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Neo-Nazi Groups Stage More Than To 20 International

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Robbi Robert Laymon and Cantor Arthur Yolko_ff

Rabbi Layman, Cantor Yolkoff To Be Installed Officially At Temple Be~h Israel Sunday

The official installation of Rabbi Robert Layman and · Cantor Arthur Yolkotr as the new spiritual leaders of Rhode Island's oldest Conservative synagogue, Temple Beth Israel. will take place at the temple on Sunday at 8 P.M.

Rabbi Layman will occupy the pulpit vacated last Decem­ber by Rabbi Morris Schuss­heim upon is retirement after serving the congregation for 40 years. Cant · Yolkotr is the first . cantor who is a graduate of the Cantor's Institute of the J ew ish Theological Seminary of America to be on the reglllar stat[ of a Rhode Island syna­gogue.

The ceremonies will open with a procession in which the Rabbi and Cantor will be con­ducted to the pulpit by an Es­cort ol Honor consisting of 13 rabbis. including a ll the Rhode I sland rabbis. seven past pres­idents of the Temple. as well as its officers and trustees.

The past presidents of the congregation who, with presi ­dent Charles Coken, will lead the Escort of Honor to the pul­pit are Dr . llie Berger, Ira S. Galkin. Charles G. Greenstein, Leo Grossman, Benjamin Kane, Marshall Marcus, and Coleman Zimmerman. ·

Included in the Escort of Honor will be Mr. and Mrs. Alexander S . Layman of Phila­delphia. parents of Rabbi Lay­man; Mr. and Mrs. Julius B . Apatotr of Philadelphia, pa­ren ts of Mrs. Layman : and Mr. and Mrs. Martin Green­holz of Brooklyn. parents of Cantor Yolkotr.

Rabbi Robert Layman comes to Temple Beth Israel from Edison, N. J. , where he oc­cupied the pulpit at Congre­gation Beth El for three years.

Rabbi Layman received ad­vanced J ewish training at Gratz College. from which he was graduated in 1952. He re ­ceived the degree of Master of Hebrew Literature and was or­daind rabbi in 1959 from the Jewish Theological Seminary.

Rabbi Layman will be the director of the Temple's re · ligious school and · will person­ally supervise its operation. H 3

(Con tinued on Page 11)

Break Ground For Synagogue At N. Y. Airport

NEW YORK-Ground-break­ing for the new International Synagogue and J ewish Center at t,he New York International Airport will be held next month. it was announced yesterday.

At the same time, the New York Board of Rabbis, sponsors of . the project. whlch will be built for Sl.000,000 elected Charles H . Silver. former pres­ident of the New York Board of Education, as president of the synagogue.

Mr. Silver was elected at a special board meeting at the Americana hotel. The board established 80 years ago , repre­sents more than 800 spiritual leaders of the three branches of Judaism-Orthodox. Conser-rn ­tive and Reform .

Outlines Details Earlier. at the board's head­

quarters at 10 East 73d Street. Mr. Silver and Rabbi Israe l Mowshowitz. president of the board. outlined de tails new sy nagogue.

Rabbi Mowshowit said that $250,000 had already been raised for the synagog ue. He said $500.000 would be used for construction and another $500.-000 for maintenance .

-:: .

Neo-Nazi Groups Stage More Than To

20 International Sessions Coordinate Their Activities

NEW YORK Neo-Nazi groups and individuals. spout­ing Fascism and anti-Semitism. have staged more t,han 20 in­ternational confrrences and sessions in recent years to dis­Cuss and coordinate their ac­tivities. according to a report issued this week by the World Jewish Congress in New York .

Submits Report

The report was submitted to the executive of the World Jewish Congress by Dr . Nehe­mia Robinson , director of the WJC's Institute of J ewish Af­fairs. It named 22 countries as having Fascist groups or in­dividuals active in or connec­ted with the "Nazi Interna ­tional": Argentina. Australia. Austria. Belgium. Britain. Den­mark. Finland. France. Holland. Hungary (exiles ). Ireland. Italy. Norway. Portugal. Spain. Swed­en. Switzerland. South Africa. S:yria, Turkey . USA .. West Ger­many . The WJC report stated that the Ku Klux Klan "has also branched out in foreign countries.' '

Not all the planned interna ­tional ga therings of Nazis have been successes the report said. Some have been banned. as was

a Mosleyite conference of "Friends of Europe" slated fe r London in December. 1961 . Some failed because of insuffi­cient response, as happened to a planned meeting of 600 lesser Nazi groups called otr when the sponsors found they could no't get enough support for a con•­fe rence in Weisbaden in 1961.

Offers No Estimate But. the report emphasized,

"in toto, the international Na­zi organizations have represcn -atives in practically every Eu­ropean country as well as ir:. the United States. Australia. South Africa, some Lat in American and Arab lands." The report offered no estimate of the number of persons in­volved in the Nazi groups all over the world. but notes that "the European Social Move­ment and the Bureau of Eu­ropean Liaison claimed som.z time ago to have 4,000.000 sup ­porters organized in some 10,-000 sections and cells".

-----------------

Mystery Shrouds Finances The financial support for the

Nazis is shrouded in' mystery . but t here are reports · that fi­nances are derived at least in part from Nazi secreted loot, "but no proof for this conten­tion exists," the WJC study said. ''There is a flow of anti­s emitic and pro-Nazi and Fa­scist literature between various countries," the report pointed

Special Squads Of N. Y. Police Probe Fatal Beating In Brooklyn

NEW YORK-Special squads of police and detectives were pursuing a number of clues this week in an effort to trace the men who beat to death Rabbi Bernard Eisdorfer, 55. a prom­inent disciple of the Satmar Rebbe.

At the same time. under or­der of Mayor Robert F. Wagner and City Commissioner of In­vestigation Louis I. Kaplan, a probe was under way of all fa-

cets of the crime and its after ­maths. including an investiga ­tion as to tbe type of action taken either by the police or the city hospitals after Rabbi Eisdorfer had been found fatal­ly injured.

Two Youths Sought

•.out. "There exists a 'Nationalist

Information Bureau' which publishes an anti-Semitic, anti­Israel, pro -Nazi press service."

Musicians Drop Engagements In W. Germany

Addresses will be delivered by Rabbi Jack Shechter of Bos­ton. the New England repre­sentative of the United Syna­gogues of America and by Dr. William G. Braude, Rabbi of Temple Beth El. The president of the Rhode Island Rabbinical Association. Rabbi Saul Lee­man. will install Rabbi Lay­man. Cantor Jacob Hohenem­ser, cantor of Temple Emanu­El of Providence. will install Cantor Yolkotr.

General Jewish Committee Plans For V'-Day Drive Completed

According to police. two youths aged 17 and 20, are be­ing sought in connection with the crime. The men had beat­en Rabbi Eisdorfer and robbed him of a large sum of money, reportedly $2.000. which he was carrying as donations to several yeshivot in honor of the cele­bration of Simhat Torah. He died four days later. A refugee from Czecheslovakia who had received rabbinical ordination as a youth. Rabbi Eisdorfer was a successful textile mer­chant.

TEL AVIV-Israeli musicians yielded to public pressure and decided to drop engagements in West Germany from a Euro­pean concert tour that' was to start last week. A musical interlude under the

direction of Cantor Yolkotr will present vocal and instrumental renditions. A reception for Rab­bi and Mi-s. Layman and for Cantor Yolkotr will follow.

The rabbis who will partici­pate in the installation are Rabbi Jack Shechter of Bos­ton: Rabbi Eli A. Bohnen, Temple Emanu-El: Rabbi Wil-

. liam G. Braude, Temple Beth El: Rabbi Abraham Chill, Congregation Sons of Abra­ham; Rabbi Jerome S. _Gurland, Temple Beth EI: Rabbi Nathan N. Rosen, Hillel Foundation; Rabbi Charles Rubel. Temple Beth Sholom; Rabbi Hershel Solnica, Congregation Shaare Zedek; Rabbi Joel H. Zaiman, Temple En'lanu-EI. all . of Prov­idence; Rabbi Dona ld Hesk ins, Temple Sinai; Rabbi Pesach Sobel, Temple Beth Am ., both of Warwick; Rabbi Pesach Kraus, B'nai Israel Synagogue of Woonsocket. and Rabbi Saul Leeman, Cranston Jewish Cen­ter of Cra n::; ton .

With contributions to the 1962 campaign of the General Jewish Committee nearing the half million dollar mark, plans have been completed for D-Day, Sunday, Nov. 4.

D-Day, the intensive one-day house -to-house canvass for con­tributions to the GJC campaign is the final major event of the 1962 drive .

Leonard Y . Goldman , D-Day chairman, said that all captains and workers will report Sunday Nov. 4, at 9 A.M . at Johnson's Hummocks where D-Day head­quarters are being set up.

Breakfast will be served fol­lowing which captains and workers will be given a last minute briefing on their speci­fic duties and strategy. Cards to solicit will be assigned to the workers who will then fan out over the Greater Providence area. After each worker h as covered his assigned cards, he will report back to headquarters with the results .

