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Negro ~ights Leader Accuses Diplomat Of 'Evading Facts' NEW YORK-Bayard Rustin, you but from some other person Negro rights leader, has accused . It would have been taken as Just THE ONLY ENGLISH-JEW/SH WEEKLY IN R. I. AND SOUTHEAST MASS . the First Secretary of the Soviet another prickle In the routine of l Embassy In Washington of "evad­ anti-Soviet activities constantly ing . . . the stubborn facts" of carried on by certain groups In VOL, LI, NO, 4 FRIDAY,MARCH24, 1967 15¢ PER COPY 16 PAGES anti-Jewish discrimination ln the this country." u_s,S.R. The charge was contained Mr. Bubnov described rhe Com­ ln an exchange of correspondence mission flndlngsaspartofa "cam­ between Mr. Rustin, chairman of paign that serves no other purpose the Ad Hoc Commission on the than to deliberately distort the Rights of Soviet Jews, and Igor Image of the Soviet Union In the D, Bubnov, second-ranking mem­ minds of Americans and to divert ber of the Soviet Embassy In Wash­ their energies and attention from ington. areas really worthy of applica­ Last December 5, Mr. Rustin tion." sent to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly On Feb. I of this year Mr. F. Dobrynln a copy of a report Rustin replied In a 600-word let­ by the Commission ba sed on docu­ ter to the Soviet spokesman chal­ 1: mentary and analytic studles and lenging him "to accurately report testimony given at a public hearing the true contents of the Judgment • earlier In the year on Jewish con­ to your superiors and to the Soviet '1 ditions In Soviet Russia. people. ◄ The report, an ll-page docu­ The Negro leader, who Is ex­ ◄ ◄ ment entitled "JudgmenJ of the Ad ecutive director of the A. Philip ◄ Hoc Commission," concluded that Randolph Inst! tute, declared: ◄ "the future of Soviet Jewry ls In "Neither the tone nor the content ◄ grave jeopardy" and called on the of that study Is remotely related ,,' leaders of the U,S_S,R. to restore to anti-Soviet attitudes or activity. full cultural and religious rights On the contrary, the study ell splays to the Jev.:l sh community and to an appreciation of the evolution permit large-scale emigration of of Soviet life and It looks forward Soviet Jews to Is rael. hopefully to the resolution of out­ Mr. Bubnov replied for Am­ standlng Issues between our two bass ador Dobrynln on Dec. 30 . countries as a major step toward The Soviet diplomat rejected the world peace and International / Commission findings and declared: s tability." / • 'Had tht s letter come not from . (Continued on Page 13) - ~ BIBLE CONTEST WINNERS-Eighth Annual Bible Contest winners are, from left, Louise Burack, Tem,>le Emanuel, Worcester, and Cheryl Fain, Tem;:,Ie Beth Torah-Cranston Jewish Center, who tied for third Greggars And Hamantashen place; Jo Ann Kantorowltz, Temple Emanu-El, second place, and Miriam Jaffe, Temple Emanu-El, first place. From left, standing, are Rabbi Saul Leeman of Temple Beth Torah; Rabbi Jacob Handler, Temple Beth Israel; Rabbi Abraham Chill, Congregation Sons of Abrahkm; Rabbi Norman Valley, Temple Beth Readied For Feast Of Purim Am, Warwick, and Dr. Aaron Sovlv, executive director of the Bureau of Jewish Education of Greater Providence. The contest, conducted by the Bureau, was held on Sunday, March 19, at Tem;:,Ie Beth Torah. Purim will be celebrated on a party after the services. Sunday Fred Kelman Photo Saturday evening and Sunday In morning the Meglllah will be read congreg•J;lQ~s throughout the area, again at 8:00 a.m. followed I,y the -with the reading of the Meglllah Men's Club Breakfast. and with parties for children. Bishops Urge Catholics To Initiate Hamantashen are being baked and greggars brought our from the OHAWE SHOLAM boxes where they were packed Abraham M_ Mal, president of rGrassroots Level' Contacts With Jews away last year. Congregation Ohawe Sholam, Paw­ NEW YORK-The Bishops' Christian anti-Semitism. They Catholic-Jewish Relations, which Purim Is celebrated on the 15th tucket, announced that the reading Committee for Ecumenical and state that the Crucifixion story drafted the guidelines. of Adar In cities known to have of the Meglllah will take place Interrellglous Affairs, created last should be presented In such a way Msgr. William W. Baum, ex­ been walled at the time of Joshua, on Saturday at 7 p.m. On Sunday November at the foundlng meeting as not to Implicate all Jews of ecutive director of the committee, and so In Prague, where It ls not morning at 8 a.m. Sanford Tracht­ of the National Conference of Cath­ Jesus' time or of today 1 'in a said the drawing up of guidelines known certainly whether the cl ty enberg wlll chant the Meglllah. olic· Bishops, Issued last week a collective guilt for the crime." Is only a beginning, and that the was enclosed by walls then, Purim Regular services on Saturday wlll set of guidelines for Jewish-Cath­ The Bishop• Conference was next step will be the establish­ ls observed onboththel4thandl5th be held at 9 a.m. Also on Sunday olic relations. established In accordance with In­ ment of a Secretariat for Catholic­ of Adar, and the Meglllah Is read morning Herman Geller, chairman These guidelines urge Cath­ structions of the Ecumenical - Jewish Relations. Such a secre­ four times. of the Hebrew School, announced ol\cs to Initiate contacts wlthJews Council to form a conference of tariat could be established next that the children will take part at both official and "grassroots" bishops ln every co1D1try. The month, when the American bishops CONGREGATION In the Meglllah reading, which levels, and call for common prayer Most Rev. John J. Carberry, meet, and Is one of four projected MISHKON TFILOH will be followed by a "hamantash" with Jews. They also ask that Bishop of Columbus, Ohio, Is "operating arms" of the com­ The Purim festivities at Con­ party sponsored by the Sisterhood. Catholics acknowledge the "living chairman of thecommlttee,andthe mittee. A Secretariat for Chris­ gregation Mlshkon Tflloh will be­ Howard Covitz and Mrs. Abraham and complex reality of Judaism Most Rev. Francis P. Leipzig, tian Unity ls already flDlctionlng, gin with the readlng of the Meglllah M. Mal, teachers, are In charge after Christ,'' and urge "frank Bishop of Baker, Ore., Is chair­ and others will deal with non- day evening at 7 p.m. The Sister­ of the festivities for the children. and honest" treannent of historic man of the subcommlsslon for (Contlnued on page 14) hood wlll serve refreshments at (Continued on page 16) National Science Foundation Makes 2nd Grant To Day School Teacher By LOIS ATWOOD when they are upside down. Rabbi Norman Cohen, a teacher The program Involved working at the Providence Hebrew Day with a scientist Immersed In re­ School, has just been awarded "a search, profiting from his grant for summer research, for knowledge and Inspiration, and the second t!m~. by the National meeting top-notch teachers from Science Foundation. He was also other schools ("a very good selected last year topartlclpateln experience"). The day school the Foundation-sponsored sum­ reacher mentioned also the fact mer research program at the Uni­ that such a program enables a versity of Vermont. This summer teacher to speak -.vlth authority, he will work on superconductlon as an academlcbutnon-laboratory at John Carroll University In grasp of his subject matter does Cleveland, Ohio. not. The program, In Its eighth year Norman and Ellen Cohen came this summer, Is designed to give to Providence from New York City, science teachers a knowledge of where they had always lived. "We J research and techniques, so that were very apprehensive about they will return to their class­ leaving, but having left, are not rooms with a firmer grasp of their .anxious to get back. There Is more subject matter, the authority of of an Intense religious life" In New having worked as a scientist on York than here, however In terms experiments, an awareness of what of environment, friends, erC., they ts sl~lflcant In the world of their said, but Rhode Island has seemed specialty (for Rabbi Cohen, pleasantly peaceful after the physlce), and an 1D1derstandlng of schedule Rabbi ·Cohen maintained some of the problems Involved In there. ·He taught fifth through scientific experiment. The text­ 12th grades simultaneously, book doesn't tell you, for ex­ teaching In an elementary school ample, that filling an odd-shaped from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Then mercury vessel without any air he ran the four blocks to Ch'san gaps (bubbles) may take a week ... Sofer High School where he taught nor do you learn exceptbyexperl­ from 3:30 to 6:10 p.m. He taught ' Rabbi Norman Cohen checks our equipment used In his research at the University of Vermont. menohat some machines only run (Continued on page 13) - ----~- -- ··----.- -r--- ·- '

_2 'Ilill RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 PIANO SOLOIST-Jean-Paul Se- Geneva Prize and the Schilling villa wlll be soloist lfl the sixth Prize. Ben-Gurion Delighted At Establishment concert of the Rhode Island Phil- harmonic Orchestra on Saturday The program wlll Include the evening, April ),at Veterans Mem­ Beethoven overture to Fidelio, Of World Bible American Branch orial Audi tori um . He will perform Peter Menln' s Canto (In I ts first NEW YORK-Former Premier Society Foundation was aMounced. Beethoven's Concerto No. 3 In C performance In Rhode Island) and David Ben-Gurlon was presented The former Premier reiterated his ' Minor for piano and orchestra. Mussorgsky's pictures at an Ex­ with the Herbert H, Lehman Mem­ conviction that "without the He­ Mr. Sevllla has toured extensively hibition, In an orchestration by orial Award recently before an brew Bible there would be no In Europe and on this continent, Leopold Stokowskl. Tickets are audlent:e of 1,200 volunteer work­ Jewtsh people today," and that It and has received the Paris National available at the orchestra's office, ers In the United Jewish Appeal ·caMot be tu)ly understood In trans­ Conservatory' a Prize of Honor, the 831-3123. of Greater· New York. The lation. gold medallion described the 80- "The survival and return of year-old Israeli statesman as a our people," he said, "to the SINGLE ADULTS 1•1 soldier, scholar, statesman" Third Jewish Commonwealth EXCLUSIVELY FOR AGE 18 TO 29 - whose • 'prophetic vision has guided (the present State of Israel) would the people of Israel through an era not have been possible had not the BY THE GUYS AND DOLLS ... of tragedy and triumph." Jews carried In their conscious­ This Dance will happen only once. People from all over New England will at• "We know," Governor Nelson ness the existence of two national tencL At the elegant Longwood Towers Hotel in Brookline, Mos.s. , on Sunday, , E. Rockefeller declared, "that the homelands, the geographical terri­ April 9, at 8 P,M , to midnight. The Boogaloo Go Bond and the Rhythm struggle Is not yet over. As long tory and the cul rural spiritual and Blues Band to please everyone'.s dancing pleasure. For any information write to P.O. Box 291, Brookline, Mass. 02146. · as fear and danger cloud the lives fatherland, the Bible." of your brothers, the work of the Dr. Halm M. Gevaryahu of United J ewlsh Appeal must go on. Represented by Off., 421-4641 Jerusalem, a close friend, who As long as men are kept from Is dlrector of the World Jewish MAX ROTHKOPF Res., 941-4810 - honoring the faith of their fathers, Bible Society Foundation, said the the appeal's lifeline of rescue must new American group had made ( ORGANIZATION be kept on ." arrangements for the establish­ THE LAWRY COMPANY The Governor said he became ment of the Ben-Gurlon Institute Est. 1922 a member of the United Jewish for the advancement of group NEWS Appeal family 21 years ago when Bible activity at the College of Monuments - Cemetery Lettering he helped to organize the appeal's Jewish Studies In Chicago. 9 o.m. - 5 p.m. 440 Cranston St. Coffee Hour Planned Non-sectarian Community Com­ The Institute will also house mittee. the national offices of the Amer­ Eve ;. and Sunday by oppt. Providence, R. I. The dinner was al so marked by ican group. Harry H. Ruskin, a For Those Interested the presentation of original, hand­ Chicago lawyer, Is president of the colored lithographs by the group, which plans to establish 12 PIERCE & ROSENFIELD In Israeli Peace Corps American artist, Chaim Gross, to seminars at colleges and univers­ A Hillel coffee hour for people the five general chairmen who had ities for training discussion ,~ MEAT & POULTRY MARKET ~ interested in Sherut La'am, an headed the appeal• s campaign here leaders of Bible groups. Israel! Peace Corps program for In I 966 . They were Andrew Good­ 136 OAKLAND AVE . lacrou from Temple Beth David) Americans, will be held on March man, Morris L. Levinson, Gustave R. I. BEAtrrY PAGEANT 28 at 7:30 p.m. at 80 Brown Street. L. Levy, Albert Parker and The Miss R. I. Universe Beauty "The House Of Prime" Former participants will rec01mr Chester H, Roth. Pageant wlll be held at the Palla­ their experiences and will be a­ Contributions that totaled $10- dium Ballroom In Warwick on • PRIME - TRIMMED vailable for questioning. mlllton were announced toward April 30th at 8 p.m. It will be • Sherut La'am (''Service to the the appeal• s nationwide goal of followed by a Coronation Ball. :TENDERLOIN STEAKS lb. 88(! People" ) Is a vohmtary program $75,620,000. TheNewYorkAppeal Mrs. Mary O'Neil, executive dl­ ------In which American youth spend Is the only fund-raising agency In rector for the fourth year, an­ • TENDER - MILK - FED • a year In Israel working on kib­ the metropolitan area for the nounced that the pageant will be butzim and Immigrant settlements United Israel Appeal, the Joint held on a state-wide basis and Is :vEAL STEAKS No uM11 lb. 1.19: In both professional and non­ Distribution Committee, the Or- open to single girls between the ------• professional capacities. It seeks ganization for Rehabilitation ages of 18 and 28. Judging wlll NO CHARGE for killing or plucking on through Training, the New take place In three categories; • our ( U) poultry. Save 30c on each bird . • to allevlP.te the asslmllatlonofnew • • Immigrants , especially those from York Association for New swim suits, evening gowns and CRANSTON the Near East and Africa. Educa­ Americans, the United Hiss personality. Talent ls not re­ tion and health Instruction are pri­ Service, and the National Jew­ quired. FREE DELIVERY •~0..",',~\~~E JA 1-3888 ish Welfare . WOONSOCKET mary areas of need. Application blanks are avail­ Experienced profe s s i on- Earl!er In Chicago, a week able at all R. I. Sears, Roebuck als, college graduates, and under­ ago, Mr. Ben-Gurlon saw a long­ Stores, official headquarters for graduates between the ages of 19 cherished hope fulfilled, when the pageanr.____ _ and 30 (not necessarlly Jewish) establishment of an American sec­ Creative are quallf!ed participants . tion of the World Jewish Bible Subscribe to the Herald. .R'epuo/icon DiPrete MEL SIMONS TO ENTERTAIN ~ The Annual Gentlemen' s Night _I_ __(Jlu_"t.u.a_h..i_·lld __I j for of the Ladles Aid and Sisterhood of Congregation Ohawe Sholam, HARRY DERMER ters, Sarah Winn and Frances Pawtucket, wlli be held on Sunday, Funeral services for Harry Polak of Brookline; six grand­ Congress March 26 , at 8:15 p.m. In the Dermer, 67, of 222ThurbersAve­ children and six great-grand­ vestry of the synagogue. !(,lei nue, who died Monday after a I ong children. Simons of Boston, a humorist, will lllness, were held Wednesday at . . . Elect Mayor James DiPrete, Jr. - entertain. Honored guests wlll be the Max Sugarman Memorial MRS, ISAAC ROSENZW EIG A proven leader with a creative Rabbi and Mrs. Henry Ralzman of Chapel. Burial was In Lincoln Funeral services for Mrs. Eva Lakewood, N. J., newly-elected Park Cemetery. He was the hus­ (Kantrowitz) Rosenzweig of Brook­ program, A man of integrity. rabbi of the congregation. The band of Ida (Bernstein) Dermer. lyn, N. Y., who died Sunday, were publ!c ls Invited to attend. He was born In Austria, Sept. held the following day In that city. Prizes wlll be awarded, and I, 1899, a son of the late Richard Burial was In Long Island, N. Y. refreshments will be served. In and Faye (Gaster) Dermer, and he Besides her husband, Isaac Morch 28. /967 charge of the evening are had been a resident of this city Rosenzweig, survivors include a Mesdames Herman Geller, pres­ for the last 35 years. He was a daughter, Miss Lenore Rosenzweig Doy of f!eclsion I ident; Abraham M,Mal, program member of the South Providence of Brooklyn; her mother, Mrs. chairman; and Raymond Marks Hebrew Free Loan Association and Rose Kantrowitz of Brooklyn, and call 46 7-4 720. and Samuel Brown, ticket chair­ the Miriam Hospital Association. a brother, Morris Kantrowitz of men, assisted by Mesdames Taft , Jr . Chairman Besides his wife, he Is survived Cranston. Harold Kerzner. Carl Passman, by a son, Zlgmund Dermer of . . . Samuel Trachtenberg, Leonard Pittsburgh; a daughter, Mrs. MRS. MORRIS SHASET Loewy, Morris Scheiner, Israel Ralph Stoddard of Long Island, Funeral services for Mrs. Suchadolskl, Hyman Schwartz N. Y.; a brother, Morry Dermer Rose Shasetof 137 Sessions Street, and Max Fishman. of Bayonne, N, J .; two sisters, who dled March 16 after an Illness Mrs. Leon Schechter and Mrs. of three years, were held Sunday TO DEDICATE PLAQUE · Martha Blsberg, both of Brooklyn, at Temple Emanu-El. Burial was Jewish Herald The South Providence Hebrew N.Y ., and eight grandchildren. In Llncol~ Park Cemetery. She Free Loan Association will cele­ . . . was the widow of Morris Shaset, brate Its anniversary on April 2 MRS, HERMAN KANOFSKY who was the owner of Shaset' s by dedicating a plaque honoring Funeral services for Mrs. Es­ Auto Supply Company. Advertising all past board of dlrectors mem­ ther (Strashnlck) Kanofsky-Kane Born In Poland on Dec. 17, I bers who have dled. Rabbi Abra­ of 36 Hood Street, Newton, Mass., 1880, a daughter of the late Simon ham Chill will deliver the address, who died March 17, were held and Sarah Slepsky, she had been a and Rabbi Emanuel Lazar will Sunday at the Levine Chapel, resident of Providence 77 years. ' speak on behalfof the organization. Brookline, Mass. Burial was In She was a member of Temple Brings Results • • • Tradltlonal memorial prayerswlll Lincoln Park Cemetery. She was Emanu-El and Its Sisterhood, the be chanted. A collation will follow the wife of the late Herman Kanof­ Jewish Home for The Aged, Hadas­ the ceremonies, which will be held sky. sah, Pioneer Women and the at 7 p.m. In the vestry of Congre­ She Is survlv~d by two sons, Ladles' Association of Brandeis for people who sell drugs gation Sons of Abraham. Raymond Kane of Milton, Mass., University. Sldn~y Pepper and ·Elisha Scol­ and George Kane of Dorchester, She Is survived by a daughter, lard are co-chairmen of the anni­ Mass.; adaughter,DorothyDeluty Mrs. Frank Melllon of Providence, I for people who sell cars versary celebration, and all past of Newton,Mass.; abrorher,Louls four grandchildren and two great­ presidents are members of the Strashnlck of Providence; two sis- grandchildren. for people who sell groceries committee. GALA COFFEE-HOUSE EVENING people who The new college-age young Max S_ugarman Funeral Home ~ for sell clothes adult group of Temple Beth Am, Warwick, will sponsor a gala " THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR" for people who sell insurance coffee-house evening on April I, I , which will be open to all Jewish -MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION- young men and women. There will be professional entertainment and DE 1-8094 458 Hope Street DE 1-8636 TAP THE BUYING POWER refreshments at the event, which will begin at 8:30 p.m. There will OF JEWISH HERALD READERS be no admission fee. FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM OUT-OF-STATE Howard Schaffer ls president 724-0200 of the group; Ronna Aron, vice­ CAU COL_LECT president, and Nadine Greenfeld, secretary-treasurer. 