Jews Can't Return ·To USSR If Israel Disappoints Th~m ) MOSC0W - Soviet Jews have - The paper publl"sjieWrestling Coach .At Y Notes ·Need For 1 Carryover Spotts' and satisfactions" of the job, which He thinks that a concept of pollcep,an 30 years ago, but now other concerned Jurisdictions, are By LOIS ATWOOD might go to Jail. prepared mainly by five members Is "very rewarding In many ways "smothering masculinity" Is other than monetary." He has The new wrestling coach atthe partly responsible for the physical "As soon as you start keeping of the lDllt and a supervisor. Other a qualified people help occasionally almost finished a book for I Pro,itdence YMCA sees great condition of many American this · kind of statistics, you do It l need In schools and colleges for more and more to Justify your - the probation officers or the children, too. children, whose parents are afraid When he finished at 8 , U. In what . he terms "carryover to have them get hurt. "I doubt If ex::lstence,,. and so far as the members of the deferred sentence I sports.'' offender IJ; concerned, "I suppose \DIii. Len Y anku has completed • 1950, he went to work (among other anyone ever died of a bloody nose •'I "I wrestled and played football sometimes. It's a· question of the Incentive In-Service Training Jobs) part- time for the Journal, or a sprained ankle. It's good for writing schoolboy sports. He still at Boston University,'' said a boy to come home at night luck... It's not the severity of Program given by the state and I Leonard Yanku. "Show me where plDllshment but the certainty of - also taken courses In related areas Writes spor~s and news, on week disheveled from play." He ends for WLKW, and at one- time a middle-aged man can play believes, too, that many time~ punishment.. that· Is deterrent. at the· University of Rhode Island either!" . " That's why capital punishment and Rhode Isl and College. was Interested In play writing. Americans equate "niceness" and "'I've done so many things. !want Golf, tennis, squash, handball a love .of the arts with sofmes·s: doesn't work - It's always the His college major was English, and possibly skiing are among . the poor, the alone, the friendless who with emphasis on creative writing, to know everything, try every that we must learn that violence thing, do everything. I'm In sports he thinks should be stressed Is not the answer to everything, end .up g!'ttlng executed." The only and he Is writing a book about a In schools, In addition to the rough way It can operate Is to judge {lctlonal probation officer " who terested In people, curious as to and that masculinity can Involve (Continued on PRge 24) and-tumble diversions, as they can more than the sports page, just as everyone by the same standards. r\Dls Into the million frustrations be enjoyed pretty much regardless women need not be exclusively A social worker since the early of age. Mr. Yanku, who says he concerned with domestic things. 1950s, he works with adults now. Is "In very good shapeformyage, The new wrestling coach Is a The reason for the pre sentence but not In competitive shape,'' probation and parole counselor In · lD!lt· Is that a person Is not re-~ plays softball and golf and bowls. the Pre Sentence Unit atthe Provi quired to take the witness stand He also has been a wrestling dence County Collrt House. Many and can plead nolo (contendere) referee for 15 years for college, of the Juvenile offenders he has Instead. prep school and high · school worked with came from a distorted "The judge Is confronted with matches, and for Olympic tryouts. family - whether because of a face and body he knows nothing For the past seven years ·he has death, separation, alcoholism, about. Someone from the Attorney refereed at the Wilkes College mental Illness or some other General's staff then gets up and Wrestling Tournament (the "Rose factor. Mr. Yanku feel s that says he Is a monster preying on Bowl" of wre stllng). generally the blame rests more society, and the defense' gets up He meets two to three nights with mothers than with fathers, and says he Is the sole support a week at tlle Y with those as .,mothets exert a far ·greater of a crippled mother and It's a Interested In wrestling. The Y Is Influence on children." Fathers, question of circumstances. And trying to set up an Instructional he finds , exert a "leavening the Judge looks down at him with program for 12 to 17-year-old influence." no way of knowing what Is the boys, and tsexpandlngltsprogram Skyrocketing percentages In truth. With a p_re sentence report, for those 18 and older. He-doesn't dellnque1,1~ ne prlmarl~ ca~sed the Judge will ha'(~ hopefully some know yet where their level ot by better record~klleplng, and to Idea of what can-~ said In exten competition w 11 I be, and they som~ extent by the emphasis on sion. or mitigation or aggravation haven't entered the full team statistics, said Mr. Yanku, who of the crime, and will know whether In meets yet, but members have doesn't think the Incidence of the person can benefit more by . . wrestled I~ tournaments. Com serious crime has risen much. one course of action or another. 0 NEW YMCA P!I-OGRAM - Len Yanku, newYwrestllng coach, watches petition at that · level Is uaually A boy caught stealing milk might The reports, open to Meri ta! his son Alan and John Short of URI (left, In gray T-shirt). The Y has · arranged with other teams. have had his face slapped by a Hygiene Service, the prl~on an~ begun a program for boys 12_to , 17 years old. 2 THE RHODE . ISLAND HERAW>, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1967 Safety Betts Mandatory· Recita-ls Of Yiddish Poetry On-New Cars In Israel JERUSALEM-No new cars will be given road licenses In Israel Allowed Now In Moscow poetry. Such are In the future unless they are equip MOSCOW-Improwment In the recitals now ped with safety belts, the Minister life of a Soviet Jew, admittedly being allowed In greater number, and ·Miss Saytan, a fine dramatic of Transport, Moshe Carmel, told slight but nevertheless ·apparent the Knesset. since the exit of Nikita Kruschev, actress, was giving a series of The Ministry will at the same has been noted by observers here. three. time launch .a publicity drive to - hi addition to the Issuance of One of the surprising things persuade all drivers to use safety exit visas ·to nearly 200 Soviet about the red tal was the ,nnnber belts. Motor cyclists and scooter Jews In the las,t 12 months, so that of Jewish poets whose works Miss riders wHI be obliged to wear they could rejoin their families Saytan recited. . Some, like crash helmets from the begtnnlng In Israel, the press has stopped Mthoells and Fleffer, died 1n of 1967. . describing synagogues as places Stalin's concentration camps In The Minister reported that the for Illicit business deals and has Siberia, though this fact was not number of road deaths had fallen stopped emphasizing the Jewish mentioned, to 1.6 per 1,000 vehicles In the names among those found guilty · There were also some young year ending September, 1966. The of economic 6-tmes. poets, the new breed pouring Its figure for last year was two per CENI'ER STAFF MEMBERS HONORED-Three members of theJewis The number of books published heart out not In Russian but In 1,000 vehicles. The number of Community Center• staff were honored recently for 10 or more years of In Yiddish has Increased slightly, the language of Its ancestors In accidents had dropped from 68.1 faithful service. Presentations were made by Dr. Bernard Carp, and the quota of Jewish youths al the Mestechkl, or the small towns per 1,000 vehicles to 60.1 over the executive director, left, and Sidney Meyer, president, right, to George lowed to enter institutions of higher of 01 d Russia. same period. Howard, building superintendent; Brister Barnett, custodian, and learning has Increased also. The The campaign against the syn Seymour Berkowitz; accountant (left to right) at a spec!al reception. Government denies that there Is agogues has been ha! ted, and there such a quota, but Jewish teachers may have been a very slight In Report Israeli Money and students Insist there Is and crease In their number. Providence GJC Joins that they have to be better than The baking of matzoh, the un May Pay For Russians Budgeting Conference the non-Jews to get In. A Jew leavened bread used at Passover,_- JERUSALEM -Repre sen°t has been appointed to a post In has been made easier· In Moscow, atlves of the official Soviet travel The Board of Directors of the the Foreign Ministry. Kiev and Leningrad. agency In Israel Indicated that General Jewish Committee voted Some 500 people crammed Into Despite the official claims to Israelis may pay In local currency last month to join the Large City the small theatre at Hotel Sovlet the contrary, however, no rabblni~ for visits of their relatives from Budgeting Conference of the Coun skaya recently, to hear Sofia Say cal schools have been all owed, the Soviet Union. The announce cil of Jewish Federations and Wel tan's recital of Soviet Yiddish and rlibbls are dying out. ment paralleled reports that Israel fare Funds, It was announced by does not plan to talle any action Merrill L. Hassenfeld, GJCpresl for the time being to clarify So dent. The Steering Committee of viet Premier Kosygin's recent the Conference voted last weekend .I statement that Soviet Jews would to admit Providence as a partic r be allowed to visit relatives In ipating agency. DR. YOUSSEF M. ME_NASHA Leo Schwartz, both of Pawtucket; Israel or \ even emigrate. The Judge Frank Licht, GJC vice Funeral services for Dr. Yous three sisters, Mrs. Cecilla Jll Premier made the statement In president, and Joseph Galkin, GJC sef M, Menasha, S7,of36Burllng, dean, Mrs. Annie Schwartz and reply to a question. executive director, attended the ton Street, who died suddenly on Mrs. Lena Wilker, all of Paw The Israel Governmentlswalt weekend meeting In New York City Tuesday, were held the following tucket, and one granddaughter. · lng to see whether the Soviets as Providence representaJ!ves. day a t,.. the Max Sugarman Memori • • • really mean to remove existing The Budgeting Conference was es al Chapel. Burial was In Lincoln barriers to visits or Immigration tablished In 19-48 by some of the Park Cemetery. Dr. Menasha, an RABBI IGNACE HAUSER . SAT . ...rSUH. MA.T.1_: by Soviet Jews, It was Indicated. I arge Jewish welfare funds to Im anesthesiologist at the Rhode Funeral services for Rabbi Ig prove their budgeting for national Island Medical Center and Provi nace Hauser, 85, of 217 Rocham Represented------by Off., 421 -4641 and overseas needs. Membership dence poTlce surgeon, was found beau Avenue, who died Tuesday, MAX ROTHKOPF Re;., 941 -48-10 In the group Is voluntary a.nd Its 1D1donsclous at Angell and Benefit were held the following day at recommendations are advisory. Streets where he was stricken with Temple Beth Sholom. · Burial was an acute heart attack apparently In Lincoln Park Cemetery. He THE LAWRY COMPANY while on his way to testify In was the husband of Bessie (Levine) Hias Gives Torah district court. Hauser. Est. 1922 Dr. Menasha came to Provi Born In Czechoslovakia, he was Monuments - Cemetery Lettering dence In 1962, and had first served a son of the late Mlchuel and Tanla From Ellis Island on the staff of Miriam Hospital . Hauser. He was a Providence res 11 9 o.m. • 5 p.m. 440 Cranston St. Born In August of1909 In Cairo, ident for the past 10 years and was \ I Eves. and Sunday by opp! .. Providence, R.I. Egypt, he was a graduate of the associated with Temple Beth Sho- To New Synagogue University of Cairo and Its medi 1om as a cantor and reader of ,,__, NEW YORK - The Torah cal school, and had been a physician Torah. .- ' --. Scroll of the Ellis Island Chapel, there until leaving for this co1D1try. He was ordained a· rabbi In ' ' Painting, Decorating or Remodeling t used by generations of Jewish His parents were the late Czechoslovakia and had been a I. FOR COMPLETE RUG and CARPET SERVICE Immigrants, was presented on Moussa and Marietta (Kamar) rabbi In Vienna from 1913 to 1939. Wednesday by United Hlas Service Menasha. l He then spent one and one-half to the International Synagogue at Besides his wife, Mrs. Regine years at Dachau Concentration ·, Kennedy Airport. (Levy) Menasha,. he Is survived Camp, after which he was allowed · Murray I. Gurfeln, President of -by two sons, Moussa and Samy to come to this country. For _J CALL the worldwide Jewish migration Menasha, and three daughters, seven years he was associated with agency, turned over the Torah to the Misses Marie, Louise and Congregation Sons of Israel In · International,. Synagogue Presi Nevlne Menasha, all at home; Amsterdam,--N.Y. Prior to com dent, Charles H. Sliver, In a two brothers, Abraham Mena Ing to Providence, he was a rabbi ceremony that recalled the I sha of Providence and David In Lynn, Mass. . I successive waves of Jewish Menasha of Israel, . and seven For more than 60 years of his Immigration since the founding of sisters, Mrs. Louise Wlgderson life and up to the time of his death United Hlas Service 83 years ago. of Maywood, Calif., Mrs. Rachel his avocation was painting. His "Three m!lllon Jewish men, Marzorlk, Mrs. Regina Kodsl, paintings Included humorous and DE 1-8086 women and children h'ave been Mrs. Az!za Licha, Miss Soltana ~religious themes, portraits and assisted by United Hlas to re Menasha and Mrs. ZomoridaMaz ships. RUG and • Sales • Tockless Installations settle ln free cotmtrles," Mr. llah, all of Israel, and Mrs. Survivors Include his wife; a • Repairing • Fitting & Laying Gurfeln said. "For many of these Josephine Licha of Paris, Prance. son, Fred Hauser of Tel Aviv, CARPET • Storage • Dying & Moth Proofing people the sight of this Scroll was • • • Israel, and three grandchildren. convincing evidence that they had • • • SAM AND BERNARD GREEN at last found a place where they HYMAN W. SCHWARTZ LOUIS KELMAN could practice their religion Funeral services forHymanW. Funeral services for Louis :I openly and fearlessly. Schwartz, 69 of SI Hamilton Street, Kelman, 69, of 273 Warrington I "We are pleased that at Pawtucket, who died Jan. 18 after Street, who died Tuesday, were Kennedy Airport, which has re- a one-month Illness, were held · held the following day at the Max - placed Ellis Island as the principal that afternoon at the Max Sugarman Sugarman Memorial Chapel. Burl port of entr.y for Immigrants, the Memorial Chapel. Rabbi Emanuel al was In Lincoln Park Cemetery. Jewish Herald Torah will continue to serve new Lazar and the Rev. Morris Drazln · He was the husband of the late 11 arrivals of Jewish faith." officiated. Burial was In Lincoln Zaletta (Chackmelster) Kelman. In accepting the gift, Mr. Sliver Park Cemetery. He was the hus A resident of Providence for pointed out that the International band of Bessie (Savan) Schwartz. 52 years, he operated his· own I Synagogue Is a "fitting repository Born In Russia In July, 1897, parking lot for IS years and for I I Advertising for this historic Scroll . It will he was a son of the late Nathan the past 10 years was associated '' serve to reaffirm to all Immi and Rose (Mlrochnlck) Schwartz, with the Meyers Brothers Park:... grants to America, to ourselves and had been a Pawtucket resi Ing System In Providence. and to the entire world, our belief dent since 1921. He was born In Russia on Jan. Brings Results • • • In liberty and justice." he said. He was a sexton for 19 years 19, 1898 . Present at the ceremony were for Congregation Ohawe Sholom, He was a member of Congre Harry Berse, United Hiss Vice and was a member of the congre gation Sons of Abraham, the Rhode President; Harry Ginsberg, gation. He was also a member of Island Jewish Fraternal Associa for people who sell drugs member of the Board; Mrs. Albert the Hebrew Free Loan Association tion and the Hebrew Free Loan As- Speed, Women's Division and Chevra Kad!sha. sociation. • for people who sell .cars President; Gaynor I. Jacobson, Besides his wlfe,helssurvlved He Is survived by four brothers, Executive Director and Harry M. by a son. ,David Schwartz of Provi David Kelman of New York City, Friedman, Comptroller. • dence; two brothers Morris and. and three brothers In Russia. Also attending were Rabbi 0 for people who sell groceries Israel Mowshowitz, Chairman of the Board of International Synagogue and Rabbi Harold H. Max Sugarman Funeral Home for people who sell clothes Gordon, Executive Vice President of the New York Board of Rabbis. "THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR" for people who sell insurance This year, United Hlasexpects to provide migration services to -MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION- about 65,000 Jewish refugees and migrants, of whom 16,250 will be TAP THE BUYING POWER assisted to resettle In Western , DE 1-8094 458 Hope Street DE 1-8636 countries. Included are 3,500 Immigrants from Eastern Europe, FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM OUT-OF-STATE OF JEWISH HERALD READERS North Africa and Cuba who will I and at Kennedy Airport destined CAU COLLECT 724-0200 for resettlement In communl-tles throughout the United States, 1967 , 3 · WINTEI! PARTIES AT \ . 61st ANNUAL CONVENTION WIONKHIEGE SOUTH PROVIDENCE VALLEY FARM ARE ALL ,FUN! StEIGH RIDES ~ HEBREW FREE L0At4 (if th,re is snow enough) ASSOCIATION Warm up in the Ga.me Room Vi1it the Tea Room Sunday, January 29, 1967 lo, pie and callee CE 1-0417 LOG ROAD Sf,\ITHf!ElD at 2:00 P.M. IN . THE VESTRY OF SONS OF ABRAHAM .SYNAGOGUE AUTO 364 Prairie · Avenue, Providence INSURANCE NOMINATION AND ELECTION OF OFFICERS , . Lo.w quarterly payments FINANCIAt REPORT OF THE YEAR TO BE READ : . for accldent~free driven. All members are invited to attend ,M-1,e,_~JlfW• Potkiftfl-""" - NO SOLICITATIONS SJ.IL ON 'SHALOM' - Mr: and Mrs. Haskel Walllck of 25 Alton Road INSURANCE : ·saned from New York for the Caribbean on Jan. 17 aboard the S, s. M& F AGENCY INC Shalom. · RUMANIAN JEWS 331-9427 I A NEW RELEASE! , BUCHAREST - Toe Jew1sh Agnon Featured 131 Washington St community . of Rumanla, which ORDER NOW! Providence ). __,__..__,..~! dates back to the early 18th cen tury, numbers 100,000. · In 'Commentary' NEW YORK-"Commentary" UTURGICAL MOODS . ESTABLISHED magazine devoted the major p(\r 1M,,,;, •~ ACCREDITED Windsor, Conn. by &q£, NATIONALLY KNOWN tton .of Its December Issue-to S.Y. Fu• • · FOR BOYS and GIRLS 6-15 I sK1LLs • 1 Agnon, who has Just received the CANTOR IVAN E. PERLMAN ,.,. FRIENDS ALIVE WITH ACTIVITY FOR EVERY AGE GROUP ACHIHEMENTI Nobel Prize-for literature. Three All Land and Water .Sports, Crafts, Drama, Trips, Skiing, Scuba, Pioneerinr. short stories appear for the first Riflery, Riding, lake and Pool, Dietary Laws. · REQUEST BROCHURE. ttme .In English along with a crttt J CHARLES ■. BROWDY, Dir., 205 Mohawk Dr., W. Hartford, Conn. 203-233-1673 cal-evaluatton of the lsraell writ er's work byEdmundWllsonandan Album Includes:• arttcle on Agnon by Baruch Hoch HASHKIVENU man. CAMP COUNSELORS . Coinciding with the award, the VAY'CHULU newly-organized Commentary Li SHEYIBONE_BEYS brary, wlll Issue as Its first book HAMIKDOSH Male Female selections to members rwo books by Agnon, "In the Heart of the and other favorites! General Specialties Seas,.. a short novel, and ..Two Tales." 'The new book club was established to make available the -' , With or without experience works of such wrt ters as Agnon, USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM: i Must have minimum of one year of college Isaac Bashevis Singer and Elle Wiesel, as well as such classics - DE 1-1070 as Maimonides' "'The Guide of the Cantor Ivan E. Perlman Perplel(e(I" and Kauffman's 1'Re 35 Astral Avenue llglon of Israel." Providence, R.I. 02906 .... As a bonus gift new members are being offered a copy of the' Enclosed please find $ __ for __ record(s) at $4.95 / sociological work, "'The Jews," of LITURGICAL MOODS.' Please send order to: edited by Marshall Sklare. De tails of the club are available at ADDRESS:------'------?Ii 1be Commentary Ubrary, 16;i East r 56 Street, New York, N.Y.10022. 11 1 ) ·Attention ~ ;:~LL ,.:~. Commentary ' magazine pio "'=: s IN PAIKIMG LOT ACROSS STHff neered In publishing Agnon' short WEEKDAYS AF.TEI S P. M. stories In this country. It began I ANYTIME SUNDAYS OIi HOLIDAYS publishing both his work and ar·t lcles on him In 1948. PEUICT MEALS AT LOW PRICES MIAMI.BEACH BRING THE FAMILY Haifa Street Named Full Coune Sundoy Di'nnen for Spanish Captain FREE AND IMMEDIATE . TIM ICloMI Y.. 11 I.lb HAIFA-The name of a Spanish No liq_uo, - o,.n 11 · o.m. to 11 P·•· - Sat. ancl, Svn. 11 • ·• · to 12 p.M. captain who brought' 'Illegal Imm!- · CONFIRMATIONS e 102 WESTMINSTER ST., N.e~ to Arcade e ; grants" to Palestine during the Brtttsh mandate was commem Also i'ACKAGE TRIPS -orated recently during a special ceremony In which a Haifa street FREE BONUS: Free cocktails at 3 nightclubs-Entertainment 1 HOUR FROM PROVIDENCE was named for him. The street leading to Haifa Port Gate Num ber 3 was, named "Captain Sreve EXPO CRUISE-S.S. SHALOM Gate" for Captain Esteban Her nandorene, who was known to the froll'' Boston or New York CAMP PEMBROKE Illegal Immigration workers as "Steve." Born In Spain In 1905, At Pembroke, Mass.