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Court o·ismisses Complaint· Brought By Boston Butche·rs BOSTON, MASS. - The Mass­ chase meat from kosher retail achusetts Supreme Court dismiss­ meat stores supervised by the ed a bill of complaint brought by Vaad Harabonlm" and solicited THE ONLY ENGLISH -JEW/SH WEEKLY IN R. I. AND SOUTHEAST MASS. the United Kosher Butchers Asso­ various member stores to end ciation against the Associated their r elationships with United and VOL. L, NO, 6 FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 15c PER COPY 16 PAGES Synagogues of Massachusetts accept the rabbinical supervision alleging "restraint of trade, eli­ of the Vaad. mination of a free market and the In a seven-page decision. Plan Services denying of free competition," • the Supreme Court declared thereby upholding a lower court that "In essence the plaintiff Is decree In favor of the defendant asking that the Associated Synago­ For Sabbath, and ending a five-year legal dis­ gues and Its allied groups be com­ pute. pelled to acceptUnlted's guarantee Passover At stake In the civil sul t was that products prepared under Its Services for Sabbath and Pass­ the objective of the Associated auspices are authentically kosher. over are listed for temples and Synagogues, some 60 Orthodox, This we decline to do. synagogues In Rhode Island today Conservative, and Reform Congre­ gations In this area, to centralize "Aside from the constitutional through Tuesday, when the Mem­ freedoms Involved, this court Is orial Service and reading of the the supervision of dietary laws In this state. not qualified to decide and there­ Song of Songs will mark tlK! end fore must refuse to consider an of the eight-day festival of Pesach. The bill filed by the Butchers Association, Including most of the Issue which Is exclusively one of CONGREGATION B'NAJ ISRAEL kosher retail meat stores In Great­ religious practice and conscience The morning mlnyan at Con­ er Boston, averred that since 1930 . . . Such a course by the courts gregation B'nal Israel, Woonsock­ It has been engaged In the certi­ would In the end deprive the de­ et, will meet ar 7 o'clock on the fication and supervision of Its nominations themselves of Inter­ Intermediate days of Passover, member stores with respect to pretations of their own body of today through April JO, and there kosher meats and poultry and that church policy and would establish will be a sunset service tonight for the past seven years "its acti­ the courts as the final arbiter at 6 o'clock. The late service, vities have been conducted under In every religious controversy. at 8 P.M. today, will be conduct­ the direction of Rabbi Mordecai The evils attendant upon such a ed by Rabbi Pesach Krauss and Savitsky through whose efforts and practice have been thought far to Mrs. Stuart Ellen and Mrs. Murry Wlnlcleman Cantor Phlllp Macktaz. Rabbi In accordance with whose Inter­ outweigh the Incidental advantage Krauss will preach on "Haggadah pretations United has enforced that might flow from Its adoption. IN MEMORY OF SHARON Highlights." Services will be held strict compliance with the tenets "Nor will the charge of re­ at 6 P .M. on Sunday, and on Mon­ of the Orthodox Jewish faith." straint of trade renderthls dispute day at 9 A.M . and at JO A.M. for The complaint charged that a proper subJectfor Judicial deter­ Two Women· Start Annual Affair the Junior congregation. The early "since August 15, 1960, the Asso­ mination. Foods labeled kosher service on Tuesday, April 12, will ciated Synagogues has refused to have a deeply religious signi­ To Aid Cancer Society's Work begin at 7 A.M., the morning accept the rabbinical certification ficance to the orthodox Jewish service at 9 A.M., the Junior con­ of Rabbi Savitsky and has re­ community. By CELIA ZUCKERBERG not only brings agony to those close gregation service at JO A.M. and quired that kosher caterers pur- "And, since the requirements "I conceived the Idea because to him, but sends a shiver of hor­ the Ylzkor (memorial) service at ror (and fear, too) through the of kashruth _are prescribed by of a Ilttle girl named Sharon 0. 10:30 A,M, G er man Ads Plague Jewish law, the preparation of Ellen, who was my best friend's heart of anvone heartns,; of It. The death of a 30 month old CONGREGATION Israeli Radio Stations kosher foods has traditionally been 2-1/2 year old daughter. Sharon, under the' excluslve control of the I ). a twin sister of Susan, had can­ . child, who has spent half her life LENAS HAZEDEK suffering from neuroblastoma Gabbai Charles Gordon will be JERUSALEM - The dlstasre rabbis. Thus, such foods are by cer for one-half of her ·young life, In an Israeli's voice when she read their very nature subjected to some since (she was) 18 months old. (cancer of the stomach) Is par­ In charge of services at Congre­ gation Lenas Hazedek. Services a radio announcement for Volks­ restraints. Indeed, as was stated Standing by and watching this ticularly horrible to contemplate. will be held on Sunday at 6 P .M., wagen was so strong that the VW by a court: "In the very dreadful disease Is a most dis­ Mrs. Murry Wlnlcleman of Sprague Avenue In Warwick felt on Monday at 9 A.M. and 6 P.M. , agent telephoned to complain. It nature of things, kashruth must be turbing and emotional experience. and on Tuesday at 9 A.M. with was the first advertisement for a monopoly In the hands of those I felt I had to do something .•• particularly bacDy when she saw the daughter of her friend, and Ylzkor services at 10:30 A.M. any German product to be used on best qualified to administer It. "Neighbors and friends, and neighbor, Mrs. Stuart Ellen, dying the program. By definition and tradition those strangers I might add, were won­ of this disease. She wanted to do CONGREGATION Later, Miss Yael Ben-Yehuda persons are the rabbis and their derful," something. MISHKON TFJLOH requested exemption from having decree is final .'" Any person's death from cancer (Continued on Page 15) Shacharls services at Congre­ to read any advertisements for gation Mlshkon Tflloh for the In­ German products. The other an­ Speaking as chairman of the termediate days of Passover, to­ nouncers are unanimous in de­ Kashruth Commission of the Asso­ day through April JO, will be held claring that no announcer should ciated Synagogues, following the Coed Sandy Tilles Cruises at 6:30 A.M. Ylzkor services will be compelled to read advertise­ Supreme Court ruling, David Gopen be held on Tuesday, the eighth ments which offend against his disclosed that It will continue to day of the holiday. Rabbi Emanuel or her conscience. be the policy of the Commission to Caribbean On Winter Job Lazar will conduct services. When the Israel! flower ex­ recognize a qualified hechsher By LOIS A1WOOO Bent Brigham Hospital In Boston porters' organization complained (rabbinic endorsement) on any pro­ She finished the ship's laundry as a messenger - escort. The CONGREGATION that Achdut Avoda kibbutzim were duct even though not emanating late on Saturday. On Sundaymorn­ weather was cold and miserable, SHAARE ZEOEK refusing to supply them with flow­ from its own precincts. But It lng she headed home to Pawtucket, so when she heard of a Job open­ Mlncha-Maarlv services at ers for sale to West Germany, will Insist on the right to make and left there on Tuesday, March Ing as a hostess on a chartered Congregation Shaare Zedek will be they reminded the kibbutz that It its own Inspection and establish 29, to return to Antioch College. boat, Sandy did some rapid check­ held at 6:30 P .M. on Sunday and used German farm equipment and If the firm meets the standards The Ohio Institution has an un­ Ing and headed for the warm seas. Monday, and Shacharls services that many members drive Volks­ of Kashruth as required by the usual work-and-study arrange­ Cerlgo, a 12-metre yacht built at 9 A,M, on Monday and Tues­ wagen cars; the reply was: "Yes, Vaad Harabonlm, the supervising ment, which made possible Sandra In 1927, was her home for a week, day, Musaf services on Monday are but flowers are different." Is­ Kashruth authority of the Asso­ Tilles' three-month midwinter but they · needed a girl who spoke scheduled for J0:30 A,M, On Tues­ rael expects to export about L97,- ciated Synagogues. cruise on a luxury yacht In the French so Sandy swapped wl th a day there will be a sermon at 000 worth of flowers to Germany Caribbean. French girl. There was a lot of 10:15 A.M., andYlzkor (memorial) this year. The Kashruth Commission of A second-year student at An­ changing of personnel at this time, services at 10:45 A.M. Last month West Germany's the Associated Synagogues, he em­ tioch, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. she said, with all the boa ts In biggest radio and TV network, phasized, offers this service com­ port. She learned to do house- ARO, which serves twelve sta­ pletely free of charge to the butch­ Norman 0. Tllles of Capwell Ave­ CONGREGATION nue had been working at the Peter (Continued on Page 8) tions, opened a regional bureau er, caterer, or consumer strictly SONS OF ABRAHAM as a public service and solely l11 Congregation Sons of Abraham In Tel Aviv to cover Iran, Tur­ THE GALDWYENA, on which Sandra T!lles cruised the Caribbean this key, Greece and Cyprus, as well the Interest of maintaining the will hold Mlncha-Maarlv services high standards of Kashruth. winter, Is white against a wine-dark sea and sapphire sky. The yacht at 6:30 P.M. on Sunday and Mon­ as Israel. Is shown here with all sails set, though they did not generally use the day, Shacharls services will be topsails. conducted _at 9 A.M. and Musaf, at 10:30 A.M., on Monday. On Gebiner To Speak At 65th Tuesday Shacharls services will begin at 9 A.M. Rabbi Abraham Workmen's Circle Anniversary Chill will preach a sermon at 10:15 Members and friends of the member of the Executive Com­ A.M., and the memorial services Rhode Island District of the Work­ Il)ittee of the World Jewish Cul­ will be held at 10:45 A.M. men's Circle will celebrate the ture Congress, and a national vice­ .(Continued ~n Page 5) 65th annlv~r sary of the Jewish chairman of the Jewish Labor labor fraternal organization on Committee. Hassidic Synagogue Sunday, April 17, at 8:00 P.M. at Alex Lassow of New Bedford, the Crown Hotel. president of the Workmen's Circle Destroyed By Fire Camp Association, and Jacob Pav­ NEW SQUARE, N,Y, - Fire­ Jacob 8. Rothenberg.chairman I ow of Providence, a member of men estimated losses of $350,000 of the Providence District Com­ the organization's National Board In a fire which destroyed Zemach mittee, Workmen's Circle, and re­ of Directors, will speak briefly. David Synagogue recently. The gional vice-chairman of the Jewish The public is Invited to attend. Hassldlc synagogue was under­ Labor Committee, will preside. The Workmen's Circle, a Jew­ going modeling and refinishing. Rachel Rellls will present a pro­ ish mutual self-help organization, The cause of the fire Is unknown. gram of Yiddish and Israeli songs . was founded at the turn of the Rabbi David Goldstein, re­ The featured speaker will be century to aid Immigrants. It ha s ligious leader of the synagogue, Benjamin A. Geblner of New York, provided cooperative health and said many Torah scrolls were lost. executive secretary of the Work­ social services and developed a He said services would be held men's Circle, a dally radio news nationwide chain of camps and for the time 1>elng In the- viii age commentator, a director of the cultural and educational lnstltu- school. Yiddish Scientific Institute, a tions .