0 , THE RHODE ISLA.ND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 3 ORGANIZATION NEWS , B'nai B 'rith Reports Need For M~re Campus Rabbis Choral Group To Sing NEFTS BOARD TO MEET NEW YORK-B'n~I B'rlth re- posal that Jewish seminaries Delegates from 3/l Temple sis­ ported last week an "acute Jack" present specialized courses on terhoods wlll convene at Temple of Jewish spiritual leaders at ministry to college students. At Annual Donor Dinner Beth El on Wednesday, March 29, American colleges and unl­ The board also approved a plan The Sisterhood of Temple Beth for a regional board meeting of versl ties In the face of an Increase offering rabbinical s chools "In­ Sholom . wlll hold their Annual the New England Federation of of 360,000 Jewish students. the-field" training opportwlltles Donor Dinner on March 29 In the Temple Sisterhoods. Mrs. Herman B'nal B'rlth's Hillel Founda­ for s tudents by provldlng "Intern­ Joseph Rosenfield Memorial Hall. Roseman of Hamden, Conn., tions, which supervise the re­ ships" at Hlllel campus facilities. Cocktails will be served at 6:30 regional president, wlll preside. ligious and counseling programs The foundation maintains Its own p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. The Officers of the Sisterhood of on _260 campuses, said In a Temple Beth El who wlll attend bulldlngs on campu~s to carry Jewish Choral Group of Providence report that "the years young Jews out programs covering virtually w111 present "An Evening of Jewish the meeting are Mesdames Hyman spend on .campus are too precious W, Jacobson, president; Newton B. every phase of Jewish spiritual Song." Ecor Rosenberg will be from the viewpoint of Jewish lden­ and cultural activity. accompanist and conductor. Cohn and Herbert M. Kanter, dele­ ,tlflcatlon, and perhaps even Jewish gates, and Victor Gold and Harry 1Slngers wlll be Ethel Ballon, cultural survival, to be treated The report pointed out that Helen 8\otcher, Annette Blumberg, Schlossberg, alternates. The lightly." approximately 80 per cent of all Avon Chalek, Marilyn R, Chalek, NEFTS Is one of 15 regional dls­ The report was Issued at the college-age Jewish youth were at­ Samuel Fink, Harriet Gladstone trlcts comprising the NFTS, with annual meeting of the B'nal B'rlth tendlng Institutions of higher and Libby M. Kelman. 615 sisterhoods In 12 countries. board of governors. learning, compared with the Coordinating c)lalrmen are The board endorsed a number general average of 28 per cent, Mesdames Charles Kaufman, HADASSAH MUSICALE K-12 SPONSOR Miss Sharon of recommendations to cope with which has also Increased sharply donor dinner and reservations: Providence Chapter of Hadas­ Mintz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. the problem, among them a pro- in recent years. Julius Levin, ad book; Milton Bol­ sah will celebrate Purim with a Thomas Mintz of I 9 Rutherglen skl, ad clearance and publ!clty; Musicale and tea at the Music Avenue. has been chosen as spon­ E$TABllSHED sor of Company K-12, Pershing 1M'~"... -Ii,,, , AC CREDITED . Windsor, Conn. Herman Weinstein and George· Mansion from 2 to 4 p. m. on """' NATIONALLY KNOWN March 27, Its next regular meeting Rifles, a fraternal R.O.T .C,order Strashnlck, program: Sumner L. ruN • FOR BOYS and GIRLS 6-1 5 I sK1us • rl Woolf, properties, Martin Wexler, date. at Providence College, for a FIUENDS ALIVE WITH ACTIVITY FOR EVERY AG~ GROUP ACH IEVEMENT •hospltal!ty, and Jack Dlnln, ex Two groups of artistes will second consecutive year. AII_Land and_Wal er Sports, Cralts,. Drama, Trips, Skiing, Scuba, Pioneering, officio. participate: Ethel Alberg, cellist, She received the title of "Hon­ R1flery, R1dmg, Lake and Pool , Dietary Laws, REQUEST BROCHURE. with Esther Chester at the peano, orary Captain" and wlll compete CHARLES M. BROWOY, Dir., 205 Mohawk Or., W. Hartford, Conn. 203-233-1673 MAGICIANS TO PERFORM and Carol Carclerl, contra} to, with with sponsors from other New A .company of well-known Allee Uffman at the piano. England colleges for the regional magicians wlll perform for the Mrs. El!sha A. Scollard, pres­ title. In April she wl)l attend a '(NASE What Cheer Lodge #24, Knights of l~nt, was In charge of arrange­ Mll!tary Ball of the 12th regiment PASSOVER-' 67 IESIIVI EAILY) PASSOVER- '67 Pythias, after the regular meeting ments and will preside. Tea wlll of New England, where the girl 'K'(.: Millis, Mass. In their Castle Hall at Temple Beth be served at 3:30 p.m. Members chosen as "Regtmenta1 Sp<,"Jlsor" Novl''-" .::, KE 6- 1011-376-8456 Sholom on Monday, March 27, at of all Rhode Island Hadassah will be announced. 8 p.m. chapters are invited to attend. ~ Synagogue ond S.Mc:e, on PremiMs Troditionol s.der Services by Prominent Contot ond Robbi. Open to tne Public MR. AND MRS. CLUB ~Board Of Regents~ Spec:iol Emertoinment ond SoctOI Program Doity The Mr. and Mrs. Club of Torc'zyner Opposes Koihe, Cuis.ine and Service at its Best Temple Beth Torah-Cranston Jew­ [Accredits Institute] HAVING A PARTY? LET US DO THE COOKING ish Center will present 8111 Church, hypnotist, on April 8 at lnterf aith Dialogue NEW YORK-An Israeli tech­ 8:30 p.m. Only members of the NEW YORK-About one-half nical Institute has been granted a group may attend the affair. of the 8,000 Arab students now charter by the New York Board of studying In American universities Regents, making It In effect an ac­ PASSOVER are conducting a U.S.-flnanced credited American educational TRADITIONAL SEDER SERVICES WILL FARBAND PURIM EVENING campaign against Israel on Institution. BE CONDUCTED ON THE PREMISES The F'arband Labor Zionist campuses of more than 100 Amer­ It Is the Feinberg Graduate Order Branch 41 and Ben Gurlon ican colleges and universities, School of the Weizmann Insti­ Enjoy the full eight day holiday or bring your Branch 418 w111 hold their annual Jacques Torczyner, president of • tute of Science, Rehovoth, Is­ family for Sedorum Purim Celebration on Sunday , the Zionist Organization of Amer­ rael, attended by 282 students First Seder - Monday, April 24 March 26, at 8 p.m. at Temple ica charged recently. He also working toward their master's or Beth Israel. Cantor Norman Ge­ alleged that "many of these doctorate degrees. wlrtz of Temple Beth-El wm sing students are allied with anti­ A gift of Abraham Feinberg, Hebrew, Yiddish and Engl!sh folk Semitic groups." executive committee chairman of Weinstein's Lake Pearl Manor, Inc. songs, and Rabbi Jacob Handler The Zionist leader made the the American Trust Company, and ' WRENTHAM, MASS. off Route IA will give _a talk on Purim. Albert charge s In connection with the Mrs. Feinberg, the new $1.5 mil­ fo, reMrvotion, write or phone EV 4-3102 - ST 1-9761 Sokolow, chairman, Branch 41 B; revelation that the American lion building was formally ded­ KASHRUTH $UPERVISION Max Portnoy, secretary: Harry Friends of the Middle Eas t Is icated last April, when a letter Finkelstein, chairman, Branch 41, of congratulations from Presi­ u \ among the domestic American PASSOVER DELICACIES PREPAUD I and Arthur Korman, secretary. are organizations that have been pro­ dent Johnson was read. I . FOR YOU TO SERVE IN YOUR OWN HOME . planning the affair, to which the vided with American funds through Instruction at the school Is general publ!c Is Invited. Purim the C.I.A . He further accused the given In Engl!sh as well as In refreshments will ·be served. organizations of being "the driving Hebrew and courses range force behind the subversive Arab from advanced mathematics and MATURE PROFESSIONAL propaganda onslaught on the cam- theoretical physics to the life LEADERSHIP puses." · sciences and biochemistry. The late Dr. J. Robert Op­ WELL-BALANCED, PERSONALIZED Mr. Torczyner spoke before EUROPEAN CARNIVAL penheimer, pioneer of the A-bomb, PROGRAM 200 Zionist leaders assembled from all parts of the country at was a trustee. Others Include No­ THE TRIP OF YOUR DREAMS COME TRUE! a meeting of the National Execu­ bel prize winner I, I. Rabi, Dr. 3 days LON60N + london H,tlon o, lloyol G~rde n Hote l CAMP MENDOTA Herman F. MarkofBrooklynPoly­ tive Committee of the Zionist Or­ 4 days PARIS - Pori1 Hilton Of Conlinenlol Ho11I 20 Years of Quality ganization of America. He sharply teehnJc Institute, · Dr. Devld 7 days R~ME . bcel1ior Conoli.,i Hilton or Gfond Hotel camping criticized the National Student As­ Rlnenberg of the College of Phy­ TUITION: $ 675-all inclusive sociation which he charged s!clans and Surgeons, Columbia CAMPER-WAITER and CIT Programs " adopted a resolution at a national University, and Dr. Victor F. 2 DEPARTURES EACH MONTH Brochure on Request meeting In Madison, Wisc. In Aug­ Welsskopf, chairman of the physics via BOAC, ALITALIA, EL AL, or other IATA Carrier In Providenc• coll: JOE SCHEIN ot 751 -6166 o, ust, 1965, phrased by the Arab Stu­ department, Massachusetts Insti­ write: DAVE SCHEIN, 134 Melrose Ave .. Need­ dent Association viciously attack­ tution of Technology. ham, Mou. o, phone, colle

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3 OuY' -1 Oov, J N,qhh -1 N,9ht. LONDON PARIS 1

WHAT YOU INHERIT AT 65: A RIGHT TO GET IN TROUBLE His company would not have You inherit, on the day you Polynesl-, retire, a special "right" you stopped him, but it would have and . CantOt"C"Se ~ursine •.-u price, per person double occupancy, tax included. probably have not had in your wo ndered why, for Goodness' .,... ..,Sena. adult lifetime, and it can be a Sake, he couldn't have become precious asset to you. involved in the !;lay Scouts in- 467-74'(> CALL 831-5200 NOW .. . It is, in brief, the right to get stead ' into trouble. Mr. Tomlinson accepted the Fr" ,O,lcing 10 mins. From "'•"· PRICE TRAVEL SERVICE Lyle W. Tomlinson, who re­ Housing Board job, publicly lte. 95tolte. 37 tired four years ago from an in­ stated his views on the housing . 1271 P•t Rd . 776 HOPE STREET PROVIDENCE dustrial job and is now in project, then set out to convert Worwi ·" for an answer. THE ONLY ENGLISH lEWISH WEEKLY IN R I AND SOUTHEAST MASS And Reb Aaron of Carlin The Hidden Light replied: Published Every Week By The "I have learned the meaning of J ewish Press Publishing Company Box 6063, Providence, R. I. 02904 - Telephone 724--0200 NOTiilNG, I ain NOTHING, but PLANT A!'!D OFFICE: ·HERALD WAY, OFF WEBSTER ST., PAWT., R. I. 02861 _ By Beryl Segal though I am NOTiilNG, I exist, CELIA ZUCKERBERG . . . Managing Editor and NOTiilNG can take my place LOIS ATWOOD ...... F..dltor My wife bought me a belated Pinkos and wrote In It ...THE TEN on earth. 0 book for my birthday. It Is a He­ COMMANDMENTS, Second Class Postage Paid at Providence, Rhode Island THE ABSENTEE WORSHIPPERS Subscription Rates: Fifteen Cents the copy; By Matt, $5.50 oer annum; outside brew book by the late Jewish THE RING Reb Levi Yltzhak of Bardlt­ New England, $6.50 per annum. Bulk rates on request. The Herald assumes Phllosop'her and scholar Martin A- poor man came to the house chev listened to his congregation subscriptions are continuous unless notified to the.. contrary in writing. Buber, and consists of epigrams, of the Reb Shmelke and asked for pray and then came over to some moral teachings and legendary a Nedovoh. Reb Shmelke had no of them and shook hands wt th them. The Herald aSSL\llleS no fjnanctal responsibility for typographical errors in tales of the lives of some Has­ money at the time, and his wife, advertisements. Qut will reprint that part of the advertisement in which "Sholem Alelcheml Welcome the typographical error occurs. Adve rtisers wm please notify the ma'nagement sidic Rebes who flourished In the Rebetzen, was not at home at back homel .Sholem Alelcheml" immediately of an~ e rror which n,.ay occur. Eastern Europe about two himdred the moment. How could one turn he shook hands all aroimd him. years ago. The name of the book back a poor man when he stretches FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 The men were surprlzed. Why Is Or Hagonuz, the Hidden Light. out his hand to you? the Sholem Aleichem? Theynever I read the book every free So Reb Shmelke found a ring left town, they said. Guidelines Toward Brotherhood minute I have and call to my wife In the drawer and gave It to the _••o, yes,youdld"-replledReb to listen to this story or that poor man. Levi YI tzhak. "You were at the The new chief rabbi of G reat Britain, Imma nue l J akobovits, which I come across. There are When the Rebetzen came back Big Fair and made a deal with speaking a t the 1963 conventio n of the Rabbinical Council of names of Hassldic Rebes In the later andlearnedwhatRebShmelke somebody. And you were on the book that were household names did with the ring she was very high seas with a boat-load of Am~rica, suggested that J ewish leaders should rea ppraise the In the linle town on the Ukraine angry and said to the Rebe: pl ace of Juda ism in a world whe re C hristi anity, for the first time grain. And you were counting where we were both brn and "Didn't you know that this ring your profit of a business deal in 2,000 years, has gone over fr om the offensive to the defen­ reached our adut thood. Is very precious? It had a diamond you made last night. And you sive. "Since the Jews could be regarded as an obstacle to the Would you like to hear some of In It that Is worth a fortune." were planning your trip to the big these stories? Reb Shmelke quieted her down city where you will sell your wheat unive rsal spread of C hristianity, as they were believed to be. and told her that everything wilt o nl y so lo ng as· that pros pect existed, the time is now opportune that .you have In your warehouses. A NOT E IN THE PINKOS be fine. He will see to It that And all this while you were to appeal to C hristi ans to e limi nate the hoped-for conversion of Reb Shmetke was the newl y the poor man finds out about It. supposedly praying. Now that we appointed Rabbi In Nlckelshburg. the J ews fr o m thei r aspirations ·a nd acti vi ties. S uc h a theological And the Rabbi sends out his have finished our pr ayers and you 'agreement · t o differ· a nd to accept as final the surviva l of It was the custom In th at city that Shamosh to locate the poor man have come back, I greet you wl th i?very new Rabbi who received a and to tell him that the ring Juda ism alo ngside C hristi anity _,;o uld in o ne st roke remove the call to come to the city In Mora­ a Sholem Aleichem." has a precious diamond In the NO MORE, NO MOR E principal sore in Jewis h-Christi an relations." he said . via, which was then a Frt of the setting. Let him remember this great Austrian Empire, would Reb Levi YI tzhak of Bardltchev That "principal sore" is finally bei ng rem oved insofar as when he goes to sell It to a buyer. would sit down every evening and write a r ule In the City Records, The buyer might not tell him about American Catholi cs arc concerned, by the just-issued Guidelines the Pinkos , and the entire com­ consider the day that has just gone the stone , and pay him the price by and he was never satisfied. with o n Cat ho li c- Jewish Re lafions, where it is sta ted tha t the general mimlty would obey that r ule. of an ordinary ring. aim o f a ll Catho li c-Jewish meetings "is to increase our under­ Re b Shmelke he sitated to write It. HE LEARNED ABOUT NOTHING He would say to himself: sta nding both of Judaism and the Catholi c fai th" and t hat " pro­ such a rule and posrponed It from Reb Aaron of Carlin returned " Levi Yltzhak, don't do It any selytizi ng is to be carefully avoided in the (interfaith) dialogue. day to day. When he could no from a long stay at the Magid more. You didn't have to saywhat longer put off the Balebatlm and where he learned day and night. the c hief aim o f whic h is not specificall y concerned with the you said today. You didn't have he observed the ways and manners' His pupils asked him what he diffe re nces between C hristianity and other religio ns . but to think what you thought today. of the commimlty , he took the has learned at the Great Magid, Don't do It az aln." rather wi th the points ·which it has in common ... But then he tol d himself: Among the themes whic h m e rit the a ttenti o n a nd study o f "You said the same thing yes­ Cat holi c scho lars is "an acknowledgme nt of the li vi ng and