'Mexican-American Migrants Most Neglected,' Says Miriam
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Yom Kippur_. Pbservance Begins With Chanting o·t Kor Nidre Oct. 9 YOM KIPPUR OBSERVANCE
BEGINS Services for Yorn Klppur, the
Day of Atonement and the holiest day of the Jewish year, begin at sundown Friday, Oct. 9. Services
·WU! be held all day Saturday, Oct. 10.
CONGREGATION AGUDAS ACHIM
(Attleboro, Mass.)
Ktppur. Services for Hebrew School
pupils will be conducted by Ira Zeidman In the chapel at 10:30 a.m. Mrs. Norman Goldenberg will conduct the services for Sunday School pupils In Room 4 at 10:30 a.m. 1
CONGREGATION OHAWE SHOLAM
(Pawtucket) The Kol Nldre service at
Congregation Agudas Achlm, Attleboro, Mass., will begin at 6 p.m. The sermon will be "It Is a
An open forum will be c-onducted by Rabbi Chaim Ratzman In the verstry during the Intermission In services Saturday
· at Congregation Ohawe Sholam, Pawtucket.
THE ONLY ENGLISH-JEW/SH WEEKLY IN R. I. ANO SOUTHEAST MASS. · Dlfflcul t Task."
Y om Klppur services Saturday will begin at 8:30 a.m. The sermon will be "Significant Memories." Ylzkor services will be held at noon. The blowing of the Sholar will be at 6:45 p.m.
- The children's service will be held In the chapel at 11 a.m. Mrs. Gerald Rosenthal Is chairman of the parents' committee.
Rabbi Phlllp Kaplan and lrvlng Miller, president of the congregation, wlll officiate.
CONGREGATION B'NAI ISRAEL (Woonsocket)
Rabbi William E. Kaufman and Cantor Philip Macktaz will conduct the Yorn Kl~r services at Congregation B nal Israel, Woonsocket.
The Kol Nldre services will begin at 6 p.m. Morning services will begin at 8:30. Ylzkor prayers will follow the sermon.
Miss tras Lavine and Miss Daryl Sherman will offer creative musical selections during the Kol Nldre and Yorn Klppur Day services. Mrs. Joan Carey Is the organist.
Joseph Shprr will chant the Shacharts service on Yorn
Kol Nldre ·services wut begin at 6 p.m., with Yorn Klppur Day services starting at 8 a.m. Rabbi Ratzman's sermon will be "Where Angels Fear to Tread." Ylzkor services will be held at 11 a.m.
The forum wlll begin at 3: IS p.m., with afternoon services starting at 4:35 p.m.
Dr. Ellezar Hurvltz, a professor at Yeshiva University, wilt chant the services.
The congregation Is Invited to break the fast In the vestry after the sounding of the Sholar.
CONGREGATION SHAARE ZEDEK
SONS OF ABRAHAM Congregation Shaare Zedek
Soos of Abraham will hold Kol Nldre services at 6 p.m. Rabbi Leon M. Mozeson will give the sermon, "In Quest of Ught.''
Yorn Ktppur services will begin at 8 a.m. Rabbi Mozeson's sermon will be "Rabbi-Aklba -Scholar and Martyr." Ylzkcir services will be held at 11 a.m., with the conclusion of the fast at 6:53 p.m. Rabbi Abraham Klein will chant the Shacharis
- (Cotittrtuecl on page 14)
$.9.enf Summer In Texas
VOL. LIV, NO. 27
Vermont labor Hits Soviet Anti-Semitism
BURLINGTON, Vt. -Concern has been votced by organized labor In Vermont over the condition of some 3 million Jews "trapped In a growing tide of hatred and anti-Semitism In the Soviet Union."
The annual convention of the Vermont State Labor Council, AFL-CIO, has voted unanimously In support of a resolution submitted In behalf of ILGWU Local #341 by Martin Berger, regional vice chairman of the Jewish Labor Committee.
In voting their condemnation of the Soviet Union• s "cultural genocide," the delegates asked that the Jews of that nation be permitted to emigrate as a "hmnan right of survival." They also asked that the United States government do all In Its power to rectify the situation and that copies of the resolution be sent to President Nixon and Secretary ol State Rogers.
'Mexican-American Migrants Most Neglected,' Says Miriam By CAROL N. AQUINO
"Mexican-American migrant farm workers are probably even more neglected than the Jndtans and the blacks In this country," says Miriam Goldsmith.
The 17-year-old Pawtucket g I r I knows firsthand about problems facing the migrants. She spent seven weeks this summer working with them In the Rio Grande Valley In Texas under the auspices of a program sponsored by the American Jewish Society for Service.
She would like to return there on her own and work again with the United Farm Workers Union, which had asked the A.JSS for assistance.
The Rio Grande Valley branch of the union ls headed by Antonio Orendln, former secretary to Cesar Chavez. The union Is trying to organize the migrant farm workers In Texas to get them a living wage, said Miriam.
"Many of the people don't even realize they don't get paid a living wp.ge," she feels. "They ju8t gef pall! and that's that."
She said they should get paid at least $1.30 an hour, but many get paid on the basis of what they pick - about $2.50 for a 100-llb. sack of cotton. It takes from four to five hours to pick that much cotton, she said. II the sack brew or something else goes wrong, the worker has to pay. The average Income Is about $850 a year.
Tbe workers are somewhat suspicious of the union, she said. They are torn by the different
opinions they ·hear. The union organizers, on the
one hand, tell them that the only way they can get a living wage and be protected Is to join the union;' .
Other people In the area - the growers, lawyers, and other prominent citizens - tell them they~ are better off without a union, Miriam slad.
''We went primarily to build a communlty canter for migrant
workers. The union was planning the center for health and child care. We got there and found that the land hadn't been cleared yet," Miriam explained. "It was stilt a cotton field, so they had us tear d own, houses and buildings condemned by urban renewal. The lumber from those buildings wilt be used to blllld the center whenever they get around to building It._ .
(Continued on page 14)
OCTOBER 2, 1970 15c PER COPY 48 PAGES
Bias Against Jews
Faculty-Student Group At eurdue Sugg~sts Changes In Admissions
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., -Rabbi Gerald Engel, director of the B'nal B'rlth HIiiel Foundation at Purdue University, reported that a faculty-student conclave had recommended to university president Fred Hovde changes In the school's admissions policy which has been criticized as discriminating against out-ofstate Jews and applicants of other minorities.
The recommendations emerged from a weekend discussion on "The Morality of Purdue's Admissions Policy" at the HIiiel Foundation.
Hovde had asked for ••constructive suggestions'' for modification of the admission policy for out-of-state applicants after the university had come \Sider -re criticism. Initially, Purdue U,lverslty had rejected virtually all applications from students In the New York metropolitan area and New Jersey.
Later, the university set a quo ta for both states but continued under criticism for the content of Its form letter to applicants from the metropolitan l!lew York area and from New Jersey.
The blanket policy had been
justified by the university with the contention It was trying to reduce the nmnber of "disruptive c-ampus outsiders" among Its students.
Both faculty members and students recommended that the letter now being sent to New York and New Jersey applicants be revised because It discouraged such applicants and made It Impossible for the university to fill Its own established quota for the area, based on the populations of the two states.
The quota system for the two states was Introduced last Nov. 19 when Dr. John Hicks, ass! stant to President Hovde, advised Rabbi Engel that the blanket no-admission policy for the two states was being changed to allow admission to applicants, other than sons and daughters of almnnl of the school, few of whom were residents of the two areas.
FROZEN FOOD PLANT ASHOOD - Sunfrost, Ltd., the
targf!st frozen food plant In Israel, will start production soon. The firm was founded by American experts In the frozen food l)ldustry. Most of the plant's production -will be geared for export.
Jewish Federation Drive Brings More Than s1 ,000,000 In Pledges
More than $I-million was economic and military pressures. pledged at the Jewish Federation Israel must show "It can continue of Rhode Island's Initial Gifts to survive despite the Arab campaign opening dinner threat." Thursday, Sept. 24. F·lnanclal donations, he said In
This represents · a substantial a direct appeal to those attending Increase over last year's gifts the dinner, will enable Israel to from the same persons, JFRI meet the pressures from the officials said. Arab nations.
To date the total pledges and _ The ambassador discounted contributions to the campaign the Idea that Russia was trying to Including the wom en's Dlvlslo~ achieve peace In the Mideast. and Newport results stand at "The Russians hold the key to $1,125,000. ' war, but not to peace," he said.
He also voiced skepticism about diplomatic efforts by the United States, the UN and other countries to negotiate a lasting peace.
The speaker at the dinner, which was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert L Gordon of Glen Drive, was Lt. Gen. Yltzhak Rabin, Israel's ambassador to the United States.
General Rabin said he sees no hope for Im mediate peace In the Middle East, despite efforts of United Nations officials toward that end.
"As long as the Soviet Union continues to support every extremist Arab group," peace ls unlikely, he said.
The Arabs must want peace before It can come, he said. "Changes In attitudes of people cannot be discussed among diplomats." He emphasized that Israel must show the Arabs It can continue to withstand heavy
Ambassador Rabin wouldn't say whether Israel has considered attacking the missile sites along the west bank of the Suez Canal. Israel does expect the U .s. " .to keep up Its role as a broker betW'.len Israel and Egypt" In an effort to have the missiles rolled back so that ·peace talks can continue.
These comments, naturally, were made before the sudden death of Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser. What effect that event will have on Israel's situation In the Mideast, no one knows. Funeral services for Nasser were held yesterday,
JFRI * Campaign In Full Swing -- Show You Care - Give MORE! - ' formerly GENERAL JEWISH COMMITTEE Of RHODE ISLAND
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2 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970
JACQUES M. RATHLE, M.U.
ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE AT: 1180 PARK AVE., CRANSTON,"R.1.
PRACTICE LIMITED TO Adolescent & Adult Psychiatry Tel. 942-1201, 331-7400 Hours by Appt.
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Zionists Establish Em·ergency Fune!
BOOTON-The New . England Region, Religious Zionists of America, Mlzrachl Hapoel Hamlzrachl, has established an emergency "Pldyon Hanefesh Fund."
Albert M. Stern, president, said, "Tbe current crisis In Israel makes It mandatory for us to exert every effort to maintain the Institutions which are struggling under the yoke of financial burdens aggravated by the current crisis."
The organization has asked spiritual leaders throughout the region to make special appeals for flmds during the High Holy Days.
Contributions may be sent to the region office, 611 Washington Street, Room 507, Boston, Mass. 02lll
I NATHAN GOLD
Funeral services for Nathan Gold, 58, owner of the Nathan Gold · Insurance Company, at 42 Spring Street, Newport, who died Monday, were held the following day at the Hoffman Memorial Chapel In Newport. · Burial was In the Jewish Cemetery In Middletown. ALART
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Providence Girl Spent Summer Working In Jerusalem Hospital
Mr. Gold, who lived at 4 Ellery Road In Newport, was born In that city on Nov. 8, 1911, a son of Mrs. Ida Gold of San Francisco, CalU., and the late Morris Gold. He was the husband of Eva (Mills) Gold.
He was a member of the Newport Kiwanis Club, uie Newport Lodge of Elks, the Salvation Army, the Touro Synagogue of Newport, B'nal B'rlth and the Avals Achlm Synagague-.,'.lf Newport.
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A Providence gtrl who wanted to visit Israel but not just as a tourlst spent the summer as a volunteer at Shaare zedek Hospital In Jerusalem.
She Is Marna Sternbach, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Sternbach of 61 Gallatin Street.
"'I heard about the hospital's summer vohmteer program from a doctor on the staff and I decidedthat this would be a better way for me to get to know Israel than m e re I y touring around the country," said Miss Sternbach, who wants to become a doctor.
She worked In the biochemistry research department.
"'Because of my Interest In medicine working In a hospital was a very rewarding experience. It was even more so because the people I worked with In the laboratory at Shaare zedek took a personal Interest In me that enabled me to have a much closer
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and more Intimate relationship with Israelis than would have been possible In another situation."
'The Shaare 2.edek summer volunteer program Is designed for Just that purpose . Applications for the program flood the hospital from all over the world and volunteers are chosen of a flrst-come-flrsts e rved basis according to qualifications.
'The volunteers receive no pay but are provided with three meals a day. In shifts of 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. or 2 .p.m. to 6 p.m., they work In various departments to help relieve the pressure on the hospital staff.
Miss Sternbach said the hospital building Is 70 years old and ••overcrowded to the saturation point.'' but has "the most modern medical equipment" and a highly trained staff that provides "the best that contemporary medical science has to offer."
Her work at Shaare :zedek made her "realize what can be accomplished by dedicated people determined to do their best work no matter what the physical conditions," she said.
A senior at Radcliff College, Miss Sternbach Is majoring In history and science and hopes to go to medical school.
JETS GAME CH!\NGED
NEW YO-.:tK - Owners or the New York Jets professional football team have changed the game time of this season's -first home game on Oct. 10 to accommodate observant Jewish fans. 11>e starting time for the night game at Shea Stadium pitting the Jets against the Miami Dolphins, has been moved up to 8:45 p.m. Yorn Klppur ends at about sundown that evening.
Herald ads get results.
Besides, hi~ mother and wife, he Is sm>vlved by a son, Army Capt. w1mam·, Gold stationed In Baltimore, Ma.; a daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Levenson of Bloomfteld, Conn.; a sister, Mrs. Kenneth Chapman of San Francisco; three brothers, Louis and George Gold of Newport and Max Gold of Fall River, Mass., and two grandchildren.
• • • JOEL POLSON POLINOFF
Funeral services for Joel Polson Pollnott, 67, or 156 Evergreen Street, were held Monday, Sept. 28, at Lincoln Park Cemetery.
Mr. Pollnoff died Sept. 27 at his home after a short Illness.
Born In New York April 21, 1903, he was the son of Max and Jennie (Llnenberg) Pollnorr. He had lived In Providence most of his adult life.
He was a self-employed salesman In the household turnlshlngs business.
Besides his parents, he Is survived by a sister, Mrs. Bernard Lipton of Stamford, Conn.
• • • Card of Thanks
Tho family of the late LOUIS STRASHNICK wishes to thank all theit friends and relatives far the sympathy and kindne11 shown ti.m during their 'a:-"'. ~eavement.
Unveiling Notice The unveiling of a monument in
memo,y of ti. late SADIE DELUTY wil take place on Sunday, October 4, at 12 noon In Lincoln Parle Cemetery. Friends and relatives are invited to attend.
Max Sugarman Funeral Home
"THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR"
DE 1-8094 458 Hope Street Providence
FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE FROM O_UT-OF-ST A TE
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I ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Joel I •. Slsltsky of . 48 Cobblestone Road, Longmeadow, Mass., snn01D1ce the birth of their third child and second daughter, Hope Rachel, on Sept. 23. Mrs. Slsltsky Is the former 'Sandra R. Slndle.
Maternal grandmother Is Mrs. Joseph J. Slndle of 101 Medway Street. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Leon A. Slsltsky of 101 Mulberry Street, Sprlngfleld,
. _Ma , s, . Paternal great-. grjlndmother Is Mrs. Harry
Slsltsky of Springfield.
SON BORN Mr. and Mrs . Barry Green of
13J Oliver Court, Pittsburgh, . Pa,, formerly of Providence,
anno\Ulce the birth of their second _child and first son, Scott Craig, on Aug. 27. Mrs. Green Is the . former Merle Schwartz,
Matern:a,t grandfather Is William Schwartz of Franklin, Mass. Maternal greatgrandmother Is Mrs. • Bessie S.chwartz of Boston, Mass. Paternal grapdparents are Mr. and Mrs. Saul Green of New York City. Paternal great-grandmother Is Mrs. Rose Green of New York City.
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Miss Reta Anne Sivie and
Philip A. Berman were married at Wayland Manor In a 6:30 p;m. ceremony Saturday, Sept. 26.
Judge Edward J. PIIUlkett officiated. A reception followed.
TIie bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Prank Sivie of Pittsburgh, Pa. TIie bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Berman of 15 Aldrich Terrace.
After a wedding trip to the Pocono MolUltalns, the couple will reside In Pittsburgh.
PIRSI' DAUGHTER BORN Mr. and Mrs. David Katz of
· . 125 Gillooly Drive, Warwick, anno1U1ce the birth of their first child and .. daughter, Stacey Ann, on Sept, 29.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Leo Katz of 34 Tenth Street
.and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Colltz of 15 Capwell Avenue, Pawtucket,
Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Louis Strashnlck of 181 Tenth Street.
SECOND DAUGHTER Mr. and . Mrs. Harold L
Kessler of 49 Raymond Street announce the birth of their second daughter, Jennifer Lou, July 20.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kaiserman of Boston, Mass. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Zakoff.
SECOND SON BORN Mr. and Mrs. Arthur K.
Newman of Montreal, Canada, announce the birth of their second son, Marc, on Sept. 8. Maternal grandparents are Mrs. Evelyn Rosenstein of Toronto. Canada, and Lewis Rosenstein of Westmount. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William Newman of 191 Princeton Avenue.
BARMITZVAH Stephen Jay Levin will become
Bar Mltzvah at Temple Sinai at the 11:15 a.m. service Saturday, Oct. 3. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Levin. ·
FIRST SON Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Rosen of New York City announce the birth of their first child and son, James Samuel. Mrs. Rosen
.ts the former Estelle Culler. Maternal grandmother Is Mrs.
Samuel Cutler of Chelsea, Mass. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rosen of 35 Elmway •. Great-grandmother Is Mrs. Samuel Korb of Warwlctc.
(Continued ~ page 10)
HIGH-CLASS HOUSING
Mn. Edmund J. Silverman
Miss Marsha Sybil Gerzog and Edmund J. Silverman were married In a candlelight ceremony SUnday, Sept. 27, at Temple Sinai.
Miss Gerzog Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Gerzog of 81 Glenham Street. The bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Silverman of 107 Norwood Avenue, Cranston.
Rabbi Jerome Gurland ofl1clated at the ceremony. The soloist was Wendy Billig. A reception was held at the temple.
Given In marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of her own design and make. It was of Ivory Skinner Lutesong and trimmed with borealla' sequlns. A
beaded Alencon lace crown held her silk Illusion chapel length veU which was trimmed with reembroidered beaded Alencon laee appUques. She carried a cascade of gardenias and stephanotls.
The matron of honor was Mrs. Joseph Ferreira. Brides maids were Mrs. Gilbert Cohen and Mrs. Jactc Winkleman, twin sisters of the bridegroom.
Philip Gerzog, twin brother of the bride, was best man. Tile ushers were Gilbert Cohen, Melvin Landesberg and Jack Winkleman.
After a wedding trip to Europe, the couple will reside In Pawtucket.
Mn. Bawy L Abrams
Miss Vicki Lennard and Barry L. Abrams were married In a double ring, candlelight ceremony at the home of the bride's parents at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 13.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lennard of 116-20 240th Street, Elmont, Long Island, N. Y. The bridegroom Is the son_of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Abrams of 25 Shadbush Road, Warwlck. , ,; r'
Rabb I Selgal of Temple Emanuel In Elmont officiated.
fashioned . with a sculptured neckline accented with Alencon lace and , seed pearls, long tapered sleeves and a detachable court train, A contour crown of Alencon lace and seed pearls held -.her bouffant veil. She carried a colonial bouquet of white roses and daisies.
Miss karen Lennard, sister of the bride, was maid of honor.
The best man was George _Bloom.
NEW YORK - WolfsonClore-Mayer Corpol:'atlon, an Israeli real estate company established. by British Investors, has ann01D1ced that It has started construetlon work on a high-class housing quarter In Jerusalem which _represents an lnvesonent of $16.5 million •
Esc!)rted by her father, the , bride wore a peau de sole gown
Following a wedding trip to Cape Cod, the couple Is living at 631 E. Broadway,, Long Beach, L.L, N.Y.
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD. FRIDAY1 OCTOBER 21 1970
YOUNGER THAN ISRAEL JERUSALEM - None of t!ie
Middle Eastern states existed In the days of World War I - and the Jurldlclal existence of eight of the Arab states Is actually shorter than the 20-year history
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I ORGANIZATl1ON NEWS I UNIVERSITY W,'JMEN
Dr. Whitney T. Perkins of the Brown Un Ivers lty political science department will dl.scuss "Problems of the Middle East" at a meeting of the Providence branch of the American Association of University Women at 6:30 p.m-. Oct. 5. The meeting will be held at 96 Waterman Street. He Is a specialist In International relations and the author of "The Denial of Empire, the United States and Its Dependencle s." ·
3011-1 REUNION
HOLD LUNCHEON: A luncheon for the members of t he board of the ladies' Anociation, Jew ish Home for the Aged, was held at the home of Mrs. David Horovitz, pr•iclent-elect of the organization, on Sept. 22 . Pouring is .Mrs. ~ank llc~t. Other gu•II, left to right, are Mesclam• Lenca Rose, Joseph Dreuler, Bernard Gladstone, outgotng president; Hyman Stone, Aaron Nemtzow, Donald Dwares, Benjamin """lte n, Haskell Walick, Harry Seltzer, Harry Shatkin, David Horovitz and, HOied at the right of Mrs. llcht, Mrs. Leo Greenberg.
The Hope High School Class of January 1941 will hold Its 30th reunion Oct. 24 at the Chalet Restaurant In North Providence. The social hour will begin at 7 p,m., with dlnner at 8.
Reservations may be made by calling Elaine and Philip Chopak of 35 Philmont Ave., Cranston, at 461-2963. Deadline Is Oct. 10. · Fred Kelman Photo
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TO ANSWER QUESTIONS Rabbis William G. Braude and
Les 11 e Y. Gutterman will participate In a question and answer period at a meeting of the Temple Beth El Sisterhood at the temple at 2 p.m. Oct. 5. The coffee hour will begin at 12:30 p.m,
PLANNING MEETING The ladles auxiliary of the
Providence Hebrew Shelte0rlng Society will hold a planning meeting at Congregation Sons of Jacob at 1:30 p.m . Monday, Oct. 5.
M r s . Sam Ludman will preside.
DONOR DINNER The Providence chapter of
Women• s Mzr acht will hold I ts ann u al don o r dinner at Congregation Mlshkon T'flloh at 6:30 p.m. Nov. I.
Proceeds from the dlnner will go to the Mzrachl vill age In Israel to help care for orphans.
YOM KIP PUR DANCE The Sisterhood and
Brotherhood of Temple Sinai will sponsor a Yorn Klppur dance Saturday, Oct. IO, at the temple. The Russell Paul Orchestra will begin playing at 9 p.m •
Refreshments will be served. Tickets may be obtained by
calling Gladys- Kaplan at 944- 5557 or Elliot Berkowitz at 944-5740. The donation Is $10 per couple.
ORT MEETING The Providence Chapter of
Wom9n's American ORT wil l meet In the Warwick Public LI bra r y, 600 Sandy Lane, Warwick, at 8 p.m. Oct. 8.
A film entitled "Israel: Story of the J ewlsh People" will be shown. Program chairman is Mrs . Daniel S. Stern.
A penny auction sale will be held after the film . Chairman Is Mrs. Milton Lev in.
The m eetlng Is op~n to prospective member s . Mrs. Arnold Kaufman w!ll preside .
TO SPEAK ON MIDEAST Mrs. Merr!ll L, Hassenfeld ,
national vice chairman of the Women's Division of the United Jewish Appeal, w!ll speak on the current conflict In the Middle East at a meeting of the Cranston Women's Division of the Jewish l'e de rat I on of Rhode Island Wednesday , Oct. 7,
The meeting will be hel d at the home of Mrs . Martin I. Dittelman , 93 Crestwood Road, Cranston, at 8 p.m .
Mrs. Hassenfeld Is former president of the Jl'RI' s Women's Division .
~latcmcnt or Ownership, Management and Circu• lauon of 1hc Rhode Island Jewish Herald for Octobc:r I. 1970 as requ ired by the Act of October 23. 1962: Section 4369. Tit le 39. United State~ Code.
I. Date of fil ing: October I. 1970. 2. Title of publication: Rhode Island Jewish Herald . J_ Frcqucnc) of issue: Weekly. 4, Location of known office of publication: 148 Taunton A\·cnuc. East Providence. Rhode Island 02914 . 5. Loca1ion of hcadquancrs or general business offices of the publishers: Same.
6. Names and addresses of pi.!blisher. cdi1or and managing cdi1or: Publisher. Waller Ru1man. 99 Webster Strcc1. Pawtucket, R. I. 0286L Editor. Celia Zuckerberg, 99 Wcbsicr Street. Pawtucke t. R. I. 02861.
7. Owner (If owned by a corporat ion . its name aDd address must be stated aod also immediate!) thereunder 1he names and addresses of stockholders owni ng or holding I percent or more or to tal amoun1 of slock . If not owned by a corpora1ion, the names and addresses of the indi,·idual owners must be given . If owned by a partnership or o ther unincorporated firm , its name and address. as well as that of each individual must be given): The Jewish Press Publishing Company. Inc .. 99 Webster Street. Pawtucket. R. I. 02861. Walter Rutman. 99 Webster Street. Pawtucket. R. I. 02861.
8. Known bondholders. mortgagees. and 01hcr sc· curity holders owliing or holdin@ I lcrccn1 or more of 101al amount of bonds. mortgages or 01hcr securities (If there arc none. so state): None. . 10. This item mus1 ~ completed for a ll publica
tions cx~ pt those which do not carr) advertising Other than lhc publisher's own. and which arc named in sections 132.23 I. 132.232. and 132 .2B. Posta l Manual (Sections 4355a, 4355b. and 4356 of Title 39, United States Code ). Average number
To'!~ls !~~\:;su:o;~ingri~~:cd~~ct 12p~: "'1;:~nf 9, 175. B. Paid Circulat ion. I. Sales 1luough dealers And carriers, street ,·endors and counter sales: 4:88 1. ~- Mail subscriptions: 3.899. C. Total paid c1rculat1on : 8,780. D. Free distribution (iocluding samples) by mai l. carrier or otncr means: 265. E. To1al distribution (Sum of C and D): 9.045. F. Of.
r~c; ~~~~ ~~tt:~r~l (S::~r1:1~nr~1~ s:!~c~ ~ 1:!i net oress run shown in A): 9,175.
Single issue nearest to filin@ date. A. Total num· her copies printed (Net Press Run ): 9.200. B. Paid circulation. 1. Sales through dealers and carriers. street vendors and counter sales: 4.870. 2. Mail subscriptions: 3.89.l C. Total [;•id circul ati!ln: 8.763.
~ ·rrfc'rcco/~:~~~ut:::aJ!~c~~5~nl . s}:1~\e~is~iib:!~~~ (Sum of C and D): 9.028. F. OHicc use. lehovcr. unac...-oun1cd . spoiled after printing: 172. G. Total ~Su m or E and F • should equal net press run shown 1n A): 9.200.
I certih that the sta1ements made b\ me above arc corrCCt and L-Omplcte. Signed: WaltCr Rutman.
IOIN THE BIGG REVOLT AGAiNST HIGH PIIICESl -
Effective Oct. 2 • Oct. 10, only!
Prices good only at Big 'G' 727 East Avenue, Pawt. We reserve ,the right to limit. None sold to dealers.
U.S. Choice
FRESH 79c BRISKET''"·'~
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD1 FRIDAY1 OCTOBER 2, 1970 r
DELMONICO 818 G Is now STEAKS""·'~ s 1.78 su••• "G" .
U.S. Choice the Underpricer! FRESH
Farm Fresh Center Cut 99 CHICKEN LIVERS ........ !~·.59~ BRISKET ........ ~~-. . c
MORRISON AND SCHIFF HEINZ Skinless Franks, I • pkg .......... :.95• Pastroal, 4 01 pkg ......... :-:,75· VEGETARIAN BEANS lnockwurst,1 • pkg ........... ~".95· Codllal Franks,12 01 pkg .......... :.99' 9 16oz.g1ass
lliclget Uverwurst-.. ~ 1.19 llidget Salallli,12 01 .......... ;ol.09 1 C · Slced Beef Frye, 6 01 pkg ......... .-.·,65' Midgetlologna,12 o, .......... -;,95'
Sliced Bologna, 6 01 pkg __ ., .. 53' Slced Salami, 6 01 pkg ......... ;;,53'
Hamburg PaHies2 lb box ..... ~ 1.88 Corned Beef, 4 01 pkg ... 85'
G Id Bl• t Reg. 6941! package of 6pkg.59c o en 1n zes •••••••••• Golden Potato Pancakes(~:::;:~il~59'
DELICIOUS, UNSALTED Nova Scotia Lox •••••. ~::.98' Belly Lox •••••• ~~1:.89'
MELON .FESTIVAL · Cranshaw,
Persians or Casaba Jumbo Size, Sweet, Vine ripened ready to eat.
69.~ · Sweet, juicy • ·
Prune Plums •• ~1~.49' Sugar Sweet
Seckel Pears •• ~!s.49,
Ct /4 JUMBO EGGS;:~;59, v s·ouR CREAM :e:s~~~39c
727 East Ave. only! STRA WiERiIES .... 39'
, I
. ~" !,, J )
6 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD1 FRIDAY1 OCTOBER Z, 1970
·FROM FRIDAY TO FRIDAY The
Lyons Den Reminiscences On an Anniversary
. By. BERYL SEGAL NEW YORK - After the dress rehearsal of "Tales of Hoffmann" at the Met Opera, Rudolf Bing went backstage. He told Rosalind Elias, who plays the Venetian courtesan, that her gown's decollete was too extreme: "I'm afraid we'll have to add an Inch or two of ruffle. A ft er all, this Isn't 'Ohl Calcutta!' you know.••
A recent family celebration remti,ded us of the many changes we have witnessed In the past 50 years, •
We were both born In the same Shtetl. This was a little town of about 500 souls In the southern part of the Ukraine. The surrounding villages were settled by Ukrainians and Poles, who tilled the rich soil of the Ukraine. The Jews were the businessmen, artisans and tradesmen. They also engaged In the distribution of farm products. The Jews were not allowed to own land, though.
Whether by choice or design, tbe Shtetl was populated solely by J ews. There was not a single Ukrainian living In the Shtetl, except for the government representatives such as police, post office manager and teachers. Yes, teachers were also employed by the government, and the schools were for Ukrainians only. There were only two Jewish children In these schools before the Revolution. J ewish children went to Heder and later to the Talmud Torah (Hebrew School) or b~d private tutors at home. These were entirely supported by Jews.
Compare this with the present '1ay school education of our children.
We had no telephone In our Shtetl. There was only a central office, which was presided over by a Ukrainian woman and, when a telephone call from another town was received In the central
of!lce, the messenger was sent out to find the person. I had only one telephone call In my 20 years In the Shtetl and my wife received none.
There was no electricity In the Shtetl. In the evening the lamp lighter would go around and light the keroslne lamps on the Main Street, also called Post Road. The other streets were unlit. But there were telephone and electric poles going through the Shtetl, Tilese were the lines that went directly to the Mansion of the Pan, the owner and master of the Sh t e t I and the surrounding villages.
The Pan also rode the only coach and bor ses In the vicinity. When his coach raced through the Shtetl with six horses "Nashpltz" - we knew that the Pan was Invited to some great affair where the guests vied with one another In showing off their ''greatness."
Transportation was supplied by Balegoles, men who made a living out of driving men and women to and from the city, some 20 miles away, In their coaches. Merchants had their own sulkies and horses. In the morning they all drive out of the Shtetl to their business affairs elsewhere.
We neither saw nor rode a railroad until we were on our way to America.
Except for Main Street, none or the streets In the Shtetl and the surrounding villages were paved.
THE ONLY ENGLISH JEWI SH WE EK LY IN R J AND SO U THEA\ T "-' SI
CB.IA ZUCKHIHG.
,_~~~~"' lo• 6063, "9YWence, I.I. 02904 Te~ 724-0200 N.ANTr l4ffltW W•y, .ttw_... .. ,s,., ,-.., .. 1.I. 02161
OFRCE: 141 Taunton A ...... lint '"'•id.Me, I.I. . .......................... .Manat,Nt9Wtet
S.Cencl c1o .. ,.., ... flald a, ""'•kMnce, ltMdtt Wand
SulNcription hffl: fifteen C.nh the cepy; ly MaW, '6.00 fM' annutl'I ; eut.W. New lftg .. nd, '7 .50 '"' annum . .,. '9t" - f9CIU"t. The tMtold OMUm" ,ubtcriptient 11,. c..,.tiftu.vt unlftt netifwd t• th. c..,.traryNlwrittft9.
Th• tMrald auumft no ffnondol ,_,..n,ibUity for typ,vraphkol enon in 11d.-rtiMm.,.h. bul w WI ,.print thot part •f the od.-rttMm•nt in whkh the lyf*INphkol MJOf MCu .... AfflrttM ... w WI p&.o .. rt0tify th• monoeemenl imm.diatefy .tony •no, whkh moy .ccur.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
The Western White House San Clemente
It is often thought and expreued that we in the modern world know all the problems faced by mankind but have just to find the aolutiona. And in looking for ways to ease man'• struggle•, we are more likely to suggest what others might or should do.
Jewiah tradition teaches that the power to do good or evil ia in our own hands, and the eeaaon of the Jewiah High Holy Daya holda a meaningful leuon for men of all faitha, · At thia time we a,re urged to look inward, to examine our own livea and to conaider what each of us can do for the betterment of mankind, These daya of atonement prod ua to an awareness of man'• own worth and dignity, and of the divine and human potentialities within each of ua. They are days of great hope, ·for the driving force of man'• freedom is in hie ability to look inward, appraise hia limitations, and aeek meana to widen hia horizons.
My thoughts· are with you aa you begin these ~ye of worship and I send my warmest wishes to all Americana of the Jewiah faith for a New Year of peace and happineu. Shanah Tovahl
When winter came, the snow covered the roofs, trees and lanes. It stayed this way until the spring sun melted It. People made only narrow paths from their doorsteps to the streets, and they walked through trenches of snow more than head high. Needless to say that what brought hardship on the adults delighted us children. We built tunnels and castles and had all the snow we needed for making men and animals and for having snow fights.
Spring came and brought a sea of mud to the Shtetl. We put on our high boots, "shtlvel" they were called- In Yiddish, and directed the now of melted snow.
Then came the summer. We threw off our shtlvel and went around barefoot. The freedom that people felt In the summer cannot be described. The river was right there down the hill and we plunged In. The forest stood so close we could almost touch It. The fields, gardens and orchards were all around us, and fruits and vegetables were abundant.
But youth grew up In hopelessness. Hands were looking for work. Minds wanted to expand. Ambitions looked to w Ider horizons. But these horizons were off limits to Jewish youth. Wherever one turned, he found an "Except Jews " sign. Czarist Russia was no place for Jewish talent and ability.
Russia was great and beautl.!UI but not for J ews. Only two avenues remained for J ewish
·youth: To Join the Revolutionary ·forct!s and make changes In the government, or emlg;ate.
We chose ttie latter.
Vour
Then Bing aded: "Not that I don't rather enjoy It personally!"
Charles Chaplin Is about to make a deal for showing eight of his movies on TV • • ; Because NYU's president, James Hester, spoke In criticism of President Nixon, Charles Wrightsman vows to wltlijlraw his support of the college and concentrate his philanthropy on the Metropolitan Museum of Art • • • The Richard Burtons will leave Monte Carlo soon for London. They'll stay In Britain until the holidays, and spend Christmas at their home In Mexico.
The Ginger Man had Its annual party for the foreign directors visiting the N. Y. Film Festival. Dick Fontaine, the young British director of "Double PiscesScorpio Rising," attended. He'd arrived here with only $3. He was a house guest of friends who also gave him transportation. The festival supplied the plane ticket for him.
Ethel Kennedy was here to promote the Restore Ball at the Americana Sept. 28. Mrs. John V. Lindsay was co-chalrman with her. It was for cultural affairs of th e B e dford-Stuy vesa nt Restoration . . . For Sophia Loren's unpr ecedented "Sunflower" press conference on the Music Hall stage, Joe Levine retained the man who coordinated the media coverage of
Money's Worth
By SylYi~ Porter . ~ ,--...__.r_
-- ·--- ~--·---· ~--J Fall Means Furnace Repairs
Now as early fall approaches, one of the most vicious types or home Improvement gypsters will be appearing at your door: the phon y "furnace Inspectorrepairman."
There are no statistics on the amounts gulllble Americans throw away to these racketeers each year, but the files of the Better Business Bureaus and other consumer protection agencies the nation over continue to bulge with the tragic details of swindlers who have tallted the elderly, the widowed and others o u t of hundreds and even thousands of dollars for extensive but needless repairs on their furnaces - or even replacement of this very costly apparatus.
Almot all of us have some degree of hidden fear that our heating plant may be somehow defective - and that, as a result, we m lght be running the danger of a devastating home !lre. Thus, a very large number of us are probably more vulnerable than we realize to the persuasive patter or the furnace gypsters.
. Here, therefore, are the basic earmarks by which you'll recognize this crook - and rules for keeping out of his way:
An unknown Individual appears at your door and asks to , Inspect your furnace. He may drop the name of your local gas and electric company or a nationallyknown manufacturer. If yours Is an older furnace he may poke around the mortar holding the fire bricks together, discover that It's powdery and declare that the furnace Is "dangerous." What you may not know Is that In this type of Installation, It's perfectly normal for the mortar to be
powdery. Or be may offer you bargain
priced furnace cleaning services - and after dismantling your heating plant, tell you that It ' s a wonder you haven't already been asphyxiated by carbon monoxide or that your house has not burned down around you. He retuses even to put the furnace back together.
O r the furnace repair racketeer may loosen a spark plug without your knowing It -then show you that your furnace doesn't fire properly. Or he may adjust the feeder mechanism so the the oil or gas doesn't now properly - again claiming that your furnace Is dangerous.
All these swindlers have one key goal: to scare you Into buying a new furnace or expensive parts from them _.:. whether or not you need the equipment - at prices far above the amounts which a reliable local heating contractor would charge.
Closely related to the crooked furnace Inspectors are ·fraudulent plumbing and electrical wiring "repairmen" - who also deal In scare tactics and exploit the average homeowner's near-total innocence on such matters as water pressure, fuse boxes and electric wire capacity.
What should you do to avoid any furnace repair racket or s imilar gyp?
Beware of anybody who comes to your door uninvited and offers to "Inspect" your heating plant or electrical wiring or plumbing system. Seek the advice of established local dealers on the condition of your furnace - or see If the local fire - department will send simebody to check the
(Condnued on page 17)
,By Leonard Lyons
========= the last Presidential Inaugural • . • Ultra Violet will star In a film about a Women's Lib motorcycle gang.
I,P, Lazar, the fabled literary agent, gave his clients an early Christmas, with a $1 mllllon distribution last month. He sold George Axelrod' s new novel, "Drunk at Lunch"; Irwin Shaw's "Girls of Saturday" will be a Book-of-the-Month Club choice; he sold Garson Kanln's book to V !king, Ruth Gordon's to Atheneum, etc. $., etc. $., etc.$.
Gov. Rockefeller stated that the Republican nominee for State Controller doesn't have "a chance In the world" against the Democratic Incumbent, Arthur Levitt. The fact Is that at the last Inaugural In Albany, when Levitt took his oath of office, two of the Rockefeller children who were present told the Democrat they'd vote for him.
And Mrs. Rockefeller told Levitt: "And so did I .•• "
Theodore H, White's play, "Caesar at the Rubicon," will be performed at the Princeton University Theater. White wlll appear on CBS on Election Night . . • Helena Carroll will star In "The Effect of Gamma Rays" In Washington, playing It with an Irish brogue. She's the daughter of playwright Paul Vincent Carroll . . • Shephear d's Is featuring an odd r ock group, Dickie Roe and the Miami. They wear suits, shirts and ties.
Mort Gottlieb, producer or "Sleuth," urged Biirt Blechman, author of "How Much?" to bike to work on Bike day, Sept. 16. The author said It was too dangerous. The producer reassured him: "I bike everywhere, and there Is no danger" . . . The author replied: "How would a Broadway producer know when he's In danger?'"
s. J. Perelman, who Is settling In London, wlll auction the contents of his Bucks County home • . . Abe Burrows will write and direct for producer David Merrick a musical adaptation of the film comedy,-. "Some Like It Hot".
W Ith Ernest Hemingway's posthumously published book, "Island in the Stream," sure to
(Condnued on page 17) IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIHI
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
A SERVICE Of THE JEWISH FEDERATION
Of RHOOE ISi.AND and the
R.I. JEWISH HERALD For Usling Call 421-411 1
MONDAY, OCTONI 5, 1970
10.00 a .m. Miriam HNpitol W-n', ........... ...,.C, --.. 12:30 p.m. Sil....._, ,_..pa. lmanu-B, ...,._ MNfkl9
1:15 p.m. S.tefhNd ,-.- leth . . ...... MNttne
1:00 p.m . .._.._ SectM,n, NatMMt C..Undl .,.wilh w-.---·~ ·~~ i..cwi.s.n.., --~--TUISDAY, OCTONI 6, 1970
9:00 · ·"'· lrancWI IJni--'Y' Natieftal w ..... ·, c-.-
""""· StudyGr-..p
............. ~:::: SpacW ......
7:30 p.m.
__ ,_,.. ___ _ 1 :00 p.m.
...... ~ ,,._..,_ tWinw o.y ----1:15 p.m.
...., WIiiams Otapfw, l 'nal l ' rfth WeitMft, --WIDNISDAY, OCT0IH 7, 1970 7:4S p.m.
J.wkh Cemmunity c;.m.., 1Nn1 ._tt,. 1:00 p.m. ~,.. ...... , ......... ...
H.- °""'"'· ,~:;.~ ~·.:.. w-n, a-.1 --.. JNI Cntnstaft..W-ick w-n·, ~ . ,-.. .... ti ..
THUISDAY, 0CTOIII I , 1970 1:00 p.m.
~ Chaptw w-·• Amencan OIT, ........ " .. ~~~' I .L "-t f23_ JWVA, ......
1 :15 p.m . SkterhNd Tempi. leth Am, ._.. MNHng
SATURDAY, OCTOIIH 10, 1970
9 :00 p.m, Sh..,..._ t_,.a. Sinai, y.,... klppur O.,-
- -111111111111 II
BRIDGE
... • Bv Robert E. Starr . . - . . . . . .
You m lght call today• s hand a v I s u a 11 z e d exactly what the fantasy although the hand Itself situation might be. It was just did actually occur. The fantasy what I had been waiting for these part cit It Is what might have many years.
·happened If. For many years I I told my opponents when the have been waiting to make the hand was over to see what would play I will te ll about If the ~ happen In · six Diamonds If the conditions appeared to be right. hand were played and defended They almost were except for the . normally. They agreed and we all fact that my right hand opponent did, that the hand could be made "chickened out" at the last If the Declarer were able to · moment. guess the location of the Diamond
West + 10 7 5 • Q 6 3 2 • A Q <I + 9 7 2
North +AH • A J 8 • K 8 7 + K Q 10 <I
Soulh +KQB .9
East + 9 6 3 2 • K 10 7 5 <I • 6 + 8 6 5
• J 10 9 S 3 2 + A J 3 ·
Queen. At least half of the time they would and some of the time some thoughtless West would help out by covering South's lead of the J ack with the Queen.