D-Day co-chairmen are Har-

ry Finkelstein. Samuel Gerstein Murry M. Halpert. Harold Pan­sey. Louis Rubinstein, Maurice Share and Louis Sweet.

D-Day captains are Alfred Abelson, Carl Arbitman, Ber­nard E. Bell. Harvey Blake, Ber ­nard I. Cohen. Leo Cohen. Jo ­seph c'ohen , Samuel A. Cohen. Charles Coken. Abraham Fac­tor, 'Bernard S . Goldberg, George Goldman, James Gold­man, Harold Goldeoberg, James Goldsmith , Irving Gordon, Na­thaniel Gouse, Leo Greenberg, Leroy ·Haft, Sheldon Heller. George Katz. Harold Kessler, Dr. Joseph H. Kolodney , Sam­uel Kopel , Arthur Korman, Ir­ving H . Levin, Julius Levin, Leo­nard Mandell, Martin Miller. Harold Mosko!, Nathan Norman. Gerson R. Parmet, Max Pollack, Max S. Portnoy, Morris Ro­dinsky, Arthur H. Rosel), Louis L. Rottenberg, Samuel E . Selin­ker, Albert Sokolow, Elliot S lack, Ira Stone. Louis Strauss. Joseph Teverow. Samuel H . Wilk, and Lows Yoken .

Tinged \\7ith Sorrow

In the Williamsburg · section of Brooklyn. where thousands of Satmar adherents live. the usual Simhat Torah celebra­tions were tinged with sorrow among many Hasidim belong­ing not only to the Satmar gi·oup but also to other Hasidic factions . There was also much bitterness, mauy J ews in Brook­lyn complain ing that they have not been receiving sufficient police protection.

10,000 Attend Funeral Ten thousand Jews °'who at­

tended r'uneral services carried large banners blaming police and other city officials for fail­ing to give the residents of the deteriorated area sufficient pro­tection against hooligans.

The Ramat-Gan Chamber Orchestra hart scheduled the West German concerts witP.. the approval of an Israeli Govern­ment committee that has been authorized to clear all cultural exchanges with Germany. The authorization is still valid.

Resist Pressure The musician resisted pres­

sure all week, until Judge Elia­hu Mani invited the orchestra's board of directors to his home for a discussion . Also present were representatives of Jews who had suffered under the Nazi regime .

Break Contracts The next day the musicianf

decided to break the contracts for German appearances.

Students of the Hebrew Uni­versity in Jerusalem told a dele­gation of German students that they. the Israeli students, could not hold a joint symposium on anti-Semitism because of emo­tional considerations.

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'SELECTOR' ARRESTED

FRANKFURT - A former nazi 88 sergeant who made the "selections" for the Auschwitz gas chambers was arrested in Hoff r ecently. He was identi­fied as Jo~ef Erber , aged 65, now a factory employee. He was transferred to Frankfurt for trial.

A LOOK AT

SPORTS by LEON SAPERSTEIN

NAME DffiECTOR NEW YORK - Dr. Walter I .

Ackerman was n amed director of the depar tment of ed11cat ion of the United Synagogue of America, the congregational body of Conservative Judaism, a nd director of · -its commission on J ewish education .·

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P olitical Adve rtiseme nt

With most of the baseball enthusiasts getting back to nor­mal following the • recent " wa­tered down" World Series, per­haps it might be a good idea to exa mine another postseason procedure. Soon the results will be announced regarding the American League's Most Valu­able Player Award. And there doem't appear to be a sure fire winner among the half dozen candidates most likely to be the recipients of the strong­est vote getting.

Usua lly, the MVP award is presen ted to a member of the pen nant win ning team. Occa­sionally a player from a lower ranked club is able to garner enough ba llots to sneak in. However, in such cases the player must have compiled a fantastic season . either at bat or on the mound to rate the nod .

This year only Harmon KH!e­brew and Camilo Pascual of the Minnesota Twins and Norm Siebcrn from the Kansas City Athletics seem probable heavy votegetters among the non­Yankee contingent. Killebrew won the American League homer title with 47 and also led the lea gue in RBI's with 126 . Pascua l won 20 games and Siebern was second to Kille ­brew i n runs-bat ted-in.

So this brings us to the Yan­kee roste r. Three prime candi­dates can win the 1962 award. First there is Mickey Ma ntle , a former two-time winner and a second place contestant to Roger Maris the past two sea­sons. Incidentally instead of

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berating Maris the fans should instead be blasting the scr ibes who deemed the feat of belt ­ing 61 home runs as the only requisite for fame and fortune. The past yea r saw Maris ex­perience his worst overall sea­son and he should be voted the flop of the 1962 campa ign.

Mantle, even though he missed ' almost a third of regu­lar season play, still managed to hit 30 roundtrippers a nd bat . 321 to finish a sca nt five points behind Pete Runnels of the Red Sox, a notorious opposite field hitter. Whenever Mickey was in the Yankee lineup he was of immeasurable aid. He still wa s the most feared batsman in the lea gue and his ability to get on base through walks cer­t a inly was no blessing to r ival pitchers. He ra tes m y vote , a l­though I am not a m ember of the Baseball Writers of Amer­ica a nd m y ba llot is only a t oken measure.

Bobby Richardson and Ralph T erry are also to be considered . The New York second basem an led the loop in hits with 209 . hit .300 a nd teamed with t\rst Tom Tresh and then Tony Kubek around the middle of the diamond to choke off ene­my rallies. Terry finally a p­proached stardom. His World Series efforts frosted h is cake of achievements. R a lph de ­veloped into the Yankee mound ace even supplanting the stel­lar south-paw, Whitey Ford . Only the gopher pitch ruined

· some of T erry 's effor ts.

Fina lly. in answer to several readers who compla ined that I seem ed to favor the Yankees in my colum ns, my answer is I did. And was I wrong to do so? When I picked the Yankees to tak·e , l.hb 'SEiries 'I : followed ' t'wo dictums. F irst. my knowledge that they were the better team and second, my intuitive sen Se that · has seen my failing only once to · correctly assess the World Series winner. Only the bad bounce ball that grazed T ony Kubek's Adams apple in the seventh game of the 1960 Series spoiled my str ing of prophecies.

However , I do not wish to list my credits but only to write that no defense is necessary. I am not among that large legion of anti-Yankee fans who decry the constant Bomber successes and hope tha t j ust any other team should be the champions. even if they do not deserve it. Let another team win yes, but let us not fault the Yankees for trying to prevent this.

HOLD THAT TIGER . Gene Fullmer is facing a mo­

mentous decision; whether to once again endure the lefts and rights of the new middleweight champ, Dick Tiger. Last Tues­day night, Fullmer's face and body was subjected to severe punishment, more than has been meted out to the pride of Utah In the past. If Gene Is able to think clearly, he should decline a return match with the strong Nigerian who would probably finish off Fullmer in about six rounds next time. And I caution Paul Pender that he should remain In Bos­ton safe from the sound and fury of the best middleweight battler since Ray Robinson.

GIANTS ON PARADE The explosion of New York

Giant's . might has scuttled Washington aspirations to tie first in war, and first In peace and first In the National Foot­ball League. Unless the Giants fall apart they will once again face the Green Bay Packers for the NFL title. Tittle finally got the protection he needs and h e was able to riddle the Red­skin defense. Hats off how­ever to Washington for their efforts.

~ Court To Check Immigration Act -"li...!wli$KmGTON - The Unit- deration. The decision, however, : ,edLSt.ll-$ei; :Supreme Court agreed clears the way for a broad re-

to look in{;; the constitutionality view of the power of Congress of some aspects of the McCar- to revoke citizenship. ran-Walter Immigration Act Other cases involving depri­that strip citizenship from n a - vation of citizenship were also turalized persons. accepted for review. During a

Naturalized Americans who re- recent 12-month period, 1,065 turn to their native land for persons h ad their cit izenship re­three or more years are f aced voked under one provision alone with loss of citizenship in one of the controversial na tionality aspect of the law under consi- la w.

I DAVID BRENNER

Funeral services f or David Brenner. 78. of 282 Lyons Ave­n ue. Newark , N.J., who died Oct. 19, were held Oct. 21 a t t he E . Bernheim a nd Sons Memor ial Chapel in Newark .

Born in Russia, Mr. Brenner came to th is country as a young man . He lived in Jersey City 20 years before moving to Newark s ix years ago. He was a reti red com mercia l sil­versmith . Mr . Bren ner was a member of the Workmen's Cir­cle and the Golden Age Club of Newark . In both organizations he was affiliated with the choir .

He leaves a son. Murray Ler­man of Ridgefield. N.J .. a daughter. Mrs. Clara J acobs of Maplewood . N.J .: a brother. J oseph of New Bedfo rd . Mass.: a sister. Mrs. Rose Spiegel of Providence. and two grand­chi ldren.