_, , I 2 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 r~ I' ~, ' A subscription to the Herald Is CONCERT BROADCAST a good gift for the person who has The March 27 concert of the· I everything else. Call 724-0200, Jewish Choral Society, sponsored . t by the J ewlsh Music Council, wlll be broadcast over Station WCRQ­ BRIDGE DRESSMAKING FM on Sunday, April 24, at 1 :OS IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIINIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIUIIINIIIIIIIII P.M. BY By Robert E. Starr A subscription to the Herald Is FRANCINE a good gift for the person who hlis Today's hand Is different In collect her Ace and Queen of everything else. Call 724-0200, that the heroine of this piece re­ Hearts, In all she took 3 Diamonds, For Appointment ceived her fine result by never 2 Hearts and the two Black Aces - From Congratulations opening her mouth except to.say, for a I trick set. On looking at Call Saturdays ·"Pass," despite having 21 high the result at the end she found } ... To I Love You card points, Believe It or not, that everyone else her way had Between 12 ~nd 2 there are times one can be too played the hand In 2 No Trump strong to bid. and gone down. North Moral: A small profit Is better 828-0443 • 10, 8, 6, 3 than any loss especially when the ¥ 9, 6, 5, 4 bidding points to this as almost ♦ 9, 7, 3 A Happy Passover a certainty. Learn when to pass; • 6,4 It will pay .,ott_. ___ OUR SINCERE S. L. INTERIORS West East BEST WISHES FOR Complete Interiors • K , Q ,J, 5 • 7,2 Duplicate Tournament Institutional Residential ¥ J , 10 ¥ K , 7,3,2 8 P.M. Eftl'7 Salida:, THE PASSOVER Gift Accessories ENGAGED - Dr. and Mrs. Na­ ♦ 10, 4, 2 ♦ K, 6, 5 Wayland Manor • K,Q,J,3 • 10, 8, 5, 2 SEASON 753 Oaklawn Ave., Cranston than Levitt of Lafayette Street, 942-6688 Pawtucket, announce the engage­ South ment of their daughter, Ellen Jean, • A,9,4 ¥ A, Q,8 TO ALL OUR FRIENDS to Dr. Lawrence C. Grebsteln, son ♦ A,Q,J,8 AND CUSTOMERS of Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund Greb­ • A,9, 7 PASSOVER GREETINGS stein of Providence. Miss Levitt, a graduate of Cl as­ North - South , Mrs. JacobOrc­ Eddie Eisenberg and s Ical High School and Sm! th Col­ hoff and Mrs. Charles Manekof­ 9-Carpenters Rufful's lege (class of 1965), spent her Jun­ sky of Providence, were vul­ Larry Albiniano. ior year at the lnstltut des Hautes nerable. West was dealer with ADDITIONS, alNr•tlons, resldentl1I, industrial building. Garages. Bath­ Etudes lnternationales at the Un!­ this bidding: rooms, cement work, dormers, MATHEWSON Restaurant versl ty of Geneva. She Is presently N E s w store fronts. Free estlmates. 9"2- with the Office of Economic Op­ IC 104-4, 942-1045. 6-3 Toggery 208 Wayland Avenue portunity In . Dr. p IH p IS 22-Household Goods For Sale Grebsteln, a graduate of Brown p INT End Providence Shop, Co. University, received his M.A. and When South looked at her 21 THREE-PIECE 11 v I n t room set, st 0 127 Mathewson St., Prov. GA 1-2712 Ph. D. at the University of Ken­ points she anticipated big things ~~~l~~lld :;:!ho1':ri: ~::i!s. tr~: tucky. He Is an assistant profes­ for her side but by the time It sonable. 739--5731. ufn sor In psychology at the Univer­ was her turn to bid she had changed 25-Lawns - Landscaping sity of Rhode Island. her mind. At first, the vulner­ A June wedding Is planned. PASSOVER GREETINGS FROM ability being as It was, she felt EIieen McClure Photo that her opponent sitting West had COMPLETE LANDSCAPE made a psychic bid. When East •nd IMPERIAL FUR SHOP responded I Heart she decided to GARDENING SERVICE bide her time as that change of - 20 Years Ex~rlence 236 Westminster Street 421-4478 suit bid was absolutely forcing, u,.1,n I West had to bid again unless he 4-15 ll really had psyched. South knew that should West pass the force, North 38a-Rooms For Rent BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER FIRST CHILD IS BORN would rise to the occasion and re­ OFF lllllOAD. Room In private home. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Barasch open the bidding. But West rebid Businessman o r businesswoman. from of 165 Harvard Street, Cranston, 1 Spade confirming a true opening Kitchen privUeges. Near busllne. announce the birth of their first and now East showed his minimum ~1-4518. 4-22 child, a daughter, Rhonda JIii, on by rebidding I No Trump. March 20. Mrs. Barasch Is the The bidding now returned to former Joan Dell Sokolow. Matern­ South who had made some rapid al grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. calculations. If West had 13 points Albert Sokolow, and great- grand­ and East 6, their minimums, this ( ( mother, Mrs. Ida Sherman, all of added to I 9 points pl us her own ., Cranston. Paternal grandparents 21 came to 40 leaving poor North WILLIAM ROSS "Put your head in Emile's hands" are Mr. and Mrs. Bernard wl th a maximum of zero. With that Funeral services for William Barasch, also of Cranston. knowledge South could see no fu­ Ross , 78, of 71 Warrington Street, 121 Medway Street 331-8914 ture. Furthermore, there was no who died Saturday, were held Mon­ ANNOUNCE DAUGHTER'S BIRTH assurance she could even set the day at the Max Sugarman Me­ Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Levine of contract and anyhow, should she morial Chapel. Burial was In Lin­ 4 Drake Road, Warwick, announce double for penalties, her parmer coln Park Cemetery. He w,as the the birth of their second child woul d not be strong enough to leave husband of Anna (!(luger) Ross. and first daughter, Faith Lisa, on It In and whatever s he bid would Born In Austria on Oct. 12, March 28. Mrs. Levine Is the probably not make. So she did the 1887, he was the son of the late former Ml ss Herma I. Garr of wise thing and passed. Mr. and Mrs. Kohs Ross. He was Providence. Paternal grandmother South led the Diamond Queen associated with the John Hancock Is Mrs. Morris Levine of Provi­ which was allowed to hold, North Life Insurance Company for 27 - dence. pl aylng the 7, her second hlgh7 years, and was a member of the est. This discard, showing the 9, Providence Fraternal Associa tion assured South that It was safe to and the Hebrew Free Loan As­ To Honor Hall Of Brown continue the su1 t so next came sociation. the Ace and Jack, won by East's He Is survived by his wife; At Center Sports Night King, all following. two sons, Kenneth Ross of Eau Bob Hall of Brown University East now went after Clubs, Claire, Wis., and Leonard Ross wlll receive the H. Berrlck White leading his 10. South took the sec­ of Los Angeles, Calif., and three ond one, cashed her 13th Diamond grandchildren. Memorial Award as Rhode Island . An­ on which East discarded a Spade . . . Athlete of the Year at the nual Award Night of the Jewish (he was reluctant to part with a MRS. FREDERICK PINKNEY Community Center on Wednesday, Heart) and North, a Heart. South Funeral services for Mrs. Jan­ April 20, at 7:30 P.M. The all­ now returned a Club won In Dum­ et S. Pinkney, 60, of 16 7 Evergreen Ivy, all-New England quarterback my. The rest of the Clubs were Street, who died March 26, were ranked eighth In the nation In pass­ cashed, South discarding a Heart held the following day at Temple ing, and tenth In total offense. He on the last, and now came the Emanu-EI. Burial was In Sharon Is the third athlete to receive the Spade King. South won this, re­ Memorial Park, Sharon, Mass. White Award, which will be pre­ turned a Spade and just waited to . She was the wife of Frederick sented by John McLaughry, Brown AT SERVICES RENDERED Pinkney. football coach. Center players will Mrs. Martha Lindquist has Mrs. Pinkney was born In Rus­ also receive awards. Joined the staff of Services sia and had been a resident of Providence since 1937. She was a CENTER ANNUAL MEETING Rendered, Inc. , Providence-based personnel consulting firm. Shewlll past president of the Jewish Home The 41st aMual meeting of for the Aged Women's Associa­ the Jewish Community Center will head the newly-created SRI GIRLS division, specializing In temporary tion; a member of Temple Emanu­ ~or ~uclt a little tim~! be held on Sunday, June S, Sidney office help. ____ EI and lts Sisterhood, Hadassah., Meyer, president, has announced. Miriam Hospital Women's As­ Members of the nomlna ting com­ HEMOPHILIA DRIVE Today young Bill likes to tinker but tomorrow sociation, Brandeis Women's Org­ mittee are Harlan Espo, chairman; A goal of $40,000 has been anize ti on and Providence Chapter, he will be deciding on his career. Whatever David Meyers, Peter Bardach, set for the 1966 March of the Life profession or vocation he may settk on, there OES. Mrs. Sidney Meyer, Samuel Rosen, Brigade of the Rhode Island Chap­ Besides her husband, she Is wi ll be no financial problem. A life insurance Mrs. Charles Samdperll, Edward ter of The National Hemophilia survived by two brothers, Louis program with Sun Life not only guarantees the Gershman, Joseph Chernick and M. 'Foundation, Mrs. Harry G. Masi, and Max Millen, both of Provi­ funds for Bilrs education but provides an income Louis Abedon. president, announced this week. dence; three sisters, Mrs. Edward for the whole family if Dad should die pre­ The drive will finance a program H. Lavine and Mrs. Maurice Bel­ maturely. INTER-CENTER DANCE of services for hemophilia victims gard, both of Providence, and Miss The new New England Inter­ In the state. _Edith Millen of Miami Beach, Fla. I'm as.wciated ,,.;,1, S11,i Life of Center Youth Council will hold a Cw; m/a , th e Company u·itl, the policy dance on Saturday, April 16, In 1/wt's ril(ht f or you and your family. Brockton, Mass., for teenagers Max Sugarman Funeral Home Wh y not call .m e IOilay ? from Brockton, Fitchburg, Haver- 111, Lawrence, Lynn, Worcester, " THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR" Manchester, New Bedford and ELLIOT F. SLACK Providence. The bus will leave MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION 1018 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. the Jewish Community Center In Providence at 7 P .M. and return DE 1-8094 458 Hope Street DE 1-8636 DE 1-2422 at 12 P.M.; no one traveling by private car wlll be' admitted, Bus FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM OUT-OF-STATE SUN LtFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA seats may be obtained from Char­ CALL COLLECT lotte Goldenberg at the Cent'er, THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 3 Herald ads get good results! THIRTY YEARS AGO Philharmonic Symphony If Its new Cantor Perlman To Chair NEW YORK - The Non-Sec- musical director, Wilhelm Furt- _.~trinity tarlan Anti-Nazi League announced wangler, refused to denounce his .. .,, ~uare Cantors Assembly Convention It would boycott the New York allegiance to the Hitler regime . Cantor Ivan E. Perlman of The convention will offer work­ playliouse Temple Emanu-EI has been ap­ shops, seminars and concerts by FABULOUS 3,DAY CHANGE OF PACE HOLIDAY pointed a delegate and is co­ artists of International fame. The AT chairman of the 19th annual con­ Assembly seeks to ralse the stand­ "The Playboy of the BEAUTIFUL TREASURE ISLAND World" vention of the Cantors Assembly ards of synagogue music, Jo pre­ of America, to be held May I serve the best of the traditional Dirtctly on the ShorH of Webster Lah A comedy by through 5 at the Concord Hotel, music and to publish new music ANY 3 DAYS - 2 NIGHTS J. M. Synge Kiamesha, N. Y. The national org­ for services, to stimulate research I P•rfs: Tue1 .• Sat. 8:30 P.M . anization of cantors, serving con­ and to s upport the education of DINING ON THE LAKE 52450 Mats. Sot. 2:30 P.M. gregations affiliated with the future cantors at the Cantors In­ INCLUDES: ~, JM". - Dbl. 0cc. Phone For Reurvation,, 351-4242 United Synagogue of America, has stitute of the Jewish Theological * h1xurious Accommocfatio"• * Dancing Broad ond lridghom Sts., Prov. more than 400 members. Seminary of America. * 2 Complete lrealcfasts * Exercis• Room• * 2 Goc.mnet Dinnen * Golf, Hor.. bock Ridi"g I Cantor Perlman will be chair­ * Giont Indoor Heat.ct Pool lowli"g N.arby .' ' man of the opening convention * Sou"° lath, aoute 193, Webster, Moss. C ' se ssions. Rabbi Ell A. Bohnen of ! TREASURE ISLAND or call 617-943-7330 Temple Emanu-EJ will be the fea­ tured speaker, representing the ORGANIZATION Rabbinical Assembly of America, of which he Is president-elect. NEWS at Amesbury, Mass. Father-Son Banquet COMPLETE LANDSCAPE and GARDENING Slated For Troop 20 Boys 6-14 SERVICE Troop 20 of Temple Emanu­ eelebritr, revues EI will hold a Fathers and Sons OVERNIGHT CAMPING at its best. JUNIOR LOOGE ideal for the young 20 Years Experience Banquet on Monday , April 18, at mag•llke•t •lte eful, camper. All land and water SPORTS, crafts, science, MOUNTAIN CLIMBING, 6:1 5 P.M. at the temple. Howard «Jtarle9..,_ lounge" 861 -7989 riflery, tennis, golf, deep sea fish ing trips. BROCHURE on request. Bromberg will become an Eagle tltree orefuatr- Scout, and Harold Espo will re­ Call after 6 P.M . STewart 1-2 S43 or write T EE N - AGE "GO-GO" Planning For ceive the Ner Tamld award. The 15 Harrison Avenue, North Easton, Mass. DISCOTHEQUE LOUNGE troop will make a presentation to ... A Wedding 4 WEEKS $315.00 8 WEEKS $585.00 the Men's Chili "In appreciation ... A Bar Mitzvah of 38 years of continuous sup­ port." EDGEWOOD F~~~:R Guests at the banquet will be Rabbis Ell A. Bohnen and Joel H. Zalman; Cantor Ivan E. Perl­ man; Max Alperin, temple presi­ ?,,ucL ~~ dent; Joseph G. Fis hbein, Men's Club president; Commissioners Magnolia Manor Abbott Lieberman and Manfred MAGNOLIA MASS Well; Bernie Kelly and Chief Park­ inson, Scout officials, and Byron New England's A. Abedon, Institutional represen­ tative. Dr. Nor man Kahn Is scout­ Favorite master of Troop 20. The meal Year 'Round will be prepared by Lou Morse, Beanie Feldman, Jack Strasmlch, Resort Abe Lippman and other Boy Scout Phone us on' our fathers. Direct Boston Line : Troop 20 will participate In the AT 9-1333 "Wonderful World of Scouting Show" at the Cranston Armory on April 22-24, with a display on CAMPS: WEKEELA - NAIAD Civil Defense. FOR BOYS AND GIRLS 7-14 SATURDAY EVENING GALA FEW C.I.T . PLACES - AGES 15--17 Temple Beth Am, Warwick, will Complete program includes golf, riding, sailing, trips, wat•rO:iing, sponsor a Saturday Evening Gala all sports ond cultural octivitiH. 21st S.a,on. Writ• for brochur•. M,. and Mn. JoH o .. B. Ween• Dr . Rob•rt I. Krasner of dance, drama and song on April 33 Blake St ., Newto;,, Man. (Call Newton, Moss. 969-81 10) Providence College 16 at 8:30 P.M. In the social hall. Mrs. Nathan Rosen, Mrs. Sidney Factor, Mrs. A. Louis Rosenstein and Mrs. Loui s B. Rubins tein will 11 MIAMI BEACH present The World of Sholom Pi, I, CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT Aleichem ," a presentation of Jew­ LOW SUMMER RATES EFFECTIVE APRIL 25 ta MID-DEC. ish folklore In song and story. Tuesday, April 19, 1966 at 8:30 P.M. The Brown Festival Dancers will give a program of International FAMOUS HOTELS The KROLL QUART ET folk dances, and there will be an 7 nights including 3 meals, transfers, plus visits to 3 night Mo~art: Quartet in E flat major art exhibit. A coffee hour will fol­ clubs with entertainment and cocktail at each \\"3lt-er Pi!.ton : Quartet No. 5 low the program, which ls open to Dvo rak: Quartet In F mo,Jor ("&lnerltan") the public. Chairmen are Mrs. CASABLANCA CROWN Benjamin Furman and Mrs. Sid­ SHERRY FRONTENAC ney Goldstein. $80.50* VERSAILLES R . I. School of Design Auditorium ----- Single tickets; $2.50, $2.25, $ 1.75, (student. $ 1.25) TO HOLD RUMMAGE SALE CARILLON The Sisterhood of Temple DEAUVILLE available at Emanu- El will hold a rummage $94.50** Brown University, Box 1903 Avery Piano Co. • Effective to June 30. $1 more daily July and August and November 1 sale on Friday, April 15, and to December 17. Providence, R. I. 02912 256 Wtybosset Street Monday, April 18, at 245 Prairie .., 2 meals daily. Avenue, Providence. Committee members are Mrs. David Dress­ ler, chairman, and Mesdames Irv­ Free and Immediate Confirmations Ing Abrams, Sidney Fisch, Leo Jacobson, Albert Kumlns and Har­ for ALL Miami Hotels and Motels vey Logow!tz. Proceeds of the sale will be used for youth activities PUERTO RICO LOW SUMMER RATES at the temple. ------EFFECTIVE MAY 1 HOME FOR AGED DRIVE 1SR A EL - EUROPE JET R:~D $ 5 3 S REPLACE YOUR OLD, INEFFICIENT BOILER Harold Leavitt, a vice-presi­ dent of the Board of Trustees and NEW LOW JET FARES (GAS or OIL) WITH A NEW NAME BRAND chairman of the membership com­ EUROPE EFFECTIVE APRIL 1 mittee, and MIiton Dublnsky,cam­ CAST IRON BOILER. palgn chairman, wlll head the BOOK YOUR SUMMER VACATION RESORTS OR WEEKEND NOW! INCLUDING: New Oil Burner, All New membership drive for the Jewish Home for the Aged, to be held on FREE AND IMMEDIATE CONFIRMATIONS Controls and Tankless Heater for Sunday, April 10. They have re­ quested that fain!lles remain home 13 nights plus jet. Includes las Domestic Hot Water! on 1 'H" Day, to wet come the vol tm­ teers who will call on homes all HAWAII Vegas and San Francisco over the city. Those not reached $535 (Plus Tax) on Sunday are asked to telephone FABULOUS BARGAIN INSTALLED-120,000 B.T.U. 1 the Home, 351-4750, and a mem­ Includes almost all meals $669* bership pledge card will be malled • PLUS $11.40 TAX • Eliminate High Fuel Bills to them. fionegmoon :},.ip:1 Our S,,ecia/tg Call Anglime Zelda ICouffman !,.,.,tu 111,,!CRANSTON TRAVEL SERVICE ~ 801 Park Avenue, Cranston -,~"'Vfl.~~ Eve■ • By Appt. ST 1-4977

-· 4 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 COUNTRY FAIR PLANNED An Old Fashioned Country Fair, Roger Williams Chapter sponsored by the East Avenue PTA, wlll be held on Saturday, May 7, To Honor 40 Members NOW SHOWING from 1 to 9 P.M. at the Oak lilll The Roger WIiiiams Chapter, Tennis Club, Pawtucket. Mrs. Sey­ DOWNSTAIRS SCREEN B'nal ·B'r!th Women, wlll com­ mour Sherman and Mrs. Jacob bine Its annual Installation meet­ "SINDERELLA AND THE Komros are chairmen of the fair, Ing with a gala program on Mon­ GOLDEN BRA" which wlll Include horse and buggy day, April 18, In the Garden Room Plus - "PARTY GIRLS" rides, go-karts, grab bags, games by Leanard Lyons of the Sheraton-BIitmore Hotel. for children, a cake sale, books, The chapter will honor more than AT STUDIO CINEMA plants , jewelry, handmade Items, It happened In the White House If the play .Is not about homo­ 40 25 UPSTAIRS SCREEN women. members for con­ a clown and refreshments. at the LBJ's reception for Chief sexuals.'' secutive years, with a special na­ "The Moment Justice Earl Warren. Some of the Channel 13 succeeded In taping tional award. Of Truth" A subscription to the Herald Is lawyers among the guests gathered a prized. TV show with Andrei a good gift. · Miss Gertrude 8. Tarnapol Is around Justice WIiiiam Brennan - Voznesensky, the Soviet poet, and chairman of the evening and com­ who wrote the ma jorl ry opinion In two Pulitzer Prize poets, Robert mittee members are Mesdames GA 1-1229 MRS. LEO GLEKLEN GA 1-1229 the obscenity cases ... Justice Lowell and Stanley Kunitz .. . Samuel Chase, Joseph Cohen, Har­ Brennan told them: 11We mustface Mrs. Kunltz, whose paintings are OF ry Davis, Samuel Eisenberg, Sid­ the fact that there Is such a thing signed " Elise Asher," wlll have ney Factor, Benjamin Gruber, Leo as hard-core pornography." her exhibit April 19 at The Con­ L. Jacques, A. Louis Rosenstein, PETTERSON TRAVEL INC. At the Whl te House dinner for temporaries . . . Andy Warhol Joseph J. Seefer and Leonard 76 Dorrance Street Providence 3, Rhode Island Prime Minister Gandhi, the wife will design the movie theater on Sholes, and Abraham Israel, ex of the Indian Ambassador - Mrs. the second Ooor of the new night­ officio. Suggests B. K. Nehru - wore a coat club, "Cheetah." The avant garde Rabbi Nathan N. Rosen wlll In­ STUDENT SUMMER TRIPS - All inclusin made by Adele Simpson from a movies shown there wlll have free stall Mrs. Israel for her second JS.day tour ocro11 U. S., into Mexico and end trip with a c:ruiN to No11ov f~ cashmere coat once owned by Am­ admission. term as president, and wlll also only $129. bassador Nehru's grandfather ... JO.day tour of U. S. by tfoin betwNn citiH, into Mexico fo, $699. David Dubinsky, who just re­ Install the other officers. Mrs. 21 doy1, Pori1, Spain and Portu9al - $695. MGM Is bidding for Dirk Bogarde tired as head of the ILGWU, left Sidney Factor wlll present an orig­ l5 doy1, Continental Tour - s.-. to co-star with Natalie Wood In the uni on in powerful financial 21 4oy1, Rome, lanMI, Nice and Pari1 - $'95. inal musical program. Members 49 day,, Grand Tour of Europe - S 1,070. "Penelope'" . . . The Pulitzer condition. Dubinsky once Invited and their friends are lnvl ted to 6' day,, Euro,- - $1,350. Prize staff requested a photo of the late British Labor Parry lead­ a ttend. __,_ J William Alfred, author of "Hogan's er, Hugh Gal tskell and his wife LAW ON RETARDATION Goat." If It' s chosen it will be to address a rally In N.Y. The NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS An ins titute on 11What's Wrong I Including: Best Picture - Best Director - Best Screenplay the first off Broadway play to win Gaitskells new economyclass,ex­ with Rhode Island Laws on Mental the Pull tzer. plalning, "Not until we were in the Retardation?" will be held at the I De si Arnaz once met Virginia plane did we read your union's Butler Heal th Center on Saturday, Hi! I, the mobsters' girl friend who financial statement - showing as­ May 7, from 8:45 A.M. to 2:15 :~ "ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL died in Salzburg. When Arnaz sets of $236,000,000 ... " P. M. Co- sponsored by the Office worked as the bandleader at La­ Sen. Bill Benton dedicated the of Mental Retardation, R.I. De­ • MOVIES EVER Conga, a cellar club, Miss HIii i.?66 Encyclopedia Britannica Book partment of Health, and the Br·own wa s anxious to meet him. She of The Year to Adlai Stevenson, University Chil d Health an