"But," I said, " give me an honest answer If I, on lead, led the Diamond Ace and on seeing Dummy continued with a small Diam on d with no pause whatsoever?" "Would you duck It around to the Jack or would you dream that I had led from the Ace, Queen?" They agreed that they would never guess right In that case but how could I dare to
All vulnerable, North Dealer. lead like that. I said that I had The bidding: As It actually went. nothing t<l lose for If the King
N INT 2NT
s 2+ JNT
w p End
were In the other hand I would just stop right there and wait for my Queen. They said they would never think of a thing like that but I said that It really was the best lead under the circumstances. The only time It could go wrong would be If my partner were to s how out at t rick one. I did add that In my own Club I would never do this no matter how I might want to but anywhere else I certainly would .
Mor a 1: Although normally leading the Ace from the Ace, Queen and others Is a 'bad lead, as you can see some of the time anything m tght be the right play even though usually It might be terrible.
ENGAGED: Mr. and Mn. Samuel Schwartz of 138 Lenox A,,.nve announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Sandra Gayle Schwartz, to Edwin Gross, son of Mr. and Mn. Benjamin Gross of 34 Hawthorne A,,.nue, Cranston.
Mils Schw,.tz ~as graduated from Central High School and attended Rhode Island Junior C"'lege.
A groduate of Cranston High School East, Mr. Gross was graduated from the Computing Proceuing Institute .
A March 27 wedd ing is planned.
COORDINATION NEEDED TEL AVN - The head of the Jewish Agency's Immigration department has urged better coordination betwP.en his agency and the government' s Immigrant Absorption Ministry to facilitate the Integration of 40-50,000 new Immigrants who arrived or are expected this year and a like number anticipated for 1971. Gen. Uri Narkls said Improved cooperation was necessary to av o Id bottlenecks that may develop In receiving and absorbing the newcomers. He sai d 8000 of this year' s Immigrants are from the United States and 10,000 are expected next year.
On lead against Three No TrumJ), m:, partner, East, led the Heart 7, my Queen won by North, the Declarer. North, In this contract could count only e ight s ure t r icks, four Clubs, three Spades and the Heart Ace. Where was he going to get his ninth from? Either Diamonds or the Heart Jack. U he could even s teal one Diamond trick he would run for cover with his nine. With that In mind he played a Club to Dummy's Ace and led the
,Diamond J ack. Most of the Declarers, in the same contract, tried this and some were able to get away wltQ It when West ducked his Diamond Ace. The needed Diamond trick had been "snuck through", Diamonds were abandoned and the contr act made. This did happen a few times. I Jumped right up with that Diamond Ace, returned a Heart and we set the contract right away by casj)lng four Hearts to go along with that Diamond Ace .
Bishop Says New Age Here In Catholic-Jewish Relations
When South put her hand down as Dum~11y she said to me, "I was th Ink Ing about bidding s ix Diamonds . How s hould I go about getting there?" I said, "The best way after finding that f1er partner had a maximum eighteen of nineteen point no Trump (North's r esponse to Two Clubs had disclosed this), was Just to ask for Aces and upon finding that only one was outstanding, to simply bid the slam."
"But," I added, "when the hand Is over I'll tell you something." I bad already
NEW YORK - The American Jewish Committee has honor ed the Roman Catholic Bishop of Brooklyn o n his rec e nt appointment as moderator of the secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Confer ence of Catholic Bishops.
Bishop Francis J . Mogavero, the newly named moderator, met leaders of New York's Jewish community at a r eception.
Afte r the traditional amenities of fe llowship and friendship, the bishop declared:
"I have come here today to assure J ewish leaders of our nation that the Catholic Church remains adamant against antis emitism and to give assurance that the Catholic Church stands ready to enter mor e deeply Into di alogue about the common spiritual treasures that are ours."
As moderator of·the Catholic-
Jewish sec r eta r lat, Bishop Mugavero wlll, In ettect, serve as liaison between his episcopal colleagues and the leaders of American Judaism.
• •The attectlonate tribute which the J ewish community has pai d me this a ft ernoon demonst rates that a new age has dawned," the Brooklyn prelate declared.
In a departure from his prepared text, Bis hop Mugaver o expressed the hope that the conflict In the Middle East might be solved with "the help or God."
Morris B. Abram, honorary pr,esldent of the committee, announced that the AJC would .sponsor In cooperation with Roman Catholic authorities, an assembly designed to brlog together Catholic, Protestant and J ewish scholars to evaluate the "present status and needs of Chrlstlan-J~wtsh relations~"
READIES PLAQUE: Mn. Leonard J. Triedman, prflldent of The Miriam Haspltal Wamen'a Association, readies for permanent display a plaque recognizing the a11oclatlon'1 pall support of the hoapltal'1 emergency unit at a recent ceremony. Looking on, from the left, are Mn. Joseph Seofer, honorary vlce-prflident; Mn. Abraham Schwartz, first vice-president; Mrs. Nathan Rakatanoky, chairman of the Gift Shop; Mn, Jason C. Siegel, third vice prflldent, and Jerome R. Sapolaky, hospital executive director.
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD1 FRIDAY1 OCTOBER 21 1970 7
17 MILLION PENCil.8 • Por excellent results, actver-JERUSALEM Jerusalem tlse In the Herald. Herald sub-
. Pencils, Ud., has received an scrlbers comprise an active buyorder for 17 million pencils from ing market. Call 724-0200 or West Germany. The oroer ts 724-0202. worth $160,000. In addition, the .-------------ftrm will export $250,000 worth Hardwood Floors of pencils to Europe and the Cl d & p 1· h d United States, as well as filling a eane O IS e $50,000 export order received Rugs Shampooed from South America by Its luu. II I I subsidiary company, Graphlt 1na S Ti es & Pane ins Industries, Ltd. . Washed
PIANOS TUNED - REPAIRED RECONDITIONED
KEY WORK HARRY BAILEY
521-2471
FLOORS WASHED & WAXED VACANT APARTMENTS.
CLEANED .All General Cl.aning
scon JANITORIAL & CLEANING SEIYICI!
461-8790
JUL IE, 5 DIELICA TESS EN 731 HOPE ST. 621-9396
MORRISON & SCHIFF
"WHILE THEY LAST" LIMITED AMOUNT
KOHER ALL PREPARED AU COOKED 99c,b_
- BAR-B-QUED CHICKEN --
TONGUE KOSHER RIPIATBY SPECIAL PRICE FOR POPULAR DUIAND WHOLETONGUE 2 69
• lb.
M&S BREAKFAST BEEF
Vil A (U) :!tE9f~. TASTEE-BITS
REG. 65• 55 SAVE 10• ~kg. HERRING 89 ~ ·
1ar
IMPORTED Royal SILD SARDINES
2 CANSFOR39c $AVE
WE AT JULIE'S WISH ALL 0 F YOU A HAPPY AND HEALTHY NEW YEAR.
now I ,pen. OUR NEWEST,
LARGEST STORE
e PROVIDENCE OUTLET e GARDEN CITY
e NEW LONDON
e AND NOW - WARWICK MALL - WARWICK, R. I.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED OFF RTE. 95
~ \
8 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD1 FRIDAY1 OCTOBER 2, 1970
For news of your organlza- ' tion, read -qie Herald.
MAKE YOUR ENTERTAINMENT PROIUMS DISAPPEAR
Magic Shows by NALRAH ·
Hello Again! PAUlfS, CLUIS, ETC.
942-0216 Ne_ws of the Sports World by Warren Walden
DR. ~EWIS -MANN announces
the removal of his Warwick Ave. office
to 564 Hartford Ave.
Providen'9, Rhode Island
Telephone 351•-4790 THE .PROGNOSTICATOR IN FLORIDA: Tommy Bolt, famed goffet,, Leo Frye, and Bud Geoghegan at O.Sato Lakn Country Club in Sarasota ~- '
ON nm AIRWAVES - It's the time when you can enjoy a television presentation of football on Sunday afternoons almost at your convenience. If you miss one game , there's another one starting on another channel. And it's all for your pleasure as you relax fo comfort at home. Time was when the hardy football fans braved winds, rains, sleet and snow while sitting In the old Cycledrome on North Main Street In Providence and watching the W or Id Champion Providence
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HILLEL OFFICERS The HU!el Student Association
at the University of Rhode Island has announced Its officers for the year. They are Alan Kaplan, Steve Demby, Ras Sorllnger, Eric Flescher, Lauren Pasner and
, Carol Sherln.
TO DISCUSS ABORTION A panel discussion on abortion
will be held during a meeting of the Temple Emanu-El SlsterhOvd Oct. 5 In the temple meeting hall.
Par ti cl pants will Include Ronald H. Glantz, who wUI discuss legal ramifications; Dr. Charles Poner, who will present medical O!llnlons, and Rabbi Ell A, Bohnen, who will explain religious complications. Mrs. Joseph C, Plshbeln Is program chairman.
Mrs. Milton Dubinsky wtll preside at the meeting, which will begin with a coffee hour at 12:30 p.m. Mrs.- Joslln Berry and Mrs. Milton Levin are hostesses.
MYSfERY RIDE 11le Young Couples' Chlb at
Congregation B'nai Israel, Woonsocket, will hold a "mystery ride" Nov. 14. A full-course dinner Is Included In the $20 per couple reservation fee.
Reservattons must be made by Nov. 1 by calling Rita and Burt Poster at 966-0074 In North Bellingham, Mass.
FOR SINGLE ADULTS An open house and mixer for
single adults wlll be held at the New Parm Supper Club, Warwick, at 8 p.m. Oct. 7. 'The evening Is sponsored by New Horizons, a new club for single business and professional adults of all ages. There Is no admission charge.
APPOINTED TO BOARD Miss Sandra Koerner, head
teacher at the Jewish Community Center Nursery School, has been appointed to the executive board of the Rhode Island Association for the Education of Young Children.
Miss Koerner studied at Garland Junior College and currently Is specializing In early
childhoo d education at the University of Rhode Island.
PRESIDENTS' COUNCIL 'The Rhode Island Jewish
Youth Presidents' Council will meet at the Jewish Community Center at 10 a.m. Oct. 4,
The organization represents the presidents of all Je'Nish youth organizations In the state.
President Is Miss Mimi Goldsmith. Advisors are Mrs. Charlone Goldenberg and Mrs . Pamela Myers.
CAKE SALE Members of Dodeem BBG wlll
hold a cake sale at the Star Market In University Heights from 3:30 to 6 p.m. Oct. 8.
Eileen Newman Is the group's president. Advisor Is Mrs. Linda Ruben stein.
SHOOTING PROGRAM 'The Rumford Hunting and
Plshing Club will hold Its second annual sighting-In program Oct. 3 and 10 at the club's Palmer River rtne range on Providence Street In Rehoboth, Mass. Trained Na ti on al R If! e Association Instructor s will aid those attending In sighting-In rifles In prep a rat I on for the hunting season.
Shooting hours are from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Donation will be $1.
PHILATELIC SOCIETY 'The R. I. Phil atellc Society
will meet at 100 Elmwood Avenue at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 6. 'The meeting Is open to the public.
ART CLASSES TWo art classes for adults
will start Oct. 13 and 14 at the Jewish Community Center.
The classes wlll meet from 8 to 10 p.m. The Tuesday class will Include Instruction In painting and the Wednesday class Instruction In drawing.
Mrs . Marilyn Bilker, a graduate of Cooper Union Art School, will be the Instructor.
Registration fee Is $20 for members and $30 for nonmembers.
( For And About Teenagers )
THE WEEK'S LE1TER: "I reac:I an article in the Central Kentucky News about teenage problems. I have such a problem. I like this boy and I don't know how to let him know. So, will you please answer my question about letting him know I like him in the Central Kentucky News. Don't mention any names. It would embarrass me."
OUR REPLY: We won't mention any names. All the boys who read the Ceneral Kentucky News may now get the Idea that some girl likes them. There It Is, boys,
\ she likes you. Seriously, the easiest way to let someone know that you like them is to be friendly.
Smile and say hello. Anytime you do this, you show someone that you like them. They know it. The difficulty often is that none of us have assurances that the people we like will like us in return. But, chances are good, if we are friendly and nice people. Thus our advice; be friendly, be nice. If he doesn't like you, someone else will.
P rotes s I on a I Steamrollers In action.
. SOMEONE ASKED Recently, during one of the telephone radio shows , someone asked Dick Pace when It was that the Steamroller won the National League championship. Dick referred the question to me and the phones started to ring. In fact they rang for a couple of days.
IN THE BEGINNING - The first Steamroller eleven played Its games at Melrose Park and to do It the club had to get a change In the ordinance that . banned Sunday sports In Providence. Melrose Park was located on Melrose and Longfellow Streets In the city and Pearce Johnson, a young, ambitious enthusiast made a house to house canvass In the neighborhood while seeking support. That was back In 1916 and In the very next year the team was forced to move out to Berkeley OVal when Melrose Park was sold. It next played Its games at the National Guard's Rifle Range In Rumford and then, In the early 20s, It moved to Kinsley Park where It made history by playing a night game,
IT WAS 1925 - The great Providence football team moved Into the spacious Cycledrome In 1925 and also moved Into the National League, getting the Detroit franchise. 'The late Jimmy Conzelman was playercoach and the team went on to win the championship In 1928. It had gone through the season undefeated and It needed either a victory or a tie game with Green Bay on Thanksgiving at the Cycledrome to talce the ti tie. It managed to get a tie.
FIRSf LOVE WON'T WIN -"1be Mets are my first love but they aren't In It this year," said Leo "Tobacco Tycoon" Prye as he discussed the oncoming World Serles. "This Is how it's going to be," Leo declared In his most positive manner. "Plnsburgh will lose to Cincinnati and Baltimore will beat Minnesota." "What then?" was the next question. "Nothing to It," replied Mr. Prye. "ClnclMati will beat Baltimore In the World Series." And Young Montreal, a Hall of Farner If there ever were one In boxing, spoke up and agreed. "C1ncl has been playing 'headsup' all season ·and they've got great team spirit." But how about boxing, Monty? "Nobody's going to beat Cassius Clay,'' the former ring great replied. "He's got two great legs, a left Jab and common sense and that's what you need."
nm WEATHER - "When I scarred boxing, I was only 16 years old and I weighed 90 lbs." Young Montreal continued talking. "Now," he said, "I only ttp the bean at 135 lbs. which means rm still a lightweight and I boxed In that class as well as a bantam and featherweight. Some of the other )>axers of my day weigh 200 pounds - they shouldn't -they should keep physically In shape you know." And then Monty mopped his brow. "I used to train at this time of the year and I never, never recall such hot weather. Indian Summerl This Is real July-August weather.''. He looked at Leo Frye. "Do you \(now where he's heading?" Monty asked, "He's going to Florida to play golf with Tommy Bolt."
A LOT OF WATER - A whole lot of water has gone over the dams since Lefty Joe Scungio was a star pitcher-outfielder In the nm O'Neil Leagues. Lefty Joe has Just completed his 34th season as sponsor of the Cranston Oilers, the team that recently won Its second consecutive R.I. Amateur League pennant. 1be Oilers were managed by Ed "Ben" Hayes, son of an 111 ustrlous athlete father and formerly with the Pittsburgh Pirates organization, (I'wo i:hamplonships, eh Ben.} AND NOW- Don't say a thing If you can't say something goodl -CARRY ONI
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HIGHLIGHTS OF OPENING CAiPi1iNHERALD,E~EOCNTs"~ JEWISH FEDERATION OF RHODE ISLAND
Shown here are some of the groups which responded to the opening events launching the annual fund-raising drive of the JFRI.
The campaign in all divisions is off to an excellent start with a substantial increase in pledges. Shown here are events at the Initial Gifts dinner at which Yilzhak Rabin, Israel A mbassador to the United States was guest speaker. Some 400 persons al/ended this affair held in a tent at the home of Albert I. Gordon, campaign chairman.
Th e previous day a combined luncheon of the Women's Division of th" Federation was held in the tent at the hom e of Mrs. Gordon. Mrs. Joseph Tekoah , wife of the Israel Ambassador to the United Nations, . spoke on the present crisis in the Middle East. On the same evening she spoke at the Young Women's Divisio11 meeti11g, also held i11 the tent at the Gordo11 home.
Also show11 here is part of the large group that al/ended the VanguardBenefactor's lu11cheon at the hom e of Mrs . Max Alperin. president of the Women's Division. The speak er was Eleazar Lipsky, author, playwright a11d a11orney. who spoke 011 the Middle East situation.
To date the total pledges a11d co111ributions to the campaig11 , including the women's Divisio11 a11d Newport results, sta11ds at $1,125,000.
Pred Kelman Photos
9
/1
, ' ,·
(Continued from page 3)
FIRST CHILD Mr . and Mrs. Alan s.
Goldberg of 550 Azalea Drive, Rockville, Md., anno1mce the birth of their first child and son, Michael Jeffrey, on Sept. 26.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Peter Berger of 928 Hope Street. Paternal grandmother ts Mrs. Beatrice Goldberg of Miami Beach, Fla. Great-grandmothers are Mrs. Annie Marks and Mrs. Fannie Berger.
FIRST SON BORN Mr. and Mrs. Ranny Pierce of
9719 Braddock Road, Silver Spring, Md., announce the birth of their first child and son, Edward Lehrer Pierce.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lehrer of Cranston and Mrs. Edward Pierce of Silver Spring.
\ Mlaha DlchNr
10 Guest Artists Ploy With Philharmonic
Miss Harriet Leslie Herman was married to John A. Pratt at the Colonial Hilton Inn, Cranston, In a 1 p.m. ceremony Sunday, Sept. 27.
The ceremony was performed by R. L Supreme Court Justice Allred c. Joslin, cousin of the bride's father. A reception was held at the Temple Beth Torah social hall.
The bride ts the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J erome M. Herman of 200 Calamari Road, Cranston. The bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Pratt Sr. of Turner Road, Ashland, Mass.
Given In marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of Ivory peau de sole fashioned with a circlet neckline, a dome skirt trimmed with Alencon lace and a chapel-length detachable train caught at the waist with matching lace. Her silk Illusion bouffant
veil fell from a matching headpiece accented with appllques and seed pearls. She carried her mother's prayerbook covered with orange sweetheart roses and eucharls lilies.
Mrs. Nell B. Sheer was matron of honor for her twin sister. She wore a noor-length green crepe gown with a detachable l)Qnel and yoke and elbow-length sleeves of fishnet re-embroidered with daisies. Her bouffant veil fell from a matching headpiece and she carried a basket of fall nowers and foliage.
James T. Walpole was best man. Ushers were William F. P r a tt Jr. , brother of the bridegroom, Ralph E. Troiano, and Nell B. Sheer, brother-In-law of the bride.
After a wedding trip to Miami Beach, Fl~ , the couple will reside In H}de Park, Mass.
Ten guest artists w111 highlight the · Rhode Island Phtlharmonlc's 1970-1971 season, which will be the orchestra's 26th under the direction of Francis Madeira.
Pianists Misha Dtchter and Lorin Hollander will join vlol\nlst Carroll Glenn, the Westerly
Israeli Clothing Exports Reflect Mideast And Modern Influences
Community Chorus, seven NEW YORK - Mrs. Hannah vocalists and a guest conductor In Shabtay Is a petite woman with a presenting eight Saturday evening I a r g e mt s st on : helping to concerts at Veterans Memorial t n crease Is r a e 1 • s apl)Qrel Auditorium. exports, l)Qrttcularly to the
The season w!ll open Oct. 24 United States. with an all-Beethoven program, Sb:e apparel is one of the featuring Mr . Dlchter, pianist, In leading export Industries of a performance of the "Emperor" Israel, her· Job ts significant In Concerto. This ts Mr. Dlchter•s her nation's economic sphere. first appearance with the The export expansion goals Philharmonic. developed by the government,
The Westerly Community moreover, have placed an even Chorus with George Kent as greater burden on her and other conductor will perform the officials to spur worldwide sales Beethoven Ninth Symphony Nov. of Israeli clothing. 14. Soloists will be -Mary Sindoni, ''We want Israel to be known soprano; Muriel Watt, contr_alto; for Its sophisticated garments W1lllam Brown, tenor, and David because we are not dealing In the Laurent, baritone. cheaper end ." she said.
The Christmas Concert on "Our aim Is to offer Dec. 19 will be an all-orchestral competitive garments with thoseprogram Including works by produced by developed · Western Gabrieli, Bizet, Colgrass; Duka~, economies. " · RI ms kl-Kor s akov, Vaughan Mrs. Shabiay, director of
anticipated. By 1973, however, the percentage Is expected to drop off to 41 per cent, even though dollar sales to the Amer!CIII) market are likely to advance. -
Of course, th! s volume may be drastically affected If the trade bill now before Congress, which limits apparel Imports to the U.S., Is enacted. "Such a law would be very harmful to us and other developing nations," Mrs. ~abtay noted.
For the present, though, she and her colleagues at the ministry - along with officials at the Fashion Center of the Israel Export Institute. Jointly financed by the government and th e In d u s tr y are concentrating on ...promoting as high an export volume as possible.
Williams and Kay. ready-to-wear and knitwear . Included among their
technique s are establishing quality control standards that all apparel exporters must meet. developing fashion projections for the various co1mtr1es In which Israeli clothing Is sold and offering programs that allow manufacturers to receive a low rate of Interest for financing exports.
The R. I. Ph II harm on I c industries of Israel's ministry of Chamber Orchestra will be heard trade and Industry, ts heading a Feb. 6 In a program featuring delegation of 18· manufacturers Carroll Glenn, violinist, who w!ll now visiting this country to sell perform the Mozart Concerto In spring 1971 fashions, A Major· · The role of exports In
Lorin Hollander wlll make his stimulating the volume of apparel third appearanc e with the made In Israel Is apparent from Philharmonic on March 6 In an the statistics. Total knitwear and all-Russian Program. - ready-to-wear production
"La Travlata" In concert amo1mted to $217-mllllon In 1969 form will be presented April 3 _ a rise of 26 per cent from the with an all-Metropolitan Opera previous year. About one-quarter Company cast. Clarice Carson, of this amo1mt, however, ts sold soprano; Octavlano Naghlu, tenor, abroad. and Russell Christopher, have The dollar volume of apparel appeared together at the Met. exports ts expected to rise to
The May I concert will be $50-mlllton In 1970 from $40~ · orchestral. Mr . Madeira wlll · million last year. Projections conduct the orchestra's first call for a whopping Increase to p e rformance of the Mahler $115-mllllon In such exports by Symphony No. I In D -Major, 1973, as a result of the greater Three Excerpts from . "The production capacity that wlll be Damnation of Faust" by. aerloiz svatlable by then. and the "!star" Variations by Last year, 45 per cent of D'lndy. The season will !)lose Israel's garment exports were May 22 with the traditional Pops shipped to the U,S. and this year program. c I o s e to 50 per cent Is
"Israel is a youthful nation with both a modern approach and Middle Eastern Influences,'' Mrs. Shabtay said. "This Is what we're trying to renect In the apparel
· we're making for the overseas market."
JUDAICA CHAIRS JERUSALEM - The Jewish
Agency's Education and Cultural Department pl ans to set up a center for Hebrew and Judalca chairs at foreign 1mlversltles. The center wlll help recruit professors and lecturers · and promote the establishment of new Judalca chairs.
.,,:-- .. -.. - . --- - .-
PRISONER 'IllANSFER JERUSALEM-- Michael
Denis William Rohan, the 29-year-old Australian who set fire to the El Aksa mosque In East Jerusalem on Aug. 21, 1969, will be transferred to a mental hospital Inside the old Crusader's fortress at Acre on Haifa Bay. 1be transfer was anno1mced by Health Minister Victor Shemtov following Rohan' s escape from a mental Institution at Beer Yaacov. He was picked up by
A MY FAMILY, FRIENDS, RELATIVES FOR THEIR DONATIONS AND SYMPATHY AND KINDNESS SHOWN TO ME DURING MY RECENT ILLNESS. ZY GAZ/NT!
•
police several hours later. Rohan was fo1md to be mentally Ill at his trial In Jerusalem last year and was ordered confined to a mental hospital for an Indeterminate period. He has been In three
• different lnstltutlJ)lls since then.
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from the MAGIC of MAGIC· CARPET THE SKY IS THE LIMIT!!
Mogk Corpet Rug Factory Outlet reports thot the slcy is the limit on our top quality merchondise but the prices ore lower than ever . You will be amazed at the selection of Carpeting to be found at the Mogic Carpet. We believe thot you will find the lorgest selection of nome brand carpeting of ih kind in Rhode lslond, including woll to wall broadloom, scatter rugs ond room size rugs of all des.criptions . Get in your rocket or automobile ond be in Bristol in just o short time by driving over the new highways.
~~~till. FORMER COLLINS & AIKMAN MILL
125 THAMES ST. BRISTOL, R.I. CL-3-8300
11& N-CftONI presenta
SAMMY KAYE t7~ ORCHESTRA
with his "SWING and SWAY" Music for Your Oancing and Listening Pleasure
Sat., Oct.17, 1970-8:30 P.M. RHODES ON THE PA WTUXET
CRANSTON, R.I. Featuring "YOU WANT TO LEAD A BAND"
TICKETS: General Admission $4.00 RESERVED Table Seat $5.50
fo..ly G•. AM. Tk .. ts S.W At O..r h""'t ef Pe,Nr•tK•) .. Tickets: Rhodes and ladd'1 Music Center.
Also White 's Music Center In Attleboro GrOl.lp lnqui,;.s htvif.d
l'feoie enclose Hlloddreu .d
stomped ennlop• ond ~
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to: . SHl PRODUCTIONS P.0.1013614 Cru,., R.I . 02910
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I •GEN. ADM. TICKETS at U .00 ea. 11 e RES. T ABlE SEAT ot $5.50 ea.
Io RES. TABLE at $55.00 ea, (IOlo o Tobie) I 'NAME . • • I I ................. .. ... ! I STREET ••••••••••••••••••••• • I ~ITY •• •• • • • •• ST~E •••• z1r . •• • :.J
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ATTEND ANNUAL MUTING: The an I mation league of B'nal B'rlth fea - mMtlng of the New lngland Society of Fellows of the Anti-Defo.
:rti: ~':1rY~g:;'~.:' :J:; "'i~ 2~E! ~":ect~ ~ =~=:~ ~~~ Unsey and Philip Krupp. Shown above left to ht n Mr on. lrmen foe, the event -e "-Ph M. Goldberg, chairman of the ADL'• Rh.,. laland ':..; :::...,~-:-,, Mr. Fonter, Mr. Krupp and 1.a-ence Y.
SUCCESSFUL
INVESTING
By Roger E. Spear
Economic R-sion ~ppecn to be Reeedlng Q: Do you thlnlt we have seen
the worst of the recession? U so will the stock market Improve? -S.L.
A: No less an authority than the N atlonal Bureau of Econom le Research, the entity that offtclally determines dates of recessions and recoveries, cannot seem to decide whether the economy Is going backward or forward. According to NBER pre~ldent F, Thomas Juster, a new term - retardation - may be adopted to describe the nation• s current economic climate. There is, however, growing evidence that business conditions are gradually lmprov'lng. The Commerce Department's Index of 1 2 v It a I leading economic Indicators - the most widely read business barometer - should get an upward nudge soon from the surge In housing. Although the 'is per cent gain In housing starting In July may not show up In this _barometer until August, due to technical differences In statistical methods, this figure will also be boosted by a substantial Increase In federally a ided construction activity. Another key leading Indicator, the change In book value of inventories, has been In a massive downturn in recent months. The sharp drop In demand for Inventories according to the Commerce Department was "by far the largest single contributor to the business sluggishness of 1969-70." A 6.1 per cent jump In orders received by manufacturers In July confirms June- Indications that a 9-nronth downtrend had been reversed , there-by stanching I n v e n t o r y outflow. Statistical evidence of a gradual Improvement In business Is plllng up, and this, coupled with continued m onetary ease, suggests that stocks should move up In the months ahead.
Q: I would appreciate your recommending some high-yield Issues, selling below $25 and listed on the NYSE. - C,K.
A: The utlllty Industry otters the largest selection of Issues meeting your specifications. By s e I e c ting companies serving diverse geographic areas you will reduce your risk som~hat. · Representing not only widely separated geographic territories but also areas of divers; economic makeup are: Central Maine Power, Kansas Power & Light and Southwestern Public Service. Shares selllng between 10 and 12 times earnings yield an average 6. ? per cent.
Good Performance By Bond Funds
Q: Would you please advise
me of a no-load fUnd which Invests In corporate bonds? We are not lnter,ested In common stocks. - J.A.
A: One no-load fUnd which Invests a major portion of Its capital In bonds Is Northeast Investors. The tund's portfolio Is approxlm ately 71 per cent Invested In a combination of bonds and prefered stocks. Common stocks, government securities and cash equivalents make up the rest of Its portfolio. For the six months ended June, 1970, Northeast had lost 3.7 per cent of Its asset value - an average performance for this type of tund. A load fUnd which you may also wish to consider Is Keystone Custodian B-1. This mutual tund Is approximately 77, per cent Invested In corporate bonds with the remainder In cash and government securities. As of October, 1969, Its bond holdings were divided thusly: utilities, 19.7 per cent rallroads, 16.3 per cent; Industrial and nnance, 40,2 p er cent; and foreign governments, 20 per cent. For the same six-month period, Keystone had a 2,6 per cent gain net asset value. Moreover, tund was among the above-average performers In Its group for au of 1969.
Q: I have several $25 E bonds bought between 1941 and 1944. I know tl\at the maturity has been extended and Interest raised since these were bought. Could you tell me approximately bow much these bonds would be worth today? - S,J.
A: The oldest of your E bonds are now worth about $48.00 and those bought late In 1944 are redeemable for around $42.50. An additional bonus may be paid when these bonds are redeemed. The Treasury has Just raised the Interest rate, retroactive to June 1, on bonds held to maturity, to 5.5 per cent from 5 per cent. Redemptions , which have exceeded sales of savings bonds for twenty consecutive months have been a problem. Although the earlier Increase In Interest to 5 per cent proved unsuccessful In stem ming this outflow the new high. rate - because It Is In the
. form of a bonus for holding a bond tull term - may turn the ,, tide.
Geographical Diversification , A Plus for Mobil Oil
Q: I would appreciate your comments on Mobil 011. I accumulated quite a few shares while working for the company, - C,T. _____ .
ISRAEL FOOD WEEK NEW YORK - Israel Food
Week, the nrst of Its kind, will take place ·1n Tel Aviv, Israel from January 1? to 24, 1971. '
A: Mobil has Jone been ranked as a high-quality, well-balanced oil COIDJlellY, The fact that It Is represented In the North Sea discovery area underscores Its vigorous exploration activities whlcb have reeulted In Mobil havtnc one of the best-balanced geographic representations In the Industry. Mobil Is strongly positioned In Europe, with elcht reftnerles, to capltallie on any discoveries on Its three blocks oftaettlnc Phllllps' Ecboflsh hit. Drilling on the North Slope has produced oil In nve test wells up to 3,000 barrels a day. Exploration and drllllnc are In progress In other petroleum hotspots, Including Indonesia, Rainbow Lake and Hudson Bay. For the nrst half, earntncs Increased to $2,25 a share from $2.17 on an 8 per cent advance In revenues. 011 stocks have been one of the best-acttnc groups In an otherwise dull market,· reflecting their not-·so-bad earntncs reports In the second quarter and a possible energy shortage. Shares should be held for growth and reasonable ( 4,5 per cent) return.
Q : I am a 74-year-old widow; own my home and have $14,000 In the bank. I get $84.30 monthly from Social Security, hold common stock of ftve companies and need advice desperately. -F,P,
A: Since your total monthly Income from all sources Is under $ 1 2 5 , yo u r desperation Is understandable. other than your savings, you have two large capital Investments, your home and your s tock. Depending on the r eal estate. values in your area, and expenses Involved In running a home as compared with an aparttnent, you may find property ownership a burden you can Ill afford. If you cannot face selling your home, liquidation of your securities would free $13,500 which should be deposited In a savings account. Annual withdrawals from this of $1,200 would give you $31 more In monthly In come . Including accrued Interest, this portion of your capital would not be exhausted for 16 years.
CURRENCY DROPS JERUSALEM-Suspension of the Jarring peace talks In New York has caused the Egyptian potmd to drop In value relative to the Israel pound In the Gaza Strip. Both currencies have been recognized as legal tender there since Israel occupied the Strip In June, 1967 War. Many Gaza residents anticipated an early return of Egyptian rule when the Jarring talks began and started to unload their Israeli currency, Some made massive purchases of Israeli goods and others exchanged Israeli for Egyptian ·pounds. The latter rose In .value from 5-1 to 6-1. When Israeli broke off the talks on grounds of Egyptian truce violations, the old ratio of five Israeli potmds to one Egyptian potmd was restored.
Herald subsc;rtbers comprise an active buying market. For excellent results, advertise In the Herald. Call 724-0200.
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD1 FRIDAY1 OCTOBER z, 19?0 11
LEFTIST COURSE SDC-LAN:;UAGE PAPER JERUSALEM - Hebrew
University students now publlsh their campus paper In six languages - Hebrew, Eng!Jsh, French, Spanish, Porruguese and Russian. 1lle emergence of five separate newspapers (the Spanish paper contains a Portugese Insert), compared to last year's Hebrew newsppper and a combine d Engllsh-FrenchSpanlsh paper, reflects the rap Id I y growing number of overseas students at the tmlverslty. 1lle number has nearly quadrupled since 1967 to :WOO this year, out of a total srudent body of 15,000. Each newspaper has Its own distinct cbaractertstics and caters to the Interests of a particular language group, though there are certain slmllarlties.
NEW YORK - Yeshiva University Is ottering a two-term course on ''Le ft Is t Ideologies and the Jewish problem" to be taught by Dr. A!>raham G. Duker, professor of histor y and social Institutions. The course, to be given at the Bernard Revel Graduate School, wlll cover such areas as social justice and Judaism, leftist Ideologies and Jewish problems Jewish leftist groups and J ews ~ revo lutionary and reform movements.
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Yiddish Theater Disappears From New York's 2nd Ave.
NEW YORK - That staple of Second Avenue, the Yiddish theater, will be denied to that raglon this season for the first time In many years.
Instead, It will be on view· on Broadway uptown, !or the most part, and on East Broadway. There are confilctlng reasons given !or Its move, ranging from the explanation that the hippies have taken over the area to the unavailability of playhouses there. But all Interested parties In the Yiddish theater world agree that It will be missing from. Second Avenue this season.
Sol Dickstein, who will put on "Light, Lively and Yiddish," a Yiddish-American musical based on the history of Jewish jesters and singers from 1870 through 1970, at the Balasco Theater Oct. 27 said that he "ran away from Second Avenue like from a !Ire.
"We had the finest neighborhood there; we used to call It the Jewish Broadway, but you cannot walk In the streets there for the people sleeping on them," Mr. D!ckstetn said. "l don't believe you can have any theater there - whether It's Yiddish or American. I lived there tor 45 years, but I don't think the Yiddish theat~ ....will ever come back.0 ·
Ben Bonus, star of the forthcoming musical, expressed slmllar views. "The downtown Yiddish theater Is no more," he said. "The Yiddish-Anderson theater Is now showing rock •n• ·roll shows and audiences don't want .to go down there because of the East Vlllage environment. The neighborhood would have to be reborn and the dilapidated houses would have to be refurbished."
But the Yiddish theater, In the mind of Mr. Bonus, IS far from being dead. "The Yiddish theater," he remarked, "has always been like a wandering star. It goes from country to country, from town to town, which we are still doing. It's a question of moving from shtetl to Broadway.''
Last season, Mr. Bonus said he and a group of seven performers traveled to 60 cities from coast to coast and to Canada. "We even played a place like Waco, Tex., which has 500 J ews living there and I got 250 of them to attend our show," he said.
Jacob Jacobs, the Yiddish
actor-producer, said that he decided to boo.I< his latest attraction, ''President's Daughter," at the Billy Rose Theater, opening Oct. 27, ,,because Second A venue ts played out."
Mr. JacObs said that he could have rented a playhouse -on Second Avenue for his YiddlsnAmcrlcan musical comedy, but he decided against It because he "could not make any money with a hit show last season." "I got all good notices for '_Oh, What a Wedding' but no one came," he said.
A new American-Israeli "topical revue,'' "To Be Or Not To Be ... What Kind of Question Is That?," w!ll have Its premiere at the Barblzon Plaza Theater, 106 Central Park South, a far call from Second A venue. In the cast are Motl Glladl, Sarah Rublne, Evelyn Kingsley, Shmullk Goldstein and Mark Stuart.
And, on East Broadway, Joseph Bulotf, who Is equally at home on Broadway and In the Yiddish theater, will star In "The Brothers Ashkenazl," the L J. Singer drama, opening Oct, 31 at the Folksblene Playhouse.
But Herman Yablokoff, president of the Hebrew Actors Union, and a Yiddish performer for many decades, disagrees with the view that Second A venue Is "played out" as a Yiddish showcase.
"I would not say that the Jews do oot want to go there anymore," Mr. Yablokotf said. "Pd say that If there Is a good show there, they'll go."
During the 1930s, Second Avenue had four Yiddish playhouses. Eight other Yiddish houses - Including one In Harlem - also operated In the c It y' s other boroughs. The decline In their number began In the 1940s.
JEWS LEAVING CHILE JERUSALEM - The Jewish
Agency has reported that after the 1ert1st victory In Chile, 80 Jewish families applied for emigr ation papers because they fear the new government will be anti-Semitic. The antl-,l'.ewlsh positions taken · by Latin American governments on both the extreme r lght and the extreme left Is expected to Increase immigration from that continent.
King Hussein's Losses Of Power Traced Through Last 8 Months
WASHINGTON - Two months ago King Hussein observed that the situation In Jordan was "like a minefield." More than 10 Palestinian commando organizations were· operating In his country - all bent on destroying the state of Israel and some bent on changing the government of Jordan. ·
Between February and July, the 34-year-old King had to yield twice to demands made by the commandos, or fedayeen, after armed clashes between them and elements of the Jordanian Army.
In February, he had to back down In trying to Impose on the fedayeen security controls designed to curb the activities of some of the fedayeen - such as carrying arms provocatively and refusing to stop at government roadblocks. The confrontation cost 30 lives and, according to observers, weakened the King even more In trying to maintain order In Ills country.
In ·June, King Hussein yielded to the fedayeen again - after !Ive days of ftghttng In which dozens of people were killed and wounded. He bought that ceasefire at the price of dismissing two of his top army leaders, whom the fedayeen regarded as their special toes.
Neither of these clashes appeared to have been planned. Rather, they seemed to develop spontaneously from small Incidents and were said to result from the lack of unity ii! the
Government and among the commando nouns.
On the Government side, there are army officers who think that If given the chance, they could, suppress once and for all the tedayeen,
On the commando side, the two best-known groups are Al Falah, headed by Yaslr Arafat, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, headed by Dr. George Habash,
Al Falah has preached a simple, apolitical doctrine since the 1967 war between Israel and her Arab neighbors: not peaceful settlement wit!) Israel, guerrilla war against the Israelis, and the ultimate destruction of the Israeli state.
The Popular Front Is a more radical group that has become known for dramatic . gestures -such as the series of airplane hijackings It has perpetrated.
It Is dedicated to overthrowing not only the state of Israel but many governments of the Middle East, Including that of King Hussein. Dr. Habash has also called for the elimination of all American Interests In the area.
The Popular Front sometimes cooperate&. with the over-all commando authority, the 27-man Central Committee, but . more often does d It-pleases.
Total' commando· strength In Jordan Is put at 120,000 men, half of whom are said belonc to Al Falah. There are also. some 4,000 Fedayeen In Lebanon.
PREPAilNG FOR 1970 FAU STUDY SERIES: Members of the PrO¥idence Chapter of the Brandeis University National Women's Committee met recently to make plans for initiating its 1970 fall study series. Shown above are members of t~ commi~ee in charge of arrangements. Seated, they are, left to right, Mrs. Milton
. Stander, Mn. Arthur Roehler, chairman, and Mn. Julius Michaelson, co-chairman. Standing, left to right are Mesdames William Reeves, Andrew Blazer, lawrence Y. Goldberg, Linda Kushner and Nine Kushner Other study group leaden are Mesdames MG.rine Greenwald, Abraham Horvitz and Robert Sholler. '
Brandeis Group Plans Fall Study Series The Providence Chapter or I.he
Brandeis University National Women's Commlt:12e will Initiate Its 1970 fall study series at Temple Emanu-El at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13.
"Left, Right, Forward March" Is the title of the series, which Includes eight meetings concerned with the discussion of the Ideas of many of the modern leaders of dissent and revolution.
material. Mrs. Arthur Richter Is chairman of the com mlttee and Mrs. Julius Mlcllaelson Is coch a Ir man. Other members Include Mesdames Lawrence Y. Goldberg, David Kemler, Richard Shein, Robert Sholler. Harris Rosen and Milton stanzler, both ex-offtclo,
Reeves. Mrs Goldberg, Mrs. Sholler and Mrs. Stanzler will also act as study group leaders.
Some or the material to be discussed has been written by Malcolm X, Fidel Castro, Abby Hottman, Wlll1am F. Buckley, Jr., and James Reston.
The 1970 Brandeis Group committee chose a wide range or
Mrs. Maurine Greenwald will be the nrst discussion leader on O:t. 13. Others are Mesdames Harold Kushner, Andrew Blazer, Abraham Horvitz and William
Por excellent results, advertise In the Herald. Herald subscribers comprise an active buying market. Call 724-0200 or 724-0202.
TITLES WERE HIS BUSINESS: Two Eastern Division and one World title as offensive line coach with N.Y. Giants ... Six Western Division anJ 6ve World championships with Green Bay Packers ... A winning season his only year at Washington. Off the field, he was "Sportsman of the Year" and "Salesman of the Year" in 1969. And one of the titles he was proudest of wu- "E:r.-newspaper· boy." .
DEPENDABILITY COUNTS! ... A tribute to newspaperboys by the late Vince Lombardi
"A coach really appreciates a depend-able performer," said Vince Lom
bardi, the late head coach of the Washington Redskins and one of pro football's all- _ time coaching greats. "He's the man that wins the big ones for you. You coun_.t.-on him to deliver-and he never lets you down.
"Newspaper boys are like that too: Reliable, hard-working, on the job in all kinds of weather. As newspaper subscribers we all appreciate the year-round good service we get from our carriers-and when that Newspaperboy Day comes around, we ought to tell them so!"