BENJAMl N RUSSIAN Funeral services for Ben ja ­

min Russian o f 174 J ewett Street, who died Oct . 20. were held Oct. 22 at the Max Sugar­man Memorial Chapel. Bur ia l was in Lincoln Park Cemetery.

M r. Russian was sexton at Congregation Sons of Zion Sy­nagogue for many years. H e was the husband of the late Ro_se <Rothstein ) Russian .

Born in Russia. a son of the late Haskel and Sonia R ussia n , he had lived in Providence for 58 years. H e was a member of the Hebrew Free Loan Asso­ciation. Hebrew Sheltering So­ciety, J ewish Home for Aged Association, and Golden Agers of the Jewish Community Center.

Mr . Russian is survived by a da ugh ter, Mrs. Ira Kulman of Providence; two sister s, Mrs. Peter Strelow of Providence and M rs. Frannie Kroop of New Haven, Conn .; a grandchild and two great-grandchildren .

MRS . NATHAN KAPLAN Funeral services for Mrs. Ida

<Goldstein ) Kapla n of 15 Mas­sie A venue, who died Oct. 24 after a week 's illness. were held the following day at the Max Sugarmau Memorial Chapel. Burial ,was in Lincoln Park <;emetery.

The widow of Nathan Kaplan, she was born in Providence, Ma y 30, 1887, daughter of the late Samuel a nd Lena Gold­stein and had been a lifelong resident of this city.

I Surviving a re t wo son.!; , I r­

ving M . K aplan of Somerville. N . J.. and Stanley 8 . Kapla n of Providence; one daughter . Mrs. Bernard Cohen of P rov­idence ; a brother. Louis Gold­stein of Providence : flve sisters. Mrs. Rose Dressler and Mrs. Sarah Ka lver . both of P rovi­dence. Mrs. F annie Bronstein of Cranston. Mrs. Sydney Ei ­senberg of New York State, and Mrs. Fred Somerstein of Florl­da. and flve grandchildren .

MRS. CHARLE S SUTTON F uneral services for Mrs.

Sa rah (Cohen) Sutton of 211 Orms Street , who died Oct. 24 after an illness of three weeks. was held the following day at the l\.fax Sugnrman Memoria l Chapel. Buria l was in Lincoln Park Cemetery.

The widow of Charles Sutton. she was born in Lithuania, Sept . 5. 1888 . She had resided in Providence 50 years.

S urvivin g are two sons. Ed­ward Sutton of New York City, and Louis Su tton of Provi­dence: and u daughter. Mrs. Ida Semonoff of Pro•; idence .

Unveil;ng Notices The unveilii ng of a m on u m ent i n

m em ory o f t he l ate NATHAN CON • IS wi ll t ak e place on Sunday, No• vember 4, a t l P. M . in L i nco ln Park Cem etery. Re latives and fr iends ar e invi t ed to attend.

The unve iling of a monument in m emory of the late ABRAHAM BAUMAN w i ll take place on Sun• day, Nov. 4, at 1 P.M . , i n Lincoln Park Cem et ery. Relatives and fri ends are inv~t e~ t? attend.

The unveiling of a monument in m emory of the late MINNllt SHORE will take place on Sunday, Nov. 4 at 11 A . M . i n L incoln Park Cemete ry Relatives and f r icmds ar e in~it~ ,to attend.

The unvei ling of a monument in memory of the lat e IRVING {IZZY ) FEROMAN will take place on Sun­day, Nov. 4 at 1 P.M. in Lincoln Park Cemetery. Relatives and friends are Invited to attend.

THE UNVEILING OF

A MONUMENT IN MEMORY

OF THE LATE

WALTER LEWENS will t•ke place on Sunday November 4, at 12:30 P. M . In Lincoln Park Cemetery.

Relatives and friends

are invited to attend.

Cards Of Thanks The family of the late BENJAMIN

COHEN sincerely wishes to thank their many friends and relatives for the kindness •nd sympathy shown them during their recent be­reavement. For donations mail in to the Rhode Island Veterans Home In Bristol and other char i table organi ­zations.

THE FAMlbY OF THE LATE

GEORGE SAMDPERIL Acknowledges with Sincere Appreciation

The Many Kind Expressions

of Sympathy Received During Their

Recent Bereayement

Max Sugarman Funeral Home "THE JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR"

4S8 HOPE STREET, Providence DE 1-8094 DE 1-8636

JEWISH CALENDARS For The Year 1962 - 1963 Are Now

Available Upon Request

' · I

Executive Committee - Shown above ore officers and mem­bers of the Executive Committee of the American Jewi sh Committee . Seated left to right, ore Poul Levinger, chairman; Mrs. Albert Pilovin, executive committee · Wolter Adler vice­choirmon, and Mox Grant, honorary ch~irmon. Stondi~g are Arthur Dorman, Woonsocket chairman; Dr. Bernard Fried­man, Newport chairman; Peter Bardach, vice-chairman; Julius Michaelson, Soul Abrams and Bo Bernstein, members of the executive committee, and Som Kotz, director of the New England Region .

To Hold N. E. Regional Conference A New England Regional

Conference of the American J ewish Committee will be h eld Nov . 10, in Boston, in connec­tion with the AJC National Ex­ecutive board meeting of Nov . 9, 10, and 11 .

Max L . Grant, honorary chairman of the Rhode Island Unit of the AJC, will serve as· chairman during a morning session of the conference .

Walter Adler, vice chair­man of the Unit, will partici-

pate in a panel discussion on "Meeting the Challenges of the N.E . Region ."

Chairing the over-all r egional conference will be Norman S . Rabb, president of the New England Region .

Relations among religious groups in this country will be one of the principal subjects on the agenda of the American Jewish Committee's national executive board meeting.

ORGANIZATION NEWS . '

TOUCH FOOTBALL The Jewish Comr.mnity Cen­

ter will conduct a touch foot­ball tournament for boys 12 to 14 years old at the Sessions Street Field, corner of Elm­grove A venue and Sessions Street., this Tuesday at 1 P .M.

Registration in the program is open to Center members. Boys may register entire 6-man teams, or as individuals. Dead­line on registrations is Mon­day, Nov. 5, at 5 P.M.

The tournament will be a single elimination event. Regu­lar 6-man touch football rules will apply. For information, Dick King, at UN 1-2674 may be ca1le<1.

ELECTION DAY PROGRAM The Jewish Community Cen- .

ter will conduct a specia l "Elec ­tion Day Program" for ele­mentary school aged boys and girls at its East Side Center building this Tuesday· at 1. P.M.

Those attending will hear "in ,miniature" election campaigns, speeches, parades and other ac­tivities. followed . by a giant cartoon show.

Bus transportation will be 'provided from the South Side Center building, with the bus leaving at 12 :30 P .M . and re­turning at 3: 30 P .M. To regis­ter for bus transportation, ·ST 1-8110 may be called .

GOLDEN AGE .CLUBS . Tile Jewish . Community Cen~

ter•s· Golden Age Club will not •hold- its regular Weekly meeting this Tuesday · afternoon due to the elections . Regular Monday and W e d n e s d a y afternoon lounge programs, however, will continue on schedule. The group is now recruiting mem­.bers for an Older Adult Drama Group. .

The East Side Center's Gold­en Age Club will hold its regu­lar weekly meeting on Thurs­day at 1 P .M. East Side, lounge activities will also be h eld on

Monday and Wednesday after­noons. The group is now as­sembling a Choral Group for Its members.

The Center's Golden Age Clubs are jointly sponsored with the Providence Section, National Council of Jewish Women.

GAJI-IEROOM TO OPEN The East Side Jewish Com­

. munity Center will open its season of gameroom activitir5 for elementary school aged boys and girls on Wednesday . Regular weekly periods will be scheduled on Wednesday and Thursday afternoons, from 3:30 to 5 P.M.

Directed by Edward A. Mor­ra, the weekly gameroom pro­gram will include instruction , play .and tournaments in table games, chess, checkers, nok hockey, skill pool, table tennis, Chinese checkers, and others.

KICKOFF DANCE Young adult men and women,

aged 19 to 28, are invited to the J ewish . Coz,nmunity Center :s Young Adult Association "62·0

633 Kickoff Dance" at the Em­pire Room of the Crown Hotel this Saturday evening.

The evening will begin with a cocktail hour at 8 P .M., fol­lowed by dancing to music by Vin Ca pone < in person) and his orchestra until 12 :30 A.M. Guests from · Centers in Mass­achusetts will attend.

VOLLEYBALL TO OPEN The Jewish Community Cen­

ter will open its men's vo11ey­ball program at Nathan Bish­op Jr . High School gymnasium, this Sunday at 10 A.M .

The opening seasion will fea­ture an exhibition match be­tween the Pawtucket VoUeybal.1 Club and the - Woonsocket YMCA , New' England's top two teams. Regular Center men's pl~y_ w_!!!._..!_o~w _!it _11 _ A,!-1.:...._ ,

Community Center Plans Series Of Children's Plays

The J ewish Community Cen­ter this week opens the sale of season t ickets for its 1962-1963 Children's Theatre Series.

This children's entertainmen t series will present four Jive productions b y professional companies this season.

