bernhardt. Ser­ thur Welner of Newport,- which haw consistently marked vices were held at the Solomon • . . Soviet anti-Israel propaganda. Funeral Home, Brookline, on JOHN ZOCKERBERG The letter noted that Soviet Wednesday. Funeral services for John Premier Kosygin told the United THIS YEAR Survivors are two sons, Ber­ Zuclcerberg, 82, of 16 Rtwrfarm Nations General Assembly In • tram L. of Providence and Ray­ Road, Cranston, who died Sunday, June that the Soviet Union was not mond S, of Buffalo, N,Y .: a sis­ were held on 'Imsday at the Max against Israel but only opposed SEND PERSONALIZED ter, Catherine Cohen af Brook­ SUgarman Memorial Chapel. Bur­ , lts "aggressive pollcy~ The So­ line, and two grandchildren. ial was 1n Lincoln Park Ceme­ viet Union has always' supported tery. He was the husband of Annie · '- New Ye.ar Greeti~gs the right of big and small nations • • • (SchlJQmerman) Zuckerberg. MRS, ABRAHAM KELMAN to national Independence," the Born In Austria on Nov. 17, letter stated. "This Is why the Funeral services for Mrs. Sar­ 188-4, a son of the late Joseph and Soviet Union voted In 1947 for tlie ah (Bllsteln) Kelman, 58, of 95 Ruth Zuclcerberg, he had lived In MONOGRAM SHOP U.N, declslon to create an Arab Whitmarsh Street, who died Aug. Providence for a nmnber of years and a jewtsh State In Palestine." 17 after an Illness of seven before moving to Cranston In has an unusual collection of "'We urge all progressive weeks, were held the following 1932. Jewish Wrilf'rS and CUitural day at the Max SUgarman Me­ Until hi s retirement In 1947 modern and traditional styles workers, Indeed Jews throughout morial Chapel. Burial was In he had been proprietor of the for­ the whole world, to raise their Lincoln Park Cemetery. mer Empire Showcase Company, to choose from voice for peace In the Middle n,e wife of Abraham Kelman, North Main Street, cabinet East and for withdrawal of Israeli she was born In Providence en makers, for 30 years. 135 Washington Street Providence troops behind the truce lines and Dec. 8, 1908, a daughter af the He was a member of Congre­ - Open Tues. & Thurs. eves 'til 9 - for promotion of an atmosphere late Dllvld and Esther L. (Kogan) gation Sons of Abraham. of respect for the rights of all Bllsteln.. She had been a lifelong Besides his wife, he Is sur­ countries and peoples In this resident of Pr ovidence. vived by a son, Morris Zucker­ area," the letter said. She was a graduate of the for­ berg of Providence: seven daugh­ It linked the Issue with the mer Providence Commercial ters, Mrs. Lawrence Wolk of death of 6,000,000 European Jews High School and was executive Warwick, Mrs. Leonard Feiner of by the statement that a people secretary of Temple Beth El for Providence, Mrs. Bernard Ber­ which had suffered such a tragedy 25 years Wltll she retired In ens and Mrs. Martin• Johnson of "clearly knows the dangers of 1953. At that time she was made Cranston, Mrs. Henry Gallup of ', military conflicts." an honorary life member for her Fall River, Mass., Mrs. Harold outstanding services to the Dwyer of Hartford, Conn., and Burmese Join temple. Mrs. Richard Dixon of Atlanta, Mrs. Kelman was a member Ga.; two brothers, Emanuel Zuck­ UN Suez Team ol the Pioneer Women, the Jewish erberg of Cranston and David Home for the Aged and the Sister­ Zuckerberg of North Miami, Fla.; UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. hoods of Temple Beth El and a sister, Mrs. Goldie Shapiro of Five Burmese army officers haw Congregation Shaare Zedek. Verona, N.J .: 15 grandchildren arrived In Jerusalem to Join the Besides her husband, she ls and six great-grandchildren. United Nations team of observers survived , by two sisters, Mrs. • • • In the Suez Canal area, It was Max Millman of North Kingstown Unveiling Notices disclosed here. They will take up and Mrs. Samuel I. Talan of their posts after being briefed by Providence, two nephews and two The unveiling of a monument in Lt. Gen. Odd Bull, the Secretary nieces. memo,y of the late SYLVIA BER­ General's personal representa­ ANBAUM will take place on Sun-­ tive, who ls directing the cease­ • • • day, August 27, at 1:30 p.m. in fire observation operation. BENJAMIN J, WEINER Lincoln Parli: Cemetery. Relatives The Middle East Crisis Issue Benjamin J, Welner of 2035 and friends are invited to attend. "ATOUCHOF was formally-returned to the Se­ Garth Avenue, Los Angeles, Cal., curity Council when the Secretary died Aug. 22 at the age of 59. He The double un.,.iling of a monu­ General transmitted to that body had lived in Los Angeles for 11 ment in memory of the late SAM· SPLENDOR" the records of the emergency years, and before that had been UEL A. COHEN and SADIE G. CO­ of HEN . wiU tako pla.- on Sunday, special session the general for many years a resident of September 10 at 1 p.m. in Lincoln Fram the ltaliu Renail­ Assembly which had struggled Providence. Park C.metery. Relatives and .._ - the ipirit aad with the question from June 17 to He ls survived by his wife, friends a,. invited. July 21. . IWlltaDce of lbe 16th The Egyptian delegation com­ ceatu,y ia captured in a complete collection of bed- plained to the Secre(ary General -. diaina - liviua - pieca . ' . in • deep that Israel was attempting ''to Max Sugarman Funeral Home buuaial fiuh - oak - aad aolid.. escape Its obllgations under the Hague Gonvention af 1954" on the "THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR" ,.l'DUONAUZD> D/ICOltATIIIG" preservation of cultural property in the areas occupied by Israel. -MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION- Israel, In another lener to the Secretary General, rejected Jor­ DE 1-8094 458 Hope Street DE 1-8636 ~91... .L dan's charge that caprured docu­ ments puhllshed by Israel, estab­ FUIINITURE GALLERY lls[)Jng that Jordanian forces had FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM OUT-OF-STATE been ordered to klll lsraell clvll­ lans, -re forgeries. The 19- CALL COWCT r•lls offered the docwnents for inspection. 1lfE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY,AOOUST 25, 1967 3 of For news Is~! and world­ 11 wide Jewry, of local organizations HALF-TON OF PLUMS me1 label used for Israel farm and society, read the Herald, •• and HAIFA - Half-a-ton of for- roduee exports. for some of the best bargains In mosa plmns from Hebron were the Greater Providence area. airfreighted by El Al to West Eu­ V fl r, 4 Re1i0~ wi.1 rope In a trial shipment organ­ ized by Agrexco. 'The Formosa JU'.M l/tehl! Oo. Carr~ MOODU5 5 CONN FLOWERS strain Is not cultivated by Israeli ~ FOR farmers, but Agrexco lnt'11lds to C ■ - ■=:-~n::. :.,:- test the market response by ship­ • Fllte...rIDundneted-..oeli _40ic85 ALL ping the fruit tmder the · "Car- e 3 Air..COndltloned Dlnlil, R_oorn~ OCCASIONS e Top Notch DAY CAMP - MITE PATROL CLARK'S • PRE-CAMI' MURSIRY - s.,-. don't swelter rote Dl■ lnt R- e TEEM AGI Rascal Flower Shop, Inc. Roorn - DISCOTHIOUI'""'°'" - in your car, • Ait-Cond. Mlff·CLUIJROOM - 294 Thayer Street LOUNGE - EMTERTAIMMEMT air condition MITEL Y - SHOWS GA 1-6700 e Pvt. Deluxe Cotta,e,._HEJ.TED, now CARPETED • Pvt. LAK~ilnr11in9, booting, LEARN HOW TO " fishing MARK IV cle:,le r e MEW TENNIS cauit lose weight e FREI GOLF on pre111i- BOSTON • JEWISH-AMERICAN • cul■ lne - lax to lobster &keep it off RADIATOR & BODY WKS 18S PINE STREET GA 1-262S COLbR BROCHURE write or phone with Weight 203 873-8649 Watchers All forms ol personal and business insuran~ Join Weight Watche~s.· NEW OPENINGS including - Lile - Accident - Group - Fire - Monday at 5 P.M. Automobile - Casualty - Bonds Sloeraton-lllm,..,. Hotel Wednesday at 8 P.M. (fOI MEN ONlY) Murry _M. Halpert 159 ...... AMnve 800 Howard Bldg. Thursday at 8 P.M. DE 1-9100 Residente: DE 1-6949 Mrs. Irwin Gaffin Ea■tP'ro,ride-YMCA For Further Information Rabbi William Kaufman offici­ Miss Darlene A. Sadwln, the Coll ated at the wedding of Miss Susan maid of honor, was gowned In A CHALLENGE TO ALL GOLFERS 831-0337 . Sadwln, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. pale blue chiffon with a Jeweled Harold L. Sadwln, of 60 Kennedy neckline etched with lace, a Street, Woonsoclcet, to Irwin Gal­ semi-fitted silhouette and flowing WARWICK NECK GOLF COURSE fin, at a noon wedding at Congre­ chiffon oversldrt. Her matching 150 GREY STREET, WARWICK 739-6311 TOWER gation B'nal Israel, Woonsocket, chiffon plllbox held a bouffant TO THE FIRST GOLFER on Stmday, Aug. 20. Mr. GaffIn Is veil. She carried a basquette of $100 IN CASH WHO PARS THIS COURSE, 1he son of Benjamin Galfln of 378 blue delphlnlmn and stephanotls. OR MERCHANDISE AMATEUR OR PROFES- HOUSE Bonito Street, New Bedford, Mlchael P. Gaffln served as Mass., and the late Mrs. Beatrice best man for his brother. Ushers SIONAL! zetman Gaffln. A reception a1 the were Barry Perlow, Howard B. RULE: You must play in a foursome and report to pro shop RESTAURANT­ synagogue followed the ceremony. Sac!Wln, brother of 1he bride, after first nine. 'The bride, given In marriage Lawrence B. Sadwln, Jon Stier- Thi, is o Professional Golf Course on the "Blue Rock" type designed by COCKTAIL LOUNGE by her parents, wore a gown of wait, Arthur I. Baskin and Martin Geoffrey S. Cornish, 18 Holes - Lorge Greens and Tee,. Beautiful white silk organdy with a Renais­ I. Esmer. Cocktail lounge. Snock Bar. sance look. 'The stem-line body 'The bride, a 1967 graduate of Public Invited and Empire bodice of 1he gown Woonsocket High School, will en- IMPORTANT DIRECTIONS: Follow signs to Rocky Point until you reach JCT. ROUTES 1 & 138 were trimmed with embroidered ter Dean Jtmlor College In the Warwick Neck Avenue. Turn right on Meadowview Ave. (2nd Street Alencon lace and seed pearls, and SOUTH KINGSTOWN fall . Mr. Gaffln was graduated •"•-•"p;o:,t:K:o;:ys::°':u;:g:.S,.t:o.r.,e;:) =·:F_o•l:lo:w:.°"- •'"r;:p;in;k:_o•r:ro:w:•:· :::::::::::::::~ Closed Monday Its stand-up collar was also from TIiton School for Boys In i trimmed with Alencon lace and 1964, and wlll graduate from the OP."f/ _daily ,4 . f'.~. to Midnight seed pearls. An open crown flow­ Babson Institute of Q_uslness Ad­ Painting, Decorating or Remodeling l Sunday from 12 noon er drop headpiece made of ministration In 1968. He Is a PFC matching embroidered Alencon with the U. S, Army Reserves, FOR COMPLETE RUG and CARPET SERVICE FOR RESERVA hONS I ace and seed pearls held 1he 483rd Engineering Battalion, Fort bouffant silk Illusion elbow length Rodman, New Bedford. ST 3-2516 veil . 9ie carried a Colonial bou­ Mr. and Mrs. Gaffln will re­ quet of gardenias and srephanotls. side at 71 Chesmut Street.Shar­ CALL on. Mass. NATIONAL LABORATORUS Tenczar Studios Photo FOR RESEARCH & TESTING, INC. Rigt,ts Commission PRODUCT CERTIFICATION To Review Complaint 40 ORMS ST., PROVIDENCE, R.I. COMPONENT TESTING END PRODUCT EVALUATION Of Unhired Orthodox TEST MElllOD DEVELOPMENT NEW YORK - "The State DE 1-8086 -FOR- Commission for Human Rights TEXTILES METALS was ordered by State Supreine RUG and • Soles • Tackle ss Installations PLASTICS JEWEJ..aT • Repairing • Fitting & laying RUBBER CHEMICALS Court Justice Jacob Markowitz to reconsider its dismissal of a CARPn • Storage • Dying & Moth Proofing 332 Barton St., Pawt., R.I., 722-4320 complaint by an Orthodox Jew that he was refused a job wl th the SAM AND BERNARD GREEN Met r op o II tan Life Insurance Company because of his religion, Bernard Rubin of Brooklyn charged that he had been refused a position as a computer pro­ Hi-, I'm Pete's grammer alter he had told a per­ sonnel Interviewer that be ob­ served the Sabbath on Saturday and so would have to leave the of­ CRUISES Marisa-... fice earlier on· winter Fridays. Mr. Rubin said, In his complaint, Co.me visit my that the total annual loss from his DON'T BE LEFT OUT! early departures would be 16 1 /2 Daddy's store hours, which he offered to make Experienced travelers up by coming to work early or by See Al/The deductions from his pay. 'The Hu­ man Rights Commission • dis­ book early to get cabins and Nice.Things He Sells/ missed his complaint. rates of their choice. In the Supreme Court It was argued by Metropolitan that Mr. HE ALSO HAS THE Rubin's claim .of discrimination CALL US TODAY FOR LA TEST FREE was ludicrous since 2,000 or BOOKLET LISTING CRUISES, more of Its home office and 40 r LOWEST PRICES per cent of Its district office COSTS AND MINIMUM RATES. managers are Jewish, Wlllard W, ON Peck, second vice-president and TELEVISIONS AND APPLIANCES associate personnel officer of Metropolitan, In papers filed In Honeymoon Trips Our Specialt1 the case, declared that the com­ Call u1 for "all tripl adverliMd in N.Y. nm- ■ pany had for many years "follow­ FREE & IMMEDIATE CONFIRMATIONS t r''r'£'C' ELECTRIC ed a rigorous nondiscrimination P personnel policy." CaU Anytime L .1 .i ,JAPPLIANCES He said It was necessary for all employees to adhere to a tml­ form schedule of hours, especial­ Zelda Kouffman c.T.c. ly In the computer department ( Certified Travel Counselor) where the • 'convenience of the 414 SILVER SPRING ST. Prov., R.I. CRANSTON TRAVEL - 801 PARK AVE. CRANSTON 861-2340 · 861-6074 equipment'' must supersede the "convenience oftheprogram­ eve,. by appointment 781:-4977 mer.'' ____ ,,, __ _ _.. ______