Opposing coaches will · tell you Vince Lombardi was usually right-and he was
on target again when he talked about newspaperboys. They're dependable, industrious -and thrifty too. ·Many of them buy U. S. Savings Bonds regularly out of earnings for college and other future needs. It's another mark of their good citizenship, their service to community and country. The Treasury wishes them a Happy Newspaperboy Day 1970.
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14 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970
Yom Kippur Services Start Oct. 9 (Continued from page I)
services. CONGREGATION SONS OF JACOB
Officiating at services at Congregation Sons of Jacob wlll be Rabbi Ellazer Berman of New York City and Cantor Israel Hassenfeld,
Kol Nldre services wlll ·begin at 6 p.m., with Yorn Klppur services at 8 a,m. Ylzkor services wl11 be at 11 a.m., with the hollday ending at 7:12 p.m.
CONGREGATION SONS OF ZION
Services at Congregation Sons of Zion will begin at 3 p.m., with the Kol Nldre service at 5:45 p.m.
Morning services will begin at 8, with Ylzkor services at 11 a.m.
Rabbi Morris Drazln will conduct all services.
TEMPLE BETH AM
(Warwick) Kol Nldre services at Temple
Beth Am, Warwick, Will begin at 5:45 p.m. Yorn Klppur services
. Will begin at 9 a.m. , with services for the Junior congregation at 10 a.m.
R a b b I Noach Valley and Cantor Irving Poll Will officiate.
TEMPLE BETH DAVID
ANSHEI KOVNO Student Rabbi Joel Gereboff
and Cantor Charles Ross Will conduct services at Temple Beth Davld:Anshel Kovno,
Kol Nldre services wlll start at 6:10 p.m., with morning services beginning at 8, The sermon wlll be delivered at 11:30. Ylzkor services will follow at noon.
Junior congregation services Will be held In the chapel from 10:30 a.m. to noon.
TEMPLE BETH-EL
Temple Beth-El has scheduled two Kol Nldre services Friday, with the first at 6:-45 p.m. and the second at 9 p.m. Rabbi Leslie Y. Gutterman will officiate.
Rabbi Wllllam G. Braude will conduct the Yorn Klppur Day services at 10 a.m. and the Ylzkor service at 4:30 p.m. ·
The children's services will be conducted by Rabbi Gutterman at 1:30 p.m.
The musical liturgy will be chanted by Cantor Norman Gewlrtz accompanied by the temple choir under the direction of Mrs. Priscilla Baslow.
TEMPLE BETH-ISRAEL
"Who Says It Is Wrong?" will be the topic of Rabbi Jacob Handler's sermon . at the Kol Nldre services at Temple BethIsrael at 6 p.m.
Yorn Klppur services will begin at 8:30 a.m. Rabbi Handler's sermop Will be "Keep Faith with the Past." Ylzkor services are scheduled for 11 a.m.
Cantor Karl s. Kr! tz Will al so officiate. The temple choir and organist David Mitchell will participate .
Children's services will be held In the chapel at 11 a,m.
TEMPLE BETH TORAH
(Cranston)i' . Rabbi Saul Leem9Ji.Alnd Cantor
Jack Smith will conduct Yorn Klppur services at Temple Beth Torah, Cranston.
Kol Nldre services will begin at 6:15 p.m., with Yorn Klppur Day services at 9 a.m. Ylzkor services wlll be held at 11:30 a.m.
TEMPLE EMANU-EL
Three Kol Nldre services Will be conducted at Temple EmanuEI at 6 p.m. Rabbi Ell A. Bohnen wlll deliver the sermon In the main sanctuary, With Rabbi Joel H. Zalman speaking In the new synagogue and Rabbi Jack Bloom preaching In the meeting house.
Saturday services wlll begin" at 9 a.m. with Rabbi Zalman In ihe main sanctuary, Rabbi Bloom In tJ,e new synagogue and Rabbi Bohnen In the meeting house.
-'services In the main sanctuary wlll be chanted by Cantor Ivan E. Perlman, assisted by the choir under the direction of Benjamin Premack with Frederick A. MacArthur at the
organ. Cantor Louts Alnsberg wlll chant In the new synagogue. He will be assisted by the choir under the direction of Louise Winsor Moore, organist. The meeting house services will be c h a n t e d by Cantor Morton Freeman with Mrs. Louis Baruch Rubinstein at the organ.
Children's services wlll be conducted by Rabbi Zalman and Cantor Perlman In the main sanctuary at 2:15 p.m. Saturday.
At that time, the adults will meet In the school auditorium for a question period with the rabbis. The session Is sponsored by the Men's Club and will be moderated by S. Samuel Kestenman.
Ylzkor services will be . conducted In all three locations during the Musaf services.
TEMPLE SINAI
(Cranston) Benjamin Lefkowitz, a second
year rabbinical student at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion In New York City, will a_sslst Rabbi Jerome S. Gurland In conducting services at Temple !inst, Crariston.
Kol Nldre services wlll begin at 8:30 p.m., with morning services at 10:30 a.m. An "Ask the Rabbi" session will be held at 1:30 pm., with afternoon services beginning at 2:30 p.m. Ylzkor services wl11 be held at -4:30 p.m.
A children's service will be conducted at 9 a.m. Saturday.
Mr. Lefkowitz has been a religious school teacher and librarian for the last five years. He Is a conflrmand of Temple Beth Sholom In Flushing, N.Y., and received a bachelor of arts degree In history from Queens College.
URI HILLEL SERVICES The Hillel Student Association
at the 1..mlverslty of Rhode Island will sponsor se~s In the Memorial Ynton Chapel. Kol Nldre services will begin at 6 p.m., with Yorn Klppur services starting at 10 a.m. The Sholar will sound at 6:30 p.m. to mark the end of the fast, Ra6bl Melvin C,ranatsteln will officiate.
RADIO SERVICE A Kol Nldre service will be
presented over radio station WEAN at 8:30 p.m. Friday. Rabbi Leslie Gutterman and Cantor Norman Gewlrtz of Temple BethEl will officiate. The temple's choir will al so participate.
Pirates Hiiacl<ed America's First Jewish Settlers
NEW YORK - Members of this city's contemporary Jewish community recently visited the site where the first Jewish Immigrants to America - the victims of a pirate's hijacking - landed In New Amsterdam over 300 years ago.
Some 200 strong, they assembled In Peter Minuit Plaza at the southern tip of Manhattan, where a flag pole and plaque now mark the sl te of the I anding of 23 Jews In 1654, the first to set foot In New Amsterdam.
Rabbi Abram Vossen Goodman, prelsdent of the American Jewish Historical Society, gave the group a capsule Insight - new to many - Into J ewt sh history before they embarked on a w-(llklng tour of Lower Manhattan.
The rabbi said that the 23 Jews, hoping to escape Portuguese oppression In Recife, Brazil, had set sail for a friendlier haven In Dutch~hetd Curacao.
They were hijacked on the high seas by a Spanish pirate, but saved from a certain death by the captain of the St. Charles, a French ship. The St. Charles eventually dropped them, destitute, In New Amsterdam.
AWARD FOR JOURNALIST JERUSALEM - Mayor
Teddy Kolleck has announced that the winner of the Gershon Agron Memorial Prize for Journal!sts for 1970 Is Howard Blake, newly appointed editor of Israel Magazine._---~-
A Herald ad always gets best results - our subscribers comprise an active buying market.
Pediatrician Say·s Circumcision Not Valuable NEW YORK - A report In The Journal of the American Mec:Uc",l Association urges physicians and pa r e n t s to reconsider the controversial subject of circumcision.
The report written by .Dr, E. Noel Preston, a pediatrician, challenges the view of many American physicians that routine circumcision of newborn males ts a useful a!}d Justifiable procedure.
Circumcision, a procedure applied to about 80 per cent of American baby boys, Is widely recommended by American physicians as a hygienic and preventive health measure.
One physician who says be ts "100 per cent In favor of routine circumcision," Dr. Vincent Vermooten, urologist at the University of Texas, says thal circumcised men are less prone to veneral Infections.
Dr. Preston said In his article
that there was little evidence that circumcision protected against cancer · or Infections In Individuals who practiced a high standard of body cleanliness.
After a critical review of the medical literature, Or. Preston concluded that circumcision, done as a routine procedure, was unnecessary and associated with undue risks to the Ille and health of the child.
His report did not deal with cl re um c Is ton performed for religious reasons, as Is done among Jews and Moslems.
In an Interview, the pediatrician, a former Air Force doctor now In private practice In Atlanta, suggested that circumcision be reserved for populations living under conditions In which the practice of good personal hygiene was Impractical.
Dr. Preston Is among a number of physicians who In the
Pawtucket Girl Spends Summer In Rio Grande Valley, Texas
(Continued from page I) ' ' T h e r e I s m u c h discrimination against the
"White we were busy tearing children In the schools by the down the houses," Miriam said, teachers and prlnclpala, The "we realized we weren't really children are Immediately put Into Involved with the people. We took vocational classes tn high school It upon ourselves to go to the and told they don't have the local stores and ask for donations abtuty to go to college. Their of paint and bl'.UShes so we could aspirations are cut off before go Into the worst housing areas, they even get started." called colonlas, and paint. Miriam found working with the
"The colonlas are filled with migrants very depressing. One narrow, crowded streets of woman brought her week-old baby thatched-roof shacks," she said. to the cl!nlc. "The baby was too "A big wind storm tears them weak to cry," said Miriam, "A apart. There are no telephones. three-year-old child was also There are outhouses for about with her. She didn't know how to every two families. There ls not talk. we gave her an orange and much Inside ptumbtnc shegobbledltupasl!itwerethe occasionally a sink - but most of first thine she had had to eat tn the water comes from outside weeks . ., sptcots. 1n another case, she said, a
"The people we were trying to married couple, their nine work for were suspicious," children, and the parents of one Miriam said. "We couldn't speak of them lived 1n a two-room much Spanish and they couldn't house. "They all slept In one speak much English, but we tried room. They had been saving for to make them understand the five years and hoped 1n another work was for free." five years to have enough money
They painted the Insides of to butld another house. several homes, she said, and "I don't think there ts any end rebuilt a roof. They also built a to It at all, even though the union dock for a man whose entire ts trying to organize them and get water supply came from a stream a 11v19r wage. 1t Will probably outside his house. There was take years. There are too many virtually no shore so the dock people for the amount of work," enabled him to get to the water said Miriam. easily, "Even we didn't really do
The union has started a health anything for them. we painted and clinic and hired a nurse, Miriam built roofs but we knew that In a said. The people come In all day f h he t g t be long with health problems ranging l~b:;~.:r,~1~o,; a;::' .. ~0 n ° from minor to major, Miriam said her group of 19
There Is a city hospital In volunteers was accompanied by a McAllen, she said, but the farm director and his family and two workers aren't admitted unless counselors. They lived at the they have the money to pay. "The catholic Day care Center In hospital even refuses women In Alamo (not the site of the famous labor," she said. fort), about five miles from
Another clinic - non-union _ McAllen. They held programs - will take the workers at one- based on religion each Friday half the regular fee and give them night. The only excursion was a time to pay, she said, but It Is fl v e-d a y trip Into Mexico, very overcrowded. Including a visit to Mexico City.
McAllen and the other towns Much of Miriam's time In the area are about 75 per cent outside school ts taken up by the Mexican'-Amerlcan, she said. Rhode Island Jewish Youths "The rest of the people are very Presidents Council. She Is Its bigoted. They realize somewhat pres t dent. The council Is that there are problems but feel composed of all presidents of the that the Mexican-Americans are state's 28 youth groups. Inferior and have no business She became- a council member being there. They say things like last year as president of the • a 11 Mexican-Americans are Jewish Community Center Youth great with their hands'," · Council. Her fellow presidents
Many of the workers went elected her to her current ottlce. north at one time or another The council, In conjunction looking for jobs, she said, but with the Jewish Federation of couldn't find any and came back. Rhode Island, ts planning a'. Meanwhile the money It cost them program on the plight of Jews In to go look was wasted. the Soviet Union, said Miriam.
Miriam feels .the workers are The program may Include an all-trapped In a vicious circle. night vigil.
"The families have eight to 10 The council ts selling books children or more. They are such about soviet Jewry to give people devout Catholics that there Is no an understanding of the situation. kind of birth control. They have "We hope to get people Interested to keep having the kids. There Is and concerned," she said. a Planned Parenthood chapter In The council ts considering the town, but the people basically holding an all-state Jewish youth aren't receptive to birth control. convention tater this fall Miriam Many of them· don't real)y know said, and may o~g:U.tze a anything a1>?ut It," she said. speakers• bureau.
As for schooling, there Is a . Miriam, who attends Temple school primarily for migrant B e t h-E I , I a s t summer children, besides the. regular participated In the National public school. Many of the F·ederatton of Temple Youth children start out ·1n school, she leadership convention In said, but have to leave because Warwick, N. Y. She studied song their parents need them In the and dance leadership. fields. A senior at Pawtucket West
last few years have questioned the medical value of this surgery,
Clrcumctston ts Just one of several forms of surgery that have come under fire recently as being practiced too frequently In this country. Others Include tonsillectomy and hysterectomy. Circumcision is uncommon In western Europe and most other parts of the world,
But American doctors often point out, as a Tennessee obstetrician did recently, that "anyone whG> has screened great numbers of recruits for military service Is made aware that ·many men practice poor gentlal hygiene.''
1n reply, Dr. Preston said that "I! a child can be taught to tie his shoes or brush his teeth or wash behind his ears, he can also be taught to wash beneath his foreskin."
Dr. Preston examined the studies that supposedly Justl!Y circumcision as a preventive of cancer of the pents, cervix and prostrate.
He found that, contrary to popular opinion, cancer of the penis, a rare disease In any event, did occur occasionally among clrcumslzed men. He also found that the disease was uncommon In unclrcumstzed men who practiced a high standard of hygiene.
However , the pediatrician conclude<!, "Circumcision affords little protection In populations where per son al hygiene may be minimal, (and) In cases of penile carcinoma lack of hygiene la always strlldng." ·
Dr. Preston• s review of studies linking cervical cancer In women to lack of circumcision among their male partners Indicated to him that It was cleanliness and sexual strictness, rather than circumcision that made the dl!ference.
1n light of what 11e considers circumcision's dubious value, Dr. Preston questioned whether the practice was worth the risk It entails. Althoucb complicatloll!' are lnfreQ11ent, he said, they do occur and are occasionally serious.
Among Immediate complications are hemorrhage, Infection ( which In few children has proved fatal ) and excessive loss of penile skin requiring slcln grafting. Delayed complications, which are more common, include ulcers and scarring around the penile opening which may result In painful urination an1 bedwettlng,
High School, she Is a member of the chorus and the drama club, Last year she had a leading role in the school play, "Bye Bye Birdie."
She Intends to major In psychology or sociology In college and plans a cafeer In social work. She has already had some experience In that line In addition to her Texas work. Two swnmers ago she was a voltmteer In Newport's Headstart program.
Miriam has a parttlme Job as supervisor of the game room for elementary school and junior high youngsters at the JCC. She works two days a week after school and every other Sunday.
She Is the daughter of Jules and Molly (Weinberg) Goldsmith of 50 Cooke Street, Pawtucket. Her father ts an Investment broker with G. H. Walker and Co. Her mother was a research assistant In botany at Brown University for nine years. Miriam has two sisters, Mrs. Paul (Lyn) Schaffer, and Mrs. Gary (Paula) Epstein.
BEST FIGHTER PILOTS LIVERPOOL, Eng.
1 s r a el' s fighter pilots are "superbly trained,'' ''immensely efficient" and "probably the best fighter pilots In the world today," according to Capt. ;peter Townsend, a British fighter pilot who fought In the Battle of Britain In World War II. Capt. Townsend's assessment was made tn·an Interview published In the Liverpool Post In connection with a review of his book, "Duel of Eagles," an account of how the RAF defeated the Nazi Luftwaffe 30 years ago..:.._· __ _
Herald ads get good results!
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Hiiacki_ngs Show Dual Passports Can Cause Problems For ·Holders
TEL A VIV - A Jerusalem policeman has his own vivid Impression of dual IsraeliAmerican citizenship: "When we picked up those yeshiva boys for throwing rocks on the sabbath, ha!! of them would provide American passports . and demand to see their consul.''
The problem of violence on the sabbath was solved by Mayor Teddy Kollek some time ago. He simply cordoned off the religious quarter on holy days, separating the observant from the nonobservant. It was the observant who hall thrown the stones.
The question of dual loyalty remains, however, and Is likely to come under even greater scrutiny with Arab hijackers making an Issue of It In dealing with some of the remaining hostages held In Jordan.
majority, or the older settlers have retained their American passports, he said, and some have also applied for Israeli passports. Of the latter group, few would· have Israeli passports so soon.
The State Department said that nothing In law prohibited U.S. c It I z ens from holding the passport of another country. As far as Israel Is concerned, a citizen can have as many passports as he wants.
A Foreign Ministry official commented that In Israel questions ot religion and statehood counted tor more than juridical factors when It came to determining nationality and citizenship.
There Is no automatic way that Israelis can lose their citizenship, he said. They can apply . to shed It, but this apparently does not occur often.
prepared to fly to the new state. The Swiss said that since he
h ad entered on a British passport, he would leave on one. His British l5assport was then collected at his hotel, and he left legally.
At one time carrying an Jsareli passport meant having to apply for visas to enter almost every country In Europe. The tr ave I er with an American passport - acceptable without a visa would use It In preference to the Israeli one.
Although Israeli passports are now accepted without question throughout most of Europe, many long-term Israeli residents retain their American pas_sports as a matter of convenience.
Americans serving in the Israeli armed forces are said by Israeli and American sources to number only a handflll. They are usually young men who were born here but whose parents, holding American passports, obtained them tor their children.
1 , THE RHODE ISLAND 'HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970 15
Sadat Is Interim President CA JR 0-The new interim
President of the United Arab Republic is Anwar el-Sadat, the former Vice President, the Cairo radio has announced.
• The Eg]J>llan Constitution of 1964 specifies that In case of the death or the President, the Vice President temporarily succeeds him. Within a period of. 60 days, the National Assembly Is required to nominate a new President, who Is to be confirmed by a popular referendum.
The National Assembly of 360 members is elected by universal suffrange.
Mr. Sadat, appointed Vice President by Mr. Nasser in December, 1969, has been described as one or Mr. Nasser's oldest and closest associates. He Is known as a left-of-center politician with an uncompromi si ng anti-Israeli position.
The 52-year-old Mr. Sadat is one of the three men still active In political life who joined with Mr. Nasser In the coup d'etat against former King Farouk In 1952. At that time Mr. Sadat was
a lieutenant colonel In the Egyptian Army. Known as an intense and deeply religious man, Mr. Sadat 1)as previously served two terms as ~aker of the National Assembly.
Foreign Minister Abba Eban said that, as far as he knew, only two of them were Israelis holding no other passports. In W ashlngton the State Department said that three of the 37 or 38 American hostages had dual citizenship,
Some of the contusion arises over apparently Indistinct definitions and over the fact that neither the United States nor Israel has made an Issue over the question of dual citizenship, or at least the holding of two passports.
"The question of the Amer le ans complicates the situation," he added. "Many arrived here and decided to look around before switching allegiance, and some are still looking after all these years,
Artists Provide 'Esthetic Touch' For Bunkers
An Israeli official said there were two categories to consider :
· Americans who have emigrated to Israel and retain their passports and Israelis who have gone to the U.S. and become naturaUzed.
He estimated that 20,000 Am er le ans came to Israel between 1948 and the 1967 war while 15,000 more came since the six day-war In 1967.
Many, although perhaps not a
"When Jews came from Europe and from places like Morocco and Iraq, they knew they would not be going back. There was no question of dual nationality.
Many Israelis have left to settle In the U.S., accepting American citizenship and all that goes with It. When one of them returns to Israel, however, he Is asked for his Israeli passport.
One Israeli recalled the case of Dr, Chaim Weizmann, Israel's nrst President, who while living In Switzerland proudly accepted an Israeli diplomatic passport No. 1, which was then rejected by Swiss border offtclals as he
War, Peace Both Farther AV1ay; Say_s Minister Of Nasser's Death
JERUSALEM A senior cabinet minister, hearing of President Nasser's death, said that Israel faced the prospect of a prolonged stalemate on the decision for war or for peace In the Middle East,
"This has bought more time for everyone," he said. "Peace Is now farther away, but.. so Is war." ·
His assessment summed up the Immediate reaction of responsible officials, who evinced a sense neither of relief nor of heightened danger .
Another Cabinet Minister, Israel Gall!!, expressed , the sentiment of his colleagues that It was. not a moment for Israel to take action. -
"In July, 1952, when the group of officers - incl udlng Nasser - overthrew King Farouk, the then Premier, David Ben-Gurion, welcome_d the new regime in Egypt and expressed the hope that new relations would be established between Israel and
.,.Egypt," Mr. Galili recalled, speaking with newsmen .
"Now another change of government In Egypt again finds Israel prepared to turn over a new leaf leading to peace - but, of course, on a reciprocal basis. I think it will not be long before we see whether or not our hopes will be realized."
Another Cabinet Minister, chatting with a group of Western newsmen when news of the death arrived, appeared thunderstruck and then said quietly: ·"I'm sorry, I'm really sorry."
Only a few minutes earlier he had spoken of the Egyptian leader as the only responsible parmer tor peace talks, saying: "He is our major enemy, but he is also our best hope for peace."
President Nasser has long been regarded here as the most influential of Arab leaders and the man Israel had to deal with If there was to . be any la sting accord. But there was also the feeling that he was a tragic figure, struggling to preserve what the Israelis felt was an Illusory Arab unity and forced
Into actions beyond his power to control.
The Minister speaking to the newsmen in · Jerusalem said, "You know, he was like a brilliant mathematician who knew how to do all kinds of things with figures - but who could not count.
"Nasser was brilliant in his ana tz Ses:' the Minister continued, "but often wrong ln his conclusions.
·American Jews Express Regret At Nasser's Death
NEW YORK Jewish leaders here reacted with expressions of regret to the death of Preisdent Gama! Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republlc and emphasized that the new leadership must give first priority to a I astlng peace between Arab states and Israel.
Dr. William A. Wexler, president of the 500,000-member B'nai B'rith, termed the los s of Egypt's leader a II source of deep concern." He expressed the hope that the successor would Initiate policies to demonstrate "an attitude of genuine friendship between the United States and Egypt" and to achieve peace In the Middle East.
Philip E. Hoffman, president of the American Jewish Committee, expressed regret and voiced ,hope that "the International turmoil that Inevitably will result from President Nasser's death will not be allowed to stand in the way of the Middle East peace we all pray for."
STRESS ON EDUCATION
WASHINGTON A house education sub-committee, headed by Rep. John , Brademas of Indiana, has Issued a report stating that the "principal preoccupation of the people of Israel, second only to national defense, is education."
TEL A VIV - Twelve Israel! artl sts have been moving from position to position on the Suez Canal front palntlng murals and canvase s to decorate fortification, bunkers, and misses and recreadon facilities.
The campaign to esthetlclze the front-line strongholds was
_ Initiated by the Army Educational and Cultural Corps, which asked the Association of Painters and Sculptors for volunteers , Those who responded Included some artists whose canvases fetch thousands of Israel! pounds In the art galleries.
Before the cease-fire of Aug. 7, only males were taken to the Canal Zone. Now women artists visit, too.
The painters were told the paint at their disposal was their only !Imitation. Most of them chose to paint abstracts and landscapes.
The thinking in the army was that covering walls with works of artlsltc value rather th8Jl pin-ups or pictures clipped from magazines was good for morale.
''It affects the men's behavior," a lieutenant colonel explalned. "You can't dirty a wall that has a nice painting on it. It affects the soldiers' table manners. Tiley come to eat more neatly attired. 'They're more polite. 'The whole environment ts more cul tu.red."
Secondly the project Is considered an experience for the soldiers. 11 How many of them would normally have an oppornml ty to watch an artl st create?" an officer asked. "When the artist went on painting in a bunker during an enemy bombardment, it boosted spirits."
Lectures by university professors and scientists ts another extraordinary aspect of the army's program. Voltmteers are taken to the front for a few days to talk about their specialized fields.
.. It isn't important what you talk. about," the scholars were told. "It can be botany, zoology, psychology, art, marine life in the Red Sea, anything.
"lbe mere fact that a group of 10 or 15 soldiers sit around a professor in their bunker and talk to him about things other than the war broadens men's outlook. It's an experience and a tremendous boost for morale."
More conventional army type of entertainment if provided by 17 army theatrical troupes. Each plays three weeks at the front and one week In the big camps in the rear.
Every· week there are five or six troupes in the .Canal Zone. Each performs four times a day. Sometimes performers oumumber spectators. Shows may be put on somewhere in a depression In the dese,rt for the crews of two or three tanks. -
As a rule the shows are nonpolitical but one that Included a number called "Song to Peace" c re ate -d some political
controversy. The lyrics included lines such as "Don't say a day will come, bring the day," reflecting the New Left propaganda line that the Est ab ii sh m e nt wasn't doing enough for peace. It was presented With shouts of "ye ye" and hippie gestures including the spread fingers. Many in and out of the defense establishment thought it was ·unseemly for an army show.
However, the show was allowed to complete its run. The controversial song reached the top of the Israel! "Hit Parade."
At the Israel Festival last month, the number was revived as the grand rtnale of an evening of selections from army shows.
Apart from touring troupes, many uni ts have their own entertainment organized by soldiers performing regular
military duties. Civilian entertainers who are in the army reserves are called up four days a month to perform. If they belong to theatrical companies, they take their shows to the troops twice a month. Mostly the artists agree to perform more frequently .
Army shows are usually light entertalnment but a chamber music quartet has al so toured the positions. It was fortuitous as four promising students of a conservatory of music were Inducted for military service at the same time. A chamber music ensemble was not the answer to an en te rt a i nm en t officer's prayer, but when four musicians who had been pl aytng together for several years became available, together with their Instruments, the feeling was that the oppornmtty should not be missed.
Views On Sex 'Liberal' . Among Jews And Atheists
WASHINGTON, D,C, - A massive new study has revealed that there Is pro_bably a strong re I a ti on s hip between your sexuality and your religion.
If you are a religious conservative, chances are your views on sex, like your sexual practices, wtll be conservative, too. If you are a religious liberal, or non-religious , your sexual views and practices will be 0 Uberal" as well .
TI!ese are among the findings of an extensive, in-depth survey of over 20,000 Americans - the largest study of its kind ever undertaken . The survey, made by Psychology Today magazine, was directed by Dr . Robert Athanasiou of John Hopkins University, Baltlmore, assisted by social psychologist Philip Shaver of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and Carol Tavris, an associate editor of the magazine.
Jews and atheis ts tend to be most liberal in their · attitudes on sex , while Protestants and Catholics fall on the conservative side, he says. However, while Jews are tolerant of those engaging In sexually unorthodox behavior, their practice Is similar to conservative Catholics and Protestants concerning a strong family life. Jews, on the whole, tend to disapprove of such ideas as group marriage, extramarital sex and mate-swapping, and they are less likely than other· groups to have done any of these things, Dr. Athanasiou writes.
'The new study was compiled from a detailed 101-questlon form published in the July, 1969, Issue of the magazine. Of some 450,000 readers, over 20,000 responded to such items as sexual frequency, pre-and extramarital behavior, homosexuality,
masturbation, orgasm and Impotences, oral-genital stimulation, group sex and mateswapping. The findings appear In the July issue of the magazine, now on sale.
Dr. Athanasiou cautions that the sampling , however large, tends to reflect the views and conduct of the magazines readers - a highly educated, affluent, youthful group. The typical reader Is about 30 years of age, holds a college diploma and earns over $10 ,000 a year.
The more religious I respondents tended to disapprove · of homosexual s , liberal abortion I law s , sex education, and the distribution of birth control and · , sex technique information. Their sexual practices also tended to be conservative.
"Knowing only one thing about a.person - how religious he · ts - allows one to make a good guess about many of his sexual attitudes and experiences relative to persons of another religion," . Or. Athanasiou says.
Nine of IO respondents believe birth control should be a matter of Individual conscience; twothirds think that legal abortion should 'be available on demand by a woman. Even the great majority of Catholic respondents expressed approval of abortion in various circum s tances. · 1
CCNY BEGINS NEW YORK - City College
of New York has started Its first Jewish ~tudtes program, with Dr. Marni n Feinstein, associate professor of Hebrew at the college, as director.
The CCNY Jewish Studies program ls inltlally on an inter departmental basts - students may selec't Jewish Studies courses and add them to their schedules.
j1 I
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16 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD1 FRIDAY1 OCTOBER 21 1970
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OUI YOUNGU SET: Michale Ellen Shubb, 21 monlhs old, is tha daughter of Mr. and Mn. Charles Lee Shubb of lleMda, Calif. Mn. Shubb is tha form• Judith-Ann Kazerman of ,..ovidence.
Maternal grandparents - Mr. and Mn. Milton Kaurman of Encino, Calif., formerly of ,..ovidence. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mn. Ben Shubb of California.
Maternal great-grandmother is Nrs. Bernard Yanlcu of Pawtucket.
For news of your organization, read TI,e Herald.
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Airlines Study Gas, Darts, Bean Bags For Ways Of Stopping Highiackers, Oppose Armed Guards
NEW YORK The perfection of several devices to Int ens lfy the screening of passengers and baggage during loading of airliners Is "Just around the corner." says the director of security of Pan American Worl d Airways.
TI,e official, Prank Cardman, said that the airlines were developing systems for puntng down hljacldng attempts In night.
But In the aftermath of the hljacldng of four United Statesbound pt anes by Arab guerrillas Sunday, he emphasized that, to minimize chances of Injuring bystanders or causing a crash, such measures would be used only when It was flet that they Insured maximum safety for passengers and crew .
.. It's not fair to say we're just going to keep turning airplanes In the direction the hijackers want to go,'' Cardman declared.
Other Industry sources appeared less confident about soon finding relatively safe ways to stop hljacldng once they get started. And there was almost universal opposition to copying the Israelis' tactic, ltlustrated on an El At plane Sunday, of carrying armed guards and having them use guns ln overpowering hijackers.
To avoid simplifying the task
magnetometers . which detect the presence of a gun or other metallic object as a passenger walks by. They are commonly used In conjunction with visual observati on of passengers, usually when they buy tickets, to see If they betray traits believed to be characteristic of hijackers .
A big drawback of magnetometers Is that they do not detect nonmetallic explosives. Another shortcoming Is that they can be activated by keychalns or other eve"'l'day objects.
Dr awbacks aside, the magnetometers are given I arge credit for the sharp decline In hijacking of U.S. airliners this year compared with 1969.
An article In the current Issue of Airline Pilot, the publication of the Air Line Pilots Association, reports that, In the first six months of this year, there were 11 attempts to hijack American planes, seven of them successful. In the same period ln . 1969 there 26 attempts., 21 successful.
The author, Franklin Oel sch I ager, enforcement director of the Air TranSBort Association, slad he believed there had been only four hljacldng of U.S. planes since Jtme 30, Incl udlng the two Sunday. 1be
of would-be hijackers, the Pan American official declined to detail the devices being worked on. There has been considerable talk In the Industry about several approaches to the problem of ' Interrupting hijacking attempts without tmdue risk.
One approach calls for feeding a basically harmless gas Into the passenger-cabin ventilation system and temporarily Incapacitating the hijackers along with the rest of the occupants. TI,e cockpit crew could protect themselves with gas masks.
Another approach Involves dart guns that would Inject hijackers · with a substance that would temporarily paralyze them.
A third alternative would be use ·of so-called "snm guns" being tested by the police In Berkeley, Call!., for riot control work. The guns fire ' small bean bags at the speed of a pitcher's fast ball. The blow Is enough to Incapacitate the person hit but, because It Is distributed over an area the size of the flexible bag, It Is not enough to kill or infilct serious Injury. .
' The highest hopes for Intercepting hijackers as they board are attached to devices for sniffing the presence of almost any explosive . It Is known that some experimental sniffers are already In service, apparently by El Al If not others. ,
Over the last year or more widening use has been made of
Are you a sentimental traveler like me? Every year when Indian Summer comes with its balmy weather and flaming foliage, I feel young and carefree again.
To satisfy my yearnings this year, · my wife and I plan to enjoy a three-week auto tour in mid-September right up to America's rooftop. What's more exciting than a vacation in the mighty Rocky Mountains, rich in scenery and adventure!
It's great to read guides that show the best trails and sights to explore at the national parks we're going to visit. We also enjoy reading books on the history, background, and wildlife of the mountains.
You say maybe it's too early to make plans now for a trip ·we won't take until autumn? Not a bit. We discovered that the beat way to find full enjoyment and education in traveling is to "pack" a lot of prior knowledge about where you're 1oing and
A.T .A, Is the trade organization of scheduled American lines.
n,e Incidence of hi J acldngs of foreign aircraft shows no such Improvement. That Is widely attributed to the fact that a sizable percentage of cases Involving foreign lines are the work of militant political groups whereas many In this country are the work of disturbed persons .
In addition, several long prison terms have been Imposed on American hljackerlr ' who returned from Cuba after finding the hospitality there much less than anticipated.
One puzzling aspect of the hijacking s Sunday was why security precautions had not been effective.
Officials of Trans World Airlines, which has been a prime victim on lnternat1onal routes and has put In force one of the most comprehensive screening systems, Indicated that It was In use at Frankfurt.
REMBRANDT AND JEWS Rembrandt was the first
master to artistically show Jews not as caricatures, but as Individuals endowed with human dignity.
what to see. This adds a new dimension to going places, making travel really rewarding. -A tourist only observes - an experienced traveler knows how to participate.
So we've already received a batch of road maps, phamplets on accommodations, and free literature on touring the Rockies. Since we enjoy the luxury of being free to travel at our own pace, when and where we like, why should we ruin our fun with hectic last-minute planning. And if you travel in autumn, immediately after the high tourist season, you can get the most out of a limited_ budget by taking advantage of the bargain off-season prices.
Maybe a fall tour to Maine"s rockbound coast, Cape Cod, or the Oregon shore - other great places to vl.sit during autumn -brings back romantic memories. Why don't you start planning a sentimental journey, too?
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Comparisons Wit~ Greats Of
~ Comedy World LONDON - Marty Feldman
· Is a handsome little feller with a delinquent eyeball. If It weren't for his ocular . wildness, he would be a dead ringer for Disney's Captain Hook In a Harpo Marx wig, which Is aspiring to a spectacular degree of handsomeness, especially In a little feller.
When he looks Into a TV camera with the performing half of his face, the other half can actually follow the teleprompter; and when a director asks him to look another actor straight In the face, he takes a bead with his rogue eye, and turns his head
'(Continued on Following Page)
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH
(Continued from Page 6) :.atety aspects of your turnace for you. Call In your regular electrician If you have reason to suspect wiring problems or your regular plumber If ypur pipes aren't working properly.
If you do decide to pursue the matter with a door-to-claor sal e sman, demand his cr e dentials . Then, In his presence, call the local banks and/or Better Business Bureau to check out his reputation.
By all m~ans, take every possible precaution against home fires. Bui use your common sense. And don't get tallted Into buying an expensive new furnace without checking your need, double-checking company prices, and triple-checking the Mure servicing, (Copyright 1970, Fi e ld Enterprises, Inc.)
I £ip,n ~ (/)m I (Continued tram page 6)
mak e the best- seller lists, there'll be another posthumously published book by a Nobel Prize winner. It's William Faulkner's "The Ghost Story." It was written on an assignment from ftlm producer Howard Hawks, who owns II.
Amsterdam's Phillips Co. Is the newest power combine to make Klrk Kerkorlan an offer for MGM • • . Diana Shumlln, wife of producer Herman Shumlln, Is entering Lenox Hill Hospital for surgery .•• Rita Garn, who was a $5 call girl In her first f1lm, "The Thief," will play a $100 call girl In "Klute."
Miss Garn says: "It's not Inflation, but a promotion." (All Rights Reserved)
S000 French Leftists Support Palestinians
PARIS - Five thousand French leftists , Including a number of Jews and Arab students , jammed the huge Salle De Mutuallte here for a rally In support of the PalesUnlan "Freedom Fighters,"
The gathering was addressed by two young Jews who said they had just · returned from Jordan where they visited encampments of El Fatah and the Popular Front .for the Liberation of Palestine.
On e young Jewish girl, declining to give her name, described the " suffering of the Palestinian people" and called on "democratic and leftist organizations of all religions and creeds" to support the Palestinians In their fight against King Hussein of Jordan and the State of Israel.
Dayan To Visit U.S. TEL A VIV - Government
sources have revealed here that Moshe Dayan, Isr aeli Minister of Defense, wlll be going to the United States sometime In December In conjunction with the United Jewish Appeal campaign and for dl$CUsslons on the Mideast with high U.S. offlclals. It Is also expected that Mr. Dayan will appear on American television. ·
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER Z, 1970 17 CANADIANSATTACKJDL
MONTREAL - Monroe Abbey, president of the Canadian J e w I s h Congress, and Abel Sellek, president of B'nat B'rlth District 22, have Issued a joint statement condemning the actions of the Jewish Defense League, Including "the use of violence to comb a.t anti-Semitism" and "appeals to extremism and paramilitary tactics." The statement was In response to a newspaper story and picture showing 13 youths and one girl practicing the "art of attack" In karate under the Instruction of JDL member Dav Kaufman.
Por news ~ your organization, read 11,e Herald,
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lCCOMMOOlTIOIIS FOi PIIYlTE PHTIB SIEClll lFTEIIIOOII LIHICNB
751-4812 HOLIDAY GREETINGS
WITH BEST WISHES
FOR A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS
AND PROSPERITY
FRANK CAPRIO
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDA TE
FOR
ATTORNEY-GENERAL
Comparisons With Greats Of Comedy World (Continued from, Preceding Page)
until the good eye allgris, which means that he Is one of the few performing artists outside of Chippertlelds who can only look you straight In the face when It's over his left shoulder.
Actually, Feldman Is not a bona !Ide midget; his stature Is Just sufficiently sub-standard to make normal people, and even people of nve feet seven feel that they are walking tall enough to make remarks about his countenance being an Ill-favored thing, and to conceive smart alee comparisons such as that he resembles hobgoblin In drag, to coin an example. All of which Illustrate how easy It Is to come away from a neetlng encounter with Feldman and wallow In a protracted pen portrait of his outward and physical being, which somewhat misses the point of his talent.
The occasion of his present airing to the press Is his ecstatic discovery, suddenly this summer, by the usually taciturn and knifecruel television writers of the United States. Apparently the villains are throwing their hats In the air over Marty• s guest appearances In a show called "The Gold Diggers," which Is the summer replacement tor the regular Dean Martin program. Anything which replaces the Dean Martin Show merits tumultuous applause In my book, and our American cousins are celebrating their release from the syrup opera by heaping upon Marty the comparisons with Danny Kaye, Buster Keaton, Chaplin, Cantlnflas, Fernande!, the Mutt and Jett, to begin with.
The "Los Angeles Tlmes" describes Feldman as the ftnd of the year; "Variety" says that on av allable ev ldence, future Feldman shots should be a "wacky gas;" the "New York Post" says our man Is the unchallenged star of the summertime network; ahd snappy Jack Pitman, also a "Variety" diarist, wrote the following entry on Marty's hopes and past history:
"Feldman thus has a crack at be com Ing the first British comedian to make It on American video since Bob Hope, which would be the more phenomenal as the Briton, now 36, only turned performer a· bit over three years ago after years of writing yock material for the other fellows. He was cranking It up for David Frost here about lour years back when Frost talked him Into doing his •own thing.' A BBC series ensued, establishing Feldman as the hottest comic In Bllghty vld, and later copped the Golden Rose top prize at Montreux." Which, when translated Is only an approximate summary of the situation.
More specifically, Feldman Is booked to appear on _ the actual Dean Martin groan-In later this year, and there are plans tor him to have bis own American show as a follow-up. If he makes the grade on u.s. "vld," It won't be an unduly phenomenal event, unless you !Ind It amazing that a man who spent 10 years editing "Educating Archie," "Taite It From Here,•• "Round the Horne," "B<>otsle and Snudge," "The Walrus and the Carpenter," should turn out to be a passable comic. ,
Feldman, who has described himself as Dada on legs and comedy as an unnatural act akin to sodomy, Is a Russlan-PollshEngllsh Jew from the East End of London. As a schoolboy, he tended to skip lessons In order to see films of the Marx Brothers, _ Kaye, Laurel and Hardy, Red Skelton, ana Keaton, al\d his First Steps to Literacy were through the pages of Thurber, Perelman, and Benchley, with support material from Dorothy Parker , Ring Lardner, Donald Ogden Stewart, Stephen Leacock, Patrick Campbell In "Lllllput," Evelyn Waugh, Rabelais, and Cervantes.
As a result of this early specialization, Feldman never
(Continued on Following Page)
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For news of your organlza-
NEW YEAl<GREETINGS MR. and MRS.
JOSEPH COHEN
60 CARR STREET
PROVIDENCE
LEO LEVINE and Family
99 Hillside Avenue
Pravicfence
A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. CHARLES TAPPER
and MR. and MRS.
KENNETH M. COHEN 197 5 Broad Street
Cranston
Wish Friends and Relatives A Very Happy New Year
A Happy New Y-ear
Biltmore Furniture
Company, Inc. Home of
Fine Furniture 523 MAIN STREET PAWTUCKET, R, I.
725-4950
lion, read 1be Herald.
MR. and MRS. BENNETT FORMAL
and sons BERNARD and .PAUL
25 1 Rochambeau Avenue Wish All Their Relatives
And Friends
A Happy And Prosperous New Year
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IMPORTED
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In Fashions
250 HOPE STREET
751-1245
BEST WISHES
FOR A HAPPY AND HEALTHY
NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
FOOD CENTRE 935 BROAD STREET PROVIDENCE
CHARLES TAPPER, Proprietor
944-5716 351-7010
ROSSI SHEET MET AL WORKS, INC.
HEATING AND AIR-CONDITIONING · -
HOLIDAY GREETINGS *- hew 1/etU q~ SCARPETTI OLDS
79 Elmwood Avenue UN 1-3310
WHARF TAVERN (ON THI WATla. WATIR IT~
WARRDI
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HAPPY NEW YEAR
For hNnatiOM Call CHerry 5-5043
Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Swartz
30 Alton Rood, Providence
Mr. and Mrs.
MANNY YOUNG
and Daughters
Rhanda Francine and
Sherri Lynne
23 Colonial Road
Providence
Mr. and Mrs.
SANFORD S. SCHWABER
and Daughters
Cynthia Beth, Jody Audrey
and Son,
Jeffrey Scatt Youngstown, Ohia
'EXTEND TO THEIR RELATIVES AND FRIENDS " :---tt'
.- ,, l ''l: BEST WISHES FOR A
HEALTHY, HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
For news of your organlza-
Happy New Year
.... ·fDOWIR;RY
, .. ,. . ., FINE PRINTING PLATES
THAT .COST LESS! Highest Quality
of Photo Engraving And Uthography
UNlon 1-1poo
DAVID NEWMAN Plumbing & Heating
co.