Season opener will be "Alice in Wonderland" , by the Nicolo Marionettes, on Sunday. Dec. 9. Other presentations will in ­clude the Rockefeller Players , in "Heidi", the Traveling Play­house, in "Tom Sawyer", and the Merry-Go-Rounders, in "The Celestial Elephant" and other dance sketches.

Children 's Theatre programs are selected to provide the best in wholesome, exciting live en­tertainment experiences for all children of school age through­out Rhode Island and adjoin­ing areas. The program series has been endorsed by public, private , and parochial schools, the Public Library, etc.

Admission to Children's The­atre programs is by season tick­et only . No individual tickets are sold to any performance. Two performances are presen­ted of each production , at 2 and 4 P .M . on the scheduled date . Season tickets may be purchased for either of the two performances, but they are not interchangeable. All shows are present£d at Nathan Bishop Junior High School.

Season tickets may be ob­ta ined at the Jewish Commun­ity Center or at any of the fol­lowing locations:

The Providence and Pawtuck­et YMCA and YWCA : the Mer­ry-Go-Round Shop : Gladdings, downtown , at Wayland Square , and Garden City: Dorothy Kay's : The Outlet Co .; Ivy Drug Story ; Hall's Pharmacy; Alexander's Pharmacy ;' Roth's Ticket Agency ; Axelrod's Music Shop; Lad & Lassis Shoe Store ; Sackett 's Card Shop; the Pheasant Market; · · Ro­berts' Children 's · Shop ; Way~ land Toy Shop; Harrison's: Ad­ler's Hardware Store : . Peter Pan Gift Shop ; Eastern Toy Distributing Co.; American Wholesale Toy Co. ; the Crans­ton Jewish Center; Miller's Del­catessen, Warwick.

Members · of the . Children·~ Theatre. Committee include Mrs. Alan Symonds, chafrman; Mrs. Milton Stanzler, · Joseph Fogar­ty, Mrs. Arthur Torg, Mrs. Nor­man Tilles, Mrs. Louis Sod, Mrs. Irving Gordon, Mrs. Ber­nard Cohen, Mrs. Melvin Hoff­man, Mrs. Lee Bonoff, Mrs. Ralph Rotkln, Mrs. Joseph Ru­bin, Mrs. Marcia Tlppe, Mrs. Burton Samors, Mrs. Morton Gurtin, Mrs. Peter Gutlon, Mrs. Harris Rosen, Mrs. Theodore Low, Mrs. Irving Kaplan, Mrs. Morris Schwartz, Mrs. Adele Kay, Mrs . Alan Arlow. Mrs. Bernard Goldberg, Mrs. Charles Hahn, Mrs. Robert Pliner .

. . .

Sch.ool Prayer. Ruling To Be Discussed At Worcester Meeting

WORCESTER, MASS.- The cha11enge posed by the recent U.S . Supreme Court ruling on school prayers will be a major topic for discussion at a state­wide conference on J ewish community relations at Worc­ester, Mass .. on Sunday.

Other issues of J ewish com­munity relations concern to be considered a t the conference are Christmas observances in public schools, compulsory Sun­day observance laws, a nd the Middle East.

Coordinated by the National Community Relations Advisor y Council, the conference has been organized by the J ewish Community Council of Metro­politan Boston. the Combined J ewish Appeal of Holyoke, the J ewish Community Counc il of Greater Lawrence . the Pittsfield J ewish Community Council , and the Worcester Jewish Federa ­tion . Worcester will be host to the conference. which will be held at Temple Emanuel in that city. George Kang isser president of the Worcester J ew­ish Federation. will welcome the participants.

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LETTER OF APOLOGY

TO THE CITIZENS OF THE

NINTH WARD OF

PROVIDENCE

As many of you know, I am aspiring for a seat in the City Council of the city of Providence.

For the past two months, I have been busy ringing door bells in the 9th Ward, to acquaint myself with a grea t number of people, and to ask for support in being elected.

However , because of the time element, it is virtually impossible , physically, to cover the area that consists of approximately 12,000 people who are eligible to vote in this Ward.

To those of you whom I have not seen, may I express my sincere regrets. but I hope, nevertheless, that on Elec­tion Day you will give me your utmost consideration. and cast a vote for me.

To the very many kind people who have encouraged me to seek this office, I thank you for your confidence in me.

I trust that some day , very soon, I may have an op­portunity to meet many more individuals personally in the official capacity as your Counc11man from the 9th Ward in Providence.

Sincerely yours, SAMUEL TIPPE <R-Providence)

Political Ad vertisement

Attorney

Classical High School

Providence College, A. B.

Geo . Wash ington Univ ., L. L. B.

Pres. Mens Club Temple Beth Sholom

Boord of Directors Temple Beth Sholom

Boord of Governors R. I. Trowel Club

Providence District Committee Boy Scouts of America

Post Officer Providence Fraternal Assoc .

Member Touro Fraternal Assoc .

Member Redwood Lodge # 35., A. F. & . • A. M. • .

Member Palestine Temple AA. 0 . N .. M. S. •

Politica l Adverti seme nt

HONESTY INTEGRITY SINCERITY

Thomas H·. Rosenf i~ld Representati_ve -:;- St~ District

PROMISES TO SUPPORT • School Lunch . Pr~rom for the Elementary ~hools

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~OSENFIELD fOR REPRESENTATIVE Vote Republican David E. Penn, Chairman

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The synagogue of Congrega­tion Shaare Zedek was the scene of the wedding of Miss Adele Ida Vilker to Brenton Bazarsky at a 6 P .M. ceremony on Sun­day, Oct. 28. Miss Vilker ls the daughter of Mr . and Mrs . Lou­is Vilker of 33 Hamilton Street ,

_..Pawtucket. and Mr. Bazarsky is the son of Mr. 1tnd Mrs. Morris Bazarsky of 246 Lenox A venue .

Rabbi Hershel Solnica, assis­ted by Cantor Mordechai Od­wak, officiated at the ceremony which was followed by a recep­tion in the synagogue.

Gowned in white imported rose pattern brocade, fashioned with a Sabrina neckline, a fit­ted bodice and long tapered sleeves. the bride was given in marriage by her father. The gown ·s dome skirt was accented with bows and the full court train followed the same motif. A Swedish crown of pearls and crystals h eld her fingertip silk illusion veil. She carried a lace covered prayerbook with or­chids. showered with stephano­tis.

Maid of honor, Sylvia Vilker, wore a ballerina length gown of royal blue silk taffeta with a portrait neckline and short sleeves, with a straight front skirt and a full back with a bow. She wore a matching headpiece of a royal blue taf­feta bow.

Ann Vilker and Judy Bazar­sky, bridesmaids. wore match­ing gowns. The attendants all carried cascades of blue and white baby pompoms.

Marshall Bazarsky was best man , and Samuel Vilker was the usher.

The mother of the bride wore an Alice blue lace jacket dress with matching accessories, and the bridegroom's mother wore a royal blue faille sheath with matching accessories. They both wore wrist corsages of white orchids.

After a wedding trip to New York , the couple will reside at 33 Warrington Street.

Ben-Gurion Warns Israel Ready To Fight Off Attack

JERUSALEM - Prime Min­ister David Ben-Gurion warned the Arab world that if war ls forced on · Israel by miscalculat­ing Arab leaders, "every one of us is ready to hit back and we will do everything so that the war will be waged on the at­tackers' territory within a few days."

Replying to threats from Pres­ident Nasser of Egypt of the range of his new rockets, the Prime Minister used a phrase from a popular American song, "everything you can do, I can do better," in saying that what Nasser could do with missiles, "we can do with more skill, abi­lity and knowledge."

He asserted that Israel's army was stronger than those of the neighboring Arab countries.

Fred Kelman Photo

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PolJtlcal Advertisement

SECOND WARD p p R A ow V T

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If You Live In This Area And

Want Effective, Intelligent And Active Representation

ELECT as your SECOND WARD CITY COUNCILMEN

Norman Jay PhilipM.

Bolotow McGee VOTE DEMOCRATIC NOVEMBER 6, 1962

Engaged - Mr. and Mrs. Ro­bert N. Dunn of 117 Trent Street, Woo n soc k e t, an­nounce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara L. Dunn of 9 Corey Road, Brook­I ine, Mass., to Saul J . Bright­man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brightman of 8 East­ham Road, Newton Centre, Mass.

Miss Dunn is a graduate of Woonsocket High School -and the Chandler School for Wo­men. Mr. Brightman, who at­tended Bates College, was grad­uated from Boston University .

A Dec. 22 wedding at Con­gregation B'nai Israel in Woon­socket is planned .

Daughter Born Mr. and Mrs . Jordan B .

Kirshenbaum of Deerfield Road , Cranston. announce the birth of their third daughter, Elyse Marsha, on Oct. 18.

Maternal grandparents are Mr . and Mrs. Max Sobel of Cranston.