- - he died In Haifa last year. after PACKAGE TOURS serving the Zlm lines where his ISRAEL from Boston FROM $449 son Is now an officer. ,Attending the ceremony were Jewish seamen, veterans of the on· LAKE OLDHAM second ·wave of pre-state Immi HAWAII • lAS VEGAS - SAN FRANCISO grants, naval officers and Catholic A non-profit camp clergymen. The latter took part 14 DAYS-13 NIGHTS !J!!cause Captain Hernandorene had DELUXE HOTELS $699 been a Catholic. Poet Nathan Al- , . operated by the te'rman said .of the Spanish hero that "we shall yet read songs and includes fab_ulous meals, s_ightseeing, cockta(I parties Eli and Bessie Cohen Foundation poems of tlils fleet small l)ndgrey, and· of you,-too, Captain." IMMEDIATE FOR GIRLS-Age 8.to 16 Celebrates fOSth Yea~ PUERTO RICO HOTELS CONFIRMATIONS _In Hoine For Aged NEW YORK - Bernhard Mor NOW IN ITS 32nd SEASON ris celebrated his IOSth birthday TIPS ON WHAT TO WEAR, recently at the Hebrew Home CRUISES TIPPING, ETC. for the Aged In The Bronx where Individual instruction . by mature staff, · excellent facilities, · he Is a resident. He retired from Jewish culture, horseback riding, arts and crafts, dramatics, the men's clothing business In CONCORD-GROSSING ER dancing, sailing, canoeing, water skiing an~ land sports. 1925 after 50 years. NEVELE-JUG END BARN He came· to the United States· RESORTS MAGNOLIA, Many others -Dietary laws Observed- from Germany In 1880 and was Umited Openings . TUITION $625 married In . 1888· at t~ age of 8-week season 27. Hill wife died In 1930. He Call Anytime then lived with his only son, Moe, Write: until he became a resident of the Home, · , MRS. 1-tADASSAH BLOCKER,-Dir'ector C.T.C In fairly good health, Morris Zelda Kouffman 344 Kenrick Street Newton, Mass. attends religious services three (Certified Travel Counse lor ) times a day In the synagogue at· Or Call: the Home. He Is a vigorous par CRANSTON TRAVEL-801 PARK AVE., CRANSTON . . I ticipant In the activities and events - Area Code 617 132-5375 In the communttyconductedforthe Eves. by appointment 481-4977 500 Home residents. / 4 nrn RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1967 Give the Herald as a gift. That It Is both Illegal and • .mistaken by an approaching driver dangerous to use parking lights as meaning you are much farther Instead of headlights for driving, :away than you actually are. Is emphasized by the Rhode Island Drivers should keep thelr head-· s/s Shalom ,Counell on Highway Safety. This light• clean, have them checked to •unwise practice Is particularly for aiming and use them even In. dangerous In periods of dusk, haze daylight when the atmosphere Is exp067 or· .fog. The parking lights can be ~ .not clear. From New York CAMP SAMOSET May 20-11 days FOR BOYS (Min. iare $295) Gilford, New Hampshire MANNY WINSTON . Owner-Director From Boston Is Pleased To Announ~e-The -Appointment Of May 21-10 days · (Min . f.ir e $275) STEPHEN FEINSTEIN Cruise to Montreal ' s As Special Representative spectacular, 70-nation exposition aboard the In The Rhode Island Area FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE YOU MAY CONTACT ,MR. FEIN$JEIN _ pride of the Israel pas · AT 215 WATERMAN ST., PROVIDENCE~ TELEPHONE421C5675 senger fleet. The luxuri- - IF NC\ .ANSWH, CALl Pl 1-7788 ous s/ s Shalom. 3 days and 2 nights at £'. ., Montrea~ . ShaiOfll is . ·· your ~el while you £c_ -~··•~«.>~- - :/ ' .-- l)h,.c~C:!lv. i,. ~ ',;, Sl!e1tereif water ~.,,-;..,·. •·• it. ·, .·-. ·"':!' £ipe Cod •~•.·~ I ':-'. -1""uced~~)'OW,W~• .• -·l, .' -, cl ~ oi 1aic-...w ... ~ ;~ 0• :~vcac · .: ·' ' """' _. Oiamond EJ-s· ' . ,to ~ )IOU. l . ~~: /-;. ~~~~•.,..:. ....~-~~ -✓ )'; ,~-Y• >a,.,,·.,_: "t' i... Office .I( ' ' !C «.. ~ ": 4· sue , . ,'i ns~ 51. -.,,,,w-Mn .. ·: ,~ :. .,r:_•,j1, ~. fO!l- • r •, < l ft ::t :' ''SMA'\OM -·· .. }r 1~ , J!~-.-"'~ ' - <= • t • • J ... .REI.TABLE GOLD~. ~ '·ltESERVATJONS · . · P"- 861-"14 ~'4 :¼\', ' ' ' CONSULT 14111 INOUSTIIIAL IA'NK aDCa. DE 1-2422 SUN LIFE ASSURANCE ·coMPANY OF CANADA NEIL S. WEINSTEIN AND ASSOCIATES 87 ROLEE.sIREET CRANSTON. R.I. TEL. 46H611 THE WEEKS LETTER: " I years. am a girl in the seventh grade. It also seems a bit cont ra I • have been asked to a prom by diclo ry th at they would buy ·you an eighth grader. This is a grad- go{l\i clothing fo r regular wear uation dance for ou.r school a nd a nd then set a price limit on a a seventh grader can go only if dress for a dance. Could it be asked by a n eighth grader. \I;· we a re not talking about a dress, pa rents feel I a m too old for this but a n evening gown a nd you t;·pe of thing, but instead of sa;·- have your heart set on o ne too ing "no", they agreed to let me expensive to purchase, fo r just I{<> if m;· dress was under S5.50 o ne prom - as you will prob and fo~ th is price you can't e,·en a b1 y "outgrow" it before next buy a good Sfhool dress. I fee l year'' my parents a re a lw ~ys good to \\'hy not take a sensible ap me, they buy me mce. an_d ex- proach? Ask yo ur mo ther t o pensive clothes; but this time I. select and buy the dress _ a nd feel they a re wrong. \\'ha t can I be happy with wha t she gets for do?" you. · OUR REPLY: \'our parents can ha rdly believe you are too If you hov e o le•noge problem you wont to Interiors of Distinction "old" for this type of activitv. diKuu, or on ob,en,otion to molie, oddren you letter lo FOR AND ABOUT TEENAGERCi. There will be proms and da nces COMMUNITY AND SUBURBAN PRES S SERVICE. throul'{hout your hi I'{ h school FRANKFORT, KY , 1l{E RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY ; JANUARY 27, 1967 5 Herald subscribers comprise excellent results, adver tise In an active buying '!'arket. For the Herald. Call 724-02(!0_. ~ /u:rn·itu.re • car,,.ti"CI • lampa .• • pceu•one• • Utwior ~nni,ig .ojf • contemporary furniture - for home anct office 724-5050 ~ NEW INTERIORS no. mam street at providence-pawtucket line - ff:rr;I HONEYMOON SERVICE , ~INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS A perfect honeymoon, planned to fit your budget, st.arts at our office, and goes from there to . . . . BERMUDA - MIAMI BEACH - PUERTO RICO EXPANDED DAY SCHOOL-A mid-term enrollment ofpre-ldndergarten and kindergarten ·students bas been NASSAU - JAMAICA - HAWAII - CALIFORNIA made possible at the Providence Hebrew Day School by erection of a large, modern, dlvlslble ldndergarten room llghted by a clerestory with stained glass windows. Applications wlll be accepted until Feb. 15 at the MEXICO - POCONO MTS. school office, 450 Elmgrove Avenue (DE 1-5327), It was announced at a recent meeting of the Enrollment ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD! Committee by Cantor lv!'n E, Perlman, chairman. Mrs. Harold E. Levine drew the sketch. Call our Honeymoon Specialist at 831-5200 ORGANIZATION NEWS President Of Senegal PRICE TRAVEL SERVICE ·Honors Mrs. Schaffer 776 HOPE ST., PROVIDENCE 831-5200 Day School Begins WHAT CHEER TEMPLE #14 What Cheer Temple No. 14, Mrs. Lawrence Schaffer of New Membership Drive ·Pythlan Sisters, Installed their of .Haven, Conn., was recently BIG The Providence Hebrew Day ficers for 196 7 In the Knights of honored by President Leopold School held Its D-Day campaign Pythias Hall recently. They are Sedar Senghor of Senegal, who pre for membership last Sunday, with Mrs. Samuel Bochner, most ex sented the degree of Commander of 50 of the more than 100 can cellent chief (her fourth term); the National Order of Senegal to her vassers attending a ldck-off Mrs. Eugene Troberman, secre at a dinner In the United Nations building. This Is the highest honor !,reakfast at the school before tary: Mrs. Ben Paris, treasurer; FLOOR COVERING CO. sol-Iciting began. Rabbi Joel Zel Miss Lillian Klitzner, manal!:er; given by the West African country. man, associate rabbi of Temple and Mesdames Frances Rodlnsky, Mrs. Schaffer has worked to Emanu-EI, was keynote speaker excellent Junior: Mary Mushnlck, further knowledge and understand at the breakfast, In which Kenneth excellent senior; Charles Coken, Ing of the African countries. She Resnick and Al an Brier, member protector; Joseph Belinsky, has established a scholarship In Call Big T ship committee co-chairmen, and guard, and Samuel Belinsky, past Senegal, created art exchanges and . Rabbi David Jehuda, dean of the chief. Installing officer was Mrs . organized a sister-cit}<- relation or visit my showroom at rear of 195 Cole Ave. school, participated. Albert Hallberg, deputy past su ship with a hospital. President for lowest prices on A goal of $15,000 bas been set preme representative. who was Senghor wished to present the Carpe•ting, Linoleum or Tile award himself, though he was only for the campaign,· for which assisted by Mrs. George Hall and Expert workmanship guaranteed ,/ workers have been asked to cover Eldmae Cooper. at the UN for one day. their cards by Sunday morning, The former Shirley Ann Leven, and backed by 30' years of experience daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Jan. 29. Members of the general MJSHKON TFJLOH LADIES Honesty and personal service is my Trademark. community associate themselves The Sisterhood of Congrega J. Leven of Cole Avenue, Mrs. with the school through this mem tion Mlshkon Tflloh wlll hold Its Schaffer will soon return to Call me any time at: 521-2 410 bership drive. annual Membership Affair on Senegal. Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. In the BRO'IllERHOOD MEETING social hall. Mrs. Emanuel Lazar "The Crlmlnal Versus Society: wlll perform a candlellghtlng Ram Haviv Briefs The Supreme Court Speaks" will ceremony to honor new Sister be the topic of a panel discussion hood members. The Brown Uni Youth Leaders at the Temple Beth El Brother- verslty, Festival Dancers, headed NEW YORK-More than 100 hood Dinner Meeting on Sunday, by Mrs. Allan Schrier, wlll pre- leaders of Young Judaea, Masada. Jan. 29, at 8 p.m. Dinner at 6:30 sent a program of Israeli dances. of ZOA and Jtmlor Hadassah, at p.m. will precede the discussion. They danced at the Providence tended a recent briefing on the Panel members will be Harry Arts Festival and the New York security and political situation In ::;oldsteln, Safety Commissioner of World's Fair. Mrs. Rachael Rot Israel and the Middle East. The Provldeiice; Eugene Toro, As- kopf, hospltalltychalrman,andher conference, which was held at the , • A "Customized Service" from Removal to Rehanging slstant Public Defender; Judge Jo- - committee will serve refresh Emano-El Midtown YMHA, was • Specialized Resizing Process seph Weisberger, Associate Jus- ments. sponsored by the three groups for • ·Draperies Pre-hung in Our Shop (DECORATOR FOLD) tlce of the R,I. Superior Court, their youth leaders. Ram Havlv,. and Alton WIiey, former Assistant Office of Information director for • .Professional Rug Cleaning • PLAN DONOR AFFAIR United States Attorney. Irving Israel, and I,L, Kenen, director of 2 DAY SERVICE · CALL FOR ESTIMATES Brodsky, former Special Assistant Mrs. Bernard Gladstone, the American Israel Public Af to the Attorney General, will be chairman of the annual Donor Af fairs Committee, spoke. 941-4655 moderator. David Gaines (751- fair for the Jewish Home for the Both noted the overt hostility 7456) or Burton Markoff (421-3292) Aged, announced her committee at ' of the Arab states which blow up may be called for reservations. a kickoff ineetlng on Jan. 18. They trains, fire• at Israeli farmers BROADSTREET CLEANERS are Mesdames Aaron Caslowltz, and carry on other guerilla USY SERVICE treasurer: Sydney Dressler, activities. 718 IROAD ST.REIT PROV. Sixteen members of the USY· reservations: Irving Feldman, will conduct separate parts of the contributions; Barney Goldberg, Says Normal Number service tonight at Temple Beth ad book; HarrySeltzer,hostesses, Israel, and a report will be made and Norman Pomarantz,publlclty. Of Israelis Emigrate on the 1966 USY National C011ven Captains are Mesdames Martin Bernstein, Joseph Jay Fishbein, TEL AVIV-Moshe Rl.vlln, the ' PEERLESS tlon. An Oneg Shabbat to which Jewish Agency _ director-general, the congregation Is Invited will Samuel Mlstowsky, Robert Block, Matthew Fishbein, Murry Bur told a recent press conference that COMPANY foJ19W the service. rows, Leo Goldberg,- Harry reports of high percentages of re Shatkln, Ben Sine!, Joseph Waxler, emigration from Israel were much BALL IN TAUNTON Harvey Golden, Leonard Whl te, exaggerated. Congregation Agudath Acblm, Abe Grebsteln, Hyman Stone, Max He satd that only 12 to 15,% of Tatmton, Mass., will give Its 51st Fish, Norman Pom,arantz, Sol Immigrants to Israel returned to annual ball at the Jewish Com Horelick and Meyer fledrlck. The their countries of origin and said munttY, House on High Street, on Donor Affair will be held at 12:30 that this was considered a normal Peb. 25 with dancing from 8:30 p.m. on March 1 at Temple Emanu percentage. A to 1-2 p. m. Proceeds from t-heevent El. He also said the Agency was will be used to maintain and Im seeking to organize group· Immi COMPLETE prove the synagogue and Hebrew gration of professionals and that a School. JWV WINTER DANCE / first group ol' American teachers ' BRIDAL Sackln Shocket Post #533 and was already In a Beersheba ulpan, Its Auxiliary will hold a Winter a center for accelerated teaching SERVICE HADASSAH STUDY GROUP Carnival Dance on Saturday, Jan. of.Hebrew. Mrs. Aaron Sovlv, education 28, at 8 p.m. at Temple Beth Am, He said a group of Argentine chairman, wlll lead a discussion Warwick. · All members and their physicians were expected to set Whatever your wedding budget .about Lithuanian Jewry_dUrlng the friends are Invited to the- dance, tle In the Negev area. Efforts al so whether conserv,ative or elaborate ... our ex period of Hasldlsm at the next tor which there will be no charge. are being made,hereported,toen meeting of the Providence Chapter Dancing wlll be from 8:30 p.m. courage North African Jews reset perienced bridal staff will assist in making your of Hadassah Study Group, on to 12:30 a.m. and will be followed tled In France to make their ulti · wedding a m<;>s\ mer.norable event. Thursday, Peb. 2, at 10 a.m. at by refreshments served by the mate home In Israel. the Wayland Square Branch of the Auxiliary. He said particular attention was A free Brides Book is yotrrs for the a·skin~ Roger Wllllams Savings and Loan Dr. Al Glucksman,chalrmanof being paid to students among North ·in the Bri dal Salon, Camellia Room. Association. Mrs. Barney Gold the committee, will be assisted by Africans and that many of them berg will preHnt the current David Penn,CharlesK!lbug,Mrs. were already attending Israeli uni events report. Hostesses will be Harold Fink, Mrs. Leo Penn, versities. THIRD FLOOR - PROVIDENCE ONLY Mrs. Joshua Bell and Mrs. Joseph Philip Woled and Mrs. Philip Van C:.ldern. Cbernov. Herald ads get good results! can go beck to .question your re turns for all years without limi tation. If It. Insists you left out · more than 25 per cent of your gross Income, It can go back six years. But an lntrl~ng point Is that as of a short time ago, the Treasury was keeping Individual return Forms 1040 only from 1959 by Sylvia . Porter on, and Form !040A's only from I 960 on. That's a practical guide for you. If you, like millions of us, ended SAVE ON TAXES last year that you, as the wife of 1966 with a net capital loss on your Second C1ass Postage Paid at Providence, Rhode lsl8nd Subscription Rates: Fifteen Cents the copy; By Ma11, $5.50 per annum; outside FORM_CHAJl!GES such a serviceman, should Ind!- stock transactions, don'tforgetthe New England, $6.50 per annum. Bulk rates on request. The Herald assumes cate In the spa·ce provided for fact that yoµ can claim up to $1,000 subscriptions are cOntinuous unless notified to th,e contrary in writing. · (In collaboration with the Research Institute of America) your. husband's signature, that he of your net loss as a deduction ' In this IO-part series, starting Is In military service In Vietnam. against your salary, dividend, In The Herald assumes no financial responslb1llty for typographical errors · tn Any tax refunds due you on this terest, etc. , Income. This Is so advertisements, but wtll reprint that part of the advertisement in which today, you will find vital hints on how to use new tax law rules made return will be expedited. Thus, even though you use the standard ~':n~Ji~fJi~P~lfca~n~rr:;;.0orcc~h~ChA~!;u~~~~r~111 pl~ase notify· the management by Congress, the Treasury and the the ear lier you send In your re- deduction Instead ofltemlzlngyour turn, the better. personal deductions. FRIDAY,JANUARY 27, 1967 courts to cut your I 966 Income tax bill to a minimum; how to avoid A warning: take special care If you must file an estimated costly mistakes; and how to save with your ar1 thmetlc this year,for tax declaration for 1967, note that with the use of computers the Truly Representative money by following specific do's Treasury plans to check all cal- to avoid penalty for underpayment and don'ts. • ~ culatlons. of estimated tax, you must pay at The announcement by the General Jewish Committee that it First , gulcles on the 1966 tax Until now• the Treasury's least 80 per cent of your actual _would _ establish its off.ices in the new building of the Jewish Form 1040 Itself, which differs In mathematical check has been llm- tax In 1967 (by estimated tax pay- Community Center, was most appropriate. - - several major ways from your ments plus withholding) rather than 1965 return. lted to verifying tax liability. But the 70 per centmlnlmJJITl which has The _$2,000,000 campaign of the Center for a new building, If you received dividends In for the first tlme,all computations prevailed up to now. The old safety which 1s desperately needed, is just start(ng. When it is success I 966, the section on page 2 In on your return probably will be zones still apply• though, so to be , checked. fully completed, it will serve as a meeting place for the entire which you report them has. been CHECK -TH-ESE "POINTS FIRST safe, make your 1967 tax estimate Jewish community of the state. simplified to eliminate unneces at least equal to your actual 1966 sary computations. A basic way to save money on tax. This will guarantee you It is only proper that the General Jewish Committee, as a If you worked for more than your 1966 Income tax Is to avoid against a penalty regardless of representative of the United Jewish Appeal and the Rhode Is one employer last year and your errors which could lead toques- how large your actual 1967 tax land Jewish community, should have its offices in this building. total social securl ty taxes were tlonlng of your entire return. Here turns out .. more than $277.20, you now have are the most common filing errors: It would be fitting that other Jewish agencies which work with 1/1/ Failure to attach all the As for your chance of belng a separate line, on which to cl_lllm Forms W-2 reporting the pay you audited, latest Treasury statistics and for the Jewish people of Rhode sland and need office space the excess as a direct reduction for their work, establish their headquarters in' tne new Center and your wife received from your Indicate It's I out of 121 for a field of your tax. On the I 965 return, employers: audit at your place of business building. This would provide a central point for all Jewish com you had to squeeze this figure Into a line used for reporting Income 1/1/ Incompletelyreportlngyour and I out of 26 for an office audit. munity activities. address or lncorrectlyllstlngyour These are merely averages, how taxes withheld. Social Security numbers; ever. Your chance of being audited The, Center; in choosing its site on the East Side of Provi If you paid any federal excise dence, did not do so arbitrarily. It chose this location because tax on gasoline used for your boat, 1/1/ Not checking the correct will be higher If your Income Is plane, tractor power saw, lawn block for your filing status(slngle,, large or your return shows some studies showed that this area had the greatest concentration of married_ filing joint return, etc.); extraordinary Items of deduction the Jewish population and would continue to have it - and be mower, or for other non-highway 1/1/ Incorrectly checking the or Income, or your deductions ap use, you. have for the first time an cause it was centrally located for other Jewish populated ~reas. blocks_ for your personal exemp- pear out of line with the average easy way to get a refund on your tlons or Incorrectly listing your deductions ofothers In your Income There are many practical advantages to this location in the 1966 return. All you need do Is matter of parking, of ease of access, of less crowded traffic con fill out simple Form 4136 and show dependents; bracket. the refund due you on page I, line 1/1/ Incompletely listing your When you mall your return, ditions, of more adequate and newer area facilities. Itemized deductions; consider using registered or cert!