ST 1-5764
Wishes All His Friends
And Customers
A Healthy and Happy New Year
tlon, read 1be Herald.
New Year Greetings
148 Taunton Avenue
East Providence
434-1723
Best Wishes For A Happy, Healthy And Prosperous New Year
SCOTT MOTORSJNc.
• F.4CTOR-Y .4UTHORIZED
SALES - SERVICE PARTS
M01'SWPO&T'l&W-..a:P.
CALL GE neft 8-5555
WELCOME RESTAURANT Italian 6 American Food
Choice Liquors Clus,•cl M oucluys
1065 Chalkstone Avenue NEW YEAR GREETINGS N:ll-9577
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
LINCOLN PACKING CO. -MEATS -
355 Canal Street, Providence 521-2301
i--gh,e BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY HOLIDAY
(JIJ ~INC.
:J.amou.:t ITAUAN RESTAURANT ITALIAN DINNERS
• LOBSTERS - STEAKS 751-5544 Your Host
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120 ATWELLS AVE., PROV., R.I. n . THIii MOil
nosm TUES.
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STAR WATCH
WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING DIAMOND REMOUNTING
46 Summer Street Pawtucket
ns-nso
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
'AR~ * ,. ___ .___ ____ CANDIES
Comparisons With Greats Of Comedy World (Continued from Preceding Page) made the science sixth. In fact he never managed to stay In one school for very long, and notched up 12 alma maters before his ruteenth birthday. It Is his proud boast that he has been kicked out of some of the worst schools In London. When he was 15, he gave up , bidding hail and farewell to educational establishments, and worked days In an advertising agency, and nights at a jazz club,' where his band gave a first break to a fat saxophonist, called Tubby Hayes.
At 16, he left England to see the world, and at 17, he was deported from France for vagrancy, a!ter a career In Paris as a sculptor's tout. Back In Soho, he lounged with groovy pals Bern a rd Kops and Frankie Norman, and produced paintings with verse written on them as double Indemnity against penury. John Minton said the paintings were lousy, Dylan Thomas said the verse was good. Feldman failed to avoid penury.
He progre'ssed from a fairground sideshow, In which he fired arrows at a Red Indian from Peterborough, to a music hall speciality act, "Morris, Marty, and Mitch," which was somewhere between the Ritz Brothers and Dr. Crock. He had been wielding a dilettante pen In between firing off arrows at Tay Owana•s belly, and at the age of 23, he joined the BBC as a script writer, where In collaboration w Ith Barry Took, he was responsible for some of the best radio and televlson comedy of the sixties.
"Educating Archie," while It was nobody's Idea of sophisticated farce, nevertheless was a forcing ground for the talent of Secombe, Hancock, and Beryl Reid. 1n two years on the show, Feldman learned from Ronald Woll all he knew about the mechanics of comedy writing. On ' ' Arch 1 e, ' ' be became a pragmatic humorist. The last series of "Take It From Here," which he and Took received after Muir and Norden' s l! - year tenure, was valuable as courting ground, where the new team outgrew the novelty of the a!fair, and climbed Into bed to settle down to a serious man-to-man grappling of steady, comedic marriage.
Feldman was chief writer on "Frost Over England" which took the 1967 Montreux Gold Award, and when Frost later lined up "At Last the 1948 Show," Feldman was given his first role In front of the cameras, at the suggestion of John Cleese and Tim BrookeTaylor. He was an Instant success and later had his own BBC show, "Marty," which won the Montreux award last year and confirmed Feldman's. position as a master of visual, anarchic humour.
He has · since appeared as a straight man (straight as schizoids go) opposite Eileen Atkins In a couple of Johnny Speight TV plays, and In "Every Home Should Have One," a feature film scripted by hlmseU, Took, and Norden, which, surprisingly, was something of a bad egg, quite good In parts. Now, he Is planning a second feature with Larry Gelbert which Is to be called "Nobody Loves an Honest Cop, Or The other Kind Either ...
Feldman believes that comedy Is simply a particular viewpoint on life; Hamlet from the gravedigger's angle was a hilarious comedy. His talent Is for stating his own viewpoint, which just happens to be absurdly · funny, In an entirely original way. I asked him If he knew any good Jokes, and he knew one once, but It was so long since he had to tell It that he had forgotten It. I also asked him why his arm was In plaster, and ))e said he broke a wrist falling off a wrestler, a thing which could happen to anybody who stood around on
· wrestlers, and the moral was ·not to stand on wrestlers without a sa!ety belt. With ad-libs like that, who needs Joke !Jocks? Reprinted from the "Manchester Guardian" By JOHN HALL
THE RHODE JBLANDHERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1 1 1970 19 For news .of Israel, Jewish society, read the Herald . . . and
,, c om m u n I t I e a throughout the for some of the best bargains In 'worl<t, local organtzattans and the Greater Provtdence area.
Happy Now Year MONOILlO COMPANY
Asphalt Paving Cement and Roofing
HOLIDAY GREETINGS MARaUO'S RESTAURANT
100 South Street Johnston GartMtt Avenue, Craneton
942-6666 CE 1-9000
New Year. Greetings
CAMPAGNA'S PHARMACY
123 Bradford Street Bristol, R. I.
HENRY M. SOULE COMPANY, INC.
/
253-8808
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
J O Furniture Co. One Of New Encland's
La!Test Furniture Stores
~1Nf/NIERS-&.er11 CIIShcllel •
Ht-, Cllllnctltl CONCIETE • MASONlY
call DE 1-3080 724-7450 466 Division St. Pawtucket
t36 AtweU. Avenue
Providence, R. I .
Extends Best Wishes fo, A Happy, Healthy
and Prosperous New Year
HELPY SELFY COIN OPERA TED LAUNDRY
675 OAKLAWN AVENUE, ROUTE 5, CRANSTON, I.I.
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
ASQUINO'S RESTAURANT 584 North Broadway East Provl~nce
GE 4-97%0
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
RHODE ISLAND
JEWISH FRATERNAL ASSOCIATION CEMETERY COMMITTEE
WE STILL HAVE VALUABLE LAND
FOR SALE For Further Information Kindly Call
MR. SAM JAMNIK, Chairman of Boord and Cemetery Committee
467-5770 MR. JULIUS MUSEN DR. MARSHAil K. BORNSTEIN
Treasurer Association of Cemetery Committ-942-1604 781-5720
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
R. I. STUE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE A PUBLIC JOB PLACEMENT AGENCY
NO CHARGE ~i ~~:t:'c~E~ PROVIDENCE: Professional. Soles & Clerical 49 Westminster 331-3315 Manufacturing & Construction 40 Fountain 831-6410 Hotel, Hospital, Household & Restaurant 40 Fountain Youth Opportunity Center 72 Pine St. Adult Opportunity Center 40 Fountain
PROVIDENCE 86 1-6200
SU OUR COMPLETE OFFICE LISTINGS UHDH R.I. STATE DEPT. OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY
831-6410 421-1410 831-6410
We Extend Best Wishes
To Our Relatives
And Friends For A
Happy And Prosperous
New Year DAVID P.
GERSTENBLA TT
aosTON, MASSACHUS6TTS
. ,,
I. l~
\
C
' ..
I
t
l
I
20 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 2, 19?0 For news of Israel, Jewish society, read the Herald ••• and
comm II n I tie s throughout the for some of the best bargains In world, local organizations and the Greater Providence area -Only in Am_erica Subscribe to the Herald.
NEW YEAR GREETINGS New Year Greetings WOODS
Happy New Yeor Ml. and MIIS.
THEODOR ZISSBSON of CRANSTON OIL SERVICE
TYPEWRITER CO. Fuel & Range Oils & Burners
, B.y Ha11ry Golden 4';':C.!:I :::t Ml. and MIS. Repair Specialists Installed and Serviced
Typewriters · Adding Machin., 1196 Cra'!,ston Street
568 Broad Street 942-8600
HOWAID D. ZISSHSON and daughter, Bonnie Hope
MR. ancl MRS. The Gypsies of England RICHARD HOCHMAN
and daughter, Debro Sue
NEW YEAR GREETINGS NEW YEAR GREETINGS
C. L PACKHEM CO., INC. TULIO GASPERINI 2642 Warwick Avenue AccordiOII Studio
Worwick, ,,R. I. 739-2900 650 Newport AYe., PaWlllcket
Acoustical Ceilings 1730 P05t Rd., Warwick PA 6-1493 PA S-0870
Best Wishes For A New Year Greetings Hoppy ond Prosperous Petteruti New Yeor
El Marocco Motor Sales
Chrysler-Plymouth Rhode lsla,id's Smartest Valiant
Night Club Private Dining Rooms
11 Famous for flne Service"
For Weddings, Banquets 105 I Chalkstone Avenue and Porties Providence, R. I.
1291 Hartford Avenue Johnston - 521-4946 831-5400
OLD VIC - ANTIQUES, ETC. 167 Benefit Street - 421-5356
Open Monday thru Saturday IOa.m. to4 p.m. Do/ore, E. Goodwin New Year Greetings
Best Wishes for a Happy and Prosperous 1"4ew Year
FASHION CORNER BEAUTY SALON 1476 Park Avenue, Cranston
94::?-9743
NEW YEAR OREETINOS
La Point's Wheel and Brake Service 2'0 BARTON STREET, PAWTUCKET
!comer of Dexter St.) 7%3-8854
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
Warwick Upholstering Co. GEORGE J. BASTIEN, Proprietor
Furniture Macie To Order, Repaired - Reupholstering 1163 West Shore Road, Warwick 737-6272
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
E. A. JOHNSON CO.
59 EDDY ST. PROVIDENCE II- of City Holl)
.a.Ila» Hat
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
There are over 20,000 gypsies living around the perimeters of London, Birmingham, and other large English cities. This ts a pretty tough time for the gypsies. More and more of the British countryside and rural areas are giving way to Industrialization and more and more the British • middle and lower-class constituency · Is becoming race conscious. The gypsies have fewer and fewer places to camp and when they do ffnd a camping site they have more and more enemies.
1 believe I saw my last American gypsy sometime In the early 1940s, before the war marshalled all our workers and our Industries. I know It was on a trip up North because I never saw a gypsy down South, for obvious reasons.
After the war, there were gypsy fortune-telling parlors along Eighth and Ninth avenues and I suppose you could find a gypsy family living In tenements In neighborhoods which had become Puerto Rican.
The fortune-telling parlors are no more. Whether the City Council decided they were against the law or the Department or Sanitation closed them down for hygienic reasons, they are gone. Very probably the American gypsy has been Integrated Into the American poor and the American slum dweller.
One of the sights you wtll not see along our spanking new super-highways ts the gypsy caravan.
There are very few gypsies In Europe. Hitler ravaged the gypsy com munlty. He destroyed and murdered proportionately as many gypsies as he murdered and destroyed Jews. I understand there are gypsy tribes which an nu a 11 y perambulate. around
. Spain but I have never been to Spain so I cannot vouch for the accuracy ol this.
A century ago, the villagers reared the gypsies because the gypsies were rumored to be notorious kidnappers or children. A century be!ote that the !ollts reared the gypsies because the gypsies commanded magic and could Invoke the aid or demoniacal spirits. These days they rear the gypsies because the gypsies live without the modern conveniences of running water and toilet facilities.
Each age, It seems, Is able to create Its own Arabs, as It were.
The British Ministry or Housing Is trying to build another l"O campsites for these nomadic peoples. There are gypsies who live atop garbage dumps and others who seek re!Uge In muddy swamps. But the police come along and hand them over to the constable In the next district who moves them along to the police In the next until finally they are out of the country and then In another city they begin the same sad process all over again.
CompuJsory education will
:JW 1jau Sa muci :J.or 1jou.r Patrona.'le
~ :Jhrou,Jt :Jle 1jear
~ We W;,,l 1jou .A//
.A .JJapp'J _A,,J P,.o6perow new ·year
ONE HOUR CLEANERS LAUNDERERS
NEW ... PLANT ON PREMISES UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS
PLAZA NORTH MAIN ST. & DOYLE
AVE. (NEXT TO ST AR MARKET)
521-3636 '
(
probably prove the gypsies• undoing. It will erase the gypsy tribe more effectively than any of Hitler• s murderous plans. One can survive a concentration camp; and many or England's gypsies have, but few of us come out of a public school system the way we went In.
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
ART'S PIZZA
* HOPE ST. * FOR PIZZA
AT ITS BEST
Italian Sonclwiches
Health services have a way or diminishing the vigor of the outlander, too. Gypsy children have to undergo vaccination and dlptherla Inoculations along with the children or the aristocracy. Call Your Order - No Wahin9
A revolution will produce counter- revolutionaries as well as Tories but the modern Industrial age must produce only sameness. (Copyright (C) 1970 by Harry Golden)
GREEK APPEAL NEW YORK - Archbishop
Takovos, the Greek Orthodol< Primate or North and South America, said that he will present a Middle East peace appeal to the United Nations, the United States and the Soviet Union on behalf or "the two million little people" In the Western Hemisphere's Greek Orthodox Church.
861-4149 13 hrlin9ton Street
Real Estate and Insarance
Your Friends are Inaund
with
William J. lynch & Son
Are You? 1 PARK PLACE
725-2220 725-4447
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
BEST WISHES FOK THE NEW YEAK
DE CIANTIS BROS. - Grade " A" Milk - Homo,:enized - l'asteurized -
CITY DEi.IVERY West Warwick, Rhode Island VA 1-8722
GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
FRANK DUPUIS COMPANY 599 Main Street, Pawtucket
PAwtucket 2-0080
FUEL OIL AND AUTOMATIC HEATING
~
ADAMS
DRUGSTORES
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR
A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH. HAPPINESS AND
PROSPERITY
MR. and MRS. ALEX GUTTIN and FAMILY and
MR. and MRS.MAURICE KAMEN and FAMILY
GUTTIN'S BAKERIES Extend To All Our Friends
-and Customers Most Cordial New Year Greetings
And. Express Our Appreciation For Your Patronage Which Has Made
The Holidays Joy9us For All Of Us.
GUT'tIN'S ·BAKERIES 27 Dou&'las Ave.
421-6590 1095 Broad St.
781-8929
HO Park Ave., Ctanston 941-9668
Herald subscribers comprise an active buying market. For
excellent results, advertise In the Herald. Call724.0200.
'
1£1 ~@ MIA! New Year Greetings
FRANCIS J. LOUGHRAN
SANITARY PLUMBING WELDERS SUPPLY INC.
557 Waterman Ave. - ·-·· East . Providence eRemodeling
GEneva 8-5507 FREE ESTIMATES CALL EXTENDS BEST WISHES 421-4176
POR A VERY HAPPY Res. 461-7S43 NEW YEAR 10 Euclid Ave. Providence
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
THE PEARLY SHELL REST AU RANT FOOT OF QUEEN, EAST GREENWICH
CATiRING TO WEDDINGS, BANQUETS, PARTIES SINGALONGS ON SATURDAY e BAND FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
COCKTAILS 814-9164
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
PAGODA INN Cocktail i.-nge and Dining Room
Cantonese and Polynesian Dishes 7315 Post Road, North Kingstown, R.I. 294-9900
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MAYOR PHILIP NOEL of Warwick
INVESTMENTS T. L. WATSON CO.
146 WESTMINSTER STREET 274-8600
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
r.--·---------------------~ I I I I I I I I I I IGAS GENIE I ' ·
HI FOLKS!
Here 's wishing you a very Happy New Year from
all of us at your Gas Company!
I ,· \
IPROIIIDENCEGAS CO/tlPANI' I~ \._,~ _______________ _)
Stop wishing, stop at Citizens
Eighteen Convenient Banking Offices
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A NEW YEAR OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
, \
A Free Jewish Univer5ity
By SAUL FARBER Executive Director, Valley Cities Jewish Community Center
• • • The location of the Valley
Cities Jewish Community Center, a branch of the Jewish Centers Association of Los Angeles and an afftllate of JWB, would make It difficult for the Center's board and staff to forget about the college generation even If they wanted to Ignore them. A twoyear community college located dfrectly across the street from the Center, which houses the Valley College Hillel Foundation, was accustomed to the sight of college students In Its building.
Early In May 1969, a small group of Jewish students met with the Center's director and advised him they were members of a new organization known as "Jews for a Radical Society." They asked for permission to meet In the Center and this was granted to them.
In the Initial contact with the Center director, members of the group described a program,
Contlmled on Following Page)
Researchers Attempt To Promote Peace
N E W YORK An Intern a ti on a I research group composed of American, Arab and Israeli scholars will undertake a broad program of research In an effort to promote a peaceful solution to the Middle East crisis, a New York educational foundation supporting the project has announced.
1be Fund for Peace, formerly knawn as the Fund for Education 111 World Order, was founded In 195 7 as a private, noncom mer c I a I organization ol educators, businessmen, bankers and lawyers.
Joseph P. Lyford, president of the Fund, termed t he collaboration of Arab, Israeli and U.S. experts "an encouraging and desperately needed initiative" which, It ls hoped, will stimulate other rational efforts by the world academic community to exam l n e the possibility of conciliation.
'The Arab-Israeli research and relations project will operate on the fundamental assumption that the•lssues In the Middle East which threaten the entire world' s security can neither be allowed to drift or solved by force, Lyford said. "It Is a tragic fact that very little has been done to s ubject the key Issues to the sort of pe r s I st en t examination which c ould l ead to practical operational recommendat1ons."
Paperbacks Published With Jewish Themes NEW YORK Paperback versions of four books on J ewish themes have been Issued by Schocken Book, Inc. of New York.
Two were published tor the B'nat B'rlth H1llel Foundations. They are "Choosing a Sex Ethic: A J ewish Inquiry" by Rabbi Eguene B. Borowttz, faculty member of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, and "Tradition and Contemporary Experience" by Rabb I Alfred Jospe, Hillel dir ec tor o.t program aqd resources.
The other two are Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg's "The French Enlightenment and the J ews: The Origin s of Mode rn Antis em It Ism " and "Ben-Gurlon Looks Back·" by Moshe Pearlman.
JOBS FOR HASSIDIM NEW YORK - Eight yourig
Hassldlc J ews from Brooklyn have been accepted by the Consolidated EdlSOf\ Company for o ri e ntation and training as account analysts through the effo rt s o f the Federation Employment and Guidance Service, the placement and Job service agency of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. The Hassldlm often experience Job difficulties because of their observance of an early Sabbatto
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1970 21 For Qews of israel, Jewish society, read the Herald •• • and
comm u n It I e s throughout the for some of the besl bargains In world, local organizations and the Greater Providence area.
236 Westminster Street Wishes All Their
Customers and Friends A Hoppy and Prosperous
New Year
STATE CESSPOOL INC
ST AJE CESSPOOL PUMPING CO
Rrsidential & Convntrci~ W,,t
Ac,d lr-t•trMnt wtwn Nt'c:nu.ry
Pipe CleanH With Root CutUr,g Machine
1S Centredale Av N Prov . . 231-6,625
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
New Year Greetings
ABBOTT'S v))gjfJfJ,k,, ROUTE 146, LINCOLN, R.I.
767-2211
A.K.C. Registered Puppies Large Selection
Of Dog Supplies
THE PASTRY BOX . /'" -:i/j) ~ - ~ lpecialiii,i In
?7. - . C.ke1 of Ll1i11nttfon ;;,;~ For All Ocwi,ns :. , J , ~ Complete Line of
( \ (· -;:,' \~ 8;, edGoodsand
l \~ ; \ 739~65~0 ---l--~ 1/ 21~1•·•·•·,,•. M, ~ ·1 ~ / Wo, 11tid,
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
FRENCH DRESS SHOP
1086 WILLETT AVENUE (Peck Corners)
RIVERSIDE
Formerly ol New York City
433-4966
HENRY PAINTING & DECORATING
Extends Best Wishes
For A Happy New Yeor
To Our Relatives
Friends and Customers
34 Oifden Avenue
C,anston
781-5031
JACK'S FABRICS Extends Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
To Ow· F riends
And Customers 725 Dexter Street 725-2160 .Central Falls
L @!iJ&l!)lfgl/ :__ . ·- (J.gl/$TRUCTION CORP.
~
• ' . . •• • ROAD CONSTRUCTION t'~ , • SEWERS
~ . ~ • CONCRETE FOU NDATIONS -~ - • · , - - ~ "':, •WATER LINES
- -".' ~ -'""~_. - - .. --c::-· ~- ~:::-·~---~----
SAND & GRA VEl READY MIXED CONCRETE
253-6522 71 S G,.i nd Army Highw•y Sw.anse• , M.)H.
·,
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, 'HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
Talces This Opportunity
To Wish All Its
Jev.:ish Friends
A Most Joyous
Holiday Season
(
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I
f
OCTOBER i, 1970 22 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY . r,.,aew Year GrNtings NEW YEAR GREETINGS
- BSA e HONDA • TRIUMPH CANAL ST. BAIT SHOP HONDA LINE FOR '69
Veronica & Kenneth Howe
Rods and Reels RAZEE Repaired
Custom-made Rods MOTORCYCLE Available
SALES 30 Smith Street 730 Tower Hill Rd., Rte. I
(Corner of Canal Street) North Kingstown 421-9009 295-8837
Best Wishes For A
Happy And Healthy New Year
'UNITED
SUPPLY
COMPANY BEST WISHES
FOR A
HAPPY NEW YEAR
s •••• ,., ....... ie ...
361 Jefferson Blvd. BARRINGTON
Warwick, R. I. TRAVEL AGENCY
BARRINGTON ~ SHOPPING CENTE
241-3021 ~ 739-8000 .. .,, ' ~~;;; ' - --
NEW YEAR GREETINGS CEDAR FENCES
FURNITURE - GARDEN HOUSES
CEDAR CRAFT CO. 1519 Bald HIU Rd., Warwick VA l-85N
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
61 Hillside R""-d GAIU>Eh CITY era ..... , LI.
OUR SINCERE WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR SEASON
ST ANDA RD BEAUTY SALON
897 Brood Street Providence, R.I.
PHONE WI 1-9489 WINIFRED H. COMSTOCK
Best Wishes for a
Happy and Healthy
New Year
Lieutenant-Governor
JOSEPH GARRAHY Secretary of State
AUGUST P. LA FRANCE General Treasurer
RAYMOND H. HAWKSLEY Democratic State Chairman
JOHN J. HOGAN
A Free Jewish University (Continued from Preceding Page) commemorating the Warsaw Ghetto UJ)flslng, whldl they conducted on . the campus of Valley College. 'lbe program was held In the free-speech-area of the campus and featured poetry reading, singing, and speeches, all of which referred to the heroic resistance of the Warsaw Ghetto fighters against the Nazis. After the of!tclal part of the program was completed, the part I c Ip ants organized themselves Into a parade. 'lbe marchers wore armbands with the word "Jude" written In yellow, 'lbese students were Joined by many others, some of whom were non-Jewish. The representatives of the new group stated that this program and parade gave the participants a feeling of Identification as Jews which few of them had experienced at any other time In their life. They also Indicated that they needed to know more about Judaism since their own sense of Identity as Jews was shaky. During this conversation the Idea of a FREE University of Jewish Studies occurred to the Center director buf at that time he did DOI mention this Idea to the representatives of the new group.
JI quickly became apparent that the group was struggling to de!tne Its goals and purposes. At a general meeting, It was suggested that the group support the United Farm Workers Union by throwing a picket line around a store which was selling California table grapes. A small minority suggested the smuggling of guns Into Israel since they felt that only a program which tied the group to the State of Israel would be worthwhile. Most felt that this viewpoint was Irrational. After coMlderable discussion, It was agreed that a picket line would be organized against the supermarket and signs would be carried which Indicated that It was the responsibility of Jews to support the efforts of all oppressed people to break the chains of their oppression. other signs urged the store to discontinue the sale of California table grapes.
Th e question of tuture programs still faced the group; the lack of long- range goals and purposes created considerable c o nfu s i o n. Before frustration o v e rw h e Im ed the member s completely, the Center director, who had been Invited to sit In, suggested the poss ibility of organizing a Free University of J ewis h Studies. He pointed out to the members of the gr oup that their comments Indicated that In th e ir c o ntact s with such o rgani z ation s as the Black Student Union and the United Mexican Association of Students, It had always been taken for granted that the J ewish students had a strong Identity as Jews. Just as Black and Mexican students wanted to establish ethnic study programs to help them learn more about their own cu It u r a I heritage and their history. Jewish students needed to know about their own heritage and their history. Black and Mexican students had already Indicated· that they would pursue Black and Mexican ethnic studies on their own and did not need outside help. This made It desirable that the radical Jewish students create a program which would meet the unique needs of Jewish students and not necessarily those of students of different ethnic backgrounds.
The sixty participants In this meeting received the Idea of the Free University of Jewish Studies enthusiastically. Many of them confirmed that they knew nothing about Judaism and they had discovered that this was a handicap for them In their contacts with other students They wanted to know If this University could be their own rather than the creation of a group of adults who might be associated with the Jewish Community Center, Hillel or some other Jewish organization The center director suggested that the Free University be completely In control of the
(Continued on Following Page)
New Year Greetings
Prom
Concord Manufacturing
Corporation - CHAINS -
lN Baur ·S&reei Proffdenee. B. I .
'61-lnt
GREENVILLE INN
FAMILY RESTAURANT RTE 116 GREENVIUE SOUTH OFF RTE 44
ITALI/\N & AMERICAN FOOD OPENU NOON
~ FaclllUcs For Up To 40 ,-,.,
36 Smith Avenue Smithfield 949-9819
Holiday Greetings
New Year Greetings
Maurice C. Smith Co., Inc.
RUBBER STAMPS
Complete line
169 Dorrance Street 421-1064
New Year Greetings
I.U0:8 I, O'BOUBKE Eledrleal Con&rador
1u Vinton st.. ProYlclenee UN 1-63%6
HAPPY NEW YEAR
COLONIAL BEAUTY SHOP
13' Park Aft, cran.&on
WI 1-0761
Best Wishes For
A Happy and Prosperou,
New Year
Edray ' Whirlpool Service
1808 Smith Street 231-6730
New Year Greetings
from
UNITED CAMERA, INC.
297 Elmwood Avenue
BEST WISHES FOR A JOYOUS NEW YEAR
HELEN OLEVSON 2 Wayland Square
Best Wlahea Por The New ' Year
Providence Watch Hospital 69 Dorrance Street, Providence
HAPPY NEW YEAR
TIFFANY WIGS • Barrington • Pawtvclcet • East Providence
• Newport • Cranston e North ICingst-n e Midland Moll
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
Dick Cranston Ford Sales, Inc.
621-4487
Rte 2 (Next to Bostitch), East Greenwich TU 4-4000
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
FROM
JORDAN and RITA REUTER Mike, Bruce and Lynn M.
46 Rolfe Street
781-3707
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS FROM
ARTHUR AND HUGO
THE NEW ENGLAND PICTURE FRAME CO. 845 Allens Avenue
Forme,lyof 62 Charles St.
-New Year Greetings
NEW YEAR GIIHTINGS lrom AUIUIN l'IUITIAND ,2...,_s_, <;n,M-
HANSON'S WI 1-1319
OF BARRINGTON
NEW YEAR Om!:ETINOB New Year Greetings from
MR. and MRS -SEYMOUR LADD
ECONOMY and FAMILY
ol PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. Ladd's Music Center
East Sicle-421-150S 51 Silver Spring St. and
Provide,- Plaza Garden City Music Center
421-2835 Cranston--942-1160 .
New Year Greetings
JACKSON CHAIRS, INC. Folding Tables - Chairs - Coatracks
China - Glasses - Silver 11 Lombardi Street WI 1-0740
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
SNO-WHITE CLEANSERS 156 Gansett Avenue CNH11ton
WI 2-6820 1!
' . BEST WISHES POR THE NEW YEAR
Valley Wholesale Grocery Co., Inc. Valle:, Farm, Ubb:, Food and Del lllonte Proclacta
BAY STREET WEST WARWICK
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
D. SCIOTTI & CO. 1155 Westminster Street GA 1-7699
r ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: National Conference
of Christians and Jews 221 Waterman Street, Providence
E.dends New Year GrNtings Wifl, The Sincere Hope That The Year 5731 • 1970-1971 Will Iring ,..,oco And Understanding To All Peoples 0, The World
NEW YEAR GREETINOS
RUTH'S APPAREL
764½ HOPE STREET
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
ROYAL CROWN BOTTLING CO.
101 Jefferson Boulevard
Warwick, R. I.
OUR BEST WISHES
DE 1-(030
FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
'\
J. ;
A Free Jewish University (Continued from Preceding Page) students. By this he meant that the students should set up the curriculum, choose the faculty and select the place In which the classes or seminars would be conducted. At the second general meeting the Hillel director and the Center dlreetor , who were Invited · as resource people. assured the participant 3 that they would serve only when asked by the students- of the Free University to do so.
After a further meeting at which a hundred students attended (many of them from other campuses In and around Los Angeles) the Idea emerged that coordinators be chosen from members of the group to discuss In detail which courses might be requested, what kind of faculty might be required and where the courses would be conduct"ll. Organizing the Free University then became the major task of the group which now called ttsself the Radical Jewish Commwilty.
At first meeting between the coordinators, the valley Hillel director, the Hillel director of UCLA ( who had been Invited by the student coordinators to help In the organization of the Free U nl ve rs It y) and the Center director, the following courses were suggested:
1. Israel, Its History and Its Contemporary Problems; 2. Contemporary Thought and Jewish Tradition; 3. The Jewish Cultural Arts; 4. Socialist Theory and Jewish Thoughts; 5. World Jewry and the World Press.
At t this meeting registration de t a 11 s were arranged and potential faculty was discussed. ln addition the students requested that space be made available to them at the Center. Another general meeting for purposes or student referral was planned. A week later approximately thirty students attended the third general meeting; all of them reg I st er ed Cor the various c I asses. The coordinators indicated that there were other potential students who were Interested In enrolling In the Free University. Although five classes were ottered, students registered for only four of them, and one, World Jewry and the World Press had to be dropped. At this meeting It was reaffirmed that the students would control the Free University and that each class would be limited to 20 students since more than that would hamper free discussion and free exchange of Ideas. The target date for the Initiation of classes was set two weeks alter the meeting.
At this general meeting, strong sentiment was expressed that the students themselves serve as faculty. This Idea was not challenged by any of the res ou re e people who were present . A week later, however, three of the coordinators consulted with both the H1llel director and the Center director about possible faculty that might be Invited to teach at least a few sessions at the Free University. Both at the planning m eetlng of the coordinators· and at the ge_neral meeting where the registration occurred, It was agreed that the students would pay a nominal registration fee ($2.00 per course) and that the Free University would pay to the Center a $5.00 rental fee for each course that was conducted In the Center.
The courses actually began ln the second week of July and continued for ten weeks. Each course had an adequate registration, with an average enrollll1'!nt Of 15 per class. The course "Socialist Theory and Jewish Thought" had the greatest enrollment; however, the attendance In this course gradually dwindled whlle the attendance In the other three courses remained consistently high.
All of the classes were loosely structured. Plans were made from week to week and members of the class began to request that more outside faculty be recruited to help In the teaching of essential facts related
(Continued on Following Page)
/
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 19'10 Z3 He~ald subacrtbers comprt~ excellent results, advertise In the
an active buying, market. For Herald. Call 72.f-0200,
New Year Greetings
EVEREADY ELECTRIC
5 Brow Street, Barrlna1on
CHerr:, 5-781%
New Year Greetings HAROLD E. BEAUDOIN
Insurance 81 Taunton A•eaie
East PrOfideace 434-4000
A Happy New Year FRATUS
Brake & Wheel Service Inc.
NEW YEAR GREETINOS
Ba. B RADIO
138 Randall Street (At North Main Street)
AND SPORTCENTER
561 Smithflelcl Ave.
Pawtucket PA 2-0909
DYKEMAN ELECTRIC CO. 5t Pl:,moath Road East Providence
GEneva a-,350 Extends Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
ORE!rr'INOS . AND BEST WISHES .
FOR THE NEW YEAR
M & M Transportation Co. EAST PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
MEADOW NURSERY & GARDEN SHOP
311 Sowams Road, Barrington MAL DeSISTO, Proprietor
COUNTRY CLOTHES, INC. MADEMOISELLE, INC.
24S-2664
591 Main Street East Greenwich, R. I. TUrner 4-4430
Extend Best Wishes For A Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, HEALTHY NEW YEAR
MR. & MRS. GERALD S. GOLDSTEIN & JILL
FOUi COIINEIS HOXSIE ,:: ~ 1$50 WAIWICIC AVINUE ~. ~-.
••-:•a •••-~-~ 4ff Wlllffl AVENUE ~
IJVEISIDE •
MARIO N and PA TRICIA fr om
VIA DA VINCI BEAUTY SALON
121 WAYLAND A VENUE WOULD. LIKE TO WISH AU THEIR
CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS A VERY HAPPY, HEALTHY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
FROM
831-9664
·WATERMAN ENGINEERING CO.
Civil Engineers
and Surveyors
450 No. Broadway East Providence
GES-5775
I
I )
n '
24 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 19'10
. 'Herald subscribers comprise excellent results, advertise In the an active buying market. Por Herald. Call n~200.
MRS. CORA GOLDMAN 185 Chaee ,benae
MB. and MRS. -MILTON GOLDMAN
Mauaebw,eUa Happy New Year
MR. and MRS. PAUL GOLDSTEIN
MR. and MRS. MAX TIPPE
20 Sparrow StrNt Wish Relatives and Friends
A Happy and Prosperous New Year
Happy New Year
Max Cunan 155 lancaster Street
Dr. and Mrs. Alton J. Curran 99 GALLATIN STREET
Extend Best Wishes For a Happy-New Year Dr. and Mrs. Robert L Curran
MR. and MRS.
ISRAEL MOSES 205 Merrymaunt Drive
Warwick
Wish All Their Friend
And Relatives
.
IZAK BERGER ' 65 Mitchell Street
Providence
Wishes All His Friends
And Relative+
A Happy, Healthy
And Prosperous New Year
A Happy And Prosperous
New Year
DR. and MRS. JOSEPH J. FISHBEIN and OillDREN
SHARI LYNNE, KEITH JASON, JANNI RAE, AMY JIU 152 President Avonvo, Providence
EXTEND BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO THEIR FRIENDS ANO RflATIVES
Extend Sincere Best Wishes For A Happy New Year MR. and MRS. S. LOUIS KESSLER
and son, ROY DR. and MRS. BERTON J. KESSLER
and Children, Sherri Ann, Scott Lerner Ronni Lynn and Mitchell David
MR. and MRS. IRVING ACKERMAN ARTHUR 28 Fisk Stroot
MR. and MRS. EDWARD D. ROTMER MICHELLE and GREGORY
141 Robson St, .. ,, C,anston
DR. and MRS. HARRY E. PASS JODI and LORI
! I PNclence C.Urt, Warwick
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. BEN ASKINS of 93 Ovorhill Road, Providonco
and Daughter and Son-in-law
MR. and MRS. FRED MARGOLIS and Grandson, Scott
of 7 Carroll Avenue, Newport
Extend Best Wishes To All Their Friends and Relatives For a Happy and Healthy New Year
Sincere Wishes For A
Happy, Healthy and
Prosperous New Year
Senator
Harold C. Arcaro, Jr.
I_
Yadin Describes . New Temple Scroll
By YlGAEL YADIN (~neral Yadln, Israel's leacttng archeotoglst, describes The Temple Scroll, which came Into Israel's possession after the--SixDay Wa_r.)
•ri• THE INTRINSIC Importance of
the so-called Dead Sea Scrolls has been heightened from the moment of their flrst discovery to this very day by events relating to their discovery, purchase and contents. Although these additional ~edients have no scientific significance, the Incredible nature . of strange cotncldences has added to public Interest In the scrolls both In Israel and the world at large.
It Is my great pleasure to announce the unrolllng of still another scroll, one which came Into our possession In the midst of the ' Slx-Day War, a day after the battle of Jerusalem eaded. Again, the Importance of this scroll was fUrther enhanced, for many of us, by the symbolism of two of Its main subjects: the rules of mobllh.atlon of the "children of Israel" when threatened · by multitudes of enemies, and a detailed
(Continued on Following Pac,,)
A Free Jewish University (Continued trom Preceding Page)
to the content of each course. Many class members recoentzed that without more expertise Input, they were simply "pooling Ignorance." When the courses first began, the planning on a week to week basis proved unsatisfactory to most of the students and they held meetings after class and tried to develop plans at least three, four, or five weeks In advance. More requests for help w-,re made on the resource people, m alnly to the Center cttrector and the Hillel director; fortunately the re.source people were able to "deliver" s u ff I c I en ti y competent cuest lecturers and teachers to help the classes to remain stimulating and exciting. In effect, all of the courses were survey courses, but each had the value of exposing a number of Jewish college boys aad girls and some Jewish adults to Jewish thought, philosophy and culture. The final result was that they wanted more courses, ottered In a more systematic way.
A core group Is presently planning to extend the Free University Into the Fall. They have agreed to continue with the same four courses that were begun during the summer but they have also agreed that the courses need to be structured with a more specific curriculum and with s p e c If I c faculty to handle material with which the students are not famillar . The core group, a s w e 11 as students who participated during the summer, have In addition agreed that the students need to be more selfdlsclpllned; that ts, they as students must be engaged In s p e c If I c study of specific material. There Is a consensus among the students that Jewish Identification through the route of Jewish studies does not come e a s y and to achieve -this Identification, serious efforts must be exerted on the part of the participants. The H111et director and Center personnel have stlRUlated that they will serve as resource people only with the under standing that the Free University beiongs to the students. To be effective It must remain with the students.
This seems to 1>e a program Idea that appeals at least to some Jew Is h students who have
. detected a serious lack In their past experiences and who understand that only a deeper knowledge can lead to a more posltlve Jewish Identification. In a larger sense, these Jewish students may recognize that they have learned something from their black and brown brothers and sisters: such learning must be reinforced by scholarship and hard work; It cannot be extended by wlshtul thinking.
Best Wishes For A
Happy Now Year From
MR. and MRS. JACK _K. STAUMAN
And Family
MB. and IIIBS. JOSEPH PERRY
... UIT)' 444 Meahan&leat Valley Plnry.
Cramten Extend Best Wishes For
A Happy New Year
MRS. JOSEPH COHEN
22 Sparrow StreeJ Providence
Wishes Everyone A Very Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
MAX J. RICHTER ... , .. uy
550 Wayland Avenue
Wish Relatives and Friends
A Happy and Prosperous
New Year
MRS. DAVID ISSHUS And Family
211 Waterman Stroot
Wish All A Happy And Prosperous Now Year
THE SILVERMAN FAMILY
ol East GrNnwich
Extends Best Wishes For A Happy. Healthy
And Pr-ous New Year
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
MR. and MRS. JOSHUA LEOfT
5 MIUER STRHT
SEEKONK, MASS:
MR. and MRS. JOSEPH L DRESSLER
and Their Children
150 Fowler Avonuo Pawtucket
Extend Best Wishes For A New Year Of
Peace and Happiness
GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES
FOR A NEW YEAR OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS
AND PROSPERITY TO MY EMPLOYERS, FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
JULIE GAINES
Best Wishes For
A New Year
Of Peace And Prosperity
from
MR. and MRS.
- RICHARD J. ISRAEL
and Family
LYMAN · J. WILLIAMS and Family
Wish Everys>ne A New Year Filled With
Happiness and Peace
.C.ANDIDATE FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 4 - DEMOCRAT
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2, 1970 25
NEW YEAR GREETINQ8 Yadin Describes New Temple Scroll For news of your organtza. tlon; read 1be Herald.
~~:~ Traditional Young Men's Merchand18e
U9 Mathewaon St. BAB.VEY . A. KAYE
WITH BEST WISHES _
FOR A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH AND HAPPINESS
CABCO Engineering Co.
96 BAYLEY STREET
PAWTUCKET, R. I.
· ALPINE Auto Body, Inc.
Body Repairing and Painting
416 Fountain St-t 421-6770
24 HOUR TOWING
Best Wishes For The New Year
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
JOHN LONGO; INC. Peeled Potato Service
Cole Slaw and Salads
Wholesale
~ (Contlllll8d frllffl Preceding Page)
description of the Holy City and the Temple.
· I cannot at this stage disclose how this scroll came Into our hands, lest I endanger the posslbUlty of acquiring turther scrolls. This episode, when recounted, wm appear llke a tale from the "Arabian Nights."
The scroll had been kept by Its Ulegal pooses.sor In most unsuitable condition. This ·unhappy environment caused some deterioration, which was
, added to damage suffered In the last two thousand years In one of the Qumran caves. Its prompt
- unrolling and the treatment It received against tuture decay have spared considerable parts of one of the most Important scrolls ever discovered.
1be scroll, even In Its present. condition, Is the longest known - 8.6 meters compared with 7.3 meters of the complete Isaiah scroll, hitherto the longest In existence. Its end . Is practically Intact, as Is Indicated by the blank sheet at the very end. The beg! nn Ing, however , Is not preserved, but probably not much of It Is mlssll!C- I was able, nevertheless, to secure a continuous sequence of all the fragments and the well-preserved whole. Altogether the scroll In Its present condition consists of 66 columns.
1be scroll was copied by a skilled scribe of Qumran. His style, which Is the common socalled Herodlan, Indicates that the latest possible date for Its composition was the second part of the first century B.C.E. or the beginning of the fir st century c.E. In fact, there are good reasons to believe that perhaps the composition took place even earlier.
In addition to Its unusual length, the scroll Is also unique In content, which concerns four groups of subjects: a large collection of Halakbotb (religious rules) on various subjects, amonc
those cases In which our scroll decrees a ruling contradicting the one decreed by the sages of
Normative Judaism." ' our scroll Is more extreme,
In most cases, In all matters pertaining to l:leanllness and uncleanliness. Interesting examples. deal with- the rules of cleanliness concerning a dead
. man's house. _ The scroll also bas a special
chapter on the rules of burial and cemeteries: "Thou shalt not follow the customs of the gentiles who bury their dead everywhere, even In their· houses; thou shalt allot special places In thy land In which thou shalt bury the dead; these places thou shal fix between four cities." Here the author concerns himself also with the •economy" of cemeteries, lest he land be defiled. These
e li: am p 1 e s are sufficient to lndlcale the nalure of the scroll.
There Is ample proof on paleographlc grounds, spelling pecullarltles and so on that the scroll's scribe was a member of the Qumran community. But there seems to be even sufficient evidence to Indicate that the author must have been a member of the Essene sect, or at least belonged to the same apocalyptic circles which adhered to the special Qumran calendar, the Book of Jubilees, etc.