I CANT GO to non-member ,o MOST OF -rHE PLACES I USED rt) Senior Citizens GO. for s4_45 per month! THE WEEK'S LETTER: "I Your parents probably knew what don't know how to begin this, you were doing and the company but I need some advice. I am in you were keeping at all times. If you qualify for Medicare Parts A and B, you can protect yourself against the 8th grade. I am known as the You certainly did not walk the most of the hospital-medical expenses not covered by the new Federal Pro­ most outstanding girl in the class­ streets at that age. And, you should not walk the streets gram. Blue Cross-Physicians Service can. give you this protection for only room. My parents won't let me go at to the skating rink. Lots of the night now, or, for that matter, $4.45 per month. But, you must act now. Offer expires April 16. kids go there; but I have not even after you become an adult. been permitted to go since the You are now at an age where (Note: Recipients under State Medical Care Plans (MAA & OAAJ probably do first time. Could it be because your parents must be even more concerned about where you go, not n eed this new plan. Consult your Social Worker, or Blue Cross, for advice.) some boys had a fight there? My parents will not permit me what you do, and the friends to walk '.he streets with other you choose. A teenager can get See your n eighborhood pharmacist. Or, call or write for information and an girls. We usually walk some eve­ into trouble merely by being at application. nings wh• ·n we don't have any. the wrong place at the wrong thing els, to do. When I was time. eleven ar d twelve years old, I Every girl wants to be popular went just about anywhere I with boys. But, the wise girl BLUE CROSS pleased. But, now my parents concerns herself with doing the FOR HOSPITAL BILLS have tightened up on me. I can't type of things NOW and being go to mo~t of the places I used the type of person NOW that PHYSICIANS SERVICE to go. Why? I am very popular best prepare for a happy and FOR SURGICAL-MEDICAL BILLS with boys. Is this a good way to successful adult life. +. be with boys?" at your service at: 31 Can~! Slree.t, Providence, R. I. 02901, Telephone: 831 -7300 If you haYe a: te•naq• problem you OUR REPLY: Your freedom want to discuss, or an obser•ation to 1 at eleven and twelve years was A~tna:~s;.c!ERS. C'i,~o&~ ~ SUBURBAN PRESS SERVICE. F!IANll:­ not as great as you remember it. FORT. 11:Y. THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL B, 1966 5 T uesday, the last days of Passover, topic at the service a t 8:30 P .M. Passover Services wlll begin at 9 A.M., and Yizkor today at Temple Sinai. Saturday (memorial) services w!ll be held services w!ll begin at 11:15 A.M., (Continued from Page 1) at 9 A.M. services on Monday wlll on Tue sday. Rabbi Bohnen will the Annual Memorials Dedication the "The Song of Moses." Serv­ preach the Ylzkor sermon. Chil­ Service a t 8:30 P.M. on Sunday, CONGREGATION ices on Tuesday wlll begin at dren of the Religious School may and the, Festival morning and Ylz­ SONS OF JACOB 9 A.M., with the Yizkor sermon at attend the Passover services, but kor service at 10:30 A.M. on Mon­ Mlncha services at Congrega­ 10:15 A. M. , to be followed by the the temple asks that, if possible, day. The Kiddush after the serv­ tion Sons of Jacob wlll begin at Yizkor prayers, and dedication of they accompany an adult. ice tonight w!ll be sponsored by 6 P.M. today, Sunday, Monday and memorial plaques. Dr. and Mrs. Norman Blenenfel d )> Tuesday. Shacharis services wlll TEMPLE SINAI in honor of the Bar Mitzvah of be held at 8 A.M. on Sunday, "Who Was Jesus" will be Rab­ their son, Steven Michael Blenen­ and at 8:30 A.M. on Monday and TEMPLE EMANU-EL bi Jerome S. Gurland' s sermon feld. Tuesday. Maariv s ervices wlll be­ "Minority Groups in Conflict" gin at 6:45 P.M. on Sunday and w!II be Rabbi Joel H. Zaiman's Monday, and at 6:50 P.M. on Tues­ sermon title tonight at 8:1.0 P.M. PLEASE NOTE day. Yizkor services are scheduled services at Temple Emanu-EI. at 10:15 A.M. on Tuesday. Rabbi Eli A. Bohne'n and Cantor Manicurist VIRGINIA KINOIAN Ivan E. Perlman wlll conduc t serv­ formerly of Maynard's Barber Shop, CONGREGATION SONS OF Z ION ices, with the assistance of the has assumed our manicuring duties. AND ANSHEI KOVNO choir directed by Benjamin Pre­ The Rev. M. Drazin wlll con­ mack. Saturday services w!ll be TONY'S BARBER SHOP duct services at Congregation Sons held a t 8 A.M. in the chapel , at of Zion and Anshei Kovno tonight 9:30 A.M. in the synagogue, and at 953 HOPE ST., Comer Eighth St. RABBI HOWARD R, GREENSTEIN ar 6:1 5 o'clock, and tomorrow at 6: 15 P .M. Services on Monday and Appointments •cceptecl M•nicurin9 cl•il·t 8:30 A.M. , 6 P .M. , and 6:40 P.M. uc:ept Saturcleys except Mon. "•ncl Wed. The study group w!ll meet tomor­ TEL. MA 1-0185 Temple Sinai To Hold row at 5 P.M. On Sunday morning, OPEN MONDAYS CLOSID WEDNISDAYS services wlll be held at 8 o' clock. rlenty of HIY ,.,111., Memorials Dedication Passover services w!ll be held at LABOR POOL Rabbi Howard R. Greenstein 6: 15 P.M. on Sunday, Monday and wlll be guest preacher at the sec­ Tuesday, and at 8:30 A.M. on Mon­ ond Annual Memorial Dedication day and Tuesday. Memorial serv­ Service on Sunday, April 10, at ices wlll begin at 10 A.M. on Tues­ DUPLICATE BRIDGE 8:30 P .M. at Temple Sina!. A day. native of Providence , he is rabbi EVERY SUNDAY - 8 P.M. of Temple Beth Shal om, Peabody, CRANSTON J EWISH CENTER Mass. Sabbath services a t the Cran­ AT WAYLAND MANOR SKY ROOM Al I in memoriam gifts received s ton Jewish Center will be held by the congregation since last at 8: 15 P.M. with Rabbi Saul Lee­ ROBERT E. STARR, Director Passover w!ll be formally dedi­ man and Cantor Jack Sm ith of­ cated. Special gifts in memory of ficiating and Mrs. Bernard For Information Call 724-1697 Eva and Harry Mlller and Anna Barasch at the organ. Rabbi Lee­ Hodis w!ll be dedicated, as will man's sermon topic will be "The Temporory labor is our busi• PRIZES FOR WINNERS the Memorial Plaques purchased Liberty Unlimited." The Single neu ... temporary lobor we by the fam!l!es of the late Henry Adult group w!II participate in the guoronfee job matched Cas tal!ne, Morris S. Davidson, H. labor is our specially service. Saturday services w!II be · Men avoiloble doy and David Falk, Benjamin Gertz, Etta held at 8:45 A.M., with Junior nig ht Goldstein, Ph!l!p Goldstein, La­ Congregation services at 10 A.M. All workers remain on our NU? zure Goodman, Charles Green­ payroll. s tein, Olga Greenstein, Robert Ro­ TEMPLE BETH AM We Handle oll insurance, sener, Henry Sil verman and Jacob Guest Rabbi Solomon Agin, rab­ loxes, records. WE'RE READY - R U? Solinger. Laborers bi and director of r eligious educa­ NU CARS - '66 CHEV. CONVERTS lumb.rmen tion of Congregation Temple Sinai, NU METHOD - INCLUDING PARKING (The Corl WarehouMmen Cinnaminson, N.J ., a member of NU - JUST PLAIN the Bureau of Jewish Education, Mat.,KII Handlers Cherry H!II, N.J., and replace­ Factory AsMmblen ment chairman for the Academy of CALL 6 Lessons $ 35.00 CHEAP Jewish Re ligion , w!ll conduct the services at Temple Beth Am, War­ 421-4886 AUTO DRIVING wick, tonight at 8:1 5 o'clock. Hi s SCHOOl . INC. sermon topic w!II be "Tradition." ALTORMAN An Oneg Shabbat w!II follow the ~36 Richmond 1 ,;_ services. J unior Congregation Providence services will begin at 10 A.M. on J'w· lc~~ ~:~~!EI "More the nervous - More the challenge" Saturday, and Sunday morning services, sponsored by theU.S,Y. , at 9 o' clock. Yizkor .services wlll be held at 6:45 A.M. on Tuesday, April 12; there wlll be no late services on Monday.