- The Center, since its purpose is to reach all levels of the Jew 20 of your Form 1040. Many of' us never bothered to file the for //// Listing Income, deductions fled mall to have absolute proof ish community, is the obvious headqua'rters for the Jewish mal claims previously required or other tax Items on the wrong you malled It on time. While there agencies. It is working towards, and should be, truly representa-· because the effort wasn't worth lines; Is no problem with thevastmajor- tive of the entire Jewish community. the relatlv:ely small refunds due. 1/11 Falling to sign your return. lty of returns, If yours Is one of A question rm frequently asked the few that goes astray, the re With the aid of the entire Jewish community it will reach its But now It's so easy that you w!II be t_!irowlng away money If you ls how long you should keep your suiting trouble and expense can goal - to aid the entire Jewish community. overlook the credit. You get a returns after you prepare them. be significant. credit of 2t per gallon for all There Is no precise answer since (Distributed 1967 by The Hall Syn gallons used fer the non-highway If the Treasury claims fraud, It dlcate, Inc. All Rights Reserved) Retaliation To Meet Aggression purposes from July I, 1965, to :;:;:~\;{\};:(:~:J'.;:(:•s-·•········x -~·;.; .-.~:. ,...... , .~ ~ ... •~· Premier Levi Eshkol has appealed to President Johnson and Dec. 31, 1966-a year and a half. If you own an automobile, you'll to President de Gaulle, warning them that '.'any extension of ag find a handy chart on page 9 of the gression must be met with active defense." This has been gener official Instruction boolclet to help ally construed to mean more retaliatory raids. There must be a you ·ngure out your deduction for HARRY GOLDEN better solution to the border unrest, but until some satisfactory state and local gasoline taxes. The amount of deductions allowed de answer is reached, Israeli irritation will undoubtedly explode in pends on the number of non-busi minor skirmishes for which the censure will be greater than for ness miles you drove the car and The Peddlers the incident which provoked Israel. the state tax rate. The chart Is The harried nation is undoubtedly still sm0arting from tl)e cen geared to a six or eight-cylinder car. (If you drive a four-cylinder sure by the United Nations last November 25 for its coun car, you get only half the This Is about a time I experi of the bargain market. You could ter-attack against Jordan, especially since the Soviet Union deduction.) But as an Illustration, enced between 1905 and 1920. And buy a half or a quarter of a chicken. ·three weeks earlier vetoed an attempt to censure Syria for at If you drove your eight-cylinder the sum total of all this experience Many of those who could notafford tells an American story essential a whole one bought these pieces tacking Israeli posts. It has been admitted that the bulk of the c11r I0,000 miles In 1966 In New York , you can claim a gasoline ly a story I shall continue to re for the Sabbath meal. After a while border incursions _into Israel have been from Syrian . soil. al tax deduction of $44. cord and eventually .put Into an the sanitation authorities trans though it is argued the commando squads are made up of refu If you are affected by the sus autobiography, with God's help, ferred this trade In fowl from the gee members of the Pal_estine Liberation Army, fostereil by E pension of the Investment credit, of course. streets to a ·special market close Thursday night and Friday gypt and Syria. If they go unchallenged, it is obvious that this applying generally to purchases of to the waterfront, I remember. business machinery andequlpment morning were the bargain days at Up and down the street was terrorist army will grow stronger and bolder, until either the after Oct. 9, 1966, there may be a the big peddlers' market on Hes the man or · the woman ·churning United Nations or the big powers (which are supplying Near slight complication when you file ter Street on the Lower East horse radish on a machine. The East nations with unnecessary arms) have to intervene again. your return. To clalrti the credit, Sid e of New York. Friday "'.as m~chlne was padlocked to a lamp also the big day for the Italian post so It wouldn't be stolen. Perhaps President Johnson's response to last week's Israeli you must file Form 3468. But the Form 3468 which you received In peddlers of olive oil, fruits and Old coats 50 cents; "As good warning could center around ideas recently advanced by Sen. your Individual tax return package vegetables and dandelion wine. as new," ' called the peddler but Edward Kennedy and New York's Sen. Jacob Javits: Sen. Ken w!II be the wrong one to use If you There was fraternization In the he sold pa,;,ts for anything he could nedy wants the whole tangled Israeli-Arab problem to be re placed In service after Oct. 9, 1966, push-cart stables among the Ital get. There were dozens of pants Ian and Jewish peddlers. peddlers and they gathered In the viewed by disinterested third parties. Sen. Javits has asked the · any property on which YOJI claimed a credit, or could have claimed a Common poverty wove a strong middle of the street, many men State· Department to call a conference of Britain, France and credit If It had been acquired be bond of sympathy. surrounding them_ fingering the the United States to create machinery for protecting the borders fore Oct_. 10. In -this .case, you Everything tinder the sun was pants, plucking at the seams. As of Israel and its neighbors under the Tri-Partite Pact signed by should get the new, revised Form sold on these push-carts on these a prospective customer walked days, Tin c_ups at two cents each, the -three nations in 1950. It would be worthwhile to include the 3468 from your I ocal director. ay,ay, the peddler grabbed him by If you are a wife whose husband peaches at a penny a quart, hats the sleeve and said, "Will you Soviet Union in such a conference, and strive for an embargo ls serving In the U,S,armedforces for a quarter, and eye glasses for give 80 cents? Sixty? Fifty? on arms in addition to a guarantee of borders. One thing is cer In Vietnam, you may file a joint 35 cents a pair. All right , take them· for 30 and tain: the recurring border attacks and retaliatory raids cannot be return without your husband's sig Chickens and geese, hung by make my Sabbath day unhappy." nature. The Treasury annotmced the neck, were the great staples The fellow took them for 30 cents ignored. and the Sabbath wasn't that un happy el ther. Soviet Jew . Visiting Relative In Tel Aviv COMMUNITY CALENDAR There were many suspender FOR LISTING CALL GASPEE 1-4111 - Aak for Calendar Secretary peddlers. I use suspenders and I LYDDA AIRPORT-An82year ·to Israel, but said that Jewish - MRS. BERTRAM L. BEllNHAllDT -- CALENDAR CRAlRMAN buy a pair every year or so and old Soviet Jew recendy walked up Agency officials had helped him ~Q~UUUUA>,?UAUUUUUUWUU~ I do not hlnk they wear out any to the bus ticket office and gave out. Arriving In Lydda with no quicker than a leather belt wears ~. ,...,.,, 21, 1967 out, the clerk his gold wedcllng band to money, he was given a meal by J:00 p.m.-C:-.. MhMaen Tffleh. ,_...,'"' Oon pay for bus fare to Jerusalem, ac Immigration officials and offered Su...,, ,...,.,., 2', lff7 ".et as I think beck, rm puz cording to The .Jerusalem Post. 7:00 p,m.-""9. MWilaen Tflleh, Talmu4 0... zled at the large number of sus lodging for the nigh~. ~. Jttnutlfy lO. 1967 The surprlaed cleric summoned pender peddlers. You met one 1:00 p.m ,,S.tertt..d Tempt. leth Am, l ..1,1lor Mfftlns on every street, his suspenders Raphael Barus, station manager, Barus give Hazln a tlcketto Je T-.cley, Mnvor, 31 , 1''7 who speaks Russian and Yiddish. rusalem' and pocket money io help 1:00 p.m.-lu,- el Jew.h M..noti.n, '-ture• ''What it, a Jew" dangling over his shoulder and The elderly man, Shabtal Haztn of tide him over. The next morning _ W-4~,r.tlirv.,.,,1,lff7 down his back, and In front. There 1:00 p.m.•lall. Au'"• .lew6ah tt.me ._the ...... ■ ..vt- MNll"I were mllltons of suspenders all JClshenlv, relate~ 'that he had ar Hazln returned to the alrportto re 1:00 p.m.-~ PTA c.na. Sent ef Alweheffl, ...... MNtffll rived the day before from Vienna pay the loan andcommented,"Thls 1100 p.m.-~ J,amplt leth J.,.h-Crantten Jr.WI C-tef, hpler Meetl"I over the East Side of New York. · on a tourist visa to visit his sister lm't the first time that strangers 1:00 p.m.-~ Caftt. MIIMl:eft Tf!WI, hp6e, MNtffll Why suspenders'? Where did they 1100 p.m,.,_,. '"... _. AM'II,, .._. MNtlne ' .at the Joint Distribution Commit have helped,me.'.' Hethentoldhow all go to? And where are they I : IS p .m ...... Cha,it.r 1·net l 'rith W-.n, ...... MNt'"t now? ' tee's Malben Old Age Home! In Je a Ukranlan peasant had saved him Thu,_,e-,, ,.~.y 2. lff7 rusalem. from the Germans In 1942 when he 10ioo ...... Cheptef''""-...... _.., ...... o,-, q,on reaching Vlema he fotmd WH fleeing the massacre of thou 11U p.m,-~ 0.,.... Wilffle11'1 it.rMric:M' OH, 1NN1 Meefl"I (Copyright, Harry Golden Distrib that be lacked $30 of the air fare sands of Jews In hi~ area.· uted by Bell-McClure Syndtc_ate) / niE RHODE ISLAND HERAID; FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, '1967 7 An f In Dmnmy. other · actor to·. -CORRESPONDENCE-- CLUB· · , lcnowninformation and country should bedesired. sent toThis the consider was that the defender PAR ROCKAWAY,.~.Y.-The Par Rockaway Jewtsli Community more likely to hold the Heart King Jewish Community . Council here Council, Central Avenue, Par ·was West, lnYlewofhlsvulnerable ha d the formation of a 1295 BRIDGE . -•ercall, but this should not make · s announce Roclcaway v• Jewish Correspondence Club to ~=..;;,.;;;t.,;';,._...;.______, RIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllHHllffllHHIIUIIIIIU any difference here. All the other foster closer: relationships be- PEN PROBLEM"'. By Robert E. Starr declarers took the Heart flnese. tween Jewish citizens of the United ~ They went down. States and residents In other parts BRING IT TO I was amazed to see how few Eisenstadt of Cranston who bid Moral: The combination of of the world. Those Interested In declarers played today's hand cor as follows: cards In today's Heart suit Is joining are , asked to submit the PROVIDENCE PEN SHOP rectly. The hand came up at one S W N E another of those which should be- following Information to the --'T Am,d~ Bldg . ' GA 1~12 of my recent Duplicate tourna , IS 2C 3S P come automatic. Look at It and Council: name; address, age, In- ments where I was able to follow 4S P P P remember It. · rerests and hobbles, languages - Lighters Repai!:_ed - . It along and watch as each de The bidding was direct, as It BAR-ILAN CHANCELLOR clarer received the same defense. should be with all pairs arriving They subsequently took the wrong NEW YORK - Rabbi Joseph at the same contract In the same. H. Looksteln of Congregation line of play and went down when way so that all the declarers had f KOSHER proper handling would have In Kehllath Jeshurun, an Orthodox s the benefit of West's overcall. J U LI E DELICATESSEN sured success. This overcall might have In , synagogue, was recently elected fluenced more of them to play the chancellor of Bar-Ilan University North at Ramat Gan, Israel. He had 731 HOPE STREET 621-9396 hand differently but regardless of ♦ K J 7 5 been acting president of Bar-Dan • Q J 4 2 which opponent shows strength, In for the past nine years. 0,-. Moshe ♦ A 8 3 this case the play should have been Jammer, a physicist, has been • J 9 the same. el_ec.te~ the presidency. West, quite naturally, cashed \O West East her two high Clubs and then ♦ 6 2 ♦ 9 4 switched to the Diamond Queen. RUSH MESSENGER SERVICE • K 7 • 10 9 6 3 All other Wests did the same. • Two Way Radio Dispatch ♦ Q J 10 7 ♦ 9 5 2 Declarer won the trick In her hand ♦ AK843 ♦ Q 10 5 2 - Also - BUSINESSMEN"S LUNCHEON and drew the outstanding Trumps, MAIL DELIVERY SERVICE ending In her hand. So far the South 1st Class and Parcel Post ♦ A Q 10 8 3 play had been quite automatic but to and from th• Post Offiu • A 8 5 now came the first problem. Two FRANKFORT PLATE 7 5~ ♦ K 6 4 tricks had already been lost and PLANTATIONS POTATO SALAD & COLESLAW-PICKLES-BREAD ♦ 7 6 there were two more possible ENTERPRISES, INC. One of the pairs who played losers, a .Heart and a Diamond. GA 1-2550 THIS WEEK ' S BIG DEAL! the hand to make It was Mrs. A Heart had to be lost no matter Elwll) Rosenbaum and M.rs. Samue~ where the King was, which was tl\e situation that the other KOSHER GRIDDLES declarers failed to acknowledge , Israeli Manufacturers for even should a finesse work, FRANKFORTS KN~~~~~RST p~~~D 8 9 ( the 10 would st!ll become a trick Going On 5-Day Week for the defenders. M & S KOSHER The only way to avoid the Dia I TEL AVIV - A number of mond loser was to discs.r d It on a Israeli manufacturers announced Heart which could easily be done BREAKFAST BEEF REG . SScPKG 49( j that they have taken steps to re- no matter how that sultwasplayed 111 1 duce the Increase In unemployment If they were to split evenly, 3 - •••Jun-f,l· ...... tl CRUI 5ri5Iii ,1 and Intend to run their factories 3, but the Idea was to still get Don ' t miss the Boat! IMPORTED SARDINES 2cANs29( ,· on a five-day-a-week basis. The the discar d should they split 4 - Send for our free booklet ------working week has been six days. 2 a more likely probablllty es- CRIJISES A TOURS EIERTWtiERE The cut to five days was Intended ~clally In view of West' s overcall, ? ? ? to obviate the need forthedlsmls- which showed a long suit. Another "PRICE IS RIGHT" sal of some workers. thing to consider was that the WOULD YOU LIKE TO DRY YOUR OWN At the same time, the Israeli Trumps had already shown that SALAMI? Manufactures Association SP- each defender had two. pealed to Prime Minister Levi With all that In mind Declarer Eshkol that he convene a round- saw that the best way to play the WE HAVE JUST THE RIGHT SIZE. table conference of employers, Hearts to obtain that vital discard organized workers a'nd govern- was to hope that the King was ALL SALE ITEMS WHILE THEY LAST ment officials to bring about mu~ offside, In other words, the tual agreement on Implementation finesse, If taken, would lose. To d a country-wide freeze on wages take advantage of this, Declarer In 1967. Jed her Heart Ace and then played A 4 percent cost-of-living wage • a small Heart toward the Queen. Increase Is to be put Into effect When West played her King, the next month. Leaders of Hlstadrut, hand was over for both the Queen the Israeli federation of lab!>r, at and Jack were now good for the a meeting attended by Mr. Esh- needed discard. This play would kol, proposed that the Increase be work as long as the King was with raised to 5 percent. West anynumberoftlmes,foreven D □- The Premier, on the other hand, If the King was not played on the asked Hlstadrut to agree to cut . second Heart play, the South hand the projected 4 percent Increase could be entered again and another 0 1' CRO~woRo puzZiE ,.... ;.~:;.~ 'T BU T. E SN OB ■ ACROSS 2. Norse god 21. Warp SE NOR >- 19 20 Efficient, Economical 41. Bosh! r0 ~ ~ f0 44. Garment of ZI 2?. 21 24 25 2b 21 Pacific ~ ~ Data Processing Center islands Zf> 2, !,O 46. Alcoholic ~ beverage 31 32 3?, • PAYROLL SERVICES 47. Sultan's ~ ~ • INVENTORY CONTROL 34 ?,S ~b decree ~ ~ t½ • PRODUCTION PARTS ANALYSIS 48. Birthplace ~ ~ • SALES ANALYSIS 37 la 11, 40 41 "12 'I?>, of Mo ~ • MANAGEMENT CONTROLS hammed ~ 44 4S 49. EntiUes ~ '" UNION TRtJ ■T ■ UILDINQ • 170 WUTMtNSTl!R STR•IIT • PROVIDaNCII, R, I. • (.01) 831~15700 50. Revoke 41 48 HANTi-OfltD, Conneotk:iut • •o i- ■rmlngton Av■un• ATTL<OlltO, M••..a;~.~-= ~ ■nd ••n~ Str.9t legacy t2oa, ea2..:a1 e7 , ~ i-ALL NIV■N , M•.-.OhUNtt:8 • 19 t -.OCk et:rwt 4, so ,et7)e,....a, \ DOWN' t0 L. l . Destln)" 8 TI-IE RHODE ISLAND HE~D,FRIDAY,JANUARY27, 1967 ketball shooters wlille·,playlng for . . ~, ; .ARREST SUSPECT •. the Brown u. team . . . ~ng TEL---, AVIV - A sixth ls ~ally dld stir last 1\Jes. Frank raell suspect has been arrested Fallon called about ·the greyhound by the pollce 1n · the bizarre plot season at Raynham Parlcwhichwtll l11Yolvlng two Amerlcanswhowere be operating for theflrsttlmewlth arrested earller. in the United out the late Russ Murray, Its States O!' charges .of planning to founder. Raynham wm runwlthout,, destroy a bridge ln Zambia with a opposition or competition this sea view to 1nm1enctng world copper son ... And rememberthat"Good prices. The name of the suspect name ln man or woman ls the im has not been revealed. LII 0 , < THE RHODE ISLAND , HERALD. FRIDAY. 'JANUARY 27. 1967· ' 9 seasoning, dot with butter and..:.:=-f;.."-s:.:u':b:.:s:c.cr"".l::p'::tl~o"~':t=ao-:the-;-=';'H;'_e.;;;ra=,l;':d~l-s;;.;.;':===~======. 0 sprinkle with crumbs. Top all with a good gift for the person who has grated cheese. Cover and bake 0200 >C ] one hour. Remove cover and bake everything else. ·can 724- .. ODD JOBS ~. ·· i":r~r~ Carpentry ld'"R;;i;;s 15· minutes longer. OLD FASHIONED BAKED BEANS green peppers and cucumbers In Mrs; Alfred Fain - s,RAY ,AINUNG - 350 degree oven bowl. Sprinkle with salt and WHAT HAVE YOU? 3 hours · pepper. Cover with vinegar (gar- ONION SOUP ._...... ~U~• Coltin9h Call ! lb California Pea Beans ' lie, wine or tarragon vinegar may I hour StNI Ofrtff fvrnitvr• - won: DoM on PfMNMS - 1/2 t Baking Soda be used) diluted-With equal.amount 3 c sliced Onions CARMEN 1 lb Brisket, cut In l'' chunks of water. Refrigerate. Serve In 5 c Water ' MOBILE 1 1 /2 c Water the liquid when well chilled. 1/2 lb Soup Meat s,RAY ,AINTING SERVICE 781-7293 1 large Onion, diced Mrs. Norman Goodman l t -Gravy Master GE 4-84<12 1 T Dry Mustard l t Salt 1 c dark Molasses CAULIFLOWER AND CARROTS Brown meat and onions. Add IT Salt AU GRATIN water and bring to boll. Add salt 1/4 t Pepper Baking dish, buttered and gravy master. Cook slowly. 1/2 c Brown Sugar 400 degree oven Mrs. Isreal Marks Soak beans overnight In baking 10 min. soda and enough water to cover 1 1/2 sliced Carrots (Reprinted from Temple E generously, to allow for absorp 'I head Cauliflower, med. size m3.~u:-El Cookbook) 1/2 c grated Cheese, American or tion. In the morning, drain and RESEARCH PROJECT rinse beans. SW!ss 1 T Butter JERUSALEM - A means of Cook beef, water and onion for determining !fa person has lost his 1 'hour. Combine meat• mixture Cook carrots and cauliflower sense of taste and i mell a·s a and beans and simmer on top of (separated Into large flowerettes) In bolling, salted water about 10 _result of brain Injury Is the object stove for an additional hour. Com of a research project at the faculty minutes or until almost tender. bine with balance of Ingredients. of dental medicine at Hebrew Uni and place In oven. Bake, adding Drain and place In baking dish. versity. water If beans appear too dry. Sprinkle· with grated cheese and Mrs. David S. Knlznlk dot wl th the butter. Bake. Serve wl-th Velvety Sauce. GRAPEFRUIT TZIMMES Mrs. Samuel Leger 1 1/2 qt. casserole . 375 degree oven BROCCOLI 30 min. 13 x 9 pan, greased 1 can Grapefruit Sections, 1 lb. 325 degree oven size 45 min. 1/4 c Honey 2 pkg frozen, chopped Bi:occoll, cooked and drained 1/2 t Salt Cruises 1/4 t Cinnamon or Nutmeg 8 oz. Cheese Whiz :::r 1 can sweet Potatoes, drained, l lb. 3 Eggs, beaten F{ Air Travel 2 oz, .slze l/4 c chopped. Onions to 12 Prunes, cooked or canned 6 T Butter Drain grapefruit; measure 1/4 2 T Flour Little Trips cup juice and combine with honey, 1/2 c Water salt and cinnamon. Arrange sweet 1 /2 c Crax Crumbs Long Tours potatoes, prunes · and grapefruit Saute onions In 4 tablespoons sections In casserole; pour on the butter. SI owly add fl our, stirring syrup mixture and bake. constantly. Add water and coo!< AWL TRAVR Mrs. Paul Schretter until thickened. Blend In cheese. Combine sauce and broccoli. Add WARWICK 1627 Warwick Avenue 11 CRISPY BROWNED POTATOES eggs. Pour Into pan. Cover with EAST GREENWICH 559 Main Street 11 x 7 baking dish, crumbs. Dot with remaining butter ungreased and bake. 375 degree oven Mrs. Stanley I. Cohen 15 - 20 min. SERVING TUESDAYTHROUGH SATURDAY (5TO 1O),SUNDAY FROM (12 TO 8) 3 lbs. !lotatoes or SHELL BEAN SOUP 12 - 15 whole, frozen Potatoes 2 - 3 Hours 1 /2 c Butter or Margarine · 4 lbs. Shell Beans 1/2 c Bread Crumbs 2 Onions, diced 2 t Salt 1/4 lb. Margarine 1 t Sugar_· 2 Carrots, sliced If using raw potatoes, cook, Salt and Pepper to taste unpeeled, In small amount of 4 c Water .bolling, salted water about 25 min 1 Meaty Bone utes. Drain and cool slightly. Saute onions In margarine until "\lfvEST "\lfvIND Peel and halve. golden brown. Combine all other RESTAU RANT Melt butter In skillet and stir Ingredients In soup kettle, add In ,;alt, bread crumbs and sugar. onions and cook until beans are Roll potatoes, a few at a time, In very soft, approximately 2 to 3 for fine food and beverages crumb mixture, coating well. Ar hours. Add water If needed. range In bakl.ng dish and bake un Mrs. Nathan Gerstenblatt til -coating Is crisp. Very tasty. Mrt• Hyman Goldstein GREEN BEAN CASSEROLE 1 1 /2 qt. Casserole 555 CENTRAL AVENUE,(ROUTE 152 ),IN NEARBY SEEKONK.MASSACHUSETTS QUICKY BEET BORSCHT 325 degree oven 6 qt soup kettle 15 - 20 min. 20 minutes 2 pkg. frozen French cut Green can Beets, large (about 2 lbs), Beans . grated 1 can Cream of Mushr~m Soup -,. •_.•·························································SWINGERS ...... 