A considerable part of the scroll Is dedicated to prescribing detailed rules concerning the celebration of the various f es ti v a Is (such as Succoth, Passover, Day of Atonement and so on) and their sacrifices, mealo ff e r I n g s and other ritual practices. In addition to the normal "Festival of Weeks" (Shawoth-Pentecost) In which the bread of the first fruits was
(Continued on Following Page)
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762 Hope .Street
(305) 981-5055 A Happy New Year
BEST WISHES FOR THE HOLIDAY
Jolicoeur & Resmini Co., Inc. MARBLE TILE a, TERRAZZO
754 Braneh Ave. TE 1-%150
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LUMB MOTORS, INC. Oldsmobile
OUR QUALITY POLICY COSTS YOU NO MORE
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BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEA R
Providence Laundry Co. 1237 Elmwood Ave. (Near Park Ave. )
WI 1-4320
With Best Wishes
For A Happy and Hea lthy New Year
PA 6-0300
SQUIRE'S BARBER SHOP By Appointment If Desired
The Finest in Men's Hair Pieces and Hair Wea\'.ing
115 Waterman Street 621-1433
DAVID T. SHWAERY, Proprietor
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Providence, R.I.
421-709~ them ritual uncleanliness and cleanliness;, enumeration of the' ' r sacrifices and offerings according to the Festivals; a
CoPPtr CNh:d Slltl
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de ta II e d description of the Temple and the statutes of the king and the army.
Temporarily, since nearly half Its length deals with the Temple, I have named It The Temple Scroll.
In the section on religious rules, th~ author of the scroll groups together many rules which In the Pentateuch are dispersed In various books. The main Interest In this part of the scroll lies, however, In the many additional rules not · mentioned In the Pentateuch at all. These, In many cases, are clearly sectarian and of polemic nature. In some cases the subject matter Is also dealt with In the Mlshnah. But here again the lnte':'st In
C'_p ·· HEARING AID CENTER, INC. o,(__ /?(.IJ(J 764 HOPE STREET, PROVIDENCE, R.I.
1 , I We Extend Our Holiday Greeungs
. And Best Wishes For A New Year
Of Health. Peace And Prosperity
QUALITY BEVERAGES l?.11 Wk :J.o, .A JJ.,,,,, an1 P'°6fHl'OIU
n,,, 1j.., Cott BottliOCJ Co. of R. t.
THIS YEAR GET ACQUAINTED WITH
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When you add to these all the fine national and t9gional brands we carry that bear the@ Kosher symbol, chances are no supermarket offers more.
These are just some of A&P's fine kosher products:
Tu ~lhetti .,_.,,_ Mayonnaise Jellies Noodles Coffff Candy Jama Dairy Foods
List of A&P, Ann Page Varieties
l>et•'l•nts Canned fruit Drinks ComOH Macaroni Drink Mires Salad Ores1in1s Olives Olhle Oil Honey Pourable Dre11in1s
Syrups Vlneaar Mustard
- No Calorie S-ener Extracts Puddl111s Spices L- Calarie Food1 Rell1hes
Come 'to A&P. Try our products. Every one carrie.,s a money-back guarantee of complete satisfaction.
BECAUSE WE CARE. ____ _
' ., '
\
, <
:,1. , l
26 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
RED BRIDGE CAR WASH
2209 Pawtudcet Avenue Eaat Providence
Cahoon's Refrigeration Service Co.
Frigidaire Equipment 430 North Broadway
East Providence ' 434-3543 434-4145
Best Wishes For A Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year
24 Althea & Dexter Sts. Prov. 7, R . I .
UN 1-9292
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
New Year Greetings
MT. PLEASANT ALUMINUM PRODUCTS
292-296 Academy Ave., Prov.
861-7740
New Year Greetings
RUFFUL'S RESTAURANT
208 Wayland Avenue Providence
GA 1-2712
.sg_a~RiET FURNITURE COMPANY
Ht,'TTElt ITlt."IITUU Ar / ,OFF-IC l'ltl(.l:."i
WARWICK 747 Allt.,ORT ROAD
739-3686 UST PROVIDENCE
SIS TAUNTON AVE. AT SHO,,ERSTOWN
438-5100 A HAPPY NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
Greetings and Best Wishes For A Happy ~ew Year
THE CHINA INN Speclallzlnar In Exotic Chinese Food
HO 7-8916 Orders put up to take out
PETER CHIN, Proprietor 90 Rolfe St.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
ELIZABETH CANDY SHOPPE 708 PARK AVENUE, CRANSTON
461-9625
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
Cran•ton
NEW ENGLAND TOWEL SUPPLY 20 RHODE ISLAND AVENUE
PAWTUCKET 723-5'98
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
BEECROFT
(14:tJRoit Where the Prqmise Is Performed
333 NIANTIC AVENUE Providence-Cranston Line
.\ LL COOi) \\ ' ISH ES FOR .\ HAPPY
. ,,u l'ROSPEROL'S 'ff\\.' YEAR
YMCA
944-2500
PROVIDENCE CENTRAL DIVISION
160 BROAD STREET
PROVIDENCE
331-9200
I I Yadin Describes New Temple Scroll_
(Continued from Preceding Page)
pffered, the sc~oll decrees the celebration of two additional festivals of the same nature -that of the .new wine, and that of the new oU, each to be celebrated 50 days after the preceding one.
From many aspects - and definitely from the space dedicated to Its description -the most Important subject of the scroll · Is the Temple. Actually, this Is not really a description of the Temple, but rather detailed commandments to build It, foJJowlng the manner and style of Exodus XXV, ff., dealing with the Tabernacle. Thus our scroJJ differs from all the hitherto known ancient sources concerning the First, Second and Herod's Temples (I, Kings; Chronicles; Ezekiel; the Jetter of Arlsteas; Josephus, and the Mlshnah).
It appears that the author of the scroll endeavored to supply the missing Torah concernllll!'. the Temple, which Is alluded to In I Chronicles, xxvm, 11 ff: "TI,en David gave to Solomon his son the pattern of the porch (of the temple) and of the houses thereof, and of the treasures thereof," etc •••• "all this" (said David) "have I been made to understand In writing from the hand of the Lord." This missing Torah must have tantalized the ancients and It's qlllte likely that efforts were made from tlme to time to supply It. Indeed, (as I am reminded by Prof. s. Lieberman) there Is a very curious reference to such a scroll In the Palestinian Talmud (San h ed r In 29a) which was ascribed to Ahltophel, who was d Iv I ne 1 y Inspired when he delivered It.
The scroll's Temple Is not, strlctiy speaking, the eschatologlcal "ready-made," God-bllllt Temple which Is the subject - Inter alla - also of the Qurnran Pesharlm. In fact, a badly preserved part of our scroJJ, which needs much further study, seems to refer to the scroll's Temple as the one to be built until the day "that I shall create Myself My Temple;" It Is the author• s prescription for the man-made Temple as ordained by God and rendered - Uke the rest of the ·scroJJ - In God's words: "Thou shalt make a second court," etc.
At the same time It can be assumed that the sect believed that the fllture God-built Temple would be erected according to that plan. Since the plan of the Temple (particularly Its courts and ancUUary buildings) does not tally with that of Herod's Temple as known to us, It ,Is quite ob1(1ous that those who adhered to It could not regard Herod's Temple as the one bllllt truly according to God's enjolnments. However, this aspect and the relation or our plan to the very sources dealing with the Temple (as well as the relation to the basically different-In-style "New Jerusalem" literature of Qurnran) requires much further thought.
The main Interest of the Temple sectlon' lles, of course, In the detailed prescriptions and measurements of the courts, the sacrificial technical machinery, and the procedure to be followed during the various festivals. We have here, for example, a grandiose desclptlon of the celebration or the fest of Tabernacles (Succoth) with the detailed description, with exact measurements, of the booths .to be erected for the chiefs of the tribes or Israel •
Considerable space Is devoted to the rules of cleanliness and uncleanliness to be observed In the city Itself. These apply, Jor example, to sexual · intercourse, to the lepers and the maimed, to the nature of the vessels with which offerings should be brought to the Temple, and so forth.
Another subject was ofl a highly emotional nature to all of us In Israel who shared the t@rrlble anxiety ,prevailing during the two weeks preceding the Six-Day War. •
This section deals with the . statutes of the king of Israel, Although It begins with a direct q u o t at I o n from Deull!!ronomy
(Continued on Next Page)
New Year Greetings
Beautiful NEW YEAR GREETINGS'
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Golf Course Rte. 2 & 102
PLAIN FACTS and FIGURES CHECK WITH US AND SAVE
N. Kingstown, R. I. CENTREDALE
PONTIAC 294-9859 Memberships
Aftllable Public Invited -
26 Putnam Ave., Cent. CE 1-6232
THE ALICE BUILDING THE BUit.DING OF SMART SPECIALTY SHOPS
WISHES YOU A HAPP}' AND PROSPEROUS
NEWYEAR
" All Good Wishes For A Happy And Prosperous New Year
Harris Lumber Company 546 Atwdls A\'enue Pro"idence, R. I.
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
McGrath-Hamin, Inc. 43 Bucklin Street
GA 1-7310
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
Carpenter & Wood Co., Inc. ENAMELS
1 S Cedar Street, Providence DE 1-0987
IMPERIAL LAUNDRY, INC. 56 Judith Street Providence
· 944-6414 Best Wishes Fo.- A Happy New Year
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Rhodes-on-the- Pawtuxet Cranston
60 Rhodes Place WI 1-2537
lall,oom and State Room completely decorated f• yovr wNldin91 ond portift
Best Wishes For A Happy "4ew Year
KELLEY METALS CORP. JOHN J. KELLEY, SR.
Best Wishes For A Happy New Yeor
LORGNETTES CO. 82 AIDRICH STREET, PROVIDENCE 461-4900
IOTTUD UNDl1 AuntoaTY Of fttl COCA·COU. COM.PA.MT IT
Best Wishes For A New Year of Happiness,
Health and Prosperity
from
THE OFFICERS AND MEMBERS of TEMPLE BETH DAVID
THE SISTERHOOD THE MOTHERS ASSOCIATION
THE MEN'S CLUB and the
USY
.I
GrNtings on the New Year - New Year GrNtings
AUBURN RADIO (!nd TV CO.
NEW SHANGHAI RESTAURANT
518 Pontiac Ave., Cranston American and Chinese Food
Radio - Phonograph - TV 267 Main St., Woonsodcet
CROWN SUPPLY CO., INC. 26 Silver Spring Street
861-6329 ' New Year Greetings
ALPINE TOOL &
ExJends Best Wishes to Our Jewish Friends and Customers
For A Happy New Year
FINDING CO., INC. 109 Summer St.
EL 1-7'82
BEST WISHES FOR A
Charles H. Wagner - Company ·
HAPPY AND HEALTHY • NEW YEAR and !t- Modern Sanitary Rendering
Co., Inc.
' . . Celestial Court Warwick
Wayland ·Square 421-6623
m_ 821-7568 - 821-3003
Nights 9'2-5009 NEW YEAR GREETINGS
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year Our Sincere Wishes
For A Happy.
Rogowicz & Tenczar Healthy and Prosperous
New Year
PAINTS WALLPAPER
Ivy Apothecary
GOVERNOR STREET
PROVIDENCE
UNlon 1-6663
REUBEN COHEN, Lie . No. 73 Registered Pharmacist
Hope Street and Rochambeau Avenue
GA 1-3047
DUNNE FORD SALES, INC. 705 Bmwood Avenue
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
BEST CLEA~ERS l'ick-Up and Delivery
1934 Warwick Avenue, Warwick 737-7979
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
ADMIRAL INN OUR FOOD IS OUR PRIDE
490 Mendon Road, Cumberland 725-8590
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
MAYOR A. EDGAR LUSSIER
City of Woonsocket
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Artesian Wells HOMES - FARMS - INDUSTRY
FAIRBANKS - MORSE PUMPS A.ND WATER SYSTEMS
KNOTTY OAK ROAD, HOPE, R~ I. CALI; 821-5422
FREE ESTIMATES
John Coyle & Sons, Inc ..
PEERLESS PRECISION
PRODUCTS co.
Pawtucket, R.I.
EXTENDS BEST WISHES
FOR A HAPPY, HEAlTHY
AND PROSPJ:ROUS NEW YEAR
-
' •••rl•• ••••• •••••••••• •• ••toooo 10 ooo100 '•• • •• .. 1A• .t. l • J tO •
~IIHHHl .. lllallllllRllll-lllHlllllllllll!i
I T ouro Synagogue; I I Natioa,al ·shrine I
NEWPOR'l' - In the picturesque city of Newport, Rhode Island, there stands an historic edifice, the Touro Synagogue, which testifies eloquently to the early settlement of Jews In America. It Is an unpretentious building, set back from the street, yet It Is so typically colonial that It attracts the attention and the admiration of all passers by.
In the Spring of 1658, Meen Spanish Portug11ese Jewish families arrived In Newport. Historians are not agreed as to the point of origin of these early Jewish settlers. Some are of the opinion that they came from Holland, others believe ·that they came from New York. The view most · widely held, however, Is that they came from Curacao, In the West Indies. This Is most plausible as trade was frequent between the West Indies and Newport In the 17th century and, no doubt, the sailors from Newport based merchant vessels,
(Continued on Next Page)
Y adin Describes New Temple Scroll
(Continued from Preceding Page) XVII, 14 ff., (lnctdentally, Deuteronomy Is heavily quoted In our scroll) It proceeds Immediately to the two main subjects of Interest to the author: the kl n g's bodyguard and mobilization plans - phase by phase - to be taken by the king when the uland of Is r ael" 1st h q, ate n ed by a war of extermination.
On the first subject, according to our author, God prescribes that th e king's bodyguard comprise 12,000 soldiers - a thousand a tribe, These soldiers must be without blemish, "men of truth, God-fearing, hating unjust gain." While some of the expressions and principles are borrowed from Exodus xvm, our Interest Is In the additions which reflect the political situation of the period. The principal duty of this guard Is to protect the kin~ and his wives "day and night' lest they fall Into the hands of the gentiles." Fear of danger from the gentiles Is paramount In this section. In another section, the scroll prescribes the death penalty for anyone who betrays the people of Israel and passes Information to the enemy.
The most Interesting part -also historically - refers to the mobilization phases: When the king Is aware of danger from an enemy who wants "to take everything which belongs to Israel" he should mobilize a tenth of the nation's force. If the enemy force be large, one-fifth of the king• s force Is to be called up. Should the enemy come "with his king and charlotry and great multitude," a third of the force should be massed; two-thirds should remain In the land to protect Its frontiers and cities Jest "an enemy band penetrate Into the country."
If, however, "the battle be strong," the king must muster half the total fighting strength and "the other half remain In the cities" to defend them.
Having read these · rules Immediately after the war, I could not help com mentlng at the time that here was an excellent description of actual defense measures preceding the Six-Day War In Israel, The parallel between the scroll's prescription for mobilization In the face of complete extermination and what actually happened In Israel two weeks before the war Is quite fantastic.
This Is, of course, a strictly personal and subjective reaction; the real Importance of this section Is that It reflects the true
- political and historical problems facing ancient Israel at the time the scroll was written. These rules are basically different from those In the scroll of the "War of the Sons of Light against the Sons of Darkness." The latter deals exclusively with the offensive eschatologlcal war, while here we treat with a defensive war against an attacklns, unnamed enemy.
• ¼ • I . , • J ' I I ',. J~,. I I J ...,;_
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY ·OCTOBER 2 1970 27 I I
New Year Greetings New Year Oreetln&a . J. V. EGAN BALP11 COSSOCK
flecfroplaters FLOOR COVERING
118 Richmond Street &a Smith street
G.A 1-67'8 421-8818 '
New Year Greetings
DAVIS CUT RATE STORE 75 Waahington St.
Best Wishes For the New Year
COURTLAND DRAPERY SHOPPE
• West Warwick V Alley 1-8989
New Year Greetings
Ms, Inc.
218 Thayer Street
Providence, R. I.
Gifts
Holiday Greetings
County Road Pharmacy, Inc.
Prescription ~ Delivery
Service
CALL 245-4482
221 County Road Barrington
445 Reaervolr Ave., cranston HO 1-5027
A Very Happy New Year
SAMMARTIN DIAMONDS HALF PRICE
1468 Elmwood Ave
MICHELETTl'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT /fa/ion
American
Food
MET ACOM AVENUE WARREN
245-9419
E,xtends Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
E. P. FOURNIER CO., INC. New England's No. I Rambler
Dealer 939 Newport Ave., Pawtucket 725-4556
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
READ & PURCELL CO. INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES
95 Blackstone Street, Providence
NEW YEAR GREETINGS FROM THE
331 -31 01
HENRY E. KA TES ASSOCIATES 469 Ancell Street Providence, R. 1.
MUTUAL HNEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CO.
New Year Grectini,(s
Notarantonio Bros., Inc. Ford Cars and Trucks - Sales and Service
1707 Mineral Spring Avewe, North Providence EL 3-2300
HALL'S DRUG, INC. Extends Best Wishes For
A Happy and Healthy New Year
149 ELMGROVE AVENUE PROVIDENCE .. R.I.
OUR NEW TELEPHONE NUMBER IS:
861-5200
PULLMAN PANCAKE HOUSE &. RESTAURANT 1209 BROAD STREET • 461-4445
Best Wishes For A New Year
Of Happiness, Health And Prosperity
MORRIS and PAT FISH, Owners
........ .., . --· ....... ... .......... - ·· .......... • : • ................... ... ...... ., J
,._ I~ ;;.'
-~
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28 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER Z 1970 . ,
A HAPPY NEW YEAR New Year Greetings REUABIE VENETIAN '
BLIND CO. F. J. FEIGHERY
1366 Brood Street 16 Edgemere Rood
461-2889 Pawtucket -BEST WISHES
FOR A New Year Greetings
S. B. WEXLER & SON 30Bed90!1Rd. HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
CHASE AUTO BODY WORKS
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
DREYFUS
HOTEL
Corner of Washington
and Mathewson Street
421-6343
OFF 15$9 ELM.WOOD AVE.
941-8000 AUTO AND RUCK BODY REP~IR
PAINTING, AND LETTERING
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
GANNON &
SCOTT INC.
"Refiners of Gold & Silver"
530 Wellington Avenue Cranston, R.I.
7B1-2230
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
efrain coiff eur Univenity Heights 861-5305
OUR VERY BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
ARMBRUST CHAIN CO.
735 Allens Avenue Providence, R. I.
EDGEWOOD LIQUOR Liquors • Ales • Beers • Wines
Open Evenings 'till 10 p .m. 87,Warwick Avenue, Cranston 941-2113
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
8EST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
MORRISON'S INC. IMPERIAL
WALLPAPERS KYANIZE PAINTS
478 RESERVOIR AVENUE 467-6818
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
R. I. METPRO, INC. METAL DRAWING
139 Jefferson Boulevard, Warwick 463-8200
ARROW
TRANSPORTATION CO., INC. 485 Prospect Street, Pawtucket, R.I . 724-9300
DAILY OVERNIGHT SERVICE
Refrigerated Service - Open Top Equfpment
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
Officers and Board of the New England Region
Rhode Island District of the
Zionist of
Organization AmericQ
I
Extend Their Greetings To The Entire Jewish Community
For the New Year /
CHARLES GARBER, President 1
THOMAS PEARLMAN, Secretary NORMAN ORODENKER, Treasurer
'B-.nffllllffllllllfflllllllll-a!
i T ouro Synagogue; ! I National Shrine ~ (Continued from Preceding Page) extolled the natural beauty ot the city and, the advantages of Ute In a tree society. These Jews, some ot whom were Marranos, wanted to start a new Ute In a land where they could Uve as tree men and women and practice the reJJglon ot their fathers without hindrance or tear. They believed this to be possible In the Colony of Rhode Is I and and the Providence Plantations because ot the assurance ot freedom ot reJJglon and liberty ot conscience promised by Governor Roger Wllllams to all who came within Its borders, They were turther strengthened In their hope tor religious freedom by the Code ot Laws drawn up In 1647 which concluded with these words: "And otherwise than what Is herein forbidden all men may walk as their consciences persuade them, everyone In the name or his God."
In such a climate ot religious freedom these early settlers hoped to resurrect their broken Uves and to become useful citizens In the New World and at the same time carry out the practices and traditions ot Judaism.
For a hundred years, the members ot the Congregation, few In number and modest In means, worshipped In private ho m es . But by 1759 the Congregation had substantially Increased to undertake the bulldlng 'ot a Synagogue, which would also Incorporate provision tor the religious Instruction ot the young. As this was an ambitious undertaking beyond the means of the community, an appeal was addressed to other congregations tor funds.
It Is Interesting to note that In the letter ot appeal to Congregation Shearlth Israel, In New York, reference Is made to the urgency of procuring proper facilities for e ducational purposes. In this letter, dated March 21, 1759, the Newport Congregation wrote, "When we reflect on how much It Is our duty to Instruct children ID the path ot virtuous reUgton and how unhappy the portions must be ot those children and their parents who through necessity, educated In a place where they must remain totally uninstructed In our most holy and Divine Law, our rites and ceremonies - we can entertain no doubt of your zeal to promote this good work.'' The appeal was successful, tor three months later, on June 30, 1759, a lot for the erection of a Synagogue was purchased, on what was then Griffin Street, from Ebenezer Allen ot Sandwich, Massachusetts. The architect selected tor the work was the renowned Peter Harrison. There Is no record ot his ever having asked for or receiving payment tor his work. It must have been a labor ot love to him. With consummate skill, he applied his great talents to his assignment and succeeded !If erecting a synagogue of outstanding beauty, dignity, and Impressiveness.
The Synagogue, built of brick Imported )'rom England, stands at an acute angle to the street. This ts because of the desire to have the Holy Ark racing towards the East, towards Jerusalem.
The Interior architecture Is ot classical c olonial style, Incorporating some features or tradlt,lonal Spanish Portuguese synagogues, Some s imilarity Is evident. between the Sephardi Synagogue that was erected In Amsterdam, Holland In 1675 and the Synagogue In Newport, Rhode Island, particularly In the seating arrangement and In the Imposing columns.
The columns which support the women's gallery and the celling are twelve In number and symbolize the twelve tribes ot Israel. The upper columns are Corinthian and the lower ones Ionic , each one being made out of a solid tree trunk.
Dr. Ezra Stiles, a Congregational Minister In Newport and president ot Yale University, noted In his writings , that the only furniture In the Synagoglle at the dedication, In
(Continued on Next Page)
SILVERMAN METAL CO. D711&fiow Senlee BUICK SERVICE
349 Eddy Street Clark's Auto Sentce, Inc. 751-4800 33 Seablll'Y St., Proridence
Extends Best Wishes WI 1-2140 For A Happy New Yeo, New •Year Greetings
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
LEPORE; 2a;~e,= NEW YEAR GREETINGS
& s ~ ,-,;'-'I ons 4, ~~
t'/t'Rn !'1~ CLARK &
tfNtt ~ta COOMBS CO. ,-
162 CLIFFORD ST.
CARPETS OF DISTIHCTIOU
Call 521-7333 PROVIDENCE, R . I.
1257 ChaJkstOM Awe., AWVlr.E.NCE
CITY TIRE CO. 210 ALLENS AVENUE
Authorized Rhode Island Distributor For DUNLOP TIRES e BATTERIES
521-2240 NEW YEAR GREETINGS
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
NEW ENGLAND EGG SERVICE 247 Jewett Street
$21-9170
NEW YEAR GREETINGS from MR. and MRS. HERMAN SILVERMAN and FAMILY of
Providence Sheet Metal Co. · Sheet Metal Work - Air Condltlontr,. - Heatln&'
Tile and Slate Work - Gravel Roofin&' 65 Blockstone Ave. 728-0290 Pawtucket, R.I.
Op<.·n Until 10 Ever) Niv;ht
Fashionable New York Lace Store PAWTUCKET, R. l.
\\' ish,·s It, Mam· Frie nds A Happy
And Prosperous New Year
GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
KUNZMANN CHAIN CO.
25 Calhoun Avenue Providence, R.I.
GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
MORTON SMITH, INC. and Medway Marine Corporation
General Insurance Agents
245 Waterman Street Providence, R.I. 02906
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
from
GEORGE WINKLER'S
MIDDLE STREET STEAK HOUSE
In the Heart of
Downtown Providence
Member of All Leading Credit Cards
Your Host, George Winkler
- For Reservations Call Ma 1-201 5
/'
/
II
Herald subscribers comprise an active buying market. For
New Year Greetings.
TOURTEUOT & CO., INC.
Harris Avenue
Providence, R. I.
·c•~ P-ONTIAC
co. . AUTHORIZED
. SALES • SERVICE • PAITS . "11' /•ere fou Get The Best Deal
I/ ,. .~ ll'ith thP Bes/ SPrcit-e .. ~15 Charles St., PA 2-5700
BEST WISHES
FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
ACE
HARDWARE
co.
12 WATERMAN AVE.
NO. PROVIDENCE, R.I.
Famous Name Domestic and Imported
Shoes
Pf111trtll
excellent results, advertise In the Herald. Cali 724-0200.
Best Wishes For Happy And Healthy
New Year
SUNDERLAND'S . s~
CHICKEN LOBSTER
Open 12 noon to 10 P. M .
Every Day Except Monday
COCICTAILS GROUP LUNCHEONS
•AnlES Girt & Pastry Shop
Reservations Call Tlverton, R. I.
624-9991
Sunderland's Dlntn( Room and Cocktails
Old Main Road
191 Westminster Mall
EXTENDS BEST WISHES
FOR A
HAPPY NEW YEAR
Our Best Wishes
For a
Famous Name Shoes Since 1911 136 WESTMINSTER ST.
Very Happy
and
Prosperous
New Year PROV., R. I. • DE 1-3541
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
PROVIDENCE PAPER CO. Printing Paper - Industrial Paper
Office Equipment and Supplies
160 Dorrance Street 421-7600
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A NEW YEAR OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS A.ND PROSPERllY
COOK LEAD HAMMER SERVICE
65 MASSASOIT AVENUE
EAST PROVIDENCE, R.I.
Best Wishes Fo; A Happy New Year
Clarke, Kendall and Bradley, Inc. INSURORS
ARTHUR E. DOMAR, ELLIOTT A. HOPKINS
JAMES A. HOPKINS, CARTER HANDY
1216 MAIN STREET WEST WARWICK, R.I.
' 821-2850
a- 12-11 ......... ~
II T ovro Synagogue; i National Shrine !!!
(Continued from Preceding Page)
1763, was the wainscotting-around the walls. 'nils was adequate seating for , a congregation that numbered, at that time, about 80 souls •
Suspended from the center of the celling Is a twelve branched candelabra. What appears to be four monlc heads can be clearly seen at the base of this candelabra. Four other smaller brass candelabra are suspended from the celling forming a rectangle around the twelve branched one. These candelabra were the gifts of Individuals as w e r e the four tall brass candlesticks on the railing In front of the Arie and the two on
· the balustrade of the Blmah. The Ner Tamld, the eternal light, was the gift of Samuel Judah In 1765.
other gifts to the Synagogue Include the two charity boxes that are affixed to the two columns at the entrance, and a clock which Is mounted on the women's gallery on the west side, the latter being the gift of Judah Jacobs of London, England, In 1769.
An unusual feature of the Synagogue and one which excites much attention Is the underground tunnel. The entrance to It Is at the center of the Blmah, where the Cantor stands and leads the congregation In prayer. Many theories have been advanced as to the purpose of this underground passage which never had an exit. It may simply have been used for storage, It Is suggested, however, that the early Jewish settlers In Newport, who were of Spanish Portuguese stock, wished to have a symbol which would serve as a reminder to their children of the persecution their forbears had endured during the Inquisition. At the same time, they would learn to value and appreciate the freedom they enjoyed In America. Underground passages where Jews assembled for prayer were a ·feature of Jewish life In Spain and Portugal during the Inquisition.
One of the prized possessions of the Touro Synagogue Is an old Safer Torah, over 400 years old, which Is believed to have been brought from Amsterdam, Holland. Dr. Ezra SU!es, to whom we are Indebted for much of the early history of Newport Jewry, records In 1763 that Reverend Isaac Touro told him that this scroll was then over 200 years old. The letters are beautlflllly w r I tt en and are completely legible, even at the present time.
Among the silver ornaments for the decoration of the scrolls are two sets of Rimonlm which are the work of Myer Myers, the famous pre-revolutionary silver craftsman. These are of outstanding beauty and of exquisite artistry. Of the three silver breastplates that hang on the scrolls, one was made In Galicia, Poland about 200 years ago, one In Germany, also about 200 years ago, and the third was fashioned In America about 70 years ago. The latter ts of beautttul design, having twelve semi-precious stones, with the name of one of the twelve tribes of Israel engraved under each stone, simulating- the breastplate worn by the High Priest of Biblical days.
Above the Ark Is a beautiful painting on canvas of the captions In Hebrew of the Ten Commandments. At one time It was believed that Gilbert Stuart
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970 29
Holiday
Greetings from
v4#§.wo'rlli TRAVEl
Street Floor Biltmore
331-1300 331-4700 ----------------Alice S. Byrnes
of
Jack and Jill Nursery School
And Kindergarten 117 Woodbine St.
Cranston HO 1-1880
Wishes Everyone A Happy New Year
New Year Greetings
Abby Construction
Company
889 North Main Street
331-4555
~c:."~· ~ ,CffH'fh &EA 11 467-7440 I
• Ai r CondltiOMd e Ample Fm Partin9 y
10 mlm.. fl"lffl Prow. '., Rte. 95 to Rtt. 37 ,12~~Rd. Happy
{ ... · New Year
New Year Greetings
ZETIER'S INC.
21 BROAD STREET
PAWTUCKET
PA 5-7070
Best Wishes For The New Year
To Our Many Friends and CUstomers
GARDEN CITY HARDWARE, INC.
41 Hillside Road Garden City
Cranston, R. I. 02920
Best Wishes For The New Year
Charles J. Whelden Company, Inc.
61 Pilsudski Street
Providence, R. I.
944-4000
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
MR. VEE'S HOUSE OF BEAUTY Specialist in Styling and Coloring
5 11 .Angell Street, Providence 621-11 09 John Vee
THE BUREAU OF JEWISH EDUCATION OF GREATER PROVIDENCE
76 Dorrance Street, Room 505 Providence, & L
Extends Best Wish.es For A Happy New Yeu to the Entire Community and Cordially Invites AU
To Make Use of Its Facllltles for the Advancement and Enrichment of Jewish Education
HAVING A PARTY?
RENT FROM
U-RENT ALLS Rear No. 1 Chapel Street, Lincoln
725-3779. WE EXTEND BEST WISHES FOR. A HAPPY, HEALTHY
AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
was the artlsf. But, during the current restoration program, the canvas was taken down for cleaning and the words "Benjamin Howland, Plnx, 1828," were discovered · etched on the frame on the back. Howland was a ;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~" cleric In the city of Newport for many years, and a man of many talents.
During George Washington's visit to Newport In 1781, a town meeting was held In the Synagogue. In 1790, Washington was the recipient of an address by Moses Selxas, warden of the Synagogue. In reply, Washington sent the famous letter "To the Hebrew Congregation In Newport, Rhode Island" which since has become the classical expression of religious liberty. In this letter,
(Continued on Next Page)
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
The MARTINIQUE RESTAURANT
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30 TIIE RHODE ISLAND ·HERALD, FRIDAY, OC"roBER 2, 1870 Por news of Israel, Jewish society, read the Herald. • .and
communities throughout the for some of the best bargains In world, local organizations and the Greater Providence area.
'
Happy Now Year
. CLARK ROWER SHOP
294 Thayer StrNt
421-6700
New Year Greetings
from
SPINTEX CORPORATION
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
FOLEY SMITH
Inc. GREYSTONE
RHODE ISLAND
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Lakewood Ha,y & Grain, Inc.
BUILDING MATERIALS
GRAIN
780 Warwick Avenue
Warwick, R.I.
467-8400
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
FROM
Gowns, Inc.
Gowns For
All Occasions
1383 Warwick Avenue
NEW YEAR GREETINGS CALUORl'S SHOES
557 Main Sheet F.ast Greenwich TU 4-4556
8840 Post Rd. NorUt Klnp&own · TU 4-WZ
New Year Greetings Wlll. MESSIER
TRUCKING Promlenee-Pawtncket
zt Mount Ave., Llneoln PA 3-3460
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
HOME FAMILY
LAUNDRY
49 HUGHES AVENUE Corner Pawtucket Avenue
and Pine Street Pawtucket, R.I.
723-4510
Interior Designers 27 Dryden lane
521-5804 Best Wishes For A Happy New Yeor
Brown's Auto Body Works
Collision Work
Auto Painting
lnsura~ce Appraisals
433 Broadway, Pawtucket
722-2119
SYD BROWN
Warwick 463-8938 New Year Greetings
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
OLD STONE BANK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
SAVINGS e CHECKING e LOANS
DICKEN'S FONTAINE'S Route, 1, Wrentham, Mass.
617-384-2000
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY,
HEALTHY 'AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
Our Sincere Best Wishes For . Health,
Happiness and Prosperity
In The Year S731
Congressman and Mrs.
Fernand J. St. Germain
LU I -·--1 IWII .... ' . I T ouro Synagogue; i I National Shrine ! (Continued from Preceding Pa~e)
W ashlngtoo wrote . "for happily the Government of the United States which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under Its protection should demean themselves as good citizens In giving It on all occasions their effectual support." A facslm Ile of this historic document ls exhibited on the west wall of the Synagogue. The words "to bigotry no s an ct Ion, to persecution no assistance,'' were not original with W ashlngton. They were contained In the letter that Moses Selxas . addressed to him. But W ashtngton was obviously so Impressed by them, for they seemed to eltJ)l'ess very forcibly the Ideals wblch he espoused for America, that he Incorporated them In his letter.
In 1946 the Touro Synagogue . was designated as a National Historic Site by the United States Government. This does not mean that the government pays for the upkeep of the Synagogue. The government does, however, send architects and engineers to make per Io d I c Inspections and to determine whether the building ls In good repair and structurally sound. The members of the congregation with their dues and assessments support the upkeep of the Synagogue and the Society of Friends of Touro Synagogue assumes responsibility for Its maintenance as a Shrine.
In preparation for Its BICent en n I al, which was Inaugurated with a special service on June 23, 1963, an extensive restoration program was und ertake n of Touro Synagogue. The Department of the Interior, National Park Service, was most cooperative In advising on procedures and techniques to be adopted In the restoration. It was proposed at first to remove the paint from the exterior of the building by sandblasting In order to ezpose the original red bricks, But, the National Park Service advised against It as the surface of the brick, after 200 years of exposure to the elements, would be severely dam aged In the process. The outside walls of the Synagogue have been painted yellow ochre and the doors and window frames chocolate brown.
To reduce the fire hazards, the fllrnace was removed from the basement and placed in a specially constructed vault In the Synagogue grounds. Pews which were put In about 60 years ago were r emoved and Windsor settees and chairs, 18th century reproductions, were Installed Instead. About 20 coats of paint were removed to determine the color of the first coat of paint that covered the woodwork of the Interior. As a result of the Investigation, the Synagogue Is now painted a warm grey. A carpet was laid both In the men's section and in the gallery, so as to blend with the color of the woodwork.
In the course of two centuries, the candelabra had become black from accumulated grime. At the suggestion of the National Park Service, they were restored to their original brass lustre_
Since It was declared a National Histrolc Site In 1946, .tens of thousands of people have visited the Touro Synagogue. Individuals and groups of all faiths have been inspired and Impressed by the simple, yet majestic beauty of this historic H o u s e of God. On Sunday afternoons throughout the year, and every day except Saturday. during the summer months, guides are present who give informative talks on the historical background of jhe
· Synagogue. President Dwight D.
Eisenhower visited the Synagogue on the first day of Rosh Hashona on September 15, 1958. He sat on the raised pew reserved for the presidents and officers of the congregation, and on which George Washington Is reputed to have sat. Robert Frost visited the Synagogue some time later. He Insisted on sitting on this seat as he said ~'Presidents and poets should sit on the same seat."
10UISE SIMONE ' BEAUTY SALON
185 Kearney St., C,a~ton Extends Best Wishes To
Our Friends and Patrons for a Very Happy Now Year
Best Wishes
For The New Yeor
Union Paper Union Transbag Co.
10 Admiral Street Providence, R. I.
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
R.lBOLT8-SCREWCO.
METAL FASTENERS J BCLTS • SCJ<E\\', •
:.ST! • -N 't.SM E:"1S -srtn. • su.1 :'lLCS :. " ' B~A~ • ALUM I NU"'
HOT c.Al.V,1.1'4IZ ED
OM ol New Enql,1nd's Ur9cH Stods of M~t.>I F•'Steners
739-9200 SO Pennsylvania Ave., Warwick _
Best Wishes For A Happy and Prosperous New Year
TOM'S FRUIT STOIIE 626 Moin St., Pawtucket
726-8815 -
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
KING AUTO PARTS CORP.
HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR
LATE MODEL WRECKS
PA 5-1298 935 Hl&'h St., Central Falls
Baney and Harold Fink
OUR BEST WISHES 1 TO ALL FOR A HAPPY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
Ill& I 819
DRESS SHOP 334 Westminster Street
Best Wishes For A Happy and Prosperous New Year
MJKGGMD!){ RHODE ISLAND'S MOST DELIGHTFUL RESTATJ RANT
INSKIP MOTORS, INC. 776 Elmwood Avenue, Providence
H07-9111 NEW AND USED IMPORTED MOTOR CARS
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
BEST WISH ES
FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
ANTHONY EMMA HEATING & PLUMBING, Inc.
72 GANSETT AVENUE
Cranston, R. I. WI 2-8510
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
VITI BROS., INC. MOVERS
COMMERCIAL AND HOUSEHOLD 361 Atwells Avenue Providence
831-3144
PENNSYLVANIA PETROLEUM PRODUCTS CO.
434 Allens Avenue Providence, R. I.
STuart 1-7400·
Greetings and Best Wishes for A Happy, Healthy pnd
Prosperous New Year
New Year Greetings
MAGUIR• -ROOFING CO. - DTAa&.ISHaD 1879
ROOFERS BONDED ROOFS SHEET METAL WORK _,_11 ......
a-i.. ,. -11o...PAwtucket 5-3394
Ill SPRING nun
BEST WISHES FOR A
HAPPY NEW YEAR
-iii -SALES & SERVICE
WM.N.HARRIS INC.
AIR CONDITIONING CONTRACTING
COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION
PAwtucket 3-3980 Ni9ht1 • Sun & Hol. PA WHO
21 COLFAX ST, PAWTUCKET
New Year Greetings
Gabermann Studio Photographers
Children, Adults and Family Groups
236 Westminster Street 331-S946
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
WALDORF TUXEDO CO. 28S Weybosset Street
421-762S 141S Warwick Avenue 463-9191
New Year Greetings
seth Lewis shoe 77-1 HOPE STREET, PROVIDENCE 274-7889
MR. and MRS. ARTHUR L. LEVIN
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
c. w. Moss· • ADVERTISING e ART e RETOUCHING
146 Westminster Street
421-S470
Providence, R. I.
- BEST WISHES-FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO OUR MANY
FRIENDS AND PATRONS
BALLOU, JOHNSON AND NICHOLS COMPANY
128 Dorrance Street Providence, R.I.
LABOR ZIONISLCOUNCIL FARBAND L Z. 0 ; BR. 41
POALE ZION WISH ALL CHAVERIM AND CHAVEROTH
A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
HARRY RNKELSTEIN, .CHAiRMAN, FARIANO BR. 41 ARTH.U~ KORMAN, SECRETARY AIBHT SOKOLOW, CHAIRMAN, BEN GURION BR. 41 B MAX PORTNOY, SEqlETARY HAHY RICHMAN, <;HAIRMAN, POALE ZION
ma'J tlie '/jea, o/ s131 Ring
.JJappinejj anJ Projperil'I
DeBLOIS OIL COMPANY
· For Dependable Service
Archives Of Nazi Crimes
By HARRY M. RABINOWICZ Condensed ttom CHICAGO
JEWISH FORUM A QUIET Georgtan-ttonted
house, Number 4 Devonshire Street, near Oxford Circus . and Regents Park, a district traditionally Inhabited by physicians, Is the home of the w lener Library, the repository of one of the most comprehensive · collections of data relating to Nazi crimes. Here are assembled over 60,000 books and pamphlets, 600,000 newspaper cuttings, 500 to 6 O O bound volumes of newspapers, 50,000 • documents relating to the Nuremberg war trials, and many thousands of photographs.
There are other recognized repositories of such material In the world. Notable collections are at Yad Vashem In Jerusalem, the Jewish Historical Institute In Warsaw, the Ryks Instltut voor Oorlogsdocumentatlc In Amsterdam, the Instltut fl1r Zeltgeschlchte In Munich, the Ylvo Institute for Jewish Research In New York, the Centre de Documentation Julve Contemporalne In Paris, and the Library of Congress In Washington. The other collections concentrate on local and national Issues, the Wiener assemblage ls mor·e universal ln scope, reflecting the alms of Its follllder. • ' The greatest service this
· ubrary can render to all and one above any other," declared Dr. Alfred Wiener, "ls to help people re a 11 z e that tolerance and understand l n g are one and Indivisible; that our task ls not merely to furnish weapons of truth to the Jew but to all that are victims of Injustice and oppression.''
In the Wiener Library are copies of the twenty-one editions of Hitler's Mein Kampf In n In et e en languages, Including Japanese and Arabic, as well as a "gift edition for newly-weds."
The Library traces the history of Hitler ttom 5:00 p.m. January 30, 1933, when he was sworn -Into office, until his suicide at 3:00 p.m. on Monday, April 30, 1945.
W rltten data are supplemented by recordings or Hitler's speeches. There are copies of "Der Stuermer" In Braille and Included Is a de-Judalzed edition of the New Testament. N~ Reich Bishop Mueller tailored the Sermon on the Mount to nt the Nazi credo and attempted to prove that Jesus "could not possibly have been a Jew."
In addition to the main works of Goebbels, Rosenberg, and other Nazis, there Is a volume containing the names on Hitler's black 11st, Nazi reference books, and year books. Das Deutsche Fuehrer LeX!con has pictures and biographies of all local Nazi leaders. A yellow badge In the shape of the Shield of David bears the Inscription "Jude." Among the exhibits are J ewlsh Identity cards, money used In the ghettos, examples of the wide diversity of malevolent Nazi propaganda, and even a picture book and games specially designed to Indoctrinate the minds of the very young. One such game, called Juden Raus, Is based on the snake and ladder principle lnvolvlni getting a Jewish family out of Germany In the fewest number of moves.
The Library houses records of the vilest crimes known to man. Volume after volume tell of dellberate exercises In murder
, and massacres. Aided by a contribution from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, a special department has assembled the stories of survivors. In one single year two hundred and fifty eye-w.ltness reports were collected. The Library possesses the seventy-page diary kept by Philip Manes, the last Jewish elder of Thereslenstadt.