terday, Levi Yltzhak, and the day before that, and every day of the complex reality of Judaism afte r C hrist a nd the permanent elec­ 'IOUR MOIIE'l'S year. What Is the use? The One tion of Israel. " In a series of booklets prepa red by the Rev. Ed­ Above will have to forgive you." ward for use in parochi al schools a ll over the U nited And to the people he would I WORTH 'I States, Book I, "Our S piritua l He ritage ... s peaks of the promise say: "We are like that woman who to the J ewis h people that " Yo u sha ll be my people." \ by Sylvia Po'rter was In the labor of childbirth, and " T o the C hristia n comm unity, this promise was fulfill ed she promised herself that.she wu, · t} when C hrist cam e to the world a nd was sacrificed. But he re it is never again have another chi! d. J important to see how those first apostles, the earl y C hristi a ns. "But she soon forgot what she What would most Inspire you goals than they would willingly ac­ swore and was In labor again the !I saw themselves. They call ed the mselves 'the people o f God.' to work to your limit to win a cept from management. Says PIC' s next year. They felt they were a continua tion of the community God had sales, production or profits contest president, William H. Preis: "the 11So, too, are we. We sin, and already formed, a people of the New Covena nt. spiritua l he irs sponsored by your company? Implications of this, In terms of when Yorn Klppur comes we ask of the na ti o n of Israel. N owhere did they say that God's first If you're typical of today's male harnessing the self-motivating forgiveness, and then we sin again. employes, NOT a chance to win a patterns In alt of us, are far:.. And He lnHlsgreatmercyforgtves covena nt had been ta ken back by Him. In fact, the Bible says bimdle of cash Bur rather a chance reaching Indeed." In short, when our sins again and again." the very o pposite: ' The g ifts a nd call of God a re wi tho ut repen­ to win an award of merchandise . we have a choice of goals, we'll . . . ta nce.' Instead, it is clear tha t si nce God's second covena nt grew you yourself 'choose from a cata­ reach highest when left on our own. (Mr. Segal• s opinions ar!I! his out of the first, the Jewis h and C hristia n peoples have a funda­ logue. ## The need for status and own, and not necessarily those of If you're typical, NOT the 11) this newspaper.) mental re la tion in their mutua l fai ths a nd sho uld exist peace­ approval of your fellow employees fully side by side." and your employers BUf rather the Before the sweet voice of reason brings a clim ate in which participation of your wife In the such peaceful coexistence is the norm, the re wi ll be effort a nd program and your family's pride In your achievement ts your a ng ui sh, a nd some time must undo ubtedly pass. With goodwill motivation. HARRY GOLDEN o n either side a nd with the positive orientation by the bis hops The promise of cash, tradition­ toward acknowledgement of a shared heritage. the stage might . ally the most popular award and be set. as R a bbi J acobovits hoped, for "coordinated actio n o n certainly the easlestforacompany Professions Which to offer, ts no longertnfirstplace, the g reat issues facing our age. The voice of religion thus according to abroad studyofmajor Need No Appr~nticeship strengthened as a mig hty force could the n effectively address it­ Incentive programs by Per­ ...... >). ~ self t o the moral evils gnawing a l the roots of o ur society: the formance Incentives Corporation, lu st for power. success and pleasure, corruption in governme nt, a Grand Union Company subsidiary One of the distinguishing marks Incumbent upon said lobbyist to m arita l faithless ness, a nd other vices• threatening m a n's security. and one of the three biggest firms of the modern American society Is reply, "Why, nothing, Senator. In the Incentive field. Cash, PIC that It has helped foster several I Just know the Industry I represent Such a voice une ncumbered by mutual fears could crea te an a l­ reports, hasn't the same "re­ occupations which need no train­ doesn't like this bill and these zinc t ogethe r new clima te of huma n dignity a nd idea lism. Relig ion membrance value" as, say,· a trip ing, no apprenticeship. In fact, If fellows are all patriotic would no lo nger be a mere regim e n -0 f worship but a unive rsal for the winner and his wife or someone had . to train for these Americans." discipline t o regenerate the m oral excellence of men a nd govern- furniture. The winner rarely.keeps professions, they would vanish. A profession which demands the cash for himself and the gift ments .. A television producer falls Into not only no training but no common loses Its Identity as It ts spent this category of the non-trafnable sense Is that scholarship which for rent or. bills. profession. Just exactly what spends Its time himtlng out who The companies have found too television producers do thatwould wrote Shakespeare. There ts no COMMUNITY CALENDAR. that while cash ts easiest to offer, not be done automatically by the end to the opportunities In this FOR LISTING CALL GASPEE 1-4111 - Ask for Calendar Secretary MRS. BERTI(AM L. BERNHARDT - CALENDAR CHAmMAN the award can boomerang, for the system Itself, I cannot tell you. field. Only Francis Bacon, the winner frequently considers it . Not too long ago , a national Earls of Oxford, Rutland, and "deserved income" rather than a magazine Invited several of these Derby, the Coimtess of Pembroke, Saturdoy, Morch 25, 1967 2:30 p.m.• sn,.,hood T.mpl• Emonu-EI, Oneg Shobbot special award and he becomes producers to luncheon and, once a poets Marlowe and Raleigh and 8:00 p.m,• Cong. Mi1 hkon Tfiloh, Talmud Clan resentful when his Income returns tape , ecorder had been set up, Queen Elizabeth have been usurped Suodoy, Morch 26, 1967 to Its former level. these fellows went at discussing by pioneers In this field. 7:00 p.m ,• Cong. Mi1hkon Tfiloh, Tolmud Clon This year, U, S, business will their jobs uninhibitedly. If you Monday, Morch 27, 1967 • • • 1:00 p.m .• P,o,.idence Chopte r Senior Hodau oh, Jewi1h Notionol Fvnd Affai, spend a record $300 million for. the think a Brownle slng-festmlghtbe "GOODBYE CHARLIE" 1:00 p.m.• Crof'IIIOrt Chapter Senior HodonOh, &oord MH ting marketing services which motivate without world-wide significance Patti Page has a recording, 8:00 p.m .• Pawl . • C.,u,a1 Falls S.nio, Hodonah, Regular Mffling - the people who move ·goods to the that Is only because you didn't "Goodbye, Charlie" which Inter­ 8,00 p.m ,• Molhe,s' A11 'n. Te mple &.th David, Regular Meeting 8,00 p.m ,• Sff te rhood Temple Beth 11,011, Board MHling coi,sumer-salespeople, distrib­ follow this dialogue as closely a. ests me. On the Lower East Side 8:00 p.m ,• Lod. Aua. lt. Leonord aloom #284 JWVA, Regulor MHting utors, dealers-up a huge 211 per I did. of New York this phrase, 8:00 p.m .- Lod. A'-' • · G.rald M. Cloman /13 69 JW'I/A, Regula, MHtlng cent In five years. The programs Another profession where any "Goodbye, Charlie" was one of the 8:00 p .m ,• Temple Emanu-EI , Concert of Jewish Mu1tc are now spreading far beyond sales training hurts Is •that of a Wash­ earliest Amer I can phrases 8:00 p.m .• T ♦mpl • Si noi Me n '1 Club, Boord Mffling 8 :00 p.m .- Who! Ch••• Lodge #24 Kn ights of Pythias, Regulor Meeting Increases alone. They are also h)gton lobbyist who stalks Sena­ adopted by the Immigrants. They Tu esday, Morch 28, 19b7 being used to reduce absenteeism, tors and Congressmen on behalf said, ." Leben Zul Columbus" for •8:00 p.m .• Cron1ton-Warw"ick ' Chapter 8' nai B'rith Wome n, Board Meeting encourage recrulnnent of new per­ of such varied clients as the zinc good news, " Long life to Colum~ 8:00 p.m .• Jewish Sin,le Adults, " Who! is o Jew" sonnel, stimulate employe sugges­ Wednesday, Morch 29, 1967 Industry, the farm bloc and the bus," (for having discovered 12, JO p.m .• Sisterhood Tempi• Emonu-EI , Boord M,eting tions, etc. Thus, PIC's study of American Medical Association. America), and "Go.odbye, 12: 30 p.m .• ,ioneer Women of Providenc, , Smorgo1bord a nd Br idge what motivates workers to compete Even the writers have a lobbyist Char lie" for bad news. 12:30 p.m ,• Wome n's Ame rtc an ORT, Luncheon 6 :30 p.m .• Hope Chapter, B'noi B'rith Women, Paid-Up M,mbe ,1hip Supper to win, and thereby to realize who gives out propaganda for the If a fellow was fa~d with loss a:OO p.m .• Sitlerhood Tempi• Beth T0tah<-on1ton Jewish Cent,,, Boord MH ling whatever the alms of the cut-back, to spread sudden earn­ of his business, his job, or his Thvrsdoy, Morch JO, 1967 campaigns, are highly significant. ings over a stated period of years, girl, friends and neighbors would 1:00 p.m .• P,o..,id,nce Chopler Miirothl Women, Purim ,arty To continue: preferably ten years. say, "Goodbye, Charlie,'' and how 7:45 and 9:00 . Bureau of J♦ wi1 h Educolion, Adult Education Solurdoy, April 1, 1967 ## Salesmen who shop a When a Senator turns on a lob­ this got started I'll never know. 3:00 P·"'•" Cong. Mi1 h kon Tfiloh, Tolmud Clou catalogue Invariably select for byist and asks , for Instance, ''What themselves harder-to-achieve do you know about zinc?" It Is (Copyright 1967 by Harry Golden)

IL THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 7 HONOR RIBICOFF Subscribe to the Herald. MIAMI BEACH, FLA.-Sen. Abraham A. Rlblcoff of Con­ necticut received the Herbert H. JOE ANDRE'S BRIDGE Lehman Medal of the Jew Is h ORCHESTRA RIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIUI Theologlcal Seminary of -Amerjca at Its eighth annual convocation Musi c for that very special affair By Robert E. Starr recently at Temple Emanu-El Weddings Bar Mitzvahs here, It was announced by Dr. 944-3344 Res . ST 1-9080 I have heard some new player· own, led her parmer's suit, figur­ Louis Flnkelsteln, chancellor. de!ICrlbe one of her slightly better ing to get started on Hearts as \ opponents as being "so good she soon as possible. She didn't want \ can tell where every card Is after _to cost East any valuable entrie• ) the ". Believe me, no by leading something else. When KOSHER t one Is that good but occasionally · the Dummy went down and South ' s J U LI E DELICATESSEN a hand may come up where the counted 28 points between her hand bidding wlll provide enough Infor­ and Dummy, she was absolutely 731 HOPE STREET 621-9396 mation so that actuallyeveryone at certain that all the high honor the table will know where every cards were wl th East. She next card Is. Today's hand Is such but counted her sure tricks, not figur­ even though every declarer had ing that the Clubs would split 3 - exactly•the same bidding sequence, 3, and whether she tried the only one was able to take advantage Diamond first or knocked of the knowledge and make the con­ out the Spade Ace, she stlll would tract. be one trick short of her require­ OUR YOUNGER SET-Terri ls the North ment. Whichever she did first, one-year-cl d daughter of Mr. and BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEON • Q J 7 losing to East, back would come Mrs. Harvey Rosenblatt · of 359 • 5 4 3 another Heart. Most players tried Morris Avenue. Mrs. Rosenblatt ♦ A 7 2 the Diamonds and when the King ls the former Myra Schwartz. FRANKFURT PLATE 7 5( ♦ K Q 6 3 won, the Heart return precluded Maternal grandparents are Mr. INCLUDES: POTATO SALAD, BEANS AND COLE SLAW any Spade tricks. and Mrs. Harry M. Schwartz of West East Mrs. Lavine thoughttoherself, ♦ 10 8 6 3 2 ♦ A 5 85 Farragut Avenue. Paternal .6 • K J 10 9 8 2 "Why should 1 take a finesse that grandmother ls Mrs. Theodore ♦ 8 4 3 ♦ K 9 5 I know will lose; 1 am going to Rosenblatt of 330 Grotto Avenue. ♦ 10 9 8 4 • J 2 see If I can't make that Eastern opponent lead that suit to me". tricks Eur discarded a Hearr-..,she South Accordingly, her first play "las a didn't dare leave her Diamond l\.lng ♦ K 9 4 Spade, that Ace had to be lost any­ all alone. Declarer now knew that • A Q 7 how and she could never make her Ea st had three high Hearts and the ♦ OJ106 contract without two Spade tricks. ♦ A 7 5 King and one Diamond. She had East happily won the trick and led already cashed seven tricks , three Mrs. Armand Demers and Mrs. a Heart, removtng Declarer's last Clubs, two Spades and two Hearts. Lewis Lavine of Woonsocket were stopper. She was planning to To get the other two she played a North and South. The bidding: eventually win her Diamond King Heart and simply waited for East E S W N and run the rest of her Hearts. to lead a Diamond away from her lH INT P 3NT Declarer had other plans for that marked King. When she did, (her After East had opened the bid­ Diamond King. I ast two cards being the King and ding, South's of One No After winning the Heart, she another Diamond) dee! arer had meant the same as If she tested the Clubs for should that succeeded where the others had had opened the bidding herself, a suit break she would have her failed. balanced hand with 16 to 19 points nine tricks but West had been Moral: If playlnf a hand one but with a definite Heart stopper, careful to follow the fine rule that way has to lose, don t play It that heard that bid shehadnoproblems she should hold what she could see way. Find a better plan. Often and jumped directly to game. She and with four Clubs showing In there Is one. needed no more Information about Dummy she dared not discard one. ----- her parmer's hand as she had no On the third Club East discarded Heral d subscribers comprise major and felt she had adequate a Diamond and now her hand was an active buying market. For strength for game In No Trump. an open book. When Deel arer excellent results, advertise In the West, with no entries of her next cashed her other two Spade Herald. Call 724-0200. f I ~

More people drink VO. than any other brand of imported whisky, including Scotch. That's because VO. does what no other whisky can. It defines smooth once and for all. Light? Of course. (So even if VO. isn't their brand now, chances are it~ be!) Known by the company it keeps Seagram's\ f '\ Canadian\J\_j

i I

' 8 1liE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, PRIDAY,MARQH 24, 1967 DISCOVERED SERUM NOT ON ROSH HASHANAH VIENNA_:Alexander Marmor- ALBANY, N.Y.-The New ek, a 19th century Austrian ob- York State Assembly has passed stetrlclan and bacteriologist, pl- and senl •to the Senate a bill to oneered In the discovery of serum Insure that Jewish voters In New Hello Again! against- streptococci for treating York State will not be deprived of scarlet fever. a chance to register because of religious date conflicts. Sports News By Warren Walden EMERGENCY The measure notes that the· fifth Thursday before election day this year, a day for registration 1liE RACE IS 1liE THING­ In which our friends are stars. XYGEN In most localities, falls on Rosh The Human race, of course. Whatl You forgot about Dog-team Hashanah. The bill asks that the IN 1liE AIR-As far as I can racing? "Smoke" Bellew was one 6.95 lo 39.50 poll day be shifted to the fifth find, the first American Afr Meet pf the first dog-team drivers to Tuesday. was a balloon race he! d back In attract attention way up there In • PORTABLE 1907 at St. Louis. There was the Klondike when men went mad • REFILLABLE PURIM also a balloon race held In Provi­ "for the muck called gold." (They • LIGHTWEIGHT dence, R. I. a couple of years stlll do, don't they?) Author Jack later. (rm still searching for the London'• book "Smoke Bellew" Full line of sickroom sup­ PARTY info on that one.) will tell you more about It. plies and convalescent WIU BE HELD AT LONG, LONG AGO--Arrlan ON 1liE ICE-Ice boating has aids for sale or rent. CONGREGATION deocrlbe• dog racing In his book been an organized sportln America "Cynegeticus," written In the 2nd for more than a hundred years. LENAS HAZEDEK Century. The oldest recorded Races of many varieties are held PA 5-8464 311 Prairie Avenue OUR YOUNGER SET-Deborah Coursing Club at Swaffham, Eng­ In many places. Years ago, Ice SUNDAY MARCH 26 Marci Fine Is the nine-month­ land, was founded by Lord Oxford boats In New Jersey were old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. when England was busyelsewhere. maneuvered with the aid of spiked AT 7 P.M. Herbert Fine of 68 Mount View It was In 1776. Coursing developed poles and also year• ago an Ice­ A PORTABLE TELEVISION Drlve, Cranston. She Is pictured Into our present popular sport of boat won a race with a steam SET WIU BE GIVEN AWAY here at seven months. She Is the Greyhound Racing which otarts at locomotive on the Hudson Rlvar. Aoiembers and fr iends are invited granddaughi,ir of Mrs. Harry Raynham Park In April. The steam engine ran on tracks Eisenberg of Lynn, Mass.,andMr. SPEAl"'coRN BEEF ,b.1.99 ~ crowd In the Dlzengoff Circle Un employment has grown with before the march said the dem­ a ,Government-Initiated deflation onstration was also designed to program Intended to cool off an YOUTii ORCHESf.RA CONCE:RT overheated economy. Deflation - Sabbath lnformation:House- - caution employers not toexploltthe The Rhode Island Philharmonic ~ wives, Light Sabbath Can- ~· ~ ·rear of joblessness as a .way to co-tnclded with a sharp drop In Youth Orchestra will perform Its obtain advantages In wage nego­ Immigration and an ebb In private spring con~rt on Wednesday, ,. dies Tonight 5:44, Next Fri- ,. Investment, however. tiations. March 29, at 8:30 p.m. In the ~ day at 5:52 P.M. . - Employers have warned that As a result, the Government auclltorlum of the Warwick Veter­ wage Increases would lead to ad­ recently decided on deficit finan­ ans Memorial High School. James dltlonal dismissals because they cing to ease the sltuat1(1n. Morgan, bassoonist, will be soloist. ~''''' ''' '' ,◄ ENGAGED-Mr. and Mrs. Max Cohen of 20 Michael Drive, Cran­ ston, announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Unda, to Larry Stephen Soren, son of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Soren ofl88 West­ ern P r omenade. Miss Cohen Is a graduate of Hope . High School and Johnson & Wales Junior College. Mr. Soren Is a graduate of El ectronic Com­ puter Programer In stitute. A July 9 wedding ls planned.