Announce Marriage Mr. and Mrs. Walter Adler of

33 Stadium Road announce the marriage of their daughter, Susan Beth, on Oct. 23, to Robert M. Kaplan , son of Mrs. Ben Kaplan of 102 Westwood Avenue, Cranston, and the late Ben Kaplan .

Third Daughter Born Mr. and Mrs. Abe Nathanson

of 102 Underwood Avenue, Warwick , announce the birth of their third daughter, Rena Lee, on Oct. 1 I.

Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Morris Staller of Cranston. Paternal grandmoth­er is Mrs. Anna Nathanson of Pawtucket.

Maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Staller of New York City.

Rosenfeld - Bromson The wedding of Barbara

Esther Bromson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Bromson of 32 Kearsage Drive , Cranston, to Stephen Samuel Rosenfeld of Washington , D.C. took place at Temple Beth Israel at 2 P.M. on Sunday, Oct . 28. Rabbi Rob­ert Layman and Rabbi Morris Schussheim, assisted by Cantor Arthur Yolkoff, officiated at the ceremony which was fol­lowed by a reception at the temple.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a full length gown of white satin with Alencon lace fashioned with a Sabrina neckline and pointed sleeves of lace. Her fingertip veil of silk illusion fell from a crown of seed pearls. She carried a bouquet of or­chids and stephanotis.

Mr. and Mrs. Rosenfeld will reside in Washington.

Change Residence Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Sandler,

formerly of 51 Pembroke Ave­nue , have moved to 396 Orms Street.

Levitt-Cohen Mrs. Florence Cohen of 183

Adelaide Avenue announces the marriage of her daughter, Ma­rilyn , on Oct. 27, to Allen Levitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Levitt of Philadelphia, Pa.

(Continued on · Page 9)

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Published Every Week By The Jewish Press Publishing Company

Box 6063, Providence, R .L - Telephone 724-0200 PLANT AND OFFICE: HERALD WAY, OFF WEBSTER ST,, PAWTUCKET, R, I,

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Second Class Postage Paid at Providence, Rhode Island Subscription Rates: Flfteen Cents the copy; By Mall, $5.00 per annum; outside New England, $6.00 per annum. Bulk rates on request.

The Herald assumes no financial responstbWty for typotraphical erron in advertisements, but wlll reprint that part of the advertisement tn which the typographical error occurs. Advertisers will please noUfy the manaceme.nt lmm.edlately of any error which may occur.

FRJDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962

An Important Decision For Israel

The news that the United States is ready to sell ground-to-air missiles of the "Hawk" type is greeted with relief and satisfaction in Israel.

. . Informed observers. appreciate the political sig­nificance of this American step even more than its military implication - although this cannot be under­estimated. The sources say that Israel has been trying . to obtain ground-to-air missiles for three years. Problems which on the limited geographical scale of partitioned Palestine resemble those of Britain - congestion 'of a large part of the civilian population (and most of the military reserves) in the coastal strip centered on Tel-Aviv, and a rather small number of airfields - have haunted defense officials.

It was felt that the balance of power between ls­real and Egypt was being steadily tilted in favor of the UAR as Russia continued to supply both fighter and bomber aircraft to Cairo in numbers which French aid to Israel could not match. The Americans, who used to insist that Israel's fears were unfounded, appear to have come round to Israel's view when it could be shown that Soviet fighter aircraft, MIG-21, and bombers of the TU-16 type had reached the UAR Air Force in considerable numbers.

The main importance of Mr. Kennedy's decision must be seen in the political field. For the first time since the State of Israel was founded, a US Adminis­tration has been willing to supply ar.ms to Israel to prevent a serious disruption of the equilibrium of power which is threatening the young nation.

The additional fact that Washington is not trying to hide this but says so openly, and has informed Presi­dent Nasser accordingly, is of considerable weight. In Israel's domestic politics, the American announce­ment must be regarded as a major success for Mr. Ben-Gurion's Government since the Opposition par­ties of Right and Left will have to acknowledge that patient diplomatic efforts have eventually borne fruit.

'IOUR MONEY'S

WORTH by Sylvia Porter

THE CUBAN CRISIS Another crash and then wild weakening. The low profit margins

rebound in the stock market, of an increasing total of U.S. car­soaring prices of commodities in porations are now of deep concern the leading markets of the world, to the government, as well as to a sharp increase in the demand businessmen. About the only force for gold in the London bullion pushing up the cost of living has market, scare r umors of renewed been the continued rise in the cost shortages, panicky hoarding of services. The pace of wage of goods by consumers and s tepped hikes has s lowed markedly, too. up buying of basic materials by Consumers have been buying, but businessmen -- all these have not avidly; businessmen have been come in the wake of the Cuban spending bigger totals on plants quarantine. and equipment, but not enough

What do these movements this more to give our economy a for­week mean to us? What might be ward push. the economlc-flnahcial impact in _ There has not been for months the U,S, of the Cuban crisis? and there Is not now Inflation In

Imperative to any Intelligent the U,S, economy -- nor Is there appraisal Is a full understanding the oomph that gives a country a of .the background against which "feeling" of prosperity, of well­the Cuban situation broke Into a being. showdown between the U.S. and It Is against this background the Soviet Union a week ago. that President Kennedy has taken

Our economy has been advanc- our calculated risks In Cub a. Ing at a sluggish, highly dis- There Is simply no parallel be­appointing pace for months. Our tween this economic pattern and unemployment rate has remained the background which existed when stickily high at close to 6 percent the Korean conflict broke out. Now throughout this entire expansion. our aim Is to strengthen the price In thousands of plants In Indus- plc!UI'e, to Improve corporation tries from coast to coast, there profits , to encourage more spend­ls idle capacity to produce. There Ing and borrowing. In the early are no shortages of anything. The 1950s, the aim was to control our stock market cracked wide open pent-up demands for goods, to last spring , and since then, a dis- l<eep the lid on prices, to curb enchanted public has moved to the wartime profits. '"1e s<>" of buy­sidelines in massive nwnbers. · Ing expansion that would have been

Prices of bulc raw materials economically cetastrophlc when and prices of goods at the factory Korea occurred would be welcome level have ~cl< In -a remarkably as economically stimulating today. narrow range for years, and ,re- Also Imperative to any lntelll­cently tbes_! prices have been gent appraisal of what might hap-

( Continued on l>ase ZO)

FROM FRIDAY IO FRIDAY

'SCRIBBLES'

By Beryl Segal -I was not one of those 387 people who asked Miriam and Max Grant that famous question:

•• And how was your trip?• ' In fact, 1 did not even l<now that

they were on an European trip. I learned of their trip from the booklet Mr. Max Grant published on his return from the trip In which he attempts to answer the question, and to tell everyone of his adventures.

But even though I was not among the ones who questioned the Grants about their trip, I enjoyed reading the "Scribbles from Fa­mous Places," a thumbnail des­cription of the places they visited, the things they did, and the thoughts that came Into his mind while away In strange lands.

"There Is an undescribable something In Israel which makes you feel different," report Sylvia and Tibby, both talking together.

Now Sylvia and Tibby, and Miriam and Max are people of many Interests. 'They are not, what ls called, professional Jews. They are Interested In art. '"1ey are Interested In music. They take part In the cultllI'al and social life of their communities. Jewishness Is just one more facet of their life. But even In the life of such as our travellers, Israel creeps In and disturbs and enhances their en­joyment of the trip.

Doesn't It say: "If I forget thee Jerusalem, Jet my right hand be forgotten?"

It was true of the Jews who sat by the rivers of Babylon, and It Is true about modern Jews going to Greece. Turkey, Paris or any­where else.

as we give to It. " And Mr. Gra1 remarks that for once Tibby ws serious.

Max Grant · goes to Paris 8J1

there he Is met by a represent.a tlve of the American Jewish Com mlttee. But there we are at oppo site poles, What he says about th American Jewish Committee an of Its usefulness, I do not share So , I think, that we had better stoi here . I want to quote from hi, "Scribbles" a little gem, and thet we will call It a day.

The "three girls," as Mr. Grant calls them, go shopping Ir. Paris, and Mrs. Grant character­izes them by the way they react to the price quoted by t h e merchant.

Miriam i;ays simply: "I like It. How much?"

Sylvia Is cagier. She says: "I don't like It. How much?"

And Tibby plays it cool. She looks at the merchandise and says: "Let me think about it. ru be back."

And the Paris merchant Just smiles and says to himself: "You bet you will be back. You will be back. I have seen the gleam In your eyes and I know that I have you In my hands. You will not es­cape me."

I lll<e the ''Scribbles" because they are hwnan. They record the reactions of two people on a trip --two people like you and me--to sights and sounds In famous and not so famous places. Mr. Max Grant adds to his reactions some quips, something that you and I may not be able to do.

"Mark my word," says Tibby, /Mr . Segal's opiffions are h!.s "in the long run, we will receive own. His views are not neces­as much from that little country sarily those of this newspaper.I

Right on the fir s t page of the booklet, Mr. Grant talks about Rome, and he remembers that the map of Italy resembles a big boot. When Miriam disappear s into ihe stores for shopping sprees, he realizes why the "boot" is sr well heeled .