Some of these reports came from the survivors of 'Auschwitz. Heroism as well as horror Is documented here. The daring and despairing revolt of the Jewish pr Is oner s In the Trebllnka extermination camp In 1943 Is vividly described In a report
(Continued on Next Page)
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY; OCTOBER 2, 1970 31
. W. B. Rose
'And Son GREE11NGS
Paln&en and Deeora&on .. Keel Cedar Dr., CramMm Wish To Extend New Year
Oreettngs· To All Their Friends and Customers
9U-5333 Sam Rose
HOLI0A Y GREETINGS
FEDERAL DAIRY
CO., INC. MILK-CREAM
BUTTER
83 Greenwich Street Providence, R.I.
781-3220
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
LINCOLN
LANES
40 TENPIN LANES
Higginson Avenue
Lincoln, R.I .
725-0323
AND &EST WISHES FOR
THE NEW YEAR
ATLAS CHAIN CO.
351-3055
HAPPY NEW YEAR
STANDARD
GLASS CO. 'AUTO GLASS
SALES & SERVICE
45 Acorn Street
Providence, R.I.
331-2050
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
ATLANTIC
COAL CO.
FUELS
OIL BURNERS
77 Pilsudski Street
Providence, R.I.
944-9000
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
East Providence Ambulance Co. Ambulonce and Oxygen Service
156 Warren Avenue East Providence 434-3S00
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
CHALET BEAUTY SALON -CREA T/VE HAIR STYLING-
79S Hope Street, Providence 831-6226
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
STANLEY ENGINEERING INC. EAST PROVIDENCE, R.I.
DERMODY, FOLTZ & PRAY, Inc.
acoustics 152 WARREN AVENUE EAST PROVIDENCE, R.I.
438-2040 BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
THE HEBREW BAKERS UNION LOCAL #45, PROVIDENCE UNIT
WISHES ALL THEIR FRIENDS A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
GEORGE SlRASHNICK, Presi<hnt AL BRODY, S.crotory-Treosurer
These are the bakeries ..;here you can buy union·made merchandise
Kessler's Bakery .. . 1883 Mineral Spring· Ave., N. Prov. Perler's Bakery ... 160 Bmwood Ave., Prov. Hope Street Bakery ... 727 Hope St., Prov.
Ben's Bakery . .. 981 'Broad St., Prov.
l ' <.
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32 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970 Herald subscribers comprlse excellent results, advertise In the
an active b)lylng market. For Herald. Call 724-0200.
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
CHELLEL'S
SUPER MARKET 156 COUNTY ROAD
- BARRINGTON, R. I. 245-4900
Holiday Greetings
AMERICAN-ITAL/AN CUISINE
1101 Park Avenue, Cranston
944-8849
Banquets - Weddings - Portie•
Accommodations For Over 400
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY HOLIDAY
J. L. MARSHALL & SONS, INC. GENERAL CONTRACTORS
560 York Avenue, Pawtucket 724-9350
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
Window Fashions, Inc. Southern New England's Largest Selection
of Window Treatment 1195 North Main Street 421-3955
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
MAJESTIC GIFT BASKETS Arnold J. Kleinman
33 Richmond Street 421-1978
With Best Wishes
For A
Happy and Healthy
New Year
BALLARD'S
p
100 ORANGE STREET 421-5494
A Fine Restaurant
Serving
The Finest of Foods
from .
people~e Saving• Bank•Truat Campany
DOWNTOWN PROVIDENCE • WARWICK EAST PROVIDENCE • WAYLAND SQUARE • WESTERLY
JOHNSTON • NORTH KINGSTOWN • COVENTRY SMITHFIELD • BARRINGTON ·
Members Fed,ral Deposit Insurance Corporation
Archives Of Nazi Crimes (Continued from Preceding Page)
which originally appeared In the Yiddish .paper Das Nale Leben on May 10, 1945-
The Wiener Library bas formidable dossiers on war criminals. It ts not surprising that this was of great service to Israeli chief Investigator, A. Salinger, of Bureau 06 of the Israel PoJice In preparing the marathon case against Eichmann.
Here are the damning details of the meeting In the former headquarters of Interpol at Grossen wannasee In Berlin on January 20, 1942; also the meeting on March 6 at Eichmann ' s office at Kurfurstenstrasse 116 which sealed -the fate of European Jewry-
The Eichmann dossier contains many ntes on known Individuals who have as yet evaded justice. On file . are the protests of Protestant and Catholic clergymen against the so-called "mercy-killing" by the Nazis of Incurables and mentally . defectives-
In many ways the Library has aided the survivors of the holocaust. It helped the government of Israel assess the value of former Jewish property In Germany. From the Issuance In 1947 by the High Commissioner In the Americanoccupied zone or Germany or an ordinance requiring restitution or Identifiable property, the Library bas focused public attention on the claims of Individuals and their right of compensation tor the suffering and privation, bereavement, and the Impairment of health- Currently, the Library keeps a caretul eye on day-to-day affairs In Germany_ From newspapers and periodicals Information Is gathered on the manifestations of Nazism or neoNazlsm In new guises.
The Wiener Library also traces the fortunes of notorious American anti-Semites.
or an Infinitely more positive nature are the data relating to Jewish communities the world over. There Is Information on the Jewish war effort, military, economic, scientific and political. The eight volwnes pubJished by the Nazi Institute for Research Into the Jewish question contain articles of specifically AngloJew Is h Interest such as "Benjamin Disraeli", 11The Jews In EngJish Literature", "Philo as a Historian", "Baruch Spinoza", "Goethe and the Jews", and "Richard Wagner and the Jews."
The Library owns many writings concerning the "Protocols of the Elders or Zion", Including the German, English, and French translations based on Nllus's edition, as well as the "Dialogue aux enters entre Macblavel et Montesquieu" by the non-Jewish Journalist Maurice Joly, published In Brussels In 1865. This enabled Philip P. Graves , the Constantinople correspondent of the London Times to point conclusively to the amazing similarities between
- Joly's work and that of the Protocols.
Alfred Wiener, the founder of the Library, was born In Potsdam on March 16, 1885. From 1905 to 1910, Alfred studied history, philosophy and Arabic under the orlentalist, Eugen Mittwoch. From 1911 to 1914, Wiener was private secretary to Paul -Nathan, writer and philanthropist, who directed the work of the Hllfsverein der Deutschen Juden (German Jews Aid Society). After the war, in 1919, Wiener Joined the Central Association of German citizens of the Jewish Faith (Central Verein Deutscher Straatsburger Judlschen Glaubens), the German Jewish organization which sought to protect the civic rights of the Jews and fight anti-Semitism.
Quietly · and conscientfousJy the Central Union began to collate relevant material and endeavored to refllte and expose the N azls In the elections of 1930 and 1932.
Meanwhile, Dr. Wiener kept In touch with Leonard Monteflore of London, David Cohen of Amsterdam, and Bernard Kahn,
(Continued on Next Page)
-
-A HAPPY NEW YEAR
HOLIDAY GREETINGS BUS ST~ MARKET
LEE ROTHSCHILD OtOICE MEATS
DECORATORS AND GROCERIES
92 Narragansett Ave. FRESH FRUIT
AND VEGETABLES Cranston 712 Admiral Street -781-2783 Providence, R.I.
621-8106
MONARCH STORE FIXTURES 1 WASHINGTON AVENUE 467-2500
EXTENDS BEST WISHES
FOR A veRY HAPPY NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
DOLAN DRUG CO. Prescriptions-Pay Telephone and Electric
734 Park Avenue, Cranston 461-1625
LION FOOD STORE
768-770 Hope Street
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
A. SAUGY, INC.
285 CANAL STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I.
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
MACK TRUCKS, Inc. 35 Corliss Street, Providence 861-3800
Service and Parts Dept, Open until 1 a .m. Mon.-Fri. Saturday 8 a .m. to 12 noon
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
DYEING AND CLEANING
INDUSTRIAL SHOE REPAIRING
FOR ALL YOUR SHOE REPAIR SERVICES
SEE PAT
124 UNION STREET (BETWEEN WASHINGTON AND WESTMINSTER)
BEST WISHES
TO ALL
FOR A HAPPY,
HEALTHY AND PROSPERO.US
NEW YEAR
FROM
WILLIAM H. FORD
I
Herald subscribers comprise excellent results; advertise In the an active buying market For Herald Call 724-0200
I
NEW YEAR GREETINGS from the entire Staff NEW YEAR GREETINGS
of
CAMEO-LLOYD, CAMEO-REGENCY CAMEO-WAYLAND
424 Lloyd Ave. 421-1975 60 Broadway 421-3586 500 Angell St. 274-4496
ANN WEllS, Proprietor
PAL'S RESTAURANT
4 1 Division Street East Greenwich
Rhode Island
884-9701
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
KENT COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN, INC.
AUTHORIZED SA°LES e SERVICE
PARTS
884-7200 Connecting All Depts.
88i Quaker lane West Warwick
Service Deportmenl Open 7 a.m. to 1 1 p.m.
Paramount Fountain and Restaurant
Supply Corp. 711 Branch Avenue
Providence, R. I.
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
R. I. CESSPOOL
CLEANERS
F. W. SLINEY & SONS 737-9177
140 Brush Neck Avenue Warwick, R.I.
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
SCHOOL BUS Rentals & Chartering
CALL 467-8844
UNITED TRUCK
& BUS SERVICE CO. 325 Melrose Street
Providence, R.I. 02907
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
BELMONT FRUIT MARKET Featuring Highest Quality Fruits and Vegetables
At Sensible Pric,es Narragansett Pier & Wakefield 783-4656
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
GIL'S HARDWARE 420 Smith Street DE 1-5674
WIT.H BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
NEWELL COAL & LUMBER CO. 140 Taft Strl'>et, Pawtucket, R.I.
722-7900
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
CANAL FURNITURE SHOWROOMS IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN PROVIDENCE
The _Finest Names in Modern
and Traditional Furniture 189 Canal Street, Providence
-OPEN EVERY DAY
Ample Free Parking
JA 1-4774
OPEN TUES., WED., THURS., FRI. EVE TILL 9 P.M.
WE WISH ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS A HAPPY AND HEAL THY NEW YEAR
Look Yaur Best With Fashions From
• Permanent Wave • Personalized Styling
315 WASHINGTON AVf. . WASHINGTON PARK SQ.
PROVIDENCE 5, R. I. WI lliams 1-9886
EAST SIDE DINER
360 WATERMAN STREET
Extends Sincere Greetings And Best Wishes }or A Happy
And Peaceful New Year
Archives Of Nazi Crimes (Continued from Preceding Page)
· director of the European office of the joint Distribution Committee In Paris.
Hitler became chancellor on the 30th of Jnauary, 1933, and on the 28th of February, he suspended the guarantees of Individual liberty under the We Im a r constitution. Wiener realized Immediately the "ultimate tragic fact of Instantaneous emigration" and sensed that the seizure of the Central's office was Imminent. In the autumn oi 1933 he left Germany for Amsterdam and In his room at the Park Hotel near the National Museum he laid the foundation of his library. "It became apparent," said Wiener, "that anti-Semitism was an Intimate part of Nazi doctrines and could not be Isolated from the rest. Therefore, ,we expanded and began to collect material on all aspects of Fascism."
Dr. Wiener was fortunate In his associates, among them Dr. Dav Id Cohen, professor of Ancient History at Amsterdam University. Cohen represented Dutch Jewry at the World Jewish Relief Conference held at London, In November, 1933, to discuss problems of the German Jewish situation. His proposal for the establishment of an office to combat Nazi propaganda was accepted by over a hundred delegates representing forty-ftve organizations In Europe.
Without delay and without publicity, the Jewish Central Information Office was set up secretly at Sarphatlstraat 18 In Amsterdam with a staff of four. Dr. Cohen's contacts were Invaluable. He put the office In touch with leading journalists In various countries. Material from sympathizers was smuggled out of Germany. The office helped to prepare the evidence for the defense of David Frankfllrter, the killer of the Nazi gaulelter Wilhelm Gustloff at Davos, Switzerland on February 4, 1936. It compiled an album of photographs viewing the catastrophic plight of the Jews In Germ any. Angered by the circulation of this Informative album, Goebbels Instituted an Inquiry Into the whereabouts of this "secret bureau."
In 1934, the Office prepared Der Klrchenstrelt In Deutschland Bible und Rasse (75 pages) which appeared without date or place. Its clearly documented thesis was that the Nazi racist theories-were a terrifying menace "not only to Jewry but also to all Christians."
Dr • Alfred Wiener was literally the moving spirit of the office. Detective, propagandist and administrator• he traveled often to London and Paris. By 1938, fifty-eight leading Jewish organizations were affiliated with the Central Information Office. It moved to larger premises at Jan van Eljckstraat 14, AmsterdamZuld. It published a periodical, "The Jewish Central Information Office" In English and German. By 1938, the Office had amassed 8,000 books and pamphlets, complete sets of newspapers and periodicals, over 500 photographs, and tens of thousands of press cuttings.
It was at this time that conditions In Holland worsened. The Dutch authorities were anxious to appease the Germans, the Dutch Prime Minister Colljn requesting the deletion of a 'description of November pogroms In Germany from a Dutch
, translation of Konrad Helden's book. Once again Dr. Wiener took the wanderer• s staff. In Jilly, 1939, he left for London together with the bulk of the library. His wife Dr. Margarete (nee Saulmann) remained behind. Dr. Kurt Zlelenzlger and a sleleton staff of three remained In Amsterdam. The office continued Its activities until_ the Nazi Invasion of Holland on May 10, 1940. br. Zlelenzlger perished In Belson. Another aid, Bernhard Krieg, died of typhus contracted In that death camp.
At 19 Manchester Square, once the home of a Victorian family, the Library, opened Its
(Continued on Next Page)
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970
Holiday Greetings HAPPY NEW YEAR
AUDETTE PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. ELGIN PHARMACY
138 Cowden St., Central Falls 632 Hope Street 723-3374 277-9154
Armored Car Service NEW YEAR GREETINGS Since 1924
INTERNATIONAL WALMOR REALTY
DETECTIVE SERVICE, INC. Real Estate
1828 Westminster St. 1624 Mineral Spring Ave. GA 1-1860 North Providence
New Year GrNtings 353-9889
NEW YEAR GREETINGS A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Palmieri Garage NARRAGANSETT
LUMBER CO.
62 CROADE STREET All Types of Building Ma~erials
WARREN, R.I. 550 Jefferson Blvd. Warwick, R.I.
245-4856 739-4000
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
THEROUX BROS., INC. - TRUCKING -
Daily Service: Boston - Woratster - Pascoag - Providence Providence: 331-8393 Woonsocket: 7 62-0700
NEW YEAR GREETINGS from
NATHAN SAMDPERIL, President
New England Metal Co., Inc. NEMCO
66 Branch Avenue Providence
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
YELLOW CAB CO. OF PROVIDENCE
315 Lockwood Street 421-5000 24 HOUR SE-RV/CE
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
CROWN HOTEL BARBER SHOP Garnet Street 621-4237
Hair Styling Our Specialty
JEAN TIERNEY AND STAFF of
Jeon Tierney Hair Fashions 182 Wayland Avenue 831-5666
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Best Wishes For A Happy Holiday
Conimicut Pharmacy, Inc.
739 West Shere Rd .. Warwick 737-6525
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Third Floor, Kinsley Building 334 Westminster Street MAnning 1-6704
Open Monday
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS ANQ PROSPERITY
ALRAE CONSTRUCTION CO.
33
65 WILD STREET 861-3150
RAY LANNI HAROLD KRASNER
I . I
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34 THE RHODE IS4\ND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2, 1970 . . New Year Greetings
MATTHEW J. GALLAGHER AGE!'!CY, INC.
Insurance - Real Estate 347 Main St., Pawt.
PA 3-1290
New Year Greeting_~
A. W. Harris
Oil Co.
America's Leading Lubricants
For Over 65 Years
EAST PROVIDENCE, R. I.
GE 4-3180
A Happy New Year from
Potter-Rathbun Organ Co.
463 Oaklawn Avenue Cranston 942-5410
New Year Greetings
ARNOLD'S OUTBOARD SALES
516 Broad Street G"- 1-3391
Holiday GreetinQs
PINKERTON'S, INC.
I SECURITY SERVICE INVESTIGATION
_DENNIS O'MADIGAN, Mgr. PROV. OFF, 10 DORRANCE ST.
330 HOWARO BUILDtNG 331-1543
, Best Wishes for A Happy New Year
THE
PLYWOOD
MART, INC. 1235 Wamponaag Trail
Route 114 East Providence
437-0100
BEST0 WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
PARAMOUNT SALES CO. INC. 276 North Main Street Providence 3, R. I.
WHOLESALE DRUGSUNDRIES - VITAMINS
LEAVITT-COLSON CO. ELECTRIC EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES
359 EDDY ST.
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MARBIL CLEANERS SHOPPERS'TOWN, TAUNTON AVENUE
EAST PROVIDENCE 434-615S
E. P. Anthony, Inc.
JA 1-8800
- DRUGGISTS - lJc. #225 -Extend Greetings For a Happy New Year
To Their Many Jewish Friends and CUstomers Over 65 Years at
ANGELL and THAYER STS., PROVIDENCE
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
DURASTONE CO., INC. Lincoln, R. I.
EAST s1·D-E NEWS SERVICE NEWSPAPERS MAGAZINES
HOME DELIVERY
194 CAMP STREET • PROVIDENCE, R. I.
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
,,, i ....
THE FAMILY AT
China ·palace Would Like To Take This Opportunity
To Wish All Their Friends A PROSPEROUS & HAPPY
NEWYEAR 332-334 Warren Avenue E. Providence
Archives Of Nazi Crimes (Continued from Preceding Page) doors on the 1st cif September, 1939; It occupied tbe ttrst noor and basement and had a staff of seven. Professor Toynbee, Commander Stephen King Hall, and Member of Parliament Strauss were among the first Englishmen to recognize the 11 b r a r y' s potentials. British Broadcasting Corporation In agreement with the Ministry of Information, then headed by Duff Cooper, reorganized Its overseas services. Kirkpatrick became comptroller of the department dealing with enemy and enemyoccupied cowitrles. Between 1939 and 1945, the Library acted virtually _as a branch of the Ministry of Information which defrayed eight per cent of Its budget . Its Intimate knowledge of key Nazts and of Institutions and propaganda methods was of the greatest use to the formulators of British counter-propaganda. Thousands of detailed Inquiries were dealt with. The Library was utilized also by the European, Empire and Home sections of the British Broadcasting Corporation, as well as by the British and Allied Gqvernment service Departments, especially the Belgian, Czech, Dutch, Luxembourg, and Polish Governments and Fighting French.
At the special request of the Ministry of Information the Wiener Library In October, 1940 published a regular bulletin "The Nazis at War," In June, 1940 the Pr ess and Information Department of the Board of Deputies of British Jews was Incorporated In the Jewish Central Information Office, a merger which brought under one roof reports from both Allied and enemy press on all matters pertaining to r acial persecution. In s p It e of the founder's reluctance, the Institution became known as the "Wiener Library." "I protested at first," recalled Dr. Wiener "but I was advised that It was more anonymous to have such a name. Above all we were still avoiding publicity. The smooth now of our Information still required us to be inconsptcious. ' '
With the Untied States entry Into the War on December 11, 1941, Switzerland and Portugal became the main supply sources of the Wiener Library. In 1945, Wiener went to Bermuda, the headquarters or the British Imperial Censorship, where American mall carrying aircraft and ships called on their way to and from Europe. He was able to select material from "captured lots." The British authorities needed and appreciated his work. The late Honorable David Bowes Lyon (brother of the Queen Mother), head of the British Political Warfare Mission In Washington acknowledged: "The Library had been of the greatest value to us.'• Sir Robert Bruce Lockhardt, a key organizer of British war propaganda, called the Wlener Library "the most useful of the outside sources of Information available to us.''
With the end of hostilities the Wiener Library entered a new phase. No sooner had the mllltary moved out than. the lawyers moved In. The Wiener Library, the arsenal of all essential facts regarding Nazism and Fascism, was of vital service to the War crimes lnvestlg·atlon. The conviction of Julius Streicher was secured largely through evlence • documented by the Library. Subsequently It acquired 30,000 documents with a total of 200,000 pages relating to the trials or the war - c r Im In als before the International and twenty military tribunals at Nurembetg. The Catalogue of the Nuremberg Documents (supplement) published In 1961 lists all the documents. ~·It Is thanks to the Wiener Library," said General de Baer, "that the criminal decrees, regulations, orders and circulars of the ·Nazl rulers were made known to this country." There Is also material on the trials (November, 1946 to August, 1947) of doctors charged · with
(Continued on Next Page)
-Best Wishes for the New Y eor YEU O GOlO
VIENNA BAKERY BANANA CO.
110 Maple Avenue Barrington
6 Harris Avenue 331-0803
245-2355 New Year Greetings
Best Wishes Happy New Year For The New Year
AUTOPARTS INC. PAUL GOLDMAN, INC. 2J Maaaaoft AYe.
East Providence Rte. 1, So. Attleboro, Mass. GE 8-ZlOO
.James J. Brady
A HAPPY NEW YEAR DA PONTE BROTHERS
FURNITURE CO. %45 Child St., Warren
· New fear Greetings
JOHN MAHONEY Plumbln&' & Heating 563 Broadway. Pro•idence
GA 1-1'86 CH 5-6143
GREETINGS
AND BEST WISHES
FOR THE NEW YEAR
- From -
14% Westminster Street GA 1-9837
Res. RE 7-4054
Best Wishes For A
Happy New Year
·ohnson's J UPHOLSTERY
1225 WARWICK AVENUE
WARWICK, RHODE ISLAND 02886
TEL. 463-7763
NEW YEAR GREETINGS ' A & F MAILING SPECIALJSTS, INC.
DIRECT MAILING ADVERTISING
781 -6360 11 Cypress Street
E. L. Freeman Co. PRINTERS AND STATIONERS Stores located ot: Providence, Powtudi..t,
~IKt ~~:;-;,.:c.:~i'' ,!:i.WpMt DE 1-3400 PA 5-3230 GE 4-7500
Jerry's Service Station 1101 Hope Street
Tel.: TE 1-9268
Wishes To Extend Greetings and Best Wishes For the New Yeor
Warwick
MOBILGAS ~--------'
SEASON'S GREXrINGS
AMERICAN CARD CO., INC. 35 BAKER STREET, PROVIDENCE HOpldns .7-8278
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
Tops Electric SupplyJ Co. 130 Point Street, Providence, R. I.
861-0695
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY,
HEAL THY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
MAGCO PLASTICS, INC. 4 MILL STREET, CUMBERLAND
PA 3-8200
BEST WISHES FOR A 1:iAPPY, HEAL THY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
GILBANE'S Fuel Oil Burners Heating
Industrial Domestic
F. GILBANE, INC.
191 Pawtucket Ave. PAwtucket 5-4422
r
New-Year Greetings
CRANSTON FARMS, INC. A Happy New Year
ASSELIN CHEVRO!,.ET CO. 137 Child St. Warren
CH 5-3500
"Where Quality Never Vories"
25 Lovell Ave., Cransto11
, 943-0600
Holiday Greetings
SPECIALTY CLEANSERS INC.
Call for and Delivery 1241 Smith St. UN 1-4844
New Year Greetings
G&G Glass Works
ENGRAVERS & DESIGNERS
Fine Cut and Engraved Crystal
319 Beverage Hill Ave., Pawt.
725-3029
Best Wishes For The New Year
MR. CARL COIFFEURS 236 Westminster Street
Alice Building
GA 1-1873
PIVE e .fURF
,. ' . AIR STATION
SKIH DIVING INSTRUCTIONS REPAIRS - RENTALS
•• ~·li.::.1~'l';h1 723-3044 51J2 Pawtucktt Avt., PAWTUCKET
AT PROY.•PAWT. CITY LINE
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
FREDDY'S PIZZA DRIVE-IN -==-
ovEN HOT GRINDEltS - ALL KINDS OP PIZZAS PHONE IN YOUR ORDER - 739-0255
1196 OAKLA WN AVENUE, CRANSTON
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
Beach & Sweet, Inc. GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS - SINCE 1868
CHARLES O. MORGAN - President and Treasurer STANLEY HENSHAW, JR. - Vice President and Secretary 524 Hospital Trust Bulldlns GAapee 1-9870
R. I. Supply and Engineering Co. Extends New Year Greetings To Their
Many Jewish Friends and Patrons
DUNELLEN ROAD, E. PROV. 434-7400
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
M & S INVESTIGATORS, INC. UNIFORM GUARD SERVICE · SPECIAL EVENTS
PLANT PROTECTION
CALL ANYTIME: 351-1670 36 KENNEDY PLAZA, PROVIDENCE
80 MANTON AVENUE Olneyville
541 ELMWOOD AVENUE 'Providence
80 NEWPORT AVENUE East Providence
550 POIIITIAC A VEN\JE Uanston .
2574 WEST SHORE ROAD Warwidc.
678 BRANCH AVENUE Providence
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
5941 POST ROAD North Kingstown
767 WARWICK AVENUE Warwick
111 SMITHFIELD ROAD NO<th Smithfield
800 WEST MAIN ROAD Middletown
575 NORTH MAIN STREET University Heighh, Providence
WASHINGTON PLAZA South Attlebon,, Mass.
With Best Wishes
For AVery Happy New Year
BAXTER
ELECTRIC CO., Inc. Established 1901
24 HOUR SERVICE
120WARREN AVENUE
East Providence
434-3081
\
Archives Of Nazi . Crimes (Continued from Preceding Page) conducting "medical experiments · on human beings" and the trial (August, 1947 to July, 19'48) of I.G. Farben, the German proNazi (capitalist).
While the sword o! Damocles (otherwise the Demolition Squad) hov e r e d over the Library, temporary accommodations were found In May, 1957 In an annex of the Royal Society of Arts at 18 Adam Street. A large number of books was stored In seven hundred old tea chests. During this period of uncertainty It was even proposed that the Library should be transferred to Germany. The Dusseldorf dally newspaper Der Mittag reasoned that Its removal to Germany would "demonstrate before the world the earnest Interest In a historically correct Investigation of a dark chapter In our history." Th Is echoed the view of Colloquium, a leading West German newspaper, that "the Federal German Government should give substantial support to the Wiener Library In London and that the Government should ask Dr, Wiener on what conditions he would be prepared to consider transferring his library to West Germany, possibly Berlin or Munich."
In July, 1958 the Central British Fund for Jewish Relief and Rehabilitation provided a new home for the Wiener Library by purchasing the leasehold of the house at 4 Devonshire Street.
After the war Dr. Wiener spent a good deal of his time lecturing to German university and high school students . He relinquished his position as director on the eve or his seventy-sixth birthday In 1961. Accolades came from unexpected quarters, Including former foes. He was presented with the Grand Cross ot the Order of Merli by the German Ambassador In London. Wiener died In 1964.
The small budget contlnually handicaps library activities. Yet It allows publication of a quarterly, "The Bulletin of the Wiener Library" and four catalogues. The library has a card Index of boxes arranged according to the subject as well as a box Index of names of authors. In addition there are a number o! typewritten bibliographies drawn up In reply to specl!lc Inquiries. There Is also an Index - to newspaper cuttings.
Catalogue series No •. l, entitled "Persecution, Terror , and Resistance In Nazi Germany" (published In 1949 and edited by Mrs. Ilse R, Wol() lists 1943 Items. Apart from the standard bibliographies, general histories, documentation and guides to research, It deals with persecution In Nazi Germany, the system of terror, Gestapo and political police, polltlcal and Ideological persecution, the Relchstag Fire trial, and persecution and resistance In Individual countries. There are sections on persecution In Germany, anti-Jewish legislation, expropriations and Nuremberg laws on ghettos. There Is poignant testimony to the heroism of the Warsaw Ghetto.
The second catalogue, entitled "From Weimar to Hitler Germany ·1918-1938," published In 1951 contains one thousand, one hundred . and sixty-six Item. Apart from the. standard books, It throws light on foreign policy, foreign relations, the League of Nations, Danzig and the Corridor. The rise of National Socialism Is traced step by step,
The third catalogue, German Jewry, Its History, Life and Culture, published In London In 1958, has three thousand, four hundred and thirty-four Items. It gives a clear picture of the various phases of the history of Germ any before the Hitler regime, Including the fight for emancipation, the religious and communal life, the manifold organizations-: etc. It throws light on the .Jewish· educational Institutions, religious Ufe, cultural lodges, and the participation of the Jews In law.
(Continued on Next Page)
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY . OCTOBER 2 1970 35 • . New Year Greetings
HOLIDAY GREETINGS FLORENCE'S NEPCO PRODUCTS CO. ALTERATION SHOP 11 Tenth St.
860 Park Ave., Crc;,nston ,
East Providence
781-4880 GE 8-4550
NEW YEAR GREETINGS New Yeor Greetings
CREST C. W. MILLER CO.
BEAUTY SUPPLY CO. Cesspool Cleaners
1 Hodsell St., Cranston 121 Mathewson St. 621-9842 461 -7330
I . NEW YEAR GREETINGS
KELLEY AGENCY
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
China Garden BOOKKEEP/NG & SECRETARIAL
AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT
Confidential - Efficient 11 Alexander Avenue
East Providence
Food Put Up to Take Out
2050 SMITH ST .
434-2026 CENTREDALE
CE 1-7079 If no ontwer ... 617 252·4455
Arden Engineering Co. MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS
GE 4-2500 60 Taylor Drive East Providence
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
JOHN J. HUDSON, INC. I Se"lce Road. Fields Pt .
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
COUNTRY INN - COCKTAILS -
Providence
438 Quaker Lane, Jctn. 2 & 3, Warwick, R.I . 828-9845
Best Wishes For A Happy. Healthy and Prosperous New Year
JERRY and MOE COHEN
The Twin Florists, Inc. 132 Gansett Ave., Cranston 942-8300
FOLGO FORD SALES, I NC.
CARS • TRUCKS
SALES - SERVICE
334 PROVIDENCE ST., WEST WARWICK
VA 1-8900 NEW YEAR GREETINGS
A Happy, Healthy
New Year
from
GOVERNOR and MRS.
FRANK LICHT and FAMILY
'
i,, (J
' \
' : \ f I I
I I . I I
36 THE RHODE IS~D HERALD, FRIDAY OCTOBER 2, 1970 . A Happy New Year . l>lew Year Greetings
SUPREME RUSSO BROS. Dairy Farms, Inc. Distributors ol
111 Kilver! Street • E. J. BRACH CANDIES J Warwick 567 Mineral Spril)g Avenue
- 739-8180 ' 726-1500
Chez olno;oe l.?eaul'J Salon
HOLIDAY GREETINGS McCOY COAL _& Oil CO.
"0.,, Service Is The Rea/ McCoy"
213 B,oad St., Cumberland 722-1920
289 Thayer Street .
Providence, R. I.
331-0303
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
New Year Greetings
NEIL'S HAIR FASHIONS
HAIRPIECES SALES & SERVICE
80 BURLINGTON STREET (OFF HOPE STREET)
861-1313 OPEN TUES. THRU SAT.
& THURS. EVE
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
WHITTEMORE
& ASSOCIATES Consulting
Engineers
1 230 Greenwich Avenue Warwick
737-7362
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
WIGWAM
Sport Center
1385 Mineral Spring Avenue
North Providence
353- 1260
FIRE ESCAPES • IRON & WIRE
FENCES
ORNAMENTAL
IRON WORK
IRON, BRASS and ALUMINUM RAILINGS OF All KINDS
469 Wa1hington Strfft
421-6640 EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, HEALTHY
AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
Best Wishes For The New Year
RHODE ISLAND ELECTRIC PROTECTIVE CO. 111 Mathewsan Street 274-0250
BURGLAR and FIRE ALARM SERVICE
Richard P. Clark, Pres. & Treas. S. R. Gray, Gen. Mgr.
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
HOPKINS NOVELTY CO., INC. Gilts and Party Favors /or Alf Occasions
158 RAILROAD STREET, CENTRAL FALLS 728-1160
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
' CHANNING CO., INC. TOTAL FINANCIAL PLANNING
PAWTUCKET, R. 1: 724-4200
GREETINGS
FROM
CLAIBORNE PELL
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY,
HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
HOMESTEAD BAKING CO. 145 No. Broadway
East Providence, R. I.
434-0551
Oven-King Products
World's Toughest Air Force Keeps Israel Alive
By GERALD ASfOR Photographs by
MARVIN E. NEWMAN REPRl!IITED FROM
LOOK MAGAZINE
ON JUNE 5, 1967, the Hagah, Israel's civil guard, was digging thousands of graves In Tel Aviv parks and gardens. The smell of war with Arab nations choked the air. 'There had to be holes to dmnp the many dead expected to fall in Tel Aviv, crouched within artillery range of Jordaas clubllke bulge Into Palestine. Arab bombers waited only six-to elght-mlnu!l!s flying time away. Egyptian armor clll1!ked along the edge of the 150-m!le-wlde Stnal desert. Syrian troops peered down from cave bunkers on the Golan Heights and lobbed shells Into kibbutzim on the borders. Terr o rl st guerrillas slipped easily across boimdarles or erupted Inside cities.
Six days later, on the Western edge of the Sinai desert, a sandy Junkyard of Egyptian tanks, trucks and guns, Israeli troops washed their feet In the Suez Canal. Israelis manned the Golan Heights and stared down at Syria. Once-divided Jerusalem belonged only to the Jews. Jordan's bulge Into Israel had vanished. DI.rt alone filled the graves of Tel Aviv.
Israel naw ruled four times Its former territory, but Its natural land border was 300 kilometers shorter. 'The Suez Canal, the Jordan River, the Dead Sea, these physical barriers cut
(Continued on Next Pue)
Archives Of Nazi Crimes (Continued from Preceding Page) literature, science and medicine.
The fourth catalogue publlshec) In 1963 Is entitled After Hitler Germany, 1945-1963 and contains two thousand, six hundred and ninety-four Items. Sections are devoted to war-time plans for Germany, Germany under occupation, the problem of Berlin, the Federal Republic of Germany, East Germany, etc. A special section deals with the Jews In post-war Germany, the new communities, anti-Semitism and defense
The Library keeps abreast of contemporary developments. It recorded the daubing of the swastika on the walls of tjle Cologne synagogue on Christmas Eve, 1959. The library has also many documents relating to Pope Plus XI, ranging from the Concordat of July 20, 1933 (which was s Igo ed by the Papal secretaFy of state, Monsignor Pacelli, later Plus XIJ) to the encyclical "MIi Brennender Sorge" ("With burning sorrow") In which the Pope charged the Nazis wtth "evasion."
·,. Anyone studying political science,'' declared Trevor Roper, Reglus Professor of Modern History, at Oxford, "Is likely to find the Wiener Library a most valuable Institution. It contains In accessible form a vast amount of material about the rise of totalitarianism In Europe, particularly In Germany In the 1930's, material most of which Is Inaccessible elsewhere. Though a private foundation, I would not hesitate to call It a national Institution."
Reprinted from The J ewlsh Digest
Locatecl in .._.ffwl lost SW.
NEW YEAR
GREETINGS
FROM
THE
FASHION
STORE
Neirt to lrown Ut1ivenlty
~
•::.::,.nd
AP:-:;~i;-.:rs F,,,whl,odm,d u.,.,,.Khocf Dining loom
~-==...,====~ Mo~S.:lc• Portci-. ~ - 123 Woterfflcm Street • O.lot ........ , __ ,
GLADYS C. CARTEi, MGR.
GAspee 1-1570
BEST WISHES FOR A HEALTHY, HAPPY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
VIC GEMMA'S
GRAND JEWELRY DIAMOND APPRAISERS
187 Westminster Street, Providence 421-4051
A HAPPY AND HEAL THY NEW YEAR
H. CARR & SONS, INC.
PLASTERING CONTRACTORS
WALL AND CEILING SYSTEMS
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
DUDLEY HAR~WARE CO.
200 Wickenden Street Providence, R.I.
421-8000
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
ROTH TICKET AGENCY
130 Westminster Street ( Arcade Building) 7 S 1-0200 - 75 1-0202
- CHOICE SEA TS FOR AU ATTRACTIONS -Boston - New York
, 119 Waterman Street (Corner of Brook Street) KING SIZE SANDWICHES AND DELICATESSEN
• BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM B.LIOTT
SERVING TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 15 TO 10), SONDAY FROM (1 TO 9P.M.) WITH BEST WISHES FOR
A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH AND PROSPERITY
VVESTVVIND RESTAURANT
for fine food and /Jeverages 555 CENTRAL AVENUE,(ROUTE 152 ),IN NEARB! SEEKONK.MASSACHUSETTS
/
Poi news of your organlza- tion, read The He!"ald.
JANTON ELECTRIC lSS Baken Creek Road Warwick - BE 7-1978
, Extends Best Wishes Por t.he New Year
New Year Greetings
ST. ONGE'S Boys' and MAJn's Store
1227 Main 51., W. Warwick 56 ltllside Rd ., C,anston
franklin Shop. Ctr., Westerly
'
,~ Second Floor, Alice Bldg. 236 Westminster Street_
Wishes You A Happy and Prosperous
New Year
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
.Wallis Seafood
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR SEAFOOD NEEDS
12 Bay Spring Avenue West Barrington, R.I.
246-1190
New Year Greetings_
ERNEST A. PLANTE MOVER
70 Brlda'bam St. TE 1-7717
NEW YEA~ GREETINGS T. W. ROUNDS CO.
52 Washington Strfft 180 Wayland Avenue
62 ltllside Rd., -C,anston Midland Mall
Colpitt'1 T.W. Round, Travel Service 272-2600
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
- - GREEN
BROTHERS
INC.
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
LINDBERGH AUTO BODY
WELDING CO. . All Types of Quality
Body Work AMERICAN - FOREIGN
S8 Smithfield Ave. 'Pawtucket, R. I.
722-8294
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
STATE LINE RESTAURANT AND DINER 80S Broadway, Pawtucket
723-9800
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
RAPHAEL PAOLA, INC.
"Insurance for Every Need"
677 PARK AVENUE, 781-6060, CRANSTON
GREETINGS AND BEST \1/ISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
JACK L EPSTEIN, MEYER A. EPSTEIN, DAVID H. EPSTEIN
e PENNA FUELS e Mutual Engineering Service Company
304 Lockwood Street, Providence 3S 1-7370 _
HELlA BERGER and RUTH SCHERZ
~~~k,treel · Providence, R. I.
Headquarters for
The Best of YARNS ·~· . and ART NEEDLEWORK .
WISH THEIR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS A HAPPY , AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
With Best Wishes
For A Happy and
Healthy New Year
JAMES DiPRETE
MAYOR
of
CRANSTON
World's Toughest Air Force Keeps Israel Alive (Continued from Preceding Page) down the threat of Invasion, reduced terrorist effectiveness. Israel's Air Poree could be over Cairo In ten mlnures, but It was 35 minutes' flying time from the nearest Egyptian airfield to the Israeli cities.
The Stx Day War began with Israel's Alrr'orce destroying the enemy aircraft on the grotmd. The Kheyl Avvlr then turned on the . Egyptian armor, An Israeli officer said, "In 1956, I flew a Jet and saw the Egyptian tanks escaping across the Canal. This time, we starred from the Canal bridges and worked back. At the beginning, there were 915 tanks In Sinai, and more than 800 were left there because of our attacks on the bridges."
The welding of airplanes and men Into a superbly meshed fighting machine caused many military experts to label the Kheyl Avvlr the world' s best air force. But the organization's beginnings were humble. Tal<e the experience of Mordechal Hod, current commander. Kibbutzborn ln 1926, Hod Joined the Jewish Brigade of the British Army and reached the rank of lance corporal -,n 1945. When World War II ended, Hod worked for the Jewish tmdergrotmd, smuggling refugees Into Palestine. In 1948, he went to Czechoslovalda, where Soviet agents taught him to fly. The Commtmlsts supported the Jews then, for Britain was the colonial power In the Mideast, and Egypt's King Farouk, the rtmnlng dog of Imperialism.
With Palestine on the verge of partition Into Jewish and Arab sections, war erupted, Studentpilot Hod flew a ~ltflre from Czechoslovalda to Israel with one stop In Yugosl avla. Mechanics had removed all armament, all electronics to make room for
. fuel. "I needed both hands on the stick to keep the nose up," Hod remembered. "When we arrived over Jerusalem, antiaircraft was fired at us - our belly tanks looked like bombs. After we convinced them to hold their fire, we had to I and on a rtmw ay . It was my first landing on concrete; all my training was on grass. The runway looked very tiny."
In the bizarre struggle that followed, Israeli Messerschmltts captured from the Nazis by the u.s.s.R. and flown by Americans, Canadians and Palestinian-born Jews dueled Arab ~ltflres, 'TIie Infant air force scored six kills on one day and since then has comm anded the air.
Motl Hod did not receive his wings, In spite of his longdistance trip, tmtll weeks after. the cease-fire. Part of the first crop of Israeli pilots to· sprout wings In Israel, he Is the first home-graduated commander. Today, every active member of the air force learned to fly In Israel.
Hod's predecessor In charge of the air force, Ezer Weizmann, now Minister of Transport and Commtmlcatlon, served during the early years of air-force development. Explaining the Israeli success, the former
. fighter pilot said. "We analyzed our enemy, his type, character and mentality. You fight different enemies different ways. It's wrong to analyze only by numbers or rype·s of aircraft he has, You go by your enemy, your geography, your climate, your people.
"Second, we analyzed our own people. What sort of crowd have we got? What makes Sammy run? The way you command French and Brltfsh tmlts does not suit us. The mentality 1s· -dlfferent, the alms different." ~It and polish Indeed do not exist In the Israeli Army. Privates call majors by their first names, nobody wears neckties, and the rawest recruit In the U.S. salutes more smartly.
"We learned how to learn fi;om others," Weizmann went on. ''We adapted, never copied." Because Mideast sides don't cloud or fog up often, trainees require f(!wer • hours of Instruction before soloing, Also, Israel's needs don't demand long-
(Contlnued on Next Page)
,_ ·~ ,! - , • . , .,. • •I :!, ••
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970 37
For -news of Israel, Jewish comm unities throughout the world, local organizations and
NEW YEAR GREETINGS DINNER BELL DINER
3016 Post Road Home Cooked Meals
.OPEN: 6 a .m. to 5 p.m. Friday 'Iii 10 p.m.
New Year Greetings
STATE BATTERY CO. H9 Fountain St. Joeeph Plsatura
UN 1-%877
GREETINGS FOR THE NEW YEAR
Your BEST Move COMPLETE
MOVING SERVICE • ~I and lntentate
• Our 64Jh Year
• Modern Storage
• Padling and Crating
LANS WAREHOUSE CO.
of WAYLAND SQ.
17 Seekonk St. Providence
861-1110
society, read the Herald. . .and for some of the best bargains In the Greater Providence area.
EARNSHAW DRUG CO., INC.
63 Brown Street Wickford
294-3662
New Year Greetings
IF YOU WANT THE BEST FOR LESS ... CALl,,434-1389
BROADWAY SILK SCREEN
PROCESS PRINTING 120 Arlinglon St .• E. Pro,.