T EMPLE BETH DAVID Cantor Charles Ross w!II con­ duct services tonight at 6 o' clock at Temple Beth David. Passover services on Sunday , Monday and Tuesday mornings w!ll begin a t PASSOVER FESTIVAL - Dr. 9 o'clock. Passover Maariv serv­ David J oravsky, an associate of ices will begin at 6:15 P.M. Yiz­ the Russian Research Center, Har­ kor services w!II be held at 10: 15 vard University, will speak at the A.M. on Tuesday, and Mincha Passover Festival of Freedom of services at 6 P .M. the Jewish Community Center on Saturday, April 9, at 8:30 P.M. , TEMPLE BETH EL for members and their teenaged Rabbi Herman J . Blumbergw!II children. Dr. Joravsky, formerly preach on "The Rabbi: Profile of a professor at Brown University, A Profe ssion" at the 8:15 P.M. has made three research trips to service at Temple Beth El today. the USSR . Cantor Ivan Perlman of A seventh day Passover evening Fashions in furs change, tool Temple Emanu-El wlll sing at the service wlll be held on Sunday traditional evening, revived last a t 5:45 P.M. , and a Yizkor year by the Center, and Passover Memorial Service at 10 A.M. on Let Harris' fur restyling experts refreshments wlll be served. Monday. restore to fashion your out-moded 17,000 Israelis Take TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL Dr. Harry Goldber g will con­ coat, jacket or stole. Need summer-care Four-Day Spring Walk duct the Sabbath service s tonight TEL AVIV - Over 17 ,000 at 8:10 o'clock at Temple Beth persons arose at dawn 1ast week Israel. Rabbi Jacob Handler's only for your furs? Distinguished and took the annual four- day Is­ sermon topic w!ll be "Elijah's rael route march to Jerusalem - Cup." Services for the last days furs really appreciate the very special a traditional spring physical fit­ of Pa~sover will be held on Sun­ ness program. day and Monday at 6:30 P.M., and attention in Harris' Fur Storage. The march began at Hulda For­ on Monday and Tuesday at 7:15 est near Tel Aviv and along a A.M. and 9 A.M. The Ylzkor serv­ Call GA 1-0198 for a bonded messenger. circular route back to Hulda for ices on Tuesday will be held at the first two days, then continued 10 A.M., and Rabbi Handler will on to Jerusalem, where the city' s preach on the topic, "Remem- residents greeted the participants brance of Things Past." as they finished their hike. The organizers of the trek, the TEMPLE BETH SHOLOM Army's Central Command, pro­ Rabbi Charles M. Rubel will vided mobile synagogues to serve talk on "The Song of Songs" at the hikers for morning and even­ late services tonight at Temple Ing prayers. Other mobile fac!l!­ Beth Sholom at 8:15 o'clock. Rabbi ties included a shoe repair shop, Rubel and Cantor Karl Kritz will soup canteens and first aid sta­ conduct the services. Saturday tions. services will begin at 9 A.M. and In addition to the Israel! groups 6 P .M. Services on Sunday will taking part, several contingents start at 8:30 A.M. The Tails and New England's Largest Exclusive Furrier Teflllin Club and the preconflr~ from abroad, including African 400 WESTMINSTER STREET students, Finnish girls and two mat!on cl ass will meet as us ual. Jone Englishmen, Joined the march. Yorn Tov services that evening ·57 Years of Fine Fur Tradition A group of dip I omats from the w!ll start at 6 o'clock, and Cantor Embassy also fell Kritz will sing the liturgy of Pass- into the- line Nr f,''-"'t•rur .>:.en.. • over abbi,,R,ul,el:.s serrnP.11..top1£ , •------..·· • and they want to do something now when their strength is fall­ ing. The Home must find a solu­ FROM FRIDAY TO FRIDAY tion to this problem. It certainly cannot be content with work the Home did twenty years ago or When It Is Time even ten years ago. THE ONLY ENGLISH JEWISH WEEKLY IN R I AND SOUTHEAST MASS At a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Home someone To Slow Down said jokingly something to the ef­ fect that the President must want By Ber.yl Segal out of his job at this time. To CELIA ZUCKERBERG Manaetnc Editor LOIS ATWOOD ...... Editor There is a time to slow down. And above all is the rule In­ which the President, Mr. Herman That rime comes to all men and scribed on the mind in the heart J. Aisenberg, replied: women. To some it comes at the of every one who has come ln "I have a job to do, and I age of retirement. To some it touch with the Home from I ts in­ Intend to see that It Is done during comes tater. But all must in time ception to this day. That rule is: my presidency.•' say to themselves that the pace ADMIT ACCORDING TO NEED The job 10 which Mr. Alsen­ ~:er1t;:~~~nrs~su~rs w'1Y1 r:~:~1~~1t~:~P 0p~s;~ 11~?' t~~r J~e~fri::!1:~i !r7°~i1~~ must be slackened. AND NOT ACCORDING TO FI­ berg was referring ls Just whatwe the typogr.apP,ical error occurs. Advertisers wtll please notify the management The woman discovers that her NANCIAL STATUS. were talking about. immediately or any error which anay occur. house has too many rooms. Each The Home Is now planning ex­ A new wing must be added to extra room is so much extra work. pansion. In fact, every Home in the Home. FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 And work Is what she is unable every lively community is plan­ A new wing bu! l t on new prln­ to do. Yet she cannot neglect the ning some expansion. There ls cipl es to fit the changing times. The Schema And A Symbolic Seder house. room for Increasing facilities and New facilities for entertalnlng service at every Home, The days and recreation that will meet with Passover, the festival holiday par excellence, one of the few The man finds that he can only dream of walking distances. The are gone when a Home was satis­ the demands of the new resident. times in the year when eager schoolchildren are urged not to few blocks that he took in his fied with giving Its residents food, The Home has a warm pl ace attend classes, is celebrated with richness and order. It is a time stride before, now seem sofarand and she! ter, and a place to sit in the heart of the community. when other banquets are held besides the Sedorum, when "Third so strenuous. What was done ef­ in the st.m. Residents want ·more. By membership and by special con­ Seders" and "Festivals of Freedom" are added to the general fortlessly before has now become Homes, the administration and the tributions the community testifies a great effort. Boards, want to give more. to its acceptance and to the con­ >festivities with which we celebrate that long-ago liberation from Men and women at that age People coming to llve In the fidence the Home Is enjoying. bondage in Egypt. It is also a festival about which our Christian change residences. They live in Home are not the old immigrants The President and the Board of neighbors know very little. a smaller house. They rent an of yesteryear. As you come to the Directors do the work of the com­ Even if they are aware that "Chanukah is the Jewish aparnnent, less work for the Home and meet the people who are munity and are fulfilling Its wishes. Let us help them when they substitute for Christmas," and that we build insubstantial shelters woman. Some move to warmer residents now, you realize how climates, easier living. Some go many of them were important in call on us for help. in the late fall when it is too cold to eat outdoors, few seem to to llve with their children. their fields In the community. • • • realize that Passover is a holiday of freedom, when we celebrate But not all can move to warm­ Many were born here. Many llved (Mr. Segal's opinions are hls our ancestors' deliverance from slavery into liberty, and acknow­ er climates or live with their all their adult llves here. They own and nor necessarU y tho se of ledge the right of all men to be free, of every people to be self­ children. Not everyone wants to were active In the younger days thi s newspaper. - Editor.) determinate. With such a theme, Passover would seem the ideal beco_me a stranger in a new clry "(4~,... ,~ ... , ..., ..,~~""',t' ...... , ...,_ away from old friends. And not time for interfaith communication. everyone can burden the children. } I On March 29th at Hillel House, this was done. A Symbolic F0t: such people there ls in Seder was held for Protestant and Catholic students at their Providence the Home. YOU'il MONEY'S In the Home there are meals I I request. After the symposium on implementing the Vatican Coun­ prepared for them. There ls a cil Schema held in February at Brown, in which a Jew, a comfortable room, cleanandwarm Catholic and a Protestant (Rabbi Nathan N. Rosen, the Rev. and private. There ls the com­ ~! WORTH :~ panionship of people of the same - Edward Flannery, Dr. James P. Adams) participated, Newman :~ by Sylvia Porter Club and University Christian Association students approached age.~and the same interests. i~ the student members of the Hillel Executive Council and express­ The admission is simple and as clear as a chlldren'.s ABC book. ii !; ed their desire to witness a Passover Seder. A candidate makes his Inten­ ENDLESS CHAIN left holding the bag. - When word got around the campus, Hillel was over­ tion known that he or she wants REFERRAL SCHEMES' Moreover, in the "endless " whelmed with requests for reservations. As only 150 persons to come and live at the Home. That Say you were approached by a chain referral scheme," you must '(1 could be seated, a deadline had to be set; 80 students who wanted intention can be expressed either salesman with this offer to get a sign a financial contract obligating to come could not be accommodated. Those who came followed in a letter or by coming direct­ "free" vacuum cleaner: youwould you not only to pay for the mer­ ly to the Home and talking to the pay $150 for the cleaner and pro­ the Haggadah, drank the wine, ate the matzoh, greens, bitter chandise, but al so to pay a price offlcers. vide the salesman with a 11st of which might be grossly Inf! ated, herbs. and charoseth, and sang the traditional Hebrew songs There are two posslbllitles: 15 to 20 names ofothers who might In one case a few months ago, .,. lustily from a transliterated song sheet. A. The candidate is unable to also be lnteresterl In buying one. a victim signed up to buy an The degree of participation amazed Hillel members, whose pay for his or her full mainten­ For each additional sale he makes $898 radio Intercom and fire alarm '\ ance. pride in their Jewish heritage was evident as they participated from your list, you would get a system - to be paid off by $100 B. The candidate has saved up $15 commission, Thus, If the in the traditional ceremonies. "It was most revealing to the commlsslons for each additional some money or the chit dren are salesman could sign up only JO set sold. Taxes and interest Christian students," said Rabbi Rosen, Hillel director, "and wllltng to pay for full maintenance, people, your own vacuum cleaner charges brought the total cost to they saw the actual sources of many of the customs and tradi­ In the case of A the candidate would be "free" and if he could $1,187. But In a landmark decision tions of their own faith." They also saw why Jews have fought is approved for admission as soon sign up more than 10, you would decl ar!ng such referral sales In as there Is room In the Home. acrually make money. so fiercely for their freedom, and loved it so well. violation of lottery laws In the There may be a delay In admis­ An attractive offer? Indeed. But state of Washington, the court later sion because of the unavall abill ty here Is the catch: the hi gh-power estimated that the equipment was An Able Start of a vacant room. But such a candi­ salesman makes the same pitch to In Rhode Island one of the more heartening aspects of worth $225. date, all things being acceptable others. Theoretically, you might be The Better Business Bureau of the recent celebration of Jewish Music Month was the First to the rules of the Home, is as­ able to land JO new buyers and Metropolitan New York recently Annual Concert presented by the newly-formed Jewish Music sured of a residence. This Is what each of those JO might be able to has been deluged with complaints Council, under the sponsorship of the Jewish Community Center. the Home ts all about. This ls lead the salesman to another JO. about another slmil ar scheme in­ why the Board of Directors meet But those 100 would have to help Under the guidance of Dr. Bernard Carp, executive director volving the endless chain referral and plan and give all of their sign up 1,000 and those I,OOOwould sale of carpeting. In this instance, of the Center, this local organization was formed in Rhode attention to make It possible for have to lead the salesman to an­ victims have been stuck with car­ Island to promote the appreciation of Jewish music, both as such people to come and find a other 10,000. In any endless chain peting for which they are obliged composed and performed by Jewish artists. Home when they need one. This promotion, most participants are to pay up to $40 a square yard - rs why the Home relies on the The concert drew a good-sized audience who definitely ~ against an estimated value of about community. $8 a square yard. enjoyed the program. The Concert, as presented, was not perfect. In the case of B the procedure In some cases the program could have been better selected; in ts different. There is an estate We Cannot Print Despite the obvious pitfalls and to settle. There ·are arrangements despite the fact that endless chain some cases the presentation could have been perfected. referral schemes violate Post Of­ However, it is a start - and a remarkably able start. with the children to be made . But Unsigned Letters after an agreement satisfactory fice and State lottery laws, this With more time and more experience the Jewish Music Council both to the Home and to the family Every letter to the editor promotion ranks am ong the top (which intends to continue its efforts and will try to interest is made, the candidate is admitted must be signed with the name three consumer gyps In the U. S. more organizations and individuals initswork)willundoubtedly upon the availability of a room. and address of the writer. In today. Products now being peddled T\vo cases, two simple rules. cases where there Is danger of by such methods range from auto­ be prepared to present progressively better concerts. personal hardship or for other mobiles, fire alarm sysrems and In order to do this the Council will need the cooperation The rules are flexible, to be sure. vacuum cleaners to color TV, home Rules are made by men and can valid reasons, signatures will siding and world tours. and help of the general Jewish community - in money, in be adjusted by men to fit the cir­ be withheld, but no anonymous enthusiasm, in work, or simply in the ability to listen intelli­ cumstances. And the circum­ letter to the editor will be print­ But whatever the product, here stances differ from candidate to ed. Space llmltations prevent are the fundamental earmarks of gently. The Jewish Music Council deserves the cooperation of publlcarlon of every letter, and the endless chain referral selling the public. Jewishmusicforagreatmanyyears has been ignored candidate. The Board deals with scheme to help you spot - and people and not with machines or may require shortening of or disparaged - and this is as unforgivable an error as it would letters which are printed. avoid It: figures or with so much paper A salesman makes you an offer be to ignore Jewish education or Jewish traditions. work. ~ to get II something for nothing." He explains that the amazing of­ Billboards Will Fall In Israel fer is possible because great sav­ Back in the days before America began to be beautified, COMMUNITY CALENDAR FOR LISTING CALL GASPEE 1-4111 - A.sk for Calendar Secretary ings can be achieved by using word­ billboards went up on every highway and many byroads. The MRS. BERTRAM L. BERNHARDT - CALENDAR CHAIRMAN of-mouth Instead of paid advertis­ proliferation of roadside signs moved Ogden Nash to write: ing. I think that I shall never see SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1966 All you need do is give him 7:30 p.m.-Farband Labor Zionist Order, Third Seder. the names of other friends or ac­ A billboard lovely as a tree. SUNDAY. APRIL 10, 1966 quaintances Indeed, unless the billboards fall, ALL DAY -Jewish Home for the Aged, H-Day Membership Drive. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13. 1966 You are urged to sign up right I'll never see a tree at all. 10:00 a.m.-Bureau or Jewish Education, Classes in Israeli Short Stories. away and the paper you sign is an Israel too has been faced with the problem, but it didn't 12:30 p.m.-Prov. Sec. Nat'I Council or Jewish Women, Regular Meeting. iron-clad sales contract - unlike 1:00 p.m.-Slsterhood Cong. Sons of Jacob, Regular Meeting. take her nearly two centuries to get around to solving it. The the usually oral agreement on your 8:00 p.m.-Slsterhood Temple Beth Sholom, Board Meeting. commissions. Public Works Department of the Ministry of Labor has pub­ 8:00 p.m.-Pawt.-Central Falls Senior Hadassah, Board Meeting. 8:00 p.m.-Jewlsh Community Center, Board Meeting. The central fact Is that If you lished a warning that advertising signboards will be illegal 8:00 p.m.-Touro Fraternal A81'n,, Regular Meeting. become involved In any endless 8:16 p.m.-Cranston-Warwlck Chapter B'nal B'rllh Women, Regular Meeting. when a new law goes into effect on May 10, and all Israelis THURSDAY. APRIL 14, 1966 chain referral scheme, you're tak­ are warned that putting up new signs ls now unlawful. After 10:00 a.m.-Bureau of Jewish Education, Classes In lvrlt Kala. ing the risk that the "endless 12:30 p.m.-Cranston Chapter Hndauah, ~oard Meeting. May ninth all billboards found along the roads of Israel "at chain" will end with you. You are 12:30 p.m.-Emanu-EI Garden Club, Regular Meeting. also committing yourselftopayfor a distance of less than 100 metres from the axis of the road" 1:30 p.m.-Plonecr Women of Providence, Board Meeting. "6:30 p.m.-Israel Bonds, Men'a Division - Dinner. something whlch you may not need will be ripped down at the owner's expense. 8:00 p.m.-Slsterhood Temple Beth Am, Board Mceling. or even want. Perhaps if the effort to grow trees were as great in this 8:00 p.m.-Lad. Aux. R. I. Post f23 JWVA, Regular Meeting. (Distributed 1966 by The Hall Syn­ country as It is In Israel, we too would prefer trees to billboards. dicate, Inc,) (All Rights Reserved) l

THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRll..,'8, 1966 7

Our Younger Set . • •

22e22::;;:::::::: =~ OUR YOUNGER SET - Michelle Eve, two and a half years old, and Gregory Coleman, six months old, are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Edward D, Rottner of Robson Street, Cranston. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Irving Ackerman and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rotmer of Providence. Great-grand­ mothers are Mrs. Rose Rottner of Providence and Mrs. Fannie Bello of Massachusetts. ~222; 522222&::\S =22eae

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r s KOSHER J U LI E DELICATESSEN 731 HOPE STREET 621-9396

WE WILL RE-OPEN FOR REGULAR BUSINESS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12 \ I \ WATCH FOR OUR NEXT WEEK'S J. OUR YOUNGER SET - Pamela Lynn, 23 months, and Cynthia Beth Miller, four years old, are the BIG SPECIALS - daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin A. Miller of Waterford, Conn., formerly of Providence. Mrs. Miller ls the former Harriet Lea Grossberg. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Grossberg of 175 Potters Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Miller of 94 Sackett Street. The Herald is now accepting Paternal great - grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Chaiken "Younger Set" Photos of 165 Dudley Street. For early publication and For our Files OUR YOUNGER SET - Clifford Goodman Is the 15-month-old son of =222228222222~ Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Goodman of Swampscott, Mass. Mrs . Goodman ls the former Joan Russjan of Providence. Maternal grandparents are The R. I. Jewish Herald Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Russian of Providence. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Goodman of Lynn, Mass., are paternal grandparents. MAILING ADDRESS : BOX 6063, PROVIDENCE, R. I. ~BBBBB28&-!...a22%a8e:22222~~~22221 PLANT AND OFFICE : HERALD WAY (OFF WEBSTER ST.) rPeace Pilot' Nathan Avoids PAWTUCKET, R. I. Proposed Arab Peace Solution NEW YORK - Able Nathan to the Israeli, which he admitted side-stepped a recent Arab try preparing in advance. The tele­ to enlist him in a peace plan gram regretted Nathan's "failure which involves giving Israel back to accept our open invitation" to the Arabs . .,I don't know you and charged that Able, In turning or your organization and we have it down, proved that his flight to no common ground," The one­ Egypt was "a publ!c!ty stunt." man peace mission reportedly told . When reporters suggested that Dr. Mohammed T . Mehdi, head of Mehdl's failure to call off the the Committee on American-Arab press conference, once he learned relations, who tried to bring Nathan his stellar attraction wasn't com­ to a press conference. When re­ ing, smac.ked of a publicity stunt, porters told Dr. Mehdi thatNathan he briskly denied It. had said he didn't want to get in­ Nathan later said Mehdi had volved with the committee or !ts cabled him in Paris and has "been alms, which ls to move 1,000,000 after me ever since I said I was Israel! Jews to Canada and the coming here." He said he had United States in the next 20 years offered to meet Mehdi for a private and let Arab refugees take over discussion but that Mehdi had the land, Mehdi charged Nathan Insisted on a public press con-· had been "bluffing." ference. Nathan was met at Kennedy "I don't consider him a legiti­ Airport by members of Dr. Mehdl's mate representative of anything committee and representatives and I have no Intention of meet­ of the Committee for Non­ Ing him" Nathan said. Violent Action. There were no Last month, on the first step representatives of Jewish organ­ of his mission, Nathan made an izations to greet him . unauthorized solo flight from Tel The 38-year-old Tel Aviv res­ Aviv to Port Said, Egypt, to de­ Enjoying our 91 st and biggest year . taurant owner started a 10-day liver a peace petition to President, campaign here to gain American Nasser of the United Arab Re­ support In his crusade for peace public. The Egyptians refueled his between Israel and the Arab world. 40-year-old biplane and sent him CHURCH TRAVEL Fifteen minutes after the press home without seeing the Arab lead­ Turks Head Building, Providence 3, Rhode Island • Telephone 421-3700 conference had been scheduled to er. start and !twas obvious that Nathan Last week Nathan had a Vati­ ROBERT T-. ENGLES was not going to show up, Medhi can audience with Pope Paul VI. , FOR PERSONALIZED SERVICE ASK FOR ELLIE FINE_ produced a neatly typed telegram then went to Paris. Sandy will probably major In theatre; last year, she had a gov­ ernment job In Washington (as a file clerk), and loved being able to explore the city. She walked Into the Theatre De Lys, said she would do anything and wound up as a dancer. The director had Jus t fired all his dancers, so for the next three days and nights Sandy rehearsed In an Impres­ sionistic ballet to Afro-Cuban jazz. She was Columbine In a wonderful costume, In an adapta­ tion of Strindberg's Miss Julie In a Southern setting. The entire second act was a recapitulation In dance, s he said, for which she wore a Picasso-clown makeup, pink leotard and blond whl te wig wl th bangs. She had a wonderful time . . but It closed In a week. She was al so rehearsal stage manager for Dos Passos's USA , At school she managed to dance seriously for two hours a day for one quarter last year with a boy who ls now professional In New York, Ken King. She had " just begun to get some kind of basic technique down ." Sandy has held a varie ty of jobs. She was a professional stage manager when she was 16 and a student at Pawtucket West High School. She s tage managed The Hostage and Orpheus Descending at Trinity Square Playhouse, and has held that position at the Orleans WIDOW QUINN and Christy Mahon, as played by Marguerite Lenert Arena Theatre on the Cape. Sandy and W!lllam Neary In Trinity Square's production of J . M. Synge's has also worked at Looking Glass "The Playboy of the Western World." SANDRA TILLES, of whom a French skipper said, "Sandy, she ze best Playhouse, Pawtucket and Bar­ female crew." rington Players, Jewish Com­ J. M. Synge Carries Much Of Play munity Center, the Brown Uni­ versity alumni show, "Damn Coed Spends Happy Winter Yankees," an d the Charles In Trinity's Production Of ,Playboy' (Continued from Page I) vegetables in a sweet and sour Theater. Trinity Square Playhouse pre­ There are some splendid scenes, sauce over the rice. Fruit was She was In an experimental sents "The Playboy of the Western Incl udlng that In which he tells work on a boat and got used to film, "A Happening" at M.I.T., often served for dessert, and pas­ World" by J.M. Synge, directed the women how he killed his "da" what chartering and boars are all where, covered in tinfoil, she was sengers were beguiled with the by Philip Minor; set design by and the misty-eyed love duet with about. She had sa!led dinghies and specialty of the boat, a " Simple one of the things the film was Miss Helmond toward the play's sa!lflsh at Camp Westwood and Stewart Brecher, lighting design Gladwyena," a drink of rum and projected on. Although she l!kes by Jody Briggs, costume design end, but he looks the r ole better loved it, but that had been several cocoanut and pineapple juices, with to do things In a more personal than he performs It. Even that note years earlier. by Ellen Brecher. The cast: nutmeg on top. wa y than ls generally possible Christopher Mahon ...... of real!sm was shattered soon after The boat she exchanged to, · in an organization, she was vice­ his Initial appearance on stage, Gladwyena, was 64 years old. It The big boat was comfortable. William Neary Its big salon was decorated beauti­ president of the Councllettes , and Old Mahon ... Robert van Hooton supposedly after an 11-day flight, had been bu!lt In the Isle of Man served as representative on the fully, with green carpet, whi te Michael James Flaherty ...... hiding In ditches and going hungry. and registered In Dover. The 58- R. I. Youth Council one year. All went well unt!l he removed foot-long yacht had been a charter upholstery, varnis hed wood and Richard Kennedy gimbal s as old as the boat for The sometime sailor was active Mar garet Flaherty ...... his boots and displayed spotless­ boar for about four year5, mostl y In Trinity when !t began (he r ly clean feet, obviously unmarked in Antigua , and this was the first candle s (used often, as they had Katherine Helmond frequent generator trouble). There father was one of the early back­ Wi dow Quinn . . Marguerite Lenert by II days of hard tramping. The season its British captain-owner ers) and said It seems strange Trinity stage Is so open to the had chartered It in the Virgin Is­ were a single cabin and a double Shawn Keogh .. . Robert Moberly cabin with a small child's bed. not to be part of It any longer. Philly Cullen .... Gene Rousseau audience's view and the theatre so lands. He had sa!led It across the Her parents, both amateur actors, Sandy generally slept In a sleeping Jimmy Farrell .. . William Caln Intimate, that details which might Atlantic. probably sparked her Interest In seem minor on another stage are bag on the deck , an d on one oc­ Sara Tansey .... Sunny B. Warner "It was 14 feet across, a theater. A younger sister, Donna , disproportionately not Ice ab 1 e casion slept In an Abercrombie 8, Susan Brady ...... Mary Miller rather beamy boat," said Sandy , a senior !n hi gh school, ls In the here. The setting ls good, with Fitch kayak brought on board by Honor Blake ... . . Donna Tllles who mentioned that all the wo rk present production at Trinity. the daughter of a passenger. She Nelly Ryan ...... Janet Braley rustling palllasse, rough walls and was "physical." Sandy, who was Sandy al so has a brother, Barry, loved looking up at the stars as Villager . . . Samuel Sherman rural furniture. and costumes are crew and cook, helped sail the boat, In seventh grade at Sl ater Junior torn or dirtied where thi s Is In­ she went to sleep. The play ls set near a village planned and prepared the food, and Hi gh School . dicated, which makes Neary's fair­ did anything else that had to be The 18-year-old coll ege girl on a wild coast of Mayo. Sandy would like to work In a "The Playboy of the Western ly clean face and gleaming feet done . .. laundry, rer!gg !ng, paint­ went snorkeling, spear-fishing and small progressive school In the more obvious. ing the topsides and bulwarks, day sailing. She " got to feel what World" has been called "one of country during one of her co­ the two or three fines t plays of There ls a stridency about the swabbing decks, pol!sh!ng brass, to do about weights" and how to operative credl t quarters. She will the 20th century." It ls a de­ production, a wildness of gesture and oiling the wood. They once lever things. She learned what al so try to return to the Carlbean and movement, a feeling that tings put on scuba equipment and spent to do when they caught a four-foot lightful, timeless comedy which where she worked hard and loved moves with precision of plotting are slightly out of control. Some four days scrubbing the bottom. barracuda on the lines thrown out It. of the action was burlesque - She hadn't used th e underwater and Joyful language to Its comeup­ pance ehd . .In the seventh and Moberly's playing of the meek equipment before, but was a good young man who fears the priest, swimmer and had no trouble with final production of the season at Trinity, this fast-moving tale of Kennedy as the drunken father, it. Neary' s cringing fear. This was Almost right away G!adwyena a weakling fought over by two women deserves better than It amusing but grew tiresome, as got a charter and "I started cook­ burlesque allows no room for Ing these wonderful meals." Sandy gets. The comedy opens wl th character growth or change. De­ had been l!vlng by herself !n Bos­ lightful little scenes punctuated ton and had done some cooking, Katherine Helmond writing out a !!st. She uses the kind of pen that the production - among them, and she had helped at home (though Caln and Rousseau as the sad­ she had never done the planning must be dipped at frequent Inter­ vals into an ink pot, but after a eyed Irishmen nodding sage agree­ and buying there.) On the boat, ment, Marguerite Lenert In the she had $6 per day per person time she forgets to dip It. The last time a Ieadlng actor at Trinity childless widow's wile-weaving to spend on food, and everything act, and van Hooton as Banquo's had to be "as good as you can did this, It was Frank Lucas In 11The Caretaker," who spent a ghost. Van Hooten's makeup, make it." whole act establishing an unpleas­ movement and facial expressions " Everything I did was very often seem too "big" for the simple," said the versatile cook, ant gesture which he then forgot until the play's closing moments. scene, enjoyable though they are. who thinks learning how to cook A dlfflcul ty ln any play where with Inexpensive Ingredients help­ Miss Helmond ls always pleasant to watch, though the accent or dialogue are Indicated ed her learn how to make things Is that the audience may not under­ taste good. Cooking on the boat, akimbo stance of the maid In "Tartuffe., is not her most be­ stand the actors. "Playboy" ls with plenty of money to spend on no exception. The accents range food , was easy and fun for her. coming pose. William Neary,how­ ever, as the playboy of the Western from varieties of brogue to On the boat, they sa!led during Maine farmer, and what seemed the day, and sometimes stopped LOOKING TOWARD GLADWYENA'S BOW as she sails gently through world must sustain the play, and he Is not a strong enough actor. at times like serried ranks of for I unch. During the afternoon the deep blue waters on a sunny day. actors with their backs to the audi­ they would pull In to an anchorage. ence heightened the problem. Everything down there was slow from the yacht. The action dropped, of course, and relaxing, Sandy remarked, and There were not many college whenever It was difficult to follow they would swim or take a leisure­ students In Jobs like Sandy's. Most several consecutive speeches. ly walk until dinner at 8 or 9 P.M. of the hostesses were wives. She Philip Minor, a guest, directed Meals took two or three hours to was able to be there because at "Playboy," which wlll bepresent­ eat, but much less time to con­ Antioch college an equal number ed Tuesday through Saturday at coct as the cook leaned heavily of cooperative and academic 8:30 P .M. and at 2:30 P .M. on on marinating meats beforehand. ~,redl ts are n,~eded for graduation. Saturdays through Apr!l 23. With She used "lots of wine and rum" Cooperative means working, Its faults, It ls still a rollicking In her cooking, mostly on a two­ and the Job doesn't have to have comedy, In which much of the burner stove with an oven. Such any relation to academic work. action Is adequate. "Spotty acting delicacies as Sandy's Polynesian The college believes In "mean­ companies" were listed as the Shlsh-kebab (lamb, pineapple, ingful expe~lences, just exploring, chief shortcoming of regional onions and peppers threaded on perhaps. It s a wonderful thing to theaters In Sunday's New York skewers) were cooked over the do," though It means a five year Times. Stanley Kauffmann' s lead charcoal grll1e they carried on liberal arts course rather than article named Trinity Square first board, and served with rice and the usual four year one. and Adrian Hall, whom he called "a bright directorial talent." It SHIP'S CAT sniffs suspiciously at Spanish mackerel they caught, later would be Interesting to see Mr. took two good bites out of Its t1!l. Captain John Walmaleg holds up Hall's version of this Synge play. fish, which Sandy cooked for dlnnex . L.A. ------~- - -··~·--· ...,. ...-- .-~-...-----·-- r----~ ___ ..,,,,, ....