Mrs. Harvey S. Cohen Miss Marsha Harriet Miller, 1ength linen gowns, made . with Mrs. Jeffrey Jacobson daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Empire podlce with Swiss lace, Miss Rozanne Butcher, daugh­ They wore long-sleeved gown s of Miller of 97 We s twood Avenue, scoop neckline, elbow-length ter of Mr and Mrs. Philip Butcher yellow chiffon and carrled baskets Cranston, became the bride of sleeves, A-line silhouette skirt of 23 N, Lancaster Avenue, Mar­ of spring flowers. Harvey Steven Cohen, son of Mr. and panel back, and matching head gate, N. J . , became the bride of Harold lsserlls, the bride­ and Mrs. Murray J. Cohen of 85 pieces. Jeffrey Lee Jacobson of Provi­ groom's brother-in-law, was best Marlon Avenue, Cranston. on Sun- Frankltn Shatzwasbestmanfor dence on Saturday, Ma r ch 11, at man. Ushers were Ted Spltal­ day , March I'>. Rabbi Saul Lee- his brother-In-law. Ushers were Temple Emeth Shalom In Margate. nlck, John Diamond, Maurice man and Cantor Jack Sm ith of- Harold Sock, Philip Sock and Austin Mr. J acobson Is the son of Dr. Singer, Ted Sober, Elliot Ma zer. flclated at the 6 p.m. ceremony Sarat, all cousins of the bride­ and Mrs . Leo Jacobson of 181 Ses­ and Gerald Keller. at Temple Beth Torah-Cranston groom, and Richard Bruce. sions Street. Rabbi Seymour M, The mother of the bride wore J ewl sh Center, where a reception After a wedding trip to Ber- Rosen officiated at the 6 p.m. an apricot and yellow chiffon print foll owed the wedding. muda, they wlll live In Marlboro, ceremony, which was followed by gown, and a corsage of yell ow The bride, wh o was given In Mass. - a r!'ception at the Seaside Hotel orchids. The bridegroom ' s mother marriage by her father. wore a In Atlantic City, N. J, wore a yell ow chiffon gown with gown of Chantill y lace fashioned The brfde, who was given In Jeweled bodice and a gold orchid with an Empire bodice wl th scal­ marriage by her father, wore a corsage. Mrs. Sophie Rothman, loped neckline set with seed pearls, white peau de sole gown with bodice the bride' s grandmother, wore a long pointed sleeves, A-line of Alencon lace trimmed with seed gold silk gown with beaded bodice silhouette skirt and detachable pearls, long sleeves, A-line skirt and a gold orchid corsage. Watteau train. Her bouffant veil with lace Inserts and matching The bride, a graduate of At­ of sil k Illusion fell from a double train. Her elbow-length veil fell lantic City High School, will be coroner jeweled wl th seed pearls. from a Jeweled crown. She carrled graduated In June from the Albert ENGAGED-Mr. and Mrs ..Wllllam She carrled a cascade bouquet of white orchids and gardenias. Einstein School of Nursing In Phil­ W. Bander of 99 Upton Avenue an­ white miniature carnations and · Miss Joyce Jacobson, the adelphia, Pa. The bridegroom, nounce the engagement of their white roses with garlands of Ivy. bridegroom's twin sister, wa s an alumnus of Providence Country daughter, Priscilla E. Bander, to Marron of honor was Mrs. Hy-, BtLTS maid of honor, and matrons of Dlly School, will be graduated In Michael Alan Cohen, son of Mr. man Toplan, the bride's aunt, who honor were Mrs. Harold. lsserlls, June, 1968 , from the Pennsylvania and Mrs. Norman Cohen of 11 7 wore a fioor-length sheath skirt, 71~1.'-llY sister of the brldegroom,andMrs. College of Optometry In Phila­ Grace Street, Cranston. cardinal coat with elbow-length Gerald Keller, sister of the bride. delphia, where he Is a member of Miss Bander Is a graduate of sleeves and matching crown. They wore apricot chiffon gowns Omega Epsilon Phi. · He also Hope High School. Mr. Cohen, Bridesmaids were Mrs. Franklin MOC.Cl\ SINS and carried baskets of spring attended the University of Rhode a graduate of Cranston Hi gh School Shatz, the bridegroom's sister, 11-. 8RooK PltOV flowers. Miss. Nancy Spltalnlck, Island, where he was a member of East, Is a student at the University Miss Lucretia V!nacco and Miss Miss Nina Diamond, Miss Trudy Phi Sigma Delta. of Rhode Island where he ls a Susan Shwom. They wore floor- Goodman, and Miss Gall Benkln After a wedding trip to the member of Alpha Epsilon Pl fra­ were bridesmaids, and Miss Diane Nevele Country Club, theywlll live ternity. Rothman was junior bridesmaid, In Philadelphia. Miss Bander Is the grand­ I SELL ALL MRS. LEO GLEKLEN 421-1229 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel ADVERTISED TRIPS OF 331-7106 Bander and Mr. and Mrs. Benja­ min H. Grett of Providence. Mr. Cohen Is the grandson of Mr. and PETTERSON TRAV·EL INC. Mrs. Joseph Grossman of Provi­ 76 DORRANCE STREET PROVIDENCE 3, RHODE ISLAND dence and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Cohen of Florida. SUGGESTS THAT YOU CONTACT HER FOR ALL YOUR ANNOUNCE DAUGHTER'S BIRTH ANNOUNCE SON'S BIRTH A June 22, 1968 wedding Is CRUISES. TOURS. HONEYMOONS. STUDENT TOURS. Dr. and Mrs. Melvin Goldfine Mr. and Mrs. Steven Weinstein planned. SHIPS · Al.RUNES· FREIGHTER TRAVEL of Roswell, New Mexico, announce of 24 Pershing Street, Cranston, th~ birth of a daughter, their announce the birth of their first first child, Stephanie Alleen, on son, Ivan William, on Feb. 25. Court Denies Wayne Feb. 7. Mrs. Goldfine Is the Mrs. Weinstein Is the daughter of The Sisterhood and The Men 's Club former Marsha Forman. Maternal Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Krames of grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Philadelphia, Pa. Paternal grand­ Realty Covenant Appeal Kalman Forman of Mattapan, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Solomon TRENTON, N,J.-A property of Temple Emanu-El Mass., and maternal great-grand­ Weinstein of Cranston. Great­ covenant that operates to exclude mother, Mrs. Sarah Forman of grandfather Is Samuel Steiner. , Jews and Negroes Is unlawful , a Malden, Mass. Paternal grand­ PRESENT state appeals court hel.d last week parents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul when It dismissed an appeal In Goldfine of Woonsocket. Paternal FIRST SON IS BORN a discrimination suit against the The First Annual great-grandmother Is Mrs. Harry Mr, and Mrs. Edward Kudlsh Packanack Lake Country Club and of 181 Whitmarsh Street announce Goldberg of Pawtucket. .Community Association. The the birth of their second child and CONCERT OF JEWISH MUSIC property covenant Is allegedly used DAUGHTER IS BORN firs~ son, Richard Eric, on March by a country club section of Wayne To COMMEMORATE Mr. and Mrs. Robert Martin 9. Mrs. Kudlsh Is the former Township, where the recent school Kaplan of 90 Taber Avenue, an­ JEWISH Music MoNTH MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1967 Lois Zltkln. Maternal grand­ board elections stirred national nounce the birth of a daughter, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel surprise. 8:00 P.M. Patrtcla Beth, on March 13. Mrs. Zltkln of Providence. Paternal 1n their argument before the Kaplan Is the former Miss Susan grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Appellate Division of Superior In The School Auditorium Adler of Providence. Maternal Boris Kudlsh of Providence. Court, the defendants urged the No Charge for Admission Sessions Street grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. court to throw out a lower court Walter Adler 'of Stadium Road, and ELECTED TO PHI BETA KAPPA decision that had outlawed the maternal great-grandmother Is The Brown University chapter covenants, which require that pro­ Mrs. Jacob Ernstof of Vassar of Phi Beta Kappa recently added spective property owners must be Special G uest Avenue. Paternal grandmother Is 38 top students to Its rolls. Among approved first as members of the Mrs. Ben Kaplan of Providence. those elected was Cheryl M. club. . CANTOR ARTHUR KORET Novlch, daugfiter of Mr. and Mrs. The plaintiffs charged that the Emanuel Synagogue. Hartford, Connect icut FIRST CHILD BORN Earl Novlch of 41 Sackett Street. club barred anyone who did not Mr. and Mrs. Myron J . Ra Isner A graduate of Classical High have a northern European, Chris­ CANTOR !VAN E. PERLMAN of Hartsdale, N. Y. , announce the School, she Is a senior and an tian background, thus effectively • birth of their daughter, Debra honors French Literature major. excluding Negroes, Jews, Puerto THE CHOIR OF TEMPLE EMANU-EL Paula, on March. 8. She has worked on the Pembroke Rlcafts and, until recently, most Mrs. Reisner Is the former ·Record since her freshman year. ltallans. Barbara Meyer ofScarsdale,N.Y ., THE TEMPLE JUNIOR CHOIR daughter of Mrs. Murray Abel and SABRAS EMIGRATE total number of Yordlm came to the late Paul Meyer. Paternal J ERUSA LEM - Thirty-three Israel befpre the establishment of grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. per cent of Israelis who left Is­ the state, s.z. Shragal, head of Abraham W. Reisner of Provi­ rael since 1948 are Sabras while the Allys Department of the Jewish dence. approximately one-third of the Agency, reported. JO TIIE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 Too many drivers are under Island Council on Highway Safety. the, Impression a "peephole" In "The Jaw requires that all windows ' the windshield frost Is all that's -front, -side and rear-be kept In needed to see, says the Rhode free from frost and snow. • ~llywoocl SONS OF ABRAHAM PARTY All forms of personal and business insurance Tiie Sisterhood of Congregation Sons of Abraham will have a Purim including - Life - Accident - Group - Fire - --Shalach Manos Party on Wednes­ ly lorney Giner day, March 29, at 8:00 p.m. In the Automobile - Casualty - Bonds vestry of the Synagogue. Commit­ Director Mike Nichols and pro­ Washington where he enters long tee ·members are Mrs. Sidney ) Halpert ducer Lawrence Turman selected range planning research. Pepper, president and Mrs. David Murry M. Dustin Hoffman to play the male Dustin, called Dusty by his fam­ Baratz, chairman. 800 Howord Bldg. lead In "The Graduate" for Joseph ily and Intimates, Is single. He has DE 1-9100 Residence: DE 1-6949 E. Levine's Embessy Pictures. been dating a young lady for the MELAVEH MALKAH Hoffman received an Obie past year but they have no The Sisterhood of Congregation Award last year for the best actor marriage plans. Sons of Jacob will be hostesses of the off-Broadway season and The talented young actor was for a Melaveh MalkahonSaturday, WE SPECIALIZE IN has ,:arned plaudits for- his work a music major at Santa Monica April I, at 8 p.m. In the vestry, In the off-Broadway comedy, City College and also studied with with guest speakers and entertain­ HONIYMOON TRAVEL "Eh?.. the L. A. Conservatory of Music. ment. Jack Glantz, chalrman,and "My mother named me after He planned to become a classical Hyman B. Stone, co-chairman, will TO FIT YOUR~UDGET Dustin Farnum, the cowboy pianist but swl tched to the Jazz be assisted by Alex Goodblatt, •MIAMI BEAOI •NASSAU actor," saJd the 29-year-old Idiom and then plunged Into Benjamin Glantz, Bernard Yanlcu, •PUERTO RICO •CATSKILLS actor. "She named my brother dramatics. Morris Friedman, Nathan Wald­ ·POCONOS­ •HAWAII· Ronald after Ronald Cotman." '"My father was In charge of man, Morris Berman and George •BERMUDA •JAMAICA Dr. Ronald Hoffman, a Ph. D. set decorating and the prop de­ Labush. Cantor Maurice Gordon and Professor of Economics at partment at Columbia Pictures," will entertain with songs. Call Us at 83"1-S200 the University of Hawaii In Hon­ Informed Dusty. "He remembers Preparing the supperette are "Newr A Charge FOf' Our Service" olulu, ls six years older than giving a promising young actor $50 Si s terhood hostesses. Mrs. Stone Dustin. He moves In July to to buy a tuxedo for a premiere. Is chairman, and will be assisted His name was William Holden." by Mesdames Goodblart, Labush, Price Travel Service A subscription to the Her'lld Is Hoffman was turning 21 when 776 HOPE ST. PROV. "It pays to coll P,:.0- PRICE IS RIGHT" Yanku, Berman, Benjamin Glantz, a good gift for the person who has he arrived In New York. He Frank Silverman. Bennett Format, I everything else. Call 724-0200. struggled for 8 years, doing odd Isreal Hassenfeld, Louis Wein and Jobs, Including playing piano fot Morris Lecht, ex officio. and Miss dance classes. He did a few rv Rachel Chanez. t EXPANSION SALE shows, played In repertory In Boston, directed two plays during RABBI BRAUOE TO LECTURE DISCOUNTS UP TO 20 % a blizzard In North Dakota, then Rabbi Wlltlam G. Braude of concentrated hi s energies on be­ Temple Beth El will lecture on com Ing a di rector. " Proverbs and Parables" at the EMPORIUM - INDIA "'Just when I was about to take fifth lecture of the Bureau of over the son's role In "The Subject Jewish Education's Adult Educa­ 287 THAYER ST., PROV., R.I. Was Roses' in New York," said tion Program on Thursday, March Dusty, ••I suffered third degree 30, at 9 p.m. at Temple Emanu-El. l\ilon.-Fri. l0A.M.-9 P.M. 421-2283 burns on both arms from hot oil Classes In Hebrew. Jewish history In a lcltchen accident. and Yiddish literature will precede '"! was confined to the hospital the lecture. for three weeks and laid up another two weeks. It was enough to lose HADASSAH JNF LUNCHEON Discover how clean my big break as a Broadway leading Mrs. Eldon Goldenberg It man but It eventually turned outto chairman for the Pawtucket­ be my destiny. Central Falls Hadassah Jewish '"Had I obtained the rote, I National Fund luncheon to be held • and easy cooking wouldn't have been selected for on Wednesday, March 29. at 12:30 'lne Graduate.' I still would have p.m. at the Pawtucket synagogue. been pushing for a director's Table prizes will be given for career.'' bridge and Mah Jongg after the .can -be electrically I Hoffman cred1 ts Dr. LI oyd luncheon. ' Bergner at the Flower-Fifth Committee members are Mrs. Avenue Hospital for saving his Harold Schwartz, co-chairman, L' ELECTRIC COOKING FACTS life. "Knowing my bitter dis~ and Mesdames Donald Solomon, Electric cooking is penny-wise! appointment about losing a Broad­ Joel Pressman, Jacob Komros, way role, he personally came In Herman Zaleznlck, William Mel­ Meats roasted electrically shrink every day and dressed my wounds zer and Herbert Katz. Mrs. Philip ~ much less, save you money. like a saint. Levine, president, wlll preside. "When I later told him I had 1ne Jewish National Fund buys I'. won 'lneGraduate' leading rote, he and reclaims barren land In a was elated over my success." development program which In­ Ann Bancroft plays the femme cludes afforestation and road lead. As the result of her tests, building. Catherine Ross won an Important supporting rote. Rehearsals start PIONEER WOMEN at Paramount April 3. Pioneer Women of Providence begins April 24. wlll hold a smorgasbord I unch arid Dustin sums up hi s selection bridge on Wednesday, March 29. at as a minor m iracle. 