Happy New Y car
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
A. RICCI, INC.
225 Dean Street
Providence, R.I.
421-0261
Ballou's Barrington
Bootery Barrington Shoping Center
1 84G County Road Barrington 245-S71S
Wishes Its Jewish Friends and Customers
A Very Happy New Year
E. F. O'DONNELL & SONS CO., INC.
PAINTING CONTRACTORS SINCE 1900
75 DIKE STREET, PROVIDENCE, R. I.
Elmhurst 1-8505
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR
A HAPPY. HEALTHY AND PROPEROUS NEW YEAR
777 TAUNTON AVENUE, EAST PROVIDENCE
434-7474 EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR
A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY,
HEAL THY ~ND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
- from -
-LEBANON KNlfflNG MILLS, INC.
721 SCHOOL STREET
PAWTUCKET, R. J.
. PA 5-1400
\
-\
{ / ) /
f, I
' ·
38 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1979
MJt. and MRS. BENJAMIN KLEHR
And Son Wish Their Cuatomen ana
Friends A Happy New Ye~r KLEHR CLEANSERS
Cleaning . Presatng · Tallorlng RepaJrtng
587 Broad St. UN 1-9090
ISMAR and ESTHER PICK and ARON and ALAYNE PICK
- of -
A RNOLD'S FRUIT MARKET Wis'1 AU. Their Friends
And Customers ' A Ha ppy New Year
1029 Broad St. WI 1-1180
BEST WISHES FOR THE
NEW YEAR
Eddy's Esso Service
Station
ALA Towlna- & Road Service
783 Hope Street 831-9619
929 North Main St. 831-9391
A Happy New Year
from
C. P. WATSON
Asphalt Driveways and
Parking Areas
Call 463-9797
Anytime
New Year Greetings
EDGEWOOD BEAU.TY SHOP
1832 Broad Street Cranston
781-5677
REP. SAM KAGAN
and FAMILY
1 61 ORMS STREET
Extend Best wishes
For the Holiday Season
Greetings
And Best Wishes
For The New Year
LOUIS & CO. Luggage and Gifts
44 Weybosset Street
Providence
Gertrude Shechtrnan ,or
Peacock Beauty Salon
236 Westminster Street
Louis Shechtman
Painting and Contracting
9 Paine Ave., Cranston
Wish Everyone A Very Happy New Year
Les Kessler's Delicatessen Lunch
' WISHES OUR MANY
FRIENDS and CUSTOMERS A HAPPY NEW YEAR
723 NORTH MAIN STREET 621-5888
( BETWEEN PLEASANT & JENKINS STREETS)
New Year Greetings
Bto1kin & @JyJney ~/ 6,lal•@o,u1e/tanh
810 HOPE STREET, PROVIDENCE 521-3'46
Best Wishes
For A New Year
Of Health, Happiness
And Prosperity
Congressman and Mrs.
ROBERT 0. TIERNAN
World's Toughest Air Force Keeps Israel Alive (Continued from Preceding Page)
distance navigation. Inst e a d of bad-weather
navigation techn14ues, Israel concentrated on dogfight tactics. Said an Israell colonel, "At the start of the 1950's , the U.S., England and France saw no future ln air-to-air combat. Mlsslles, sophisticated weapons , fire d and destroyed an enemy before you ever saw him visually. We thought In more conservative terms."
Weizmann agreed: "The basic tactics are still the same, the dogftght of 1914 to _1,918. Even In Mach 2 fighters, the speed drops down and you go for each other's tall, twisting, turning. At 2,000 .yards, you can plug them with a mtsslle, but al 400 to 500 yards, you need a cannon."
Dogfights demand short-range weapons, but designs for the French Mirage and the U.S. Phantom, for example, provided only mlsslles and rockets. As the customer, Israel insisted that cannons be installed, Alter the succes!f of the Jews, the U,S, man uf a c tu re rs made cannons standard equipment. Israeli engineers Increased the bomb payload of all aircraft they bought.
Ze'ev Schiff, military correspondent for the newspaper Haaretz, said, "After the Six Day War, the Air Poree dlscovered America,'' a reference to purchases d. the subsonic Skyhawk and Mach 2 Phantom. "'The Sl:yhawk ls an old horse," said Schiff, "bur It Is a strong horse, a healthy horse, and the reliability of the horse Is very high." An official said, "'The Sl:yhawk carries 20 bombs where the Mirage took two. TI,e Phantom ts fantastic; two of them could do what a squadron of Mirages did.''
Above all, what makes the air force superior are the people In It. A flight officer said, "1be first advantage ls technical. Our people grow up with machinery,
- 'They work with tractors when they are very yotmg. Even the toys are Il)l'Chanical. We are part of Westl,rn technological civilization. 'The Arabs do not have the feeling for sophisticated machinery . Even In Israel, those Jews who have come from cotmtrles such as Yemen and Iraq are not good material for pilots. And they are the elite of those places, the sons of doctors and engineers, so you can Imagine what the lower ranks of people are, And this cllfference extends beyond just flying. It Includes planning, maintenance, all that goes Into an air force." During the Six Day War, In fact, Israel's grotmd crews drastically cut turnaround time between missions.
'The Mirage filer continued: "Then there ls the spirit. Because Jews have been persecuted, we have 2,000 years of trying harder. In Nazareth, where Mary and Jesus lived, It's nothing more than a hole, but you can know what a Christian can get from such a place. For me, there ls Masada." (The rocky hill overlooldng the Dead Sea where almost 1,000 Jews held out against Roman legions for three years: rather than surrender, nearly all committed suicide.)
Israeli commanders Insist quality outweighs quantity, When you are up against 50 million
. Arabs, 50 more pllots don't make any difference, 50 bad ones would make things worse. (Current estimates put Israel's aircraft between 300 and 400, with at least three pllots for each plane, as against perhaps 1,500 Arab combat planes.)
A Kheyl Avvlr commander remarked, "We have the world's greatest rate of washouts from flying schools. Generally speaking, Arab pllots have not improved since the Six Day War. It's not more training they need, it's mentality, w111power, Integrity. Some of them are damn brave, knowing they don't have a chance. Judging from our experience, ft wtll take more than a generation before they can change. You have to motivate
(Continued qn Next Page)
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
EK ANTIQUES American Antiques Boqht and Sold
337 No. Broadway, Rumford 434-0275
· Our Very Best Wishes
For the Holiday Season '
Narragansett Paper Company
10 Almeida Avenue East Providence
New Yea r Greetings
Capaldi Bros. Corporation
Contractors - Ena-tneers
Washlna-ton Hi&'hway SMITHFIELD, R. I.
CE 1-1350
HAPPY NEW YEAR COLONIAL
PHARMACY, INC. Prescription Delivery Service 598 Elmwood Avenue
461-1690 Hrs: 7:30 o.m. · 9 p.m. 7 Doy,
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
From
Westcott, Slade & Balcom Co.
38 Bath Street A FULL LINE
OF PAINT SUPPLIES 421-7256
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
LANCELOTTA PAVING, INC .
655 Cammonw~alth Ave.
Warwick, R. I.
737-9477
HAPPY NEW YEAR . . . From
NORMA and HASKELL BROADMAN and Family
PARK A VENUE KOSHER DELICATESSEN 840 Park_ Avenue, Cranston
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
GENERAL GLASS CO.
WI 1-9828
• Aluminum Doors ond Entrances • Store Fronts • Mirrors SID ALTMAN, Manager
222 Hamiltan Street 467-6650
Best Wishes For The New Year
TYPESETTING SERVICE CO.
211 EDDY STREET PROVIDENCE, R.I.
421-2264
HOLIOA Y GREETINGS FROM
Alf ,:et/,, RESTAURANT
280 THAYER STREET PROVIDENCE
Specializing in Italian-American Cuisine
located an the East Side 621-5397 ·· Open Monday Through Saturday
11 A.M. to 9 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS
LEONARD ANTIQUES.
INC. Antique Furniture - Rough and Finished
Specializing in Finished 4-Post Beds
Dealers Welcome - Route 44, Seekonk, Mass.
600 Tau!'ton Avenue, Seekonk
Extends Best Wishes For A Very Happy Holiday
336-8585
NEW YEAR ORE!:I'INOS
PELLETIEB. TRUCKING CO., INC.
New Year Greetings
JENNIE'S, BEAUTY SHOP 9 South Angell · Street
Jennie Soletnik, Proprietor 421-7868
, B4sera 64j Armfa&loe Blvd., Paw&.
PA 5-~Z91
Happy New Year
WOONSOCKET GLASS and MIRROR CO.
New Year Greetings Prom Mr. and Mrs. Abe Weinstein
of WEINSTEIN'S
Mr. & Mrs. Shepple Dressler and Family
Service Station MA 1-3363
3'1 Corey St. Woonaocket 221 Smith St. Providence
/
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
PERRY MUSIC STUDIO
HIBBARD A. PERRY, 111,.ctor Guitor • Western & Popular
Clos.sic Guitar Hawaiian Guitar ~njo, Mandolin
& Folk Gutta, 357 Wfftminsler SINet
331-8145
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Mason's Pharmacy
1469 BROAD STREET
PROVIDENCE
941-7330
PIZZO'S
Wishes its F'rlends- and CUstomers a Happy and
Prosperous New Year
PAUL PIZZO, Prop.
791 Hope Street
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Coutu Bros. Inc.
GMC MOTOR TRUCKS
388 Walcott Street
Pawtucket
723-S076
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
- from -
HOPE CHEMICAL CORP. Pawtucket, Rhode Island
.724-8000
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
EILEEN DARLING'S RESTAURANT
Party and Banquet Facilities Fall River Avenue, Seekonk, Mau. 336-9222
A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW ~ TO ALL OUR FRIENDS .AND CUSTOMERS
LARRY'S FRUIT STORE 727 Hope Street, Provjdence 621-5759
MR. and MRS. LARRY RESNICK
-OUR BEST WISHES FOR
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
MILLARD WIRE COMPANY.
722 EDDY STREET 421-5854
BEST WISHES FOR
A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
Nina Ferrie - Joseph Ferrie
LICENSED ELECTROLOGISTS
187 WESTMINSTER STREET GA 1-1869
920 SMITH STREET
BEST WISl:I.ES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
FROM
Roberts WOO·DWORKING Co.
27 CENTRE ST., PAWTUCKET Specializing in wood turning
and repairing of fine furniture Open Monday thru Friday 8 to 5 p.m.
Call 722-9578
World's To-ughest Air Force Keeps Israel Alive (Continued from Preceding Page)
people to be good fighting pilots. Flying itself ls not so dlfflcult."
At an Israel! air base, a squadron commander helped hand-push his Slcyhawk on the fllght line. Dawn the rtmway thtmdered a Phantom; It soared ~. the yellow fires of the afterburners fiercely glawlng. A black-bearded captsln watched ammtmltlon hauled toward planes. "Breakfast for the Egyptians," he grunt_ed. An old woman with a scarf on her head used a broom to brush away puddles · of water near the control tower.
A squadron commander, blueeyed, slightly bullt and Pollshborn, spoke good English except for the habit of using "Jab"_ In place of "yes." "I wanted to be a pilot when I was six. At 16, I flew a Piper Cub. At seventeen and a half, I Joined the Air Force (he's now 32). In our Air Farce, everyone knows everyone. You f e e I you have to Improve yourself, everyone looks at you In the briefing. You want to be the best pilot In the squadron."
This pilot, his wife Mary and three young children llve In a small house a few htmdred yards from the runways. On cold raw days, an electric heat~r warms the cramped living room. A porch overlooking a few shrubs and a patch of grass makes a place to talk on still, hot days. Every Thursday, a group of wives travels to a big City many miles away for shopping. Buses take the children to a school, at a nearby village. A store on the post provides living essentials.
Plump, dark-haired, Mary wearies of the fighting: "I was born during a war and have lived my whole llfe In wars." She paused as an overhead Jet drowned conversation. "When will It end? When peace comes, the Messiah wlll come. Why don't the Arabs tmderstand? Our people were in refugee camps In the 1940's: now they have all settled. But after 20 years, the Arabs are still living In refugee camps. I pity them. When you go In Gaza (a strip along the Mediterranean now occupied by Israel), you see hate In their eyes." Her flveyear-old son wandered in wearing an American cowboy hat and pistol. _ "It Is a primitive hate," said her husband. "They cannot do anything to us , so ~y throw grenades and hurt their own people (I aborers who work for the government of Israel)."
Hls wife remarked, "I can't tell you Iles that I am so brave, that I am used to his Job. He comes home at noon and at night. I didn't tell him to be a pilot In the Air Force, J can't tell him to be with El Al."
"Somedmes when Someone is ldlled," said the pilot, "you wonder who's next." His sevenyear-old daughter cllmbed 1nto his lap. "But I don't want to sit on a chair. Most of the time, I'm flying. El Al would be llke working In an office."
"In the Journals of the world," complained Mary as their daughter banged away at a standard piano exercise, "our husbands, the ·pilots, have ~ image of killers. But they are Just fighting for their homes."
"We are restricted on what we can hit," said her husband. " But we have pictures that show mortars and Cl!Jlnons placed between homes. You have 20 seconds to pull up, amid anti-
- aircraft fire. A man can make a mistake. We are not out to hit Just any target and kill fifty to a h1mdred clvlllans. Every life ls Important to us, soldier or civilian. But we must protect our boys." One mistake ldlled 70 Egyptian workers last February, and in Apt11, children died when they were caught in what Israel m aln t al n s was a mllltary lnstallatlon.
A certain 1mrealty suffuses the air war. "It ls like a summer camp," said the · pilot. "You never see any Arab planes arotmd here, You have breakfast with your family and then p;o on vour mission. You are home for ltmch. It ls a very clean war, for us."
(Continued on Next Page)
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970 39
New Year Greetings
BERGER SUPPLY CO.
6S4 Warwick Avenue
781-4400
·A Happy New Year
PAYETTE TRUCK BODY MFG. CO.
65 Dyervllle Ave., Johnston EL 1-0711
New Year Greetings . TOWN & COUNTRY
HAIRDRESSERS Hair Styling by Mr. Leigh
70S Park Ave., Cranston 941-6690
New Year Greetings
MARK S. BRACKEN 166 Adelaide Ave.
781-S962 NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
New Year Greetings CHRISTENSEN
STUDIO OF MUSIC Plano - Orran - Accordion
357 Westminster St. 421-0277
New Year Greetings DOROTHY STREETER
STUDIO Ceramics
Dorothy Morse SO Aldrich Street . 781-1831
artesian wells before deciding
call us for
an accurate, sincere
analysis of your well problem
wm. c. northup & son CE ntredale 1-6590
WE SELL & SERVICE JACUZZI PUMPS
TANKS · WELL SUPPLIES 230 putnam ave. johnston
Best Wishes For A Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Trading Post At Hearthstone · 15 Fall River Ave., Seekonk, Mass.
I At Rumford-Seekonk Line)
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
EDWARD F. CAPALDI, INC. WATER - GAS - SEWER
CONSTRUCTION
336-8659
Oki Crow Pt. Rd., Lincoln Mailing AddreH: P.O.Box 22, Soylesville, R.I.
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
O'DONNELL'S
PROVIDENCE NEWPORT
WEtDING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
A. Greenhalgh Co. Plant: 19 Mendon Avenue, Pawtucket 723-3528
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
Best Wishes For A Happy and Healthy New Year
SECURITY CLEANSERS, INC. EIGHT CONVENIENT LOCA TiONS
MAIN PLAN'{: 821-4850.
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
DORIC .DAY SCHOOL 145 PONTIAC AVENUE, CRANSTON • WI 1-6051
Accredited by R. I . Board of Education STATE LICENSED
Best Wishes For A Year Of
Health, Happiness and Prosperity
K. C. Insurance ~gency; Inc.
6 Braman Street
Providence, R. L
Sydney Kramer Ernie Chernick
40 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2 1970 . . New Year Greetings CHARLES H. DREW
Authorized Distributor For TEXACO & .FIRESTONE
31 Calder St., Ct11nston 942-5470
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MAYNARD'S BARBER SHOP 15 Weybosset St. 621-0656
I ARLENE CHERUN
Professional MClnicurist (Formerly of Ci'X_ Holl Sorber Shop)
WE EXTEND
BEST WISHES
FOR A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH
ANO HAPPINESS
Walter F. Snow
PLUMBING AND HEATING CO., INC.
2845 POST ROAD
WARWICK, R.I.
737-4421
New Year Greetings To All Our Relatives,
Friends ond Customers
MR. and MRS. TED RICE
MR. and MRS. IRA L Ria
and daughters AMY BETH and PAMELA WENDY
NATHAN'S EXPRESS CO. 7-9 holy Street
861-4546
Best Wishes For A
Happy and Healthy
New Year
Rochambeau Barber Shop
ERNEST MANSOLILLO 245 Rochambeau Avenue
Comp(elely New and Modern Decor
831-9858
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
RAY'S BAIT RAY IDE, Proprietor
289 ARNOLD'S NECK DRIVE PONAUG MARINA
738-7878 - FRESH LIVE BAIT -
D' AMBRA TEXACO ST A TION 761 HOPE STREET 621-2348
WISH THEIR CUSTOMERS
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
SETIAN SALON OF BEAUTY 364 Westminster Street, Providence
621-7206
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
TOWN ELECTROPLATING CO.
178 George Waterman Road, Johnston
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
C,.orothy kay
231-5011
18 SOUTH ANGELL STREET WAYLAND SQUARE
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
AMERICAN JEWELRY CHAIN CO. 560 ATWELLS AVENUE, 421-4162
PROVIDENCE - SPRINGFIELD DESPATCH
540 HUNTINGTON AVENUE
941-0364
EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR
A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
CURRAN & BURTON
DIVISION OF TEXACO, INC.
EXTENDS NEW YEAR GREETINGS TO ITS
MANY JEWISH FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
500 ALLENS AVENUE· 1120 EDDY STREET
467-8050
World's Toughest Air Force Keeps Israel Alive (Contlnueil from Preceding Pate)
Another flier; said, "It's like a silent movie. TI>ere' s much Technicolor. You see smoke, tlashes or orange, brown, black. We don't hear any noise. I drop a .bomb: all I hear Is a small click." ·
Little personal feelln£ enters Into the fight. "I don't have any hate for the Arabs," said a Skyhawk officer. "You don't see the enemy personally." Another flier told Ze'ev · Schiff, "As In every profession, you know what to do and when to do It. Mlsstles are not that terrible. Of course, when you see them coming, you know your death Is right there. You have to react In time. I feel nothing, I am so busy. l"m Interested In direct hits, nothing else. Aftet"Nard, I may think ab out the poor miserable bastards who live In those trenches. I neither hate nor love them. Some run away, some are courageous and keep shooting to the very I ast. An Egyptian I treat as an equal. Until you gun him down, he Is equal, but their pilots as a group are not equal to us."
TIie Arab leaders and the Soviet Union obviously agree that Egyptian pilots are unequal. Now, U.S.S.R. men In MIG's guard population centers of Egypt and the Soviet-financed Aswan Dam. But the Soviet presence does not lead to emotional hand-wringing by the Israeli Air Poree . Should the Soviet pilots scramble against Israeli filers, It wlll be novices a g a In s t experienced fl11:hters. Still, the entrance of Soviet-flown MIG's Into combat would seriously weaken the Kheyl Avvlr. "Take away the Air Poree, and you wlll have war within 24 hours," warned a highranking officer. Tile nwnber-one mission has been to deter war Initiated by Egyptian, Syrian or Jordanian armies.
As for the guerrilla threat, Al Parah, Israeli officials call It much over-emphasized. Most Jewish leaders think Al Patah fantasizes about Its exploits. Although Arab guerrillas may klll a handful of Jews each month, one Israeli offtclal said flatly: • 'Terrorists do not endanger basic security."
Israel finds the U.S. position hard to understand. "Don't they recognize that we are the one friend In the Mideast?" asked an officer. "Don't they realize that the Soviet Union nibbles away until It Is stopped or else It gets complete control?"
TIie U.S. decision In March not to supply more Phantoms and Slcyhawks, and therefore maintain the alleged balance of power, b It t er I y disappointed Israel; Within days of the refusal, the Egyptian Air Force and artillery became more aggressive. "We would rather have had a public announcement that we would get the Phantoms In two years than be given them secretly now," said one officer.
Israel puts small stock In U.S. promises to preserve the Jewish I and' s Integrity. In Lyndon Johnson's metaphor, Israel went to the well three times (1948, 1956 and 1967), and never once did the U.S. come along.
Meanwhile, Israeli attitudes toward the Arab countries toughen. TIie seized lands of 1967 that once were readily negotiable In return for promises of territorial Integrity now seem more and more attractive as permanent, easily guardable borders. Contempt for Arabs grows. Inside Israel, dragnet arrests for allege~ terrorism emphasize to Arabs there that they are second-class citizens. Along the borders, the shooting grows louder. "We may have to escalate In order to deescalate," said one Jewish authority, sounding like U.S, spokesmen on Vietnam. "If the · Arabs want a war of attrition, they will be the ones to suffer attrition." Pcir their part, the Arabs appear as bellicose as ever. Tile hardening attitudes of the enemies means the killing and maiming must continue. TIie Kheyl Avvlr may serve as a deterrent to a wider war, but armies or air forces do not create peace.
Happy New Year
CRANSTON FANCY WIRE CO.
1655 Bmwoad Avenue Cranston'
461-1850
' New Year Greetings
MARY JAY'S
, Lingerie and Acceisories
I Arcade Bldg., 421-2460
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
HENRY E. PILZ Gold, Sliver and
Brass Pla&ln&' 891 North Main St.
GA l-f358
New Year Greetings
MAX SHORE'S MARKET
1590 Mineral Spring Ave. North Providence
353-1920
THOMAS F. COSTEUO & CO.
Independent Insurance Adjusters
905 Warwick Avenue Warwick, R.I.
Best Wishes for the New Year
New Year Greetings
Louis Fink & Co., Inc.
JUNK ls our Business Our Trucks WIii Call . ..
2 Ambrose Street DEl<ter 1-6135
Jack Fink
Happy New Year
GEEK'S DRUM SHOP 385 Westmlmter St.
Drumminl Inatruction By Georee B. Geer-Georae E. Barrorf
PL 1-05%8
Happy New Year
GIZZABELLI ELECTRIC SHOP
226 County Road, Barrlnston
CH 5-8727
New Year Greetings
MARY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE 7 Carney Road
(Cor. StTawberry Field Rd .) Warwick 737-7156
Hoppy New Year
PHIWPS ORGAN STUDIOS
Wurlitzer Organs, Pianos 1951 Post Road 739-2282
New Year Greetings
·BRIAN SUPPLY CO.
Industrial Supplies
111 Chestnut Street 272-6400
Our Very Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
ANDRE'S BEAUTY SALON 176 Mathewson Street
Providence, R.I.
621-8022
Mrs. Morris Block and Mr. and Mrs. Leon Goldstein
Extend Best Wishes For A Happy and Peaceful New Ye.or
BLOCK ARTIST MATERIALS COMPANY NEW LOCATION: 129 Dyer Street
STONE'S KOSHER MEAT MAR~ET
780 HOPE STREET WISHES All ITS FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
97 NEW LONDON AVENUE
CRANSTON 942-2660
.BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
CHARLES A. CURRAN
725 HOWARD BUILDING
421-0800
WE EXTEND BEST WISHES
FOR A HAl'PY ANO HEALTHY NEW YEAR
FIAT LARGEST FIAT INVENTORY IN R.I.
TAVARES MOTORS 11 Where Customers S.nd Their Friends"
15 Minutes from Providence Rte. 136, WARREN, R.I.
Ju,t off Rt.. 195 245-2250
BRUIN PAPER BOX, INC. New Yea~ Greetings
MARSHAl1 ELECTRIC CO.
Small Appliance Repairing
681 Wnhninster Street 331-1166
"Quality and Service" GA 1-3018
317 Charles St., Pro't'. Extend .Best Wishes For
A Happy New Year
Greetings and Best Wishes
For the New Year
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
DRISCOLL & LANE
PROCHAIN, INC. ( Incorporated) Delicatessen
225 Carolina Avenue
Providence, R.I.
1485 BROAD STREET PROVIDENCE, R.I.
781-8842
With All Good Wishes For A New Year Of
Health And Happiness
BEST WISHES
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
GIL ENOS Over 25 Years Experience
Upholsterer Of Fine Furniture Tufting a Specialty
12 Burgess Avenue
, A. PRIMIANO
& SON e WAUPAPER
e PAINT e ARTIST SUPPLIES
East Providence 434-4350 211 Waseca Avenue
~rrington, R.I.
Best Wishes For The New Year NEW YEAR GREETINGS
ARMEN'S
Hardware Co., Inc. Hardware- Tools-Plumbing
George R. Thornton AGENCY, INC.
Electrical & Housewares
Sopolin Paints
765 Broad Street 941-3600
943 Namquid Drive Warwick, R. I.
463-7676
•
THE ART STORE THAT'S DIFFERENT PROV_IDENCE PICTURE FRAME CO.
61 Arcade Building 3rd Roar Bevator Service
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
LA FRANCE-DUNN AGENCY INSURANCE and REAL ESTATE
AUGUST P. LaFRANCE, President ANDREW P. TORMEY, Vice President
267 NEWPORT AVENUE 723-2300
BEST WISHES ON THE NEW YEAR TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
· DORIS CORSET SHOPPE 187 Westminster Street
Westminster Building Providence, R.I.
621-9313
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
AUBURN BRASS -FOUNDRY
323 Wellington Avenue, Cranston 461-8569
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
GEORGE, BARRY and PAUL· MILLER of
The Miller Corrugated Box Co. 289 Kilver! Street, Warwick 739-7020
from everyone at . .•
p1lqnm f0r-l/,??mr, House 4,.,r,,,, l ,,,!, 101111/ I"""" !
Make a date to come browsing through ' our magnificently appointed showrooms . . . --a fabulous panorama of visual enchantment. Everything in American Traditional Inferiors .. . from complete rooms .. . to the smallest and most preciovs of oc,essorie~. And don 't . forget to piclc up your lrH 358 page decorotmg boolc . " The Ethan Allen Treasury."
1187 NORTH MAIN STREET - PROVIDENCE
C C C O C O C C C O O 0 Wliat's Wrong With Jewish Education?
tOOOOOOOOOOOC By SHLOMO KATZ
Condensed from MIDSTREAM Who would dispute that J ewlsh
education for our children Is of utmost Importance? Just see what others do for the sake of educating their children and young people to an understanding of their past, ihelr culture, the specific and unique "experience" of their group. College campuses are torn apart to compel the establishment of Afro-American departments; elementary schools are virtually wrecked In the attempt to gain "community control" over the children's education.
- w h a t about the J ewlsh education of our children? I have yet to hear of J ewtsh students seizing a college building to force the establishment of a Judaic Department where, in addition to courses In Hebrew and Jewish history and the meaning of Israel, a course In "Jewish Experience" should deal with such matters as persecution, migration, struggle for evanescent success, and, ffnally, the Holocaust (genocide In the literal sense of the word) which Is a truly and uniquely Jewish experience. Nor have I read of Jewish parents demanding that the elementary school In the neighborhood where they are a majority should start sending school notices of all sorts also In Hebrew (or Yiddish), or that the school should hang a portrait of Ben-Gurlon, for Instance , on Its walls (as a portrait of Nasser hangs, or has until recently hung, on the walls of a school In Harlem, with the Inscription, "A Great Egyptian") .
Som e of my own, personal, attempts to provide a J ewish education for my children, and the failure sustained were, naturally, not the same as those of others, and they may even be regarded as uncharacteristic. But considering the pltltul state of J ewish education In this country, they may cast some light on the overall picture.
I am keenly (some might even say morbidly) aware of the "Jewish experience" perhaps because of my Immigrant history, remote though It has become. For many years, decades In fact, I used to classl!y mysel! as some kind of Labor Zionist, though I am .not -by nature an organization man . More recently I, for some time, used to describe myself as a " secularist," in reference to the Jewish community. I do so no longer because the term has lost Its meaning for me, as well as !or many others. (Many terms have lost their meaning. Once I used to say I was a socialist. I do so no more. lJ Nasser and Kosygin, and before them Bevin and Stalin, were socialists, how can I describe myself as one?) In the education of their children some secularist-Zionists, friends of mine, sent · their children to Orthodox yeshlvahs, resorting to the dubious and pllpullsltc argument that these schools teach their puplls thoroughly and when the children grow up they will outgrow the. Orthodox teachings and r-etaln the basic knowledge of Hebrew, the Bible, etc. I rejected this reasoning. Could there be anything worse than approaching the problem oh!ducatlng c)>lldren with mental reservations? Personal observation of the results of this Machlavelllan practice has .. tended to confirm me fn my view.
My son (he Is now eighteen) reached the age of three. Alert, bright, he was 11111 of questions. Passing by a church he somehow sensed that this was no ordinary structure. Synagogues In the neighborhood were less conspicuous; In !act some of them occupy space In brownstones, or the lower floor or two of an ordinary b·ulldlng. The conversation would go somewhat as follows: "What Is this?" "A church.'' "What Is a church?" "A place where people iO to
(Continued on Next Page)
Herald subscribers comprise an active buying market. For excellent results, advertise In the Herald. Call 724-0200.
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2 1970 41 . . . NEW YEAR GREETINGS
GIIMOIE'S ROWEi SHOP 76 Taunton Avenu.
East "'-lclence 434-3667
New Year Greetings COUIERT'S
DETECTIVE AGENCY 150 Carolina Avenue
Providence 467-7790
I. LEWIS SNYDER
"Super-Sonic" Automatic
Car Wash 580 Reservoir Avenue
781-8912 Extends Best Wishes
For A Hoppy New Year
Hopi:,y New Year
Cedar's Prescription Pharmacy
Keod.atten fo, '°""' f---, ChocolotH
" In Cranston It's Cedar's"
82 Ralfe St., Cranstan ST 1-5818
Your Health Is Our Business
-
SOCK!S RADIO & TV
266 HAWKINS STREET PROVIDENa, R.I.
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
NEW YEAR GREETINGS HIGGINS REALTY CO., INC.
Real Estate - Insurance 668 Church Ave., Warwick
737-7272
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
from MR. and MRS.
MILTON ISRAEWFF and Sons, JAMES JAY and SAMUEL STEVF.N
20 Cole Farm Court of BEACON RECORD SHOP
To Our Relatives and Friends
The men's store where you can afford to look your best
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
The Door To A ,Van', W, rfd
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267 Plain Street 421-4600
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ABBEY Telephone and Secretarial Service
86 Weybosset Street 521-3411
- OUR VERY BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. BEN FERDMAN and Family of
Ferdman Upholstering & Supply Co. 178 Mineral Spring Avenue Pawtucket, R.I.
725-3874
NEW YEAR GREETINGS TO FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
PETROLEUM HEAT & POWER CO. 375 Allens Avenue
941-0050 Providence
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
MAINE POTATO GROWERS, INC.
64 Whitman Street, Pawtucket 725-7263
LEONARD'S HAIR FASHIONS
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133 WASHINGTON STREET WEST WARWICK
828-9715
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WITH BEST WISHES FOR A NEW YEAR OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
TECH -CLOSURES, INC. AND
METALIZED PRODUCTS HENRY BROMBERG
and
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42 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, ~IDAY. OCTOBER 21 1970
New Year Greetings NEW YEAR GREETINGS
To OurFrlends andCustomers
Ruggieri Bros., Inc. Linoleum - Broadloom
Formica - Tile NICK GUH CiA, PI\OP.
zt Midway 8-11 (Garden City)
Cl'anston R. L
Office: Williams 2-1700
253-6600 BODY &
24 , HOUR
FENDER TOWING W'ORK SERVICE
GOCDING .\VE., SR l q \L OUR SERVICES., , •
• EXF ERT ;.uo o:.pJT: ".JG • F'RA'."E ~E?~i '<: ~C. • ;:-RO' JT mos
Best Wishes For The New Year
Happy New Year
RALEIGH - SCHWINN BICYCLES
New & Rebuilt
National Cleansers & Dyers 88 Harold St., 621-5432
806 W. Shore Rd., Warwick 176 Main St., Ea. Green. .... .
233 Martin St. East Providence
Best Wishes Por The New Year New Year Greetings
MORRIS METAL CO.
2260 Pawtucket Avenue East Providence
434-4007
176 Wayland Avenue Wayland Square
PHIL and BARRY LEVINE
We Extend Best Wishes For A Very Happy New Year to Our J ewish Friends and CUstomers
American Insulation And Roofing Co. 3483° West Shore Road, Warwick RE 7-314_1
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton F. Peasley, Sr.
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Greifer and Family
OF PAULINE'S DRESS SHOP 63 Hillside Road Cranston
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8 ABBOTT PARK PLACE
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331-3915
RANDY'S SHELL SERVICE STATION 691 North Main Street, Providence
Mannlns 1-2997
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
, FRANK J. NEWMAN & SON, INC. Industrial. Sheet Metal Fabricators
44 NEWMAN AVENUE 231.-05S0
JOHNSTON
McGARRY'S
RESTAURANT 60 EDDY STREET
DOWNTOWN PROVIDENCE
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A
VERY HAPPY AND HEALTHY
NEW YEAR
0 C C O O C C O C C O 0 What's Wrong With Jewish Education?
o a o a a o . ~, o a o a (Continued from Preceding Page)
pray." "What does •pray' mean?"
About this time we once happened to be walking along tJ\e edge of a park where huge masses of rock Jut out. "Who made these rocks?" he asked. I slc1rted the subject: "They were made In a factory," he concluded on his own. All Inanimate objects he knew of were made In factories, why not rocks? My secularism or agnosticism or whatever took a quick flip fiop and l told him God made the rocks, and l started telling him ·a simpllned version of the Genesis story. Anything, even the most primitive anthropomorphic Idea of God he might at this age embrace, was culturally Infinitely superior to the notion that rocks, yea, rocks, were made in a factory.
The years passed slowly. He was enrolled in a neighborhood afternoon Hebrew school three tlm gs a week. The results were less than m!!dlocre and l fretted a bit, A friend of mine, the parent of two children approximately my son's age, faced the same problem and we talked about it . . We hit on a plan - a not very original plan which has been tried here and ther e. We should Interest a few other parepts facing the same problem and start a class tor some 8 -10 children. The class was to meet In one of our apartments. We would work out a curriculum that would stress Jewish selfunderstanding - our history both contemporary and ancient, Hebrew - In place of learning to read by rote and to r ecite a few broches. Finding a suitable teacher was the problem. Neither my friend nor l 1s a teacher , and, in general, we felt it was desirable that a parent should not do the instructing.
We turned to a rabbi of our acquaintance and explained our problem. Could he help us find the kind of teacher we wanted? He should be a dedicated educator, sympathetic to our ideas, and expect only modest remuner ation. How much could a handtul of parents pay? The rabbi, a man of some prominence, an author, the spiritual leader of a large congregation, was enthusiastic. Yes, Indeed. It was a tine plan we had. And he could help. He was In close contact with one of the theological seminaries. They had fine and dedicated young men. "Leave it up to me," the rabbi said. "l will find you a koshere behelme." (A person Innocent and naive to the point of foolishness, literally, a kosher animal.)
And that was the end of tha. We dropped the plan, The notion of a koshere beheime flllt1lllng our need chilled our ardor. The ardor must have been not very great t<> begin with, since It was a product of contusion. It took that one bit of vulgarity and cynicism to cool It to the vanishing point.
My son continued with his Hebrew school. He was rapidly becoming restive. He threatened to become an Idolater. His Jewish education was quickly proceeding nowhere. At home? At home Hanukah reigned supreme tor obvious reasons.
The Days of Awe approached. My son was six or seven. The Hebrew school he attended was holding a children• s service, conducted by some of .the older, "graduating" pupils. My son didn't want to go. l said, "Come." We went. Though we did get there late.
l don't know what · had gotten Into the organizers of this service that year. As time came for the reading from the Torah, a boy about thirteen began to read In English from a Bible, He was solemn; the two youngsters on either side of him were solemn. And he read - the Yorn Kippur order of service In the Temple In J erusalem In ancient times, how a bullock was brought up to the priest, how he slaughtered the bullock, how he cut up the bullock, how he placed the chunks of the bullock on the altar, etc, Bullock again and again and
(Continued on Next Page)
New Year Greetings
SHAW MOTORS INC.
89 Bellel'lle Ave.' GA 1-8171
New Year Greetings
GILBERT'S DRUG STORE
Cor. Smith & Chalkstone Ave. 331-0123
Gilbert J. Bullerfield, Prop.
South Providence Oil Co.
Best Wishes Far
292 Prairie Avenue
A Happy New Year
To Our Customers
And Friends 7S1-6973 r
Bernice Wishes All Its
Friends and Customer_s
A Happy and Prosperous New Year
of Hope Street
Mrs. Benjamin Schuster Mrs. George Fox
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MR. and MRS. SELWYN KIRSHENBAUM and Family
Friendship, Body & Radiator Wks., Inc: 111 Point St .... t, Providence JA 1-3366
"SATISFACTION MAKES FRIENDSHIP"
C;w.M.erl Sa6.Md Specializing In Gifts and Decorating Accessories
BARRINGTON SHOPPING CENTER 245-2133
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AL'S SHELL SERVICE BATTERIES & ACCESSORIES-FIRESTONE TIRES-TUBES
820 HOPE STREET 621-0060 BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
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398 HOPE STREET GA- 1-4707
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BARNES RUBBER CO., INC. AUTHOIIZID DIALH FOi IHODI ISLAND
nRESTONE TIRES 750 Reservoir Avenue, Cranston
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
L!ON CLEANSERS 111 S Chalkstone Avenue
331-2470
943-1616
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
PARFLEX RUBBER THREAD CORP.
50 Valley Street, Providence 421-6261
ANNA DEL SANTOS and All THE GIRLS of the
COZY CORNER BEAUTY SALON 244 Capuano Avenue, Cramton 942-9851 1020 Pontiac Avenue, Cranston 781-8705
WISH THEIR FRIENDS AND PATRONS A HAPPY t-1:W YEAR
Leonard A. Rotenberg and Harry Umer
- of.-
RELIABLE .GOLD· LTD.
ANTIQ_UE and UNUSUAL
JEWELRY and SILVER
CHINA
181 WAYLAND AVENUE at WAYLAND SQUARE
WISH EVERYONE A HAPPY,
PROSPEROUS AND HEALTHFUL
NEW YEAR
_I
MR. and MRS. HARRY FINKELSTEIN
and Family of
ST A TE SIGN CO. Foremost in Sign Advertising
Extend Best Wishes ' For A Happy New Year 836 Eddy StrNt
941-6477 Truck Lettering - Neon Outdoor Advertising
Bernice Bergeron FABRICS
Interior Decorators 180 Taunton Avenue
East Providence 434-1301
Best Wishes For A Happy and · Prosperous
New Year
Best Wishes For A Happy, Healthy and Prosperous .New Year
PEER~ESS SUPPLY CO.
Aluminum Jalousie and Awning Winclows
180 Allens Avenu,i
421-0450
/ RHEA and ALBERT ZEIDEL of
RITE WAY LAUNDRAMAT & CLEANSERS 785 HOPE STREET
Wish our Jewish customers and friends a happy and healthy
New Year
BEST WISHE§ FOR A HAPPY HOLIDAY
HELENE'S BEAUTY SALON Hair Coloring • Styling • Cutting
1180 Park Avenue, Cranston 944-9711
GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
HERBERT BROWN, INC. 199 WAYLAND AVENUE 861-1926
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H. G. DYER, INC. STEEL STORAGE SYSTEMS
(FORMERLY PAUL M . JACKSON CO.)
157 CRARY STREET, PROVIDENCE 421 -6586
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
AUSTIN'S HEARING AID SERVICE, INC. Soles and Service
On All Types of Hearing Aids For information call 421-0627
Ask for Austin 40 Richmond St.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
A. J. KRAJEWSKI MFG. CO. 780 WELLINGTON AVENUE, CRA1JSTON
1467-6800
SUGARMAN'S MARKET MR. and MRS. MYER SUGARMAN
MR. and MRS. SUMNER GOLD and Family
Extend to all their friends and customers best wishes for a
very happy, healthy and prosperous New Year
727 HOPE STREET PROVIDENCE
d ~ ltbt · 61ti .OUft
We Take This Opportunity At The New Year To Thank Our Jewish People For Their Patronage
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A NEW, YEAR OF HEAL TH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
WILLIAM K. TOOLE CO.
Industrial Supplies
and Hardware
76 'EAST AVENUE 723-9000
PAWTUCKET
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 What's Wrong With Jewish Education? Ottttttttttt
(Continued from Preceding Page) again.
I was shocked. My son started nagging, "Daddy, let's go." Other children, normally much better behaved, began to fret and to whisper. The few adults· present to s e e that decorum was m a I n t a I n e d started shushing them. My son was becoming Insistent and I led him out.
Outside an autumnal, Days of Awe melancholy pervaded the clear air. The trees and the rocks In the neighboring park were In a Yorn Klppur mood.
I raged Inside. What fool Md made that blunder? An • accident, of course, but how did It come about? The Yorn Klppur service! The machzor Is replete with poetic passages of great beauty and supreme humanity. Then the other Yom Kippur readings -the account of the Ten Martyrs, The Book of Jonah. Yet they had to pick the dreary account of the ancient sacrificial ritual In the Temple.
We transferred our son to another Hebrew School run by
1, another Temple. A bigger school, better organized, but the results were not much dltterent. Reading by rote; a Hebrew vocabulary of a couple of dozen words; Bible stories conveyed on a level that was far beneath the Intellectual and Imaginative capacities of the chlldren. There was a pltlf\11 attempt at aping the competitiveness of the public school - report cards, exams, grades, but these soon lost all meaning when It became apparent that nearly every child was awarded a grade of excellent In alm0st every subject, that the school was prepared to grant awards In gratitude for merely attending classes. Children had to be pressured to attend, and tardiness was disregarded. U the Instruction had been made more meaningful (relevant, they call It nowadays) the children might have been glad to go. And If the parents had been a little less smug about their newly- gained affluence and sense of security and of having made It, their at t It u de toward the J ewlsh education of their children would have changed the atmosphere radically. But that's the way It was. And every year around Hanaukah time our son would bring home an award, a small unattractive Hanukah lamp for which It was hard to find candles s lim enough to flt It. The first time this - the awar d - was a bit or an event. But the following year It was the same award, and by the time he brought the third Hanukah lamp, of similar design and size, the entire matter was becoming a little ludicrous.
My son attended this Hebrew School for another year or two - requiring ln c; reasln g pressure to get him to go - and then came " graduation" - and the end. After that there was no place to send him.
But I also have a little daughter some ten years younger than my · son, and the same process Is no'f r epeating ltseU. She started /attending nursery school.