ll!E RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 9 FIRE DESTROYS SYNAGOGUE ' Ing remodeled and refinished. The NEW SQUARE, N.Y. - The cause of the fire lstmknown. Rabbi Congregation Zemach David Syn- Daniel Goldstein said many val- agogue was destroyed by fire here uable scrolls had been lost and last week with a loss estimated services would be held In the at $350,000. The building was be- village school. , MOST FABULOUS HOLIDAY UNDER THE SUN

3 Nights in Las Vegas 669 3 Nights in San Francisco $ PER 7 Nights in Honolulu PERS9N Includes Round Trip Jet from Boston, most meals, deluxe hotels, transfers, baggage handling, etc. WEEKLY DEPARTURES - CALL, WRITE OR VISIT Price Travel Service 776 Hope St. 831-5200 Providence, R. I.

'A WOMAN'S PLACE' - Providence Section, National Cotmcll of Jewish Women, will meet on Wednesday, SELECT FROM April 13, at the Providence Hebrew Day School for a coffee hour at 12:30 P .M., to be followed by the dramatic presentation, "A Woman's Place Is In the World." The play was written by Mrs. Sidney Wein­ OUR FINE COLLECTION OF stein, the former Ethel Blank of Providence. The committee Includes, from left, standing, Mrs . Samuel Posner, director; Mrs. Morton Paige and Mrs. Charles J. Fox; sea~ed, Mrs. Martin Kenrick, Mrs . James Winston and Ben Sliver. Mrs. Walter Battista and Mrs. Harold Pavlow were not present for the photograph. neccle crleeK Mrs. Reuben Pollock Is program chairman. The public Is Invited to attend. PILLOWS Fred Kelman Photo ticut said: "Here Is something that the United States should team Grammar School Dropouts from Israel . ., accents inc. While In the United States the THEY'RE UNIQUE! Prettily Taught In Army mllltary rejects near-llllteretes, THEY'RE BEAUTIFUL! the Israel Army accepts them and UNQUESTIONABLY THE TEL AVIV - The most non­ verb "bo" (to come" - in He­ attempts to make them better citi­ MOST ELEGANT THROW brew). martial operation of the Israeli zens before returning them to PILLOWS IN RHODE Army Is the program ·for soldiers Her pupils were a dozen Is­ ISLAND AVAILABLE who have notcompletedelghtyears raeli men soldiers. A few ap­ civilian l!fe. IN A HOST OF COLORS, of school: during their last three peared Intensely Interested In the Col. Mordecai Baron, chief ed­ SIZES AND STYLES months In the army, they are taught intricacies of Hebrew grammar, ucation officer at the army gen­ the basic elements of general cul­ while one or two tried to hide eral staff, explained that the three­ 203 WAYLAND AVE. ture. About 150 girl s, recruited . their boredom. Most of them readi­ mon.th course on Mount Carmel Is 521-6090 after graduation from teacher ly replied to the corporal's simple obligatory for all soldiers. seminars, staff this Army pro­ questions, though rarely managed ACCENTS FOR INTERIORS gram. w! th out help. Formally, the program of This was a typical classroom, ~ AUTO studies comprises eight subjects one of many In the elongated wood­ Including history, civics, arithme­ en huts that make up the army t-~ INSURANCE tic, geography and rudimentary school named the Marcus School, science. Bur as one young instruc­ after David Marcus, a Un! ted Low quarterly payments tor explained, ·the real objectives States colonel killed during Is­ for ac.cident-free drivers. • ,are to modify as much as poss ible rael ' s War of In dependence. It I any resistance to things Intell ec­ stands In a beautiful pine wood, . Me~be, Downtown Parking Plan tual. She wa s aware that the rela­ commanding a view of the lovely INSURANCE bay of Haifa. The pupils of pretty - tively brief course could not pro­ M& F AGENCY INC. vide a proper education, but In Corporal NI tza of the army edu­ many cases helped to take away cation corps we re all soldiers 331-9427 the rough edges of Ignorance. awal ting discharge after compul­ 131 Washington St. In one Army classroom, a sory national service. pretty, dark-haired young woman, They had been recruited like Providence wearing an army uniform with the everyone of their age group but, two stripes of a corporal on her tmllke others, had not completed sleeve, stood before the black­ elementary school . Some were board. near-Illiterates. Patiently, slowly and carefully, After visiting the Marcus she explained how to construct school recently, Senator Abraham COME and ENJOY In the past and future tenses the A. Rlblcoff, Democrat of Connec-

LAST WEEKS I CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER ... JOEY RUSSELL AOROSS 5. Subside 23.French 1. Strike 6.Almanacs pronoun breaker 7. Goddess of 25.Shank Whose wit and zestful humor guarantee 5. Star discord 27. Justice performers 8. Dispatched Fortas 9. Crazy: 9.Foldover and an evening of 1«:;ughs, laughs, laughs slang 11.Thing: name• 10. Plainer Latin sakes for you - 12. Relative 13. Let it 29. Arach­ 13. Salty stand . nids H.Couples: 15. God of war 30. Lin­ abbr. 17. Unbra nded ··coln's 15. Bears 18. Pennies: child 35: Attempt witness abbr. 31. Smell 37. Garden 16. Soup dish 19. Weep: Scot. 32. Hair on tool 18. Brass­ 21. People of horse's neck 39. Group of at the wind Boise 34. Fish ac­ soldiers: Instrument 22. Lever cessories abbr. 20. Slopes 24. Blnd I 2. ~ 4- b 7 6 211. Frame­ ~ ~s ~ MEN'S INAUGURAL DINNER work '1 JO II IS.Small ~ barracuda 12. I~ for 27. Attires ~ 28. Waylay 14 ~15 30. British soldiers lb 17 Israel's Economic Development aa. Frequently ~ ~ ~ r¼ ~ M.Conforms t6 1'1 20 21 22 23 37. Filament ~ 18. Recipient 24 ZS Thursday, April 14, 6:00 p. m. of agltt ~ 39. Descriptive 2b 21 MEETING HOUSE, TEMPLE EMANU-EL ota ~ laule Z.f> Z9 ~ tO.Com­ ~ ~ ~ ~ !>O !,I ~z. ·n ~ ¥ Couvert: $6:00 per person munlata ~ 41.Cape 'I" ~ 17 Israel Dinner Cammlttee DOWJf '!,& For Reservations Call: 32 Custom Hause St., "Providence 1.NotllWNt ~ ~ JA 1-8914 2.Iaterpret , ,.., I.Inaect ~ .... ~ ~ ~ - - - ·- - ---·

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10 · TI-IE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL a, 1966 Minister Seeks Swap Of Homes With Rabbi For Summer Month Judge Cohn Weds Divorcee TEL AVIV - A Protestant Ministry, which passed ltontoThe Canyon, Jess than a day to both minister In the United States who Jerusalem Post. Bryce and Zion National Parks, plans a visit to lsrael this sum- In his letter, the Rev. Mr. Lo- "Our church Is one that would In Rose-Filled Penthouse mer Is looking for · an Israel! gan writes that he, his wife and welcome a rabbi with open arms. the marriage was ''completelytra- rabbi to swap living quarters with. their 12-year-old son plan to fly We have some 500 members, a NEW YORK - A Cohen mar­ ried a divorcee two weeks ago, In - dltlonal and In keeping with rel!g­ The pastor Is w!ll!ng to throw -~o Israel arolD!d July 15 and stay new church plant, a yolDlg and ious laws." his car Into the bargain and notes ,for a month. He writes: "We have growing congregation and a most ~ private ceremony performed by Rabb! Edward Sandrow, president Justice Cohn, by virtue of his that the rabbi can earn $25 a week a nice house, well-furnished. This responsive membership . In every name, Is held to be a descend­ by officiating at services !n the · church - pays an honorarium of way." . of the New York Board of Rab­ bis. Justice Halm Cohn of the Is­ ant of the priestly tribe - the church. $25 a SID!day for one service at The Rev. Mr. Logan adds a Hebrew word "kohen,. means The offer was made by the 11 A.M. We have a good auto list of rather Impressive ref- raeli Supreme Court and Miss Michal Smolra, an Israeli music priest - and marriages-between Rev. C. Sumpter Logan of Trinity that will be available at no cost erences, Including the Governor of members of the priestly class and Presbyterian Church !n Ogden, for the person ,who might want to Utah and the Mayor of Ogden, • critic, were married under a beige plush canopy before 26 friends divorcees are prohibited by the Utah, who sent It In a letter to take advantage of my offer. We are and closes with "all good wishes Orthodox rabbinate of Israel. The the Israel Chamber of Commerce, less than a half day from Yellow- for a continued strengthened ls- .and relatives In a rose-f!lledpent­ house suite. Rabbi Sandrow said rabbinate's position against such which passed It on to the Tourism st_one Park, a day from Grand • rael." marriages comes from an lnjlDlc­ tlon to that effect In the Book of Leviticus In the Old Testament. Miss Smolra, 40, had been di­ vorced from her first husband, and widowed by her second. A spokesman for the Chief Rabbinate In Jerusalem, Informed of the Impending marriage, said: "The marriage ls not valid. They're not allowed to live to­ gether." Justice Cohn, questioned before ..... ···••: the late afternoon ceremony at the Hotel Summit, maintained that FORA • hi s marriage was valid and that • he was marrying outside Israel • only to avoid "offending the feel­ ings of the rabbinate.'' • The Supreme Court judge, who • said he ls not a devout Jew, HAPPY EAtTER • maintained that there were rabbis In Israel who would have per­ SHOP FOR THE BEST.. AND SAVE AT FIRST NATIONAL! : formed the ceremony. Rabbi San­ drow said that It was a question Low, Low Prices Plus Gold Bond Stamps! of Interpretation . • "I consulted a num be r of my • Orthodox colleagues," he said, "and It wa s agreed that the bride wa s a widow and not a Iivor­ ,, cee." Rabbi Sandrow exp! alned that ,, her second marriage, which ended ' I In the death of her husband, ob­ literated her status as a divorcee. Justice Cohn, who ls repre­ senting Israel at the meetings of the United Nations Commission for Human Rights, said that this was also his Interpretation. Justice Cohn's case for the . Government's recognition of his marriage ls believed to be based on a 3-2 decision In I 963 by his TURKEYS colleagues on the bench. In that case a Christian wo­ man of Belgian nationality sued U. S. GRADE A the Ministry of Interior, which controls the register of popula­ tion . ro register her as Mr s. Is­ :,: The Finest, Plumpest, FINAST rael Scheslnger by virtue of her _Mouth -Watering Turkeys marriage to an Israel! Jew In a PINEAPPLE civil wedding on the Medi terranean You Con Buy Isl and of Cyprus. JUICE 10 to 14 LB. Avg. Rabbi Sandrow Regrets 79c OVEN READY Marrying Ju~tice Cohn NEW YORK - Israel's Su­ preme Court may have to decide whether the marriage of one of Its members, Justice Halm Cohn, Is valid. Rabbi Edward Sandrow, presi­ dent of the New York Board of STUFFED Rabbis , wh o married Cohn and Is­ rael music critic Michal Smolra here recently, said he "would have acted otherwise" If all the TURKEYS facts had been known. Mi ss Smolra had been once di­ vorced and once widowed. Cohn, ARMOUR LB. a reportedly non-observant Jew 59c who se name in Hebrew means "priest," is regarded as a mem­ ber of the priestly class and there­ for unable, accordlr.g to Jewish law. to marry a divorcee. The Israel Orthodox rab­ •t I binate's prohibition on such mar­ ' riages derives from an Injunction to that effect In the Book of Le- · v!tlcus. A spokesman for Israel's Chief Rabbinate said that "the marriage Is not valid. They're not allowed to live together." Cohn said his marriage was ASPARAGUS valid, and he married outside ls­ -rael to avoid offending the rab­ Delicate Green Spears binate. Rushed from the field to Rabbi Sandrow said he "con­ sulted a number of my Orthodox your table LB29c colleagues, and It was agreed that the bride was a widow and not a dlyorcee.'' He did not specify later SUHKIST - California Navel what additional facts he learned ½CAL,,( after the ceremony. LB CONT Cohn, 55, represents Israel In BAG the United Nations Human Rights, ORANGES4 Commission.· Prices effective 1ft oll Supermarkets In this vicinity. (We reserve the right to Umlt quantities.) 2,150 TRAINED TEL AVIV - Israel played host to 2,150 trainees from 80 SPECIAL! countries In Africa, Asia and Latin FINAST - Sliced lLBBOz49c America during 1965, while 832 Extra Large Loaf 2 LOAVES Israeli experts went out to work WHITE BREAD In developing countries during the same period. THE RHODE ISLA~ HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL B, 1966 11