3 qt Water 1 can French fried Onion Rings Il EL AX E Il S are WILD About Our New 1 can Tomato Soup Cook frozen beans as dire-cted · Modified American Plan and Salt and Pepper to taste on package. Drain well and c;om FUN LOVERS low Off-Season Rates Juice of 1 Lemon blne with soup. Pour Into & IlOYALT'\:' Starting Fe~ary 1 6 t Sugar casserole and cover with onions. Boll slowly- serve hotorcold Bake until bubbly and onions are top wl th dab of sour cream. brown. WEEKEND SWI~GERS • Friday to Sunday Mrs. Matthew Sherman Mrs. Merrill Percelay All Rooms with Private Both - 2 Deluxe Breakfasts - 2 Gourmet Dinners - Champagne and Hors d'Oeuvre Porty - Movies - Steam MEAT-RICE-TOMATO SOUP GREEN BEAN CASSEROLE, Baths - Dancing - All-Star Floor Show - Famous Su~doy Breakfast · Soup kettle CHINESE STYLE Smorgasbord - Newly reconditioned Solt Water Indoor Pool - Ping .. Per Person · 2 large cans Whole Tomatoes ·and l l /2 qt. casserole Pong - Billiords - Ice Skating nearby - New Coffee Shop - Sun Double Occupancy liquid 350 degree oven Deck - Cord Room \ 1 can Water 20 min. and 5 min. 1 1/2 lb Chuck or other Soup Meat . 2 pkg frozen Green Beans Bones • 1 can Cream of Mushroom Soup MID• WEEK RELAXERS_ • Sunday to Friday 1 large Onion, whole, slit 1 can rhlxed,Chlnese Vegetables, All Rooms with Private Both - Deluxe Breakfast - Gourmet Din 6 T Sugar, more It desired drained ner - Steom Baths - Cord Room - Sun Deck - Solt Water Indoor Pool - Ping Pong - Billiards ,-.Ice Skating nearby Per Person - Per Doy Juice of 1/2 Lemon l small can Water Chestnuts, Double Occupancy Salt and Pepper to taste drained and sliced , 1/2 c Bolled Rice, approx. 1/2 T Worcestershire Sauce Chop tomatoes Into small 1 can French Fried Onions SATURDAY NIGHT FUN LOVERS pieces. Place first 5 Ingredients Cook frozen beans until partly (6:11 P.M. to 1 A.M.) $7so In kettle. Bring to boll. Skim done; drain and combine In cas foam from surface of soup. Add serole with other Ingredients Champagne and Hors d'Oeuvre Party - Gourmet Dinner - Dancing Per Person remaining Ingredients, excapt except onions. Bake 20 minutes, to Dick Show Quartet - All-Star Floor Show - Midnight Swim .. Plus Tax & Tip rice, and simmer, covered, for 2 then top with ol'ions and bake 5 hours or until meat Is tender. ~mlnutes·more. Do not overbake. IlOYAl.TY FOil A DAY · Remove meat, bones and onion. Mrs. Charles Emers $250. 5 minutes prior to serving, add (Tueoday & Wedneoday, 10 A.M. to S P.M.) serve Steom Room - · Lock~rs - Solt Water Indoor Pool - Ping Pong - rice, simmer and Immedi Per Person - Per Doy ately. . EGGPLANT and TOMA TO Sun Deck - Coffee Shop - TV Lounge - Mossoge available $3.50 Do not add too much rice be en CASSEROLE cause It continues to swell and Casserole Reservations Only Special Holiday Rates absorbs the soup. 350 degree oven 90 Minutes from Boston via Super-highways Meat may be served In soup or 1 hour plus 15mln. separately. Serves 6 For Reservations and Rates Call ( 617) 289-1333 , Mrs. Ell A. Bohnen 4 c Eggplant, peeled and diced - OR SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT- 3 Tomatoes , sliced 1/4 t Pepper CUCUMBERS VINAIGRETTE l 1/2 c Bread Crumbs Cucumbers , thinly sliced 1 t SaH q.,uu1, c. Magnolia Manor Onions , thinly sliced 3 T Butter Green Pepper Rings 1/4 c Parmesan Cheese, grated Salt and Pepper Alternate three layers of egg ea-'UJM. MAGNOLIA, MASS. Vinegar plant and sliced tom atoes In ca1i Arrange layers of onions, serole. ~nlde each layer wttn ...... , ...... 10 UiE ' RHODE IS[,,AND ·HERALD,_FRIDAY;JANUAR.Y 27, 1967 : QUARTETTO 0:_ALlANO R. I, PHILHARMONIC , The Rhode H.eland Chambel . Joseph Conte and Joseph C~nte ' ~Music• Concerts.-wlll present tbl Jr. wlll be guest soloists With · · Quartetto Italiano on Tuesday the Rhode Island Philharmonic Feb. 7, In the Rhode Island Schoo'. Orchestra on Saturday, Feb. 4, at · on Dec. 28, Mrs. Alpren Ts · the of Design Auditorium. nckea 8:30 p.m. atthe Veterans Memorl- may be purchased from '3rowt . al Auditorium. They wlll perform former ThellJla Beth Galkin. Ma University, Box 1903, Providence ternal · grandp.arents are Mr. and the Concerto In D Minor for Two 02912, or Avery Pl~o Company, Violins and Strings by J. S. Bach., Mrs. Herman S. Galkin of . Remaining tlclcets will be solcl Cranston. Paternal grandparents francls Madeira Will conduct the at the door on theconcertevenl~, program, which will also Include are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Alpren The program will Include Haydn s ~ Lewls_t@,. Maine. the Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 Emperor Quartet, Stravlnslcy' s by Bach, and Divertimento No. 14 . TO BECOME BAR MITZVAH Three Pieces and Concertlno for and the Symphony No. 39 In E Plat Joel Alan Salhanlck, sonofMr. Strl Quartet. Heading South? by Mozart. · and Mrs. Gershon Salhanlck, Will We have everything the woman become Bar Mltzvah at the Sabbath needs for resort ,and cruise' Wear JOE ANDRE'S morning services at Congregation . SAMMARTINO . from sizes 8 to 20. All ex Mlshlcon Tflloh. Bruce Alan Wol DIAMONDS - Half Price quisite, exciting new fabrics and ORCHESTRA pert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irving coJora. It~ Would even be wise to Music for that very special affair G. Wolpert, will become Bar Mltz 1468 ElmV.:oad Ave. tl)(:k away your Summer wordrQbe vah during the Sabbath morning - OPEN EVERY EV~ING now, while our collection is so Weddings Bar Mitzvahs Qan. 28) services at Temple diversified. . 944-3344 Res. ST 1-9080 ~omplimento,y Parking Emanu-El. Ethan HI! ton Siegal, son of Mr. P ./ 'Mickey' Finn, AZA Adviser, To Show Slides Of Vietnam; j -Notes Need For Rabbis Th~re 1/ -~ Samuel (Mickey) Flnn In Vlemam I By Lois Atwood Color slides of Vlemam as It was · but rubber plantations, with perfectly his father, and It was Impossible to get during his seven months there wlll be straight rows of trees for miles and a mlnyan together during the week. shown at the Jewish Community Center miles. They always had one or two tanks He only saw the chaplain at Passover on Monday, Jan. 30, by Samuel (''Mickey") as escorts. The tanks would knock down In Saigon , when as many Jewish Gls as Finn to all Center youth clubs. Before trees, and the tyacks could go In. The po~slble got Into the city for services. ' he entered the Army In 1963, after his tracks carried gear for 30 days. Mickey Special orders were cut and kosher food graduation from Hope High School, he had was In the. track when he got hit through was available for that one occasion. They been a member of AZA for three years the. open cargo hatch. never tried It In any other war, s aid a'nd president for one year of the Narra The way they evacuated him and the Mickey, and the rest of the time "you eat gansett AZA which he helped found. He amount of time It took to get him to a C rations like everyone else." There was also president of the Center Youth first aid station an_d then to a hospital was an abundance of soda, candy, cookies Council, a representative to the Adult' was amazing. The " ship" (a helicopter) and beer In South Vietnam, and they Youth Committee and runner-up for tf\e that picked him up came right In under bought Ice which was likely to be booby I. S, Low Youth Award. Mickey ts now fire and took three direct hits, but got trapped and was Inedible. advtser to the newly-organized Masada him to a first aid station In IS minutes. After being out In the 140 degree heat AZA. The quality of hospital care was excellent, during the day, at night at base camp Hts slides show how a new division though there was no running water and Sergeant Samuel Finn wrote letters by everything has to be purlfledwlthalcohol. moves lnto an area II and from Just woods the bright moonlight. Hts mother knew builds It up." He was In the third track He said he had seen men come In wt th an something was wrong when the letters out of a whole division to pull Into an arm or leg blown off, and be put back stopped. After being wounded, he dictated area. "We were pretty much of a recon together. Within a week, they would have one to a Red Cross worker. When she movement In the limb. outfit, too," said Mickey, 11 Form1lesyou received It, his mother began trying to can't .see anything but Gls and our first The hospital was well-staffed, with find out more about her son. Finally plenty of nurses and doctors. The chief of Job was to push the VC back. That took Mrs. Finn called Senator Pastore's office, many nights of fighting." surgery at the 95th evacuation hospital, and the following day he called to say Col. Walter Gordon, a Negro, "stays up Mickey was In Manila and would be sent to with guys morning, noon and night. This He Is home from Vietnam for good Phoenix, Pa. guy ls terrific," said Mickey, who was The new AZA adviser planned his because on the seventh of May, on the "In the operating room and out cold" border of Hobo Woods, Sergeant Finn was slides so they could be edited after he within an Incredibly brief time. In got home. He has shown them already, hit "by a sniper's fire and-badly wounded. Vietnam they don't stop to prepare He spent the next few weeks In the_93rd to a Pilgrim High School history class , patients for operations, nor do they close and a repeat showing has been requested. ev&CIJ!ltlOn hospital and then was flown wounds like Mickey's there. That Is back to the. States, to Valley r orge • The students were especially Interested delayed (and penlclllln used liberally) In the tracks and how they operate, and General Hospital. He was discharged until the wounded serviceman can be from there In September, has been working asked about the. weapons used In combat. shipped home, as the danger of Infection Mickey al so discussed the long under since then, and wlll enter Roger Williams , Is much higher there than In the. States. Junior College next month to major In ground tunnels of the Viet Cong, and the business administration. For 30 days while he was In the hos American tunnel runners who get $65 _ Mickey was a member of the. First pital Sergeant Finn tried to get hold of more a month for their dangc,rous duty. Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized) of the. the one Jewish chaplain In alt of South A 300-bed hospital of the enemy Is com 25th Infantry Division. The whole division Vietnam. He never managed It. A pletely underground near Cu Chi, the city was stationed In Hawaii for two years and Catholic P.rlest, Instead, wrote Mrs. David near which the 25th Infantry was and Is was well-trained before they were called I. Finn of Colonial Road about her son. stationed, and It Is feft over from the to Vietnam. He was• a photographer In In the field Catholics had masses on fight 20 years ago against the French. the. Information Office In Hawaii for a year, Sunday, "but we had nothing on Friday The holder of the Combat Infantry but they broke up that department and night. They should have a chaplain right Badge, Purple Heart, Vietnamese Service moved everyone back to his combat outfit at the hospital . There were an awful Medal, Good Conduct Medal and National when the alert came. In Vietnam, he was lot of Jewish guys. Each brigade has one Defense Medal, Mickey believes that we gunner on an 81-mllllmeter mortar. He or two Catholic or Protestant chaplains should be In Vietnam. The United States was In action the whole . time he. was In but the. whole 25th division did not '1ave has "a goat over there now. We've Vietnam, said Mickey, whose hours In, a Jewish chaplain." When they wanted a committed ourselves and might as well go downtown department store are mild com Friday night service, some Jewish boys through with It. There have been too many pared to the. 24-hour-a day duty of his 'got together and went io ,: priest. · And lives 1ost over there to pull out now." combat service. There his outflrwould be In Hawaii, Mickey had to go alt the way He will show his slldeaonMondayfrom on operations for 30 days, come back and down to Pearl Harbor to say Ylzkor for 8 to 9 p.m. for all Center youth clubs. rear two days, and then go back on opere tlons for another 30 to 60 days. What made them a good unit was the 1n1enstw training they received In Hawaii ' ar the Jimgle warfare training center. The only c:Wrerences were rha t they used blanks Iii Hawaii and llw ammunition In Vietnam, and that the terrain In Vietnam waa easier. The PUth Infantry, organ'lzed In 1808 In New Hampshire, Vermont, Massa chueetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island, didn't walk ar all. They were transported In Armored Personnel Carriers - better known as "tracks" - as far as possll,>le, and would then offload and walk In t~ rest of the. way. When It rained the mud was waist-deep, and the. tracks couldn't move In mud. " Many a night," said Mickey, " there would be Just• squad left out to guard the tracks, about six of us. Effl"Y two hours we would fire a Adviser Mickey Finn (3rd fro,n ·1eft) meets on Monday burst from the machine gun. If there nights at the Jewish Community Center with Masada - had been 20 of the Viet Cong around, AZA. Members are Al Salmanson, Allan Kllbe, Jeff they could haw wtped us out." - ~ . Agtd, Howard Mittleman, Richard Sloane and Richard Where tl(ey were wssreallynotjungle, Feldman, f i2 fflE SHODE IBUND nmLD,FRW-Y,JANUAAY2,,,%, WarWick Girl Studyin{) Among the many colleges and uni- versities that offer srudents opporrunltles ·for srudy abroad, few If any provide more m varied options or offer more carefully F i•nd F. •da O/}'9 planned programs than little Kalamazoo · s ri. . . y _· / 4 College. More than 90 per cent of all Kalamazoo graduates have spent some I time In foreign srudy at one of the col- 1 tege's centers In Germany, France,Spaln, Porrugal, Sierra Leone and Kenya, or at one of the centers of the Great Lakes Colleges Association In Colombia, Japan Dear Parents, to tell you the truth, It Is Just like a tradi and one woman, and Lebanon, wrote the Sarurday .Review a Just a brief rK?te to tell you that tional meal anywhere else - fish, not were yolDlg - 30' year ago In an Introduction to an article I arrived safely In France. Actually, gefilte; soup, vegetable rather than Rabbi. Afterwan about American srudents abroad. The I haven't arrived yet, but It's Friday chicken; meat, vegetables, etc., and and one of the me, article was written by Richard T. Stavlg, morning and as we "dock early Sunday compote and sponge cake for dessert. morning. They v the director of Kalamazoo's foreign srudy morning Pm sure we'll make It. The Absolutely delicious! WeatelntheSukkah, peclally the Rabbi program, and described the nonacademic boat Is sheer pleasure, but It's almost since they had one set up at their ·house. tin. So, 'this mort benefits. Dr. S'8vlg made It plain that -too relaxlng,-how can I go back to The President's name Is M. Schwab, and ' after services M. the academic program must be roughly on studytng after all this loafIng? There Is liesldes him and his wife, there were his to dinner. He I a par with what a srudent would get at plenty to do, what with playing bridge, son, the Rabbi, and his wife, both of whom middle 30's, wit! home. , movies, dancing, reading, and Just plain speak a little English. They have five aged 5 1/2 (a doll!'. . Stephanie Zaldman, the daughter of Mr. talking. Besides a).l that, there are groups children, who were on their way to bed - stuffed cabbage and Mrs. Irving Zaldman of Warwick, Is a every morning for language discussion. when I arrived. It was a lovely evening, -and afterwards JIDllor at the Michigan college. She had You will be pleased to note that I was and after dinner they sang Hebrew songs, plans I went with ! srudled French for seven years before she chosen by the group leader t~ take one of like at Uncle Izzy's house. I felt good, He al so Is In his i went: most of the Kalamazoo srudents had, the smaller groups and lead the dis because two to three of them were songs 6,4,2-and very , In fact, a good language backgrolDld, though cussions. l was very pleased, especially on the Yeshiva Boys Album, and I could there Is a young •· that was not the basis on which they were !► since this gives me an opportunity to sing along. meets every Mone selected for overseas srudy. After an In talk to him about vocabulary, All In all, It was a lovely evening, sions and also ther ' troductory six-week language course at Also, In passing, we had to take the and my little lady friend has promised to taught by a yolDlg Vichy, "Steph" went to the new center at standardized language exams before we Introduce me to a young J ewlsh girl of the man Is studytng Clermont-Ferrand, France, where she left (they're the exams we had to take In community, who did not happentobeatthe I go to that every will spend a total of two quarters. Ex high school, with College Boards) and service that evening. So we shall see are 35 or 40 who c, cerpts from her letters home lndlca te today, we got the results from Dr. Hovey. what develops. Anyway, It's nice to know To Improve thlt some of the Joys and hazards of college In high school I got 576 In Reading and how friendly Jews are. was a girl who ha, abroad. 643 In Listening. This time I got 718 9 October she Is a student at In Reading and 678 In Llstenlngll Great (She and a friend were given a joint _friend! y and took , Improvement, especially since Dr. Stavlg surprise birthday party. Stephanie was left and we went t, said !Mt anyone over 600 wouldn't, or 20.) a friend of hers. ! shouldn't, have to worry about learning French don't usually have birthday I know now. Afte problems In the first 6-week course, cakes as such, but the restaurant owner leaving, Chrlstlenn, The water has been as clear as glass, folDld Just the thing. It was a long, rec an African boy she unusually so, so nobody has been really tangular mocha whipped cream cake, dec us to have coffee I sick. The food. Is good, but there's too orated with pink flowers with green stems stairs In the Restc much of It. Our waiter worries about us and a llttle square which said Happy Birth about 8 guys, one of like a father, and thinks I'm riot eating day In French. Andheevenput 20 ·candles Negro studytng her enough, so I'm well taken care of. on the cake! It was Just one of the most was (ls) a French Traveling on the boat are a whole wonderful birthday parties lhaveeverhadl degree In English mob of students going lo Germany to (On a tour of the Loire valley chateaux) translating. I ha~ study. Among them are at least 50 24 October tomorrow. All thl! · Fulbright scholars, and are they nice! I've We went on to Chenonclaux and I'd be to the synagogue anc gotten to talk to a few and they are really there still If I had my way. I cannot pos track of the numbe brilliant. Makes me feel downright Ignor sibly explain what ltw,rs aboutthls chateau have met because ·r 1 ant. I'll write again when I'm settled In that Inspired me, but I just loved It. Oh yes I There' Vichy. The intertor was nothing spectacular, e x He's a young man 27 Sept, 1966 cept that there were different women who Fac. of Law, who l I'm In Vichy, very tired after my first left their marks on It-one, Diane de because they keep , day of class, but happy and excited to be Poltlers, mistress of one of the French to get to know him> here. The city Is lovely, probably awful kings, the other, Catharine de Medecls. he Is friendly, and during the tourist season but lovely right The thing about the outside Is that It was to be seeing some now. The weather Is absolutely Indian built on the fo1D1datlon ·of an ancient bridge during my stay. sllmmer, and trees and fiowers are in and when I looked at It, It seemed to be bloom everywhere. We have nine different merely floating llght!y on the water-In •••(when) we w restaurants to' eat In and they all seem spite of the fact that It's a massive build the day. • .on the fairly nice. A really fantastic life! ing. It was absolutely aetherlal, and I Am erlcan girl that Stephanie Zaldman We have two professeurs - a young don't think I'll ever see anything else !Ike before. We talked, a lady and a gentleman, both funny and easy It. studying at Strasbou1 to understand. We are divided In two, and 31 October of the "K" kids the spend half the day with one, and tlie other I am happy to be writing to you from bus a man cam e u: half with the other. There are many the City of Lights-Parisi This Is the one thought he'd overhe: German students here and we'll probably place which makes me feel like I'm R. L I said yes an, be meeting them soon. really In Europe-everywhere you go, you lil Wakefield! Seem Paris was lovely but l'mafraldidldn't can look up and see the Eiffel Tower. In Engineering, on a enjoy It much because I was far too tired Marvelously so far the SIDI has shined, ship or something, t to appreciate beautltul things. I won't but I can't tell about today yet since it's lands School for a ye list what I saw, but suffice It to say that Just midnight-but since It's been raining how things like that b there wasn't much we didn't see. My feet _ for 3 weeks, maybe It can spare a 3rd dence of 2 people fr still ache, as does the rest of me when I SIDlny day! And If you think I'm kidding, come from 2 dlffere: think of It. then you should be In France-It has been a bus at Versailles! The French have left-handed desks! three full weeks since we have seen a com I went to my Hel Unbelievable. Also these people arevery plete day of s1D1-1D1be!levable. night, and met abo, friendly, contrary to Northern France. Sunday, I met- Nancy at Notre Dame, some