12:30 p.m. at the Temple Beth '"I was playing 8 shows each Israel social hall. Table prizes week off Broadway, with two shows wlll be given. Proceeds of the Saturday night back to back, plus bridge will be applied to Israel! a Sunday matinee and evening show. scholarship funds. '"I planed out for Hollywood on my Mrs. Albert Sokol ow, chair­ day off, Monday, arriving at 2:30 ► man, Is assisted by Mesdames ( In the afternoon. I read for Mike Harry Ballon, Samuel Black, Al Nlchoots, took home the script, Diner, Joseph Epstein, Samuel ' stayed up all night learning my Goldman, Paul Goldstein, Henry lines and reported to the Para­ Helfand, Morris Kritz, Charles ! mount set at 8 a.m. Tuesday. Lappin, Benjamin Levin, Leo • "Mike tested me and Catherine Rappaporte, Samuel Rosensheln, ! Ross all day long In a ta-minute Samuel Solkoff, Hyman Stone, ' scene. Samuel Tar sky. Harry Uffer ! "I was so nervous and fatigued, and Herman Wenkart; Mortimer I couldn't concentrate. I blew my Aron, tickets; Morris Ackerman, :\ lines repeatedly. I knew I had done­ public! ty; Sidney B a ck m an , i • terrible Job and was positive I treasurer, and Maurice Schwartz, I didn't _get the part. Mike at so felt ex officio. I depressed. l "When he saw the rushes next PROVIDENCE MIZRACHIWOMEN ' day, Mike was surprised and Providence Chapter Mlzrachl elated. He said, "Your panic came Women will celebrate Purim with through. We're In buslnessf' a party on Thursday, March 30, '"When I do the part," laughed at I p.m. at Congregation Mlshkon Dusty, • "I plan to make myself so Tflloh. Guest speaker will be thoroughly exhausted rll be a sen­ Mrs. Morris D. Silk, whose sui>­ TAPPAN Silhouette Electric Range sation." Ject will be "Jewish Festivals as presented by Herman Wouk In hi• book, 'This ls My God.' •• I A budget-priced flameless eleetric range with fresh TO SUPERVISE BETTING JERUSALEM-State Super- Mrs. Hyman B. Stone, Mrs. new styling and many extra features! Top units vision of Israel's lucrative foot­ Rebecca Shapiro and Miss Rachel give you an infinite choice of fast, controlled heats. $15495 ball pools and other forms of Chanez are members of the hostess Clock and oven timer for automatic oven cooking. betting on sports events, which committee. Oven light, storage drawer, waist-high broiler. was voted at a recent Cabinet meeting, calls for • a public ORT LUNCHEON RESCHEDULED Available in white or copper. budget terms authority, half of whose members 1ne ORT Day luncheon origin­ would be Government offlclalswho ally planned for Thursday, March would be appointed to oversee the 16 , was cancelled because of the pools which sometimes pay up to blizzard, and has been rescheduled $40,000 to a single winner. Here­ for Thursday, March 30 , at 12: 30 tofore winnings have been tax-free, p.m. at Ballard's Restaurant on but .the Cabinet decided that half Pine Street. New members are NARRAGANSETT ELECTRIC of the sum formerly paid to winners Invited as guests to the luncheon, should be spent to promote Israeli for which reservations may be sports against the majority, ad­ made by calling Mrs. Ira vocating the complete abolition ·of Schrieber, 942-1043, or Mrs. Sid­ betting In Israel. . ney Nut man, 831-6228. ,-''J,_...,,... ______THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 II The other companies named Jordan Bars Firms were two in Britain and one each In India, Singapore and Belgium. For Trade With Israel Give the Herald as a gift. LONOON-The Jordanian Gov­ enunent has barred nine com­ I WISH TO THANK ALL OUR panies, four of them American, FRIENDS AND RELATIVES FOR from doing business In Jordan THEIR MANY WARM THOUGHTS by Leonard Lyons because they trade with Israel, It AND INTEREST IN ME AND MY was reported here from Amman. FAMILY DURING MY RECENT The four companies are Na­ HOSPITALIZATION. The death of Ml! ton Shubert will director, -found a solution: He tional Steel and Tinplate Ware­ MRS. ELLA BERGER place upon the market the rights arranged for the dialogue to be house, Inc., of Pennsylvania; he owned to Puccini's music­ flashed, like a giant teleprompter, Jantzen, Inc., and seven of Its enough for a Broadway musical. from the Life bulletin strip at branches; Studebaker Corp. and Shubert once visited the Phila­ Times Square. 14 of Its branches In England, delphia nightclub owned by Frank Shella MacRae will play Alan Canada, Mexico, SWltzerland and Palmnbo, , who was starring a King's Adelaide In "Guys and the United States, and Staples and singer he felt would be ideal for Dolls" at the White Hou•e March ~cialltles International of New the Pucctni musical. The man had 18 • . . Peter -Sellers dressed as a York. sung with the San Francisco Opera Cossack, made a surprise and the Met. appearance In "The Great Cathe­ Shubert listened to the singer, :::::::::cRUISl!S rine," just to Startle Peter COLUMBUS ,:;,.';RE Don 't miss the boat! then said: "But doesn't he sing a O'Toole. The oequence was filmed 2 7 ( S1ouo ... oy P,011 6 2 1 Oc, t,Q Send for our free booklet little flat?", • . " Sure," replied and retained . . . The program notes NAM ED CO-CHAIRMAN -Mr s. Palumbo. ,-,Otherwise he'd be at for Ray Lev's Carnegie Hall con­ Martin I. Dtne!man's appointment NOW SHOWING CRUISES & TOURS EVERYWHERE of the Met and not here in my club." cert May 17 will have one para­ as co-chairman the 1967 cam­ DOWNSTAIRS " It pays to call Price Lord Snowdon 'wandered Into paign of the Women's Division of graph In Japanese. She's Just back " I, A WOMAN" PRICE IS RIGHT'' the CBS building, where Frank from Tokyo, where she taught at the General J ewlsh Committee was Stanton encountered him by chance the University of Arts and Music. announced today by Mrs. Edmund ALSO and took him on a tour. Snowdon Lynda Bird dined with George J . Waldman, 1967 drive chairman. Selected Short inspected The Ground Floor and Its Hamilton atthe21ClublastThurs­ A vice-president of the Women'• Subiects PRICE TRAVEL kitchens too. . .Joe Levine will day: n1~ht. "Wasn't It a goo d Division, Mrs. Dlnelman has been At Studio Cine ma Upstain Sc reen sign Simon and Garfunkel to write party?' she called to me. It was, chairman of the Vital Gifts Divi­ "CLOPORTES" .,:,;;;,~,, 831-5200 three songs for "The Graduate," except that It had been off the sion and of the Education Commit­ and ~ISlJ ; 776 Hop<' S1 the film Mike Nichols- will record. .. And my toast," she tee. "INVITATION ' • · • 11 ~ ~ \~ P r ov1dP flC t_• direct•. . Beverly Bentley, wife beamed, 11 shows t have a sense A graduate of Pembroke Col­ TO PARADISE" of Norman Maller, will leave his of humor, doesn't It?" It certainly lege , she Is a board member of play, "The Deer Park," April I. did. Her toast, at the Feb. 22 the Pembroke College Club of Edie Sedgwick and Baby Jane Hol­ party, had been "to the Presl­ Providence and a member of the zer auditioned to replace her, dent,'1' then "to George." She Brown-Pembroke Pops Concer t Laurence Harvey's friend, Indicated she'd meant Washington, Committee. She Is a past p resl­ reading improvement fashion model Pauline Stone, has by adding, "Happy birthday." dent of Pr ovidence Chapter ORT a tiny role with him In "A Dandy J'd tried to get It released for and past area chairman of the FOR JUNIOR. HIGH, SENIOR HIGH In Aspic.,.. She showed up wearing publishing, by asking her "Didn't Heart Fund, AND FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS the minimum of miniskirt. Derek you make the same toast at lunch IMPROVE COMPREHENSION, VOCABULARY, STUDY Marlowe, JIUthor of the story, said: today?" .. . She' d said no ... "I "The lower the British pound goes, couldn't lie," said Lynda Bird Auction Polish Mizrah, th~ higher the miniskirts go." last Thursday night, "not on Jerome Weidman's new novel, Washington's Birthday and," she Embroideries Scrolls ~,R,L1T "Other People's Money," will be added, ' 'you may print that." r··.. out May 5-the 30th anniversary (Distributed !967,byTheHallSyn­ • NEW YORK-A decorated cut­ FOR FULL DETAILS CALL 331·3915 - of his first book, "I Can .Get It -~cate, Inc.) (All Rights Reserved) paper Mlzrah from a Polish syn­ for You Wholesale" . . . Weidman's agogue survived the ghettoes and son, John, and Russel Crouse's concentration camps of World War Johnson & Wal11 Reading Institute son, Timothy, wrote Harvard's :vouR II sewn Into a piece of linen In the • Abbott Park.Place, Providence, R. L, Hasty Pudding Show, " A Hit and I a coat of Jewish prisoner. A a Myth." It won such a fine MONEY'S WORTH Mlzrah Is a painting or Illuminated reception In Boston, the State Dept, (Cantlnued from Page 6) • manuscript hung on the East wall of will send It to Expo 67 . .- .Allen recognition Is as deep In the home a synagogue to Indicate that di­ Drury's new book will be titled, as In the office, maybe deeper, rection. The Mlzrah to be sold on "A Very Sg:-ange ~ety-a and this explains why the Inf! uence March 16 Is a painting. It was to Creative Journey to the Heart of South of the wife and children Is so be sold at the Parke- Bernet Gal­ Africa.'' leries In New York on March 16 DiPrete enormous. Again In Preis' words: Repu/J/icon Mike Ke111n, co-star of "The "the wife's participation gives her whe·n part of the Judalca collec­ for•- , Odd Couple," once hoped to Join a feeling of pride In her bread­ tion of Herman Davldowltz was of­ Paul Muni In the London produc­ winner, a deeper appreciation of fered at public auction. tion of "Death of a Salesman." his Job, Its tensions and rewards, In London after the war, Mr. Ke111n saw Muni on W. 45th St., and tends to make her more sup­ Davidowltz purchased the Mlzrah Congress stopped him and suggested: "I portive." Incidentally, PIC's sur­ from the prisoner, whose name is could play your son. People say veys affirm what other studies have not recorded. He brought It to the I look like you did _20 years ago" disclosed about the most popular United States and commissioned a Elect Mayor James DiPrete, Jr, ....,· restorer to open Its linen cover. • . .Muni stared at Kellin, then . awards. Of the 100 top selections, Aproven leader with .a creative shook his head and walked away 85 per cent are Items for the The Mlzrah was found In shreds muttering: "Tilf.rty ..." wife or home. Prizes men pick but several weeks of Intensive work program. A man of integrity. Franco Zeffirelli, who bril­ for themselves, such as a drill resulted In Its successful restor­ liantly directed Richard Burton or a watch, rank very low compared ation. Near1y·200 Items from Mr. and Elizabeth Taylor In "Taming to irons, blankets, sheets, chairs, -Davidowitz's collection were "of­ of the Shrew," has a new go! d hair dryers. fered at the auction, among them . Morel, 28. /967 cigaret case Inscribed with thanks pewter, brass and other- ritual ## There Is a great need to objects, textiles, embroideries, "from the Shrew and the Tamer" motivate men to compete against Doy of Decision! ... Elizabeth Hartman will play the their own records as well as paintings, falence, marriage con­ Emily role In Jason Robards TV against the records of others. The tracts, meglllah scrolls and version of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. shevlssl tablets. call 467-4720. ◄ top producer wl,)1 want to raise Taft. Jr .. Chai rm an . ◄ Hyde". . .Samuel Lefrak, the his celling; the lowest producer ◄ · ·real tor, will be the speaker at ◄ · will try to get farther off the FAMILY CONCERT ◄ Amherst's commencement dinner. ◄ bottom. The Rhode Island Philharmonic His son, Richard, Is an Amherst All this, of course, Is fas­ i senior. Orchestra will present a Famlly ◄ cinating for employers and em­ ◄ David Sinclair, a research Concert In Roberts Hall, Rhode ◄ ployes who are men. But what Island College, on Sunday, April TRINITY SQUARE physicist at Johns-Manville, had to motivates the mllllons of women 1: retire because he'd reached 65. 16, at 3 p.m. Francis Madeira, who al so work and join company music director, will conduct a 1: He and his wife wondered how to Incentive contests? The research I spend their time. Their problem varied program ranging from a I on this Is not so Inclusive but REPERTORY'S I was solved quickly: The Atomic Beethoven Overture to selections ,, unlike their spouses, wives over­ from "The Sound of Music." The Energy Commission, working on whelmingly select things for their ' air pollution, used computers­ featured work wlll be a perform­ ' homes or themselves. ·ance of "Peter and the Wolf" which showed Sinclair to be the To Indicate the extent of a The Birthday Party man they needed: of the 69 basic by Prokofiev with Robert Colonna self-absorption, one worn an as narrator. Mr. Colonna Is a articles on air pollution, In the circled a man's picture In a cat­ ·last 30 years, Sinclair had written member of the Trlnl ty Square by Harold Pinter alogue, asked how many points Repertory Theatre. The concerts 16 •••The AEC signed him, full­ she'd need to win "a man.'' Said time and at high pay. are sponsored by the Columbus a sober spokesman for PIC: National Bank · of Providence. The new project Is for 15 "This Item Is not available years, easy for Sinclair: his Tickets may be obtained by calUng through our merchandise cat~ the Philharmonic office, 831-3123 , Tues. - Sat. 8:30 Sat. Matinee 2:30 father, Upton Sinclair, Is still alogue.•• active at 88. TRINITY SQUARE PLAYHOUSE Cheetah Is merchandising a Wayne Rejects Group Aimed At Brotherhood · 7 Bridgham Street miniskirt mod ruxedo for men-a Wayne Ministerial Fellowship . .short skirt, dinner Jacket, turtle­ WAYNE-The Council of Rm. " A" The Arcade neck sweater, all In black . . . The Wayne Township, where two Jew­ Wayne Township attracted na­ Box Office 351-4242 honeymooning Liza Mlnnelll and ish candidates for the Board of tional attention last month when Peter Allen were at Arthurs the Education wer.e defeated I ast Newton Miller, a Protestant who other night entertaining his family month, rejected I a•t week a pro­ w'as then Board of Education vice Special Performance from Australia . •• The Waldorf is po•al to create a Human Relations president, called for the defeat of delighted with F.I orence Hender­ Commission for fostering brother­ Jack Mandell, an Incumbent, and FOR THE; BENEFIT OF THE URI HILLEL son's triumphs In the Empire hood. Robert Kraus, because, as Jews, Monday April 3, 1967-8:30 P.M. > Room •.. Before starting "D1- The pr.opos al would have set they might be too liberal In spend­ 1 vorce, American Style," Dick Van up a seven-member commission, Ing for education. In the February Dyke remarried his Marjorie, on to be named by the Township 14 election, Mandell and Kraus Sponsored by their 18th anniversary. Council, to promote the Im­ ran fourth and fifth In a flel d of ROGER Wl~UAMS LODGE, B'NAI B'Rl fH One of the principals In the provement of relations between five candidates. and ' movie, " You're a Big Boy Now," racial and ethnic groups and to Town officials took pains · to HOPE CHAPTER, B'NA/ B'RITH WOMEN kept forgetting his script Jines. probe complaints of discrimina­ point out that the Human Relations This was during the scene fllmed tion. The Town•hlp Council de­ Commission proposal was thr~ Call Barbara or Stephen Wosser - 724-2674 - for tickets at the corner of Broadway and cided Instead to turn the task of years old, thus antedating tlie '46th St. Francis Coppola, the advancing brotherhood over to the Board of Education dispute. Ill