TEMKIN, MEROLLA & ZURIER ATTORNEYS AT LAW

ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT ROBERT L. DeCOSTA IS NOW ASSOCIATED WITH THEM IN THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF LAW

832 INDUSTRIAL BANK BUILDING JAckson PROVIDENCE, R. I. 1-2400

CDllWll - ~ TO CELEBRATE THE 65TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE WORKMEN'S CIRCLE Sunday, April 17th at 8:00 P.M. Crown Hotel • RACHEL RELLIS • Popular songstress in a program of Yiddish ond Israeli songs. ,· Accompanist: Mrs. Lou is B. Rubinstein GJC WOMEN'S DIVISION ANNUAL MEETING - At the annual meeting of the Women's Division of the BENJAMIN GEBINER General Jewish Committee last week, Mrs. Leonard I. Salmanson was Installed as president for 1966-67; Executive Secretary of the Workmen's Circle Mrs. Sol Koffler, Mrs. Edmund I. Waldman and Mrs. Martin I. Dlttelman, vice-presidents; Mrs. Bernard NO CHARGE E. Bell, recording secretary, and Mrs. Merrill L. Hassenfeld, retiring president, was made honorary PUBLIC IS INVITED president. Guest speaker was Israel Am Ital, an Israeli who served as captain In the Israel underground movement during World War II and In the War of Independence. Fred Kelman Photo COLLEGE BOUND? Washington Council Objects To Boycott Brandeis Dean BOOKS THAT WILL HELP YOU! WASH INGTON - The Jewish Student Non-Violent Coordinating SELECTIVE SERVICE COLLEGE QUALIFICATIONS TEST•••• 1.95 Community Council here criticized Committee and the Free D.C. Succeeds Rabbi COLLEGE BOUND ...... , , , ...... , • , , ••••• 1. 98 Negro groups which are leading a Movement." The Council said the NEW YORK -- Or. Harold YOU CAN WIN A SCHOLARSHIP ...... , . ... 3.95 boycott of local merchants, many boycott "coerces business men Weisberg has been elected chair­ VOCABULARY BUILDER ...... , •••• 1.25 man of the B'nal B'rith Adul t Jew­ of them Jews, as a protest against who may have no views on Home PROFILES OF AMERICAN COLLEGES ...... 3.95 ish Ed uca tion Commi ssion, to suc­ the failure of Congress to vote Rule an d who have no voice In the 17 WAYS TO HELP YOUR CHILD IN SCHOOL ...... 1.95 Home Rule for residents of the decisions of the Board of Trade, ceed the la te Ra bbi Morris Adler nation's capitol. to commit themselves in favor of of Derrol t, Ra bb t Adler recom­ HOW TO PREPARE FOR Home Rule by a threat of a boy­ mended Dr. Wei sberg as hi s suc­ COLLEGE ENT~AN CE EXAMS ...... , ..... , .... 2.50 The Council reaffirmed its sup­ cessor several months ago. port of Home Rule and condemned con If the~ do not so commit SCHOLARSHIP APT ITUDE TEST ...... 1.98 themselves. ' The new chairman, a gradua te STUDENT DRAFT DEFERMENT TEST ...... 3.95 "the actions of those who have of the Jewish Theological Seminary unconscionably blocked Home Rule The Council declared such ac­ tions were "a vtol ation° of the of America and graduate school Mail Orders Only. R.I. Tax add 4¾ . Na C.O.D.'s for more than a decade." The at Columbia University, Is dean of statement singled out the city' s freedom of such merchants ''to have an opinion on this s ub­ the Graduate School of Arts and Metropolitan Board of Trade "In Sc iences of Brandeis University . AUBURN BOOK SHOP opposing genuine self-govern­ ject, or to have no opinion, and an Invasion of their rights of 11 Herald Place Cranston, R.I. 02910 \ ment" for Washington residents privacy." Moreover, the statement \ and urged the Board "to dlscon­ said, "this kind of a program Is J' tlnue Its opposition." irrelevant and lneffecrive so far as . Then the statement added that the achievement of Home Rule Is , the Co:..incil "must disavow the concerned because It Is not di­ FAT 27TH SEASON 1966 r or skinny, everybody rides nicely . present boycott program by the rected agains t the real tar gets." in a new FORD . Save a bundle, by getting DARIO FORD 'S deal. CAMP Both YOUNG JUDAEA I MEN LAKE BABOOSIC and women can come in and get AMHERST, NEW HAMPSHIRE I DARIO FORD'S facts and figures I on a new FORD or a good used FOR BOYS AND GIRLS 7-16 8-WEEK SEASON OR TWO 4-WEEK PERIODS FORMULA FOR TIME-WASTING LIVE $525.00 - Tuition - $315.00 each your days and nights in the quiet - AS RETIRED MAN SEES IT of a new FORD - where people Affiliated With A completely ca ndid retired Send in all the coupons you find can hear themselves talk. Don't man, who will tell you the in the paper and the magazines, make it too NEW ENGLAND ZIONIST YOUTH COMMISSION whole truth. is something of a thus getting on a lot of mailing AMERICAN ZIONIST YOUTH COMMISSION museum piece- rare and unusual. lists. thus having something to LONG Endorsed by Hadassah ond ZOA But one showed up this week. get out of your mailbox every before you come in and pay us and in an unlikely place on day. a visit. Our many courteous sales­ Member, American Camping Association I. the steps in front of the Lincoln 5. Never do two errands on men are always ready to help you. Memorial in Washington . D.C . He one trip to town. Certainly not OFFERING YOU had two matters on hi s mind. three or four. Do one. This leaves • 168 ocres of sceni< be t,utv • Comprehensive athletic program One was to move to Washington. something to do tomorrow, which • Exp'trienced counselor staff • Extensive waterfront activities which he insisted was "the finest you'll need. • Kosher_ food • CIT program • Performing arts: music, dance, • 24-hour medical supervision dramatics, etc. • Arts & crofts spot in the world for an intelli ­ 6. Learn how to read the elec. 1• Significant learning experiences • lsroeli cultural activities gent man to make his retirement tric meter. from the meter reader. , OVER 50 EXCITING ACTIVITIES AT CYJ home." The other was to benefit Then you can read it three times other retired nien by passing on a week to see if yo u use more CALL OR SEND FOR BROCHURES AND APPLICATIONS TO , to them his "Formula for Time­ e lectricity on Monday-Tuesday Charles B. Rotman, Ed . D., Director, Camp Young Judaea Wasting After Age 65 ." than on Friday-Saturday. This 550 PAWTUCKET AVENUE Zionist House, 17 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Mass. 02116 This man, Mr. J . Bradley takes up lots of time. PAWTUCKET PA 2-1960 Jones. said he had perfected his 7. When the bank statement Toi., (617) 267-3600 formula over two years of time­ comes every month, don't just wasting retirement. It fo ll ows: check the balances. Read the en­ I. Get a new and proper per­ dorsements. This is good for an spective on your home. which hour. has in fact been your factory. 8. Don't trust the mailman to - It has produced your children, pick up your letters from the JEWISH HOME FOR THE AGED your meals, your sleeping priv­ mailbox. Take the letters to the ileges, the background for your Post Office. Another chance to job. You have been the absentee get out of the house. ENLISTING NEW MEMBERS landlord, and your wife has been Why Mr. Jones chooses Wash­ manager. ington : It is where you can see 2. Where you once wrote a world history being made; can check for the ·phone bill between watch the unending drama of coffee sips before running for Congress and Congressional com, the bus you now make your wife mittees; can rub shoulders with Campaign To Be Held clear the junk off the coffee the finest cross-section of people table. lay out phone bills for the as yokels and dignitaries from last 12 months to make sure you the hinterlands and from abroad SU_NDAY, APRIL 10th aren't being cheated, th en write come in to visit; can see sights the check. That sort of thing. and study history from here to 3. You change the grocery mar­ there: can settle down in a com­ keting from a weekly to a daily munity of retired government pattern. Don't Europeans do it workers· who have no more money that way? Anyway, since you for yachts and limousines than Welcome Your Volunteer Worker don 't have anywhere to go every you do. IF NOT CONTACTED PLEASE CALL THE HOME day it gives you somewhere to go AT 351-4750 AND A MEMBERSHIP PLEDGE New GOLDEN YEARS 36-paqe booklet every day. now ready. Send SOc in coin to Dept. CARD WILL BE MAILED TO YOU 4. Rent a Post Office box. This CSPS. care of !his newspaper, to Box 1672, Grand Central Station. New York is expensive, but worth the cost. 17, N.Y. 12 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966