of whom .Uve Today I found the synagogue, which Is 'cause she wanted to see the mass there. already got an lnvltal near my hotel, but I won't be able to go I don't recommend It to anyone who really come visit. After until tomorrow evening, because tonight wants to worshlJ>-lt's like a traffic Jami went out foi' coffee Is a last dinner with Dr.Stavlgwholeaves 3 November custom, the cafel) 1 tomorrow. The synagogue Is In an alley, • (In Clermont-Ferrand, In an old, cold great ---- very frlen Is fairly old, locked tight during the day, dorm with showers five flights down 11 and I think, Sephardic. It should prove In the basement) _ . The Students groUJ Interesting. · Right now I'd give most anything to be verslty students, all back In the nice sane atmosphere of "K" friendly. Tonight as a 3 October 1966 College and Its !000 students. I know now having a Shabbat din~ Everything here Is going along fine. why I chose a smati college-the air of the Students. The He, The language courses are difficult but not Indifference here Is fantastic! As you can going well, and I mlgl Impossible. The actual speaking of the see, your cheery daughter Isn't so cheery thing. The school In Vichy where students spent their first language Is very dlfftcult, but so reward these days-partially It's the weather, 2'\ six weeks In an Introductory course, before going on Ing when you make yourself understood. psrtlal!y the fact that I expected to be In Hope you had a H to Clermont-Ferrand. This past Friday I went to services, the new dorm, and al so because I have a We here did, althoug and It was extremely Interesting. It's cold. 3 November the same thll\l, We a little bare synagogue In an alley and I I 'decided to drop you another llne this and the food was d almost chickened out, but didn't. When I evening because an afternoon has made a weren't any candled, went In, It was too early for services, and lot of difference. While I still think French . stuffl,.ng or apple pie. there was an old man and woman sitting University life Is awful, I feel 100% better I wanted to let there, and we began to talk. The woman because they finally answered most ofour Itinerary has change~ was a darling and took me upstairs and questions about the courses, and helped us mas vacation) but rt, had me sit next to her and kept ·talking choose some which were within our range. Many of the kids have to me the whole time. She complimented I still feel they're too casual but at least because of · the pro me on my French, which made me feel I can start attending classes with some fioods), and In the c great, and Introduced me to allthewomen Idea of how they are. rlDl , someone to travel wl who came In. There were only about five 5 November be In Vienna for C women, all older, and-only about 15 men, You certainly can't complain about a wants to see the Vie mostly older, present that evening. The lack of letters now! Seems to me I've a'bo~t all K College st Rabbi Is very young, and didn't lead the written just about a letter a day, butthere so It'll be s omething· service that night, since the President of are so many things to tell you! My spirits way, we weren't sure · the synagogue had his son, a Rabbi, are about 100% Improved and It's all be We have about IO days visiting from Paris, Afterwards, my cause of Jews! Let me explain. ..- but both of us wished friend Introduced me to another older lady Last evening-Friday, I went to the It will take us 24 hou and she In hifn Introduced me to the Synagogue with one of my friends because to Coperu'lagen, but President. He, right off the bat, said to I was afraid to walk back alone after dark. We are sper)ding ei Cl 111m••• from "K" College met for • plcnlc In both of ua, Of course yqu'll come to It's In a communtry center during the and Vienna so we sh Versulles Gardens. 'Ibey had come from various supper! And so I had a traditional Sabbath winter because the old Synag<>glN! 19 too out, and we'll have ft 1iehool1 In Europe for • reunion -!tend In Parts. meal In an ordinary French home, and cold. 'There -re perhaps 12 men there, commodattons which n·France THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, . 1967 13 iip Opens Many Doors By Lois Atwood out half of them a little easier. Unfortunately,asJreaUze, some of the students have difflcul ties 40's, Including the 3 days In Copenhagen and 3 In Oslo Is not making friends. Anyway, there were Introduced myself enough, but to melt'sbetterthannone,and about 30 of us, and It was funny for me, d me to come this at least w-,•re only trying to do a city In 3 because not only did I meet some new ,ery friendly, es d.,ys, ngt a whole country. Anyway, that's forelgrr students, but I also met an Amer hlsman-M. Mar the way It stands, and I wrote to botlh the ican girl. She's from· U. of Wisconsin went-alone-and man :n Zurich and the one In Copenhagen and she's an Instructor In one of the high In Invited me home asking I! we :ieeded advance , _eservatlons. schools here. At the same time she also y young-perhaps Everyone has told us we won't, because takes some courses at the University otfe and daughter tourists head south, but I thought I'd make here. I guess she's kind of working on 1d a delicious meal sure. Besides, thlsway theyh:ivaadvance an M.A. although I wasn't sure. Also.met homemade chollel warning .that I exist. two Scotch girls with pleasant brogues . Stephanie Zeidman b, I had no other 27 November 1966 Makes French sound rather Interesting. to visit the Rabbi. Good evening from . your happy busy After the dinner, the priest. who Is very with 3 chlldren little wanderer. As I think back, that's a pleasant, asked various questions and was athetlc. It seems slightly different tune than two weeks ago. pleased to find out that he had a variety lents' group which Fun."ly what time and friends can do. of religions present-Catholic, Prot rvenlng for discus I think, Mom, that the whole Idea estant, Jew and Muslim. Made for good a course·In Hebrew of the articles ts a good one, andyou have conversation and most Important of all aellte couple-the m y permission to extract a.1d ;;mt Into showed how easy Brotherhood can be. >e, Unlver-sltyl So, literary style anything you think ts worth And that It doesn't have to be onl y one tlay, because there being printed. I do especially hope you'll week a year. We all enjoyed our evening stress how absolutely wonderful and so much that we've planned ro get to atthe Rabbi's there friendly Jews are around the world, 'cause geth~r every mqnth 10 discuss various d dirmer there, and I'm sure it's not just ln France. These problems and differences. We're all J. and she was very pe-1;,l~ have not only Invited me home to going to try and Interest other foreign with her when she dinner, but they've takenmeln,asltwer~, students, too. You know your daughter, nner together with a s ->:1e of the family, and that's a feeling this kind of thing was my element, and I 1ere's two students absoluf ely Irreplaceable for a student In a really came away with a pleasant feeling lnner, as we were sirnili~ t:ountry. I've been here for three that groups like this might help lessen ne of the glrls,met we·.Hccod~• now, and ·I've eaten with the same prejudice all over the world. . ows, and he Invited famll; e·1,,,·y weekend. That Is something One other sidelight. ,Afterwards, as ,e little ca!e down more than Just being polite - that Is I was leaving, the priest asked me to ask We went and I met friendship In Its truest sense. Thlsweek the Rabbi to contact him-that he would ,om Is an American end I eat with \he Rabbi on Saturday like to talk about havtng an evening of >r a year. Another afternoon, and ,her2 again, he and his wife combined Jewish and Catholic s tudents' [ who Is taking his aren't Just Inviting me because I'm an groups. It's funny , how I believed other 1 needs some help American s tudent but bacause. they are students who said that the Catholic stu a date to help 'him truly warm, friendly people. Well, now dents were friendly, bur that the Church ·ose because I went that I've preached m y s.srmon, I'll move was a closed thing. Here Is one pries t lhope you' re keeping on. who proves that It's not so, and I'm In of French people I I passed a very b vcly weekend here. clined to believe there are a number like lost count! Frld~y night we hart" danner tor_ the J ewlsh him. one other I forgot. students and It was ver y lovely. Yes, the crepes are fancy pancakes, :6-studylng In the Afterwards we sang Hebrew songs, etc. light as feathers. Absolutely delicious. Stephanie snapped this view of Salzburg, Austria. ,s wltli the Martins 29 November 1966 After this evening, perhaps I will acquire ,osher appf. I hope Right now, I'm a l!ttle upset and rather the art of lightnes s. Also hope to learn ,tot better, because aggravated. Today In the lunch line - hew to make bread from Jacqueline-she fObecause I expect which is wh~re French students show their does make the yummiest bread. As for Ing of the Martins bestial narure-someone shoved me and food in general here, It's great. Above my scarab bracelet fell off. The cr owd was all , I love the way they pr epare thelr 9 November 1956 so dense lha·, we ·couldn't make a thor ough vegetables-they always seem to be well 11 to Versailles for search and when the line had lessened, It flavored and often have s ome s ort of we ran Into an was gone. I'm l,9;,i3g .someone will be wine sauce. I don't particular ly care had met the day honest enough to turn It In;-:, the concierge, for their meats-too tough, almost al ri8ound out she was but I'm not holding -my l> re,1th. ways have the grain going the wrong d she knew some Things continue as usual here - good. way. I would dearly love to have a nice e. As I got off the I'm having a ball, and I a·,er'.l;,~ 1 to 3 big thick juicy steak, but that doesn't lo me and said he new acquaintances a day. Right now It's seem to e xi st here. ~d that I was fr:,m Moroccan students - Pvc met 8 out of 7 December lhe told me he lived ·20. Yes, your daughter Is cons:ir,Jng Dear Papa lhe Is a prof at URI with Arabs! But don't worry, they're You were right about the Jews, as you abbatlcal or fellow friendly! In fact, there are any numlnr well know by now. They are wonderful aching at a Nether of Jews living In Morocco quite happily. people, and they are doing much to make Lr. I really wonder An~J they are fun and love to take me my s tay here a happy, profitable one. ,ppen - the colncl for c 1Jfl' ~.,i :JO what the heck. You would enjoy these 'people I think..- ,m a tiny state who I had a lovely weekend - ate with the . they are for the most part young, dynamic t places meeting on Rabbi Saturday and had a very pleasant and small! It's amazing how few men time. 2 December· come to Services , and no women! But rew course Monday I'm babysitting right now-for the It's Interesting for me, since this ts a t:.. a dozen students, people I eat with Friday nights. Laurence, Sephardic-Oriented group, and this Is my In Clermont. I've their 5 I /2 year old daughter, Is sick and first meeting with anything butAshkenazl. (on from one girl to . since they both work they really needed It Is a noisier religion with more Interac he meeting, we all someone. Yesterday Jules and I were tion between Rabbi and congregation, than here In the morning-he lives here-I was I have ever known . There Is more singing ~'!"'1"velous French Stephanie and a group of students_ ~ tlhe kids are Just here In the afternoon, as my History prof (:,ery badly off-key for the most part) J. . didn't hold class yesterday, and this morn and chanting. The Rabbi has a very nice November 1966 Ing I'm here again. She's not really voice, although slightly nasal. Anyway, 11 made up ofUnl sick-Just has a slight fever-and she It Is different, and I am trying to learn ~ ery nice and most ts p_retty good on the whole. The only more about It~ The Rabbi Is very nice matter of fact we're thing Is, when her parents arrive, she about answering dumb questions, and es after Services fo?' transforms Into a spoiled little brat. Guess pecially as he realizes that It Is my first rew course Is also kids are all the same, no matter the experience with Sephardlm. even learn somP.- country. As for the food situation, I don't"think This evening I'm going to a French there Is much of a problem wt th. the two Novamber 1966 birthday party. One of my best girl families with whom I eat. At the Rabbi's ppy Thanksgiving. friends here, Maggie, Is 20 today ,andthls I am never' the only guest, and usually It wasn't exactly evening 8 of us are going to make crepes there are 3 or 4 students there. At the ate In a restaurant (no, onl y she Is ,going to make them and Abethoul • s, there Is again no problem, and liclous, but there show me how-we're going to eat them) they, too, often have more thanoneperson eet potatoes, bread and have a birthday cake that her grand ,to dinner. I ~Ill bring preserves and such, Ob, well. mother baked, and drink champagne sent If I can find ·where they sell Kosher food. u · know that my by her mother. Sounds like It will be Both families, naturally, are kosher, and again (for Christ really fun. These are the kids I ear I know they have their meat from Vichy, s time It's final.~ with every day-as opposed to my Jew as there Is no Kosher meat market In changed their plans ish friends, who for the most part live Clermont. (Can't quite figure why not, as lem In Italy (the ln town and don't eat here. Funny, it's It's a good-sized rown ; but I suppose It's nges I picked up like two separate worlds , even though because Vichy Isn't that far and there are • Carol wa.1ted to I'm sure they woul d get alohg well. It's hordes of Jewis h tourists In the summer.) lstmas, slnc-e she a question of there never being much con I s tarted this letter before one of my Choir Boys. J\lst tact between them because of time. Ann, classes and I'm just getting time to·flnlsh ents wlll be there, the firs t Jewish girl -I met, Is the onl y It. l was Interrupted by a dinner at the a reunion. Any- one I know who Jives In the dorm, and she Synagogue · this evening, to celebrate the • ttodoaJterward. can't come tonight. beginning of Chanukah. It seem s funny to couldn't decide, I must tell you what !did Tuesday night. think that you haven't even lighted the first to see sca:ndinavta. Maggie Is Catholic, and she lnvtted us all candle, and here I am beginning the first toretfrom Vienna to the Catholic Students' Center for a,dln day already. Have a happy Chanukah, and give my The Albert Premier.Hotel In Vlchy,whereKalamuoo feel It's worth It. ner they were having. It turned out to be students lived In luxury. time In Zurich really fun . n.e Idea was to have sort love to all the younger generation when t be all tired of an lnternstlonal group, so that the y~u pass out dollar bills. Orareyou, this ll•elus train ac-. foreign students could meet French and year? It's too bad they don't have sliver mal 14 1liE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, PR!PAY,JANUARY 27, 1967 fantastic. Every minute he knew what he was doing." Vivacious Debbie Coppel Vivacious Debbie n-ted out for the part of an older girl, but at her audition, despite her laryngitis, they thought she would "make a perfect Pride 'n Joy," Wants Theatre Career • as she did. She and Ellen Salter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester H. Salter of Blackstone Boulevard, played the part of The day after the show ended~bbte 10-year-old twins and wore short, curly Coppel planned to sit and-cry while she blond wigs. After the first week, said wondered when she would have her next Debbie, she didn't even notice how hot part and what It would be. The 14-year the wig was, and she didn't get the least old Pawtucket girl had her first taste bit tired at performances. 1 of professional theatre this winter, during She Is used to performing. When she the Trinity Square Company's production was seven she began to study with Mrs. of "The Grass Harp"whichendedJan.14. Melford and then wor.ked under Dorothy She hopes to make musical comedy her Winn until she was 13. She was in career. many shows, at Exeter, where she played The 14-year-old daughter ,of Mr. and the lead in a musical Little Red Riding Mrs. Harry Coppel of Hlllside Avenue, Hood; at St. Aloysius, at Lakeside • 1 Deborah Ann played Burma Shave, one of Children's Home, at the Jewish Home for the Gospel Show children. Rehearsals the Aged, B'nai B'rith, Warwick Shoppers began on Nov. · 21 and continued through World, Temple Beth Sholom and the Dec. 26 when the musical play opened. Pawtucket Sisterhood. She has sung on She managed to do her school work television, twice on Spotlight on Tal~t, every day, but was a little sleepy during and also on Youth on Parade, Community her first classes at Slater Junior High Auditions (Channel 4) and closed circuit. School. She rehearsed four hours dally, She could have been In the Falstaff Tuesday through Friday, and all day Players when she was 12, but had to Saturdays. go to camp. Debbie likes acting, but For Debbie, who has studied singing found "It's even harder when you don't ever since her parents realized, when she say anything." She had the lead in the was about seven, that she "had something Christmas show at school this year, a a little extra" In her voice, the experience one-act comedy, and had to rehearse for ' was a beginning rather than a culmination that during part of the time she was and end. The composer, Clalbe Richard rehearsing for "Grass Harp." _ Her son, suggested that she might work in 10-year-old brother Robby could have summer stock. He said, "She works hard been In the musical, but didn't want to every performance (and) gives a fine give up so much time to rehearsals. performance every time." Debbie had a Now a student at the Rhode Island chance to act In summer theatre last Conservatory, her teacher has told her summer but her parents felt that she was that If she keeps on she will have an too y01mg, especlally as she would have exceptional voice. Her half-hour lesson been the only teenager In the company. with Mr. Lewis, who comes In from New The show was an eye-opener In two York once a week, Includes about 20 respects for Debbie: first, In working minutes of scales and breathing exercises with professional actors and singers, and and 10 minutes of the songs she has been also in watching_ a brand-new musical working on. He tapes music and exercises being put together. Roles and songs · 'Flower Drum' costume-Debbie for her to work on during the following week, and Debbie plays them on her tape were changed or dropped and alterations was 12 in this show at Park View made, as the production came together. recorder. She Is practicing songs now They cut out all the extra Uitle parts Ju,,tor High School. from "The Fantasticks" and "Bye, Bye, and introductions, said "Burma Shave, 0 Birdie.