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4 TI-IE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 · IN.FOR~TION CENTER !sh community. Simon called on Eban To Write VIENNA-A new· Israel Infor­ the Austrian Government to take mation Center was dedicated here a firm stand against attempts by Sook O,n Power recently In the presence of Israel the Arab states to get Israel Ambassador Michael Simon, civic · branded as an aggressor In the officials and leader)' ot ~he Jew- Middle East war. In Middle East NEW YORK Random House will publish, next spring, a ''MIXER'' book about the new power rela­ tionship emerging In the Middle JEWISH COLLEGE-AGE SINGLES GROUP East. Forelio, Minister Abba Eban of Israel, In his first major Mix and Mingle • Fun Galore written work, will ref I e ct on the ) recent war and Its effect on the Bring Your Friends political and economic evolution of Israel and surrounding Arab SA TU RDA Y NIGHT, AUGUST 26 countries. "It will not be a history, but a from 8:30 until? collection of Ideas, Images and TEMPLE BETH AM, 40 GARDINER ST., WARWICK discourses on the Middle Eastern problem and of Israel within it,'' ENTERTAINMENT-REFRESHMENTS ADMISSION $1.00 he exp! ained. · Mr. Eban agreed recently to TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL write the book for Random House, · 155 Niagara Street thus ending a scramble by sev­ Providence, R.I. eral major publishing _houses for the rights to publish his works. Has dates available for the Fall and Winter A contract with Mr. Eban season 1967-1968 in its newly completed was regarded as a prize in _the. air-conditioned Social Hall. Plan to have your publishing trade, and his advance Bar Mitzvahs, Weddings, Anniversaries, and all on royal ties was said to exceed social functions here. $75,000. Since the Middle East - Seating capacity 300. - crisis flared up In June, publi­ You are welcome to inspect our fine focilities. shers have been engaged In a wide search for books by quali­ For further information call Temple Office at fied historians and writers on the WI 1-6668 or HO 1-1186 days call St victory of Israel and Its Implica­ ·1-9330 evenings. tions. "We think we are fortunate Mrs. Frank Shatz for having been able to get Mr. BIG Eban' s book," Robert Bernstein, Helen Esther Marks, daughter Bridesmaids were Mrs. Leon­ president of Randon House, said of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Marks of ard Halpern, sister of the bride­ Saturday. "Not only does he have 506 Prairie Avenue, became the groom, MJss Tina Kaufman, Miss an Ideal scholarly and profes­ bride of Frank Shatz, son of Mr. Jeri Levy and Mi ss Sara Linder, sional background, but we are and Mrs. Thomas Shatz of 33 The attendants were dressed In also convinced that the Churchil­ FLOOR COVERING CO. Elma Street, at a 6 p.m. candle­ pelican pink chiffon empire lian style of his speeches will light wedding on Sunday, Aug. 20, SHOWROOM: Rear sheath gowns which were de­ easily carry over Into his writ­ 195 Cole Avenue at Temple Beth El . Rabbi William s I g n e d with flowered petal ing." G, Braude and Cantor Ivan E, sleeves and flowing chiffon Wat­ In addition to the book on Is­ Perlman oftlclated at the cere­ teau trains. "They wore matching rael's role In the Middle East, He did it again with drops and ends mony which was toll owed by a re­ flower headpieces with blusher He ' ll save you enough till your pocketbook bends Random House has asked the ception at the temple. vell s. They carried spray bou­ Foreign Minister to write a short Carpet or inlaid it's no never mind Given In marriage by her fa­ To him they handle as one of a kind quets of fashion carnations and history of Israel by the end of ther, the bride wore a whl te sweetheart rose s. 1968, and another publishing Your credits no good - So cash you must pay sheath gown of silk organza over But so must his sister or Mom tHe same way house, Atheneum, wants to pllh­ taffeta fashioned with a scoop llsh his memoirs. Quality and Service - 30 years do prove neckline and short sleeves. "The Best man was Arnold Kauf­ S.0 call the BIG-T before making your move. man, brother-In-law of the bride. "I've never published a single empire bodice and the front of the . word," he said "I know It will be MURRAY TRINKLE FLOOR COVERING CO. skirt were appllqued wl th re-em­ Ushers were Herbert Marks, brother of the bride, Leonard extremely dlfflcul t to find the Call me any time at: 521-2410 broidered Alencon lace accented time. But I do have some ex- ' with clusters of seed pearls. Her Halpern, brother-in-law of the bridegroom, Phlltp Greenberg, cellent training In writing my veil of English Uluslon fell from speeches on planes and In foreign a pillbox of matching lace and and Charles Ingerson II. "The bride's mother wore a hot hotel rooms and I'm sure this seed pearls:-She carried a prayer will be very useful ." book covered wl th orchids and pink crepe sheath gown with , JACK'S FABRICS beading, and the mother of the stephanotl s. , 'KEEP CAPITAL UNDIVIDED' bridegroom was dressed in a hot Mrs. Arnold Kaufman, sister BONN-Rolf Vogel, editor of pink chiffon sheath with a flowing DRAPERIES of the bride, was matron of hon­ ''Oeutschland-Berichte," writes, or. She was gowned In two-tone train. Both wore white orchids. "It ls my personal wish that Is­ After a wedding trip to San For Homes and Offices pink peau de sole and wore a Dior rael will succeed In keeping Je­ Juan, Puerto Rico, the couple wlll SLIP COVERS BEDSPREADS bow with a blusher veil as a rusalem as an undivided city, as headpiece. Her spray bouquet reside at 6 Lachance Avenue, Its capital. As a Berliner myself, UPHOLSTERING WINDOW SHADES was of fashion carnations and Warwick. I know only too well what It sweetheart roses. Fred Ket man Photo means for a city to be divided and CALL PA 5-2160 for there to be pl aces on the oth­ I I er side, which are so important FOR AN EXPERIENCED DECORATOR 'Away We Grow' Chosen As Slogan and evoke particular feelings." ----- "Pree access to the Holy We Will Gladly Help You With Any Places of all the religions must Home Decorating Problem You May Have For NCCJ-Sponsored Camp Ourtown remain a permanent milestone on ., Away We Grow" is the slo­ son of Fairlawn, N.J ., and Mark the way to peace. The situation Call Us Now. No Obligation. gan of Camp Ourtown, U.S.A., Silber of Harvard.Religious serv­ must never be allowed to arise 725 OEXTER STREET CENTRAL .FALLS Sharon, Mass., where 143 Rhode ices will be conducted by the again when friends- of Israel are forced to make detours In order MON., TUES., WED., FRI. and SAT. 9 lo S,30; THURSDAY 9 lo 9 Island and Massachusetts teen­ Rev. Herbert 0, Edwards, Law­ agers are discussing the prob­ rence Goldenberg and the Rev. to reach the Holy Places at Beth­ lems of growing up in modern Thomas J. Coskren. Miss Feath­ lehem, Jericho and In Jerusalem, America. The camp Is sponsored erstone will r,resent her "One­ or that It ts Impossible for them by the National Conference of Woman Show ' and "In White to do so because of political black PROVIDENCE Christians and Jews through the America.•• lists. NCCJ Youth Council, which planned the five day program HEBREW ending tomorrow, said Rozella White Switzer, Southern New DAY SCHOOL England director of the NCCJ. Campers are from public, private and parochial schools, are white, Negro and Chinese, and are Cath­ /J~~G APPLICATIONS FOR ENROLLMENT olic, Protestant and Jewish. I WRONG ~ ! ~~~~ FOR THE 1967-68 SCHOOL YEAR Counselors are Kathi Buffum r ~=r=~:..aw P',TiNG, (U.R.I.), Nancy Burt (HOP."), Lewis Chapman (USA Special NOW ACCEPTED Forces), Jack Cykert (Boston University), Vertie Gay (R, I. • PreJindergarten College), Harvey W. Gershman (Northeastern), Larry Goldenberg 1 THE WEEK'SLETTER:"Do party or for some group activi­ (Hebrew Union College), Char­ you think 14 year old girls ty. But, this activity should be • Kindergarten lotte Peloquin (R, I, College), should be allowed to double date subject to some adult supervi­ Caryn R, Robin (Syracuse), or group date. I read the article sion. It is wrong for boys and • Primary Grades 1-3 Cleveland Kurtz (NCCJ), Sue which said that fourteen year girls of this age to "date" with­ Robin (Pembroke), Noellne Sorn­ old girls should not date. Re- out any parental or adult super­ berger (Emmanuel College\, member girls these days are vision. For example,lsome boys Grades 4 through 9 to Qualified students only Tom Thomson (Providence Col­ more m~ture than they used to and gfrls no older than fourteen, lege) and Lois Tierney (Bryant be. We aren't wearing pigtails who are not responsib_le to any College). anymore. I can understand not proper adult supervi~1on, may FOR INTERVIEW,... PLEASE CALL going out on single dates, but spend a !at of nigh~e hours Mrs. Switzer ls camp direc­ frankly, I see nothing wrong hours riding around man aut? tor. Members of her staff are with us double dating or group with older teena~s. Whether it RABBI NORMAN COHEN, Principal Rt ch a rd Curran, Providence dating. I would like your opin- is called a "date or Just "riding Monday & Thursday 1 to 4:30 p.m. School Department: Susan Robin, Ion on this matter." around" it is not the best activity Tuesday & Friday 9:30 to 12 noon Pembroke; Larry Goldenberg, OUR REPLY: It is not the for a fourteen-year-old. He-brew Union ; College, and opinion in this corner that there 331-5327 Joanna Featherstone of Trinity is something wrong with dating I you hove • ...... preblem you want lo dttCU1s. or an obten,ation to mah, ~ Square Repertory Company. Adu! t at fourteen. At fourteen, boys you I- to FOi AND AIOUT 1HNAOHS. and girls should be mature 450 ELMGROVE AVENUri speakers are Dr. John A, Ferris COMMUNtY AND SUIU-N Nffl SEIMCI. of Warwick, Mrs. Elaine David- enough to have a date for a FIANICFOIIJ, lY, / ,.. TIIE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY ,,At.X,USf 25, ~967 5 World Church Council ' . Israel To Excavate Below Wailing Wall Ducks Pope's Proposal TEL AVIV-The lower tiers foot stones now above the surface of the Wailing Wall are to be ex­ are said to date from the Second WASHINGTON - The World cavated this week. The historic Temple built by Herod the Great. ColDlcll of Churches In Geneva, structure Is the world's most sa­ Some of the lowest under­ SECOND CHILD BORN Switzerland, Is carefully avoiding cred shrine for Jews. The deci­ grolDld tiers, burled under cen­ Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bander any commitment on the future of sion to deepen It was made on turies of debris and soil, may of 109 Aurora Drive, Warwick Jerusalem, according to reports Aug.- 7 by Cabinet ministers, announce the birth of their second • date back to the First Temple, to American churchmen. The archeologlsts and architects at a child and first daughter, Holly, on bull t by King Solomon and de­ Co1D1cll has not taken sides In the meeting near the wall. It was ap­ stroyed by the Babylonians. questions arising from Pope July 7. Mrs. Bander Is the for­ proved by the religious officials. mer Judith Goodman. P au!• s' proposal to Inter­ There Is archeologlcal evi­ Maternal grandparents are nationalize the holy places, and dence that the wall goes down 20 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Goodman hopes to avoid taking part In the tiers below the surface. An offi­ of Providence. Paternal grand­ controversies resulting from the cial said that the digging woul d go parents are Mr. and Mrs. w alter merger of Israeli and Arab Je­ down only . a few tiers for the , Baker, also of Providence. rusalem, they say. present. The Rev. Eugene Carson THIRD CHILD BORN The five lowest tiers of 10- Blake, general secre~ry of the Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W, Ber­ Co1D1cl1, does not feel that gel of 66 OVerhlll Road announce "Christendom Is In a position to the birth on July 6 of their third Specialists in demand things froru either Mos­ ch 11 d and second daughter, AR.T Jems or Israel with regar d to Je­ Rhonda Lynn. Maternal grand­ t "LASSES HONEYMOONS rusalem," although he believes parents are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. that "proper access to the h/)ly Morris M. Karklln of Eaton ITCHICAWICH TOURS - RESORTS Saltzman of Cranston. Paternal 5 Modway SI., Prcw. pl aces should be taken for grant­ grandmother Is Mrs. Anna Berget Street annotmce the engagement . CRUISES ed." The Council depicts as more of Provtctence, and paternal of their daughter, Joyce Marilyn, FALL PRICE SELLS urgent the preservation of the to Stephan Potemkin of Washing­ great-grandmother, Mrs. Leah COURSES HAPPINESS cease- fire, Whitehead of Providence. ton, D.C., son of Mr. and Mrs. .. Joseph M. Potemkin of Grace STARTING SEPT. 19 Street, Cranston. PRICE - SPRAY PAINTING - ANNOUNCE SON'S BIRTH REGISTER Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Ho­ Miss Karklln, a graduate of NOW TRAVEL «efrig•rJ:Cl~liK~~:J,.!" Cabinet, renstein of 1900 Seventy-ninth Cl asslcal High School and the StNI Office furniNr• College of Liberal Arts, B.oston - Work Don• on Premi1H - Street Causeway, North Bay Vil­ JA 1-5574 Univers i ty, attended s ummer MOBILE lage, Miami Beach, Fla., an­ nounce the birth on Aug. 15 of school at , the SPRAY PAINTING SERVICE Sorbonne, Paris, and Ulpan Et­ GE 4-84<1? their first child and son, Allan Perry. Mrs. Horenstein Is the zlon, Jerusalem. She Is a social former Rozlyn Augat. Paternal worker with the Providence De­ grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. partment of Public Assistance. Mr. Potemkin, an alumnus of CAMEO BEAUTY SALON EDSAC MUSIC Charles Horenstein of Lexington Avenue, Cranston. Maternal Cranston East High School and 422-424 UOYD AVE. (AT EIMGROVEl PROV. INSTRUCTIONS-SALES grandmother Is Mrs. Albert Au­ the University of Chicago, Is a RENTALS get of Boston, Mass. computer projects analyst with ALL INSTRUMENTS The Bureau of the Census In SPECIALIZING IN Washington. STUDIOS 1 A Sept. 24 wedding Is planned. COLOR AND HIGH FASHION I Certified Teachers ORGANIZATION Flleen McClure Photo I 1701 Cranston St . 8 OPERATORS .. 942-6398 NEWS MUSIC AT HOME FOR AGED SHOWROOM Perry Borrelli and his full TO TAKE CARE OF ALL YOUR 1 orchestra will play at the Jewish -Authorized Dealer- PIONEER YOUNG WOMEN BEAUTY NEEDS Pioneer Women are forming a Home for the Aged on Thursday, EDDIE SACCOCCIA Aug. 31, from l to 3 p.m. The young women's group In the East Call 421-1975 For An Appomtment Side- Pawtucket area. A tea for Musicians' Union Local I 98 will those Interested In Joining the sponsor the entertainment. new chapter will be held on ' \ PARTY Wednesday, Aug. 30, at 8:15 p.m. \. at the home of Mrs. Richard Ack­ ·' PASTRIES erman, 231 Elmgrove Avenue. Prospective members should call I her, UNI on 1-0030, or Mrs. Mau­ I MADE TO rice Schwartz, Sfewart 1-3607. l·t ORDER Mrs. Rita LeVlne of New FOR ALL Haven, Conn., who was recently in Israel on a Pioneer Women OCCASIONS Seminar, wlll show pictures and l Furs Showing Their dg~? give her Impressions of the organ­ ization's work in Israel. .. _.___""'"" e PIES e CAKES TALMUD TORAHS Here are some of our e DANISH The Talmud Torahs of Con­ e ROLLS & gregation Shaare Zedek and Sons current thoughts of Abraham have Joined and wlll MUFFINS be one central Tai mud Torah at on 688 Broad Street. Teachers are Mrs. Abraham Chlll and David "Redesigning" them Mermels tein. Registration wlll MADSEN'S BAKERY take place on Wednesday and Furs have changed-have 832 Hope St., Prov., R. I. Thursday, Sept. 6 and 7, between 4 and 6 p.m. The first session yauts ? If nof, then it's lime of Sunday School wlll be on Sept. 351-9070 lo 10 at 10 a.m. coMulf wifh our talented designer. He'll create something fofally new, zingy, WHY DRIVE up-fo-fhe-minule •• • and jusf for you. Righi now, his HUNDREDS OF MILES. sketchbook is brimming with fresh ideos. Is your coal loo when a delightful vacation awaits you long, loo full? only 45 minutes from Boston at . . • Your jacket FRED and CAROLE'S heavily-cuffed? Stole or cape MAGNOLIA MANOR outmoded? Mosf any MAGNOLIA, MASS. df!led fur will yield lo our masterful louch­ on ocean-cool Cape Ann - where the Countryside Meets the Ocean and the low cos/ will * Your hosts, FRED AMD CAROLE BLOOM, would like to welcome you to surprise you! MognoHo Monor, where you ore never a stronger; personal attention will be shown to your every need. Mognollo Manor Is small In size but large In focilltles and pleosure,-mlnutes from historic Gloucester ond Come ·in now Rockport ort colony. for a free esfimafe * Modified American Plan rates Include Deluxe Breakfast and Gourmet dinner * Heated indoor ond outdoor ocean-fed swimming pools * Pool-- New England's Larges/ 8 0 1 0 9 !~!~,:0b~!~~~•b:ct'~1n8t:~, ::::e,{~es~v::1~e: b'! 11,' l!c:iii:;~f,'h :!~r,~ :nd Exclusive Furrier mossoges avolloble, golf and tennis nearby * Summer , antiquing, ~ 1hl;!i!ln!;1,::.T!~ng;,.. a~llckl0:!d'Jew~~~A~8;:ic~~o J~1~!:: .!1 E~1:e';o1~! 100 Wes/minster Sfreef ment * Movle1 * Dancing In new Celebrity Room. 58 Yeats af Fine RESERVE NOW FOR • • •• Fur Trad if ion ·LABOR DAY WEEKEND • Sept. 1-4

SuPt1r-HighwaY1 via Rout• 128-Exit 1 $ For Reservations alfd Rates CALL COLLECT ( 617) 525-3411