12 TIJE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 Roxbury-Dorche-ster Jewi·sh Populati-on Medicaid Expected -To Have lmpad Declines, 15 Temples Dissolve Or Move On Jewish Homes for Aged, Hospitals NEW YORK-Medicaid, Title ceterated," the yearbook states. BOSTON, Mass.-Flfteen con- Is In the order of a religious services. 19 of the Medicare Act, Is ex­ Government payments for the , gregatlons have either dissolved mandate ... The prosper! ty of the 20th cen­ pected to have a major Impact care of older persons In Jewish or moved from the once-busy Rox­ "The synagogue (tn Dorchest­ tury scattered the Jewish com­ on financing and programs of homes for the aged have risen, bury-Dorchester Jewish area, ac­ . er) will linger on for a short munity to Brighton, Mattapan and Jewish homes for the aged and primarily because of _Increased cording to a Boston Globe survey white longer unless there Is a nearly every city and town sktrt- hospitals. The Impact cif Medi­ payment for medical care under by, Laura J. Holbrow. She writes radical change. That Is not ex­ lng Boston. ' caid may be greater than Medicare the Kerr-Mills law. The Kerr­ that In a section where public pected." Along with others of all faiths itself, It was reported In the Year­ Mills law Is supplanted by Title schools were almost empty during Rabbi Koolyk described the and ethnic origins, the Jewish book of Jewish Social Services, 19 of the Medicare Act In states the High Holidays Just 10 years several others which have Just middle-class rejected urban decay circulated recently by the Council where It has been Implemented. ago, there are now only about recently ceased to exist or " ... not only In Boston but In all Amer­ of Jewish Federations and Welfare Two-fifths of receipts for 2,500 Jewish famllles lef\, most have declined to non-existent ican cities. Funds. • operating purposes, came from of them elderly. (In one of the levels, just shadows of their The Influx of the great Negro Medicaid provides medical government payments. Nearly schools, the Robert Treat Paine former selves." Other congrega­ and Puerto Rican population had care without cost to the medically one-fourth of' reporting Institu­ School In Dorchester, only 23 out tions have merged for temporary little to do with the dispersal. Indigent regardless of age. tions received one-half or more , of the 500 students enrolled were survival. Long before the flight to the Thus far, Medicaid has been of their total Income from govern­ present during Rosh Hashanah and All that remains of the once­ suburbs, the Negro and Jew had Implemented In 23 states. Still ment funds. Yorn KIP,Pur In the mld-1950s. flourishing Jewish community Is Integrated these communities. And unresolved Is how many persons dver one-half of all residents The 'mother neighborhood for the overflow Moi'ton-Mattapan today's suburban Jewish people wlll be eligible for Medicaid, what In the reporting homes are bene­ all other J ewlsh Neighborhoods In section, a residential riddle where Integrate Negro residents t)1ore should be the family income levels ficiaries of Old Age Assistance all of the Greater Boston area ... fine single family homes fill one readily than any other e thnic group. for ellglblllty and what standards from the government. where was produced the leadership section; high rent apartment com­ Mo~ Important, the success of and levels shOllld be set In de­ Nearly 12,000 persons are

I for the major cultural , religious, plexes another and post-war three­ the Jewish community fulfilled the termining reimbursements to being served In 68 Jewish homes ,. and philanthropic Jewish Institu­ deckers still another. Here, too, promise of Boston's first congre­ Institutions providing services . for the aged, covered In the year­ tions, the largest enrollment In is the Kosher shopping strip, owned gation which began according to • At the first of the year, the book report. Their average age New England and the finest com­ generally by commuting shopkeep­ A, G. Daniels, one of the founders "extended care" facilities pro­ is 81. The average dally operating munity .services," according to ers. of Temple Mishkan Teflla, " ... gram of the Medicare Act went cost for each resident is nearly Rabbi Samuel I. Korff, president Rabbi Korff speculates that the in a Unle room ln a tenement into effect. This involves nursing $11 a day. of the Association of Synagogues of area Is currently thriving but Its house on Oswego St. , In the South homes and similar Institutions. A In regard to admission of non­ Massachusetts, declined gradually character is changing. Younger End. " number of Jewish homes for the Jews to the home, a number of and "the effect on most local In­ people are moving out and it Is "Bur we were all immigrants aged have been certified by the the homes have maintained non­ stitutions was spontaneous." gradually becoming a community then ," he wrote," new arrivals in Social Security Adm inistration as discriminatory admission policies In the past six years alone, of older people. a free country and the humbleness extended care facilities . This over the years. Other homes for eight congregations have dis­ The death of the "mother neigh­ of our surroundings spurred us on certification Is necessary so that the aged-after changing their banded, leaving six synagogues and borhood" he attributes to the com­ to improve our condition and be­ the homes might be reimbursed admission policies so that they schools to be sold or transferred. ing of age of second and third come worthy citizens." for services to persons eligible for are non-cUscriminatory in connec­ Statistics provided by Dr. Ben­ generation Jews with a strong de­ the Medicare benefits. tion with their use of Hill-Burton sire to " ... move away from the SER VED IN REVOLUTION It is still too early to determine jamin Shevach of the Jewish Bureau WOODBRIDGE , N,J, - Dr. funds-have had no applications of Education show that nine Hebrew family nest;" to the expansion of what the effects of Medicare will Moses Bloomfield, a hospital sur­ from non-Jews or only a few. schools have closed In the area suburban housing and subsequent be on budge ting for the homes. ~ geon here late In the 18th century, However, In Jewish homes for the I since 1950. More than 2,200 stu­ A number of the homes have aged In Tucson, Phoenix and Port­ modern school systems; to Federai is the only Jewish physician known I dents studied Hebrew In that housing crash programs In the area developed transfer agreements land, Me., non-Jewish residents to have served In the American district then. There are now with. local general hospitals to range from 15 to SO per cent of and to deterioration of municipal Revolution. only 739 . many from outside of qualify for the extended care pro­ the total. Bed capac-lty and facili­ Boston. · visions. ties of those Institutions were At Temple Mlshkan Tetna, "It seems likely at this time planned to provide services to the overlooking Franklin Park In Rox­ Levi Eshkol's Government that In view of the high occupancy general community as well as the · bury, in 1953, more than 1000 per­ rates of most of the Jewish homes Jewish community. sons regularly attended Friday for the aged and pressure for ad­ The yearbook noted the growing night services. Today the temple is Given Vote Of Confidence missions of long-term residents, trend to develop housing for the empty, its congregation Is located JERUSALEM-A vote of con­ British Zionist Federation, ownen actual participation by many of elderly In apartments In specially in Newton and the formerly-pruned fidence In Premier Levi Eshkol's of the publication, after he had the hol)'les will be considerably designed housing projects In large grounds neglected. government came on Monday after refused to withdraw an article on delayed," the yearbook states. Jewish communities. At the end The late Rabbi Herman H. Ru­ a debate pressed by three Op­ Israeli unemployment. Earlier, An indirect effect on Jewish of 1966, there were over 800 benovltz, describing the temple's position partiesonthelssuesofun­ however, the Israeli Government ' homes for the aged as a result apartments for the elderly, hous­ ·~ dedication In September, 1925, employment, governmental pres­ had told the federation of Its dls­ of Medicare is rising costs. The ing about 1,000 older-Jewish per­ wrote, " ... We marched into the sure applied in another country plea,ure with Mr. Klmche for yearbook quotes Dr. David sons. magnificent temple and In the pres­ and the jailing of two editors for having suggested that Yaakov Llttauer, executive director of th~ ence of thousands- dedlcated' it to having published hints that Israeli Shapiro, the Justice M!Jtlster, Cedars-Medical Center In Los the service of God and the promul­ lntelllgence agents helped In the resign because of his role In the Angeles, as noting that a signifi­ Jewish Institutions ·I gation of the Judaism of all ages." plot against a Moroccan opposition prosecution of the editors of Bui. cant increase in costs has resulted I It was In 1954 that, according leader who was kidnapped In Paris "Mr. Klmche Is a faithful friend from higher salaries to nurses and Hold S7-Billion In Land, to Rabbi Israel J. Kazis, his suc­ In 1965. of a certain circle In Rafi," Eshkol technical, clerical and service cessor, "We began to think Mr. Eshkol's 90-mlnute reply, said, adding that the Opposition personnel . in terms of catching up with our his first public response after a party had chosen Mr. Shapiro and_ Because of rising salaries, the Estimates Bishop Pike congregation." At that time, when month of criticism by the Opposi­ himself as targets for "personal costs per patient day for all NEW YORK-American syna­ paradoxically the temple rolls and tion, was punctuated by shouts and abuse. Mr. Klmche apparently patients-not onl y the Medicare gogues and other religious Jewish attendance were at a peak, as accusations. did Rafi a service In attacking Act-covered group-are expected Institutions in the United States much as 60 percent of the congre­ On the economic question, Mr. Mr. Shapiro, Mr. Eshkol said. to rise this year by 20 per cent or are reported to have real estate gation were coming Into Roxbury Eshkol said, "Our difficulties are Mr. Dayan said that If Israel more rather than the customary holdings totaling $7,000,000,000, · from suburban homes . the result of tremendous economic accepted praise from abroad It annual five to eight per cent rate. according to an estimate by Bishop "They still came regularly on expansion and an exaggerated rise should also accept criticism. The "Since homes for the aged draw James A, Pike. Sabbath and high holy days," com­ In the standard of living," last thing that Israel •hould do, upon many of the personnel pools In an article In "Playboy" mag­ mented Rabbi Kazis, "but they ..This Government," he went he said, 1s· to tell the Jews abroad serving hospitals, It can be azine advocating the Imposition of were not sending their children on, "Is successfullygrappllngwlth that what goes on In Israel I! not expected that salary costs In taxes on the property and Income into our school. Had we not moved this problem and wl th the diversion their affair. homes for the aged wlll be ac- of religious Institutions, the I the congregation, the oldest Con­ of manpower to production for ex­ Episcopal· bishop estimated Cath­ I servative Jewish congregation In port-for this Is the only way we I olic Church holdings In this coun­ I America would have disappeared." shall be able to build a healthy Seminary Assigns five Graduates try at $44,500,000,000 and Prot­ Shortly after, new land was cotmtry." estant and other church holdings acquired in Newton where many In He did not challenge the as­ at $28,000,000,000. · i l the congregatlonalreadyllved. The sertion by Moshe Dayan, one of To Serve As Rabbis In Latin America Bishop Pike contended In the temple properties were trans­ the leaders of the Opposition Rafi NEW YORK-Answering the was a chaplain In Rio 25 years ago. article that the weal th of organ­ ferred at nominal fees to the party headed by David Ben-Gurlon, appeal from Lat,ln American Jew­ All el

1liE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 13 an absolute sense, not In the sense of time Interval." At the Ch' san Sofer High School Rights Leader Rustin Says he Introduced several adVan~ed courses, ·one of them ln.hatachlc Soviet Diplomat Evades Facts astronomy, which deals with legal (C ontlnued from Page 1) problems that Involve astronomi­ Mr. Rustin also dismissed Mr. Soviet elements of conducting a cal knowledge-the computation of Bubnov' s accusation that the Com:.. campaign against the Soviet Union, sunrise and sunset, the Interna­ mission findings were connected of distorting Its Image, and of tional dateline, the Sabbath and with a "campaign" allegedly con­ seeking to divert people's attention outer spa,ce, and abstract laws ducted by certain groups In the from 'really worthy' areas?" Mr. as they apply to time, and how United States. Rustin asked. these laws stand up under such "The Identity of these groups," He added: "You further circumstances as the North Pot e's Mr. Rustin declared, "remains a mention that there are Jews In six months of night and six months mystery to me. I am Interested the Soviet Union who defend the of daylight. The Shema Isn't to know the factual basis for your U.S.S.R . against the chargeswhtch affected, as It Is said on sleeping accusations and am extremely we are making. I am aware that and waking, but problems like the anxious to have you detail them." It Is possible In Mississippi, Sabbath are quite Involved. . No reply has been received to Georgia or Alabama to find some Asked whether he will continue Mr. Rustl~s letter of Feb. I. Re­ Negroes who would defend the to teach, he remarked that any lease of the correspondence was system of segregation. But the fact scholar or researcher wants to delayed to give the Soviet diplomat that they are Negroes does not share what he Is working on. an opportunity to answer. Six obscure the Injustice, nor can It "If you are famlllar with the sub­ weeks having gone by wl thout a re­ be the means for discrediting the Rabbi Cohen Is surrounded by equipment used for experiments to ject area and have a responsive ply, the exchange of corres­ effort to do away with racism In audience, there's no greater determine the effect of a transverse magnetic field on the absorption pondence was released publicly on the United States." pleasure than to explatn what of sound In plasmas, the project which he worked on last summer. Mar. 19 by the Conference on the In Its report, the Ad Hoc Com­ you've discovered." He also Status of Soviet Jews, which or­ mission asked "that Jewish rights teaches Slddur, Torah and Talmud ganized the Ad Hoc Commission. on Sundays at the Hebrew High be observed no less than those In his letter to the Soviet dip­ of all other Soviet national and