•• Her range Is from the e who was treated like a professional, and under middle c, to a high c. never felt left out. "I always felt just When she was younger Debbie studied as Important to the show as the stars, ballet dancing, and has had a year of even though I knew I wasn't." jazz; she hopes to get back to It, now The choreographer sometimes asked that the play ts over. She swims In the Debbie to help with the younger children, summer, though she doesn't care for It, and a note from Zoya Leporska calls her and plays tennis. She was recently In "my rock of Gibraltar.'' Once, when the semi-finals of the Miss Rhode Island Debbie was very discouraged and felt Teenage Contest. At school she Is a like rebel11ng, Carol Bruce, who was most BURMA SHA VE-Deborah Coppel member of the Speakers' Club, and she helpful, pointed out to her that "We all (left) played one of the children in belongs to Dodeem B,B,G. She became say we're getting out, but we don't do it. "The Grass Harp." Others shown Bas Mltzvah at Temple Emanu-El, where , That's show business." Miss Bruce and here with Elaine Strttch are Wil she ts In the preconftrmatlon group. Elaine Stritch, who played the Gospeller liam Parant, Ellen Salter, Alexis Although she likes all kinds of music, Babylove, also gave them helpful hints. Gantry, Stephen Knox and Adam Debbie Coppel prefers must cal comedy, Working with each of the professionals Miller. and If she doesn't make the Broadway was different, and Adrian Hall • 'is stage, would like to teach voice. CAMPUS VIEW By Leslie Horvitz At Brown ,University 1liE CULT OF-ALIENATION Leary, one of America's more dubious theologtc I - leaders, proposes a new type of alienation-"Turn According to Erich Fromm, one _of the apostles of on, tune In and drop o·ut." He tells us that we the New Left, the most frightening sensation ts alone-_ should completely dissociate ourselves from society, ness, complete tsolation- GERALDINE ., By now, It Is hoped, everyone Is familiar with Sh. Y. Agnon, the winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature. But not everyone has heard of Salman s. Schocken, the publisher of the many novels of Agnon. · Mr. Schocken was, In fact, the discoverer of Agnon. He was his sponsor when all publishers rejected his writings, and has remained his "employer" 10 this -FOSTER day. How this strange relationship between an author and his publisher came about, Is related In _the January Issue of the Jewish Spectator, an Anglo Jewish monthly of distinction, a magazine, by the way, which deserves to be read by everyone who Is concerned wt th matters Jewish. In My Father's Court In the year 1914 Sh. Y. Agnon came to Berlin to study: He was then 26 years old, but already he h~d By Isaac Bashevis Singer written many stories. , Agnon called on Salman Schocken, a proprietor of ,a chain of department_stores In Germany. Schocken was also known as a great FROM can glimpse In these memoirs the genesis lover of literature, and especlally literature In the of his major themes and characters as Hebrew language. Not too long ■go I gl ■nced atanartlcle he recreates for us a way of life erased Schocken was Impressed by the stories of Agnon ln one of the leadllfg magazines, and a by catastrophe. and promised 10 find for him a publis her. But phrase caught my eye. The piece In The court referred to In the title Is a rel!lzlng that a writer must eat, he made a bargain question was a review of one of Isaac Beth Din, a rabbinic court, which decided with Agnon. Schocken will provide him with all his Bashevls Slnger.'s latest books. The points of law, adjudicated · disputes, needs, and Agnon will assign the rights to all his author, a well known critic, refen-ed 10 granted divorces, offered counsel and writings to Salman Schocken. FRIDAY Mr. Singer as the 'Dean of American compassion. Singer's father was a rabbi, Thirteen years passed by. >,gnon was writing, Yiddish letters' and one of 'this country's an unofficial rabbi, who conducted the and Schocken could not find a publisher for the literary lights'. This was high praise, court from the family home at#l0Kroch material. What did Schocken do? He became a Indeed. If one wished to carp .a bit, malna St. In Warsaw. Here he · also_ publisher himself. . one could easily point out that the ti.tie officiated at regular religious services . of Dean of Yiddish' letters fell to him by He functioned without the official sanction A new business venture. A publlshlng house for ·default. How many writers still produce of the government through his own choice, the works of Agnon only. Stich was the Impression major works In Yiddish? But the second not out of necessity. To receive this the young man Agnon made on Schocken. SUch was part of the accolade has merit. Singer legal pennlf sfon meant taking an the touch of greatness Agnon had on the businessman has captured the Imagination of the reading examination In Russf'an, the language of Schocken. TO. .public and the wrltlngcommunlty,,.swell. the .. others", and then speaking to the And In 1931 the Schoclcen Publishing House was His books always rank In the top ten as far governor. He would have had to recognize cfflclally established. The first of four books by as popular! ty Is concerned, and the crl tics the world of politics and Its right to decide Agnon appeared In that year. Now, the fam1llar ha'll! consistently hailed each new novel or who shall administer religious affairs. Schocken Books, of small size, almost like the collection of short stories. This would have violated the elder Singer's Pocket Book Serles of today, only· In hardcovers, are The fact that Mr. SlngerdoesnotWrlte concept of how a Jew_. parg cuJarlyaRabbl, part of'l,yery great library. ln English makes his success all the more • should act. So, Instead he paid regular remarkable. Although he Is fluent In bribes to petty officials via a Jewish The Schoclcen stores were lost In the Hider days. English and has a wide ranging vocabulary, mldcBeman . • In this manner he was But the publishing house survived. Schocken trans- · FRIDAY Yiddish remains his ·most comfortable permitted to serve as a rabbl,.butoutslde -ferred his activities to the United States and'to Israel . means of expression, the vehicle he finds the pale of the law. In America the house publishes books of J ewlsh Inter most apt for presentl-ng his view of life. Rabbi Singer was an anomaly, a est In English, and In Israel the works of Agnon appear By Beryl·Segal one Even In conversation he will tapse Into relic of a fading day even In his own by one. , his mother tongue, If his listeners imder lifetime .. Scholarly and devoted to Jewish And-Agnon received .his monthly salary from year ·1 stand It, to bring a point home. This ways, he shunned the modern dress others . to year. means that all his published material . of his contemporaries preferred. He Salmon Schocken did not live to see his trust In published, that Is, In English - must first continued to wear traditional garb. Agnon confirmed by the Nobel Prize committee. Could . undergo translation. And translations too Al though Hebrew newspapers and Yiddish he have foreseen. that Agnon's novels will someday often lose the essence of the original or . books circulated In his home town of receive the coveted award? Who knoW's? But his heirs destroy Its feeling of Immediacy. · Tomaszow and certainly In Warsaw, he continue with the Schocken books, and Agnon ls still on would have none of them. The printed an annual salary at the publisher's house, and all the Schocken Mr. Stnger Writes of an era dead and word, according to his view, must be rights of whatever he creates go to Schocken, gone, and of people who left little Imprint dedicated solely to explaining or clarifying on the giant tableau of history, for they The Spectator speculates on the Agnon-Schocken the Law. If It did not Inspire Jews to partnership this way: lived out their lives far from the councils study further, then It had no merit and of the mighty yet under the constant "Would Agnon have continued writing without the therefore should be_lgnored lest It entice Schocken salary for years and decades? A writer will threat of their decrees. Singer pictures · · the reader Into thoughts or actions a precarious world fraught wt th tensions write under all conditions. However, If the days and and unbecoming a Jew. Whllf yet In his teens, strength are consumed bynot- to-Wrltlng-relatedwork that only rarely relax. Tensions between he .decided to become a "Wonder Rabbi" small towns and their mode of life and for a living, he will come to his desk tired, exhausted able to perform miracles, and .he . and discouraged." those of the big cities: between Jews who Immersed hlmselfln·Scrtptures, In Gema cling to the old ways and their enlightened "There Is no telling how much Jewish talent went ra, In Cabala, In booksrecountlngmlra to waste (and Is going to waste) because there was no brothers: between man and woman: Jew . cles wrought by saints. Hedldeverythlng and Gentile. Ignorance and superstition Salman Schocken to encourageandsuppor twlthdlgnlty Agnon to purify his soul so that he might attain young writers .and scholars of promise." exist side by side wl th learning and his ambition. Of practical matters be took sublime faith. Reason demolishes age old no notice. World affairs did not Interest In retrospect, the Agnon-Schocken relationship was beliefs, yet these beliefs reemerge him, These things belonged to the outside not new nor unique. A man of substance In Lithuania somehow triumphant. world which he consldered "Tref,'' or Poland or the Ukraine, who had a marriageable Then, too, Singer's world Is a world unclean, for In the outside world a Jew daughter, would come totheYeshlvalnhlslocallty and subject to whims of unseen, unnatural could so easily go astray. Learning "adopt" a promising youngmanforason-ln-law. The forces. Imps and demons fly through the Russian or anY. other foreign language ' young man could remain attbe Yeshiva and study· to his llr In ·search of a soul to tempt and meant partaking of something Tref. He heart's content. Hewasproytdedwlthall the comforts mmare. 'They lie In wait for the unwary even tried to blot out the sights and .of life, without any worry for the morrow .• He was_to md for those who think they can escape sounds of the street on which the family srudy,.and his father-In-law would set a tablefor him :he blandishments of evil. They, these lived. There was a balcony outside his and his wife. . of S.Y.AGNON ron:es darkness, play cruel and ugly study on Krochmalna St., but he n~er Or the tradition of serving scholars and honoring \ '' tricks on Innocents, reward knavery with sat there or glanced In that direction. them that ·was so prevalent among Jews, and Is still material gain, turn happiness to misery And, when he had to go out on some . to some degree practiced among our people. The just as a caprice. Singer took Jewish rabbinic errand, he walked· with his eyes stories about a well-to-do country Jew, or a man of folklore and made Its demonology a symbol carefully averted lest he see somethl11g no learning In the city, who devoted their lives to . for all the Irrational forces that bedevil that. might contaminate his soul. He built serving scholars, are many_. They all are said to have the lives of men and women. The threat a fortress around himself, but when he come to the Rabbi. They·au have asked the Rabbi what posed by these spirits and their cohorts studied the Torah, he rejoiced with a · they can do to give meaning to their lives, since they ·underscores the uncertainty of existence, passion and a fervor of which only a themselves have never. learned to understand the and the reader may come to recognize that Hasld, which he was, was capable. Torah. And the Rabbi has always advised them to take part Within himself that would or could (Contlnued'on page 16) upon themselves some.'servlce to the scholars11n the succumb to temptation or fall victim to t.S. SING'ER Yeshiva. Those who could supporte,;1 the Yeshiva evil. It Is thlsportraltofthelnexpllcable, scholars with food and clothing. Those who could not the unknowable, and the recognition of afford to, took upon themselves a menial job to help these primal }ll'ges · deep In the heart of the Yeshiva, such as chopping wood and ca'rt'ylng water, all that has attracted his large following. or sweeping the floors, or doing any repair wor k In Singer seems to say, "This Is how · It the Yeshiva. • really Is , dear reader. Take a good The Agnon-Schocken case was remarkable In many took at It. Now search Inside yourself. ways. First, that Schocken should "take" to a young Perhaps there you will find something that man whom he did not know before. Second, that Agnon will help you bear all this." In these days should remain falthtul all his life to his benefactor, wlwn the words l!lenatlon, disintegration, And finally, that a busy businessman In Germany tack of communication have become a part should take time out of his activities and devote him of the air we breathe, this view of life self to literature-In-the-making. We read about many prcnes attractlff to many, many people . Industrialists and bankers and men of means who are However, we are not going to dlsccss Investing In the arts. But these are works of art that lils nOYels or his stories this evening. have been recognized already by the world of art. Radler, we shall concentrlte on his Schoclcen "took" a chance on a novice. memoir In My Father's Court. These And. he succeeded. · recot:ectfons by Singer of his youth span the years 1910-1917, approximately, and • • • were culled from the pages of the Jewish (Mr. Segal's opinions his own,andnotnece'ssarlly Dlfly Forward to which Singer ha• been• ara • cantrfbutor for the last -IO years. How tho• of this newspaper.) .-..r, lfnce an author cannot be separated from hi• work, nor his work from. the Inf!-• diet haff shaped his life, one ... , 16 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1967 The Rabbi had no reply. He glance(! toward his books In hope of finding an answer. Here was a miracle. How could one fathom the meaning? Suddenly the Rebbetzln laughed. "Did you remove the windpipes? No? Then take them out, and your geese wll~ no longer shriek." So saying, she took hold of a bird, Clifford Karren of Cranston, probed Inside thebeck,foundthewlndplpe, a student at Hebrew Unlverslcy, and pulled It free. Then she exorcised wrote a second Installment on the second goose. The geese shrieked Israel's border difficulties and no more. Air rushing -through the open how It feels to live with border windpipes had caused the awful sound, terrorism. This account was nothing more. • prepared In Jerusalem on Jan. 15. The Rabbl'.s face mirrored his cttsappolntment. Cold, dispassionate logic liad demollshed his miracle. Later, alone with his son, he tried todlscusshiswlfe's GERALDINES.FOSTER Says That Israeli Restraint (Continued from page 15) Mrs. Singer had a far more skeptical behavior, but then he 'threw up his hands Unlikely Under Provocation turn of mind. Let me hasten to explain as If to say; It Is too late now to call off that she was a thoroughly pious woman. the wedding.' By CL,IFFORD KARTEN and heavy machine-gunning, there However, she loved books, taught herself Al though Isaac Singer revered his On January I st, Syria and the were no Israel! casual ties up until Hebrew, and had a llklng for philosophy. father, I would suggest that he was more terrorist group "El Farah" now. Then, on January 8th, the She relied more on reason than on his mother's son. He inherited her red ushered In the New Year with a Syrians began attacking the Hula miracles to bolster her beliefs. Although hair and fair skin, and her personality as new series of mine planting In valley, Instead of the Galilee, she, like herhusband,fllledherchlldren's well. Incidentally, he derived his middle Israel! territory. Since then, the this time hitting, only Injuring, .a heads with stories of demons and sprites, name from her given name. She was Syrian-Israeli border has not seen tractor driver. (I think I should yet, as far as she herself was concerned, called Bathsheva - an Interesting Irony, a day go by without some Incident point out here, that the Syrians she was not quite so apt to accept without for she bore llttle resemblance t<>" the or another. Syrians have constant never cross the border, but shoot examining the matter at hand coolly and biblical lady who so Inflamed the passions ly plagued Israeli farmers with across. This Is what I mean rationally. Singer relates an Incident of King David. Bathsheva Singer was machine gun fire from the hlll s. when I say attack. The terrorists, that beautifully Illustrates the differences hardly the woman to tempt a man from the overlooking the "Sea of Galilee," or "El Farah,'' are the ones who between husband and. wife. path of righteousness. Although attractive forcing residents of the area Into eras s the border, but actual com However, before beginning this story, I In person, she had a shyness and reserve shetlters and all work to be halted bat Isn't their game. They plant should like to digress for a moment to quite apart from that demanded by her until the "pest" has had enough. mines and time-bombs, and are clarify a point, Jestyougetthelmpresslon piety. She possessed a sharp Intellect On January 6th, the Syrians back In Syria by day-break.) that the Singers were unduly superstitious. and an equally sharp tongue. All these stepped up their attack, by bringing On January 9th, the Syrians • Except In the most enlightened of traits managed to keep everyone at a tanks In to support their machine were finally answered when the Is households, Jewish children of Eastern distance, but then, she didn't particularly gun positions. Despite the shelling (Continued on page 23) Europe were brought up on stories of !Ike people. And as so often happens, rootless spirits who possessed.the bodies the passing years accented the more of 'the living, of goblins who haunted austere aspects of her personal! ty. She cellars and dark corners, of demons whose seldom laughed; however, the family's eyes glowed llke coals, especially on precarious financial situation was hardly dark moonless nights. They are a part of one to Inspire lightheartedness. rabbi, to ask for help. served as cantor for Rabbi Singer's folklore, and they are common to all The Singer family subsisted on the fees And, after the Initial shock, how did services, people came from all over to nations and races. Psychologists tell us Rabbi Singer earned from suits brought to the boy react to this encounter with the listen to the beauty of his singing. He that these stories have a relationship to him for adjudication. ht addition, outside world? htexpllcable, he·began to accepted no fee, for that was his way of fhe deepest needs of mankind. They are members of his unofficial congregation study - alone, without a teacher - a few helping Rabbi Singer earn ·a Jlvellhoodfor primitive responses to the unknown and gave weekly contributions for his support. pages of Commentary and Maimonides and the holidays. Though In moderate cir ,, the unknowable. ht these myths people This provided the backbone of the Income. Cabala. Though he still could not grasp cumstances, no one outdid him In gOO"d for centuries- have tried to exp! ain the Obvlo4.sly, the Rabbi could not go around much of the sense of what he read, that deeds and charity. Perhaps he could · ' unnatural occurrences and some belleved collecting this money, so a collector made part that he could comprehend took on barely struggle through a chapter of these tales lmpllcltly. ,They also served the rounds each week for25%commlsslon new meaning for him. Mtshnah, but he was, In the highest sense, a more practical purpose. They offered on all receipts. The first man to act In This living, turbulent, teemlngentity a Good Jew. He Jived what others an emotional means of Instruction to keep this capacity kept an honest account, but thls Krochmalna Street - this mixture of preached. He loved his fellowmen, he children In line, and they also provldecj his successors proved Jess honorable; the sublime and the squalid symbolizes In loved his work, he loved his Judaism. entertainment on Jong evenings. Nowa The last collector kept most of the money miniature the way of life for the majority As Singer writes, 'His entire lffe was one days, we get more sophisticated versions for himself. Though he would never of Eastern Europe's urban Jewish popula great yes'. The author has many other of these·tales on television. suspect another Jew of theft, the Rabbi tion. A world away from the small Jewish reasons to remember this good person However, to return to Mr. Siriger's finally had to discharge him. The family's towns where life seemed Jess precarious, with love. One was his kindness to him as story. One day, his father - who had a situation became Increasingly dlfflcul t. more ordered and placid, It lay In an a small boy. He used to let the youngster great Interest In anything smacking of the No food, no money, no further credit, entirely different universe from the accompany him on the dairy cart to share supernatural, - related a story he had plus the threat of eviction. So, young fashionable section In the north of Warsaw the adventure and 'danger' In the ride found In one of his holy, books. It con Isaac, then a boy of about 10, convinced where the really weal thy Jews lived their to the railroad station to drop otf some cerned a girl possessed by four demons. his father to let him try collecting. more genteel lives. Krochmalna Street's empty milk cans. Also, It was Asher These demons could actually be seen Armed with collection tickets and residents felt much more keenly and who saved the family when their apartment slltherlng _from one part of her body to addresses, the boy began his rounds. At Immediately rhe vicissitudes of life and caught fire. On hi sway tofetchmllk early another. The poor girl's pllght came to first things went very well. Everyone the vagaries of government. In. the small one morning, he noticed an Intense light the attention of the Rabbi of Graldlk, who was generous: they received him kindly, towns, community organization and coming from their windows. With exorcised theevll splrltswlthlncantations pinched his cheek, offered him fruit and distance from the seat of power acted as a dltflcul ty he roused the porter to open the and Incense and the blowing of the shofar. c:<10kles. Krochmalna Street, the street sort of buffer, while the well-to-do used gate, then raced up the stairs and broke The Rabbi had no doubts about the with- the huge apartment houses and the their money to Insulate themselves as best open the door to their apar,tment when no authenticity of the story. Mter all,ltwas llttle shops, the place he thought he knew · they could. But Krochmalna Street had one answered his knock. Slngerconcludes reco\Dlted by an Hasldlc Wonder Rabbi. !Ike the back of his hand took on an none of these, and In addition It knew the his remembrance of Asher the dairyman However, some one (I suspect his wife) entirely new aspect. It became a kaleido Isolation, the anonymity of llvlng.ln a big with these words: did question It, and he became quite scope of shapes and colors he never city. excited. Suddenly, the door opened. There dreamed of - an enchanted place hidden And so, they lived out their llves stood a woman obviously frightened and behind a brick facade. Tallors,cobblers, against the backdrop of the busy 'I do not know whether he (Asher) distraught. That Is, her highly emotional furriers, a jeWelry shop where girls Impersonal street, these members of llved to see the