In Greece, they have learned about the past at every turn . And Mr . Grant says:

"A lot of things that until then were Greek to me , suddenly be­came Grecian."

On the ruins of Greece, he states that they-- the ruins -- are the .. making of modern Greece." There we re thousands of Ameri­can touri s ts swarming around, a ll " discovering Europe to get even for 1492," remarks Mr. Grant, and you can see his smile at the sight of these swarming touri s t s.

He does not forget Israel eith­er on this trip, although he, him­self, did not go to Israel this time. Or better, Israel does not let him forget It.

In Turkey, he remembers that It was under the Turkish rule that Pales tine was despoiled of its foliage, of its ver y soil, and his enjoyment of Turkey Is just that much less.

In Switzerland, he learns that the Swiss-Israel Trade Bank is doing very well for Israel and for the s tockholders.

He states: "During the last decade, reserves climbed from 60,000 francs to S million."

But more than the stocks and the reserves, Israellntrudedltself on their trip in more tangible form. They had with them, two friends from Washington whom we know as Sylvia and Tibby. It seems that Sylvia and Tibby went to Israel, and when they returned, they were brimming over with en­thusiasm, just as you and I would be.

"Everything we heard about lsriiel was comforting,0 says, Mr. Grant.

J. Arthur Rank , who retired recently as head of a vas t British movie empire, built a corporate s tructur e worth more than half a billion doll ars. Laurence Olivier said of him, " Rank has two match­less qualities -- he Is a thoroughly good man, and ha s lots of money."

I once visited G.B. Shaw at Ayot-St . Lawrence shortly after Rank had been there, Shaw said he' d greeted the movie man with hi s usual shocking opening re­mark, ••Mr. Rank, 1 hear you' re a very rich man. Who'd you swindle to get so much money?" ... . ••1 swindled nobody," Rank replied. "I inherited money from my father."

"Then who' d he swindle?" Shaw said . ,.No man can become that rich without swindling some­body."

But neither Rank nor his father ever swindled anybody. They were a devout family whose money came from a successful flour mill. Shaw's film producer, Gabriel Pascal, and Alexander Korda -­both migrated to London from their native Hungary -- once ne­gotiated with a British star , who said , "I suppose you'll do the right thing by me , the way Rank always does?"

"When Gabriel and I do the right think it's a matter of honor," replied Korda. "But with J. Arthur Rank , it's a matter of duty."

Rank followed his father's pre­cepts -- except In the matter of accepting a peerage. He now Is Baron Rank of Sutton Sc,,m~ey. But

Mox Sugarman Funeral Home

COMMUNITY CALENDAR Sunday, November 4, 1962 9:00 a. m.-Gen er a l Jewish Committee, D-DAY. 8:00 p. m .--Jewlsh Community Center Caba r et Night, Hono ring New Members. 8:00 p. m,- Temple Beth Israe l, Reception to new Rabbi.

Monday, November 5, 1962

tgg ~: ~:=1~~!~~0 ~11~~f~hS1u~~a~~~:kSe~e~~~ar o:eJ~~na1Sm for Teachers, 8 :15 p. m.-Slstuhood T ~mple Sinai, Board Meeting. 8:15 p. m_-Lad. Aid & Sisterhood Ohawe Sholom, Pawt., Board Meeting. 8:30 p. m.-Slsterhood Temple Beth Israel, Regular Meeting.

TuHday, November 6, 1962 10:00 a. m.- Brandeis University Women's Dlv., Study Group. 8:00 p. m.-Sisterhood Temple EmanuEI, Adult Institute.

:\gg ~: ~ :=~~~r~!~~ai!1r~:•~!b~~~th0 :o~e:~0r.o~~..13e:;!~fing.

Wednesday, November 7, 1962

}g!~ ~o~~~r:;h!~ ~~~·~s~g~"j~1w°t!h'C~~re~t':!~~h!!~d~<?.roup. 12:30 p . m.-Lad. Ass'n Jewish Home for the Aged, Board Meetlnl,.

=~gg ~: ~ :=~~f:r;o~tn:·0t!n~:"tn':0::;e~b~~!~.M~~l· Meeting. 8:00 p . m.- Touro Fraternal Ass'n. , Board Meeting.

Ttlunday, Novembet' I, 1962 ,.. 12:00 noon-General Jewish Committee, Men's Div., Report Luncheon. 1:30 p. m.-Ploneer Women 0£ Provtlience. Board Meet.ma'. &:00 p. m.---Jewlsh Community Center, Century Club Meetlng. 8:30 P . m.-SJsterhood Temple Beth Am, Board Meetln1.

Friday, NOYember , , 1962

t~ :: : :=i~r~l~~;t~~ ~:cM.,t~r!,e~~~ ~-~DM!ounr:. Meettn1.

S.turday, November 10, 1'62 8:00 p. m.-Prov. Chapter Women 's Amer1can ORT, Party.

(/Jm

by Leonard Lyons

his father declined such honors, explaining "I was born Joe Rank; I will die Joe Rank. That's all there is to it. "

Julia Davis, author of "The Anvil," opening tomorrow at the Maldman Theater Is the daughter of John w. Davis, one-time Presi­dential nominee . .. . Sonny Liston, who announced that he has his own promoters for the r ematch with Patterson. has over-matched him­self. There contract gives Patter­son the right to designate the promoter.

Jay Harrison tells of two peo­ple who met on a beach. The first one complained;" "Nowadays, with those short hair-cuts and oddphy­slques , you can't tell the boys from the girls. Look at that one just coming out of the surf. Can you tell If It's a boy or girl?" .. A boy," said the second person. "He's my son" .... "That's not a fair test ," said the first, u since you're his father" . ... "I'm not his father ," said the other. "I•m his mother. ' '

Gladys Cooper will return to Broadway in Anouilh' s "Traveler Without Luggage" .... An Iron Curtain diplomat said: "The USSR will not risk war at least until Dec. 2, when Its Bolshoi Ballet leaves the U.S.A. Besides, the Leningrad Symphony just arrived here" . .. . Mervyn LeRoy Is re­cuperating from surgery at the Mayo Clinic.

Joan Fontaine was In Washing­ton recently for a dinner party aboard the Sequoia. Twenty-four guests, Including the French and British Ambassadors and the Bobby Kennedys, cruised along the Potomac. Each made a speech. Miss Fontaine jokingly announced. "This ship has been commandeer­ed by the President, and Is sailing to Cuba" . ... Bobby Kennedy, who knew of JFK's plans said, "Times are too tense for such joking."

The U.S. Supreme Court's clerks challenged the clerks of Arnold, Fortas & Porter to a touch football game. But the Washington law firm discovered that Justice Tom Clark's clerk once played for the Baltimore Colts . ... Wlll Fow­ler flew to New York for the pub­lication of his gay and touching biography of his father , the late Gene Fowler, "The Young Man From Denver" ..•. The F rank Loessers named their new daugh­ter Hannah.

A famed English variety star likes to concoct unl'1U" betfl. One of his favorites Is a bet that he can shoot a bird, catch aflsh, suc­cessfully woo a woman and -play 18 holes of golf -- all within a time limit of three hours. Wooing the girl Is the least of the prob-

(Contlnued on P..-e 19)

---- - ·•--- _---.~- .... - -~· -~-· ·---- -----·-·--- ----.....~-----

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standing on his own feet ... ~ ;,.

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Sunday, November 4 Is Upcoming GJC Events

• Young Adult Division, ANN\JAL DINNER DANCE, Colony Motor Hotel , Saturday, Novembe r 3, at 7 p. m.

• REPORT LUNCHEON MEETING, Thurs­day, Nov. 8, 12 Noon, GJC Headquarters .

NOTE to " D" DAY WORKERS - Please assemb le at Johnson's Hummocks, Sun . Nov. 4 at 9 a.m. SHARP . . Plenty of parking space.

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Freedom is a home - and 18,000 must be ~ built for the refugees pouring into Israel this ~

< year. Increased immigration has put a severe i strain on this small country which has already l"l

absorbed more than a million, who came before. ~

Freedom is economic independence - for 135,000 immigrant settlers needing critical farm aid and the machines, tractors and agricultural training that can continue to turn dry land into th riving field s.

Freedom is training and guidance - for 31,000 r efugee children who must be sent to schools, fed, clothed and guided toward healthy adulthood.

YO UR ONE GIFT TO GJC helps to suppo1·t 53 worthy causes. THIRTEEN OF THESE ARE LOCAL ONES ! More than $119,000 of the GJC Campaign Funds collected last year stayed right here in Rhode Island.

Greet your "I)" DAY VOLUN­TEER from the GJC MEN'S DIVI­SION with a GENEROUS GIFT! Remember he is contributing his time and energy, as well as his money. Give an "extra gift" to the 1962 Rescue Fund!