- OR SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT - !.. ow1 JUmmer t1his ire dill in effec♦• Write Ma9nolla Manor, Box P. Magnolia, Mass . ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• struments, sheet_ music, In­ strument" accessories and In­ structional aids last yetir sur­ passed the combined dollar vol­ umes of all spectator sports, still and movie cameras, comic books THF ONLY FNGLISH lfWl'H WfFKLY IN P A.ND SOUTHf,1ST MAS.: and pl aylng cards. And mind you, this boom has developed despite the !Ol)g decline by Sylvia Porter of the Industry before World War n and right through 1946. It has CIUA ZU0CIIUIO ...... Mi• SELF-MADE MUSIC gained strength despite the Im­ LOIS ATWOOD ...... mense competition of other elec­ It's the season of the summer strument. As a group they sent tive subjects In our schools, the 5iKond 0oM ,_._.. l'aW ot "-idenca, .;.._ h&ond competitions and what activity do tier~ competition from other Sublcripttett latfl: Aft•n C.nh the cepy; ly Moil, $6.00 pe, a11nuffl; eutlide ...w lntlond, $7 .SO per .,.. the Industry's retail sales to $955 num ..... ratet on requMt. The Kffold -. wbtaiptions a,e -,tinueu1 unln1 netifiecf t• the c•ltuary you think leads them all? Base­ million In I 966, up frqm $424 leisure-time easier activities. lnwriti"9. - ball? Softball? !Ml!mmlng? million as recently as 1956 and It has been spurred by our None of the seemingly obvious growing leisure time and pros­ Thi tt.rold CNWmet no Rnandal fffPOMIWlty f• typoaraphical •"en in od..,.._r,wntt;, but wi1 ,..»rint from only $235 million In 1950. thot part of the od~nt HI which the typoaraphical .,,., _,._ M-.-tiaen will p1eo .. ~ the sports Is even In the running. /Ill There are 41,600,000 ama­ perity. It has been fed by our ma-..ment if!,medio~ty, of any err• which may octvr. Leading them all In this material­ teur musicians In the U.S. now, search for a means of self-ex­ istic nation of ours Is music - double the 1950 total. Of these, pression_ It has been aided by FRIDAY, AU::UST 25, 1967 the battles of the bands, of the 15,400,000 are between 4 and 21 philanthropists from coast to coast guitars, the pianos, the brass In­ years of age. This represents and by all levels of government. struments, the strings. an Increase of more than 410 But with the boom already so A Serious Blow To A Principle To you, the sollllds we ama­ ·per cent since 1950, against an big, can It continue? Can It be­ The principle of separation of church and state has been teur musicians produce may be overall population Increase In the come even stronger? I submit eroded openly as well as slyly in the past 20 years. It has just lost Just so much noise which pleases 4-21 age group of 80 per cent. that It can and here's why. an important battle in .New York, where the Constitutional Con­ or Irritates you to varying de­ II# The number of musical In­ We are ever more aware that we must prepare ourselves to fill vention has eliminated a 73-year-old ban on the use of state grees. But to our economy what struments owned In our country we produce Is the sweetest sound Is at a staggering 35,700,000. The Increasing hours of non-working funds to support religiously-controlled schools. A clearly- worded of a boom without parallel In this number pl aylng the piano Is up time and we know that a most constitutional statement, safeguarding a vital educational prin­ or any other nation In all history. from 19,700,000 In 1956 to satisfying way to fill those hours ciple, has been repealed. Backers of the repeal seem to think a Consider these statistics: 23,300,000; the number playing Is with self-made music. provision primarily concerned with protecting religious freedom ## Amateur musicians are now guitars Is yp from 2,600,000 to The old-fashioned attitude that Increasing at the rate of 2,300,000 studying music-making Is a chore will be adequate replacement for the statute which had been in 10,000,000 In the IO-year period; a year I This Is more than double the number playing the organ Is Is fast di sappearing and In the the Constitution since I 894. the annual Increase before this up from 1,000,000 to 4,400,000. words of the American Music decade began. Conference, It Is being replaced Some defenders of church-state separation hope to undo part Provocatively, there have been 1111 The amateur musician, de­ declines In the numbers pl aylng "by an exuberant approach to of the damage to the basic principle by having specific limitations fined by the American Music the accordion and the ukulele. music study, with fervor and written in, on the spending of public money for non-public Conference Is an Individual who Enough. Self-made music now little Inhibition." Adds the AMC: schools. The most interesting of these is a proposed amendment plays a musical Instrument six or ranks behind only · reading and "the challenge of music will be a part of muslc-making•s attrac­ which would prohibit racial and religious discrimination in admis­ more times a year, without pay. card-playing among our nation's Or he Is receiving Instrumental most popular participating leis­ tion. This will apply to all forms sions to schools supported by tax monies. A Fordham law profes­ Instruction on a specific In- ure-time activities. Sales of In- of Instrumental music, from the sor said that if the amendment were allowed to stand in its classics to the contemporary present form, it would nullify the preferential provisions of the ¥ forms of muslc-maklng." Education Law "and open the doors to possible destruction or Mounting numbers of Ameri­ 'maill,ox 111 cans are embracing the concept the Catholic School system. If the schools have to admit every­ · of music lessons as almost a one, the parishioners who pay for the schools would soon tire or Ill birthright of an American child. waiting in line." More and more families, are In- Proposes That South Vietnamese Vote cluding musical Instruments and The imagination almost boggles at the picture: public-school lessons among their basic family children standing in line for the better teaching and smaller ''needs.'' classes their parents expect from the religious schools, On Continued U. S. Involvement Television Is continuing to Bible-oriented Protestant families sending their small fry to The war In has have tor being In South Vietnam drive us away from passive view­ Hebrew school, yarmulke-topped boys sharing their kosher reached a most frightful stale­ than the w!ll of the majority of Its Ing and toward active home-cen­ tered entertainment (music). lunches in the Catholic school cafeteria. and the bewildered mate. There rs no doubt that a people? Once and tor all let us large percentage ot Americans, If find out wh at that will Is l And Government support of music teachers and school officials trying to keep up with it all. New not an actual majority, currently abide by Its decision! study and performances will ex­ York's educational changes might, after all, keep government oppose our continued Involvement It Is the way to close our pand and Improve. Our school~ and religion separate, if the religious schools wind up trying to there. ranks at hom e, no matter what will make strides In providing arrange for released time instruction for their own children. It However, Amerlc,-n opinion or that decision be. It Is the way to quality music facilities and mod­ even world opinion Is not a Just exlflblt the sincerity of our pur­ ern teaching devices. may not be what the legislators or schools have in mind, but it criterion for determining (,,hat pose - and our honor - to the We are caught up In a whole looks like a possible way to retain a vital principle. ' our next steps there should be. world. new aonosphere for creating, , I The only truly Just criterion tor You can help - by sending this learning and playing music. I can reaching that decision should rest article to your senator. Do It to­ foresee the day when the ex­ with the people we are fi ghting dayl ception will be the person who there for - the South Vietnamese Alan s. Feinstein does not play at least one ln­ people themselves! 41 Alhambra Circle strwi,ent. Let us once and tor all deter­ Cranston (Distributed by Publishers-Hall HARRY GOLDEN mine what the majority or these (Continued on page 9) Syndicate, all rights reserved) people really want, by proposing 1 that the question or our leaving their country or staying be placed The Peddlers before them on the ballots In their forthcoming election. The !b~·-,&¾~\tJJft~:p::~? \tW ::}t;::~:~:~;;}G~1?t ....-,~--- .---- tt:J will of the South Vietnamese ma­ The Cherokee Ind! ans called "Dutch" peddler. For the Ameri­ jority - this alone Is the only the Jewish peddlers (phonetically cans, the accent sollltded slmtl ar, democratic and honorable basis at least) "Jew-wedge-du-glsh" which Indeed It was. An Inter­ for formulating our future policy which translates literally as the esting death notice' In The Land­ In their land. 0 egg eater." mark, Statesville, N.C., October Moreover, our forces there by Leonard ·Lyons The Jewtsh peddler often 11, 1884, describes the transfer could be used to Insure the right found It necessary to refuse food of the remains of "A. Blum, a of every citizen who wanted to Mayor Lindsay Is determined 1or" • . .. Georges Tovstonogov, of offered him In all kindliness be­ Dutch peddler, from Wilmington, vote to do so, as well as Insuring · to have the builders at the Hotel Leningrad's Gorkl Theater, may cause It had not been prepared In N. C., to Baltimore." the privacy and honesty needed to Astor and Rockefeller Center ex­ direct Stell a Adler and Kenneth ) accordance with kosher dietary Professor Oscar -Handlin, In produce a true accounting of their tension erect a theater ln each Haigh In "The Seagulls" at Yale Jaws. Wherever he went he asked his book "Adventure In Free­ will. Oh, yes, we would have the complex. He's reminding realtors Drama School .. . General Eis­ for eggs In barter. He carried dom" writes that ln early New manpower available tor this. With that theaters enhance the value of enhower has made four visits to hard-bolled eggs In his pocket and England, too, the Jewish peddler such a question on the ballots the nearby realty ...Lindsay also the Cotzean Castle apartment existed for the most part on a was ._looked upon as just another Viet Cong would expend every ef- - signed Venice's experts to paint Scotland gave him. George C. diet of hard-bolled eggs and kind of German." fort to get their followers to the our ferry boats . .. Judy Garland Scott, who shuns interviews, vegetables when he was away -The term Jew peddler ap­ polls to vote against our contin­ persuaded Broadway's shyest awards and personal appear­ from home or· no.t near a Jewish peared In the public press In the ued staying (which would be no star, Barbara Harris, to join her ances, will be shown receiving a community. · · early part of this century; later less fair than the mllltary work­ onstage at the Palace ..•Sandy prize at the Aug. 22 premiere of Many of the Jewish peddlers came the term "Jew store" Ing equally hard to get their fol­ Dennis will sing In "Daphne In his new film, "The FIim-Flam from the late 1800s on arranged which Is still widely used among lowers to the polls to vote the Cottage D." Man." But Scott won't be there at their routes to bring themselves the rural white and Negro popu­ other way) thereby Instituting a Woody Allen will play the am­ all: The producers hired a home on Thursday night, Insuring· lation of the South, although It Is sort of unspoken agreement to bassador's bumbling son In the double, and make-up men will that an unscheduled delay did not never Intended as an Insult. Cus­ de-escalate the fighting at least screen version of his comedy hit, have him look like Scott. keep them on the road until too tomers upon entering an estab­ until the returns were all In, thus ''Don• t Drink the W a­ The Temptations, breaking late to make proper preparation lishment often ask, "ls this a Jew treeing for that time many ot our ter,. . . . Vincent Sheean ls hav­ records at the Copa, wear new for the Sabbath. $tore?" soldiers tor such duty - and, ing problems with his commis­ clothes at each performance. In Florida and In the settle­ The question Is prompted by a also, Insuring a truly representa­ sioned biography of Saudi Arabia's Their entire wardrobe had been ments of the Southwest where the widespread legend that a Jewish tive vote. king . . . may play the In a cleaning store In de­ peddlers dealt with Spanish­ merchant will make every pos­ And would not our support of title role In 20th-Fox' "Joanna" stroyed by rioters ••. A se­ speaking pioneers, the word for sible concession or sacrifice to such a proposal Increase respect .. . Janet Margolin will star In quence with the late saxophonist peddler was "semanalchlk" chalk up the first sale of the day, for us throughout the world by Paddy Chayefsky's "The · Tenth John Col~ane will be Included In which derives from the Spanish accepting any offer rather than showing In no uncertain terms Man" at City Center. the Bell Telephone Hour's special word for "weekly payments." I ose his first customer. The our sincere desire to let the Agatha Christle, In her 70s, on Jazz ...Sisters Angelica and The peddlers (the Germans and farmers and sharecroppers used people of South Vietnam decide doesn't know how many stories Theresa, of St. Vincent's Hospi­ the Scandinavians probably to vie with one another to be the their own future - through the she's written. She Just finished a tal, were shocked when they were learned It from their Jewish col­ first one In the store to take ad­ greatest of all democratic pro­ mystery which WIil be the last brought to lunch at Toots Shor's: leagues) referred to themselves vantage of the "bargain." cesses? And would not our own cases for her favorite detective They always thought.Toots was a as "klappers" which means The tradition Is old and comes countrymen welcome the results characters - Poirot and Miss girl .•.Cardinal Spellman vis­ "door knockers." Their work af­ from that same concern for of such a vote and more solidly Marple. The story wlll be stored ited the Nate and Frances Spin­ ter the 1890s took them from "parnossah" which means 111lve­ unite behind a policy formulated for publication after the author's gold Museum at Brandeis Univer­ door to door, house to house, of­ llhood," a beautiful word. I re­ on those results - either to pull death. · sity last week. fering everything under the sun member the peddlers In New out (as we could with honor) It the . Don Ameche, who gave up Duke Elllngton Is at the Rain­ Qll weekly payments. - York would shout In the morning will of the majority of the South ~moklng years ago, must smoke bow Grill until 2 a.m. When he Because the German peddler as they wheeled their carts Vietnamese so Indicated, or to two cigarettes simultaneously In appeared on the early morning had trouble with the English lan­ through the streets, "Women, strengthen our resolve In pur­ the musical, "Henry, sweet Hen­ .. Today" TV show, one of the guage due to his guttural, heavy women, I need a 'first' I" suing the war to a successful ry" .•• Ely Landau flew to Ire­ program's writers greeted him: accent, the Jewish peddler who • conclusion, It that be their will. land to sign John Huston to direct "Duke, how did you ever manage succeeded him was also called a For what other Justification do we "The Madwoman Of Chall- (Continued on page 8) THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUSf 25, 1967 7 OYer to the Dummy's 10 and when Give a gift subscription to The East ducked, she next took her Herald. first Club finesse, which worked. ,------... BRIDGE Now came another Diamond to the Golden Brown Crisp Queen and should the Ace be IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU PINEAPPLE PANCAKES played at this time four could be Hot Syrup and Butter By Robert E. Starr made tor the Diamonds would all be good as well as the Clubs ex­ EAST SIDE DINER Because of a defensive error North had enough extra, she cept for the King. When, however, 360 Waterman St. • Red Bridge some Declarers were able to would have gone on to slam. Ac­ the Diamond Ace was not played, m ake today's hand but only one tually, North had just enough to that was the end of the suit for would have made It against best keep the bidding open and was de­ there was no entry. l defense, Mrs. Selwyn Epstein lighted to pass for she would have Now, our Declarer abandoned playing with Mrs. Charles Zal­ passed anything other than a Jump Diamonds and returned her atten­ klnd, both of Fall River. The oth­ shift. tion to that Club suit, taking an­ ers failed to give themselves an Every Declarer In No Trump other successful fines se. She next !'lternate chance and when their received the same lead, the Heart played the Ace, hoping the suit first suit did not produce as 10. All but today's heroine Imme­ would break but when It didn't, hoped, they showed a los s Instead diately tried to establish the Dia­ she conceded a Club which now of a nice profit. monds by leacllng them ID!tll the made her fifth one good. In all, North Ace wa s played. If the defenders she scored four Clubs , two Dia­ ♦ 5 3 2 had sense enough to hold back monds, rwo Hearts and one Spade, .J7 3 that Ace ID!tll the third round, the nine tricks . ♦ K Q 10 7 4 Moral: Do not put al I your ♦ 54 hand would be set for now two Clubs would have to be lost and eggs In one basket unles s you West East nine tricks would not be avail­ have to. When chances are ava11- +o 10 1 6 ♦ K 9 8 able. able wltho_lJ_t_co s t, try them both. •o10 9 6 2 •a5 • ♦ 5 2 ♦ A 6 3 East should know how long to ♦ 97 ♦ K 10 8 2 hold off her Ace by watching her South parmer's signal In Diamonds. ♦ AJ4 Those careful enough to play the . AK 5 and then the 2, showing a ♦ J 9 8 doubleton, gave the proper Infor­ JULIE'S ♦ A Q J 6 3 mation. If the parmer watched it KOSHER DELICA JESSEN South was dealer, no one vul­ and played accordingly, she would IN HONOLULU - Arlyne Gold­ nerable. The bidding: hold her Ace long enough. Those berg of Sinclair Avenue, Crans­ S W N E who simply flipped cards , so to ton, visited Honolulu, Hawaii, this IC P ID P speak, guessed and If they played summer. 3NT P P P their Ace too early, their oppo­ The bidding shoul d have been nent wou1d make the contract. autom atic for South, de spite hav­ This, however, wa s not the Report 320,000 Jobless ing an extremely powerful hand right way to play the hand for could do nothing but open one should the defense play correctly In Gaza Before War Club, not a forcing bid. She was the hand would go down. Our De­ too strong to open one No Trump el arer s aw this and decided to go JERUSALEM - The Economic and not strong enough for Two No after two suits at the same time. KOSHER Planning· Authority released the Trump. When s he heard her part­ Ins tead of persisting in Dia­ KOSHER-WHITE MEAT results of a study of the Gaza ner respond, she now showed ex­ monds, she led the first one Strip that revealed that when Israel actly what she had by jumping ROLLED rook over the territory In June, directly to game. This bid, by the TURKEY 320,000 were 1D1employed and de­ way, Is definitely not a close-out ( NO SKIN ) BEEF pendent on relief. as so many players think for If ( LEAN-NO FAT) The Authority said the popu- Free. 1ation of the 200-square mile USSR Wants Advisers :~~ND 2.39 area was 380,000, of whom 270,- LB.1.59 000 were refugees. The Egyptians Stationed With Arabs The one i REG . 2.98) had put the refugee total at more WASHINGTON Reports than 300,000. All the refugees received here from Moscow at­ book that were without jobs. An additional tributed to Soviet sources the In­ FANCY-ALBACORE 50,000 of the permanent popu­ formation that the Kremlin, In tells Y.OU r' lation of the area were also job­ exchange for new arms for the SOLID PACK ..,. less' and on relief. Arabs, has asked for the station­ eve~ing l I .\ !_ The Authority estimated that Ing · of Soviet military advisers with Arab troops and air force per capita annual Income was abouthow HERRING $125, compared to about twice \Dilts. The reports said Moscow IN WATER that of the population on the West has also demanded Increased So­ to take a Bank, and about one-tenth of the viet direction of Arab military affairs and that the Russian fleet ~!Roz. 69( Israeli per capita Income. has already been granted In­ West Indies (REG. 83t) The report noted that the only definite port prlvleges In Alexan­ . modern Industry lti the Strip was dria, Egypt and Port Said.· cruise. a pl ant producing citrus products. All SALE ITEMS WHILE THEY LAST It employed 80 workers. Resi­ According to the Moscow dis­ dents of the Strip were not admit­ patches, Soviet leaders are seek­ What will your cruise be like? FREE PARKING ON BRAMAN ST. LOT (IN REAR OF STORE) ted to Egypt without special per­ Ing to make the Arabs Into an ef­ Who will there be for you to mits. The Authority reported that fective military machine while talk to? How long will it last? What will you wear? What the Sinai Peninsula, an area of deterring rash actions that might provoke prematurely an ID!COn­ islands will you visit? What 37,000 square miles, had a popu­ about food and fun? And cost? lation of only 130,000. trollable conflagration. Holland-America's new book­ let "Cues and Oues" tells you LAST WEEKS everything. So you won't go off to sea all .at sea. The Herald is now accepting I CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER ... Write, drop in, or telephone "Younger Set" Photos me for your free copy of Cues and Clues. For early publication and For our Files ACROSS DOWN 19.Bronx I.Claw l .. Knot lace cheer MILDRED CHASE 6. Appoint­ 2. Skilled 21.Splgot ments com­ 22.Con­ The R. I. Jewish Herald 11.Make peutora junc­ amends 3. Learninlr Uon MAILING ADDRESS : BOX 6063, PROVIDENCE, R. I. tor 4. Single 23. Bltter­ ~ PLANT AND OFFICE : HERALD WAY (OFF WEBSTER ST.) 12.Zola unit endera 33 WESTMINSTEFl ST. PAWTUCKET, R. I. 13. Cast 5. Not old 24. Mea­ UN 1-4055 14. Tight 6. Discovery aure 15. French 7. Catkin ot article 8.Cans land 16.Became D. Otherwise 27. Harem 35. Matured, aware of. JO. Plant room as cheese 17. Earth, u ovule 30. Youth 36. Edible EDUCATION & FINANCIAL SECURITY GO HAND IN HAND a goddeu 16. Part of 31. Of area fruit 18. Upright amln. 33.Name- 38. Fondle You are providing your son with a sound education - 20.Allure 17. Festive aakes of 39. Time Why not also guarantee him the financial security 22.Ohlo 18. Sea Miss Lillie before and protection he will need for the future? collece eagle 34. --Tumer 40. Observe The Sun Life Junior Adjustable policy protects you town while the children are your dependents ... and later I 1 I 16 l':I 110 25. Inclinea • I' • ~g it protects their families. 26. 'J'ype of II At ag~ 21 the assurance protection this policy pro­ archltec• ~It vides increases to as much as five times the initial ture level, depending upon the option elected. 13' ~ IS 28. Snake The increased coverage requires no additional medical · 29. 0ne who ~I> ~I& examination and no increase toil• ~ in premium; in fact, the pre­ olowly 17 ~16 mium rate charged will be 31, Blbllcal " ~ ~ ~ lower than if the increased river of zo •I ,.. <> .., protection were purchased Damascus ~ new at age 21. 32. Pronoun Z> 7 .. 33. Proclaimed ~z, (The Policy is participating and contains guaranteed cash loudly 128 JO 36. Ma"a ~,, values and non-forfeiture companion provisions) 37.Anxloua ~ 0 ~>I ~31 38. Membera )> ... )5' ot House ~ ~,- ~ of Lonlll )7 >D ,,, 'IO ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA 41. Near: ~ s LN LIFE poet. 11 ELLIOT F. SLACK 42. J:acape ~ ~· ,a.Koum­ 1018 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. 331-2422 luJly ~- ~ "" 44. CODCIN 8 nm RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGU&'f 25, 1967 100 MUSICIANS Mont re a I , Sharkey Buonanno, TEL Avrv - The Israel Frankie Travis, Larry SAMMARTINO Philharmonic Orchestra has ­ McManus, Tommy Millette, Joe more than 100 men, and Its per­ Cellettl and ochers are famutar DIAMONDS - Half Price manent home Is the Fredric R, names In the world of boxing list­ 1468 Elmwood Ave. Mann Auditorium here, In Je­ ed for appearances; IN ACTION ruMiem It appears In the new Haro Id Gomes, Inter­ - Ol'IN EVHY EVENING - Convention Hall, and In the Ar- · nationally known, and Rocco Cel­ !JlOn In Haifa. ' Sports News By Warren Walden lettl are scheduled for boxing ac­ tion In one of the bouts. Others 944-5716 942-0328 ~,..,,,.,..,..,,,..,,,,..,..,,,..,,,..,,;..,,,..,,,..,,,.,,.,,.,,..,,, who will take· pare in .exhibitions IT LEAKED OUTI Noc the wa- was elected recording secretary Include Frankie Blancclnl, Eu~ INC. ter In the pool but-the word that for her class. "Anthony runs like gene Krank, Gene Palmer, James ROSSI SHEET MET AL WORKS, Charlie (Chuck)_ Rink, greyhotmd a deer," says his father. And we Brown, Ronald Sykes, Peter trainer, finds swimming the add chat he must be a dear to Amonte, Charlie Lagore, Allie HEATINfi. AND Allt-CONDITIONIN. "greatest" method for keeplqg Votta, the father. Kruger and others. The enter- EASY TERMS the racing dogs In condition and BACKWARD, TTJRN BACK- tainment program Includes ED- bringing "cripples" back to the WARD - No doubt about It. DIE ZACK & CO., THE COUSINS ~IPIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHnlllllHIIIIIIIIHl~n11111111111111111111mwnmm1111111111111111111111NIUJ( competition. Although Rink's There'll be many a trip down AND FRANK COLLINS, the BAG- method of resorting co swimming memory lane when some of the PIPE playing .patrolman. Good to condition his greyhounds has gladiators of former years climb show, worthy cause, open to the been a long-time practice for the Into the boxing ring at Manny AI- public - Aug. 28th. i DUNNE FORD SALES, INC I veteran, It only came · to light melda's on Warwick Avenue next TIZN'T SO - The planned recently when It was learned that Monday night. They'll be ·appear- honoring of "Smokey Joe" Wood his I.W's. Owl, five time con- Ing at the Earl. T . King Memorial when Palestine Temple Shrlners queror of one of the best, We sty Fund Show, King being the gallant go io Fenway Park on Sept. 9th Whlzzer, and winner of 25 starts fireman who gave his alt In the will not take place, according to a at Hollywood, Florida, last season, line of duty. Ralph Zannellt, Lar- change In pl ans ....So has been churning the waters of ry Bolvin, Martin Tabor. Yotmg CARRY ONI the lake adjacent to the Rink farm .,_ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • •~ In Mlddleboro, Mass. ♦ ♦ FORD-;;;l~~~;;:~BIRD 1 I I INTHESWIM-"Swlmmlng ♦ J"-- 'f',.,,.,,,, 1 (/)_,,u,, ♦ moves everv muscle In a ♦ 'llR ~,11. ,u. "-"'- ♦ ~~ilfllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUllllllllllnHlllllllllll..i greyhotmd's body," says Rink. ♦ 8 "So when the 'Owl' pulled up (Continued from Page 6 ) lame at Raynham, I took him ou t to get up so early?" Ellington re­ To compensate for the short­ .of action and when the warm plied: " Baby , who's been to age of teachers In Arab schools, Weinstein's Lake Pearl Manor, Inc. weather came, I would take him bed?" Israel will have a two and half and two Unennates out in the wa,.. Mrs. Carter Burden' s meals. hour dally TV educational pro­ WRENTHAM, MASS. off Route 1 A cer . They acted Just like a bunch at Roosevelt Hospital' s Maternity gram beamed at Arabs. Prime of kids. They really enjoy It. And Wing, are catered by The Grotmd Minister Eshkol al so Is Inviting EXCLUSIVE KOSHER ­ It seems that the greyhound who Floor . .. Mrs. Burden's mother, all airlines to use Its air corri­ runs the fastest, swims the fast- Mrs. Bill Paley. al so had Ground dor which saves six hours In the CATERING est." Swimming must be good Floor catering during her own flights to Nairobi and Johannes­ medicine, Judging from the man- hospital checkup ... Contracts burg. ANYWHERE IN NEW ENGLAND ner In which the "Owl" blazed of sale have been drawn for the Mrs. Henry Fonda wlll make around the Tatmton course last last of Billy Rose's realty - hi s her 1V debut, wlrh Fonda, on the HOTEL OPEN THIS SUMMER FOR SOCIAL FUNCTIONS ONLY week. He's scheduled to be In the homes In Connecticut and Ja­ Lee Bailey show, "Good Com­ " Inaugural" at Taunton Track maica . . . When Cheetah's t.ease pany" ... Jean-Paul Belmondo Irr} Reservations Now Being ·Accepted Saturday (Aug. 26th) night. ends, the huge discotheque prob- sculpted the statues seen In his A HOL E IN TH E WATER - ably will move Into the Palm fllm, ''Thief Of Paris" .. . Cy "A boat Is a hole In the water Gardens on W. 52d St. Coleman records hi s singing for IIBf For The High Holidays Into which you pour your money," Some musicians dining at Clos MGM, and hi s piano-In­ For reservotions write or phone EV 4-3102 - ST 1•9761 a Miami sailor put It according to Normand were Introduced to King KASHRUTH SUPERVISION strumentals for Verve . , .Lois TIME mag that also records that Peter of Yugoslavi a there. They de Fee , once Broadway' s Tallest Sllakespeare wrore, "Ships are discussed music, and one of them Stripper, now works for Miami's but boards, sallors but men." asked Peter: " Wha t instrument Greek Orthodox Church of the t The Bard of Avon wa,; obviously a does Your Majes ty play?" . .. Annunct·atton. landlubber. Those t!d-blts are Peter' s frank reply was: .. Re­ (Distributed 1967, Publishers-Hall from a great s tory on Newport cords." Syndlcate)(AII Rights Reserved) E. R. DAVENPORT & co. and the International Yacht Races. And while we're on yacht Richar d Zanuck asked Irving INCORPORATED races, may we move Eddie Falk Wallace to help cast the charac­ ~.. ters In the film version of Wal­ ( ~ Into the select company by re­ I 11 don't swelter marking that It Is nice co hear lace's - The Plot" . .. The Up­ Members New York Stock bchan.. and other Priftcipol Exchan9H him In his modest praises for the stairs-Left rooms at 21, once in your car, racing activities of hi s son§, considered Sibe ria , now are the 1 908 Hospital Trust Bldg., Providenc·e, R. I. 02903 Steve and John, at R.I. Yacht choicest locations there , .. Vin­ Club, Falmouth' and other waters. cent Sardi, Jr. , declined the air condition GOOD EX AMPLE - Anthony Beverly Hill s deal-because he TEmple 1-7150 Votta, 62 Eden Crest Drive, had a disastrous lesson In Absen­ now Cranston, Is setting a good ex­ tee Management with his Connecti­ Large Enough to be of Service, ample for other yotmgsters and cut project . . . Jose Quintero MARK IV ,:~,,:, -, with others , too. In a playground says he II direct no more Eugene Small Enough to be a . Friend Meet last week, Anthony was the O'Neill plays. He' s done them all . BOSTON Ariel and WIii Durant, who've winner In the SO-yard dash and RA0IA TOR b. BODY WK ~ the 100 year dash; also right up been writing their "History of i85 PI Nf )T REET GA 1 2625 Off"tees in: New Haven, Saybrook and Newport at the top In the Home Run hitting Mankind" books for Simon & contest. He's a member of the An Schuster, had hoped to be able to Star Uttle League team, played cover It right up to modern second base for the undefeated times. But their tenth volume, up Gamwell and Ingraham little to Rousseau and the French Rev­ STUDENT RENTALS! league baseball team and Is a olution, wlll be their last. Durant, TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL half-lYack and captain for the after all, Is 82. • Typewriters .,. · ..... ,,, 155 Niagara Street _Garden City Lanes football team. Allen Gin sberg' s parents are • C111le11lators , ..., Providence, R.I. He wlll enter Park View Junior flying to London to meet him. The • Adding High where hi s sister Marianne father-and-son poets wlll do joint M.chines Announces Meetings of poetry readings In Eu­ rope ...Edward Fields was BUY or RENT HIGH HOLY DAYS and NEW Greeks To Keep commissioned by the University "Shop Where You MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEES and of South Carolina to design the Can See Them All" RELIGIOUS SCHOOL REGISTRATION Jewish Boards rugs for its new structure. It' s ATHENS - The Greek Gov­ the revolving restaurant from the at the Temple on ernment recently assured two N.Y. State Pavilion at our oons.w World's Fair, which the Univer­ PEWRITER Co. Thursday, September , 7:30 P.M. to 10 P.M. B'nal B'rlth leaders that recent it,IUIRI aTUIT measures that made possible the sity placed atop a dorm . ..Ray Sunday, September 10 9:30 A.M. to noon appotnonent of non-Jews to the Parker, of The Concord, will R.l.'s Largest Typewriter Display build a hotel at Maho Bay In St. Monday, September 11 7:30 P.M. to 10' P.M. boards of Jewish commtmal bod­ Easy Terms Maarten. Tuesday, September 12 7:30 P.M. to l 0 P.M. ies In Greece would be amended. The two measures, signed last Wednesday, September 13 7:30 P.M. to l 0 P.M. Jtme 8 by Constantine Kalam­ Thursday, September 14 7:30 P.M. tcr 10 P.M. boklas, Education and Religion Sunday, September 17 9:30 A.M. to noon Minister of Greece, empowered him to appoint five-member ex­ '"kE :)",f '.'ol'. (,t.•,::, Membership applications may be obtained by calling ecutive boards to manage the af­ fairs of the Central Board of ,owMOTOt COltPOIATION i1 o 1uluicfi"p ., CAJU,,ll.O ,ucro• co. Temple Beth Israel HO 1-1186 Jewish Commtmltles of Greece as or well as the Organization for Re­ Mr. Leo Greene HO 1-8023 lief and Rehabllltatlon of Greek Jews. OWN • RENT • LEASE Dr. Harry Goldberg 781-3420 Before World War II, Jews In Special consideration given for new applicants. Greece numbered some 75,000 of which 12,000 survived the Nazi Quick Service holocaust. Of thesta, many emi­ The public is invited to join the Congregation in the grated and there are about 5,000 Fast Parts Availability MIDNIGHT SLICOTH SERVICE left, mostly In Athens and Salo­ nika. REPAtRS ON ALL MAKES Saturday, September 30 The promise to amend the re­ cent measures was given by The­ conducted by odore Georgiadis, head of the ec­ Rabbi Jacob Handler clesiastical· · deparonent of the ServiCen Tre Greek Foreign Ministry, to Dr. ◄ i·fif #·ii+►. and William A. Wexler, International Cantor Karl Kritz assisted by a full choir. president of B'nal B'rlth, and Herman Edelsberg, director of TAYLOR BROS. TOWMOTOR A social period beginning at 10:30 P.M. the International Cotmcll. will take place in the auditorium. Give a gift subscription to The 51 SEEKONK ST,. PROV•• R.I. (401) 421-6363 Herald. l•r (' TIIE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AOOUST 25, 1967 9 CANADIAN JEWS HONORED NAMED TO COMMISSION A subscription to the Herald TORONTO - Five Canadian makes a good gift. Jews, one of - them Lawrence Julius Abrams of East Green­ Freiman of Ottawa, former pres• bfib,AA 'YflaiJJJJJx wich was appointed as a member IDA'S HEALTH STUDIO ldent of the Canadian Zionist Or· ll (Continued from Page 6) of the Motor Vehicle Dealers LI• Steam Baths - Swedish Mossoge ganlzatlon, were on the list of g_() cense Commission succeeding outstanding Canadians to receive Leo B. Carey of West Warwick, It IDA THORSON ti\(! newly-created Government - Offended By Editorial, Writer Lists was announced by Governor John Ro9. MT and PN awards of Companion of the Or­ H. Chafee on Thursday, Aug. 17. 1491 Broad Street der of Canada and the Medal of He will serve a term which ex­ ST 1--8510 ST 1-6409 Service. The others were H, Carl Reasons For Mourning On Tisha B' Av pires Feb. 1, 1972. Goldenberg, Q.C., of Montreal; I was appalled at your recent apex. theatrical director John Hirsch; Edi torial "WHY SIT ON TIIE As for the phrase, "Next year Mme. Pauline Donalda, opera FLOOR?" . ln Jerusalem," it m'eans more I SEU AU MRS. LEO GLEKLEN 421--1229 singer, and Maureen Forrester, You begin by quoting a Sabra, than just physically being there. ADVERTISED TRIPS OF 331-7106 contralto, a convert to Judaism. who says "Why should we sit on Even people who are today In Je­ the fioor? We have Israel I" Yes. rusalem say this. This phrase The Jews, for the first time In signifies the ul tlmate religious PETTERSON TRAVEL INC. JOE ANDRE'S nearly two thousand years, do Utopia which Jews long for. 76 DORRANCE STREET PROVIDENCE 3, RHODE ISLAND hold Israel. But for how long? You stated that In Camp Cen­ SUGGESTS ORCHESTRA Jews have controlled Israel sev­ ·terland the children would spend MIAMI WEEKEND- LABOR DAY, SEPT. 1-4 Music for that very special attojr eral times In history, but each a "joyful Tisha B' Av". There are 3 nights, 4 day,, Miami Beach oceanfront motel, 3 meal, oer day, round Weddings Bar Mitzvahs time they have Iif,en driven !~to several Jewish Holidays which trip Providence to Miami. All inclusive $169. 00 944--3344 Res. ST 1--9080 Exile. What makes the Sabra so are joyful celebrations. Tisha sure, that he w111 be able to hold B' Av commemorates a Tragedy, I on to his land? I truly wish that I see nomore reason for celebrat­ GALA LABOR DAY WEEKEND could be as sure as he Is. Israel ing a "joyful Tisha B' Av" than COLUMBUS TH1 SEPTEMBER 1, 2, 3, 4 t,:;RE Is still surrounded by hostile na­ to be Joyous concerning any other 270 Broadway Pr ov 621 9660 tions , and, despite the miraculous tragedy In our history, such a s e SHOWS e ENTERTAINMENT• NAME STARS result of the recent war, there 1s the one you mentioned - the an­ N- M..ien1 M.MI 4ccoM111o,latiea1 N- Avallable NOW SHOWING no assurance that the Jews will nihilation of six million Jews. DOWNSTAIRS SCREEN hold this land forever. Even the On the Eve of Tisha B' Av, an K• •-1011 "THE PINK PUSSYCAT" merger of Jerusalem has not e s timated thirty thousand people NOVICK"S :;:~::~ and been officially recognized by the came to the Western Wall re­ A·-,., 1. liOxAO --1....,, s,.,tI-•· ••ul Actfv l"""""ty-Sll...... ,_Da,.c:h'le,---St,,..._ .....- .. $59so "DANIELLA BY NIGHT" nations of the world. m sining of the Temple to com­ In the song you quoted ("By memorate Tisha B' Av, In sad­ vlNtll TN" •"4 ChlWN"'' ,,.__Ntte Petf'N-- At Studio Cinema Upstairs Screen .,_,., litltde• ,_ W.. tht Wetcllen ett4 D6eten. hr WNk & u, " HOW TO SUCCEED IN the waters of Babylon we sat ne ss...... _ Dlf'Mf et 111,..... Ye11, T,..,,.. Ae-t Dt, ... Oc:c:. BUSINESS WITHOUT REAU Y down and wept ...") you They remembered. Now for LAIIOlt DAY and HIGH HOLIDAYS Daniel Hassenfeld It...,,,• TRYING" omitted the next phrase: .. . Dlek,y Lewt Strictt, O_., d Datet O,.e• f., Perttes and "and we remembered Zlon." 40 Boon Street " AFTER THE FOX" Throughout hi story, the fondest Narragansett Pier, R.I. dream of the Jews has been to return to Israel . They remem­ bered Jerusalem and the destruc­ Conquests Ease Work tlon of the Temples. 'They were driven by the hope that they might Of Army Of Israel Theatre festival live to see the I and of their an­ JERUSALEM-Egyptian army cestors. Without this perpetual ;::: circles were distressed as a serl• force compelling them to return, ous breach of .,security rocked NOW : I doubt s trongly that we would Cairo. President Nasser was re­ have a Jewish Israel even today. PLAYING ported to have ordered a top a It was on Tisha B' Av, when we to bottom lnvestlgatlon and over­ I amented the destruction of Je­ haul of the Egyptian officer corps rusalem and the Temples that our • following the revelatlon that the Who's Afraid of arnln to return reached Its Israeli s ecret service had ?h~~~~S'~ managed to lnfll trate several spies Virginia ~ooH? Into the Egyptlan army for more CUI HLLBIIIS that a decade. ~,d~lllvrNV THRU AUGUST 27 621-8087 On May 28, a week before the mldcDe east war, a routine story n--lEATllE COMPANY _, CUSTOM FRAMING came over the wires that five tKa,/~ad~ OF BOSTON Egyptian soldiers, Including three -, ORIGINAL ART officers, had been captured on the ( TICKETS AT DECORATOR ACCESSORIES Sinai border. 'Their jeep, accord­ M~/~Clie~ Axtlrod's - 421,4833 ;, Ing to Israeli army officers, had WALL GROUPINGS apparently strayed Into Israeli 801 OffiCe in Theatre- gdt(e~ DECORATOR SERVICE - territory near the former demil­ 719.9733 itarized zone of Nltzana, and \. Memorial Unio11 Theatre stumbled onto an Israeli posltlon 167 ANGELL ST. Pro•kl•nce, R.I. \..._ URI, Kin9ston ) 20 yards from the frontier. o/~~,.b~ CALLUY OPEN DAILY t:tt t• 5:Jt P.M. 'The Jewish Press has report­ ed that reliable sources assert that the five "Egyptians" were ln reality members of the Israeli VILLA & MARTIN AUTO SALES secret service, sent into Egypt OPEN THURS: more than ten years ago, and had "'(]J,4_._ Fred Villa and Bill Martin Are Offering What .& FRI. EVENINGS '(""~.... "Clay They Believe To Be The Finest Used Car Values succeeded In Inf!! tratlng the army and giving Invaluable Information 't,I 9 P.M. ,_,_;,;~.li on The Market Today to the Israeli Defense Force. It Is believed that the precise Here are Some Examples: Information as to the location of mine fie! ds In Sinai and the num­ ber and position of military planes Everybody's was relayed to the Israelis by 1967 CHEVROLET . these men. IMPALA. 2--DR. HT S2767 Talking about . The "discovery and capture" MAROON-BLACK VINYL . of the men took place In a highly TOP AND INTERIOR. FULL POWER sensitive area close to an Impor­ tant road Junct'- ~ that could have served as the ,nain route for an Egyptian push toward Beersheba 1965 CADILLAC 1964 CHEVROLET and the heart of Israel. COUPE DE VILLE IMPALA. 4-DR. HT At the time of their capture, GOLD, FULL POWER VS-FULL POWER the three officers were Identified ~rl ~edlivaf LOW MILEAGE as Lieut. Col. Naglb Mohammed 5 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM el-Mahdi, Maj. Sayed Ahmed GALLERY $2965 Lelthl and Capt. Mohammed Alam WARWICK PLAZA $1564 ed-Dln. The United Arab Republic had Interceded with United Na­ ORIGINAL PAINTINGS , tions Commander Odd Bull at the 1965 CHEVROLET time of the capture asking for the FROM ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD IMPALA 4-DR. HT. 1963 CHEVROLET Immediate return of their sol­ GREEN. FULL POWER CONVERTIBLE. WHITE diers. LIKE NEW. 7 MORE WITH BLACK INTERIOR. HAND-CARVED FRAMES TO CHOOSE FROM. FULL POWER. UKE NEW. Israel To Pipe Oil THAT ARE EXQUISITE $1865 $1363 From Sinai To Haifa RESTORATION WORK HAIFA - Israel will use the oil she has started pumping from BEYOND COMPARISON 1966 FORD the wells captured In southwest CONVERTIBLE 1965 BUICK SKYLARK Sinai to cover her own needs, CUSTOM FRAMING A WHITE BEAUTY! 3,300,000 tons a year. This was SPORT WAGON YOU CAN'T ~EAT IT UKE NEW. 9,000 announced by Finance Minister FULL POWER. LIKE NEW. MILES. FULL POWER. Pinchas Saplr. The Italian state-owned oil THAT'S WHAT EVERYONE. IS group, ENI, held an oil con­ SA YING ABOUT THE $2166 $2265 cession from Egypt before the Arab-Israeli war and owns SO per cent of the Sinai wells. Payment for the oil to be tak• ..Art :J.e:,livaf 75 OTHER USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM en by Israel will be deposited In a foreign bank In the absence, so 836 POST ROAD, WARWICK PLAZA BANK FINANCING far, of an agreement with ENI on OPEN 10 a.m. - 1o ·p.m., Mon. - Sat. how It Is to·be paid for. Refining of the Sinai oil, which VILLA & MARTIN AUTO SALES will be shipped to Elath and then Rte. 44, Johnston, R. I. 231.1,00 sent northwards by existing pipe.: line, will be carried out In Haifa. ----- .. -~-·------· --. - ~. •------•-~-·------•-·-•••---- a-..,,_,,.. < -•