Nazi occupation of state was apparent to everyone except the strung bright beads and lovely corals. Rabbi Singer's unofficial congregation. Warsaw. He probably died before Rabbi. He never looked at a woman, not Here all seemed so pleasant. Then to There was Joseph Mattes, who devoted that. But such Jews as he were even his wife, since Jewl_shlawforbadelt. another apartment. This door opened to his llfe to rellglous matters while his dragged off" to Trebllnka. May these "What Is It?" he asked. the revolting sight of heaps of dead animals wife sold geese In Yanash's Court. The memoirs serve as a monument to him "Rabbi, 1 have a very unusual on the floor: the . tenant bought rabbits tradesmen who sold \heir wares there and his like, who lived In sanetity problem." frotn hunters, dressed them, and sold the received greatrecognltionforthefoulness and died as martyrs.' Her problem concerned the contents meat to restaurants. Behind another door of their language, and Joseph Mattes' wife of the basket on her arm, a pair of geese. he heard the voices of girls singing Yiddish stood In their foremost ranks. However, For Isaac Singer, the reality of What was the matter with them? Even songs. Ifhe derived a momentary pleasure she was a sharp business woman, and she Krochmalna St. ceased to exist during though they had been ritually slaughtered, from their song, I twas quickly dlsspelled. provided handsomely for her husband, her World War I. It became Impossible for then decapitated and and eviscerated, they A glance Into the tenement revealed a daughters, and her scholarly sons-In-law. the family to remain In Warsaw. Hunger continued to shriek In a most tmearthly shambles of a room through which flew _ And, while she brought In the money, and the uncertainty of the times plagued way. . bits of thread from whirring spindles. Joseph Mattes gave It outwlthafreehand. them constantly. The one daughter, Hinda "Slaughtered geese don't shriek," the Threads adhered to the floor and walls Came World War I with Inflation arid Esther, had previously married and llved Rebbetzin pointed out. and became entangled In already shortages and hunger. No one could afford In Antwerp. The oldest son, Israel Joshua, ''But these do,'' thewor'nan maintained: disheveled hair. By now the enchantment to buy geese, and even If they could, the had a position wlthanewspaperlnWarsaw and she took them out. Laying one goose had begun to assume some of the farmers brought no fowl to market. And and the beginnings of a life apartfrom his on the table, she took the other and hurled characteristics of a nightmare. ht one so, this man who had given a fortune to famlly. This left the parents and the It against the first. An eerie sound place he was greeted by a freak: In charity, this man who had provided two youngest children, Isaac and Moishe. filled the room. Again and again she another by the horror of bookbinders sumptuous banquets for the Hasidim had to The Rabbi did not wish to go too far away clacked the geese together, and the same trampling over copies of the Torah. He stand before the congregation one Friday from his congregation, so It was decided terrifying, high-pl tched cackle pierced the arrived at a fll thy basement In time to night and shout, "Men, I don't have any that he go to stay with the Radzymln silence of the room and chllled the see a corpse. The Initial wonder dissolved bread to usher In the Sabbath!" ht those Rabbi whose follower he-was. Mrs. Singer onlookers. The Rabbi felt both fear and In the terrible ugliness he found. dlfflcul t days bread -had to be substituted was to take the children to her parent's triumph - fear of those dead creatures Although young Isaac collected more In for the traditional wine. For that Sabbath, home In Bllgoray. that seemed to retain a living force, and that morning than the collectors had turned a collection gave him bread, fish, and The end of an era, the disintegration triumph since his bellef In the miracle In In a month, It marked the end of his challah, 1/Ut nothlngreallych~nged. Those of a family, the discovery of a wide wrought by the Rabbi ,of Graldlk seemed career. It had too terrible an effect on with full cupboards refused to alleviate world of learning and knowledge beyond vindicated. Unnatural things do occur. the .young boy. A new man began making. the plight of the poor. Some feared that the borders circumscribed by his father. It was happening before their very eyes. rounds for the Rabbi, but he also stole If they showed generosity, they, too, might On this note Singer ends his memoirs. ''What shall I do now, Rabbi?" the most of the receipts. Finally the Rabbi find themselves In dire straits very soon . But the sights and sounds and forces Noman pleaded. Here It was, a day before posted a notice that no more sums be .Then there was Reb Asher the that molded and shaped the author andhis the Sabbath, These geese were meant to given to collectors on his behalf. And dairyman, a simple person who handled view of life can be found In this volume. orovlde their Sabbath meal. They cost • the family again faced starvation. This milk cans as If 'they were toys. His And If we ,-ead thoughtfully, we can llmn i,reny penny, took all her meager time the Rebbetzln went to Bllgoray to speaking voice resembled the roar of a the outline of the man that young Isaac lllowance. What to do? the home of her father, a successful lion, but on the High Holidays, when he Singer has become. THE' 'RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY, ANUARY 27, 1967 Golden Brown Crisp VOLLEYBALL V,:ORKSHOP . Rhode lslancl physical educa 1 • PINEAPPLE PANCAKES Far East House Hot Syrup and Butter ORGANIZATION tion Instructors have· been In vited to a State WorkshoponGlrls' Oriental _Gift Shop EJ.ST _SIDE DIMER Sports, to be held on Feb. 4 at 1'83 Angell St., Pro,. 6,, R. I. St. • NEWS Rhode Island College and on Feb. .f21-8019 · 360 Waterman Red Bridge ' ' BETH- DAVID MEN'S CLUB II at ' the University of Rhode Open 10 A. M. to 9 P, M. 'The Men's Club of Temple Beth Island. College physical educa David, will sponsor an evening of tion majors and other Interested cards and Mah Jongg on Jan. 28 adults may also atten 18 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, PRIDAY,JANUARY.27, t967 University Nadonal , Ubrary- tn Jerusalem. ~avatia .To-Influence Oberammergau R. ·Nissim Text ·On Babylonian· Jractate - . Finally, Feldman was Inspired by a newspaper ardcle to make Trac~ ed Down By -Rutgers Hebraist . inqulries In the Soviet, Union. A If. Possible, Avers Dr. Alfons Goppel letter to the Russian cultural NEW BRUNSWICK-A search Feldman's notes and comments NEW YORK - The Mlnister Bavarian State Goveniment, which by a Rutgers Unl'lersityprofessor recently in 'Jerusalem, , • attache in Washington followed. Then · more letters, lnvQlvlng Presldent of Bavaria, Or.' Alfons owns the copyright to Mein Kampf, in the libraries of three continents ·nie search began 'In the Goppel, told an American Jewish take more dec1 slve steps to has led to the publlcadon of a summer of1963whenFeldmanwas -~eldman and the U. S, State Committee delegadon last week uncover the publishers and distri priceless and previously unknown in Barcelona doing research on~ Department; . and finally (1118 ·that his government would use Its butors of themanyplratededidons , work by an Important Hebrew extraordinary period In Spanish direcdng Feldman to wrtie to-a influence to urge local Oberam of the book throughout the world scholar of the 14th Century, history, the decline of Spanish V. Baraschenlcov, director of-the mergau officials to use a version and to bring sul t against them The search for the manuscript, Jewish culture in the 14th and . SaJiytcov-Schedrln Public Library I! In Leningrad. of the Passion Play that Is not under the linternadonal copyright a text by R, Nlsslm of opinions 15th Centuries a period which laws. or Interpretations (?ftheBabylonl- ended with the ~xpulsion ·order by There, Manuscript 964 of the and-Semitic. Concern was expressed by an Talmud tractate Ketuboth, deal- Ferdinand and Isabella in 1492, Baron David Guenzburg Collecdon Dr. Goppel, Germany's Con the Ing with marriage laws, had a dis- In the Archivo de la Corona de turned out to be the missing docq sul-General in New York, Dr. American Jewish Committee over :1 Klaus Curdus, and other consular the contlnulng large circuladon of tlnctly International flavor from Aragon, Feldman came across ment; In due course, a microfilm I , copy was sent to Feldman and the officials, met with the American the book. Eclltlons have been beginning to end. references to missing manu- published recently In Mexico and ·1 t;>r, Leon A. Feldman, chair- scrlpts by 'R. Nlsslm, a legal book published In Jerusalem Jewish Committee leaders In his through the support of the Rutgers suite at the Americana Hotel this In Denmark, and then smuggled man of the Department of Hebraic expert, poet and author of several into Germany. Under exlstlnglaw Studies at Rutgers, began his Important commentaries to the Research Council. the Memorial morning. The American Jewish In Germany, books which preach search In Spain, scoured Important Talmud, who lived In Barcelona Foundation for Jewish Culture and Committee group consisted of racial hatred and Incitement are libraries of Western Europe and from about 1349 to about 1380. the Friends of the Rutgers Hebraic !rvlng M. Engel, Honorary -Presi dent; Richard Maass, Foreign lllegal, and since World War n finally found the lost manuscript Feldman had been working on Studies Program resulted. Affairs Committee chairman, Dr. the Bavarian government has in the Soviet Union. It was other unpublished writings by R. How did the manuscript ever John Slawson, executive vice . never given approval for the publi publl_shed, In Hebrew with Nlsslm and immediately recog wind up in . such a seemingly unlikely place as Russia? presldent; Dr. 'Simon Segal, cation of Mein Kampf. nized the potential Importance of Foreign Affairs Department Dr. Goppelpromlsedtoexplore the missing manuscripts. Baron Guenzburg was a 19th Century collector, philanthropist, di.rector: and Jerry Goodman, with the Foreign Ministry In Bonn, "They could have been almost European Specialist. ways of securing cooperation with anywhere," Feldman sald. "We Oriental l'anguage scholar and an eclltor of the "Russian Jewish Dr. Goppel explained that the other governments to prevent any know that when the Jews left Spain Encyclopedia." His superb li municipality of Oberammergau Illegal prlndng and distribution of after the expulsion order they has local autonomy. However, he the Nazi work. took their cultural treasures with brary Included many manuscripts which he had purchased all over said that the State government, Turning to the question of the them, These have been scattered which he heads, will use Its In last November elections, where to the four corners. the world. The Nlsslm manuscript was undoubtedly one of them. fluence with the Oberammergau the neo-Nazl NPD (National Demo For •• • "As a result there.. are now authorities to substitute for the cratic Party) elected 15 repre • IUSINESS . more Spanish manuscripts of a ''Its Importance." Feldman century-old Dalsenberger text, sentatives to the Bavarian State • PROFESSIOlil~L Je"(lsh nature In libraries all over said, "Is due to the fact that It which contains anti-Semitic stere legislature, Dr. Goppel said that • PERS.ONAL the world than there are in Spanish brings to light a hitherto unknown otypes and allegations, either the they are "like chickens without ,.EEDS ••• archives." _ work of one of the most Important older 17th Century text by the heads," for they have neither a The search for the NIJ ,E. R. DAVENPORT & co. INCORPORATED Members New York Stock bchan• and other Principal ExchangH 908 Hospital Trust Bldg., Providence, R. I. 02903 . I - TEmple 1-7150 TOURO FRATERNAL ANNIVERSARY YEAR - Installation of officers and directors on Jan. 11 began the Golden Anniversary Year of Touro Fraternar Association. From left, front row, are Leo Greenberg and Paul E. Goldstein, Board members; Arthur Poulten, president; Simon Chorney and Samuel H. Wilk, Large Enough to be of Service, Board members; second row, Charles Coken, secretary; Sidney W. Paull, faithful guide; Irving Gordon, Board member; Carl P. Kortlck, Inside guard; Morton L. Coken, Louis I. sweet and Leonard L. Levin, Small Enough to be a Friend Board members; back row; Burton L. Fischman, vice-president; Gerald D. Hodosh, treasurer; Dr. Marshall K. Bornstein, Harry M. Schwartz and lrwln Stone, Board members, and Maurice W. Hendel, lnstalllng officer. Mr. Poul ten was elected to a second term as president. Mr .. Colten, who Is serving Offices M: New Hav•n~ Saybroolr: and Newport his 21st consecutive term as secretary, ts In his 25th consecutive year as a Touro officer. ORGANIZATION NEWS HUG IVRI TO MEET MUSIC AT BETH EL The Hug lvrt (Hebrew Speaking Joel Israel Cohen will give an Circle) will meet on Sunday, Illustrated lecture on the music Jan. 29 , at 8:30 p.m., at the home of Salomon! Rossi, a 17th century of Mrs. Fania Gross, 118 Eaton Italian composer, and on Jewish 62 Tiuwater Prive Street. Rabbi David Jehuda will music of the Renaissance tonight at Temple Beth El, when an aug I. give a talk Illustrated with slides War-wick, R. of Israeli stamps. Anyone .who mented choir will present a Sa)> 739-0971 speaks Hebrew Is Invited to attend. bath Service composed "Y, Rossi. Rabbi Jehuda Is chairman of the A "Song of Songs Suite • com Hug lvrt. posed by Mr. Cohen will al so be performed. Mr. Cohen, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob I. -Cohen, PINAL! FINAL! FINAL! - has been In France. for two years on a Fulbright grant. White a fllllgn/,ftcent savingf Off fashf,on'i most important it11l# EDSAC MUSIC Brown undergraduate he composed JNSTRUCTIONS-SALES-RENTALS a Sacred Service for Frlday Even ALL INSTRUMENTS ing, and recently wrote another Sacred Service for a Glencoe, Ill. 'STUDIOS SHOW"OOM temple, which was perf(!rmed FLORSHEIM SHOES.FOR WOMEN Certified Teachers -Authorb:MI Deale, - there In February, 1966. mtlUCled.iur. with a total of Tremendou1 Savin91 on NanM 130 yrs. experience. INSTRUMENTS wch as BETH SHOLOM CHOIR • Excelsior Accordions 1701 CRANSTON ST. • Fender-Epiphone ~uitars & The new junior choir of Temple $11.00 Knightsville Section Amplifiers Beth Sholom will make Its first ValllM '17,95 to $21.95 TE--4398 e Ludwig OruMs appearance at the service tonight at 8:15 o'clock. Rabbi Charles EDDIE SACCOCCIA M. Rubel will conduct the monthly fmll>arrassiil9 family night service, and Mrs. THAYER McNEIL SHOES Norman Landroche will be organ • ,el«l,d ,tyb ist. Members of the new choir are fl HAIR OUT FOREVER Hyman J . Dress, Debra B. Levin, l Robin M. Paige, Marc A. Paige, · $8,00 • - 1 ■-a-flag - Jeann~ S. Pulner, Deborah E. Valuea $14,95 to fl9,95 l Fishbein, Carl S. Woolf, Jo Myra WITH THERMADERM Woolf and Sara B. Woolf. The l Thorin•donn reshepes yow heir Sisterhood will sponsor an Oneg • line - eyebrows - ufely, ac.i• Shabbat after the service. LITTLE HEELS, FLATS, CASUALS • entific:elly •ncl l•stingly ,_ • ln,el«:t,4-r• ' 1 unw•nt.d heir. This unbeli ..•bly gentl• electronic NmOval of Mir ADL AWARD DINNER - tmooth - f...... body Sidney Rabinowitz of Prov! $6,00 and l•gs --tty. Do .. with dence will be among the members grNtest comfort ...... of the New England Regional Board Val1111 '10,95 ~ '14.95 CAU. .OR WRITE of the Anti-Defamation League at NINA FERRIE • JOSEPH FERRIE tending the 1967 America's Demo 117 WESTMINSTER ST. Licensed EJectrolotists cratic Legacy Award dinner on 920 SMITH ST. Phone GA 1-1169 Jan. 29 In New York. Under Secretary of State Nicholas deB. - Katzenbach will receive the award; presented annually for "dis $5.00 tinguished contributions to the en Values to $1 l.9S richment · of our democratic herltage." SO FOUNTAIN ST. Across from Journal BENEFIT DOG SHOW HANDBAGS. The 71 st annual Providence County Kennel Club AKC Sanc Daily -Specials tioned Match, which will beneft't · the United Fund, will be held 30% OFF In the Cranston Street Armory on .95 to s1.2s Sunday, Jan. 29. Among the tro SPECIAL: 6 PAIR OF HOSE .•• $.4 phies offered In competition will be Rcc,$1.3S eada Plus our standard Menu at The U, S. Congressman John E. Reasonable Prices Fogarty Trophy. The general public has been Invited to "come 0 FEATURING This is your las/ chance to choose from this oulS/anding ,wtth your dog and bring a firlend." array of values. PRIME RIB OF BEEF & WILLIAM SLOANE EXHIBIT Come in 1oday. Not every size in every s1yle. Cyrk Galleries, now located at - ROCK CORNISH GAME HEN 167 Angell Street, will open an exhibit by William Sloane, of re "ivate Dining loom for Meetings and Showers verse paintings on cellulose Finest of Codctail1 at reatonable prk•~ acetate, on Sunday from 3 to 5 ~~/tz,U~ Open doHy ot 11 o.m. p.m. The exhibit of the contem Soturdoys, open 4 p.m .• OOHcl Sundoy, porary primitive from Mexlcowlll be on view from 9 a.m . to 5:30 ~WCY'~~. S.oring Copocity 175 ,....,,, p.m. dally from Jan. 30 through 119 Wayland Ave. • Open Fri. Evenings 'til 9 • Ample Feb. · 18. Richard White It new Free Parking MA 1-4089 manager of the Galleries, and Ben RESERVATIONS Wei!s Is owner. . 20 TI-IE RHODE ISLAND HERALD,-FRl;DAY, JANUARY 27, 1967 Herald subscribers, comprise excellent results, ad¥ertlse In TO STUDY PLAy TEXT an active . buying market. For t~ . Herald. . Call· 724-0200. , BONN-Mayor i;:rnst ZW!nkof · Oberammergau, site of the Passion · Play presentation which has. stirred International controversy '" . for Its version of the trial and it,\llywoocl -. . . CHINA INN., - crucifixion of Jesus, saldherethat the text of the play would be Stu.died SPECIALIZING IN .. by a Catholic monastery for alleged ly la~ey-Gluer ., EXOTIC CHINESE FQODS anti-Semitic, elements. Things, we learned from David .Philadelphia, 330,UUU; Chicago, 90 Rolfe Street HO 7-8916 - <;_rans ton Ewen's "America's • Popular 285,000; Boston, 160,000; Newark, Open Every Day 11 a .m. to. l O p.m. Songs: From the Revolutionary 100,000. BEST ta.. War to the Present" (Random The same volume credits Carl House): Irving Berlin's "Alexan Laemlle with the 1907 creation of ~IIIIIUIHHRIIHUllllJIRIIIJlfflHllllllnillmn11umn111111H1-1Hn111111111111111111m111um - oEAU~ der's Ragtime Band" Is a march Hollywood's star system, now al Plain Facts and Figures rune, not ragtime •. . Barney Kapp most defunct, and Louis B. Mayer renamed Doris Kappel off after s.he with the conversion of show busi I· -DUNNE -FORD SALEt INC. ·1 Check with- Us and Save auditioned for his band by singing ness to big business. "Day after Day,'' thus, Doris Day WRITER Milt Josefsberg once CEMTREDALE . • • Fanny Rose Shore renamed \ ! 705 Elmwood Ave. ! · wrote a situation Into a Lucy tele- . PONTIAC herself Dinah Shore after singing vision show, explaining that Lucille 781-4000 .. "Dinah" In her first radio appear Ba11 was fired from her book de I I 26 Putnam Ave., Cent. ance In ·Nashville, Tenn. parnnent show because she sold. CE- 14:IU Lyricist Gus Kahn wrote "Yes, a copy of "How to Be a Jewish ~ FORD - FALCON - THUNDERBIRD ~ Sir, That's My Baby"whllewatch Mother" to a nun. Milt revealed lng Eddie Cantor's five-year-old that he later deleted thellne,fear Margie playing with a mechanical lng It would draw adverse crltl- • 'i . SALES and SERVICE _ I pig toy. Said Kahn later, clsm frombothCathollcsandJews. 1 BIG DISCOUNTS !! " -Imagine a Jewish boy writing a BILLY ROSE'-S body still, lies ~IIUIJIUIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIHIIIIIIJIIRIIIIINIUIIIIIIIIIIIIUllllllllffllllUUHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI_IIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~ • TYPEWRITERS hit tune's lyric,; about a trayfeh In a vault In Westchester Hills a, pig." (N,Y ,) Cemetery since his Feb. 10, l • CALCULATORS , JACK BENNY objects to the 1966 death at his Montego Bay, · COl!IIPLETE • ADDING, • word "specials" for his television MACHINES Jamaica, West Indies estate. Fam- • shows. "To me," satd Jack, "a lly sulis over Billy's will have · TRAVEL·- BUY or RENT special Is when coffee goes from ' delayed his- Interment. 89 to 59 cents a pound." · Billy was born Rosenbloom on INFORMATION "Shop Where You ISRAEL'S most successful N.Y.'s East Side. The man whose ; Can See Them AU" movie? "Sallah." To date, It has family was so poor that frequently sold enough tickets to equal half. he and his two younger sisters of Israel's population .. . Joey often went to bed without dinner, WARWICK 'TRAVEL ooms Bishop tuned up for his ABC-1V singlehandedly fought his way Into PEWRITER Co. late show debut In April with this the multi-millionaire class. RE 9-4648 Ml»llll •na:r comment, "I alqne am responsible TONY MARTIN, JR., w111 al * * * * R. /.'1 Larg•sl Typ•wriler Display for Sammy Davis, Jr.'s conversion ways remember' his bsr mlrzvah :1 2915 POST ROAD WARWICK Easy T•rm• to JudalsT(I. Now, Sammy wants party. His celebrated father took ' me to turn colored." Junior and six buddies to Reno, ' .' . Continued Bfshop, "When Sam Nevada, to celebrate his today-l ► my first attended schul, he listened am-a-man party. ► ► , . to the cantor sing and then Jumped MARTY INGELS will never for up and shouted, 'One more time!' get the time he received a rave '► ...Sammy told me, "Joey, I have review for hi s summer theater ap ' to run along. I'll see you In the pearance In "Guys and Dolls.''