DAY

"D" DAY Chairman . . LEONARD Y. GOLDMAN

Co.Chairmen - Horry Finkelstei n, Samuel Gerstein, Murry M. Hol• pert, Harold Pansy, Louis B. Rubinstein , Maurice S. Shore, Louis Sweet. -1962 Campaign Chairman . MERRILL L. HASSENFELD

President, General Jew ish Committee . JOSEPH W. RESS

... "' "' "'

GOOD GIVING IS PART OF GOOD LIVING m• '

•Give Generously .To The_ 196i GJC Campaign ' • - ' ... .. . .• . • • . i .

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_ ~cellent opportunities are in the Herald's Classifted ads.

ORGANIZATION . NEWS Fashionable Furs

MRS. SAM GORMAN wishes to

thank her relatives and friends

for their thoughtfulness during

her recent illness.

HERMANN STERNAU JEWISH COUPLES' CLUB Prizes were a warded for cos­

tumes worn at a H alloween party held Saturday by the Jewish Couples of Pawtucket.

FORMERLY DESIGNER OF WILLIAM H. HARRIS FURS

FINE RESTYLING • REPAIRING Prizes a warded included Ben Ferdman for most original cos­t ume; Leo Max, funniest cos­tume ; Helen and Hermie Gel­ler, best dressed couple.

PEARLS - BEADS RESTRUNG AND KNOTTED

• Cultured Pearls • Beautlful Clasps

UNion 1-2575

• Paint 6 Walls Washed , • Floors Washed & Waxed • Upholstery & Rugs Cleaned • Drapery 6 Slipcovers Cleaned • Venetian Blind Service • Fire Damage Cleaning

• RESIDENTIAL • • INDUSTRIAL •

COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE

• STORAGE

70 Glenham St., PROVIDENCE

116 Everett Avenue

for

To Speak - ¼rt Blender will speak about his recent trip ta East and West Ger­ma ny at the meeting of the Cranston Chapter o f Hadas­sah which will be held on Monday at 8 : 15 P.M . at the Cranston Jewish Center.

A representative from the League of Women Voters will speak on important e lection issues. The coffee hour will be in charge of Mrs . Max White a nd Mrs. Burton Salk .

Po liti cal Ad ve rti sem e nt

22 years

Gver'JtoJ'J ~ Cong-reJJman clesen-es EVERYBODY'S support

FOGARTY CAMl'AION COMMITTR

Members of the committee who arranged the party were Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Berkowitz, Mr. and Mrs . E. Weiss and Mr. and Mrs. Harold P ansey, as well as the presiding officers. Co-chairmen for the November meeting are Mr . and Mrs. Eli Abrams .

BETH SHOLOM SERVICES The series of late Friday

night services at Temple Beth Sholom was launched with the first service last Friday. and will continue each Friday night with Cantor Karl Kritz con­ducting the services. and the delivery of the weekly message by Rabbi Charle~ M . Rubel. An Oneg Shabbat wi;l follow each service featuring discus­sions of the sermons and lec­tures . A digest of Jewish cur­rent even ts will be presented and will be followed by com­munal singing.

TO LEAD DELEGATION Commander Ha rold Pansy of

the J ewish War Veterans of Rhode Island will lead a dele­gation of wa r veterans to Woonsocket to participate In the dedication ceremonies of the new syn agogue. Congrega­tion B'nai Israe l. on Sunday, Nov. 11.

The Annua l Veterans Day Dance of the JWV will be h eld on Sunday evening , Nov. 11 at headquarters, 1 0 0 N i a g a r a Street . Senior Vice-Commander Irving Levin is general chair­man of the dance committee.

WOODMAN'S SS Eddy St. JA 1-4977

Lindy's Bali Restaurant

CRANSTON

ST 1-8781

" The Tolk Of The Town•

OUR SENSATIONAL

Chuck Wagon CHANGED DAILY

$1.35 Samples:

Smothered Beef And Onlons London Broll

Coming Soon - Banquet Hall For 450. Reservations

Now Being Taken

OFFICE SPACE

For Rent New Building

24 Bank St., West Warwick

1st Floor 926 sq, ft, Lower Floor 688 sq. ft.

air cond.

reasonable rent

will divide

Call VA 1-7611 ofter 5

Grand Opening Celebration Starting Monday, Nov. 5, 1962 For 7 Daysi

WE ARE GIVING AWAY FREE

• 1 King Size 6 Pak Carton of Coca- Cola

,-: .,.. •••• .., I: •••• .., >-•••• <( ... •••• <( ..I

EAST AVE.

• 1 Family Size Bottle of Coca-Cola

• Plus 1 Old Fashioned Party Tumbler With Purchase of Eight (8) or More Gallons of Gasoline

Starting

Special 0//er f Mon., Nov. 12, 1962

FREE· FOR EIGHT (8) WEEKS (To Complete Your Set)

1 Old Fashioned Porty Tumbler With Purchase of

Eight or More Gallons of Gasoline

Start Your Set During Grand Opening

GASPERI NI'S Shell Service Station

ORLANDO GASPERINI, Prop .

Service Is Our Business

East Ave. and Lafayette St. Pawtucket, R. I. 726-8802

...,~ ..:._~ ~r 'i. ~ ..

j (Continued from Page 5)

Move To Connecticut Mr. and Mrs. Joel M. Coh en of

74 Gallatin Street, h ave m oved to 431 Ellsworth Avenue, New Haven, Conn.

Mr. Cohen, who received h is Master's degree from the Uni­versity of Rhode Island last J une, is presen tly teaching at the North Haven High School.

Mrs. Coh en is the former Miss Carolyn L . Scherz.

CERAMIC SUPPLIES Service to Schools

Kilns • Greenware • Firelng:s

LOUIS & GLORIA To Se rve You

PA 6-1634-2-4---7-9 336 Power Rd ., Pawt., R. I .

Saturday Evening 5-8 P.M. BUFFET SUPPER

Miss Margo wishes to Announce

the Opening of Miss Margo's

Beauty Salon, Inc. 236 Westminster St., Providence

Aice Building (2nd Floor) MA 1-7633

Staff: Miss Margo Miss Kathy Miss Paula Miss Joan, Receptionist

STYLIST Formerly with ANDRE'S BEAUTY SALON

OF RHODE ISLAND

1217 NO, MAIN ST., PROV. (Across Fr om Sears)

Open 9:30 - 9:30; Sats. nt 6:00

• DIAMONDS-JEWELRY

Nice Selection of

Gold Earrings & Pins

By Candlelight DExte r 1-5995

Miss Rosilyn Dress Weds Milton Bolski • WATCHES-STERLING SIL VER

FABULOUS DESSERTS

MISS DUTTON'S

YOUR HEMLINES COATS 3.00

DRESSES 1.25 up

LUCY'S 256 Westminster St. GA 1-0145

Closed Saturdays

MIMEOGRAPH ING • CLUB NEWSLETTERS • MEETING NOTICES • FLIERS

HEE NIE FINEMAN WAYLAND OFFICE SERVICE

PL 1-2800 41 SEEKON K STREET

at W ay land Squa re

Avoid t he Foll Rus h. See us today

for free expert consulta tio n, advice ond esti mate.

CALL GA 1-8096 Storage your little fu r

MI NK A SPECIAL TY

MARK WEINBERG Custom Furrier

the Lapham Bldg. 290 Westminster St.

Miss Rosilyn Alberta D ress, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Jack Dress of 131 F ourth Street, was married to Milton Burton Bol­ski, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil ­liam Bolski of 126 Sumter Street at a 6 :30 P .M. candle­light ceremony on Sunday, Oct. 28, at Temple Beth David. Rab­bl Robert Layman, assisted by Cantor Arthur Yolkoff, officia­ted at the wedding wh ich was followed by a reception at the temple .

T he bride, given in marriage by her father, was gowned In light ivory bouquet taffeta with a scoop neckline, fitted bodice and short puffed sleeves. Re ­embroidered Alencon lace with pearls and crystals accented the cummerbund and sleeves and circled the hem of the dome skirt which ended In a detach­able paneled train enhanced with lace. A bouffant veil of French silk illusion was caught to a queen's crown of pearls and

POPULATION SHRINK S TEL AVIV - It may be safe­

ly assumed tha t in the course of the next 10 years the J ew­ish community of Poland, now numbering 35,000, will have completely vanish ed, declared Moshe Ron, general-secretary of Israel's journalists' federa ­tion , after his return from a recent visit to Poland. Mr . Ron was the officia l representative of Israel at the international congress of journalists for tourism .

The number of Jews in the traditional J ewish centers like Warsaw, Lodz, Cracow. Lublin, and Czestochowa is shrinking from day to day. Along with them are slowly di .Jpearing J ewish institutions a Ld com­munal organizations.

Special on

Sale

IMPORTED KNITS

SAVE

O~r Price $65 to $89. 99

-NOW-

2Oo/o OFF

MORE

Ronny's Low Low Prices For One Week Only

Ronny's Dress Shop 422 Westminster St.

Providence

crystal. She carried an a rm bouquet of ivory roses .