10 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AOOUST 25, 1967 _NEO-NAZI. RESIGNS that party, It was announced by Munich Mayor Hans Jochem Vo­ Providence Women To Join MUNICH-Karl Arthur Rltt­ gel, who ls a member of the So­ ler, the only member of the Mu­ cial Democratic Party. According nich City C01Dtcll elected by the to the Mayor, Rltt!.er remains a Other UJA Leaders On Trip neo-Nail NPD, has reslgned,-from member of the City CouricU. Mrs. Albert Pllavin, honorary GJC Women's Division of Provi­ chairman !;If the Naticoal Wom­ dence and Is a board member of en's Division of the United Jewish Hadassah and the Miriam 0Hospf­ Appeal. and Mrs. Merrill L. Has­ tal Wom/,..oz "In 1963, It added to lts baste courses (Which had already han­ professor, Norman Golb. and the community evidently TUBE 57c The document - a letter of Colgate Toothpaste dled close to 100,000 students), stood as surety for the remain­ recommendation for a robbery der. Regular or Drip lts Kibbutz Research Institute and other faculties, the Center for victim - Is written on a thin Jacob later carried the letter 1 LB Jew ls h-Arab and Afro-Asian fragile sheet of parchment ln to Cairo, where for 900 years It Autocrat Coffee CAN 64< Studies. Glvat Haviva became one square Hebrew script, and signed was in a store room. It was taken of the vital forces In Israel. •. for by members of the Khazar Jewish to Cambridge In 1897. Prof. Golb All Popular flavors the furtherance of Jewlsh-Arab community of Kiev, ln what has began studylng the document become the Soviet Unlon. The let­ about five years ago. JUICE ½GAL understanding through reciprocal JUGS 69< study of the two peoples' respec­ ter Is now at Cambrldge Unlver­ Lincoln DRINKS 2 tive cultural heritages. slty ln England. He said many of the names ln Prof. Golb, an assoclate pro­ the letter were non-Semitic and FINAST - For Soft fluffy Fabrics "In the four years of Its exist­ ence, the Jewish-Arab Institute fessor of medieval Jewish stud­ appeared to be names derived GAL ies, said the parchment Is the from a Turkic language. ' How­ JUG 69< has trained numerous Jewlsh Fabric Softener teachers of Arabic language and on! y known original document of ever, there was a similarity be­ the Khazar Jews. His findings tween the Hebrew names men­ flNAST - Sweet and Flavorful llterature, as well as many Arabs who have gone back to thelr com­ were discussed ln New York City tioned and those of the Khazar 15 oz munities to work both as teachers during a meeting of the Ukrainian kings of Jewish faith. He said JARS s1.oo AppleSauce 6 and In key posts ln varlous social Academy of Arts and Sclences. there was also evidence that the Golf said scholars had known Khazars converted to a "rabbin­ ~\ organizations. Special semlnars I that a Khazar king and hls court ical Judaism" and not Just PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT are offered to the latter to train a converted from a Turkish pagan sectarian form of the rellglon. 41QT14oz them for social work, trade un­ FINAST CANS 89< rellglon to Judaism but they have Because of the name slmllarlties Juice Drink ion organization, and other vlt~l disputed whether or not the com­ the people apparently had adopted aspects of local life. flNAST - 4 Popular flavors - No Deposit, No Return mon people adopted the rellglon. Judaism. The Khazars llved In "Arab workers regularly at­ The conversion had been noted In one quarter In Kiev at the time. tend the Institute for seminars In various Arabic, Byzantine and old "Until now,'• Goth said. 11not 1 0 00 Beverages LO-CAL 7 ~~fs z s1- I abor legislation, social Insur­ Russlan chronicles, and In letters having one single document com­ ance, and the role they can play In Hebrew sent from Asia to Ing from the Khazars has caused Same Low Self-Servic• Prices in all our Stores in this Vicinity :­ In their own local unions as well Spain In the 10th century. doubt about the conversions. But as within the broader lsraell la­ The document was probably this writing helps to exp! aln the Roso;v• tho Right to Limit Quantities) IW• bor movement as a whole. wrltten In the first part of the wide spread of Judaism In Asia "One of the signal accom- 10th century In Kiev. It Is a letter from 500 to 1500 a.d." ... _.~;;.,-..;,- -• ...... ~·u._,,,_,, ,..,,...,-. ..,.,...,__ .... __· · --~-- --~..:..-----..

11fE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AOOUST 25, 1967 11 Ullverstty of Washington-a new experimental program to train professional actors for hlsl:h school graduates who pass strin­ TWEEDY gent auditions, even If they do not meet all regular university FALL FASHIONS \ entrance requirements. . ( LUCY'S IY ALTERATIONS COAT HEMS • ~ . . $).tl.0 DRESS tl&MS~.. ,SJ,QO ALICII IILOO. :11 ·te1

38I ii''t-.0 0tQ ST.

70% Of Parents, School Boards ....•...... •••••.•• YOUR Prefer 'Ungraded' Pupil Assignment TI ... ,,.{lfl~E FALL SKIRTS ~DIES : FAVORITES Assignment ot students to styles of school architecture. classes In accordance to their And, as school board mem­ HOME FASHIONED HAVE SLACKS level ot achievement regardless bers know perhaps better than ARRIVED ot age-a method frequently re­ parents, the fiextbWty ot move­ FAVORITES SWEATERS ferred to as the "ungraded" sys­ able partitions may well lead to tem-has won equal approval savings. from parents and board members When sizes oJ classes vary, I lb. Box S1,t In the IDEA survey, with 70 per­ changes may be required In the $1.80 cent ot both scoring this a "good rooms provided for them. idea." 6ki-oue With 33 percent ot the schools T-~AIPAAB. fOI THI YOUNQ net -' JUNIOI. MIU _ _ 0,..11 Daily 1-1 I 1ri. 'til I represented In the survey already using this method ot education, Shoes Styled 1141 WUl,ar Aw., Jtte. ltJJ many who voiced opinions were s.,,..,.• .,, Mu,. speaking from first hand obser­ vation. For Many Needs "This -way the child ls not As students step back to class pushed Into a group tor which he and campus this semester, an. Is not prepared while the brighter abundance of shoe styles Is ready child can go on ahead," ls a sum­ to tit the varied needs ot a busy mary ot favorable attitudes. college schedule. In new and Among the opposed the opinion classic leather textures and col­ appeared to be summarized by ors, shoes go back to college with the feeling that It would embar­ both lively good looks and com­ rass those not moved ahead In fort afoot. some subjects. Shoe-happy co-eds see the 1n practice, this Innovation ls shoe looks ot the season Inter­ Lets you on a l reported to have been most effec­ preted In slings, pumps, ties in tive In reading where sound abili­ flattles and, ot course, the ever­ ty ls so Important to progress In present boot. The hottest heel of new Decorator Idea: education. the season, shaped low and chun­ I\ Use ot moveable partitions In ky, and a new wider toellne make construction ot new schools, to active feet smile, BEADS and BOWS .. make way tor adjusting the sizes Pumps are slowly outdoing the ot classrooms to the require­ strap shoe, although the latter on hampers, baskets and ments ot the education formula, continues to show ott at school In . tissue holders will give was approved by an overwhelming T's, halters and multiple-strap . your bathroom that and =••A variety of butter bons, percentage of the school board styles, For wear on off "added touch." Now members participating In the campus, the breezy tie shoe ap-- . pecan rolls, fudges, nut ,; IDEA survey of educational re­ pears In ghillie style, oxford tie, and fruit candies, car• • available in a wide varie­ J I quirements. spectator tie and a myriad other mels and jellies . . . no : ty of brilliant colors. ' 1,1 , Parents, on the other hand, versions. chocolate covered pieces. : gave It only 63 percent approval Leather textures Include ef­ while 40 percent of the schools fects both old and new-smooth,. represented already have adopted grained, brushed, suede, waxy, IVY HONEY SHA TK/N this type of school building plan­ patent, embossed, aniline. & HELEN BAK_ST ning. Shoes for the male student Difference of attitudes may be combine a light step with casual APOTHECARY traceable In part to the greater elegance, Here, too, toelines are FREE PARKING 127 WAYLAND AVENUE consciousness of school board wider, and textures are V/ll'led, In 736 HOPE STREET members to the Increasing need smooth, grained, brushed, cordo­ 421-3047 274-7832 for fiexlblllty In the size of van, split cowhide, waxy, natural classrooms. and suede leathers. As a matter of tact, the school The sott leather slip-on, the house without walls-with fioor classic or contemporary mocca­ plans so fiexlble and with furnl­ sin, the beefy brogue, the trim ture easily moveable-ls on the oxford, and, again, the boot are ascendancy, according to the set to cover every step taken this Educational Facilities Labora­ semester. tories. The slip-on comes stitched, Team teaching, for one thing, gored, tasseled, strap-and-buck­ which has a tendency to eliminate led or high-tongued, while the the need for "home rooms" of moccasin takes such touches as fixed size, functions more ef­ brass hardware, rolled seaming, ficiently under the more modern novelty straps,

Ours alone - This mlr• Yelous little ensemble - aYailable in honey beige with Lutetia mink - upphire with black mmk and the subtle blend of alabaster and ranch mink. 139.95

?~~~tt:l/ l(,illi,.11 :, 7111l W1vl~nct A,111m e W1;\u11l Sq11111

HOW MUCH MATH CAN HE LEARN-Fifth grader Scott Johnson, still wearing his traffic safety belt, ls shown participating above with Prof. David A. Page, director of the University of Ullnols arithmetic project, In a long range experiment subsidized by the Carnegie Foun­ dation, and aimed at determining how much math grade school children can learn. t ' ·~ l o, ' Jt 1... + 1 r ,. 1 r '' J l. 12 1HE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AOOUSI' 25, 1967 Oalcland Uitversity-100 In• Ohio State lmlverslty-A coming freslnnen will enter Oak· newly established University Col­ I and' s second experimental lege program for "Utdeclded" "little college," New College, Its freshmen, emphasizing academic predecessor now has study co1U1selllng and effective Instruc­ groups In 'Germany, France, and tion. Spain. . PEN PROBLEM ? BRING IT TO Come See ~ROVIDENCE PEN SHOP 7 Arcade Bldg. GA 1-4512 Our - Lighters Repaired - lmRortep Report Cards FOR AN EXTRA-SPECIAL KNITS IMPORTED BIRTHDAY GOLD JEWELRY Outmoded PARTY Is the traditional report card O~ANY OTHER KIND OF FROM ITALY doomed to go the way of the old fashioned slates and dunce caps? PARTY The National Education Asso­ LOUIS COLA VECCHIO ciation board says It Is outmoded, CALL 31 HAWKINS BLVD. calls It "the sick man of educa­ CE 1-0417 tion • • . a nuisance to good N. PROV., R.I. teaching and learning." WIONKHIEGE 334 WESTMINSTER MAU Eve.,-ings 7 to 9 231-0506 The educators hold that the standard old report cards almost rorce students to work for VALLEY FARM grades, leading to emotional dis­ tress Instead or learning. LOG ROAD SMITHFIELD UNIVERSAL To replace the report card of 200 acres of fresh green, old, the association's study group beautiful New England GENEVE 1s working on a new plan that In­ Try a surrey ride volves evaluation comnilttees to RESERVATIONS IMPORTANT Slim dress bracelet. decide what each course studied Is worth for college entrants and watch su'l>erbly de­ guidance or employers and par­ s lg n e d In 14 kt. ents, gold. Atruly distinc­ But they are taking their time about recommending chaages­ tive timepiece, at least fl ve years-until a new plan can be perfected. 300. Meanwhile, a simple "pass­ rail" system or reporting student performance has been put Into ef­ excluslvely from rect by some schools, even by FIRST" DAY for first grader calls some colleges. for a "grown-up" outfit like this Parents, however, are very reversible cardigan, with slacks much concerned over tinkering and a vest. covered-up here, but with the traditional method of r e­ al so reversible. ~ porting on how their children are _____1'.~ELErt9 .....,,.. getting on In school. Parents, School Boards They are 83 percent opposed to the drastic "pass-fall" report­ ltOUlll-tvn.&TIIUltl,111'1'.& system, according to the Institute Surveyed By Gallup STOP IN AND CIWIQI ACCOUIIII 1111/ITU for Development or Educallonal How parents and school board Activities Innovations Survey. members evaluate the proliferat­ SEE OUR NEW School board members par­ ing Innovations In educatlQn that ticipating In the second phase of have been Introduced Into grade FALL LINE the IDEA survey were 78 percent schools and high schools ls r e­ against the "pass~fall" r eport vealed In two special studies s ystem. commissioned by the Institute for OF Opinions volunteered by par­ the Development of Educational ticipants In the survey varied Activities. KNIT SUITS, widely, yet Indicated a willing­ Basic s urveys for the study ness to forego rigid grading sys­ were made by Gallup Inter­ tems If something could be de­ national Interviews and open end DRESSES, vised to keep parents Informed of questionnaires Involving a sam­ the progress their children are pllng that stretched Into forty­ making In school. eight of the nation's 50 states. AND u Parents need to know," said IDEA Is an activity financed one, "what the child Is doing so If by the Charles F. Kettering he needs help they can try to help Foundation of Dayton, Ohio, dedi­ EVERYTHING Back To School him." cated to study, development and A flat "n0" to the "pass-fail" promotion of Innovative practices ELSE method admitted there may be In primary and secondary schools Head Quarters "many fallacies In our grading with a view to helping Improve system, but until a better method the quallty or publlc school edu­ RUTH'S APPARE Where your new wardrobe Is determined, I would stay with cation. our method." is ready and waiting! Come Two phases of the study have NEA appears to be on the been completed and a third, among 764 HOPE ST. right track In taking plenty of school administrators, Is yet to plot your course in fashion now. time to explore the problem. PROVIDENCE, R.I. Major in knit dresses, skirts, and sweaters. Minors in coots, Teachers, Schools f' ' jackets, and shirts. And OH, those

extracurricular clothes. Matched By NEA Matching teachers to the spe­ cific requirements of the schools - Have A Fling .. that need them, Is a new service With the new leg wear, launched by the N atlonal Educa­ tion Association In a move to too! Fishnet and opaque ease shortages and Improve ca­ reers or educators. hose and tights, nylons, The new service, called bright knee-highs, NEASEARCH, Is a computer based "locater and referral ser­ our selection goes to all vice," which Dr. William G. the lengths of '67. Carr, NEA executive secretary says, provides "a systematic method of locating Jobs for educators and relieving the criti­ cal teacher shortage" that "could only have been accomplished by i an association as large as NEA," ) More than 4,000 teachers and over 120 school systems had reg­ istered for the service shortly after It had been put Into oper­ ation. Teachers and school su­ perintendents can apply for the service, for which a small fee Is 8

11fE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, PRIDAY, Au:;usT 25, 1967 13 · __ Syrians Relinquish Uilftrsify of Georgia - Sum-­ 3 Coffined Israelis mer or-lentatlon program for TEL AVIV-In theflrstSyrlan­ 2.SOO freshmen In groups of 200. lsraell prisoner exchange since the end of the June war, Israel handed over 500 Syrian soldiers and one EI F atah guerrlll a and re~ eelved three bodies and one Is­ raeli pilot. The guerrilla had A·NNOUNCING been sentenced to life Imprison­ ment by an Israeli court. The bodies were handed over In co!11ns. One was of an Israeli North Carolina A & T Col­ ALL THE youtb who disappeared two years lege-New recreal1onal and cul­ ago while searching for botanical tural programs for the student LA TEST FASHIONS union. s pecimens near the Syrian bor­ HAVE der. The Syrians denied for the entire two years any knowledge of the youth's whereabouts. The oth­ ARRIVED er two dead were Israeli Air FOR THE Force pilots killed by the Syr­ ians. The three coffins were wrapped PREP In Israeli flags and pl aced In a car while members of a burial society & recited Psalm r 1 COLLEGE Reliable STUDENTS Venetian Blind Co. SALES & SERVICE Aluminum Windows and Doors LOCAL BUSINESSMEN (DOWNTOWN'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE Venetian Blinds YOUNG MEN'S SHOP) Repaired and Cleaned SHOP THE 1366 Broad Street ELEPHANT WALK FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY HO 1-2889 See Ovr Total Line Of Jrtp 6bop VICTOR OF MILANO BECAUSE BOYS are clothes-con­ 149 MATHEWSON STREET -Lotions, Cologne scious, too, new outerwear jack­ PROVIDENCE ets are handsomely s tyled. This RIGHT FOR rainy . school days and Acee~ sories CHARGE ACCOUNTS one has corduroy look, self col­ are pracrtcal, good-looking new THE ELEPHANT WAU< lar, zip-off hood; In Caprol an ny- raincoats, like this Jaunty trench 16 Pine StrHt 1on. COB( style.