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PLAN BBYO SPRING CONVENTIONS - Members of the New England B'nal B'rlth Youth Organization staff plan regional spring conventions. From left are Miss Shirley Horbl!t, secretary; Mrs. Phyllis Rubin, assistant director; Robert Shapiro, director, Bl ackstone-Narragansett Region BBYO; Miss Barbara Levine, Miss Lois Dermer and David Ul!n, fiel d workers, and Jack Levy, di rector, New England Region. Bay State Region BBG will convene April 15 through 17 at Magnol!a Manor, Magnolia, Mass.; Tri-State Region A2A, at Magnol!a Manor April 17-19, and the Blackstone-Narragansett Region A2A and BBG on May 27, 28 and 29 In Worcester, with most of the program scheduled at the new Jewish Community Center there. Your Headquarters For Breakstone Dairy Products ANCIENT COMMUNITY KOSHER FOR PASSOVER KAB UL - The 1,000-member Right-Wing Radical Forces BREAKSTONE Jewish community of Afghanistan, dating back to posr-B!bl!cal days, CREAM CHEESE 3 oz. Sc today ls concentrated !n Ka bul, Herat and Balkh. Increasing In West Germany WEEKEND ONLY BONN - The year 1965 saw ported here. The report compares CHICKEN WINGS lb. 49c JOE ANDRE'S · a "slight increase" in the right­ figures for I 965 and I 964. It shows w!ng, radical forces !n West Ger­ that, as far as acru9l Naz! and CHICKEN BREASTS lb. 69c ORCHESTRA many and a considerable rise !n anti-Semitic incidents were con­ Music for that very special affair the circulation of right-wing news­ cerned, these had risen vastly !n • Weddings • Bar Mitzvahs papers, some of them outright antl­ 1965 , totaling 52 1 for the year, More Specials Advertised At The Store 94+-3344 Res. ST 1-9080 Sem! tic and anti-Israel!, Minister compared with 171 !n 1964. of the Interior Paul Lueker re- The Minister of the Interior stated that, during the parl!amen­ tary elections last October the Na­ tional Democratic Party obtained 64 ,000 votes our of a total of 32,- 000,000 ballots cast, while another right-wing group got a total vote Now! of 52,000. "Thus," he stated, "all the r!ght-w!ng gr oups together got onl y 2.2 percent of the total vote." There were 14 right-wing groups, he said, with a total membership Get more for your money of 9,700 members by the end of . 1964. The number of groups, he reported, had dropped to 11 !n 1965, through mergers and reorganiza­ tions, but the number of members with Industrial National's had gone up to 16 ,700. Right-wing youth groups, his figures showed, had diminished !n strength from 700 members !n 17 organizations by the end ofl 964 NEW savings plan! to 500 members !n 10 organiza­ tions by 1965. However, he stated, 50 other youth group s not organized as pol!tlcal parties had 11,964 members in 1964 against 11,600 !n 1965. Lumping together various Savings Bonds r!ghr-w!ng groups, youth organiza­ tions and groups providing publ!sh­ These discounted bank savings bonds are a high-yield security that will pay you a !ng services, Mr. Lueker gave a bank-guaranteed rate of 4 ½ % ... from 90 days up to 5 full years. All interest is figure of 22,500 at the end of 1964 compounded quarterly, and the bonds are self-renewing until maturity. as against 28,600 !n 1965. New 4½% Savings Bonds can be cashed 90 days after purchase but cannot be In the publ!cat!ons field, 45 ca lled in by the Bank before maturity. Their high-yield, redeemability, and short right- wing organs had a total cir­ (5-year) term make them particularly attractive to the small investor and persons culation of 18 3,000 !n 1964, going c lose to retirement. You can purchase these new bonds in multiples of $50. up to a circul atlon of 227,000 !n 1965 . "The main cause for this in- crease," he said, "was the rise !n the circulation of the Deutsche National-und-Soldatenze!tung and the Deutsche Nachr!chten 2e!tung. The latter Is the organ of the Na­ tional Democratic Party. In ad­ d! ti on, 6 I foreign and 40 Germ an Income Bonds anti-Semitic periodicals were !n c!rculatlo_n !n West Germany In These fully-protected securities give the saver an unusually good return on his 1965. money, with no market risk. The 4½% annual interest is bank-guaranteed. Income Bonds mature in 5 years, and are self-renewing each quarter of the period. Of the 521 Naz! and anti-Semi­ tic incidents !n 1965, the Minister Individuals (including trustees and executors), nonprofit organizations, and muni­ of the Interior said, 107 involved cipalities can purchase 4½% Income Bond·s for $1000 or more, in multiples of threats and insults, 54 cases were $100. For amounts up to $5000, you may receive interest checks semiannually .. ·. concerned w! th the spreading of for amounts of $5000 or more, you can choose monthly, quarterly, or semiannual anti-Semitic posters and leaflets, interest checks; or interest can be left with the Bank where it will be compounded I 9 incidents Involved damage to quarterly and accumulated until maturity at 5 years. Jewish cemeteries. A total of 201 offenders were apprehended, in- cluding 58 children. Commenting on the report,Mr. Lueker said: "The increases were NOW NO WAITING! Industrial National savings accounts now pay 4% interest right not serious. ·1n many cases, pun­ Earn 4o/o interest on from day of deposit to day of withdrawal. It means that as soon as you deposit your ishment was avoided by the right­ money, it will begin earning daily interest at the rate of 4% (on amounts of $10 or wing radicals posing as persons Savings Accounts more). And a ll interest is compounded and credited four times a year. loyal to the Constitution. Butwhlle the situation was not serious, the position of the right-wing radicals from day of deposit has to be watched carefully. The learn more about the advantages of these new high-interest savings plans at most sinister event was the in­ to day of withdrawal any Industrial National office. ·· crease !n the circulation of the Deutsche National - und - Solda- tenze!tung, which has succeeded In ■ attracting national interest and constantly propagandizes against victims of the war and against Israel." Naming Dr. Maurice N. Els- Industrial National A good endrath, president of the Union of ntighbor American Hebrew Congregations, I ,..,.. can Rabb! Levinson said: "The rabbis ban• on! have an incorrect picture, thlnk- Membttl'oderal .,.,,_,...._wlnv"ag that !nsufflc!ent Information ls n.-,.i--~•• ,..,_.,...,~..,.--,,.,.--,"""'"'.,.,....,- __ Uable, THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 13 Herald subscribers comprise A subscription to the Herald who "has everything" else. Call an active buying market. For ex­ Abba Schwartz Resignation Is a good gift for the person 724-0200. cellent results, advertise In the Herald. Call 724-0200. Causes May Be Investigated ,------1 REMAR~ABLE - ZEIGLER----- l NEW YORK - Heads of na­ as medical men and scientists KNIGHT FARM I tional organizations, Jewish and would henceforth be given visas for "Crisp-Aire" I FACIALS travel to Red China and other I LOOK YEARS YOUNGER! I non-Jewish, Interested In the lib­ LIFTING FIRMING TONING I eralization of Immigration regu­ formerly restricted areas as long McIntosh Apples I MISTER CHARLES I lations by the United States Gov­ as they have bona fide business SPRING TIME TREAt! I Alice Bldg., 236 Westminster I ernment, telegraphed President there. We ltave only "Crisp-Aire" Storag,e In It.I. L-s~~!'----~~~':!!--1 Johnson, asking him not to accept This plan had languished In the the resignation of Abba P. State Department and the White Arao . Schwartz, who tendered his resig­ House for more than a year and Rom-Baldwin and Red Delicious Apples nation from his post as admls­ until very recently there was no "Best Ever" Swee! Cider the lighted dial lstrator of the State Department's sign that It had the slightest chance Rte 116, Greenville, R. J. Bureau of Securl ty and Consular of approval. Affairs. Johnson accepted the res­ Where the Schwartz issue heads Open Daily 'till 5 P.M. comes to you ignation. now seems to depend on just how Schwartz said In Washington strong the Liberal Democrats feel, that he quit his post upon dis­ which in turn depends upon how covering that he wa s the principal shaky they Judge President John­ victim of a State Department re­ son to be. FAILING IN SCHOOL? organization that would abolish his "All the publicity," said one Poor Reading and Study S~ills May Be Your Trouble •• bureau. White House source, "has created • • He Is widely considered one a bad atmosphere for a good plan." DEVELOP •• of the Administration's most vig­ By the time the reorganization • COMPREHENSION • CONCENTRATION orous advocates of liberal Im­ plan does get to the HIii, much • STUDY HABITS • SPELLING & VOCAIULAPIY migration, travel and· refugee pol­ of the heat on the Administra­ The Nationally Recognized PAR READING PROGRAM ic!es and was the principal archi­ tion wlll have cooled, It Is felt, tect of the new immigration law and the liberal De mocrats will be CLASSES START APRIL 23 adopted I a st year. wiping out the unable to fan the embers. . l •ncl mH ♦ momin91 ff'Offl di scriminatory "national origins" Bur there is grudging White will S•tvrd'•y I quota system . House admiration for Mr. Schwartz 9 to 12 for 12 wHn for Schwartz said that the "re­ and the flurry he has caused. Jr. High. S.nior High and Coll,go Sfvd,nt, organization" plan, presumably "Ir has hurt us more than any­ linked ro Government 11economy ," thing in years ," a White House JOHNSON & WALES READING INSTITUTE had been In the works for " many, official said. "It Is a great public • DE 1-3915 many months," but that he had relations iob. " CALL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS ' ! known nothing about it until hi s return from a confidential mis­ sion abroad last weekend. The New Yo rk Times said that Schwartz had been offered a posi­ OPPORTUNITIES IN ISRAEL tion vaguely described a s a special assistantship on refugee matters The Israel Aliyah Center offers Americans information on to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, i but that It was not the equival ent "Opportunities in Israel": of hi s ol d post. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy , Are You Interested In: .., • chairman of a Senate subcommit­ . tee concerned wi th refugee prob­ • EMPLOYMENT • LEARNING HEBREW • PURCHASING AN APARTMENT I lems, said he is considering hold­ • TEACHING • j ing hearings on the reorganization. • PURSUING YOUR EDUCATION • INVESTMENTS The Times said that a Senate • RETIRING tmit on Government operations Employment: I includes: conversa tional Hebrew; being cons_tructed by the Jewish headed by Sen. Abraham Rlblcoff Israel's rapidly growing Indus­ reading and wr iting; culture; and Agency in Israel. The program may also hold hearings. trial complex will require more various aspects of living in Is­ features low down- payments and Liberal Democrats have been than 120,000 additional workers by rael. Two program s are offered: Jong term (20- 30 year) mortgages char:ging the Administration wi th 1970. More than 20,000 Job open­ at Interest rates averaging 7% . I. TH E KIBBlTTZ ULPAN - making deal s , unwarranted se­ ings are available for professional Apartments offered in this plan Young people (between 18- 30) are i crecy, Whl re House conniving and and highly skllled technical work­ are well designed and the projects eligible for a six month Ulpan in-fighting in the State Depart­ I, ers. themselves are integral parts of program conducted in Kibbutzim ment. ; The Israel Aliyah Center offers planned communities. The self­ throughout Is rael. It combines a According to Capitol Hill ~ employment programs for en­ contained communities have shop­ sources, the President is trying gineers , chemists, computer pro­ half day of language instruction ping centers, recreational facili­ ! wi th a half day of work In the to smoorh over the affair. He made grammers, actuaries, architects, ties , school s and other essential ! Kibbutz. There Is no charge for personal cal Is , they say, to Speak­ i product designers, systems ana­ services. All the developments are this program. er J ohn McCormick and other : lysrs, accountants and business within easy commuting dlstance of House members. to say he knew r. management graduates. 2. T HE CITY ULPAN - Pro­ Industrial and commercial cen­ nothing of the reor ganization plan , Positions are also available fessional , skilled wo rkers, and ters. which wa s an economy measure for physicians , paramedical per­ other qualified Individuals are pure and simple, and the Secre­ I eligible for a five month Ulpan Retiring: t cl l sonnel, registered nurses and in­ tary of State's business. Sources program . City Ulpanim are I ocated l f !cal and educational psychologists . Pensioners (up to the age of said the calls strongly Implied that in several of Israel's major popu- ·l f Employment contracts provide 65) may now purchase apartments 1atlo n centers. In dividuals may at­ pressure ought to be br ought to for transportation , shipment of In the aforementioned housing pro­ prevent hearings on the reorgan­ t tend the Ulpanlm either as resi­ ' f household goods to Israel , low­ jects. Retirees are eligible for ten ization plan, originally scheduled dential or external studen t. • cost housing, guaranteed Job place­ year mortgages of up to IL 10,- to go to Congress on March 4. Classes are conducted on a full t ment and a five month course in 000 ($3,333). Monthly payments av­ The Schwartz affair includes time basis with adequate oppor­ , conversational Hebrew at an Lnpan erage IL 100 ($33). two separate elements : Mr. · tunities for preparation and in­ (Hebrew Language Laboratory). In addition to this plan, there 1Schwartz, a Kennedy appointee, 1 dividual study. The Ulpan fee is promoted the open door policy of are various other housing and re­ t Teaching : $180 for the entire five month tirement opportunities in Israel. travel and immigration , which may Numerous positions·are avail­ course Including room and board. Representatives of the Israel Ali­ be ended by the disbanding of his l ' able in Israel's rapidly growing 3. FAMILY STUDY - Entire yah Center are ready to advise bureau and hi s departure; and the ' educational system. Teachers of families may study Hebrew at the you on all retirement possibili­ method of hi s disposal seems to : Math, English, Talmud, Physics Ulpan Ben Yehuda in Natanya. The ties. many like a Johnson deal, his scalp and other subjects are being sought Ulpan provides s upervision for in exchange for the passage last I by Israel! In s titutions. Salaries youngsters of kindergarten and Investments: September of liberalized immigra­ ! are commensurate with education- pre-school age, while the parents tion and Nationality Act amend­ Individuals Interested In In­ '. al background and reaching ex- attend Ulpan sessions. The fee for vestment opportunities in Israel ments. ; perience. this Ulpan ls $45 per family mem­ ln its arguments on the subject, may avail them seIves of expert : In addition ro the basic salary, her, per month (including room and advice available through the Israel the White House and State De­ I teachers receive increments for board). All Ulpan participants are partment have both denied vigor­ Allyah Center representatives. '. dependants and financial assls- responsible for their own round The Center has detailed Informa­ ously that anything but the saving I tance for fares and shipment of trip _transportation. of about $250,000 and the need for tion on many aspects of the Is­ i household goods, low cost housing Pursuing Your Education: rael! economy. a less complicated chain-of-com­ : and other benefits. · mand is behind the departure of l. Qualified teachers, without the Israel's multi-faceted educa- living In A Religious Abba Schwartz and his bureau. ; required Hebrew speaking back- tlonal system offers a wide range Community: To bolster that last point, one ( ground, will be taught Hebrew at of program s for students who wish which rankles many liberal Demo­ Call your Telephone .;, :, special Ulpanlm designed to meet to continue their studies. The ls- The Israel Aliyah Center has crats, the White House last week ! their particular needs. rael Allyan Center advises Business Office orasli" announced that scholars as well been Instrumental In forming sev­ ' students on the possibilities of eral religious communities In Is­ your telephone~an\iliir I Learning Hebrew: attending Israel's educational In- 45 Orthodox Rabbis rael. The Center encourages the ; The Israel Aliyah Center en- stltutlons. formation of additional projects by <. ables Individuals to learn Hebrew . rellgious, communal and fraternal Sue Animal Friends through the "Ulpan" method. He- Purchasing An Apartment: ~ organizations, offering these new NEW YORK - The Long Is­ ~ brew language courses are avail- Americans and Canadians may land Commission of Rabbis, an groups Information on building able In city centers and at Klb- now purchase apartments In any Orthodox group of 45 rabbis, has ~ construction. land procurement butzlm. The course of Instruction one of 18 suburban communities flied a $1,000,000 llbel sulragalnst ~ and other pertinent details. the Friends of Animals, Inc., The New York Times and 58 Individ­ -f;::k· uals whose names were listed In FOR INFORMATION: an advertisement that appeared Mr. Moshe Shadmi, Rhode Island representative of the Israel Aliyah Center, In the Times on March 1 pro­ . phone testing what It called the "ob­ will interview individuals interested in "Opportunities In Israel" on Tuesday, viously cruel procedure" of May 3rd, 1966. Appointments may be made by calling 421-4111 or by "shackling and hoisting" con­ contacting: scious · animals prior to kosher slaughter. @ They charged that the adver­ Mr. Moshe Shadmi, Israel .Aliyah Center, Inc. tisement llbeled them by saying 515 Park Avenue, New York, New York (10022) New England Telephone that they were "paid to super­ Part of lhe Nationwide Bell System vise kosher catering establish­ (212) Plaza 2-0600 ments and butcher shops." 14 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, .FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 Herald subscribers comprise MEMORIAL CANDLES Independence Day. This custom has an active buying market. JERUSALEM "Ylzkor" become a tradition, and the Candle candles for the heroes who died Commemorating Vallance will be In ----:PERSONAL---- In the War of Liberation are lighted transformed Into a second Hanu­ In every J ewlsh home on the eve of kah ceremony, eventually. Hollywood ...

DORIS ­ All forms of personal and business insurance. By Barney Glazer coME HOME including - life - Accident - Group - Fire - Pootsie, please, why are Automobile - Casualty - Bonds HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. - Ed­ ADD Murray Korda and the " die Fisher finally got around to members of h!s Beverly Hilton you doing this to me? Come dating Mia Farrow .. . Producers home for the holidays. Monseigneur Room Srrlngs to the Murry M. Halpert of canceled teevee series don't gr owing list of Fawlck violin own­ So, what's a couple of 800 Howard Bldg. fade out. Howle Horwitz, who once ers. Industrialist Thomas L. Fa­ gave us " Sunset Strip," returned dented fenders? Mr. Golden DE 1-9100 Residence: DE 1-6949 wick applied hi s artistic hand to with "Barman" . .. Sandy Koufax creating the fine In strument. Other fixed the car "just like overlooked the onl y way to make the 11 owners Include: Jack Benny, new. Dodgers meet his demands. A bowl Jascha Heifetz, and the entire St. of hot chicken soup would have Louis and Kansas City Symphony You are · an excellent brought Walter O' Malley around. driver. I'll never complain DICK FLYNN orchestras. 1 AFTER 52 years In showbiz, again. Complete Landscaping Service FREE DELIVERY Allied Artists exploita tion mana- II Your Lonesome One 21 YEARS OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE FINER ,O1NTS OF GARDENING ' DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED ge r Harry Goldstein retired. When "'fi WINES AND LIQUOkS I was 8 , Goldstein, as projection- , LAWN MAINTENANCE By The Month 1st for the Boston Shawmut Thea- ' MA 1-0980 Rod,oto, A Specialty ter, le t me watch him work. He BOSTON MAX SILVERMAN 'S al so handled the -spotlight when my Body &Wor_k s brother, BIiiy Glason, started his e LAWNS BUILT • EVERGREENS e LOAMING Swan Liquor vaudev!lle career at 16 (and be­ 185 Pine St., Providenc · e SEEDING • FERTILIZING cause it was a disgrace in those GA 1-2625 813 HOPE ST . (At Fowrth) PROV. days to be an actor, our mom Free Estimates WI 1-8465 PARKING IN THEATRE LOT axed him out of the business, but only temporarily.) ARE ALL Jewish-Italian com­ edy teams destined for greamess only to spilt due to personal mis­ understandings? To wit: Abbot and Costello and Martin and Lewis? Or will bushy- haired Marry (Hello Dere) Allen and gorgeous Steve Ross! break the Jinx? XAVI ER CUGAT once told me, "Many people think I'm Jewish and Abbe (Lane) Isn't, It' s the other way around." This week, Rod Stei­ ger said about his acrress- wlfe Claire Bloom, "Many people think I'm Jewi sh and Claire Isn' t. It's the other way around." Sound like a broken record? Mixed marriages in showbiz cause columnists all kinds of trouble. To wit, Dick Kallman of You can be $3000 the ''Hank" teevee series. My be­ lief tha t Dick is Jewish was al­ most Justified, not quite. He and his mother· are Episcopalian. His father, who died two years ago, richer in 5 years was Jewish. ALAN KING starred In Broad~ way' s " The Impossible Years" but Cary Grant may nab the lucrative movie role. Instead of being dis­ appointed, Allan said, "Imagine/ with Save•0·Matic I can tell my mother-in-law and my friends that Cary Grant re­ placed me/" .. . Lennie Kent calls Mil ton Berle's wife Ruthie "the captain of the Olympic Yenteh Team ... WHEN Louis Prima sings his feverish Italian lyrics, Sam Butera picks up the. tempo with some tor­ rid sax accompalnment. The faster Prima sings, the faster Butera plus 4% instant interest plays. Finally Louis sings so fast Butera finds It Impossible to keep up with the approprla te fll ls. He breaks up and laughingly admits that Louis' lyrics are too far out, even for him. "Whassamatter?" demands Prima, " You can't play In Litvak?" LOUIS NUSSENBAUM,82-year old resident of the Los Angeles Jewish Home for the Aged, Is a one-time star of the Yiddish stage . . . When Vivien Leigh Only you ca n decide how much richer you want Start your Save-0-Ma tic plan soon at the Hospital opened In the stage production, to be five yea rs from now - but Hospital Trust's _Trust banking office near you - we have 25. "Ivanov," she played John Giel­ Save-0 -Matic plan ca n make it easier to reach your See how SAVE-0-MATIC builds mo re sav ings gud's beautiful but tubercular Jew­ goal. ish wife. On opening night, Miss through regular-as-clockwork deposits: Leigh received the following wire W hether it's $600, $1 ,200 or $3,000, systematic from an admirer, "Roses are red, sav ing with Save-0-Matk w ill do it. You ca n't forget ,---- YOU SAVE ----, violets are bluish: It took Mr. to save because we remember fo r you. Here's how MONTHLY Chekhov to make you Jewish." it works ... DEPOSIT 1 YEAR 3 YEARS 5 YEARS Just decide on the amount of money you wa nt to $ 10 $ 120 $ 360 $ 600 have in five yea rs. The chart shows what you Christian Pole United need to save each month to get it. You simply 20 240 720 1200 autho ri z~ us to transfer a fixed amount each month 35 420 1260 2100 With Family She Saved from your Hospital Tru st checkiffg account to your - so 600 1800 3000 ELIZABETH , N.J. - An emo­ Hospital Tru st sav ings account ... we'll do the res t. tional reunion took place when a 100 1200 And best of all, you gel 47" interes t compounded 3600 6000 Polish Catholic woman met for quarterly right from the da y the deposit is made PLUS OUR 4% INTER ES T RA TE. From d.iy of deposil to d.iy the first time since World War ("instant interes t") until th e da y you want the of withdr.iw.il. Compounded qu.irterly. 11 with survivors of a Jewish money. Provided $10.00 is /(•fl on d cpm il until end o/ quJrler. family she helped keep alive dur­ ing the Nazi occupation of Poland, Adam Reihe!, an .Elizabeth builder who came to the United States In 1949, and mem hers of RHODE ISLAND his family had waged a campaign to bring Mrs. J anlna Rybak to HOSPITAL TRUST this country. Here on a six­ month visa , she Is staying at COMPANY the home of Mr. Relbel and his wife. Mrs. Rybak, now 56, provided food and shelter for Mr. Reihe! and three of his brothers and sisters while Hitler's extermina­ tion program was at Its height.