Now nursery school Isn't Intended to "educate," but only to take the chlld off a mother's hands, and tf the teachers are competent, all Is well and fine. But there came a shock this time t oo , not unlike the one experienced nearly a decade earlier with the Yorn Klppur service. ,
One day In the spring we received a notice: Parents are Invited to attend a model Seder for the little ones.
I confess, I don't. normally respond to such Invitations. For some reason which I cannot fathom, I responded this time. It had been better had I not.
It was noontime. A large horsesh oe tabl e was appropriately set with plates containing the Ingredients of a Seder. The rabbi sat In front . Half a dozen parents took their places alongside their children. The rabb i began with an explanation of the m eanlng of Pesach that went somewhat as
(Continued on Next Page)
' THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970 43
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
KENT ClEANSERS
775 Hope StrNt
145 Waterman Aw., E. Prov. 1526 Smith St., No. Prov.
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
VORRO'S EXPRESS Minturn Farm Road
Bristol, I.I. 253-4800
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
SARGE'S AUTO BODY WORKS • Far Cars, Trucks & Buses
331-8031 Nights - Sun. - Holiday>
722-2389
450 BRANCH AVENUE Corner Charles 5tffft
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
FROM
The Sydney Family
SYDNEY SUPPLY CO.
Wholnale,. and Diltributon
176 UNION AVENUE PROVIDENCE, R.I. 02909
944-0200
New Year Greetings
GEORGE J. HORN, INC.
Oil Oil 81,rnen Burner Service
238 Warwick Ave., 461-1725
Best Wishes for the New Year
OAKES ON THE HIU
at 10 Thomas Street
- Att Supplies -
Cesspool Cleaners Barrington
245-5686
Frank J. Palumbo 30 Maple Avenue
New Year Greetings
Pilling Chain Company
Manufacturers of Zipper Parts
90 Bay Spring Avenue West Barrington
246-0100
Extends Best Wishes For A Very Happy New Yea r
NEW YEAR GREETINGS from Artie Silverman and Family of
Artie Silverman's General Auto Sales, Inc.
1100 Warwick Avenue, Warwick 467-6684
MRS. SARAH FRADIN of CHARLES FRADIN UPHOLSTERING CO.
729 Pontiac Avenue Cranston Wishes Her Relati ves. Friends and Customer, A Happ) . Health) and Prosperous New Year
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
BEST PLASTICS, INC. Plastic Exlruders , and Fabricators
325 Valley Street Providence. R . I. TE 1-6750
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
LORD'S ATLANTIC SERVICE 460 PONTIAC A VENUE, CRANSTON
MORAN INTERNATIONAL
Air Freight Forwarders e DOCUMENTATION
e BANKING Extends Best Wishes • INSURANCE For A Very 1-k>ppy New Year '
J. F. MORAN CO. 17 EXCHANGE STREET, PROVIDENCE
phone 421-9533
BEST WISHES
WI 1-956'4
FOR A HAPPY NEW · YEAR
CRISS CADILLAC COMPANY, INC.
Cadi llac Sales & Service
101 CADILLAC DRIVE
467-6600
PROVIDENCE, R.I.
44 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2, 1970 I I
New Year Greetings
GARDEN CITY RESTAUR~.,T
47 Hillside Rd., Cranston
942-.9800 ' ,
NEW YEAR GREETINGS FROMENT BROS. Quality Cateren
1965 Mendon Rood Cumberland
725-7084
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
A: G. CARUOLO Architect and EnginHr 296 Ai,;ells Avenue
861-9192
New Year Greetings
WEST WARWICK SCREW PRODUCTS CO., INC.
21 Factory St., W. Warwick
821-4729
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
BROOKNER FLORIST
Rowen For All Occasions
204 Brood Slrfft 421-2538 - 751-5553
A Happy New Year
UNION CAMP CORP. Pak-AH
Plastic Products 50 Niantic Awnue
944-3300
Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
MAXINE Fashiom for Women and Children
1249 Main Street, West Warwick 821-JfiOO
OUR VERY BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
- BRODSKY'S-CRANSTON - PAWTUCKET
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
RICHARD P. RITA PERSONNEL SERVICES, INC.
187 Westminster Strfft 421 -7616 BOB McGOVERN, Manager
A Healthy and Prosperous New Year to All from
Antonio's Coiffures, Inc.
837 HOPE STREET
PROVIDENCE
861-8887
t C C O O C C C CC¥_ C C O C C C O O C C O C C C ¢ New Year Grietings
JUUIE'S BEAUTY SALON
1076 Hope StrNt Provide,..
What's Wrong With Jewish Education? o o o o o o o o o o o t o o o o o o o a a a a a a
(Continued from Preceding Page) lot of money · for the Egyptians? Let us go to our own country and wort hard and make a lot of money for ourselves.
follows: Long, ago our forefathers were slaves In a country named Egypt, The "forefathers" bit left the four- · year-olds bewlldeJ'ed, They knew daddy and mummy and grandpa and grandma, If there were any of the latter. · But " slaves" they under stood. In fact some of them play games at enslaving their juniors. Then there came a man named Moses, the rabbi continued, and he said to the Jewish slaves In Egypt: Why should we work hard to make a
"'-ew Year Greetings
MANCHESlH & HUDSON CO.
300 Station St., Cranston
467-8815
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
EL-DEE FURNITURE CO.
COMPLETE
HOME FURNISHINGS
2UO Mineral Sprina' An.
Centredale CE l-739t
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IOUGHT - SOLD - APPtAISID o,,, T• MIIII• s._. It$ .02 Eadl
ALBUMS e CAT AlOGS • SUPP\.IES H.11.,..,1, c,-1,.. Car.u
ZEKE'S STAMP SHOPPE 800 HOPE STREET
Edward A. Britland
Open every day 8:30 o.m.-8 p.m.
COME IN AND
PUR-R-R-R-K
UP
YOUR
WARDROBE
~ PROFESSIONAL DESIGNING,
KNITTING, CROCHETING AND AL TERA TIONS ...
ON ALL KNITS
AMY and FARIDA
This bit of profound Marxist Interpretation of the Exodus seemed to go aver well with the little ones. At least there were no . protests or snickers. And so Moses led the Jews out of Egypt In such a hurry they hadn't time to bake bread, and therefore baked matzohs, the rabbi concluded.
The little ones took It all In good spirit.
At about this point the rabbi switched . to the question and answer method of Instruction. Picking up a piece of matzoh, he asked, "What Is this?" The answer came In chorus and correctly. In the middle-class, sophisticated (assimilated? deraclnated?) homes of these children Pesach may not be observed much, but matzohs as a token on the table were lnvarlablY In evidence.
"And what are matzohs- made of?" the rabbi asked.
Puzzled looks on all sides. What kind of a question was this! Malzohs came from a cardboard container which was bought In the neighborhood supermarket. Matzohs, like rocks, are made In some kind of factory somewhere. Who cares what they are made of, as long as they are there.
"Matzohs are made out of nour," the rabbi explained. "And what kind of nour ," the rabbi explained. "And what kind of nour are they made of?" he pursued the subject.
"Matzo nour ," they sang out. Leave It up to them, They were bright children of middle-class educated parents and they could put two and two together.
Thus t h e Instruction proceeded until the rabbi picked up a piece of charoseth and Inquired what It was. Now, matzohs are one thing and charoseth Is a different story altogether. Not many children from non-Orthodox homes had ever seen any.
"We 11, what does It look like?" the rabbi prodded.
The children glanced at each other meaningfully, snickered and shouted "BMI"
The parents, too, snickered self-consciously, and also the rabbi.
The "model SP1er" ended a few minutes later.
An unfortunate gaffe, one might say.
Perhaps. But the rabbi Is an able, educated and progressive man. More recently, during the strike of the United Federation of Teachers In New York, he was active In reopening the local public school that had been closed down by the strike, He Is active In neighb o rhood community
(Continued on Next Page)
831-9662
Best ~Wishes For A Happy and Prosperous
hlew Year
G. Daniels & Co.
Custom Mode Curtains Draperies-Slip Covers Window Shades and
Venetian Blinds
969 Broad St. - -461-4440
OUR SINCERE BEST WISHES FOR
THE NEW YEAR SEASON
LINENS e LINGERIE Wayland Squa,e Garden Oty
PROVIDENCE YARN CO , INC.
Extends
Best Wishes
For A Happy,
Healthy And
Prosperous
New Year
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
ROBERT A'S BEAUTY SALON All Branches Of Beauty Culture
143 Warwick AYenue, Cranston 781-8824. Open Thursday and Friday eYenings
WAYLAND MANOR MEN'S SALON
JOHN arid VINCENT
BETTY, Manicurist 500 ANGEU STREET
831-9793 751-7700
PROVIDENCE
EXTEND BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES
FOR A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR
From
WAYL-AND· YARN SHOPPE Sterling Engineering and
Construction Co., Inc. 38 North Court Street,- Providence
~ARC J . PEARLMAN
Pl 1-1234 201 WAYLAND AVENU-E, PROVIDENCE
'
1· Ii
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421-2838
SEAFOOD
~ • STEAK • CHOPS • FISH &
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DIAL 737-9606
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• EXC LUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS FOR DAHLBERG " MIRACLE- EAR" ~·
421-s1a2 ~c:si~/. ,..., ___ ._, 103 EMPIRE ST., PROVIDENCE
ROBERT J. BARRIE
HOUDA Y GREETINGS
TERRY HANNA WORLD WIDE
TRAVEL SERVICE 170 Westminster St. TE 1-7676
Best Wishes For A
Happy New Year
131 Dorrance St.
Across from 1he Oullet
331-2000
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
BUCKY'S AUTO SALES 205 ATWOOD AVENUE CRANSTON, R.I .
942-1800
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
R. I. GLASS WORKS, Inc. CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING
375 WASHINGTON STREET 421-4131 MIDLAND MALL, WARWICK 828-2951
OUR VERY BEST WISHES
FOR THE NEW YEAR
GRAYSON'S of PROVIDENCE
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
BRIDGE TIRE SERVICE, INC.
Formerly BRIDGE TIRE & SUPPLY CO.
21 Division Street (At the Bridge)
Pawtucket, R.I. Phone: 72S-1312
"Your Bridge to Complete Ca, Care" President John H. Knobel
New Year's Greetings From
All of Us At
S. H Wilk Realty Company
Mr. and Mn. Samuel H. Wilk and family
1429 l,ood St. HO 1-9290
,_ Sports, Athletics I In Jewish State
By SAUL BUCH (Mr. Buch Is an American
_ biologist who travels extensively to the Middle East.)
FOUR-D"AY marches from the coastal plain to Jerusalem.-,relay races through the Judean hills to celebrate the victories of Judah the Maccabee •.• long-dlstance swims from Tlberlas across the Sea of Gallllee to Eln Gev ,._
Yoga on the sands at Tel Avlv ... crlcket In the meadows of the Upper Galllee ... golt on the greens of Caesrea .. .
Scuba-diving In the Red Se a _ .. r o c k-cllmblng In the • Carmel mountalns •• -horseback-r Id Ing on the Mount of Beatitudes ...
swi'mmlng, basketball, volleyball - even fencing and tennis on the kibbutz ... -
National teams competing In Olympic, European and Asian track and neld championships (Israel Is In the unusual position of being able to compete In the games of _both contlnents) ••• natlonal teams vying for honors In Israel's own Olymplc_s, the Maccablads ••.
This, then, Is sport In Israel. There. Is hardly a pastime In the world which cannot be found In
(Continued on Next Page)
000000000000 What's Wrong With Jewish Education?
tttttttttttt (Continued from Preceding Page) affairs. He Is a lecturer . I am told that he often broadcasts over Station WBAI, the same one that was made "famous" last winter for Its broadcast of a poem written by a Negro pupil, the poem that went llke this , "Hey Jewboy with the yarmulke on your head / Hey pale-faced Jewboy, I wtsh you were dead,'' But from his haggadah the ancient cry of "Jewish Rage," the shetoch ham o sch o ("Pour out . thy wrath ... ") has long since been deleted.
And so my little daughter continued In the same Hebrew. School the year following the "model Seder." It was a good year - a couple of good teachers made the difference . She used to come back enthusiastic and excited. Songs, discussion of moral problems (Y{as Jacob justl!led In his dubious deal with Esau about the primogeniture blessing'?), she began to learn the aleph-bet.
The past year was not so good. No more moral problems, no more aleph-bet, not to speak of anything beyond It. And Sunday mornings there were battles. "I don't want to go." "Why?" "It's boring." The old problem, what to do next. Transfer her to the other school? And more Hanukah lamp awards? What to do?
A study,., a census of a kind, had been made not so Jong ago of the state of Jewish education In this country enrollment, average number of years of attendance, frequency and duration of classes, In short, the works. I Invited a prominent Jewish educator to analyze these results and to discuss the problems and posslhl!ltles of Jewish -education In this country at this time. In due time the mailman brought a manuscript. It proudly described how J ews were
'the first to Institute a public school system with virtually compulsory attendance as far back as twenty-five centuries ago, and what Jewish sages of that tim e said ·1n praise of educating' children; of the present It said that while things are very bad In reg ar d to Jewish education, nevertheless there Is also much hope ,and what we must do Is, with united effort, shoulder to shoulder, to bend our energies toward the great goais ahead. What those goals were was not described. In short, a sermon.
_ Naturally, I reject~d It. It ls now summer. Soon
schools, will reopen, also Hebrew schools of all kinds, So what does one do It one wants a Jewish ed'lcatlon for one's child?
REPRINTED FROM THE JEWISH DIGEST
THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2 1970 45 . . . IDA'S HEALTH STUDIO
Ida Thorson, R.M. T. 781-8510 - 781-6409
1491 Broad StrHt New Year Greetings To
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TERRACE Post Rd ., Warwick
Try Our Polynesion Delights
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NEW YEAR GREETINGS
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Harold L. Kendall Jr .
New Year Greetings
WIONKHIEGE VAUIY FARM
Log Road, Smithfield
231-0417
New Year Greetings
From
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Rumford, R. '-
Poise ·,n Ivy 434-1140
New Yeor Greetings
THOMAS B. GRAY Jewelers Since 1878 Corner North Main and Smith Street
Providence 270 County Road
Barrington 3 Arcade Building
Providence
Happy New Year
4118 Mendon Road Cumberland Hill, R. I.
767-3560
NEW YEAR GREETINGS from
HOWARD MILLER 200 TOBACCO SHOP
200 Union Street, Providence 831-9385
of
WITH BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY,
HEAL THY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEA R
LOUISQUISSET GOLF CLUB
VERY BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
from
Bernard Green and Samuel Green
LABOR POOL "All Types of Industrial Workers-Male or Female_"
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NEW YEAR GREETINGS
!
I I
,I
46 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD FRIDAY OCTOBER 2 1970 . . MRS. LOUIS ,JACOBS Mr. and Mrs. Max Greenberr
and Leon wishes a u her friends and 113 Julia Street, Cranston
relatives a nd au her Dr. and Mn. Gdlden Agers a happy, - Robert Greenberg h ealthy and prosperous
Wish Their Relatives and New Year Friends A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS. Happy New Year OSCAR ZARETSKY MR. and MRS.
And Family WILLIAM s. KJiITZNER 324 · Rochambeau Ave"!u• -
Wish All Relatives and Friends A Happy New Year
We Wish All Our Relatives and Friends A Very
Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
Jrving Zatloff and Sans, Steven, &rol D.,
and Michael 129 Blanchard Avenue
Warwick
MR. AND MRS. EDWARD GOLDIN
Ellen. Sherry and Donna
118 \Y arrlngton St.
Extend Best Wishes For A Happy
New Year
DR. and MRS. HYMAN GOLDSTEIN
and DAVID 84 Fosdyke Street
MR. and MRS. SUMNER POMERANZ
MR. and MRS. HOWARD HOLLAND
MR. and MRS. ARTHUR PRICE
and GRANDCHILDREN A HAPPY NEW YEAR
DR. and MRS.
MILTON LEVIN And Children
and Family I Timberland Drive
Lincoln. a. 1: BEST WISHES
FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR-
MR. and MRS. AARON COHEN
30 lowell Avenue
MR. and MRS.
DAVID GENSER 8 Marine Avenue
Warwick
Wish AU Their Relatives and Friends
A Happy New Year
A Happy New Year Ta All Our
Rela tives a nd Friends
MR. and MRS.
JOSEPH ACKERMAN
and Family 231 Elmgrove Avenue
MR. and MRS.
BERNARD SEGAL Children and Grandchildren
94 Overhlll Road
Wish Their Relatives and Friends
A Hapl)y New Year
William Alla n, Larry Robert Mr. and Mrt. And Joa n Susan EDWARD SEGAL
of 110 Savoy Street and Sons, Joel, Ke nneth
DR. and MRS. a 'nd Jimmy ~
HENRY LEVIN Mr. and Mrs.
Linda Beth. Lori Ann MELVIN SEGAL And Steven Irwin and Brvce, Michae l
35 Fifth Street Peter and Pame la
Wish Relatives and Friends A Happy and Prosperous Wish Their Relatives
and Friends o Happy and New Y~ar Prosperous ,._.,w Year
MR. and MRS. JEROME HOROWITZ ' and FAMILY
Sidney Carl. Carol. Ste,en Dean. Robin Gail
of 183 Ninth St reet
Extend Best Wishes · For A Happy and Prosperous New Year
THE HARRY LEACH FAMILY WISH ALL THEIR RELATIVES, FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERS OF THE H. LEACH MACHINERY CO . A HAPPY. HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
MR. HARRY LEACH MR. ancl MRS. MAX LEACH
and Children MR. and MRS. OSCAR A. LEACH
and Children
With Best Wishes
Fpr A New Year
Of Health and Happine~s
HERBERT F. De 'SIMONE Attorney-General
. -Sports, Athletics In Jewish State
(Continued from Preceding Page)
the country but this Is surely to · be expected In a lan<I which has drawn Its population from so many corner s of the world. The Eng II sh and South Africans brought with them their cricket; Indeed, there Is a cricket league to which a number of kibbutzim belong. An Australian has opened a scuba-diving school at Ellat, and an American, a riding stable In the Galilee.
It Is not mer e chance that emphasis on past imes Is on group activities. Such activities as nature junkets, excursions Into the desert and archaeological trips - It Is no cUche that a r c h ae o logy Is ever yman's "spor t" In Israel - are much more popular, possibly even more acceptable, than going off alone to train for such Individual sports as running, boxing and wrestling.
Most of Israel's successes In International sport have been In team games r ather than In performances ot Individual skills - In basketball and soccer rather than In track and field. As a nation, Israel In terms ot sport can be l!lcened to such schools as the University ot Chicago, Johns Hopkins and the Massachusetts Institute ot Technology which
· have Ignored, de-emphasized or eliminated football, rather than those, like the members ot Big Ten, which clamor to be Invited to play a post-season Bowl game.
The non- competitive attitude ot Jsraells toward sport Is characterized by makot, a game played by young and old, male and female, on all Israel's beaches. In this activity, two persons, armed with enormous table teMls
- bats, voUey a ball about the size and consistency or a squash .ball. There are no rules, no points to be won or lost, no victor and no vanquished. Matkot Is all that a game should be as opposed to what today's games so frequently are. It Is a fUtlle pastime. Nobody attempts to win. There can be no regrets at defeat. It Is a pleasant way to exercise, to rel:Q: and to unwind - the essence of sports, to the unspoiled mind.
Still, Israel Is no different from the majority of countries In that soccer Is the number one team game. Israelis are soccercrazy and It Is no surprise that Israel Is the current soccer champion of Asia. However, her performances against stronger European _opposition have been singularly unsuccessfUl. In the Olympic games, her team won twice and then was beaten. ·
Thre e explanations are offered ror this lack ot s uccess. Fi rst , Israeli players are aU amateurs and young, In contrast to their opponents who are usually In their late twenties and quite expert. Then, that poutlcal In fig ht i n g which Is so character istic of Israel has s pread to soccer. The majority of club teams are af!lllated either with Hapoel or Maccabl and each gr oup demands, and until recentlY. was given, five positions on the national team. A Betar or Hakoah player was chosen to rm the r e maining position.
Finally, as Mllovan Clrlc, the national coach of the Israel soccer feam r ecently said: "The Israeli footballer Is not devoted enough to his sport. He has little s ports ambition and Is not r ead:, to sweat In order to Improve his game, once he bas made hls club's 11-r-st team or the National team. The Israeli youngster Is not taught how to kick a ball correctly, how to kick on the run, how to kick from any position or how to head the ball."
It Is " early-teen" coaching which counts and this Is ~ dly lacking In Israel . Outside ot· Israel, the best-known Isr aeli soccer per sonality Is Menahem Ashkenazl . He Is not a player but a r efer ee who won warm tribute for his refereeing In the r ecent World Soccer Cup In which, Incidentally, Israel failed to quall.fY.
Basketball Is the second most popular sport In the country and In Int e rn a ti o n a l competition Israel's r ise has been meteoric She !lrst came to the fore In th~
(Continued on Next Page)
For ney,s of Israel, Jewish comm un ltle s throughout the world, _local organizations and
society, r ead the He r ald •• ( and for some of the best bargalJlS In the Greater Providence area. ,.
HAPPY NEW YEAR MR. and MRS.
EDWARDO. ADLER and Family
18 Memorial Road
MRS. SAMUEL KOPECH and Family
101 Radcliffe Ave. Wish Their Family
and Friends A Happy New Year
DR. and MRS. MARSHALL K. BORNSTEIN
Robin Nancy and Thomas Rodin
MR. and MRS. FRED MAX Extend Best Wishes For
HAPPY NEW YEAR MR. and MRS.
EDWARD BERREN and LARRY
MR. and MRS. RICHARD COHEN
Happy New Yea r MR. and MRS. JACK SWARTZ
And Family 395 Ancell Street
Providen ce
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gorodetsky
and Lenore
A Happy New Year To Their Many Relatives
And Friend s
Wish Their Relatives and Friends A Happy Healthy a nd Prosperous New Year
MR. and MRS. MR. a nd MRS. RALPH SHUSTER
and FAMILY IRVING I. COKEN
15 Greening Lane
Dean Estates 69 Marion Avenue
Edgewood WISH THEIR RELATIVES
AND FRIENDS A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
Wish AU Their Relatives and Friends
A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS. SAMUEL WEINBERG
and MARC
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MR. and MRS. CARL WEINBERG
17 Tulip Cirde Garden City
The
PEARLMAN FAMILY
Wish All Their Re latives a nd Friends A Happy New Ye a r
Morris Avenue
MR. and MRS. MAURICE LEACH and FAMILY
39 Creston Way WISH ALL THEIR RELATIVES AND FRIENDS
A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. HARRY A. SCHWARTZ and FAMILY
71 Hartshorn Road WISH RELATIVES AND FRIENDS A HAPPY, HEALTHFUL
AND PROSPERO US NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. ISRAEL KAUFMAN and FAMILY
MR. and MRS. SOLOMON KAUFMAN
19 Ruskin Street EXTEND BEST W ISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR
DR. and MRS. HARRY I. GOLDMAN MR. and MRS. EWOT L GOLDMAN and FAMILY DR: and MRS. LAWRENCE D. PAGE and FAMILY MR. and MRS. LOUIS G. SURDEN and FAMILY
Wish Relatives and Friends a Happy New Year
MRS. ISRAEL B. DICKENS DR. and MRS. MAYNARD S. BURT and Children James and Nancy
Wish The ir Relatives and Friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year
Judge and Mrs. Jacob J. Alprin and FAMILY
53 Lauriston Street
Exlend Best Wishe s for a Happy. and Prosperous New Ye a r
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Riddell and Family
209 Sixth Street
WISH ALL THEI R RELATIVES AND FRI ENDS
A NEW YEAR OF PEACE, HAPPINE-SS
AND PROSPERITY \
...
I, / I'>.'.
, )
DR. anil MRS. SAMUEL H. KOUFFMAN
and Family 677 Hape Street
Wish Relatives and Friends A Happy New Year
New Year Greetings
MR. and MRS. FRED KELMAN Daniel, Jahn, David
and Gloria 71 Stanwood St(eet
NEW YEAR GREE,'TINGS
MR. and MRS. LOUIS HANDWERGER
and Family
,18 Stadium Rd. Providence
MR. and MRS.
SOL KOFFLER 600 Blackstane 'Baulevard
Extend Best Wishes To Their Relatives and Friends far A Happy and Prosperous
New Year
MR. and MRS.
IRA S. GALKIN and Family
Wish Their Relatives and Friends
A Happy and Prosperous New Year
MR. and MRS.
Charles Zatloff 39 Sessions Street
And Sans
Irving Zatloff and Family Morris Zatloff and Family
Wish Relatives and Friends A Happy New Year
DR. and MRS'. JACOB REICH CHILDREN and
GRANDCHILDREN Extend Best Wishes
To Their Relatives and Friends far a
Happy and Healthy New Year
New YeorGrHtings MR. and MRS. ,
JOSEPH SALTZMAN and Richard
Dr. and Mn. Paul Feldman and Lisa Joy
Mr. and Mn. Robert Lubin and Scott Lee
MR. and MRS. ARNOLQ FEITAL
and BETSY HOPE 44 Whip~ill Road
Warwick Extend Best Wishes To Relatives and Friends for the New Year
HAPPY NEW YEAR MR. ALBERT LIEBERMAN
RICHARD, JUDITH and· ROBERT
259 Evergreen St_, Pawtucket
MR. and MRS.
WUIS I. SWEET And Family
Jenckes Hill Road Lincoln
Extend Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
Charles Steingold And Children
MR. and MRS. KENNETH H. STEINGOLD And Son, NEIL ROBERT
Best Wishes To Reloti.,. , ond Friends on the New Yeor Season
MR. and MRS. MILTON SCHOENBERG
of 28 Gillooly Drive Warwick, R. I .
Wish All Their Relatives and Friends
A Happy and Prosperous New Year
MR. and MRS. DAVID HORVITZ
And Children ELLEN HOPE, SUSAN GAIL
and ROBERT CURLAND
9 Dorset Road, Pawtucket
Extend Best Wishes To , Relatives and Friends For
A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year
MR. and MRS. JOSEPH W. RESS and Famlly
486 COLE A VENUE
EXTEND BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. JOSEPH BLOCK 1 Summer Street, Narragansett
Extend Best Wishes For A Happy New Year
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander K. Gladstone Wish All Their Relatives and Friends
A Happy and Healthy New Year
MR. and MRS. THOMAS ROSENFIELD and Children, Jael, Jay and Lisa
Wish Their Relatives and Friends A Happy, Healthy and Prosperous
New Year
COUNCILMAN LOUIS A. MASCIA . I
AND FAMILY .
' EXTEND BEST WISHES FOR
A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PROSPEROUS ,
NEW YEAR
Sports,-Athletics In Jewish State
(Continued from Preceding Page) European Games ,tn 1954 and since then her club and International teams have complied outstanding victories a g a I n s t the best European opposition. Is.rael at present Is champion of Asia.
It Is dlfflcult to pinpoint the reasons for pre-eminence In the basketball world but several observations are pertinent. Facllltles on the club level, I! not on the national plane, are goad - every kibbutz has its court. The sport, too, Is devoid of the political squabbling which cripples soccer. Israeli players are taller than many Europeans and, finally, success tends to breed succ~ss.
It ls Israeli women, rather than men, who have starred In Individual, as opposed to team sports. This was especially so In the Asian games In Bangkok In 1966. In track, Hannah Shlzl!I raced the BOO-meter route In new Asian record time - 2 minutes, 10,5 seconds a fine performance by any criterion -and Debra Markus won the 200-meter sprint In 25.3 seconds and placed third In the 100 meters In 12.5 seconds.
Israel 's swimming performances at Bangkok so Impressed the coach of the allconquering Japanese squad that he suggested that Yvonna Tovlss and Gershon Shefia might well pose a threat to Japanese supremacy In Asian swimming. Yvonna was second In the 100-meter freestyle In 65.5 seconds and second again In the 200-meter Individual medley In which she was clocked In 2 minutes and 38. 7 seconds. Gershon Sheffa took second In the 400-meter medley In 5 minutes and 9.5 seconds and third In the 200-meter breast stroke in 2 minutes and 39,7 seconds. Another modal at Bangkok was won by Abraham Melamed who was second In the 100-meter buterfly swim.
In these successes the kibbutz certainly plays a role. It Is surely no coincidence that many of the best swimmers In Israel are klbbutznlks and that so many of the kibbutzim have swimming pools. Given the opportunity Israelis can obviously compete successfully with the best.
Israel has a superb climate tor tennis, but unfortunately courts are costly and therefore scarce. There are only 155 courts in the entire country. Yet, matters are Improving. The ftrst school court was opened In late 1966 In Tel Aviv. Now, 1,000 secondary s c hoo I students receive weekly lessons. Six kibbutzim have tennis clubs and It Is hoped that tennis wlll take its place alongside basketball and swimming as a kibbutz activity.
The Budget of the Israeli Tennis Association has been Increased from 800 .Israeli pounds In 1957 to 110,000 pounds in 1967. Although Israel's Davis Cup record can at best be called dismal - in 17 rounds she has defeated only Turkey ·and Portugal - her Junior netmen have performed well In England In the last few years.
Sports facllltles are woefUlly Inadequate compared to those available In the United States and other developed countries. In all of Israel there are only a mere ftve running tracks and these are frequently unavailable becausj! of prior claim by soccer players.
Still, .It Is well to remember that Israel has yet to attain her majority and that there are more swimming pools and more tennis courts In Israel than, tor example, in Turkey or Greece, and that, Indeed, there are probably more pools and courts in Israel than in the entire Middle -East. .
And facllltles are Improving. As· you drive north from Tel Aviv along th,!! Halla highway you cannot fall to observe ihe Tel I Aviv Country Club, sponsore<fby a group of Immigrants from Mexico. It has superb facilities. The swimming pool Is designed to permit 25, 33r and 50~meter laps and there are 1, 3, 5, and 10-meter
diving platforms. There are 17 hard and 4 taut-en-cas tennis
(Continued on Next Page)
THE RHODE ISLAND HERAL:D, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 1970' 47
MR. and · MRS. WALLACE H. GENSER
And Children Ronelle, Sheryl and Erick
76 Summit Avenue
A Happy New Year
MRS. HARRY GORNSTEIN
Wishes All Her Friends And Relatives ·
A Happy and Healthy New Year
MR. and MRS. JACK RESNICK
31 Raddilfe A,·enue Wish All Their Relatives And
Friends a Healthy and Prosperous NCw Year
New Year Greetings
DR. and MRS . IRWIN A. GRAUBART And Sons, Ronald M .
and Julian I. S 1 Homer Street
MR. and MRS.
Paul J. Robin and
MR. and MRS. NA THANIEL M. BODNER
Extend Best Wishes To Their Mony friend s for A Happy And Prosperous ~w Year
Our Best Wishes For A Healthy and Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
MORRIS SA TLOFF
and Sons, David Paul Lewis Marc and Robert Barry
19 Ray Street, Providence
Mrs. Max Botvln
Mr. and Mrs. Phlllp Swartz
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Botvln
Mr. and Mrs. David Botvln
7 Celestia A venue. Cranston
Extend Best Wishes To All Their Relatives and Friends For A Happy and Prosperous
New Year
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. SAM FLESCHER
64 VASSAR AVENUE
PROVIDENCE
MR. and MRS . .
RALPH W. MILLER And Family
156 Sixth Street Wish All Their Relatives and Friends a Happy New Year
MR . . and MRS. IRWIN R. GREENBERG
and Sons GARY, TODD and ERIC
Wish Their Relatives And friends A Happy And Healthy Holiday
HAPPY NEW YEAR MR. and MRS.
JOEL ROBINSON and FAMILY
36 FARRAR STREET CRANSTON
Mr. and Mrs. DAVID LINDER 19 Lorraine Avenue
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Glick and sons
Lawrence and Stanley 12 Carlisle Street, Cranston
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence S. Miller and son, Lee Howard
68 Wood Street, Pawtucket Wish Relative and Friend s
A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
WUIS STRASHNICK of 181 Tenth Street
Extend Best Wishes To Relatives and Friends · For
A Happy and Prosperous New Year
MR. and MRS. HERMAN WEINSTEIN
S4 Tome Street, Cranston MR. and· MRS.
HARVEY A. LEIB of Worcester, Man.
MR. and MRS. IRWIN M . WBNSTEIN
Hilari Frc ncine of California
MR. and MRS. GERALD WEINSTEIN
Craig Alan, Jeffrey Philip and Pamela Beth
of California A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS. IRVING ROSEN 41 Unity Street, Pawtucket
MR. and MRS. IRWIN M. HAZEN Stacey Davida, Harry Brian, Heidi Elissa, Felicia Beth
24 Progress Street, Pawtucket Extend Best Wishes to Relatives a nd Friends for the New Year
MR. and MRS. NORTON RAPPOPORT STEPHEN, HARVEY and HOWARD
81 Payton Street
MR. and MRS. RONALD RAPPOPORT MARCI ROBYN
Extend Best Wishes For A. Happy New Yeor
DR. and MRS. BENSON E. GOLD Andrew Richard, Raber! Daniel, . Jason Gregory
377 __ Narragansett Parkway, Warwick Extend Best Wishes For a Happy, Healthy ond Prosperous New Yeor
MR. and MRS. DAVID MEYERS and FAMILY
Wish All Their Relatives and Friends A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year
MR. and MRS.
LOUIS L. ROTTENBERG
CHILDREN and
GRANDCHILDREN
Wish Their Friends and Relatives
A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year
' t
,,,
j
48 THE RHODE ISLAND HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1970
JOSEPH MONZACK and Sans
224 Chalkstone Avenue Wish All Their Friends
A Happy and Prosperous New Year ·
Be~t Wishes for the New Year
Robert B. Suzman 551 Hape Street
Bristol, R. I. ~
MR. and MRS.
Max Broomfield Arid .Family
of 19 Michael Drive Cranston
Wish All Their Relatives And Friends
A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
Alvin N. Biener and family
136 Ninth Street
Extend Best Wishes To Friends and Relatives For A Very Happy New Year
MR. and MRS.
LEONARD GRANOFF and Sona, Lloyd Wallace
and Ev&n Ja:, 460 Rochambeau Avenue
Providence Extend Best Wishes To
Their Relatives and Friends For a Joyous New Year
MR. and MRS. DAVID KOTLEN
of Glocester
Wish Thelf Relatives and Friends A Happy and Prosperous New Year
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MR. and MRS.
Irving Kushner and sons
Alan and lester
89½ Glenham Street Providence, Rhode Island
MR. and MRS.
MAX FISH Peter
Dr. anci Mn. Stanley Fish and Susan
Mr. and Mn. Elliot Turk Bonnie, Mindy, Franklyn
24 Wriston Drive Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Fish
A Happy New Year
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
MR. and MRS.
EARL J. RESNICK Kenneth, Deborah
Sha,on and Frima
51 Richland Road Cranston
MR. and MRS.
WUIS WVITI and Famlly
201 Hollmaa AY•Craastoa
Extend Best Wishea To Ther Relatives and
Prlenda For The New Year
MR. and MRS. LOUIS TROSTONOFF and FAMILY
35 Fisk Street Wish Their Many Relati; es and Friends
A Happy and Prosperous New Year
New Year Greetings To All Our Relatives And Friends
MRS. HANNAH PUSAR MR. and MRS. THEODORE FEINSTEIN
AVA and PERI
NEW YEAR GREETINGS ,
MR. and MRS. MURRAY (MARK, BRIAN) FREEDMAN MRS; GERTRUDE EKSTROM
124 WARRINGTON STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I. 02907
MR. and MRS. WILLIAM KESSLER and MR. and MRS. PAUL LEVIN
WISH THEffi RELATIVES AND FRIENDS A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PRQ_SPEROUS -NEW YEAR
MR. and MRS. MORTYN K. ZIETZ And Daug!Jters
BOBBI and JUDI of 195 Lorimer Avenue, Providence
Extend Best Wishes to Relatives and Friends For a Happy and Prosperous New Year
i>R. and MRS. HAROLD HANZEL DR. JEFFREY S. HANZEL
MEL VIN HANZEL 30 Knowles Drive, Warwick
Extend Sincere Best Wishes for a Happy New Year To Their Relatives and Friends
BEST WISHES FOR A HEALTHY,
HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
FROM
Rep. and Mrs. Bernard C. Gladstone ANb FAMILY
ANDREA, BRUCE, JEFFREY AND SCOTT
Sports, Athletics In :Jewish State
(Continued from Preceding Page) courts, 4 of which are 1:loodllt. There are also volleyball and basketball courts, a soccer fleld and a king-sized gymnasium. Membership fees are modest, even when judged by Israeli Income.
The Tel Aviv club dillers from most United States country clubs In that Its members participate In athletics all through the day rather than at the preprandlal ljour. The _clubs hours are Indicative of this: It Is open 16 hours a day - from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. A turther ditrerence between It and those In the United States Is the wide range of cultural activities offered - a chess section, classes In ceramics and dancing, and, of course, lectures In archeology and other popular subjects.
There Is also the new sports club at Katamon, In Jerusalem, and a magnificent, new gymnasium at kibbutz Ktar Glladl In the Upper Galilee. A new basketball arena Is planned for Tel Aviv. The newly-opened Jerusalem YMHA features a broad sports program.
On the basis of the performance of Israel's athletes In the Olympic Games In 1968 In Mexico City, there Is much to the theory that her teams excel In competition far more successflllly than her Individual performers.
The soccer team's showing pointed up this fact. The booters mowed down Ghana, 5-3, and El Salvador, 3-1, before running afoul of the Olympic champs, Hungary, In the quarter-finals. Here they lost, 2-0. Their next test, with Bulgaria, resulted In a 1-1 tie, leaving unresolved the question of which team (both were tied In games won) was to advance to the semi-final round.
- A toss of a coin was agreed upon to resolve the Impasse. Israel lost, thereby missing certain silver medals for reaching the sem!-!lnals.
But the 11 solo performers were hardly as outstanding. Dr. Shaul Ladany, the nation's wellIt now n long-distance walker, placed only 24th In his specialty. Nehemiah Slrklss, competing In his second Olympics, trailed !n 28th place In a field of 90 In prone markmanshlp and his three comrades In the same field were out of contention completely. Miss Shlzl!I, who did so well In Bangkok, did not qual1!y In the 800-meter run, her specialty. A vraham Melamed qualified for the semi-finals In the 100-meter butterfly swim, but did not progress to ttie final rouhd, Shlomlf Nlr, a promising 16-year-old breast-stroker, missed qualifying by- the margin of 3 seconds In the 100-meter event.
Israel's famed soccer referee, Abraham Klein, officiated In one of - the ·championship rounds and won wide acclaim for his outstanding performance.
Lack of success in International competltfon i~ due not only to Inadequate facilities but also to the paucity of coaching and lack of encouragement. At all levels, but especially at the school-age, U>ere Is virtually no c_oacblng · available. In addition, the young athlete Is not lauded, written up and hero-worshipped as he Is In the United States.
Thus, unless he has tremendous Inner drive and ambition he will soon lose Interest and not Invest the long ho u r s of rigorous training re qu Ired by today's athlete seeking the pinnacle of bis sport.
But Israelis have zest . and Interest In anything exciting. Ever ready to try another sport, Israelis have now started to ski. As a result of the Six-Day War and the acquisition of part of white-topped Mt. Hermon . they now have that snow for which they so longed. Indeed, a-ski club has already been organized. Although there are, as yet, no facll1tles, plans are "being formulated for the Installation of II. ski-tow - · Slalom Shalom.
REPRINTED FROM THE JEWISH DIGF.ST
. MR. and MRS.
SAMUEL I. WOODMAN
99 Laurbton Street
Wish Relatives and Friends A Happy New Year
MR. and MRS. SAMUEL MICHAELSON
21 Cole Farm Court
Wish All Their Relatives and Friends A Very Happy and Pros
perous f'lew Year
MR. and MRS. MAX FISHMAN 139 Sheffield Awr., Pawl.
MR. and MRS. HARVEY FISHMAN and san Kenneth Allen
MR. and MRS. ARTHUR FISHMAN Long Island
A Happy New Year
New Yeor Greetings
M,. and Mn. Irwin Prifft 139 Hillside Av•nue
Mr. and Mrs. Law,ence F. Priest 590 Hope st ... 1
M,. and Mrs. WilNam Nasberg and Dauvhten
Harriet Toby, Beth Abbey 59 o. .......... Rood
M,. and Mn. Burton H. Priest Jeffrey Scott, Mara Sue
60 EdgehiH load
Samuel Moverman
68 Woodbine SINet C.anston
Wishes All His O,ildren, Grandchildren,
Greot-Grondchildref! And Friends
A Very Happy, Healthy And Prosperous New Year
·-A Very Happy New Year
MR. and MRS. MICHAEL THAlER KENT and TARA
11 Blue Bonnet Road Cranston, R. I.
HAPPY NEW YEAR
from
MR. and MRS. EDWARD A. BOSlER
66 laurel Avenue
NEW YEAR GREETINGS TO OUR JEWISH FRIENDS
FROM
MARJORIE &nd ANDREW
BELL
MR. and MRS.
VICTOR GOLD and Children
JUDITH ANN SHARI CYNTHIA
MR. and MRS .. DAVID GOLD
32 Dartmouth Road Cranston
Extend Best Wishes For A Hea lthy and Happy
New Year
A Happy New Year From
MRS. IRVING KOFFLER
MR. and MRS. LAWRENCE KOFFLER
and daughter, USA
MR. and MRS.
STEPHEN KOFFLER and daughters,
SAMARA RACHAEL, DEBRA LYN
MR. and MRS. WOLF E. MYROW and FAMILY
11 Methyl Street, Providence Extend Best Wishes for a Happy New Year
To All Their Relatives and Friends
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM
MR. and MRS. IRWIN CHASE MICHAEL and BRADLEY
10 Brookway Road, Providence
MR. and MRS. PHIUP SEIDMAN 25 Douglas Ave,.,•, Providence
MR. and MRS. HAROID LAKE Debbie Bt.n, Sheryl Ilene, Beth Usa and Rhonda Lynn
MR. and MRS. M. DAVID SBDMAN Renee Audrey and Jill Michelle
MR. and MRS. MICHAEL SEIDMAN
Extend Best Wishes For A Happy and Prosperous New Yeor
MR. and MRS. WILLIAM ORLECK MYRNA and GARY
71 Grand View Avenue, Lincoln
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPYr NEW YEAR
DR. and MRS. MARC HERBERT RICHMAN 291 COLE A VENUE
- PROVIDENCE
BEST WISHES FOR- A NEW YEAR
OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
MR. and MRS. PETER K. ROSEDALE
MR. and MRS. HARVEY PABIAN and JAY
MR. and MRS; ALAN PABIAN BRIAN EDWARD
MR. and MRS. EDWARD SWERDLICK 'MARC EV AN, JODI ELLEN, JEFFREY SCOTT
Exttnd Best Wishts For A Happy and Prosptrous Ntw Ytar
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