NOW IS THE University of Michigan-A resldenl1al college, a small unit TIME TO PREPARE within the college of literature, Definite Style Opinions FOR FALL science, and the arts, will open this fall In temporary quarters Expressed By Boys See our newest styles with 220 freshmen enrolled. ln­ strucrton will be extended each 38 Pon•t2 ~9o6'2vidence- The myth that boys don't care f year unit! four years are offered. about clothes has been exploded for all rtme. They do care, and \ E111barraul■9 they have definite views. In fact, when they reach their late teens, they become sharp dressers. as HAIR OUT FOREVER any parent can attest. What do 1ounger boys really - 1 ■-a-fla• - like to wear? A quick survey of some members of Boys' Clubs of WITH THERMADERM America gives Insight Into their Therm•clenn tMh.pn your lwtir­ personal tastes. i line - 1y.brows - ufely, sci­ I First of all, among the 750 ,- 1 entifically •ncl IHtingly remo'lfl 000 members of this youth group, 1 unw•n ♦ ecl Mir. This unl>.liev•bly 1 by gentl• electronic ,-mov.r' of Mir the trend can almost be gauged can smooth your face, ermt, body age. The younger members , up to I and lag, permanently. Done with about 12, want sturdy, washable 9,.atffl comfort encl use. clothes with lots of color In l shirts. The up-to-stxreeners want I CALL OR WRITE school clothes featuring slacks l I NINA FERRIE . JOSEPH FERRIE and lots of color In the shirts, 187 WESTMINSTER ST. Licens•d Electrologish plus dungarees for after-school l 920 SMITH ST. Phone GA. l •1869 fun at their Cl ub. Above th at age , the vote Is for ✓ ~------7 three different outfits; one for lI school , one for Boys' Club, and FIRST - IN MATTERS Of EMPLOYMENT the sharp one for dating - with lots of color In shirts and neck­ lI ties. The boys emphasize washable 1 j Assistance to Management: clothes In their preferred list. : There Is a very simple reason I Worker Recruitment. for this: "You can fool around or I wrestle on the floor, and If your ◄ Worker .Aptitude Testing. i clothes get dirty your Mom won't .I, Industry Occupational Surveys. be so mad If they can go Into the I Employment Trend Information. washing machine." Colors seem to be of major Importance, e specially In shirts. The colors most favored are of the firehouse variety: reds, or­ Assistance to Workers: anges, bright greens and blues. Job Referral. Job Solicitation & Development. Jesuits Pref er Job Counseling & Selective Placement. Referral to Training Opportunities. Jewish Jerusalem Special Services to Veterans, Youth, I and the Older Aged Worker. · NEW YORK-A leading Amer­ ican Jesuit publlcal1on has voiced Tan, or Dark Special Services to the Handicapped.' differences with the Vartcan policy $9.99 Referral to Cooperating Community on lnternartonallzation of the city Mahogany or of Jerusalem. $8.99 Agencies for Services to Enhance Sizes 4-10 Worker Employability. An editorial In the current ls­ AAA-AA-A-8-C Mahogany or sue of "Ame·rtca" pointed out $8.99, that "no single one of the world's great religions has a monopoly of At any office of your Interest In the Holy Land.• It noted that " given the Inter­ national character of Jerusalem, Internationalization Is perhaps RHODE ISLAND the most logical solu11on to a problem that Is of ~ncern to so much of the world outside Is­ STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE raeJ 's. borders." It said, however, that "tf ls­ rael' s record aver the las t 20 176 Way land Avenue Ga nsett Shopping Pla za 1 years In providing free access Is Way land Square 64 Newport Avenue the Issue, then we cannot help Open Fri . Nights 'til 9 P.M. Open Night s "til 10 P.M. wondering If the case for thfi ln­ (Charge Accounts In vited} , (Next to Mammoth Mart) terna 11onallza11on of Jerusalem Is as urgent today as It appeared to be In 1947." --.-.

14 11fE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 Herald ads get good results! Prosecution Proceeds Against H. Wagner Israel Will Negotiate Only RUSH MESSENGER SERVICE BONN .....,. 1be pr09ecution progress since 1959. Wagner Is Two w~ Radio~ opened !ta case recently against · free on bail In spite of the vast With Arabs, Says Eban -Am- Horst Wagner of Duesseldorl, a number ol murders .Involved In JERUSALEM - Foreign "What the map would look like MAIL DEUVERY · SERVICE 60-year-old former high official the charges against him. Minister Abba Eban this week re­ would only emerge In the peace · 11, er- ...i ,.;...... , of the Nazi Porelgn Ministry who jected third-party mediation In negotiations themselves," he ...... ,_ ...... ,_ In Bremen, the prosecutor In Is charged with participating In the dispute between Israel and said. "We have very clear Ideas the murder and deportation of the trial of Fritz Hildebrand, a her Arab neighbors, according to of what we think It would look like PLANTATIONS 356,000 Jews. former SS officer In occupied Ga­ and what we would like It to look lllffllPIIIU, INC. Terence Smith In a .New Yori: Investigations of the charges licia, demanded life Imprisonment Times story. like." QA_ 1-1558. against Wagner have· been In at hard labor for the defendant. He emphasized that Israel The Foreign Minister declined would accept no substitute for a to say what that map might be, --- peace settlement negotiated but he said that Israel was pre­ directly with the Arab nations. He pared to enter negotiations with repeated that Israel would main­ all or any of the Arab nations and tain her troops along the present that she would offer "reasonable cease-fire line until such a peace and practical proposals" In the settlement was reached. negotiations. "We will reject any form of In answer to a question, Mr. armistice· and we reject all the Eban acknowledged that he had no kinds of euphemisms designed to tangible evidence that the Arab provide our neighbors wt th an es­ countries were considering nego­ cape. route from the necessity of tiating on peace but he said he ­ formal interstate relations," he still believed they would even­ said at a news confejence here. It tually decide to do so. was the Foreign Minister's first '"If we make It clear that session With the press In Israel there are only two alternatives, since before the brief war In namely Indefinite prolongation of June. the cease-fire situation and the ''We think the time has come negotiation of peace, then the al­ to restrtct the area of choice," ternative of peace will commend he went on. • 'We think that If the Itself,'' he said. neighboring Governments are "But If we give the Impres­ faced With two alternatives: to sion that there are dozens of al­ maintain the existing situation or ternatives - ease, faclle, w­ to change It by !!"ace, then the reallstic ones - then we shall Idea of negotiating peace might squander this opportunity." seriously enter their minds.,. Asked about the Israeli atti­ The position outlined by the tude concerning the Suez Canal, Foreign Minister Is essentially the Foreign Minister said: '"Let the one Israel has maintained us make one thing clear. Israel Is since the end of the six-day war, not obstructing the canal and the but observers here regarded It as canal Is not closed because of Is­ significant that he chose 10 reiter­ rael . It Is closed because Egypt ate It so emphatically at a news sank ships at either end." conference attended by nearly 100 Mr. Eban went on to say that foreign Journalists. there was nothing preventing free Many observers believe that and Innocent passage In the canal Mr. Eban's remarks were de­ while Israel remained on the east signed as much for the benefit of bani:, but that If the canal did · the countries that might be draft­ open to other -nations, "Israel Ing peace alternatives as for the would recall to the others that we Arab nations. have the same rights of pas­ Discussing the territories that sage." Israel occupied as a result of the When asked what. Israel would war, Mr. Eben said: "l1lere are do If the canal were opened but two possible maps. There Is the denied to her shipping, he smiled cease-fire map as It exists today and said: "I am wllllng to bave a or there Is the new map of the press conference on the day the Middle East which could be can a I Is opened to Inter-, achieved only by a peace settle­ continental shipping to discuss ment." the question then." Technion Mapmakers Plan It's back to sch.ool again. Electronic Data Processing HAIFA, Israel - Map-mak­ Plnhas Yoell and a staff of two · Time for us all . ing, like diamond cutting, has technicians produce maps which been a Jewish occupation since are of the highest professional the Middle Ages, when the pro­ standard In every aspect: details, to be more careful. fession was dominated by entire color technique and workmanship, famllles of Jewish cartographers but they can produce them cheap­ Not only when driving. But when dren need. And our experts will fit living on Majorca In the 14th and er. overhead Is low. The labora­ choosing the right shoes to send the your child as perfectly as it can be 15th centuries. Many maps pro­ tory Itself Is fully equipped with duced by these · families went every Instrument needed for kids back to school in. That's where done. In a variety of popular styles around the world with the ex­ map-making, and all the Informa­ \ Jumping Jacks can help. Made of un­ and colors. So come on in today. peditions of Vasco da G~ma and tion needed Is on file. Every de­ lined leather, they're soft, light and You'll find it doesn't cost very much Ferdinand Mage)lan. tall of the maps can be done at The distance from Majorca In the Technion with the exception of flexible for the barefoot freedom chil- to be careful. the West Mediterranean, to Tech­ printing, which Is executed by a nion City In Haifa, Israel, Is not reliable firm In Haifa under close far In miles, but the techniques of supervision of the staff. map-making have changed greatly Technion's map-makers can In the · Intervening centuries. A point with pride to their produc­ short tour through the Cartogra­ tion. With little fan-fare, In Its phic Unit at the Technion where short period of operation, the unit students learn by practical ex­ has put out a map of Israel, In the perience to make today's highly scale of 1:700,000, printed In complicated maps, Is proof of English, French and German, re­ this change. If the research now markably detailed for Its size. being conducted In this unit be­ This was purchased by the Gov­ comes practical reality, the pro­ ernment Tourist Office, which cess of map-making In die future ordered a first printing of 200,- will be changed even more. 000 copl!'s for Its various bu­ Besides producing high-quali­ reaus around the country and ty maps and atlases for schools, abroad. Then came a map of the tourist companies and the general MldcDe East which was purchased public, the Cartographic Unit at and distributed by "Maarlv," a the Technion has started re­ leading afternoon newspaper In search on an entirely new system Israel. TASSEL of data processing for maps The unit Is al so working on a BILLIE TAFFY COMET BOXER which can be drawn and printed 1:400,000 map of Israel's territo­ by an electronic computer. ry, showing all the settlements Ordinarily, shadow pictures of and towns. A third project will be the terrain shown on a map are a beautifully colored three di­ Jumping.Jacks~ shaded In by hand. Under the new mensional plastic relief map, to ' ' process, height data will be fed be produced Inexpensively for for toddlers to teens - size. Into a computer which will pro­ schools and offices, cess the Information as well as print the result In the form of a ,,,, ,.,.. "hill shaded" relief. DtrrCH FAVOR ISRAEL Originally operating· as an AMSTERDAM-A poll of the academic unit only, the Cartogra­ Dutch· population on the MIElcDe phic Laboratory at the Technion East situation showed recently 48 ROLFE ST. Research and Development Foun­ that 6 7% of those queried favored CRANSTON dation not Jong ago began making the lsraell cause IQ the conflict o...... 1e1 .. , ...... Its maps available to the public. with the Arab states. More than Working as a "home-Industry" 25% of those polled were neutral for I 1/2 years on a shoestring on the question and another 7% OPIN IYllY DAY UNCLUDIN• MONDAYS> 'TIL '6 budget, the map-making business had no opinion. Less than one­ OPIN THUitS. • PII, IYINltl•S 'TIL 9 has begun to pay Its own way. half of 1% favored the Arab Not only can the students, cause. ~ ------~-~~-~- '-""'· =~...,,.,.-----·-....-...... ---~------~ ...... s.- ,.._ ----o".,_

THE RHODE ISL,AND HERALD, FRIDAY, AOOUST 25, 1967 15 B hi h G d E . dB I I TOAIDINHARVEST Wo~ld Business Leaders et e em oo s xporte Y srae NAZARETII-Jezreel Valley TEL AVIV--Bethlehem-made people, half of them ',!Orldng at settlements sent combines to the religious articles and manutac- home. At present he cannot oper- Jenln Area In West Jordan to aid Confer On Israeli Economy tured goods were on show last ate two shifts because of the cur- In the wheat harvest. This follow- JERUSALEM - Business utilizing Israel's technical and week at the Shalom Stores here few, ed an urgent appeal 11ent by the leaders·· trom 13 countries met ~ scientific skills and her position for sale to visiting buyers from Ibrahim Handal, president of Mayor of Jen1n throug~, the MIii• here on Aug. 9 and 10 to confer at the crossroads of European, abroad. They will also be sent to the Bethlehem Chamber of Com- tary Governor and !IN: Agrlcul- on the economic expansion and Asian and African trade. Israel's permanent exhlb1t1on merce, said that there was more rure Ministry. Desplt4,; the war, Independence of Israel. They em­ Mr. Saplr said that In the next stands In North America, as part trade In the town now than before • harvesting In Israel ,ras finished phasized that their plans for the 10 years Israel hoped to Increase of a · Government plan to help the war. The problems facing Jo- on time. On the WeJiern Bank next 10 years had been formu­ her exports by 12 per cent a - Arab enterprises. cal Industry, he said, were rs-·· where harvesting ls~ llll being lated before the war and did not, year, doubling the 1967 figure of Some manufactured goods rael's high taxes, the continued; done by hand, tens of-,.r_,usands of wl th the exception of the Arab nearly $!-billion. from the West Bank have already closure of the Arab banks and the dunams would have ~ lost but sector of Jerusale111, Include the been exported by Israel. They opening only three times a week for the quick action l:ll the Israel Arab areas occupied during the Among the 38 Americans at­ consist of decorative and rell- of the Bank Leumi branch In combines. The settlements are to · June war. tending the conference were gtous articles which were shipped Bethlehem. This restricted open- receive payment for the work ac- The conference, which at­ Abraham Feinberg, president of from Haifa and Ashdod. Ing produced "an Impossible sit- cording to the prevailing rates In tracted some of the weal thlest the Israel Bond organization and A market will also be ottered uatlon," he added. Israel. and most successful members of chief executive officer of the ,n Israel and the Ministry of Fi­ their communities, had been Amertcan Bank & Trust Company nance has been requested to ex­ planned long before the war, In of New York: Samuel Rothberg, empt rellgtous articles from cus­ preparation for a much larger president of the American Dis­ toms. conference In April. More than tilling Company: Lewis H. Boyar, The Frelj Pearl Works In efucienne 400 Jewish businessmen are ex­ a Los Angeles real estate execu­ Bethlehem which earned $100,000 JUST RETURNED FROM pected to attend that meeting. tive; Max M. Fisher, a Detroit olt last year, Is again In Ml produc­ A similar conference In 1950 and real estate executive; Phillip tion and has already shipped SUP­ led to the Israel Bond campaign, Lutznlck of Chicago, a former piles abroad through Haifa and PA·RIS which In 16 years has promoted representative at the United Na­ Ashdod, The owner, Mr. FrelJ, WITH the sale of more than $!-billion tions, and Benjamin Swig, a San told newsmen that he employed In worth of bonds. Francisco real e state executive. normal times a minimum of 100 FRENCH KNITS Leading members of the Cabl• EXCLUSIVE WITH ME IN THE U.S.A. net spoke to the businessmen, ap­ pealing for greater direct In­ Former Jordanian Museum C'esf Magnifique vestment In Israeli enterprises and greater efforts to sell Israeli Being Readied For COMPLETE RANGE· OF SIZES products. Visitors WIU RE-OPEN SEPTEMBER 1 HOURS 10-6; CLOSED WEDNESDII Y They noted that while Israel J ERUSALEM - The arch­ to about $80,000. He al so said 250 HOPE STREET, PROVIDENC:E PL 1- 1245 had achieved considerable eco­ that II ttle has changed about the nomic growth since Independence eologlcal department of the Israel Museum Is preparing the Pales­ museum during the 19 years of In 1948, both her Industry and her tine Archeol ogtcal Museum In the Jordanian operation. He noted agriculture were near their max­ that the catalogues Issued by the imum limits without a large In­ former Jordanian sector of Je­ rusalem -for an anticipated rush authorities of the British Mandate fusion of new capital. of v1 sltors. ·were still ln use , and that some They said that expend! tures Th e stone building was Items listed In 1947 as "removed for Imports to sustain this econo­ erected with fllllds donated by the for repairs" are still missing. my exceed Income from exports Rockefeller family In I 927, who Dr. Blran olso thinks that by at least $45-ml!llon a year. stipulated that the museum should some recent finds were sent to Minister of Finance Plnhas not bear the family' s name. Jordan's newer museum in Am ­ Saplr said the goal of self­ Hebrew lettering on the s truc­ man, and that these probably In­ sufficiency could be reached by ture had been hidden from view cluded some Dead Se a Scrolls. by plastic, cardboard and display ''We cannot locate any In­ cases during the Jordanian occu­ ventory," he says, nso we are pation , and mos t recently, the not even sure what ls missing." J ordanians used the building as a IsraeJ owns seven scrolls, 1n­ 011 All Finer 911allty military position. cl udlng the 23-foot scroll of 1ra11cl Names, at o ;Qo•s The war left Its mark on the Isaiah. Some smaller fragments True Dtsca•nt Prlcll museum: the window s are broken, foWld In the Israel Museum match PROVIDENCE shrapnel has ripped through the other pieces folllld In the "Rock­ lW• 1pectatlle la 116 Mathewson Street walls and ceilings, ancient vases efeller" mu,;eum. Also on display aCfffO- wlcltlll and pots developed new cracks, are remains of prehistoric Car­ AAAAA-~> Quality Clothing and but much of the glassware re­ mel man, Ivories from Meggldo Furnishings Personally mained intact. and Samaria and the Palace of King Ahab, rare sarcophagi, the Selected by Bill Vellella Dr. Avraham Blran, the Gov­ ernment antiquities department's original lintel from the nearby Ben Feinstein director, said that the cos t of re­ Church of the Holy Sepulcher and pairing the museum would come Important relics. Mayor Teddy Kollek, chair­ man of the board of directors of the Israel Museum, has Indicated that another museum, the Isl_am1c Museum near the Aksa Mosque, would be reopened soon. ~ - of Paris It was e stablished by the for­ mer Mufti of Jerusalem, HaJ Amin el Husseini, but remained 121 MEDWAY STREET, PROVIDENCE closed for many years because of ·I a lack of funds. We Are Glad To Announce that The Israel Museum Is training Arabic-speaking guides and will soon add Arabic signs to Its ex­ MISS HENRIETTE · hibits. Of Our Shop At Narragansett Will Join Our Providence Staff This Fall New Borders Ease FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL 331-8914 Israel Army's Task TEL AVIV-President Nas­ ser Is making a major mis• calculation If he believes that Is­ rael will find It Increasingly dif­ ficult to maintain her occupatien I Joseph A. Christy of Sinai and ho! d the pre sent cease-fire line, now the new bor­ 1. proudly announces der between Asia and Africa, ac­ 1. cording to General Rabin, Chief the opening ol of staff of the Israeli Defense Forces, and Moshe Dayan, Min­ ister of Defense. They have al­ ready pointed out that It ls easier I CINDERELLA WIGS, to hold the new lines than It was to defend the previous armistice Inc. line. 516 Reservoir Ave., Cranston,- R. I. The present duties of the Is­ raeli Army are fundamentally those they are used to In peace Excellent selection of time. If the new lines of commu­ nication are longer than before, the border Itself has become Wigs, Wiglets, , and Falls shorter, more simple and, from the topographic al viewpoint, Complete Wig Service better. Border clashes no longer directly threaten peaceful Israeli 100% Human Hair settlements. One of Israel's gen­ Shop Susan's, The Friendly Store, Where erals remarked after the recent You Get All The Brand Names Mon. thru Wed. 9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. Incidents on the Suez Canal: · " When I hear that fighting has Thurs. and Fri .•. 9:00 A.M . to 9:00 P.M. broken out, I still think In• sdnctively of the children of Al­ Saturday ...... 9:00 A.~. to 5:00 P.M. magor, Gadot and Nltzanlm. Then · 1 realize that It Is lsma1lla, Port Tel. Tawflk and El Qantara which are 762 HOPE ST. tmder fire.'' Providence 467-5050 ----- Last year, excessive speed was Involved In more than 18,000 fatalities on America's highways. Iii • .,