Herald ads get good results! their contribution will help Innum­ In Memory Of Sharon ... erable people and can serve as an example to those who feel that (Continued from Page l) merce Is donating the fashion show ..one person can't do anything.,. which wlll be held following the One willing and dedlcated worker And so she decided to rim a bridge. Cal art has contributed the can do a great deal. dessert bridge to benefit the Rhode work necessary to arrange the cen­ Island Cancer Society, sothateven terpieces. The bridge prizes were Mem hers of the committee If It were Impossible to save donated, 1lnd a cake sale which helping this · year Include Mes­ Sharon, others might be helped. enabled them to raise $200 which dames Helen Moretti, Alice Suglia, This first effort, I ast year,. was used to purchase a television Connie O'Donnell, Ann Gallogly, was r1D1 completely by Mrs. Wln- set for the raffle which they are Maggie Vaphltles, Barbara Sher­ 1 lcleman (the former Shella Perlow holdlng was a success because of man, Betty Eley, Sandra Friedman, of Pawtucket) with only the occa­ the contributions of many women. Lynn Pelletz,- Roberta Boyajlan, sional · help of Mrs. Ellen (the In a world where "love thy Sue Brooks, Joan Bloom, Carole former Joan Frye of Providence), neighbor" Is a saying which seems Chernack, Seena Gllsteln, Corrine who was occupied with her sick to have been forgotten,· a story Resnick and Miss Pat Essley. They cb,lld who, at that time, was In such as this Is heart-warming. come from Cranston, Barrington and out of the hospital constantly Mrs. Wlnlcleman and Mrs. El­ and Providence as well as from because of operations, radiation len cannot say enough about their Warwick. treatments, etc. neighbors, their relatives, and Mrs. Wlnlcleman had her own Mrs. Ellen, who soon will have even the strangers who have heip­ a -brother or sister for Susan, has problems when her husband had to ed them. The two friends are hop­ enter the hospital In the midst of suffered a great loss, but rather Ing to double the contrlbutl~ they than give In to her sorrow, she has, her planning for the bridge. She will be able to give the Cancer spent her days between meetings with the help of a loving and deter­ Society this year. mined friend, been able to bring and the hospital. Without any or­ The two young women call ganized help, Just through friends some good to others out of her own themselves "Just housewives,'' but and relatives, the two womenwere troubles. able to raise $498 which they con­ SUSAN ELLEN tributed to the R. I. Cncer Society as "friends of Sharon Ellen." Approximately two weeks after the bridge, on June 4, Sharon dled of PASSOVER GREETINGS FOR YOUR MUFFLER cancer. AND TAILPIPE NEEDS \ Mrs. Winkleman and Mrs. El- Call HERB'S First len decided that they would make BEAU BELLE the bridge an annual affair ahd so · this year their dessert bridge and BEAUTY SALON HERB'S AUTO fashion show In memory of the HAIR STYLISTS - TINTING 2-1/2 year old twin sister of Susan, COLD WAVES - CUTTING SUPPLY INC. a pretty, healthy four-year old, 59 PLAINFIELD ST. wlll be held at the Colony Motor 1985 Broad Street Hotel on May 11, from 8 through PROVIDENCE 11:30 P.M. Cranston Instead of Just two of them, GA 1-9464 there are at least 20 women help­ 941-5180 HAPPY PASSOVER Ing this year. "The letter quoted above was written last year by Mrs. Winkleman to Sammy Davis asking him to appear at this second PASSOVER GREETINGS annual affair. This however will be Impossible because of prior FASHION HAIRDRESSERS commitments In Las Vegas where 906 Park Avenue, Cranston he will be at the time of the bridge, 941-4738 which has been expanded to Include a fashion show this year. Help Is forthcoming from many. Major-Gen. Leonard Holland and PASSOVER GREETINGS Mayor Horace E. Hobbs of Warwick ~I wlll be present to greet the guests. STATE LINE RESTAURANT & DINER "The Warwick Chamber of Com- ' 805 Broadway, Pawtucket to make It a year-round resi­ 723-9800 dence. f According to the pastor, the Rev. J ohn C. McAlear, a portion of the two and two-fifths acres BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER involved, that nearest to the church on Rockland Street, will be made JOLLY CHEF DINER Into a parking lot. The buildings 876 BALD HILL ROAD, WARWICK on well-landscaped grounds w!II 821-9831 be maintained as they are for the time being. Known as ''Lasata," the estate had been In the Bouvier family PASSOVER GREETINGS since Michael C. Bouvier of New York, a noted International finan­ SETIAN SALON OF BEAUTY cier, bought It in 1906. Jacqueline 364 Westminster Street Bouvier Kennedy, widow of the Providence late president, spent childhood 621-7206 ..,____ vacations there . 'LASATA' SOLD - Dr. Maurice Adelman, Providence pediatrician, The estate has a frontage of has sold his summer estate In Narragansett to a Roman Catholic church. 355 feet on Rockland Street and HOLIDAY GREETINGS FROM 240 on Central Street. The house has 14 rooms, three baths, a ALFREDO'S RESTAURANT Dr. Adelman Sells 'Lasota' lavette, and five fireplaces. There 280 THAYER STREET PROVIDENCE The summer home of Dr. Mau­ Is a partial cellar built while the Specializing in Italian-American Cuisine Victorian-style residence and Located on the East Side 621-5397 rice Adelman, Providence pedla­ Adel mans owned the property . An trlclan, has been purchased by stable. Or. Adelman and his late exceptionally spacious, broad, St. Thomas More Church corpora­ wife bought the property from roofed porch with hardwood floor tion In Narragansett. The estate, John Vernon Bouvier Jr., and had was formerly used for dancing, at Rockland and Central Streets, completed much of the restora­ and has two entrances with double PASSOVER GREETINGS was once a showplace, with Its tion and modernization necessary doors to the I arge living room. from Reporter Who Bared Burros Tells Of Hate Ltterature , &· ll. (/)avJUtfJb!d & efJ. NEW YORK - What Is the Is a literature drenched In Jewish Circle as the labor-oriented, secu­ effect when an average respect­ plots; Communist Jewish plots: lar voice of many not affiliated able middle-class Christian has an capitalist Jewish plots; even with the synagogue. "LARGE ENOUGH TO BE OF SERVICE, Intensive encounter with American Christian Jewish plots, strange SMALL ENOUGH TO BE A FRIEND" hate literature? Does he reject It to tell. Wild though It Is, I found out of hand as repul sl ve? · that reading so much of It, so Kaiser Company Names Quite to the contrary, accord­ repetitive, so monomanic, stained 90_8 Hospital Trust Building TE 1-7150 Ing to John Phllllps, New York my own outlook with suspicious­ Times reporter, whofoundhlmself ness for several hours afterward. Morell As Arbitrator deeply affected when he examined It was hard for me to kick It. WITH BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER the bizarre Daniel Burros case, As I viewed my fellow passengers TEL AVIV - The Kaiser En­ accordlng to a story In the curren; on the subway and In the street, gineering Company, an American Iss ue of "Point of View," publish­ I found unsavory thoughts Intrud­ contracting fir m engaged by the lliduvu:l'.d ed by the Institute of Jewish Af­ ing. I cannot recall ever before Dead Sea Works to build dlkes fairs of the J ewlsh Labor Commit­ having such Ideas, andwouldnever for a massive potash evaporation ;J(aiJ, }.aAltioltd tee and the Workmen's Circle. Imagine that I could ever enter­ system at the southern part of Annabelle Wolfzahn, correspon­ tain them.' ·" the Dead Sea, named as arbitra­ WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT dent for the magazine, reports Mr. The story reports briefly on a tor In Its dispute with the Dead Phllllps found he could not quickly review of Incidents In Burros' Sea Works over the specifications MISS TERRY shed the Influence of the litera­ life from a psychiatric viewpoint of the contract, Admiral Ben Mo­ HAS JOINED OUR STAFF ture he had read while working on by Or. Morton M. Hodas, as well rell , an American steel executive. the case of the Jewish leader of as a probing of possible Implica­ Kaiser has charged thatthe en­ the New York State Ku Klux Klan tions for modes of Jewish sur­ gineering specifications for the WE SPECIALIZE IN who committed suicide when the vival In this country by dikes on the Dead Sea "were Im­ ADVANCED HAIRSTYLING Times exposed his Jewish bacl<­ Rabbi Julius Rosenthal, editor of possible to attain." The Dead Sea AND COLORING Works has not yet named Its mem­ ground. "Point of View.'' 108 OAK Hill AVE., PAWTUCKET Phillips "ruminated upon a The Institute of Jewish Affairs ber on the three-man panel, which, FOR APPOINTMENT CALL Is maintained by the J ewlsh Labor according to the contract, will also Open Monday Through Saturday frightening reaction of his own to 726-9452 Thursday Night 'Til 9 the mass of fanatic literature. 'It Committee and the Workmen's Include an Israeli Judge, 16 1lfE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL a, 196,6 ....c: Herald subscribers comprise cellent results, advertise in the A subscription to the Herald who "has everything" else. Call an active buying market. Por ex- Herald. Call 724-0200. American Released Is a good gift for· the person 724-0200. Best Wishes for Paasover Paasover Greetings From . Syrian Cell PASSOVER GREETINGS Elbabeth Oandy Sheppe . CRANSTON Holiday Oreetlna'a ".Queen of candy" FANCY WIRE CO. NEW YORK - A 26-year­ EDGEWOOD T. D. BROWN, INC. old American tourist, Edward BEAUTY SHOP 802 Park Avenue 1655 Elmwood Ave. Levy, was returned to Israel ear­ School Ppotographers 1742 Broad St., Cranston Jlier this month, after nearly two Cranston, R. I. 46101850 STuart 1-6320 years In a Syrian prison cell. 781-5677 He was exchanged for a 19-year­ PASSOVER GREETINGS old Syrian, Youse! Ahman Ashem el-HaJ, who had crossed Into Is­ PASSOVER GREETINGS PASSOVER GREETINGS PASSOVER GREETINGS 1 PINKERTON'S, INC. rael on a bicycle • . Embassy officials of the Un,lted States were still unsure of wh~re (}iovanni; Jllmtldip,~ Mr. Levy's home Is, when he was WILLETT REALTY returned. An embassy spokesman RESTAURANT said, "He ts. not in good shape:• 873 Willett Avenue 148 TAUNTON AVENUE The exchange of prisoners took East Providence for the fin est in place on a bridge spanning the Italian Cuisine EAST PROVIDENCE Jordan north of the Sea of Galilee. SECURITY ISERVICE INVESTIGATION Back home again, the slim, 433-2010 376 Bullocks Pt. Avenue JAMES P. McKENNA, Mgr. dark-hatred student sat In his East Providence PROV. OFF., 10 DORRANCE ST. 434-1723 330 HOWARD BUILDING family's upper East Side apart­ WILLIAM C. IANNONE 331-1543 ment and recalled the two In­ 433-1270 ,, credibly lonely years he had spent In a Syrian prison. PASSOVER GREETINGS PASSOVER GREETINGS "TI,ey hit me a few times." he said. "But the bad thing was For PASSOVER GREETINGS the mental bit and the quiet. I Gracious Dining ·Warwick BATTY REALTY was alone In one room for two CO. years.•• ELECTROLUX ' Realtors and Appraisers Edward Levy, 25, was work­ HOLLAND HOUSE Travel ing at an Israel! ldbbutz near the INC. Since 1936 Sea of Galilee when he wandered 1473 Warwick Avenue CORP. across the Syrian-Israel! frontier RE 9-484-8 375 North Broadway In June, 1964. Warwick 509 Waterman Avenue "I was at the crest of a hill East Providence Robert J. Cotton near the border and decided to 463-8282 463-9802 East Providence go over. The thought crossed BEST WISHES FOR A Harold L. Kendall Jr. 434-8500 my mind to turn around, but all 438-2430 of a sudden there were soldiers HAPPY PASSOVER In front of me and a machine Passover Greetings gun nest behind. It was too late." HENRY M. SOULE Shortly afterward he was taken Attractive & Functional to a prison near Damascus. COMPANY His prison life quickly settled Offices into a numbing routine of endless hours alone In his cell broken only by occasional Interrogations PASSOVER PROVIDENCE bg iaJl(&,U;l~ held by prison officials. YARN CO. INC. "It was so depressing," he remembered. "rd hear Arable GREETINGS every now and then, but I couldn't understand what they were saying. r1 r1 6 The only things they would tell me got my hopes up. When they Gen&ral Construdion • didn't materiallze that made it worse. Extends Heavy Construdion "Sometimes they'd put an Arab CONCRETE • MASONRY In with me for a day," he con­ Q 41 tinued. 8Ut we could never talk." 722-2110 Designers &Suppliers of He wrote two letters to his Best Wishes ' 421 Walcatt Street Pawtucket parents, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Levy, -~ Offim Extends Best Wishes For A of 360 E. 72nd St., but they were -lll • C.,lllll Happy Passover never received. Ill-- After months of careful dip­ For A Happy 33 WESTMINSTER ST. lomatic maneuvering, Israel nego­ tiated Levy's exchange for the PROVIDENCE, R. I. PASSOVER GREEI'INOS Syrian who had crossed into Is­ rael a year ago. Passover CHALET BEAUTY SALON "llley didn't tell me anything,'' UN 1-4055 - CREATIVE HAIR STYLING Levy said of his release. "They Just took me from the prison 795 Hope Street, Providence 831-6226 and brought me to the frontier." He arrived here last night. "He looks better than we had PASSOVER GREETINGS been led to expect,'' the father said. "But he's going to a doctor MR. AND MRS. HAROLD GLATT AND CHILDREN and a psychiatrist." WASHINGTON - The State Automotive Parts Exchange Room 406, Westminster Bldg., 187 Westminster St. Department reported that Syria had MA 1-9313 not told the truth when It denied 9 Ford Street GA 1-6275 Providence, R. I. PASSOVER GREETINGS In I 964 that It held an American citizen In prison. The embassy In !Jamascus, Mr. McCloskey said, had unconfirmed PASSOVER GREETINGS MR. AND MRS. SELWYN KIRSHENBAUM rwnors in I 964 that an uniden­ AND FAMILY tified American was being held by MISS MARGO'S BEAUTY SALON Syrian authorities. The embassy 236 WESTMINSTER ST. 21 Sunset Terrace, .Cranston asked the Syrian Foreign Ministry 208 UNION ST. Extend Best Wishes For A Happy Passover on Oct. I, 1964, whether H was MA 1-7633 MA 1-8308 true that an American was In a Syrian prison. The Foreign Min­ istry replied Dec. 21, 1964 that no BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY PASSOVER American was held. PASSOVER GREEI'INGS Mr. Levy possessed an Ameri­ can passport and also other Iden­ COUNTRY INN FASHION CORNER BEAUTY SALON tification material when he was 438 Quaker Lane, Jdn. 2 and 3, Warwick, R. I. 1476 Park Avenue, Cranston released, Mr. McCloskey said. 737-4183 828-9845 942-9743 Mr. Levy has never been tried, and he was held In solitary con­ finement almost continuously until his releas"e..__ __ _ PASSOVER GREETINGS PASSOVER GREETINGS SYRIA REJECTION Laurene's Dress And Lingerie Shop WASHINGTON - Syria has Sportswear - Accessories - Women's, Juniors, Misses rejected a United States Govern­ ment protest concerning an Ameri­ Lingerie - Dresses FOR REAL ESTATE ACTION ·• I I can citizen who was held Incom­ 1615 Warwick Ave., Hoxsie RE 7-9004 municado for almost two years, after crossing the border from Is­ • RESIDENTIAL rael. The State Department has been told that the American, Ed­ FOLGO FORD SALES, INC. ward Levy of New York, was ac­ tually "an Israeli citizen" and • COMMERCIAL that the State Department had 0 greatly exaggerated" the case. The Syrian statement charged that CARS • TRUCKS • INDUSTRIAL ''Zionist circles" had exploited the affair "to damage Syria's rela­ tions with friendly foreign coun­ SA.LES - SIRVICE tries." Mr. LeV}''s detention was LOBEL REAL TY l',O. disclosed when he was r eleased 334 PROVIDENCE ST., WEST WARWICK 367 EDDY ST., PROV. - Tel. GA 1-3340 in an Israeli prisoner exchange VA 1-8900 lt.eol Estate lrohrs with Syria for a Syrian held In PASSOVER GREETINGS Israel.