Science Foundation Awards Grant School of the Bureau of Jewish lomat, Mr. Rustin declared: Education. He attends the Day religious minorities ." Those Jews "We are concerned for only who wish to seek personal ful­ School on Saturday mornings, two things: the adumbration of the where a vital program attracts not fillment through living In a for Summer Study To Rabbi Cohen truth, and the establishment of full community of the Ir own group, (Continued from Page 1) between the basic assumptions of only the day school children who cul rural, religious and communal run the services, but 'a number of the Ad Hoc Commission declared, physics, chemistry, astronomy, Neal S. Anderson and E. T. Korn­ rights to the Soviet Jews." should be perm! tted to go to Is­ calculus, Intermediate algebra, hauser (a Brown University pro­ Brown students and day school In the response to the Soviet alumni. (He also taught a class rael. trigonometry and geometry (not fessor), and to try to determine official's charge that the purpose · The report was signed by Dr. all of them simultaneously, how­ what kind of experiment, other than In Talmud for adults when he first of the Ad Hoc Commission was "to came to Rhode Island.) John C. Bennett, president, Union ever) six days a week. One ad­ what they were doing, might be divert energies and attention from Theological Seminary; the Rev. vantage of this was that "teaching critical In Justifying one or the Right now he Is working dltl­ areas really worthy of applica­ gentty to find out__ what the Tat­ George B. Ford, pastor emeritus, all grades at once put me at a other theory. tion," Mr. Rustin declared: Corpus Christi Church; Emil Ma­ vantage point as I saw the grades A letter from Kenneth D. mudlcal approach to time Is, trying "Allow me to ask precisely to show that the rabbis of the Tal­ zey, secretary-treasurer, United as a group" -all the sixth graders Fisher of the University of Ve r­ which areas you have In mind. Automobile Workers; Telford Tay­ going through a certain stage, or mont, director of the Summer mud had a definite view. First Peace? Viet Nam? Civil Rights? he has to prove that they did, and lor, professor of law, Columbia something as being essentially Research Participation Program, Trade unionism? Poverty? These University; Norman Thomas, vet­ eighth-grade. to Inform Rabbi David Jehuda, dean then that modern theory doesn' t are among the many public Issues contradict the plauslblllty of the eran Socialist leader, and Mr. The busy New York days of of the Providence Hebrew Day on which my colleagues and I-as Rustin. teaching had been prepared for School, that Professor Sachs re­ Talmudic approach. The energetic well as a host of other leaders teacher Is also Interested In the The Conference on the Status during college, when the Cohens quested that Rabbi Cohen continue the world over who are equally of Soviet Jews, which organized were students at Brooklyn College his work on an academic year ex­ history and philosophy of science, concerned for Soviet J ewlsh rights a subject he hopes to pursue, the Ad Hoc Commission, Is com­ and got out of class at 10:40 p.m. tension, reads ln part: -have been and continue to be posed of Justice William O. Rabbi Cohen, who re·celved his "Rabbi Cohen made significant and which Is relevant to his teach­ Involved In . ing. Dougl as, U.S. Supreme Court; Dr. B .S. degree In physics there In · progress In this study and Dr. "If we are politically suf­ Merle Falnsod of Harvard Uni­ three and a half years, was at the Sachs and !were more than pleased "We did resolve certain differ­ _flclentty aware to fi ght the good \ ences wherein observation versity; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther same time by day attending rab­ to have him with us. He Is ex­ fight on these many Issues , why can King, Jr., president, Southern binical seminary (he Is a graduate tremely energetic and very differed from certain statements we not be credited with appropr i­ In Gemorrah, and showed how the Christian Leadership Conference; of Torittl'Vodaath and Yeshiva Kar­ capable and I am sure wlll be a ate political awareness on the Issue Pr ote s tant Episcopal Bishop lin Stolln, where he was ordained credt t to your school.•' statements didn't contradict each of Soviet Jewry?" other," he said. Each of his James A. Pike of California; Dr. to the rabbinate). Mrs. Cohen The work this summer, under Mr. R ustln al so noted the Eugene Rablnowltch, editor of the taught first, second and third Dr. Trivisonno of the Physics students at Ch'san Sofer had to "many statements by Communist write a term report on one of Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists; grades In the English and Hebrew Department of John Carroll Uni­ parties, organs and leaders in Walter Reuther, president of the departments of parochial schools versity, wlll be based on the fact the subjects, and at the Provi­ many parts of the world ... which dence day school, where he teaches United Automobile Workers of In the Bronx and In Brooklyn that when a metal Is cooled to adduce and protest the same facts America, _ AFL-CIO; Norman for four years. She Is now busy near-absolute zero, the electrical Talmud In terms of relevance to as did the Ad Hoc Commission. modern problems, his srudents are Thomas, and Robert Penn Warren, with a four-year-old son, Ylsroel resistance in the metal almost 11 Are you prepared to accuse now working out whether the poet and Pulitzer Prize-winning Mair, and a daughter, Sarah Dev­ completely vanishes. The metal these loyal Communists and pro- novelist. orah, who has Just begun to walk. in this state "superconducts .. MegUtah 111ay be heard over a Their nine weeks In Vermont electricity. Currents Induced In microphone or a telephone to sat­ last summer were ,.fabulous,'' she a superconducting material have isfy the Purim requirement. An­ Montreal Police Seek Leader said. They had a private beach been observed to persist with other group Is considering whether on Lake Champlain and his pro­ undiminished strength for over the laws of the Sabbath are ob­ Of Juvenile Gang Of Toughs fessor had a yacht. Rabbi Cohen a year, said the teacher. jective or subJectlve,l.e. ,persons has been working this winter also Rabbi Cohen al so studied at are not to work, but may machines MONTREAL-Montreal police that since the war, 76 ,000 Jews on theoretical aspects of his last Brown last year, under the Aca­ or non-Jews work for- them? This reported an Intensive search for a had come to Canada, 90 percent summer's project, which Involved demic Year Institute of the Is part of the pilot project he has man they described as the leader of whom settled In Montreal and measurements of the effects of National Science Foundation, for undertaken under the auspices of of a gang of young toughs who have Toronto. He added that recently a transverse magnetic field on the his Master's degree. The princi­ Torah Umesorah, the national so­ chosen Nazi symbols as their em­ more French-speaking Jewish Im­ absorptton of sound In plasmas. pals of the schools where he taught ciety of Hebrew day schools, blem after five alleged members migrants had arrived but they With Dr. Thomas Sachs of the Uni­ In New York encouraged him to to develop an Interdisciplinary were arrested. must educate their children In versity of Vermont Physics De­ accept the grant. HJ s thesis for curriculum In Talmud and science. - Detectives of the Criminal English-language schools. partment, and his graduate Dean R. Bruce Lindsay was "On Rabbi Cohen, who teaches Inve s tlg a tlon Bureau made students, Rabbi Cohen helped con­ the Nature of Time" and he would science, Talmud, laws and lightning raids on the homes of struct an experimental apparatus like to do a doctoral thesis on time customs, Torah and prophets at members and found In one of them Wonderland Alice _ to study themeasurementofatten­ In the light of quantum mechanics the day school, thinks It a fallacy a desk with a large swastika uatlon of sound waves with a view and relativity, or the Talmudic to speak of_ J ewlsh and secular painted· on It. In the desk, they toward resqlvlng a conflict In the approach to time and Its plausl­ • education In two different areas. said, they found a copy of Hitler's Charms Jerusalem theoretical background which blllty In the light of modern • 'Jewish education Is the embodi­ "Mein Kampf," crudely made JERUSALEM-The biggest hit would explain this phenomenon. physics. His main Innovation, ment of all human knowledge. swastika armbands and slmll ar In Jerusalem last week was an There are two opp o s I te said the physicist, Is that he feels Certainly, knowledge of the material. amateur production of "Alice In theories as to what happens to that time Is absolute. physical universe and the history Two of the five suspects were Wonderland," performed by stu­ mercury placed Ina magnetic field The relevant sentence from his of man are all-Inclusive, not com­ arraigned In Criminal Court. The dents and faculty members of the If an acoustical current Is passed thesis Is: "Specifically this means partmented. We want students to others, alt 17-year-olds, were Hebrew University's English de­ through It. Th!.s w Inter he was that the physical relationships (e. feel that this Integrated, scientific held for Juvenile Court. Richard partment. supposed to find out the actual gc , formulas) between any two program Is part of Jewish educa­ Jones, 20 ·and Pasquale Pletrin­ Unlike the film made by Jona­ differences In the theories; to systems will depend directly upon t1on." ferno, 19, were charged with con­ than Mltler for the British Broad­ seek to discover any discrepancies the 'time' of Interaction-time In The energetic young teacher . spiracy to construct explosive de­ casting Corporation, this pro­ mentioned the distinction between vices when they appeared before duction was without Freudian over­ "rabbi as a profession and rabbi Judge Jean Tellier. · tones or even tmdertones. Mr. as a ttalnln g a degree of The charges stemmed from an Miller's show was pronounced knowledge." You can't know If Incident at a Montreal sports cen­ "unfit for children" and resched­ food Is kosher,e.g., unless you are ter on Jan. 24. A youth threw a uled from afternoon to late eve­ familiar with halachahand crude Incendiary bomb Into the i11ng. chemistry, and all Jews should hall durtng a teenage dance. Po­ The local version, adVertlsed have a thorough knowledge of Jew­ lice discounted reports that the as "a grotesque entertainment for ish law. As an ordained rabbi gang might have as. many as 100 adults" has proved equally attrac­ whose profession Is not the members, but. estimated that there tive to children. rabbinate, he follows In ·lt>e long were only about a dozen members. Dr. Ari eh Sachs of the uni­ and distinguished line of Orthodox Also In Montreal, the Canadian versity adapted and directed the scientists which Includes such men Jewish Congress has documentary production, In which many players as Dr. Herbert Goldstein, evidence that at least six major .wear masks and the lines are president of the Association of Nazi war criminals are living In occasionally out of order and given Orthodox Jewish Scientists, ana Canada, according to executive to other speakers than Lewis Car­ Included the rablils of the Talmud vice-president Saul Hayes. roll Intended. who were versed In the science of Mr. Hayes made the statement . The background muslclncludes their day. In testimony before a Montreal . selections from the Beatles, I· hearing of the Federal Senate­ 1966 SC.OPUS AWARD Shostakovich and Wagner. "Wag­ Commons Immigration committee NEW YORK-Jacob Blaustein, ner seemed suitable for the march ' studying the Government's White Ba\tlmore Industrialist, was re­ of the cards," Dr. Sachs said. cently presented with the 1966 Paper on Immigration. He told "So we used the music from the committee that "we know of Scopus Award, the highest dis­ 'Meistersinge,.rs. • '' tinction •given by the American at least six major cases where The Cheshire cat appears and Friends of the Hebrew University. people who were arch war crimi­ disappears In the form of an ex­ Mr. Blaustein Is formerpresldent nals entered Canada. Once they panding balloon. {The unstageable of the American Jewish Committee become citizens they are Innocent croquet game becomes a mad con­ and a consultant to the State De­ no matter how heinous their cert. The nonsense of the Jabber­ These seven teachers received sirants from the National Science Foun­ partment on International business crimes." wock Is offered twice-the second dation for work at the University of Vermont last summer. problems. Mr. Hayes told the committee time In German. I ◄ THE RHQDE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY I MARCH 24', 1967 Cath OI ic . 8 i sh OPs ·i111111u1111111!11111111111u11111n11u111m1111111W:11111111111111111:1111111111111111111111111111111um1111111111111111111111111111111um•1:11111111111111111111111111,11u:111111111111n11111111111111n11mu1111:111111111111,,,~11,u11uu11111111111111111u111111u11D1,I Suggest Contacts, ; Gu1dehnes -for Cathohc-Jew1sh Relations 1 Prayer With Jews = f'erapecttves and theological studies and meetings, their scope and cies and leadenlllp sperta i (Continued from P•~e l) In Its Declaration on the fraternal dialogues." ' confines should be mutually In this area ot""endeavor. !i ..., Responding to the urgency . agreed upon in advance. 9. While popular "grassroota" 5=- Chrlstlan religions other than Relationship of the Church to of the conciliar Statement 6. It Is recommended that In programs to impl'O'{e Caat- Judalsm and with "nonreligious" f9~~;~~u-~ec!eJigi~tic~ on the Jews, our · American order to maintain the dla.- ollc-Jewlsh relations mwt. § groups such as humanists. Council issued a historic Bishops have established, as Jogue on the hlgbes~ pos- be preMe(! .forwvd without. = Most Jewish leaders who have Statement on the Jews and part of their Commission for slble level Its organization delay, slower and deeper E been active In dialogues and co- - summoned all Catholics to Ecumenical Affairs, a sub- be "accompllshed in consul- explorations of pertinent 11• E operative social action with Chris- reappraise. their attitude to- commission for . Catholic- tation with ·those expert- ~es S:o1Catboll~an~ i tlans, welcomed the guidelines. ward. and ,;-elationship with, Jewish Relations, with Bishop enced In thelntestructurall; . hlgarsh prim orlty S;...• _§ the Jewish people. Franc;,. P. Leipzig of Baker, doctrinal and rpersona given a . . I"" Reform and Conservative Jews In The statement was, in ef- Ore., as • chairman, Bishop skills which thl' dialogue many of the probleiN Ill 5 the United States have forthe most =-- •feet, a culminating point of Aloysius. J . Wycislo of Chi- requires. this a.rea of O.thollc-;Jewlsh E pa t wetc ed di Jogue d Ill · chairman 7. It is und.erstood that pros- relations are intellectual Ill r om a an co- § initiatives and pronounce- ""lft•th ·,Riash~~ G ' elyc.