16 1l!E RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AU'.,UST 25, 1967 Buy Pants Suits But Not For Class When the new semester' TIie pants suit (long or short starts, and the new campus ward­ pants, coordinated with Jacket, robes come out, where will the shirt or sweater and perhaps a pants suit be? vest) Is an establlshed young Not, properly, In the class­ fashion and as such has a place In rooms and halls of higher learn­ the shopping plans of both high ing, Is the consensus of fashion school and college girls, but It's authorities. for leisure only. Of Nation Books Nearly One-Third 'That Returns To School This Fall Going back to school this fall record high of $6 billion. _ some 2,850,000 are members of will Involve grade school, high The time of the year has come the professional staff - admin­ ards istrators, principals, teachers. school and college youth totalling when all the children who are the Flair! nearly one third of the nation's major beneficiaries of these pro­ And of this number, I. 9 million :,,111e,= ~,., .,,~ population, In the annual return to grams and the dedicated work of are In the public elementary and learning. TIie ratio. actually their teachers, must prepare secondary schools, reports the Rlc:haz,D: ftalr .. • In natural lhoul· der Jackets and IUlta In the .,_..., three out of ten, Is expected to again for the return to learning. National Education Association. aelecUon of Jabr1ct and ·colon, School administrators , main­ ,ou•u llnd an,where . . • and 1n prevail with substantial accuracy The answer may hold at least for most of the 23,500 school dis­ tenance people, and most of all one surprise. Teacher may turn ·-from hatortatnal to lboa.Rldlards Get - oft. to ..• nmnlns Rlcharda at&rt lhla fall and tricts In the coimtry; the teachers, are now busy pre­ out to be a man. NEA reports that do lt wltb.ln. YoW" bUQtt ! Percentage-wise enrollment paring for their return. almost 35 percent of all class­ Increases will be greatest again Of special Interest •to both pu­ room teachers today are men, this year at high school and col­ pll sand parents are some 4,350,- and at the high school level they lege levels. Not only has the 000 people who will be going back outnmnber women. "growing-up" progress of those to school this year. Even before A profile of a typical man horn during peak birth rate years school opens throughout the coun­ teacher, as compiled by NEA, contributed to these Increases: try, they' ll be on hand, and on the might read like this: the awareness of parents and to­ job, by the millions. He Is about 35 years old, day's wiser teen-agers of the Im­ Included In these school-bound married, and teaching In the high portance of. higher education to mil II on s are administrators, school. He probably has taught their future, means more are classroom teachers , bus drivers, for 10 years-six to seven of continuing to reach for all the cafeteria employees, Janitors and them In the local school system. learning they can get. all the rest of the enormous He teaches math, science or so­ The annual youth mobilization corps of school personnel dedi­ cial studies. for the return to cl asses this cated to the education of Amer­ He has an average of 134 stu­ year occurs during a period when ica's children. dents In five cl asses a day-all the search for more effective and Of the 4,350,000 workers In thl s aside from his homeroom more efficient educational meth­ regular schools and colleges, and study hall _ --•o·· --··- ods wt th which to cope wt th con­ stantly Increasing enrollments, and teacher shortages, Is accel­ Bright and lively . . . erated. Simultaneously studies aimed burning with color .. . at evaluating Innovations In­ bunting with action troduced Into education In recent years and the newer technologtes and a new kind of now being tested, likewise are flavoring ! multiplying. It's our new campus Experimentation with appli­ cation of electronics to education collection of fashions has surged forward. More stu­ a/e.z:aAde/!J ready for a fling ! dents at all levels, but by no means all of them, may find HA.IR FASHIONS themselves being Introduced to computer assisted teaching this year. to be different ALEX On the evaluation front federal AND 5 Lincoln A venue Come take government, privately endowed PEGGY corner of Cole Ave. the fotmdations, teachers associ­ ations and even the parents have formerly rrom Providence, R.I. Wayland Square plunge been and wlll continue to take a 831-9474 good hard look at all Innovations. Te am teaching, tmgracled classes which permit students In ~• ..Jst.,. the elementary schools to prog­ 21 Hillside Rd . ress In accordance with their ca­ GARDEN CITY pacities, now widely used, are -~ Store Hours here to stay. ~ Mon., Tue>. Wed. & Sat. 9, 30.5f30 So Is the magic of the audio I nsidcfl Wedge Long Leather Rro;HI Steel An.i1 o mic THURSDAY ond FRIDAY 1(!,00 A.M. TO 9,00 P.M. visual teaching hooked up to tele­ Counters Shank Hee l in Heel phone lines or closed circuit t-v, permitting master teachers to • "appear" simultaneously before many classes. Two-thirds of the nation's schools, lt ls estimated, Pro-tek-tiv· now are within areas served by EXTRA SUPPORT SHOE Educational television. Motmting costs of education at the personal level for those who want to go to college, and al so at s1100 To s1300 the commtmlty level where addi­ tional educational facilities are ACCORDING required are creating problems. TO SIZE Those seeking help In finan­ cing college education may have It however, as the result of a pro­ gram of government guaranteed Joans available through banks. School districts should be able to We have Everything in Back lo share In Federal money being made available by contimiation of School substantial Federal appropria­ • Personal Items • Drugs tions. This Is the year when the • School Supplies • Cosmetics Federal government's most serious Involvement In assisting education at all levels reaches a For children whose feet need it, 100th anniversary. It all started SPECIAL SPECIAL In 1867 with the first congres­ sional legislation establishing the Pro•tek•tiv people have put what has become the U.S. Office 300 NY~ON of. Education. something extra in this extra sup­ STOCKINGS Today the U.S.O.E. has about FILLER 2,500 employees, an annual budg- port shoe. PAPER PACKAGE . et of more than $4 million dollars OF and administers more than 75 oTHER sTvLEs Pro-tek-tiv· s79s To s1,so S"x 10½" education programs tmder land­ 3 mark leglsl ation capped by the Elementary and Secondary Edu­ 99( cation acts of 1965, and the ad­ 69( justments that have been made In t ·t· I 2ti ti rfri!\~ these acts by Congress since then. With all of the contin.ulng ef­ 48 ROLFE ST, WARWICK PLAZA . fort at cultivating the nation's CRANSTON 804 P'ost Rel., w-lcti ELGIN Pharmacy greatest national resource-the o .. lleck ..... Perk .... Nm ,. W-ick ci.... [V AN CRON50N B 5 RlG PH youth of the nation-overall U,S, Investment In education has OPEN UNCLUDIN• MOND. 'TIL 632 HOPE STREET PROVIDENCE R I soared to In excess of ·$48.8 bll• IVDY DAY YS> 6 FREE DELIVERY 621 -1289 lions with federal aid for the fis­ OPIN THUIS. I HI, IYINlli•S 'TIL t cal year of 1967-68 standing at a TIIE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGlJSr 25, 1967 17 Iraq Announces War Program For news of your organlza- tlon, read The Herald. WASHINGTON - The 1raql her Yahla said In a broadcast Government has anno1D1ced a pro­ from Baghdad that the army was SIMMIE SAROIAN'S gram to put the nation on a vlr- · · receiving the latest weapons "to tual war footing wlth the an­ resume the battle of honor." no1D1ced Intention of resuming the Command and technical standards war against Israel, according to would be raised for the approach­ A,,t.]Ap~ reports received here. ing "second rotmd,0 according to Prime Minister Lt. Gen. Ta- the report. To niy mony lrncoln M,•rcury and Comet Custome rs S1mm1t• still ho '.:> available these new automobiles BUFFING AND WAXING DONE WAYLAND MANOR • ML MAKES • All MODELS _• 100% FINANCING 4657 POST RD . . 884. 3800 MEN'S SALON AT WARWICK - Ea . GREEN . LINE COR. DIVISION ST. 500 ANGELL STREET 751-7700 MR. VINCENT AND MR. JOHN INTERNATIONAL HAIR STYLISTS OUR YOm«lER SET - Jodi Lee INVITE YOU TO THEIR NEW SHOP Pass Is the 16-month-old daugh­ ter of Dr. and Mrs. Harry Ed­ OPEN 8 o .m. lo 6 p.m .• SA1 'Iii 5,30 service ward Pass of 4310-4 O'Donnell • Cockt_ails Heights, Fort Riley, Kan. ' BETTY, Our Manicurist, is back at the Way­ and fine liquors pr. Pass Is presently servtng land Manor Barber Salon as an optometry officer In the AUTHENTIC CANTONESE CUISINE United States Army at Irwin 2003 Post Road, Warwick, R.I. RE 9-2528 Army Hospital, Fort Riley. Mrs. Pass Is the former Rayna Acker­ man. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Irving Ackerman of Providence, and paternal grandfather Is Max Pass, also of Providence.

WAePe can I yet c1 cl,eck✓n9 e1eeount' t-/Jat:r /Ust ,,,~ht ro✓- me.?

~-) • '!_ I

OUR YOUNGER SET-David Jonathon Volin, pictured at five months, Is the six-month old son Riqht where 'JOU have of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Volin of 86 Pllgrlm Drive, Warwick. I Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harold Coleman of 'JOU1' sa\l\nqs account 45 Brookside Drive, Cranston. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Volin of 9 Le­ nore Avenue, Moosey, N.Y, earn,nq interest irom da\J of depos\\: to da~ of w,thdrawa\. f:\t O\l\ Stone-Bank\

OUR YOUNGER SET Steven David Is the one-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie S. Gorden of 339 Morris Avenue. Mrs. Gorden Is the former Ricki Zarum. Ma• ternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Leonar'(l Zarum of Rhode Island Avenue. Paternal grand­ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Morris H. Gorden of Early Street. SCROLL FRAGMENT'S TEL AVIV-A large quantity of Dead Sea -Scroll fragments has been folD!d In the Rockefeller Mu­ seum located In the Old City of Jerusalem. Dr. Avraham Blran, director of the Israel Department of Antiquities, said the museum was being taken over by his de­ partment. Israeli officials also reported that a synagogue mosaic floor dating back to the fifth or sixth Cenrury was discovered In the basement of a house In Jer­ icho. u - ·- ~·.:.:,_ -~ ... --:~-···--,:...·.-_ .. ·_._~-- . -~ .. - ·• .:---=-_-::, --;:,· ... __.l;;- ~ - -~-- .... __ .._ ··=-· · . ·---- ., . .._.. ·-- .. _, ·-· . . . --~ -./ ------'-"'-

18 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD,. FRIDAY, AOOUST 25, 1967 Subscribe to the Herald. IRAQ ON WAR FOOTING tention of resuming the war against Israel, according to re­ •-... • • • • • • • • • !' • • • • , WASHINGTON - 11le Iraqi por\s received here. Prime Min­ Gov~rnment has annotmced a pro­ In ­ gram to put the nation on a war ister · Lt. Gen. Thaher Yaher footing with the annotmced In- Yahla said In a broadcast ti-om Rebuilt Baghdad that the army was re­ Hollywood ceiving the latest ·weapons " to Engines reswne the battle of honor." Command and technical standards In Stock· wo~? be raised for:,the approach­ By Bamey Glazer Ing second rotmd, according to Producer Jack Garfeln Is Low quarterly payments the report. rected a glaring error about Call HERB'S-First furious about column Items that Steve Allen. A feature In 1V for accident-free drivers he and Carroll Baker have sepa­ Gulde credited Allen as the In­ Member Downtown Porlcing Pion rated legally. "We're separated ventor of tv's late-night chitchat. H;ERB'S AUTO by distance, not by law," said Not so, reported Glason. Jerry INSURANCE LEROY HANSON Jack. "Carroll and the klds and Lester started It and did a much M& FAGENCY INC . Carroll's mother are In Eden Roe better fob to boot. SUPPLY INC. INC. and I'm here In Hollywood. HANK GRANT, my good Se­ 59 PLAINFIELD ST. 331-9427 ''When two persons remain phardic friend and knowledgeable PROVIDENCE GA · 1-9464 131 Washington St. LOUVER DOORS apart for any length of time. gos­ tv columnist for the Hollywood Re­ Provid e nce sip columns promptly potmce on porter, handled the standard •••••••••••••••• SHUTTERS the opporttmlty and stretch the guest confusion on the Joey Bish­ di stance all the way to the di­ op show with mental muscle. CABINET DOORS vorce courts . COMPLETE Bishop had delayed Hank's ap­ BAR DOORS "Carroll and I have had argu­ pearance tmtll the tallend of his ments, as most couples do. If show and you know what usually TRAVEL·· FOLDING CLOSET Carroll weren't in showbuslne~s, happens. If only a few minutes INFORMATION DOORS nobody would look our way twice. remain, Joey assumes his best "We're still married. No, we humble stance and asks you- to 125 GANO STREET haven't separated, except by dis­ return at some inconvenient, fu­ tance. We 'll be together In three ture date, If you do make II, you PROVIDENCE, R.I. weeks when I go abroad. don't have enough time to prove WARWICK TRAVEL "We're human so I can't you're not an idiot. GA 1-7558 guarantee we might not eventually Sure enough. Joey came up * * RE 9-4848 * * spilt. 1 hope we'll stay together with the customary stutter. He for another SO years." apologized to Grant that time had 2915 PO$T ROAD WARWICK When I advlsed Jack that this rtm out and he was sorry but the column would take one week to columnist could not sing his pro­ see print, he promised, '"I'll grammed nme. guarantee you that we won't sepa­ No amateur at this game of LADDERS rate for at least seven days." "ll planned mishm ash, Grant out­ MILES AVENUE GARAGE FOR HOME The Garfelns recently sold smarted Joey by taklng the reins r 25 Miles Avenue-Providence-331-8833 ,::, OR their huge Beverly Hill s home. In his own hands. He sang anyway, r Owned and Operated by ~ • 'We had a sale almost lmme­ COMMERCIAL USE And good thing that he did. The ' 0 GEORGE A. SCORPIO 0 dlately ," said Jack. "Being a astute columnist sang so well he ' -< motion picture star may not have overshadowed any voe all st used ' 0 * GENERAL REPAIRS ON .ALL MAKES m GASOLINE Z • many compensations but It does by Bishop to date. ! * EXTENSION OR · help sell a house quickly. It > * LUBRICATION, WASHING & POLISH• _. WHEN DA YID ROSE learned I < STEPLADDERS seems that everyone wants to buy that his ex-Wife, Judy Garland, ' ING, PARKING & STORAGE ~ a celebrity's property." !Tl In wood, aluminum had brushed off their marriage I - Daily, W•••lr, Monthly Rates- !Tl Jack and Carroll have since snidely In a recent magazine ar­ "Your Dependable £ad Side or m09n.lum leased a 7-room aparnnent in a ticle, Dave shook his head sadly. I, Automotive Service Center" high rise building. "Judy and I have remained good TONY CURTIS fl ed from his friends," he said. "l can't tmder­ MILES AVE. Combination role In "The Night They Raided stand why she pops off frequently Minsky's," but David Janssen, with these tmpredlctable state­ LADDER CO. who doesn't dig this fugitive bid ments." C-r H:1rris and ' (1',n Jdddlng}, ran right In .. The· musicmaster also re­ f I Sims Aves. UNALIKES Peter Sellers and mains friends with another for­ ELMGROVE AVE; - N ....,. Chris Connelly (Peyton Place} mer wife, Martha Raye. She often GA 1-1330 fotmd one thing In common - they appears on the Red Skelton show, celebrated the same birthday: where Dave conducts the orches-, Sept. 8. tra. BILLY CLASON, author of Hawthorn's upcoming comedy In­ Herald subscribers comprise ,· struction book for amateur and an active buying market, For ex­ professional laughmakers, "How cellent results, advertise in the to Master the Ceremonies," cor- Herald. Call 724-0200.