. '► synagogue Frldar, night, I'll be In ► ' put your weather worries Said Marty, •'The review appeared ► the third row.' ' Bishop replied, In- the Christian Science Monitor. ► 11 Anytime I can't see you tn a ► · What more could a Jewish boy ► synagogue I" ask?" ► REPORTS that L.A.'s Jewish WHATEVER happened to all in a RCA Whirlpool population Is slowly creeping up those movies Eddie Fisher an- ' L. on N,Y. al"'! unfounded, according nounced he w o u 1 d produce? , .J to Thomas H, Johnson's "The Ox Nothing!. .. And why hasn't Molly • 'I ford· Companion to American His Picon carried' out her plans to tory" (Oxford University Press.) star In a television series as a 7 electric dryer I As of 1965, L.A. has 435,000, far shahtken, our traditional marriage behind N.Y.'s 1,836,000. Then, broker?. .Promises, prom!sesl Itt: .► ' 'tp~ THE ii'. ~GOLDEN YEARS ~ .,, " CITY WIFE SINGS A MELODY ,. ABOUT RETIRING TO A FARM Dear Golden Years: we weren't fooled - they really I do not often write letters came to !ell us what fools we to newspapers, but I feel you were to buy the place. But they are going to let some retired stayed to chop brush. people miss their bus because Three years have now gone they are standing on the wrong by since we took over the place. corner. And I must speak my We have the prettiest little two piece. bedroom house in these parts. You have been writing about Our yard is an acre of mowed "the mistake" people make in weeds (they look like a lawn) moving to a country place when and flower beds. We have a they retire . . . how they work vegetable garden from which I m themselves to de a I h with no have canned over 2,000 jars of promise except another day's food for our winier use, work tomorrow. I feel so sorry Our woods are a haven for for them. small game, and my husband My husband and I retired and our two beagles love to hunt three years ago. _We lived in the there, Sometimes with friends city and both had jobs in the from the city. There's a river for middle-pay bracket. We had fishing not far away. . worked hard all our lives and, My person a 1 interests are being in the city, had saved genealogy and flowers, and very lillle money. We retired on when the long winier evenings one small check-my husband's come I read. my genealogy Social Security. I'm. not o\d papers, ma.ke quilts, do fancy . enough for mine ye!. needlework, and all the other On this one small check we such things I had always wanted 'could not cover the expenses of to do if there were time. Now city living. Anyway, we didn't I've got the lime. RCA WHIRLPOOL 5-CYCLE like city life, All that_ we wan led After living in !he city for so FLAMELESS ELECTJIIC DRYER only most was what a country place long we didn't want close neigh had to· offer. bors. We wanted space. Here, So we moved onto an old run- our nearest neighbor is over half No more weather delays or storm.tossed washes down farm of about 100 acres. a mile down a country road. So, on the line. Dryer dried clothes look better, last The land was grown up in trees instead of the noise of humans longer, need lesii ironing. Keeps creases sharp s124ss 'and brush. The house had no we listen to the songs of the birds windows and little foundation. and the music of our two creeks. and textures soft in wash 'n wears, tool Hut two little creeks ran merrily I would n~ver take another monthly · past the old house, and a large city job to sup'plement our in ~ budget terms lilac tree in the yard was full of come. We have adjusted to what bloom. An old apple orchard in we have. And, in fact, we have the front was also in bloom, at Just about as much leftovereach least that part of it sill! Hving: month now as we had when we We had fallen in love with the go! two weekly pay checks. place at first sight, and had A West Virginia Wife NARRAGANSETT ELECTRIC bough! it shortly afterwards. The next morning we were on the site Foi , the GOLDEN YEAH 36~• ltoolda,1, In overalls and with rolled-up send SOc in l..,. , .-~e=;'= ~...... -• •l , •.. . «dies anddnmad : . frotn c1_. glas$ Alfi . , -~ · amderslde "'-die ~ ' ~ ·lllllllle . ;'' • iy: to.,adslpjl . ,• . tW :-.- - '\ -; - , 1 ·.~ space...... ,. j ~[----◄► pll\'IIIOII la ., !.-~1'9~ exhfb(ts,hld '1 ,--".:t.•~i'ltn of Jlldalc l. .,· ~..oe.:• ·•~ used!a ~ : s, a hlst°1'f _" \l=,J:1J.;a;~1=:a,_,lliill__ ~::II '"'••__ ..,..IIIIIRIWJii•_• •• .-.aa-e•....,,.,ftlms ....~ ~- . llELl,ULE - EXl'EllfflllCEO 11,e 'pllimers of die c,aflll• are coordlnaUng TEMPORARY HElP I effona -wldl 'die commlssl AT A MOMENTS NOTICE gereral of die lsraell pavlllan • V RATES BY HOUR, DAY, WEEK OR PC. U.TES ' Insure dlat dlere Is no dupllcat11111 VALL HELP FULLY INSUR.ED . of displays. V AU WORKERS REMAIM ON OOR PAYROLL V fl HANDLE AU INSURANCE, TAXES, RECORDS 'Accenllng . ta Mr. Joseph ·s .' , Scholaldc, Director of bller- ; •PACKEIS •SWVIDOIES•IMOIIEIIS natloul Expositions for die , . I • ASWMel.EIS s-;,., Amerlcaa £xp,ess Company, cle,;: ~u,_...a. • S10C1C -KERS CITY&SUIIMIS • WAIEHOUSEMEN ~FACTOIY General Agents for Expo 6 7 tn . ,j •. , • MAtalAl HANDI.ERS •-WORKERS the U. S., "The enthusiastic 179 .GUINl'inEET, PROVIDENa AVAILABLE participation of the Jewish people will be a highlight of Expo. Thetr GA 1-4514 two pavilions will be outstanding attractions and Jewish cultural participation In the 'World Festival of Performing Art$'' program will be of enormous Loolc Your Very 36 RICHMOND ST. PROVIDENCE Interest to Jewish-Americans." The Israel e l mer! theatre, presenting a special musical show, HOW. and the Batsheva Modern Dance BEST! and Cl>era Company are schedllled A SWIMMING. POOL to appear In the performing arts OF YOUR program planned for Expo. The unique housing develop OWN ment, Habitat 67, designed by HATS Moshe Safdle, a 28-year-old archltt!'ct born In Israel, will al so be of Interest to the Jewish community. "We anticipate a tremendous response from the Jewish-Ameri SWEATERS can Community because a visit to Expo will provide an Ideal oppor tunl ty for American Jews to observe, first hand, the strides ACC~SSORIES & EcpUIPM~NT made In Israel by a courageous people and, at the same time, It provides a meeting ground for THE COMPLETE SKI SHOP! / American and Canadian Jews," Mr. Scholnick noted. Expo 67 Admission Passports ~ • 011en Daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. are now available at sharply re duced prices In thousands of ~-..illl~l!!!l!!e==i'!""~··--~~ Saturdays 9 a.m. to5 p.m. "Offlelal Expo 67 Information ~ • .• ' ;,< JI! 1 Call 673-3354 , Centres" In the United Stares. -... Quantity purchases offering fund-raising opportunities are BUDY POOLS al so avail able to service organi zations, clubs, groups and D SACHIM ID.. IIYIISIDI community associations. Special CALL ANYTIMI Jll•JOOO 01 M4-J617 fund-raising programs can be ar IHI WUbur Avenue Route 103 ranged for non-profit organlza- THE . RHODE ISLAM) · HERALBtPRIDAY • JANUARY· 'l:1, 19<>7 - ' ·Says German Texts Glorify Third Reich _ Third Retch' s brave soldiers. In of of Hitler's ~ . ._ NEW YORK - "No" sooner .In the World-Jo1!1"11al-Trtbune. stead speaking All forms of· personal and business insurance had-the Allied c;,ccupation of west Returning from a recent vtslt genocide policy against Sla".s and Jews, or the devastation wrought · / d. t·f A ·d G · F. Germany ended when German his- to Germany - where as a yo\Dlg I . me u !Jng • - 1 e ~ cc, ent • roup • ,re • tory textbooks - which under man he had studied In th,: Univer- by the Luftwaffe In London and Coventry, they dwell on the Ai.ltomobi/e • Casualty • Bon. ds Allied supervtslon contained over sity of Berlin and where he ob- SO pages on the terror regime of served the -rise of Nazism before' suffering of Germ any' s popu lj\tion from Allied bombing the Third Reich - were revised he left In 1935 - Guttman ex- Murry M. Halpert leaving a few paragraphs to deal pressed horror at what he dis- attacks." 800 Howard Bldg. with Germany's darkest period." covered. "Instead of lDlpleasant Or so Werner Guttman, a consult- reminders of the past," he noted, A subscription to the Herald Is DE 1-9100 Residenc;e: 'DE l-6949 Ing cbemlcal engineer, asserted In "the new textbooks began to.devote • a good gift for the person who has one of a sertes of five articles space to the glorification of the everything, else. Call 724-02QO. 4½% GUARANTEED .5 -- YEARS: HOW' MUCH LONGER WILL -IT BE AVAILABLE? . .; ., Good question~ No easy answer • ( , Interest rates, move up· and down with' the money supply. Money's tight now, interest rates high - highest_in 30 y~ars. It's not a .permanent situation. Many indicators _right now point to possible change. Recent Federal Reserve announcements, government monetary actions, capital expenditure slow-down all could mean tight money will ease up. Good news. For everybody. ·~ • except SAVERS. Where ao YOU stand? If the tight money situation eases, inte.rest rates could drop. They've done this in every similar situation in last 35 years. So you see, the one word -for today's economic picture is uncertainty. With the picture this uncertain, you need high savings interest GUARANTEED. Not •-:mbject to quarterly review• not "current annual inter~st rate•, but really and truly guaranteed. For just as long as you can get it·. With your nest_ egg availllble every 90 days if you need it. At full interest fro.m first day to last, naturally. And if you're like most savers, .you'd rather have savings certificates that don't tie up $1,000, or ev,en $500, Ours. cost only $39. 9_8 each. Pays you a solid 4¼%~ Guaranteed a full 5 years. · Sound like the nearest to a "sure thing• you've heard? It is. Certainly worth $39.98 or as much more as you feel li~e saving. With all the .current uncertainty simple common· sense suggests you move. Fast. Like~ You can move .fast by filling in this coupon • • INDUSTRIAL NATIONAL Member Federal Reserve System • Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation • ----, ------·HERE'S AN EASY WAY -,O GUARANTEE INTEREST NO. FACE VALUE PURCHASE OF 5-YEAR Industrial National Bank of Rhode Island PRICE AMOUNT Customer Relations Department BONDS MATURITY 111 Westminster Street, Pr.ovidence, R. I. 02901 Enclosed is my check _payable to "Industrial National Bank" tor$ ...... Please .issue $50 $ 39.98 each 41/2 % Saving Certificates as indicated at right. Register certificates as indicated below: (SS # $100 $ 79.95 each (one name or two - Mr., Mrs., or Miss, In trust for or Jointly) ' ~ (SS # "I $500 $399.75 each I I Addret9 City State Zip $1000 I $799.50 each I I I I -: Name of Purchaser Address City State Zip : I TOTAL • ~ I I ------AMOUNT I : , Signature of Purchaser : ·------~------· TifE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1967 23 MODIFIED MAGNOLIA PLAN MOSCOW YIDDISH Marldsh by siiviet authQ._rltles al- MAGNOLIA, MASS,-Magnolla LONDON-A Moscow publish- tho.ugh the Yiddish poet has never Manor now offers a · modlfted Ing house has just Issued "In t~ been officially and formally re- imerlcan plan and wlll begin low Footsteps of Generations," In Its habllltated. He has been mourned off-season rates next month, Fred original Yiddish, by Peretz Mar- In speech and prlntbymany Jewish Bloom, owner of the resort, has ldsh, one of the prominent Jewish and non-Jewish Writers. announced. The policy• In line writers liquidated In the Stalin A subscription to the Herald Is with the present trend In United era. The publication was viewed a good gift for the person who has States hotels, will Include such as an lmplled rehabilitation of evervth!nv else. Call 724-0200. features as a gala Saturday night . .., topped With a midnight swim. NEVELE SPORTS STARS ELLENVILLE, N.Y.-Stars of basketball, majQr league baseball and pro football will hold perform ing and discussion sessions with ?:lte 6Pacltme1t school vacationers at the Nevele .Route 138, Tiverton, R. I. (Near the Sakonnet River Country Club from Feb. 17 through 26. ABC Radio-TV star Cousin Brucie wlll be master of cere monies for a rock and roll show, to be produced by Art Kahn. SABBATH OBSERVANCE NAMED BY CENJ'ER-Harry J, Licht, left, has been named chairman 16Shevat Cq11dlellghtlng Time - 4:36p.m. of the Building Committee for the new Jewish Commtmity Center, and Lester J. Millman, president of the R.I. Chapter of the American LF ARN HO'.'✓ TO Institute of Architects, has been chosen as architect. Assisting Mr. Licht, who Is a member of the Providence Zoning Board, are Peter lose weight Bardach, former JCC president and chairman of the Fact-Finding Building Study Committee; Sidney Meyer, JCC presldel)t; Dr. Samuel &keep it off Pritzker, Temple Beth El president; Alex Rµmpler, past president of Miriam Hospital, and Leonard Salmanson. Preliminary plans and with Weight a' model of the new center wlll be displayed on ' Feb. 5. Watchers Says That Israeli Restraint Join Weight Watchers~ The eaoy, no fad way to redu!ce U[llikely Under Provocation Meetings • DANCING NIGHTLY IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE (Continued from page 16) throughout concerned. The Soviet Union has R.I. and Mass. raells, replying to the provoca warned Syria, but In the same tions, destroyed two Syrian tanks, breath Journallstlcally attacks Is OPEN TO • ro• ...... TIONS CAil and disabled a third, while also MEN WOMEN w-n~I rael as an Imperialistic satellite. damaging some of the emplace For those on the spot, suffering TEEN-AGERS ments at Tawaflg In Syrian terri loss of life, propeI'ty' 'I I Yanku, ·Pre Senl'ence Counselor, Coacher Wrestling At Y I CLASSIFIED r (Continued from page l)· have teachers, policemen, soclal don't know what · the answer Is, what they do and why, what they workers, Institutional personnel other than · that people shouldn't 3 - Apart~ents For Rent ·21 - Help Wanted - Women think and why." and a whole host of otherswhtrare duck their civic responsibility." EAST SIDE: Morris Avenue. Five He discussed briefly his unfit for the power they exercise. The fear of Involvement not only rooms, first floor. Modern. Combi- AVON PRODUCTS concern that there are persons In . Money alone cannot make the dlf- keeps people from helping at the notion windows. Oil heat. Garage. To Buy positions of authorltywhoareunflt ference except In the. kind of scel)e of .an accident, but also Adults. 521 ,2810. or for power, and considers the "ter- 'persons' attracted to · such vital causes the use of words to hide To .Sell rlble salaries:::, basic factor In Jobs. things rather than to communicate, EAST SIDE: 41 Exeter Street. Second Coll the problem. Ive known so many Nothing Is more frightening he said, and added a vigorous floor, five rooms. Combinations. AVON MANAGER ' fine and d,edicated teachers,, but than Ignorance In action, said Mr. affirmative to the question of dis- Adults. 7~ 1-2550. GA 1-2908 2-3 there are~,t enough who are truly Yanku. People who should be on a cussing politics and rellglon. Four room NARRAGANSETT PIER: WVNIAN, 9 to 5, tive days a week. dedlca_ted'. he said. Until decent Jury often aren'tbecauselt'sgolng ''Any society has Its element and apartment,. furnished. One light hou!oework and light cooking pay Is offered, we wlll continue to to cost them money or time. "I of disturbed Individuals who are Available monthly one-half baths. for two adults. East Side. 331·0089. failures, and Ina Utopian existence or s.eason. 336-6878. everyone would have a chance to 2-17 23 • Home Repairs prove his own worth. Ideally, we OAk Hill PLAT: Six rooms, first floor. would have healthy and dedicated INTERIOR - EXTERIOR Modern. $115 monthly. Pl: 1:0121. Pointing. All LEROY HANSON teachers, pollce concerned wt th surfaces prepared with electric• sanders, point INC. people more than with crimes per 9 • Carpenters and Builders burners, wallpaper• se (protecting the community steamers, thus assuring good fin· means the entire community) and ished work throughout. Wincfow ADDITIONS, alterations, residential, glazi n g . Raymond Beaulieu. LOUVER DOORS social workers more concerned industrial building. Garages. Both• 821-8928. with people than with nickel rooms, cement work, dormers, sto,·e ufn, SHUTTERS psychonalysls. People need peo fronh. Free estimates. 942-1044, 942, 1045. CABINET DOORS ple, and unless they're wllllng to ·30 - Painting, Papering communicate and try to under ufn BAR DOORS stand, It's too easy to flt people 19 - General Services INTERIOR PAINTING ot its best. Polynesian Into the approprla•te slot. The Complete pointing !oervices. Refer- and . FOLDING . CLOSET Cantonese ~ulslne ones who don't flt - like Oswald FLOOR CLEANING and polish.ing . ences. Hal's Pointing, WI 2-1178. • , ... .., Sentct • DOORS - you wedge them In." · Also general home deaning. Fronk 2-10 - Mr. Yanku, a Providence Dugon. 9-44-9081 . 35 - Private Instruction 467-7:t,O 125 GANO STREET native, Is a graduate of Henry ufn Barnard and Hope High School. GUil AR INSTRUCTION: Pick or fin- hM Parking PROVIDENCE, R.I . 20a - Help Wanted 10 mim. kom ,..ov, During World War II he served Men or Women ger. limited openings. Private school tt.. 95 to Ito. 37 GA 1-7558 In the Air Corps as gunner on music teacher. Adults, children 9 up. 1271 ,_, Id. a B-17. He has five children-, COOK: individual or couple. For Fall Wayland Square. 351·4328. Warwk• Sharyn, 17, and Robert, 15, River Home for the Aged . Live-in students at Cranston High School preferably. 199 Hanover Street, Foll TO CIRCULATE AGNON East; Alan, 14, at Park View River , Moss. (617) 679-6172. Junior High School, and Steven, 11, ufn N°EW YORK-Leading book • and Lisa, 7, at Rhodes School . 20aa - Help Wanted - Men stores do not carry the works of Mrs. Yanku Is the former Esther the recent Nobel prize winner, reading improvement Lecht of Providence. He used to NATIONAL COMPANY EXPANDS S.Y. Agnon, according to many re FOR JUNIOR HIGH, S~NIOR HiGH teach Sunday School at Temple Due to recent unparalleled growth, on cent reports, and blank-faced Sinai and at Temple Beth Israel unusu al prestige opportunity is.offered booksellers often ask who he Is, AND FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS and was a member of the Cranston to on ouhtonding mon who is !oeeking when asked for his books: Ad IMPROVE COMPREHENSION, VOCABULARY, STUDY o lifetime soles career. Immediate and HABITS. RATE, SPELLING AND CONCENTRATION Jewish Center. Heenjoysconver cordtngly, "Commentary" maga satlon and mustc. and "suffers liberal solory plus unlim ited comm is• sion. zine, which Introduced Agnon CLASSES BEGIN FEB. 4 Def inite opportunity for promo- from books like other people suffer tion and management responsibility, to American readers about 25 from alcohol. When I was a little years ago, wlll make a special re ADULT CLASSES BEGIN FEB. 1 OS soon o, wor"ronted. The man ... ELEMENTARY CLASSES BEGIN FEB. 4 boy my mother used to take me to lected must be ambitious, soles· min - print of the Agnon features In Its the library and having no guidance, ded and of high native intelligence. December Issue: commentaries FOR FULL DETAILS CALL 331-3915 I started at one side and read my SelecJion wilt be competitive bo!oed on by Edmund W!lson and Baruch way around." optitude tests plus personal interviews. Hochman, a study guide. and three Johnson & Wal11 R11ding lnstitutl He does not believe that the Co tls will be token between 9 o .m. to of Agnon's stories. "Agnon Re • younger generation Is getting 5 p.m. ports" may be ordered from Abbo.tt Park.Place, Providen~e, R. J• • worse and worse, and mentioned a MR . GELLER "Commentary," 165 East 56th cuneiform tablet from Sumer.that 739-7370 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. bewailed this fact. "I don't believe ufn RHODE JSLASD S FINEST there's any substantial change for than for most of the population. wrestling coach at the Olneyvllle the worse . .. or that figures really Len Yanku has done pre sentence ' Boys' Club and In charge of youth change over the years or the ages. work for seven years t without activities attheJewlsh Community I believe human nature ls running Into as many Jewish cases. Center. He Is a past president of relatively stable. Caln slew Abel : Mr. Yanku, who finished second the New England lntercolleglate this sort of thing was uncommon In New England wrestling In his and Rhode Island Interscholastic then and is uncommon now.'• . competitive days, was formerly wrestling associations . The rate of Jewish crime Is low . There ere far fewer adult juvenile offenders among Jews .{/· 1),, 0 u FRESHLY SMOKED R Q u M WHITEFISH lb. 8 9 ~ { A NO SPORT FOR THE WEARY - Alan Yanku, 0 carrying John Short on · his shoulders, Is watched l by Len Yanku, wrestllng coa-ch at Y. s I J T T HEINZ KOSHER - y ••'• . t \ , BEANS GJ::s_ 21 ( F ~ \~ 0 \ ) ~ ' R MEAT DEPT. OUR FRESH MEAT DEPARTMENT IS CLOSED AT NOON ON FRIDAY AND ALL DAY .SATURDAY KOSHER HEAVY STEER AT COAST GUARD ACADEMY TOURNAMENT -'- Len Yanku's three sons, from left, Bobby, Alan and Steve, all won medals at the Coast Guard Academy Tournament for-youngsters In 1964. Bobby and Steve won third places and . Alan a ftrst In their classes. Mr. Yanku Is at right. n,e- cadet In center was their wrestling captain at the tournament,
<<