:======-• ;fiT~::r=;~::dialogue. It urges the creadon sio~::¥.ns that:f~fi~ti have ·separated ~:~;;;::;;~;,knta\11.:, : 0 ~:-d 1t';,,.';'~,:1~;:;1, 1.l§:1:':§t~:~ cathollc - Jewish relations ~1@~~today In a colll!Ctlve guilt for of anagencytoenco\}rageCatholic- fi~:·is~.i;~:r~1 Jae;;:i5. t~routi~ corned immigrants and refu• should be a

astrlnal the ..and historical, liturgical Biblical, heritage doc- ~======ancany timenever fromreceive any Cath sourceolic line!--Americawilln Catprovholice shelpful in attain- to 3. lifeDiocesa. n and parochial or• timtidne, especiallythat Judaism that ofot Pbari- that shared by Catholics and Jews, as sanction or support. ing this noble objective. i:-anlzalion.s. srhools. col- saism, was a decadent for- well as their differences." Mcasage Is Clear Genera.I Principles loges. universities, and es- mallsm and hypocrisy, well It calls for Catholics to The message of the coun l . It is recommended that in pecially seminaries t"hould exemplified by Jesus' eneml.,,. acknowledge the \'permanent cil"s statement is clear. Re: each diocese in which Jews organize t pro~t"'s 1 im• f. An acknowledgment by election of Israel" cited by St. calling In moving terms the and Christla.ns live a com - , . P~•;~lp~i ; hou~:r":i.;, be ;:,r'~;.:i'e,.~'t;.i::~ ~~~ Paul and specifically rejects any "spiritual bond that ties the :,r;/~~°"meo,:;b!~';';,ta,reoMa~-· boer used for expounding the Ism after Chmt and the per- suggestion that first-century Juda- people of the New Covenant teachings of the statement manent election of Israel, Ism, especially that of the \.'.'ath~:;:~a~; Co~~~i~;~mt:; :;:~fr's".'1 lo Catholic-Jewish ~dp~~=~g rftt:cifuat~~ :!~~d)ed, ~/Yln~rpop~ti~':i'r Pharisees, was ''a decadent u~ of the special place Jews 2. In keeplng wi.th the ~i1; t pR.rochial level. the results into Catholic =:g::; ~;d ;!!':,:!~~~:~=~;; ~1~:~n~-t~!ff~::~ o:{:~£~ ~~ u,~~~!::i,Decd:~ii~~ 5:,.,,~ch~J,e~x~Jr:Y"'m'::~ ~full and precise ex- should take the Initiative under competent auspices, be planation of the use of the 5 ~ake of the patriarchs; He not only in Catholic- examined in order to re- expression "the Jt!W"S' by st. 5 Seek To Attract has not withdrawn His gifts Protestant and Orthodox move not only those -male- John and other New Tl!sta- 5 City Dwellers or J~~,~.~i.n~~~refo rc, u,e F;\lh- fr;!ai~~t:~fc1~!~ ~o;J!;: ~~ ~~i~~nt~da~~~ ment references wb1ch appear ~ crs c::ntlion . .1re nnt "to be ~tandipg. Public and fonmtl of the statement but also to place l&ll Jew:s 1n-ga• § presented a.s rejected or ac- projects. however. should those which fail' to show :~ ~~~re~~~ be f::I!; E To Kibbutzim cur~cd by God. as , if this fol• have the 3.pproval of the Judaism's role in salvation• and precisely clarified in i tm,:ed from holy scripture." Ordinary of the diocese. history 'in any positive accordance with the tritent ot ~ J ERUSALEM -"Operation Kibbutz.'' an experiment under­ ~,?:r, p~~!~~ot°f b;es~:tri~~[:d 3. The general aim of all 6. lirr\s recommended that the Statement that Jews are = taken about 90 days ago jointly without distinction to all foath1_noclire'ca-Jseewio'urshumneedetrsintangs di~ Catholic-Jewish understand• nj ottedto ·be u~~.:!"~y Godu re• ~ as by the Jewish Agency, · the J ews then alive, nor can it be ing be fostered effectively ec or accw~ = Ministries of Labor and Housing attributed to the Jews of lo- ~~! C~~~li~ffaf&".";~t';,;~~: at the popula,r level by ~ri~re~?flowed, from holy ~ th st and the Hlstadrut, Israel's labor day." The church, e ate- sources of tension and mis- means of so-called "open This subcv(rurtl.!lSlon for i ment declares. "decries ha- understanding, initiate dia- houses'' in places o! wor- Catholic-Jewish . relatiOM re- 5 federation, to attract city-dwellers tred, persecutions, displays 1ogucs or conversation~. on· shi p, mutual. visits , to mains available to individu&L! = and new Immigrants to kib­ of anti-Semitism directed different levels, multiply !-Chools. joint social events or groups in the va.rtouS dio- 5 butzim-communal settlements­ against tbe Jews at any time intergroup meetings be- ;\nd ''living room dia- ceses for further information 5 has so far resulted In placement anind bl~· anhtyofneth." rl . l tween CathoJics and Jews, logues." and for practical aids and =_S of some 500 candidates-Including ig O ese P ncip es and promote cooperative 7· Catholic-Jewish coopera, suggestions ·for their efforts 119 families-In a number of kib­ the Fathers enjoin that "all social action. lion in the field of social In the area of C&thollc-Jewlsb see to it that nothing is 4_ These meetings should be action designed to promote affal butzim throughout Israel. taught. either in catechetic marked by a genuine re- public welfaire and morality rs. The experiment ls similar to earlier ones designed to encourage l~;/\,~;rd" njh~cidre:~~i"~~~-! spect for the person ana.e -,,, no f~ wav to redllft T T Irwin Fischer, Fred Rotenberg 0 ing l-er vice before you con get your car released. Thii meoni 0 ficiated at the 5:30 p.m. candle­ Meetings DOUat.l towing chorge 1o . light ceremony. A reception fol­ and Arnold Side!. throughout R R lowed In the temple social hall. Following a wedding trip to R.I. and MaH. CALL BOSTON RADIATOR Jamaica, the couple will make The bride, given In marriage TO their home In Pawtucket. OPEN by her father, wore an Empire MEN WOMEN gown of light Ivory peau de sole, Fred Kelman Photo with A-line effect, a. scoop neck­ TEEN-AGERS line and elbow sleeves. Seed pearl For information or More Students Attend free fife(oture embroidery trimmed the bodice CALL 831 -0337 BOSTON Radiator & Body Works and accented the sleeve cuffs. Israel Universities o,-w,,,e The full-length aisle-wide train J ERUSALEM-The number of 159 Elmgroye Ave., Prov. 029().', 185 Pine St. GA 1-2625 Providence was detachable. Her head piece students In Israeli universities now was a matching Circlet oflmported totals 28,000 as compared wl th 24 ,- orange blossoms with a triple­ 000 last year, according to an tiered veil of silk Illusion. She annOW!Cement by the Ministry of carried a flowing cascade of Education. Bar-Dan University of stephanotls and phalaenopsls Ramat Gan now has a student orchids with a removable cor­ body of 2,600, an Increase of 500 sage of Phalaenopsls andgarlands over I ast year. A total of 4,800 of Ivy. students attend the Haifa Technion Providence Voters: Maid of honor was Miss Phyllla as compared with 4,414 last year. Cramer, cousin of the bride. The Tel Aviv University nwnbers bridesmaids were Mrs. Irwin 6,500 students In comparison to a Governor Chafee: Fischer and Mrs. Raymond total of 4,609 durl ng the prevl ous VOTE " This is only the second project in the Remlek Jr. They wore Empire year. library's his!ory tor which a bond issue has been asked to improve its LAST WEEKS facilities. For the sake of a better IAPPROVE I library, I urge all Providence voters I CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER .... to support t.'1is issue." Mayor Doorley: 2. Gardener's ON THE LIBRARY ACROSS 20. Talk A 5 sup " More than 50% of the library's work E E P WR \T l l . Pier need 21. Part is devoted to helping our children. I 6. Flower 3. Theatre of ALT ER A V G VR CON DE MN s ■ MV urge all of the voters to support this 11.Fame group "to TEA • AES GUS BOND ISSUE much-needed bond issue." 12. Girl's 4 . Spawn be" ADD CE LT name of fish 22. Cereal AO I T S P l ETY 13. Regard MIN E LI 0 Providence Council, PTA: 5. Haunted • grass ARK p N LA Y 15. Bear 6. Man's 23. Mature SE JU V £ NI LE WHEN YOU VOTE " The improvements that the library constel­ nickname 24. The SC O VR SA MOA bonds will make possible wilt greatly" lation 7. Impudent sun TA NS A V ID strengthen the library's contribution 16. Social 8. Mongoloid 25. Large ROY PET to education in the city." affair 9: Scottish- worm ON MARCH 28. 17. Sounded, Gaelic 28. Beast of 36. Vo,gabond Rhode Island AFL-CIO: as a 10. Dutch burden 37.Moslem call to This $500,000 bond issue " Th e Library bond issue deserves the 19. Finical assembly 31. Cuckoos support of all Providence voters." 20. Attics H . Obligatory 32. Simpleton prayer will help to obtain 23. Mother of action 33. Scorch 38. Botch Peer Gynt 18.Aid 34. Canter 41. Not in state and federal funds The Greater Providence 26. Indo­ 19. Friar's 35. Biblical 43. From: for essential improvements Chamber of Commerce: prefix European title r egion to your " The bond issue will greatly improve 27. Belonging library service in neighborhoods I s 9 10 to Othello's 2. 3 4 0 6 1 8 Providence Public Library. throughout the city." foe ' 29. Drone or \\ 12. worker ¾ 30. Decorative 13 M IS pendants ~ PLEASE VOTE APPROVE 32.Small Jb 18 FOR THE LIBRARY bump ~ " marks 01/, 19 BOND ISSUE ON 33. Girl's ¾ f0 ~ ~ ¾ MARCH 28. name 20 :u 2l. 23 2'\ 2.S 36. Egga' ~ {All Providence voting places partner 2• t'0 n 29 will be open March 28, 39. Cornucopia. including those in 2.9 30 31 40. Short 0, Congressional District One.) sleep 42. Swiftly 32. ~ ¾'. ~ ~ ¾ ~ Sponsored by 44, Belonging 3} 3'1 3S 3.1> 31 38 Board of Trustees, td a. W. 0 Providence Pub I ic Library Ind. Isle 39 Philip B. Simonds, Preside nt 45. QuUI ~ ◄ O ◄ J feather 42. 46.Boya' ◄ 3 ~◄~ jackets CONTRIBUTED BY A ~s FRIEND OF THE LIBRARY DOWN ~ ◄ lo 1.Sharpen I - -_..,...- ---~----==~=----- ·----·· ---- ... -... ------··--· ---•------... --.

J6 lllE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1967 CRITICIZES AUSJ'RIAN TRIALS. _ LONDON~Austria'• handling raelt attorney general who pros­ To Be Celebrated HERALD :,f war crimes trials was sharply ecuted Adolf Eichmann. Mr. Haus­ Purim criticized by Gideon Hausner, ls- ner was particularly bitter about (Continued from page I) The Meglllah reading and the the treatment given by Austrian SONS OF ABKAHAM Maarlv service will talce place on Classified courts to witnesses "who were The Meg!llah will be read In Saturday ntghtat.7 o'clock. Hebrew treated as though they were crim­ Congregation Sons- of Abraham on. school students will be given greg­ inals." Saturday, March 25, at 6:30 p.m. gars. The Purim service on Sun­ Call 724-0200 to usher In the Purim Festival. day morning will begin at 8:30 The Sisterhood wtll be hostesses o'clock. The students of the Sun­ 3 - Apartments For Rent to the children at a collation to be day School will ~sent a Purim held In the vestry Immediately program and play at II a.m. which FOUR ROOM modern oportment, east after the reading of the Megtllah. parents are Invited to attend. of Hope. Near shopping and trans· CALL The Book of Esther wtll be portation. 521 -7797. reread on Sunday morning, March TEMPLE BETH SHOLOM Carpenters and Builders 26 at 7:30 a.m. The reading of the Meglllah 9 - 621-1289 Services tonlghtwtll commence will be held In the main sanctuary at 6 o'clock, and the Saturday ADDITIONS, olterations, residential, of Temple Beth Sholom on Saturday industria l building. Garages. Both- FREE morning service at 9 a.m. The evening at 6:30 p.m. Noisemakers rooms, ce ment work, dormers, store class In Schulchan Arachwlll meet­ and Hamantashen will be dis­ fr o nts . F, .. estimotes. 9•2-10«, DELIVERY at 4:30 p.m. on Saturday. tributed to all the children 9•2- 10•5. (courtesy of the Sisterhood). ufn SONS OF ZION On Sunday at 10:30 a.m. the '19 - General Services ELGIN AND ANSHEIKOVNO Hebrew School pupils will present / Services at Congregations Sons an original Purim play written by FLOOR CLEANING and polishing . PHARMACY -WEDOtNGS - BAR MITZVAH~ of Zion and Anshel Kovno will be­ Hyman Dress, a fourih-grade stu­ Also general home cleaning. Larry AND SPfCIAL PARTIF.S gin at 5:50 p.m. today, It was dent. Kindergarten pupils wlll Dvgan. 353-9648. 632 HOPE ST. PROV. JOHN C. FORYS 1',op. announced by Rev. M. Draztn, and also participate In the program ufn at 8:30 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. on with appropriate hollday songs and Saturday. The study group will dances. Purim refreshments will 21 Help Wanted - Women meet at 4 p.m. on Saturday, and be distributed by Mrs. Melvin DRAPERIES Maarlv services wlll be held at Fishbein through the courtesy of A VON PRODUCTS 6:40 p.m. They will be followed the The Sisterhood. entire program To Buy by the reading of the Meglllah. For Homes and Offices Is under the direction of EdWard or Slipcovers-Upholstering The morning service on Sun­ 0. Adler, principal, assisted by To Sell day will commence at 7 o'clock Mrs. Amnon Horvl tz and Mrs. Call We Will Gladly Help You With Any and the reading of the Meglllah EdWard 0. Adler , Sunday School AVON MANAGER will follow, at 7:30 a .m. A Purim teachers. GA 1-290e , . 14 Home Decorating Problem You May Have. breakfast will be served Immedi­ ately after the service. The Sunday TEMPLE BETH TORAH COMPANION, lig ht housekeeper. Call Us Now. No Obligation. evening service will be held at Sa bbath Services at Temple Li ve in. With driver's lice ns.e , 6 p.m. lody. References. WI 2- 1922 '°'o, Beth Torah-Cr anston Jewish 751 -5500. Call PA 5-2160 Center will be hel d at 8:15 p.m. FOR AN EXPERIENCED DECORATOR HILLEL today. HOUSEKEEPER fo, sing le gentleman The Megill ah will be read by Rabbi Saul Leem•n and Cantor in comfortable home; lig ht cook ing ; Upholstering and Window Shades Rabbi Nathan N, Rosen, assisted Jack Smith will officiate, with live in. Write R. I. Jewis h Herold, 99 by students , at Hillel House on Mrs. Sarah Rosenthal a s organist. Webster Street, Box A-96, Paw• Saturday night. A Purim Seudah During the service, Lorna tucket, R. I. 0286 1. and sherry hour will follow the Dressler, Sheryl Furman and Jack's Fabrics WOMAN to baby-sit. Meg!llah service. Informal dis­ Two young 725 DEXTER STREET CENTRAL FALLS De bra Morse will become Bas sc hool-age • child ren. Occa si onal cussion with three members of Ml tzvah. An Oneg Shabba t will days and / or weekend s. 942-2683. OPEN the faculty Is a feature of Hillel be sponsored by their parents, MON., TUES ., WED ., FRI. and SAT. 9 to 5, 30; THURSDAY 9 to 9 sherry hours; thefacultymembers Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dressler, WOMAN, Occ a si onal baby-sitting on Saturday will be Prof. George Mr. and Mrs. Geor ge Furman and doys and evening s. East Side. Refer• Morgan, University professor; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Morse. e nces. 861 -0607. Prof. Walter Feldman of the Art Department; Prof. Benjamin Chln­ 23ad - Houses For Sale itz, Economics Departtnent, and TEMPLE EMANU-EL Prof. Yechlel Weltsman, Applied Purim Services will be held EAST SIDE, laurel Ave nue. Charming Math Department. at Temple Emanu- EI at 7 p.m. six -room Colonial. One and one-half boths. finished bas.ement, screened Prof. Horst Moehring of the on Saturday In the Main Temple. porch. Move-in condition. Mid 20s. Rellglous Studies Department cl Cantor Joseph S. Lourie wlll read Owner. TE 1-4674. Brown. University will speak on the Meglllah. "Germany Today-Ptomlse or Children of the Rellg!ous School Threat" at the Hlllel Brunch on will present summaries of the To Try Bovensiepen Sunday morning. chapters of the Book of Esther. For Mass Murder Students at all Rhode Island col­ Participants wlll be Sandra Beder, leges will be welcome at these Linda Goldenberg, ­ BERLIN-Otto Bovenslepen, -, activities. stein, EdWard Gorodetsky, Jerrold 61, a former Gestapo officer who Hyman, Michael Lieberman, Is alleged to have ordered the re­ TEMPLE BETH EL Rhonda Luttman, Jeffrey Paster, moval of 50,000 Berlin Jews to • 'The Fingers of a Hand, Cheese Lewis Satloff, Jocelyn Shepard, concentration camps, was arrested and Wine" will be Rabbi William HEBREW NATIONAL - STRICTLY KOSHER Lynn Shuster and Jane Stepak. In Muhlhelm, West Germany and u G, Braude' s sermon topic at the The Megill ah will be read again turned over to the West Berlin 0 N Purim family service at 7:45 p.m. at services on Purim morning, authorities, according to the Asso­ u SAVE at Temple Beth El today. The March 26 at 8 o'clock In the ciated Press. ·c Purim Meglllah service will begin 14c chapel . After the war, a court In Cop­ A lb. 0 at 5:45 p.m. on Saturday. enhagen, where Bovenslepen had L M The adult and junior congrega­ TEMPLE SINAI served since 1943, sentenced him I p tions will meet for Sabbath morn­ Temple Sinai will hold lt1 to death on war crimes charges­ HEBREW NATIONAL SAVE 19c Ing services at 9:45 a.m. to­ annual Purim Family Service on mainly for the ldlllng of hostages. T STRICTLY KOSHER R morrow, and Rabbi Braude's Chu­ Sunday morning at II a.m. During The sentence was later commuted y 0 mash and Rash! class will meet the service, portions of the Megll­ to life and In 1953 he was freed atll a.m. lah_ will be - conducted by Rabbi from prison and returned to Ger­ M many. I PKG. Jerome S, Gurland, assisted by FRANKFORTS OF 7 I TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL the rellglous school choir directed A spokesman for the West Ber­ s s The annual Temple Beth Is­ by Mrs. Wendy Billig and lin justice authorities said that rael Sisterhood service will be accompanied by Mrs. Frank Gil­ Bovenslepen Is to be tried here E held at 8 o'clock tonight at Temple man. After the service. there on charges of having aided and 0 HAND - MADE - FRESH ( NOT FROZEN) D Beth Israel and wlll be followed will be a Purim Carnival. The abetted the mass murder of Jews. u '- by an Oneg Shabbat. publlc Is Invited to attend.· R BLUEBERRY OR CHEESE Howard Alan Salk, son of Mr. NEED NO VISAS 0 and Mrs. Norton E. Salk, will TEL AVIV-The needofentry­ u 'Euthanasia' Doctor become Bar Mltzvah at the vlsas for Israel has been waived M .. service at 11:15 a.m. on Saturday. for Yugo s I avian and Indian A In Hitler's Program 0 His parents will sponsor a Klddush citizens, according to an annotmce­ L Fill YOUR FREEZER AT THIS PRICE Faces German Trial In his honor after the service to­ ment by the lsraell Foreign Min­ s I night. istry. T FRANKFURT - A former T "selection doctor" at the Ausch~ FRESHLY SMOKED - MEATY SAVE 40c y wltz death camp, who Is awaiting I LARGE ·- 1 ½ LB. AVERAqE trial on charges of mass murder, AS A M testified this week that he set p F up the first death center In 1940 0 for Hitler's euthanasia program MATTER 0 lb. to kill persons considered unfit R R to !Ive under Nazi · racial laws. OF Horst Schumann, who was ex-,1 T MEAT DEPT. T tradlted from G)tana last year A OUR , FRESH MEAT DEPARTMENT IS CLOSED AT w after a long legal battle, testified N 0 at the trial of three doctors here NOON ON FRIDAY AND ALL DAY SA TU RDA Y accused of participation In the , , , more than three million Sun Life T mass murder of mental patients policies and group certificate s are in , STRICTLY KOSHER' CHOICE G during the Nazi regime. force and over two-thirds of Sun Life's I E Schumann said he did not dare FACT policy payments are now be ing made to refuse participation In the eu­ N : . N thanasia program because he had to living policyholders and annuitants. G E been Informed that murdering In­ As a local Sun Life represeotative, may R R curably Ill mental patients was an order from Hitler with the force I call upon you at your convenience? A of law. The date for Schumann's All STORES T trial has not yet been set. ELLIOT F. SLACK I , - . . I 1018 INDUSTRIAL BANK BLDG. OPEN For news of Israel and world­ E .. • • 0 DE 1-2422 N ... ALL DA Y wide Jewry, of local organizations ~. IN and society, read the Herald ••. and SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA SUNDAY T - . ' for some of the best bargains In A MUTUAL CC,MPANY s the Greater Providence area.