D0 □

RETIREMENT FOR OLD FOLKS ONLY?-DON'T 1(:1D YOURSELF etirement is not just an old In this helter-skelter, when R man's game, as is commonly they're giving the baby the 2 A.M. supposed. feeding, when they"re washing the □ It is a game that is being diapers in the basement, when tlte played. for heartache or gladness, some character on the job has about four times before a person just pushed them out of a pro­ reaches 65 .. the first time at motion-at such a moment as this, about age 25. between about 29 and 33, the A good many people who still dream of retirement hits them have. their teeth_ and their hair like a truck. C don't fully appreciate this. The third encounter with re- lfil!f!l!~C.. tirement usually comes in the When a youngster finishes his early forties. People are on the C E N T E R education he has his firS t en- way to success now, if they"II I D. counter with retirement. He is ever be. Joining this, serving on likely to get his first job ·because that. running hard. And hoarding some 65-year-old man is being money to pay the taxes, to move eased out of the chute at the far up to a better car, a better house, end of the line to make room for two TV sets, and to send the kids him at this end. Not always, be- to· college. / Every Hour of Every Day cause firms do expand. But often. Just at this age the parents of In fact, some companies spot the husband and wife are reach­ employees as they pass age 61 or ing 65 and retiring. So there At Your Servi,e as an so and then plan their hiring of must be a pause in the running young people accordingly. to offer an emotional crutch ... There's nothing evil about this. which many people now retiring Effident, E,onomi,al Business must have young blood. sorely need from their children. It must keep the age level of its The early fifties are the fourth employees · as low as it can in time peol?le play the retirement Data Pro,essing Center order to hold down costs. But the game. They become aware of sig­ educated young man who gets nals all around them, telling them his first job without knowing that it is growing late, retirement is • PAYROLL SERVICES retirement may have had a hand coming, and they'd better start • INVENTORY CONTROL in it is not a fully educated young storing some nuts. But, ironically • PRODUCTION PARTS' ANALYSIS man. this is just the time when people • SALES ANALYSIS The second time people play start reaching back and trying to • MANAGEMENT CONTROLS the game of retirement is in their hold on to youth. Exhilaration, early thirties. They're married romance, excitement, sex, the UNION TRUST BUILDING • 170 W ■BTMINBTl!R 9TRl!l!T • PROVIDSNCI!, R. I. • (401) 831-5700 now, are very much in love, have works-people in the early fifties HAlll"T,..01110, connecUout • eo pra,mlnsrton Aveune ATTL ■ BOAO , M ■•-.chu ■•tt• • ,.,v ■ r Park ■nd ••nk Street babies, and mortgages, and install-1 wish very much no~ to let go. - 1 (203) 922·2187 (817) 222-MOO ment accounts, and problems- N- GOLDEN YEARS 11. ... MOklet "-"LL ,.,v .... M ■ HachUMtta • 181 Nock ■trNt 0 (817) 874'-M21 and are striving mightily to get now read:,. Send Ht In coin (no 1tampa). _going with success. ,~.~::~ ~~!sy!tx i1,•.1•N.c.;~"• Central 1l!E RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUSf 25, 1967 19 A SAPE DRIVER? MAYBE Give a gift subscrtpdon to The Herald. The R. 1.- Registry of Motbr f!.erald Recipes, Vehicles suggests that drivers .I who think they are safe behind the wheel try this test: Have you ever don't swelter COFFEE-CHOCOLATE ICE 1 Chicken, 4-5 lbs. bolled, boned received a traffic ticket? in your car, CREAM PIE and cut in small pieces Recently? Been Involved In a 9" Pie Plate, greued 3 Onions, medium stze, diced traffic accident'/ More than one? 1/2 c ftnely crushed Cbooolate 3 stalks Celery, diced • Had to slam on the brakes or take air condition Wafers Oil for frying violent evasive action to avoid an 1 qt Coffee Ice Cream Mushrooms, optional accident? Passed on a hill and now 1/4 c Chocolate syrup Salt and Pepper to taste hoped no car was . approaching? Llne pie plate with wafer 3 c Chicken Soup Had pedestrians Jump back as you MARK IV lc.i lo:r crumbs, reserving 2 tablespoons In Dutch oven, slowly saute approached? If any of these things for topping. Caretully spread onions, celery, mushrooms and have happened to you more than BOSTON softened Ice cream over crumbs. seasonings until light brown, us­ once or twice, the Registry says, Sprinkle remaining crumbs to you have been tr a ding on Iuck and RADI A TOR & BODY WK S Ing oil or top fat from chicken ;5::, PINE ~TREET GA 1·162 5 form a border around edge of pie. soup. Add Soup stock and simmer other drivers' good driving Freeze until hard. Run tines of for 10 minutes. Add meat balls, habits. fork deeply over pie. Drizzle cover and cook slowly for one chocolate syrup over top. Freeze hour. ,..\dd chicken and simmer THE uncovered until set - cover with for ano'"l!aer half hour. Serve onl THE foll - keep in freezer until ready patty shells or rice. COHENS AND KATZES OUR YOUNGER SET - Pamela :~ serve. Variation: (ANNE and RAY) (DOTTY and LEO) Renee Bazarsl-...:_ - ' Gewlrtz of 36 Ninth Street, a maining Ingredients and simmer WEZ:JU>AYS AnZ:a 6 P .H . Serves 6 tor 1/ 2 hour. Pour over the .ANYTDlZ: SUNDAYS Oil HOLIDAYS sophomore at George Washington 3 c cooked Chicken, cul up University, where he Is president Ch IC ken and bake, basting J"all CoarN Su. Dlaaen-T•• JUad 70a wW COl(E IN 1 Onion, minced frequently. of Hillel; Allen Heller of 450 Salt to taste Llk.,_Perfect aad low price.. TODAY! Brook Street, a Junior at Brown Mrs. Bertram Brown Orien to Take Oat-Air Con41tloae4 Call GA 1·2680 2 T Lemon Juice OPEN Z:VEBY DAY ll A.H . to II P .H. University, . and Murray Gereboff 1 c diced Celery • • • of 128 Modena Avenue, a Brown 1 c Seedless Grapes CHICKEN FRICASSEE WITH 102. W£STMINST-Elt ST- Next tu kwE senior. Mr, Heller Is president of 1/ 2 c Mayonnaise MUSHROOMS Hillel at Brown, and Mr. Gereboff 1 can Mandarin Orange Sections 3 T Oil Is religious coordinator. 1/ 2 c slivered Almonds, toasted 3/ 4 c Flour, seasoned with Salt A faculty of 16 national and 8 Lettuce Leaves and Pepper J. P. SUPPLY CO. campus Hillel directors will be 6 Ripe Olives, pitted 2 1/2-3 lb. Pullet, cut In serving augmented by Avraham Harman, Combine chicken, onion, salt, pieces PLUMBING & HEATING SUPPLIES Israel Ambassador to the United lemon Juice and celery. Refrig­ 1 Onion, medium size, chopped 2271 PAWTUCKET AVI., IAST PIOVIDINCI States; Rabbi Jakob Petuchowsld, erate. 2 cloves Garlic, minced or whole J' ', professor · of Rabblnlcs and The­ Before serving, toss lightly 2/ 3 c dry White Wine 438-2311 ology at Hebrew Union College­ with grapes, orange sections, 2 T Tomato Paste ·r Jewish Institute of Religion, and mayonnaise. Arrange on lettuce 1/ 2 lb. fresh Mushroolllti, sliced 1st QUALITY, TOP GRADE Erwin Jospe, dean of the School leaves and garnish with almonds or of Fine Arts, University of and olives. 1 can Mushrooms, 4 oz. size, TOILETS Judaism, Los Angeles. Mrs. Norman Goodman drained The lecture topics, suggested Cooked Rice by campus queries, reflect the . . . Dust the chicken on all sides $25.50 questions and problems Jewish ClilCKEN AMBROSIA with seasoned nour and lightly college students seem most con­ 32 5 degr ee oven brown In hot oil. Remove from ,Complet. with Rttin91 cerned with today: "Can Modern 4~ min. plus 1 hour sklllet. Add onion and garlic to Man Have Faith?", "Israel's 2 Broilers, quartered drippings In sklllet and saute Challenge to American Jewry", 1 Onion, grat"4 over low heal until onions are FORMICA VANITIES .. Freedom and Moral Re!=;oonsl­ 1/ 2 c Orange Juice transluscent. Stir In wine. Sim­ blllty" and "Judaism and Ethi­ 1/2 c Sherry mer about 3 minutes. Add tomato ST AIMLESS STEEL SINKS cal Commitment.'' 1 can Pineapple Chunks, drain; paste and mix well. Add ap­ , The eight-day program will reserve juice proximately 1/ 2 lo 3/4 cups wa­ UR6f SRECTION OF USED BATHROOM FIXTIIRfS begin on Tuesday. 1/3 c Brow11 Sugar ter to make a thin sauce, but not 1/2 c Blanched Slivered Almonds enough to cover chicken. Mix Hebrew Day School Sprinkle chicken with salt, well. Return chicken to skillet. garlic powder, seasoned salt, Bring to bolling point, reduce etc., and set aside. heat and simmer, covered, about Can Take More Pupils Spread grated onion on bottom 30 minutes, ·basting occasionally, Additional pupils can be ac­ , of baldng dish and arrange chick­ until chicken Is done. Add mush­ cepted by the Providence Hebrew en over this, skin side up. Com­ rooms and simmer 10 minutes bine 1/ 2 cup pineapple Juice, or­ ATTENTION Day School for the fall term, longer. which will begin on Sept. 6, and ange juice and sherry. Pour over Serve on bed of rice and pour applications may still be made chicken and bake 45 minutes, sauce over all. for full and partial scholarships. basting frequently. Remove from Mrs. Simon Lessler Rabbi Norman Cohen, principal, oven. Com blne the sugar and BOWLERS! and members of the faculty will pineapple chunks and spread over • • • test students applying for schol­ chicken. Return to oven 1 hour PITTATO KNISHES arship. Parental eligibility will longer or until browned. Baste 2 1/2 cups sifted all-purpose THE NEW determine the amount awarded. occasionally. To serve, pour flour The faculty will Include In­ sauce from pan over chicken - 1 teaspoon baldng powder structors from Brown University. sprinkle with almonds. 1/2 teaspoon salt The science room and laboratory Mrs. Simon Lessler 2 eggs CASINO LANES facilities have been updated at the • • • 1/2 cup cooldng oil school, which will celebrate Its PINEAPPLE C!IlCKEN SALAD 2 tablespoons water twentieth anniversary this year In s·erves 8 Potato Filling 180 Pina Streat, Providence a modern 13-classroom building 4 c cooked Chicken, diced Sift flour with baking powder and with an enrollment of 250 pupils . . 1 c crushed Pineapple, strained salt. Make a . well In the center WE ARE OPEN 1/2 c sliced Almonds, toasted and add eggs, oil, and water. Mix Industrial National Bank 1 c Celery diced with the hands and then knead on a FOR BUSINESS 1/2 c Mayonnaise lightly floured board until smooth, NOW TAKING RESERVATIONS Lettuce Leaves Roll out dough on a lightly floured 2 hard-bolled Egg Yolks, mashed board as thin as possible. Cut Into FOR Declares Stock Dividend 3-lnch rounds. Place 1 tablespoon Season to taste LEAGUE BOWLING Directors of the Industrial Toss all Ingredients together Potato FIiling on each round. National Bank of Rhode Island and serve on crisp lettuce leaves. Moisten edges of dough and pull have declared a 10% stock divi­ Garnish with egg yolks. together to enclose fllllng com­ Come See Our Newly Remodeled dend, which has a current market Mrs. Manuel Bromberg pletely and to form a ball. Place value In excess of $7 million. pinched side down on an oiled And Refurnished Establishment Payment Is expected to be made • • • cookie sheet, Bake In preheated Bowl A Couple Of Strings ) sometime In October on a date CHICKEN FRICASSEE WITH moderate oven (350 degrees F .) determined by the Comptroller of MEAT BALLS for 35 minutes, or until brown. On The House the Currency, Meat balls:• Makes about 2 dozen. This will be the fourth suc­ 2 lbs. Hamburg Note: Knishes can also be filled cessive year In which the Bank 2 Eggs with pot cheese, ground meat or For Information Call has declared .a stock dividend. In 2 Onions, medium, grated chicken, or )"Ith cooked and sea­ 1964, stockholders received a 2% 4 slices Pareve Bread, soaked in soned buckwheat groats. 421-6311 or 421-2625 dividend (25,000 shares), In 1965 cold water & drained a 6% dividend (75,000 shares) and Salt and Pepper to taste • • • In 1966, a 10% dividend of 130,000 C o m b I n e Ingredients and (Reprinted r r om the Temple shares. shape into small balls. Emanuel Cookbook.) 20 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, Au:;usr 25, 1967 PAINTED N,Y, MURALS · NEW YORK-Ernest Clifford Pelxotto, an American Jewish American Joint Distribution Committee painter who lived In New York In the early part of this century, ex­ ecuted murals -In many of the Asks U. S. Aid For Jewish Refugees clo/'s ~ajor butldlngs. GENEVA, SWltzerland - The passports. Most of these have Ame rt can Joint Dlstrtbutlon now fow,d asylwn fn the cow,trtes Committee, originally established of which they were citizens. by America Jews to help care for According to rellable sources, Jews who escaped from the about"' 650 of the 2,800 Libyan BEST ta. Nazis, has made application to Jews have been assigned · to President Johnson to use part of camps at Capua near Naples and DEAU~ his $5-milllon special fw,d _ for Latina near Rome. The camps I the Middle East to help pay for were originally established by the Plain Fads and Figures the care and maintenance of sev­ Italian Government to process Check with-Us and Save eral thousand Jews who have fled Yugoslavs and other Europeans I from Arab cow,trles since the planning to emigrate, CENTREDALE war in Jw,e. The remainder are staying in The committee's application small hotels and boarding houses PONTIAC did not say how much money was in Naples, Rome and Genoa, 26 Putnam Ave., Cent. needed, but it was w,derstood that which was selected because con.i CE 142.). the request was primarily con­ sul s of many Latl}I American cerned with 2,800 Jews, almos t cow,trles are available there to all residents of Libya, who made discus s the gr1111ting of immigra­ their way to Italy. tion permits. AT GALKlN'S In the two months since the These sources said that the war, about 800 Moroccan Jews Italian Government was charging FOR EXPERT AUTO have fotmd refuge in France, $3 a day for refugees starving In • BODY & FENDER WORK where they are receiving help the camps and that the accom­ • PAI NTI,'£ from the Jewish community, and modations were pl ain but accept­ • RAOIAroRS REPAIRED they are continuing to arrive In able. However, it Is hoped that all & RECOR ED France at the rate of 400 a the refugees will be moved Into • 1NSURANCE APPRAI SAL S • GLA SS RE PLA CED month. In addition, there are 100 hotel s and boarding hou ses as TOWING - PICK - UP • DELIVERY to 200 Moroccan· Jews In Spain, soon as pos sible. . and a few Jewish families have The Libyan Jews had to leave reached Greece from the United so quickly that they were unable Arab Republic. to sell any of their property, but Those In Greece are believed the Italian Jewish commw,ity Is to have been am~ng the 200 to 300 helping meet their expenses. Jewish residents of the United Although It has not provided Arab Republic who were allowed any financial support, the office l bl CHESTNUT ST PROVIDE NC E NIGHTS - 944-2371 to go to Cyprus and Greece since of the United Nations Hi gh Com­ they had Italian, Greek or Spanish missioner for Refugees has promised to extend legal protec­ Nazareth Tourist Attractions Slump tion to the Jewish refugees w,der its original grant of authority LOUISOUISSET GOLF CLUB from the General Assembly, In­ As Old City, West Bank Draw Crowds tended for help to refugees in the 600 WOODWARD RD ., NO. PROVIDENCE perl6d immediately following NAZARETH-Israel's largest atmosphere of Nazareth Is over­ World War II. Arab city, w,tll last Jw,e, and a whelmingly Arab. Most men of Sportiest Public Golf Course It Is understood that the high bustling tourist center before the the town cover their head with commissioner's office will be Arab-Israeli war, has been nearly kafflyehs, and many wear the in New England utilized to help supply documents empty as Israelis flock to the Old traditional full-length robes. and meet other formalities re­ City of Jerusalem and the newly­ Of a population of 3U,UU0, 56 quired for the resettlement of the captured Arab territories along per cent are Moslems, and 44 per refugees in other countries. If the west bank of the Jordan. To the cent 1re Christians. · NIGHT GOLF Mr. Johnson decides to grant Israelis, Nazareth is now only an­ About 16,000 Jews live close MON. THRU FRI . .. $2.50 fw,ds for the support of the Jew­ other Arab city and they are spend­ by In the modern suburb of Naza­ ish refugees, he may channel the ing their money Instead In such reth Ellt, which overlooks the old (Closed Sat. & Sun.) money through the high commis- unfamiliar towns as Nablus, Jenln town from a hill but has a sepa­ sioner's office. ' and Jericho. rate town cow,cll. Most of the (TEE OFF TIME UNTIL 10 P.M.) The request was made by the "Not only are the tourists not Jew; work In the sprawling tex­ American Joint •Di stribution coming," a restaurateur said, tile factory on the outskirts of the -I • new town. - -- ;--: , , Committee In a letter on July 24. 0 but even the Nazarenes are heading for the west bank to visit The Arabs of Nazareth fow,d ( ; their rel atlves and see sights themselves in an emotional and they haven't seen for 20 years." political quandary when the war SERVING TUESDAYTHROUGH SATURDAY (5TO 10),SUNDAY FROM (12 TO 8) Because of the slwnp, the II broke out in Jw,e. As Israeli full-time licensed guides of residents and citizens, many of Nazareth have fow,d themselves whom were born here, they felt a with little to do. They spend the commtnnent to Israel. As Arabs, hot afternoons polishing their they had personal and sometimes cars and I ow,ging In the open even family ties with the enemy. cafes . uMy car hasn't been so · "It was like watching a fight clean sinCe I bought it," one between two of your brothers and guide said, "and I haven't had so trying to decide which was in the VVES'I'VVIND much sleep ln years." right," said Abdul Aziz Zouabl, Even without tourists, Naza­ an Arab who ts Deputy Mayor of RESTAURANT' reth ls w,mistakably a tourist Nazareth and also a member of town, Its streets linked with the Knesset, "Some of the Arabs souvenir shops that offer a profu­ here privately hoped Nasser fur f inc f uud and beverages sion of cheap religious goods and would overrllll Israel, while oth­ pl astic miniatures of the towering ers were afraid of what might basilica of the Church of the An­ happen to them if he did. I think nunication. most of them were behind Israel 555 CENTRAL AVENUE,(ROUTE 152 ),IN NEARBY SEEKONK.MASSACHUSETTS The church Is In the center of because they believed s he was In town, on the site where Roman the right and fighting a basically Catholics believe the angel Ga­ defensive war!' briel appeared to Mary and an­ now,ced that she would bear a Despite the division of Its child, who should be named sentiments, Nazareth remained Jesus. Greek Orthodox, who also quiet during the fighting. The only believe In the Annw,clation, dis­ excitement occurred during the pute the site. They maintain that second night of the war when an It occurred about a third of a air battle was fought over the rolling Galilee Hlll s , providing 611 WATERMAN AVENUE, EAST PROVIDENCE, R. I. mile to the north, where their Church of St. Gabriel Is loc ated. Nazareth with spectacular TEL 434-0380 The official tourist map of the show. town avoids taking sides by list­ There were no demonstrations A PROFESSIONAL REAL ESTA TE AGENCY ing both places as the site. during the war, not even by the A few yards from St. Gabriel's fiercely nationalist Arab Commu­ is Mary's Well where she Is nists, who control nearly half of BUILT ON EXPERIENCE the Town Cow,cll. The most ·no­ 1 believed to have drawn water for the Holy Family. Across the table agitation came In the weeks street an enterprising Nazarene after the war; when, according to operates the Mary's WeH Souve­ the Israelis, the Arab Commu­ nir Shop and Cafe. Despite Its nlsts s tirred up resistance among choice location, It has done a Arabs on the west bank. meager business since the war. In retaliation, the provisional In the heart of town Is the military Government ordered a Nazareth branch of Wimpy' s , a number of "known agitators,'' in­ snack-shop chain that has opened cl udlng four of the six Arab Com­ restaurants along most of Is­ mw,ist members of the Nazareth rael's highways. Across the main Cow,cll, confined to . their home street, Via Casanova, ts the Abu towns. Nassar Restaurant, decorated in Deputy Mayor Zouabl, a gentle an ecwnenlcal motif: Arab worry and affiable man, smiled when he ISAAC C. ROWI.AND ROBERT J. MIKOLAJEWSKI beads and Christian rosaries was asked which cow,try he hang side by side,· and in the thought most of the Arabs of Mr. Mikolajcwski . a Cranstonian. began his real estate experience as a salesman with Ma• place of honor is a color photo­ Nazareth would really have pre­ son & Winograd in Providence. he wus soon appoi nted to general sales manager. He orgi• graph of Pope Paul VI embracing ferred to win the war. natcd the rirst two suhurban offices for M & W. He has had exte nsive experience in the the Orthodox Patriarch, Athe­ "I'm afraid we are Inclined to sale and appraisal of commercial and industrial properties. · nogoras I, when they met for the take our politics rather emotlo­ Mr. Rowlund, in addition to extensive experience us a district manager for Mason & , Win­ first time two- years ago on the nally ,'' he said. "I think most of, orad. has had wide experience in all foccts of real estate ·including mortgage consultant. de­ Mow,t of Olives. . the people didn't want Israel to ~e lopcr nnd sale~ manager. Despite the presence of many lose, but they didn't want the Arab Christian shrines, the spirit and countries to Jose either." 'TliE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, fRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 21 HERALD AJC MISSION TO ISRAEL political and geographic problems American Zionists Told That Israel NEW YORK - A 14-member resulting from the war, mission of the American Jewish Tbe fact-finding mission Is Congress made up ot Its principal headed by Rabbi Arthur J_, Lely­ Classified Must Attract Western Immigration offlcers have spent a week In Is- veld, president of the American rael to study and assess •~l. Jewish Congress, NEW YORK - Israel must here for the past few weeks to Call 724-0200 create the social and economic participate In International con­ conditions to attract technically­ ferences and get a first-hand look skilled young Americans, I! It at some of Israel's postwar prob­ hopes tor Increased Immigration EAST SIDE, Olney Street, near Hope. lems. First, three room apartment. Ex­ trom the United States, said Jac­ Israel's many political fac­ Interior Design Consultants ques Torczyner, president of the cellent condition. For one business tions, often widely separated on B\' APPOINTMENT ONLY '67-4677 woman. $65. 274-7727. Zionist Organization of America, solutions to social and economic recently, He told a news confer­ problems, are agreed on the need BENEFICENT HOUSE , Downtown ence that the present generation to Inspire young professional and Providence. Efficiency l and 2 bed­ ot American youth Is more likely technical talent to settle In Is­ room apartments, air condiioning, to be persuaded by the Image ot raeL heating, GE appliances, S 120 to Israel projected by her young $200 monthly. Model oport'ments They .see this as both a prod now showing. Open Mon. to Fri. , 9 army than by the "romanticism to the economy and a means ot to 5; Sat. and Sun., 1 to 5. Coll Mr. ot the second aliyah" (wave ot sustaining the nation's cultural Haggerty at 331 -4755. Immigration) that began 60 years growth, modern outlook and Jew­ ago, laying the foundation tor the ish character. 3a • Apartments Wanted present state. The J ewtsh complexion of the Mr. Torczyner•s remarks state, many say, can be Imperiled WANTED: two-bedroom duplex or came on the eve of the 70th an­ without sizable Jewish Immigra­ flat, East Side or Cranston, 1 child. nual convention ot the organiza­ tion because of a declining J ewlsh Coll 351-2745. tion. birth rate and a correspondingly 12aa • Commercial for Rent The discrimination and limit­ advancing one among Israel's ed opportunities that restricted Arabs - proportionately twice RELIABLE - EXPERIENCED BENEFICENT HOUSE, Downtown J ewlsh lite In the Eastern Europe that ot Israeli Jews - and the Providence. 1,360 sq. ft. in brand ot several generations ago, possible absorption of many more TEMPORARY HELP new 10 story apartment house. Will prompting many to strike out divide. Heat provided. Coll Mr . as thousands of Arabs as a result of AT A MOMENTS NOTICE collective agriculturists In Pal­ Haggerty, 331 -4755. the recent six-day war. V RATE'S BY HOUR. DAY, WEEK OR PC. RATES estine, do not a!tect the present That "new approaches" are V ALL HELP FULLY INSURED h I g h 1 y educated, technically V ALL WORKERS REMAIN OM 'OUR PAYROLL 19 - General Services needed to win aliyah from the V WE HANDLE AU INSURANCE, TAXES, RECORDS trained generation ot Western current gener ation of American FLOOR CLEANING and polishing. • L.,UORERS I .PACKERS youth which requires a social cli­ youth ts a view shared by most • STEVEDORIS • ASSEMBLERS Also general home cleaning. Lorry Ser,ing mate and an Industrial technology American Jewish leaders and • LUMBERMEN • STOCK WORKERS Ovaan. 353-9648. ufn • WAREHOUSEMEN • FACTORY CITY & SUBURBS In Israel attuned to Its own back­ many Israeli officials too. • MAT'U.IAL HAHDLlRS , ground, he said. • EVENING WORKERS F(OOR CLEANING and pot;,h;ng. "Aliyah can't grow on the slo­ Aho general home cleaning. "It Is within Israel ltsel! that gans of the past," Dr. William A. 944-9081. these new opportunities must be Wexler, president of B'nal B'rtth, . -: ff ~F.,;r:rt~~t~(; 1 created to bring the new set­ told a convention of Israeli mem­ ';.;.--~--~~~-1.c,p,,jJ-~ ~~ 24 - Jobs Wanted - Women tlers," Mr. Torczyner declared, bers of the organlzalton last .. warning that Israel "must not ex­ week. ' ... WOMAN: Part-time, Monday • Thurs• pect too much" In the way of such Premier Levi Eshkol, giving ...... doy, 1 to 3 p.m. East Side. Excellent Immigration but look toward "a the opening address, pointed out typist. Automobile. Write R.I. Jewish wa­ Herold, Box 8-14, 99 Webster gradual evolution." He also said that there are sufficient land, Street. Pawtucket. R.I. 02861 that "a student spending a year ter and other natural resources or two at a university In Israel or In Israel for all Its Inhabitants, 30 - Painting, Paperhanging a protesslonal man coming to "The only thing that has so for FRED SPIGEL'S teach or practice his profession prevented the solution of the ref­ INTERIOR ond exterior pointing. Po­ tor a number of years Is also a ugee problem ts the fact that perhonging. Estimates cheerfully giv­ halutz (pioneer)." Arab r ul ers do not want peace. KOSHER MEAT MARKET en. Coll anytime. 781 -4187. When there Is a change In this 9- 1 The Issue of Western aliyah, 243 RESERVOIR AVE., PROVIDENCE HO 1•0425 relatively dormant In recent approach we shall make every ef­ 42 • Special Notices years, has been revived as a ma­ fort to help In this work." jor subject of discussion by Is­ He told the Zionists that It ts MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN wou ld t;ke raeli officials In meetings with their duty to encourage sktlled - (REG. S9c qt.) QT. 39( - to shore 5-room apartment wi th an­ leaders of American Jewish or­ talent, such as industrialists , sci­ other woman. Elmwood Section. HO ganizations, ~ COOKED ~ 1- 1832. entists and research and market­ Many of the latter have been ing experts, to settle in Israel REG. '.q9) and become "our partners in ,. CORNED BEEF ( LB.1. 99 ,. body and mind" In helplng to re­ _ , PHILADELPHIA (REG. lSc PKG.) - Russian Statistics On Jews solve the postwar problems of the state. A large Immigration from Western coW1trtes is an essential ~ CREAM CHEESE !.?;· 10( ' condition for the utransformad.on ..,,,,,,,,,,,-..:◄ Reflect Shortage Of Rabbis of our political and mtlttary vic­ ODESSA, U. S. S. R. - This leading Yiddish writers. There ts tory Into a soltd reality." . port city, where one In every still no Yiddish theater, and only The Premier al so said that three residents Is of Jewish ori­ one Yiddish magazine exists, with Israel emerged from her six-day gin, once had 90 synagogues. To­ a circulation of 2,500. war last month with great WHARF TA VERN day an estimated total of 250,000 Soviet authorities deny that achievements, but he added a (ON THE WATER. WATER STREET, WARREN, R. I.) Jews live here but there Is only there Is any anti-Semitism since Hebrew aphorism: uThe more one synagogue left, the Constitution forbids reltgtous assets, the more worries." A On high holidays as many as discrimination. Jewish population of four mtllton 10,000 worshippers come to pray Jews and non-Jews are in Israel, an increase of a million Choose Your at the lone synagogue. It seats treated equally In such secular We Use and a half, would make It easter Own Lobster 800, has no Hebrew school and matters as old agepenslons,med­ "to solve the problems with The Best Beef . has virtually no prayerbooks, lcal treannent, and elementary which we are now wrestling." From Our In The World Tbe Odessa Jewish community and secondary school education. Uve lobster Is still one of the most fornmate They are treated altke In UOJCA To Reconstruct U, 5, Prime In the Soviet Union. It has a rab­ some religious matters, but the Pool bi, Only two other major cities In lack of rabbis touches a sensitive Old City Synagogues European Russia, Moscow and nerve. On this point Jews are NEW YORK-A project aimed Leningrad, have rabbis. treated differently. at the restoration and reconstruc­ fOUR HOST AND HOSTESS: LOUISE AND ED BUSIERE Tbe white-bearded rabbi of The dominant Russian Ortho­ tion of the many synagogues In Odessa, Israel B. Szwargsblat, 54 dox Church has a seminary for the Old City of Jerusalem de­ FOR RESERVATIONS CALL CHerry 5-5043 years old, came here five years training priests. °Jewish groups stroyed or defiled during the Jor­ ago. Before that he taught at the abroad say other Soviet minority danian occupation over the past only rabbinical seminary In the religions have seminaries of two decades, has been launched Ample Parking For Cars. Boats - Yachts Soviet Union, Tbe seminary was their own or are · permitted to by the Union of Orthodox Jewish closed by Soviet authorities In .train young men for the church In Congregations of America, 1962, seminaries abroad, The project was announced by Jewish sources say major So­ Yehuda Lev Levin, the chief Rabbi Joseph Karastck, national -ror The Best In Shoe Repairing viet cities with large Jewish pop­ rabbi of Moscow, told visiting president, who returned recently ulations are KJev, capital of the American rabbis In July, I 965, from an extensive Inspection tour Ukraine, a city of 250,000 Jews: that the Moscow seminary would of the Jewish holy places. Rabbi Riga, capital of Latvia, with 30,- be reopened soon. It ts still Karaslck said that "all 73 of the SEE PAT 000 Jews: Vilnius, capital of closed. major synagogues In the Old City Uthuania, 5,000 Jews, and Kish­ The second rabbi of Moscow were either completely destroyed One of the most complete and inev, capital of Moldavia, 100,000 died last year at 90, Rabbi Levin, during the Arab occupation or Jews. 73, ts now the only rabbi In Mos­ converted for such secular use as up-to-date shops in the city Jewish groups fear that as So­ cow, a city of some 500,000 Jews. theaters or even stables," and viet synagogues become lead­ Of these, at least 150,000 are es­ that not a single synagogue has erless, through the death of rab­ timated to be Interested In reli­ been left undefiled. bis, they will be closed and the gion. He also spoke of the dese­ A few of our services: large Jewish religious community Kiev, like Odessa, has a sepa­ cration by the Jordanian author­ In Russia will die out, rate Jewish cemetery, It Is ! ties of the Mount of Olives Cem­ • FACTORY REBUILDING etery where hundreds of grave­ Before the Bolshevik Revolu­ against Jewish law to bury Jews • NEW HEELS ._ LA TEST STYLE tion SO years ago, the Jews of in the same cemetery as non­ stones were carried off for use In Russia had thousands of rabbis Jews, but there ts no separate construction of a Jordanian army • LADIES' THIN INVISIBLE SOLING and synagogues and 7,000 Jewish Jewish cemetery In Moscow or In camp near Jericho and In building • SOLES AND HEELS WHILE YOU WAIT schools, Today the country has 40 some other major cities, and road construction elsewhere, to SO rabbis, Their average age There ts still a shortage of Rabbi Karaslck announced that • HEELS PUT ON IN 3 MINUTES Is about , 60. Most are In central prayerbooks, Tbe rabbi of Odessa a drive has already been launched Asia. , was asked If visitors could see by the Orthodox Union "to enlist There are some 62 syna­ his, He took a key from his the aid of aff!Uated congregations gogues left, Teaching of the pocket, unlocked a drawer, and In 73 communities In the United INDUSTRIAL SHOE REPAIRING Hebrew language Is prohibited In pulled out a tattered book In He­ States and Canada, each of which schools, except for a few ~clal­ brew, It was published In Poland would become a patron to rebuild lzed departments In Soviet uni­ Jn 1939, one of the destroyed synagogues 124 Union Street versities, In some areas, however, life In the Old City." . Jewish culture In the Soviet has Improved for Soviet Jews, Union has oner recovered from For the third straight year In A subscription to the Heraldls BETWEEN WASHINGTON AND WESTMINSTER STREETS Stalin's decision In 1948 to close many Soviet cities matzoh was a good gift for the person who has the Yiddish theater and purge available for Passover, .everything else. Call 724-0200. ------

22 TIIE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 year-old grandaughter Holly Gene 1be little gold disks were likes to go. 1be Frledmans have bought one or two at a time for Workmen's Compension .Expert, Wife two cblldren, Muray, who works the outgoing ATLA Auxiliary pres­ In an administrative capacity at ident, but this year the women _ the children's center, and Mrs. voted to present them to all the Honored By Trial Lawyers' Association James Genser of Woodridge. convention chairmen. Rhode Is­ 1be beautiful ranch house In land, added Mrs. Friedman, Is (Continued from Page 1) energy plants, atomic reclama­ Friedman Is an advocaie of ex­ jured. tion plants and plants to produce Dean Estates which they moved too small to accommodate the 1,- tending this statute for occupa­ Into last winter Is filled With Ori­ 500 or so lawyers and their wives 1be curative center was a electricity have been built. Ed· tional diseases that don't show up dream of his, but he would like to ward Friedman was the first per­ ental antiques and art and with for the semiannual affairs. fairly soon. Lead and arsenic · When ATLA was formed, Mr. see another dream realized, • 'to son to lecture on radlation to the the colorful paintings of Charles poisoning and hernia show up Mel ohs. Three of their paintings Friedman was a judlclal officer see the Injured worker get what's ATLA, last year at the con­ pretty fast, but dlsabllltles from coming to him faster than he can vention; where he used the death were chosen as lecture topics by who would be hearing cases radlatlon exposure and from the curator of the Rhode Island brought by the I awyers In the as­ right now." He does not find the of a Rhode Islander In Charles­ chrome poisoning may take from program Is making the strides he town as an example of the Impor­ School of Design Museum when sociation. In 1953, however, when five to 20 years to become appar­ Temple Emanu- EI had a Collec­ he resigned as head of Work­ hoped It would, and Wishes Gov. tance of instructing workers, ent. Chafee would appoint him to the plant personnel, ambulance at­ tors' Exhibit three years ago. men's Compensation, he became "These subtle and latent dis­ Mrs. Frledmar, watches the active with the group and last adv!sory board, In view of his tendants, nurses and family ease conditions don't show up for strong Interest and his untapped members In the proper methods stock market and cooks , but her year was chairman of the Work­ a while. Why should .certain greatest interest is her husband's men's- compensation Section, the knowledge. People are on relief of handling radloactlve material. workers be discriminated now, said Mr. Friedman, who Al though It must legally be proP­ profession. Tite conventions are highest honor below that of the against" because of this? And like old home week, she said, as presidency. He has al so been a could and should be rehabilitated erly shielded and a worker must why should the burden of paying for their own and the state's be warned that his Job Is hazard­ she knows. almost all the lawyers member of the board of gover­ for them "fal l on the shoulders of there. As national treasurer, she sake, and he wonders why Rhode ous, work of this nature Is. still town, city and state welfare nors of ATLA, and an active par­ Is Involved In al I Auxiliary activ­ Island doesn't spend more money so new that many times the · dan­ organizations and not on the em­ ticipant In lectures and com­ ities. Generally entertainment for mittees. He Is a national lecturer on rehabilitation. gers are unknown or unpubllclzed ployer?" The causal connection · Mrs. Friedman would also untll an accident occurs. the ' women Includes luncheon, on tort and work'men' s com­ would, of course, have to be chartered bus trips around the pensation problems and has also like to be appointed by the Gover­ Mr. Friedman thinks that the proved, but he has recommended nor, to his commission on con­ workmen's compensation law, area and a hospitality room open lectured at Brown and URI. The amendment of the law so that a all the time with hot coffee , pas­ list of responsibilities he has sumer affairs. She Is especially which was set up to benefit the coincidental statute of limitations concerned about truth In packag­ Injured worker, should be liber­ try and hostesses. 1be president held takes up 31 single-spaced would be In effect. for each term Is generally elect­ lines and Includes holding office ing, In advertising (With respect ally construed In his favor, and In Some of the cases he men­ to the consumer) and In lendlng. borderline cases the benefit of ed from the area of the next big In and editing journals for the tioned are almost unbelievable: convention. National \ssoclation of Claim­ The University of Rhode Island Is the Jaw should be given to the In­ carelessness, malpractice, cal­ one of the few places which offers ants' CoW1sel of America and jured man. lous dlsregard for human life and Mrs. Friedman has to recom­ courses In this, so Nettle Fried­ In practice, however, he has ATLA. unwllllngness to grant dlgnlty or mend conservative plans, since man may do further studying. She found that employers accept the He Is concerned for the prop­ compensation to employees stand she Is treasurer. She has found feels that women ought to be necessity to pay for a simple In­ er working of the compensation out glaringly. On case was of a other ways of conserving the I aw, so that workers may be members of any such commission jury that will not last long, but veteran who Injured his back, but Auxiliary funds, too, by keeping compensated by their employers as they do so much of the buying they or the Insurance company by the time Mr. Friedman was today and are often better In­ Will fight a long-term, expensive their money In a s avings account for work-caused Injury without a called In, 23 months after the ac­ rather than a checking accoW1t, wait that makes for undue hard­ formed about It than men. or serious case If they think they cident, the man was paralyzed She also would like to see a have a chance. 1be "underdog" and by buying a I arge number of ship, and he Is willing to speak on from an operation. He- had had a gold dlsk charms with the scales jtlvenlle court committee formed, stll1 has the burden of proving the subject on almost any occa­ dlsc condltion, an Impartial doc­ of Justice. as has been done In Washington, that his Injury was caused by his sion. The handsome couple are tor found; the Government has On her own charm bracelet D.C., with members of the Trial job. Often men are afraid of being both persuasive speakers, and been sued for malpraetlce. she wears medals her husband fortunate that they share so many Lawyers' Women's Auxiliary of. fired If they testify for another There was aJ so rhe man who won In wrestling and football, Interests. Mrs. Friedman still ferlng candy or soda and being employee, Mr. Friedman has fell from his milk truck. He was avallable Just to be talked to found that sometimes they are when he was New England Inter­ regrets one convention, however, found to have multiple sclerosis collegiate wrestling champion at while they wait by the youth, afraid of I oslng their jobs If they the only one she ever missed ... and Jo s t his case, but when he Brown, and won the Brown Unt­ many of them In court for the go to a lawyer about what seems and the convention at which Sec­ went back to court, three years verslty and Metropolitan League first time. to be obvious radlatlon sickness. retary of Labor Frances Perkins I ater after having to have a leg championships. had a wonderful time. The American trial lawyers He cited one case In which a amputated, he was awarded work­ are a group that represents the young widow With two children men's compensation. underdog,sald Edward Friedman. came to him when she had onlv The "Second Injury Bill" The association was originally about SO cents left. Her husband which Mr. Friedman drew up In Easier To Make Friends, composed of compensation claim­ had dled at work of carbon dlox­ 1943, encourages the employment ants attorneys, but the name was lde poising, and the· Insurance of the permanently handicapped, changed when negligence, adml­ company was contesting the case and furnishes artificial appli­ Finds Jewish Coed Abroad (Continued from Page 1) ral ty, railroad and aviation law as they said they thought he dled ances where needed. When pay­ than they do and that we try to spedallsts joined, and recently of natural causes. 1be group ment from the insurance com­ way, she found, and would "just limtt our students, commented criminal lawyers and those con­ heal th and accident pollcv was nf panies Is exhausted, then a state as soon live in peace and not the Kalamazoo senior. cerned with leg! sl atlon have been no use. as that company refused fund takes over. fight. They'd never be friends but .. Their history courses tend be added. to pay· her because she was only Lawyers, like doctors, do a they could get along economl­ to on one century or one and a "We are the men who go to 20 years old and therefore a mi­ great deal of charity work. • 'We ca\ly." half centuries. I took two courses court. We are constantly. actively nor. She had thought that work­ get no fee to file for the second During her time In France she in French history, one covering In court, maybe SO times In a men's compensation came auto­ Injury fund, and where It will be learned to Jove the Sephardlc 1450 to 1500 and the other 1550 to year. These cases take up to matically. Mr. Friedman con­ hotly contested, It's hard to gef a synagogue, which Is "somewhat 1600. This brought In France and three weeks ro a year to try," tacted the welfare people and got I awyer to take on the case. lbese livelier" than what she ls accus­ England, but It was still limited." said Mr. Friedman who practices assistance for her, and the com­ people have been on compensation tomed to. 1nere ls much more Their courses are often lecture compensation In Rhode Island, pany began making payments for years, sometimes, and even singing and chanling. and every­ courses for 200, With small dls­ Connecticut and Massachusetts. ''without prejudice" which means when he wins the case we don't body takes part. She enjoyed the cussion groups once a week. "I He passed the New York Bar but they can snll contest the case, get a fee. Legal aid Is supposed dlfferences and characterized It dldn't feel the quality of education was never admitted, as he cam~ but the widow and her chll dre.u to take over cases of this kind, as "people-centered, not the rab­ was as good as at Kalamazoo. here to live. won't have starved in the inter­ but why should a man be forced to bi leadlng his flock. Always one Most of the lectures were very Very few trial I awyars know val. go, In a specialized field, to a of the young boys gets up and dry, unchallenging. At Kalamazoo anything about radiation, he com­ All too many Injured workers lawyer who Is not a specialist." gives the klddush, and another you can ask questions, but in mented, through there are radi­ delay asking for help until It Is One day a week Mr. _Friedman sings part of the service. One of France they come In and read the ation compensation cases In Col­ almost too late, or, sometimes, goes fishing on the bay In his 24- the men davened Musaf every lecture and leave. You can't dis­ orado where uranium Is mined when It Is too late as the statute foot Parece Bass Boat. His wife Saturday, not the rabbi. who con­ cuss It with them over a cup of and In other places where atomic of limitations has run out. Mr. doesn' t care for boats, but 10- ducts part of the service. coffee." "Everybody works together. Though school In France was Generally there were 12 to IS less satisfactory scholastically, men and some young boys and a she thinks "kids who don't take BEFORE YOU KNOW IT - few women, as well as those who up this option are crazy. It had to say kaddlsh. I was the only doesn't take a lot of nerve to woman, often." go . _ . . Now I want to go back to THE HIGH HOLIDAVS WILL BE HERE The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Europe, not just a wish to go back Irving Zaldman and a member of but the knowledge that If I possi­ Temple Beth Am, Warwick, she bly can I wlll go back soon." found there were only Orthodox In MI s s Zaldman eventually -­ Plan NOW to say "Happy New Year" · France, "and probably In Europe wants to go into library science, except for Engl and where there Is but Is getting a teaching certifi­ Reform which Is semi-Reform­ cate In history and her French Conservative. In Vichy the women minor and may teach for a year To Friends and Relatives sat upstairs.,. before doing graduate work. She In Clermont, In November, the dldn't have any trouble speaking very old synagogue had no heat­ and understandlng French, but dld in the R. I. Jewish Herald ing, so services were held at a In getting to know the Jokes and l center above stores. Some of the slang, which are very specialized members of the congregation and full of double entendres. An­ Your Greeting in the Rosh Hashanah were "a little quizzical the first other language she took up In time I came. They thought It a France Is Hebrew. nice thing that an American girl The frlencDy rabbi whose hos­ issue of the Herald will reach all your wanted to. 1 think I was the first pitable family had students for American Jewtsh girl to hit Cler­ frequent meals started a Hebrew . mont, which Is rather out of the class With three or four young relatives and. friends no one lS forgotten way." men, t.o read the first book of She met a good-sized group of the Torah. One of the students In­ Greetings are priced at students through a parish priest vited her to attend. The rabbi who wanted his young people to tr an s I ate d the Hebrew Into $3.00 · • $3.75 • $5.00 - get to know of other countries and French and then Into English. cultures. lbere were about 35 of "It's remarkably dlfflcult to Ask for rates on la-!ger ads them, Catholic, Jewish, Protes­ learn Hebrew from French Into tant, Syrian, American, German, English," added Stephanie Zatd­ ,------THE R. I. JEWISH HERALD Scottish, who got together once a man, who Is very Interested In FILL OUT AND MAIL BOX 6063, PROVIDENCE, R. I. month. At one meeting, Stephanie learning to read and speak mod­ told them what college life In ern Hebrew, and whose two quar­ THIS COUPON NOW! Enclosed find for which please- print a 9rNtin9 in the America Is like, and how If It dlf­ ters of study in France taught her SPECIAL NEW YEAR EDITION al the R. I. JEWISH HERALD. the depth and practical advan­ SAVE TIME fers from that of France. The French get a very broad tages of her Jewish roots. MR. and MRS . education In the lycee, much bet­ 800 AFGHANISTAN JEWS ter than ours as It Is study In • ADDRESS HERAT - The Jewish com­ SAVE MONEY depth, but at the university they munity In Afghanistan, which enroll In the department of their dates back hundreds of years, to­ CITY ...... STATi ...... ZIP CODE . specialty and take nothing else . I day numbers some 800 persons, . I Nevertheless, they feel that we the majority of whom live In turn out more specialized people Herat. 'IHE RHODE !Sl,AND HERALD, ·FRIDAY, AU:,USJ" 25, 1967 23 SUEZ NOT SO VITAL 1956," the editorisl stated. "The Report On Jordan Catholics To Opp9se Bill Allowing NEW YORK-In an editorisl, reasons are, first, a phenomensl (Continued fi:om page I) published In Increase since then In oil produc:- last week, the Importance at the lion In the Western Hemisphere Refugee Year, sponsored by the Anyone To Attend Parochial School Suez Canal In the world of today and Africa, and second, a trend United Nations. Earlier this year has been discounted. "The six toward bigger and bigger rankers he had been elected chairman NEW YORK - A New York the Education Law "and open the of state amendment to the education doors to possible destruction of weeks since the Sinai clash have that cannot get through the Suez the American Counctl of Volun­ only demonstrated the fact that and can take their oil more tary Agendes for Foreign Serv­ law which would prohibit ractsl the Catholic school system." .tce. and religious discrimination in A delegate to the Convention, the Suez Cansl no longer Is so VI- cheaply around the Cape of Good admissions to schools supported tsl a waterway as It was In Hope. In 1961, Mr. Jordan was in­ he added: by public funds might "destroy" "If the schools have to admit struments! in the creation of the everyone the parishioners who Internationsl Counctl on Jewish the Roman Cathollc school system; pay for the schools would soon Soclsl and Welfare Services a Fordham law professor said ROBERT STARR BRIDGE CLUB which gave formsl structUre t~ this week. tire of waiting on line. I heartily The amendment, introduced by the • • the long-standing de facto coop­ favor part of the amendment 1060 HOPE ST., PROVIDENCE ~-831-4669 a Manhattan Democrat, passed by about ractal discrimination but eration among major Jewish wel­ a voice vote. The Church-sup­ the other would be disastrous." fare agenctes worlc1ng overseas. DUPUCA TE BRIDGE SCHEDULE ported schools are presently per­ The amendment was attached He still serves as executive sec­ retary of the counctl. mitted to exerctse the right of to the measure ending the banning SUNDAY· 7,30 p.m. THURSDAY - 12, 30 p.m. preference to maintain the reli­ of state aid to church schools. MONDAY - 12,30 p.m. FRIDAY . 12, 30 In 1965 Mr. Jordan was elect­ p.m. gious character of the schools. The origins! statute had been In MONDAY - 8,00 p.m. FRIDAY • 8, 00 p.m. ed to the board of governors of Dr. Charles Rice, Professor the Constitution since 1894. · TUESDAY • 11 ,00 a .m. SATURDAY - 12,30 p.m. the Paul Baerwsld School of Soctsl of Law at Fordham and vice WEDNESDAY - 8,00 p.m. SATURDAY - 8,00 p.m. Work of the Hebrew University in The amendment will be voted Jerusalem. president of the Conservative on agaln by the full convention af­ party, contended that If the ter It has passed through the WEDNESDAY - 1,00 p.m. lo, non-Maste,. TwO' years earlier, the Nor­ amendment were allowed to stand wegian Refugee Counctl awarded Committee on Style and Arrange­ MASTER POINTS - COFfEE - AIR-CONDITIONED ♦ In Its present form It would nul­ him its annual plaque in recogni­ ment, which is editing It. lify the preferentisl provlslons of Concern was also expressed • tion of his services and those of the Joint Distribution Committee by Charles J . Tobin Jr., secre­ register today for in behslf of refugees. tary of the New York State Catho­ Reports That Stalin Died lic Conference, who indicated that JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER ''Do I need children of my a fight on the amendment was In NURSERY SCHOOLS own," he once asked an inter­ the offering. He declined to com­ viewer, "when I have many thou­ Of Anger Over Jews ment In detail but said the matter sands of them throughout the PROVIDENCE ~ges3-S WARWICK EXTENSION DETROIT-Joseph Stalin was under serious consideration world?" He and his wife were and that the Catholic answer East Side Temple Beth Am ) chilcfiess. died 14 years ago of a rage caused when the Poll tburo op­ would soon be presented to the 170 Sessions St. 40 Gardiner St. A tall, husky man, he was a Legislature. popular figure at the annual posed his proposal that all Rus­ sian Jews be expelled to Siberia, He noted, however, that the United Jewish Appeal con­ preferential aspect of the Educa­ the Detroit News reported from * Full Focilittes, indoor and ootd~or ploy vention~. He was quick to supply tion Law was not considered as figures of how much aid money Washington. * Transportation Available Stslln called a secret Polit­ disc rl m In a ti on and therefore was needed, without a prepared would not be affected. But he said ' FUUY ACCREDITED BY THE R.l . STATE BOARD OF chart, and time and again was buro meeting to announce a cam­ EDUCATION paign against the Jews, according the whole matter needed further sought out for advice on how to study before he could Indicate the • Morning and Afternoon Sessions Doily cope with assistance programs by to The News. He said measures should be taken to deport Jews en form the Catholic answer would Begins September 13 Call 861-2674 both Jewish and non-Jewish wel­ take. · fare agenctes. masse to Biro Bldjan In Siberia. Stalin was quoted as saying, "The PRAGUE - According to the Jews will be kept hermetrtcally United States embassy here, the isolated there. 'They never will be two Swiss doctors cone! uded that able to come out." Mr. Jordan died several hours Mikoyan Is said to have ob­ after leaving his hotel and that jected that the Communist move­ I.. the Immediate cause of death was ment abroad would lose support drowning. They said that the de­ and Stalin would be continuing OPEN 9:45 to 5:45 composition of the body after Adolf Hitler's policies. Lazar several days In the water was so Kaganovlch, only Jewish member EXCEPT TUESDAY great that they could make rio of the Politburo and Stalin's AND THURSDAY NIGHTS Judgment on whether there had brother-In-law, tore up his party UNTIL 9 been violent Injury before drown­ card and threw the pieces in Sta­ ing. 'They -requested that Czech au­ Un' s face, said The News. thorities mm -certllin body !Is­ The report said that Stslin sues available to them for further then turned purple with rage. laboratory examination. Mikoyan reportedly told Stalin Their findings brought the that the Red Army had been told case of his disappearance · and to encircle the Kremlin If the Po­ death no closer to a solution. litburo members did not leave Unlted States officials have found within an hour after entering. The no evidence on which to base an story said that Stslin then or­ accusation against the Czech au­ dered Lavrenti Beria, secret po­ thorities or any other persons of lice chief, to arrest ! 'all the complicity In his death. scum here." Berta refused and Jacob D. Beam, U. S. Am­ announced his support of Miko­ bassador roe zechoslovakla, yan. was reported to be pressing the Stalin rose from his chair, Foreign Ministry for a full police according to the account, began report on the Investigation and of · screaming Incoherently and fell the Circumstances of Mr. Jor­ unconscious. An hour later, phy­ dan's disappearance. sicians pronounced him dead.

)J Center's Camp Centerland ) Ends Summer Season Today The Jewish Community Center rrative director of the center, will end its I 96 7 summer day during his recent visit to Israel, camp season today. the eight­ were shown, and Pnlna Tadmor week camp has served nearly 250 explained their background. children between the ages of six A staff of about 60 persons and 13 years from the Greater worked at the camp, among them Providence area. Camp Center­ Marshall Gerstenblatt, assistant land Is located on the Pawtuxet director; Edward Gerstenblatt River near Scituate. and Geraldine Foster, division The camping program offered heads: Nancy Kitchens, water-. arts and crafts, zoology, hiking, front director, assisted by Mar­ cook-outs, camp craft, nature tha Taylor, and Jerry Wagner, tore, swimming, music, dramat­ C.l.T. director. Mrs. Jeanne ics, games and sightseeing trips. Buckley was again camp nurse. Spectal weekly features included Many Junior counselors-In-train­ a hobby morning (astronomy, ing were on the staff. creadve dramattcs, nature, mod­ The Center's Camp Com­ el building, weight-lifting, gym­ mittee, under the chairmanship of nastics, sketching, water ballet, Joseph Gladstone, ·Will review and crafts): the Sabbath Eve service, evaluate this season before mak­ bet d In the "Dell" or In an apple ing plans for Center day camping SPECIAL PURCHASE! orchard; a bus contest; a carnival In 1968. run by the campers to benefit of the Jerusalem Young Men's JEWISH-ARAB CAMP SCHOOL GIRL DRESSES IN Hebrew Association In Israel; ACRE - The fifth annual overnight sleep-outs and a water Jewish-Arab youth camp has PLAIDS, STRIPES & PRINTS safety demonstration by Harold opened In Acre. It was organized Anderson, safety director of the by the Arab Affairs Adviser In American Red Cross. the Prime Minister's Office and 5.88 Cantor · Joseph Lourie of the Counctl for Arab Culture In Temple Em·anu-EI led a program the Education Ministry. The 1(?­ of special songs for Tisha B'av day camp Is anended by 110 boys Wonderful lines for the student body! and explllined the significance of and girls, 17-year-ol d high The cotton A-line with smart military_button the holiday. Emily Grueneberg, school pupils from all over Is­ at'ts and crafts counselor, and rael. The Jewish campers, all trim, bright red bow at c:ollar, in navy/green/ red Arthur Seltzer, a rabbinical stu­ taking Oriental studies as their plaid with zipper baclt, in sizll$ 7 to 12. dent, read poems Written by chil­ major subject, practive spoken dren of the Warsaw Ghetto, and Arabic and get to know Arab cus­ Don Soloman, camp director, told toms and ways of life during vis­ Girls' Apparel-Second Floor a Tisha B' Av legend. Color slide• Its to Arab Institutions and fami­ made by Sha! Tadmor, admy,te- lies In Oatllee. 2-4 1HE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY 1 AOOUST 25, 1967

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