• CHINA WARE-LUGGAGE • TV-STEREO PHONOS • MAJOR APPLIANCES

• CAMERAS-CHf.R MS • TYPEWRITERS

Mrs. Charles H . Dress, sister­in-law of the bride, was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Paula K essler , Janice Dress. Miss Wilma Eisenberg, Miss Toby Demel, Mrs . Nor­man Bolskl and Mrs . Marty Kaufman .

Th• Orlglnal D iscoun t House of R. I. S0o/o off Free Parki ng {Rear of Sto re)

The matron of honor and the bridesmaids were dressed in short length gowns of sea coral peau satin fashioned with fitted bodices, scoop necklines, cap sleeves and front envelope skirts app!lqued with a spray of satin and velvet lea ves cen ­tered with a large satin cab­bage rose. They wore matching bands of velvet leaves cen ­tered with a small bow and back petal veils .

After a wedding trip to the Nevele Country Club in Ellen­ville, N .Y .. the couple will re­side at 74 Sumter Street.

PollUcal Adve rtisement

ELECT

THOMAS W.

Political Advertisemen t

THIS

PEARLMAN

Mr. Salk. with ◄ 8 years experience In the fur buslneu. wi ll expert ly rei. tyle your present coat In to a new 51'.a rment. Act now and y()u will be r ea d y tor th e w int er seaso n . . . In style ·

FUR COATS MADE TO ORDER

All T ypu ol R epairing cl R emodelin•

SALK'S FUR SHOP

LA P HA M BLUG. P ROVIDENCE G A 1- 1268

Clou d Monday•

Polltlca l Advertisement

TEAM

CHARLES A.

KILVERT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES FOR CITY COUNCIL

SECOND WARD (East Side Area, Providence)

Restoring the balance between the two parties is long overdue in Providence. Presently, only two of the twenty-six City Councilors are Re­publican and only one of the twenty-five Providence members of the Gen­eral Assembly. In only four of the last fiftyyears did we have a Republican Mayor.

The result has been lack of vigor and leadership in governmental af­fairs. The city's population has decl ined from 250,000 to 200,000 and hundreds of jobs and businesses have moved out. The heavy Democrat majorities have degenerated into 'a rubber stamp. An independent Demo­crat, where found, must ask, "what good does it do to dissent?" Thus vot­ing for the whole Republican team in the third and fourth columns is nec-essary for a real change. ·

VOTE FOR FRANK LAZARUS, JOHN CHAFEE AND THE WHOLE TEAM

VOTE REPUBLICAN . 3~~~~~~~h ._.- - \ r ... • , • .; ,

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C ... Hassenfelds Give $225,000 To Brandeis

Merrill L . Hassenfeld, pre;i­dent of Hassenfeld Bros., Inc ., his brother Harold of Nashville, Tenn., and their sister, Mrs. Leonard Engle of Pawtucket, have underwritten a new $225,-000 dormitory at Brandeis Uni­versity.

The "Henry and Marion Has­~• senfeld House" will be a me­< morial to their parents who !3 were among the university 's I~ earliest supporters. • Merrill Hassenfeld is a fel­

low of the university and co­chairman of its National As­sociates and a life member of the Family Funds Committee.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hassen­feld, to whom the dormitory will be a memorial, established a scholarship endowment fund at Brandeis in 1955 .

Visit The Gaylord

Diner 1140 No. Main~

P,rovjdence, R. I. OPpos1tc R 1 Auditorium •

Open from 7 in the Morning Until 3 A. M.

. ~

Engaged Mr. and Mrs. Julius Be rnes of Fifth Street announce the engagement o f their daughter, Marcia Ro­berto, to Richmond W . Li sse r, son o f Mr. and Mrs. David H. Li sser o f Montreal , Canada.

Miss Bernes is a senior at the Boston University School of Education . Mr. Lisser attended Clark University in Worcester. Mass.

A July 4, 1963. wedding is planned .

Meat- eating nations. s ince the dawn of his tory, ha ve usua lly been the most aggressive .

Rattray's Scottish Tobacco

$3.00 the 4 oz. Tin

- Unusually Good -

GLOBE-WERNICKE, ORSENIGO

EXECUTIVE INTERIORS

R. GRETCHEN NELSON, AID, PLANNING CONSULTANT

38 NORTH COURT STREET, PROVIDENCE 3 - 421-3273

Political Advertisement Political Advertisement

PAWTUCKET OAK HILL PLAT VOTERS

I NEED YOUR HELP

-ELECT.-

l;L-1 ABRAMS FOR STATE

REPRESENTATIVE IN THE 10th DISTRICT

• World War II Veteran

• Jewish Wor Veterans

• · Cpngregation Ohawe Sholom

• Pawtucket Kiwanis

• knights of Pythias e • ' nOi B' rith

• Sl~ter J:. High PTA

F_OR TRANSPORTATION TO THE POLLS, CALL

724-3040 PA 2-7790 PA 5-5100 PA 3-3419

PA 5-2996

REPUBLICAN 10th REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT COMM!TTEE Co'uncilman John P. Ford, Chairman - Samuel Goldfarb, Secretary

- PULL LEVER IN .3rd COLUMN -

ORGANIZATION NEWS _, ·: • • .... -~ 1 ~ ~ •

BROIDES TO SPEAK Abraham Broides, one of Is­

rael's outstanding poets will address a special gathering of the Hug Ivri, Hebrew Cultural group, on Wednesday at 8 :30 P .M . according to word re­ceived from the Histradrut I vrit of Americe. in New York . The Providence visit will be one of Broides' last visits before he returns to Israel, following a brief first stay in America . The meeting will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Leitner, ll8 Everett Avenue. Rabbi Akiva Egozi is newly e lected chairman or the Hug Ivri of Pr0vidence .

Arrangements for Broides' coming were made through the Bureau of Jewish Education .

Broides holds the Important office of Executive Secretary of the Is rael Writer 's Federation .

In his early youth Broides was discovered and sponsored by Chaim Nachman Bialik . At the meeting on Nov. 7. Broides will discuss his associations and reminiscences with the great Hebrew writers of con tempor­ary times, such as Bialik . Tchernichovsky , Schneur and othe rs. He will also read from his own works . For additiona l informa t ion about t he m eeting the ofl\ce of the Bureau of J ew­ish Education may be ca lled .

CAM PAIGN AT S490,000 With the total contributions

and pledges to the 196: cam­paign now standing at $490 ,-000 and steadily approaching the h a lf-mill ion dolla r mark , G enera l J ewish Committee of­fic ials urged an effort by the entire Greater Providence J ew­ish commun ity to surpass last year 's ca mpaign fi gure of $650 .-000 .

Joseph W. Ress. GJC presi­dent, sa id that the nex t report m eeting will be held Thursday noon. a t the GJC headquarters. 203 Strand Building. Mr. Ress stated that there are still many cards that have not been cov­ered . He urged all workers to cover their assigned cards with­out delay and turn in the re ­su lts at the next report meet ­ing.

QUARTER PAST CLUB The Quarter Past Club of the

J ewish Community Center is planning a new series of spe ­cial activities for its members, it was announced this week by Samuel Cohen, club president .

Be[!"inning in November, the group will program a regular once-a-month meeting and so­cial. cultural. or educational event at the East Side Center

building . This will be in addi­tion to the club's current series of once-a-month dances at the Crown Hotel.

First program in the new series will be held on Sunday, Nov . 25. Others will follow on Dec . 23 and Jan . 20 .

The club's dance schedule calls for Nov. 18, Dec . 2, and Jan . 6.

Members of the program planning committee, in addi­tion to Mr . Cohen, are Gloria Rosenbaum, Mary Friedman, Lillian Goldstein , and Arthur Finkelstein .

Membership in the group is open to all unmarrieds, 28 years and over.

Of Jewish Objects Exhibit Collection At Cong. B' nai Israel

A price less collection of J ew­ish ceremonial objects. paint­ings. and sculpture is now on exhibit at the new Congrega­tion B 'nai Israe l Synagogue and Commun ity Center in Woon­socket and will remain through Nov . 21. it was announced last week by congregation president Sa muel Medotl" .

The art treasures are on loan from the J ewish Museum of the J ewish Theological Semin­ary of America In New York , and will be exhibi ted in the ar­chitect-designed Museum of the Congregation B'nai Israe l Com­munity Cente r .

Hundreds of Woonsocket school-children are scheduled to visit t he exhibition on spe­cial tours arranged by the Woonsocket School Department . Additional hundreds of visitors will include civic organizations and community leaders of a ll fa iths from as near as Prov­idence and as far-away as Bos­ton, Mass .

Mr . Medoff announced that the exhibit ion will be open to the public Sunday through Thursday of each week from 2 P .M . to 5 P .M . and 7 P .M. to 9 P .M . Volunteers from the congregation will be on hand to answer questions.

Among the paintings, water ­colors, etchings and woodcuts will be works by Mitchell Si­porin. Chaim Gross, Alfred Van Loen, Irving Amen, etc.

Ceremonial art objects, some dating as far back as the 17th Century, include magnificently carved wood, silver and bronze, brass and copper articles from Europe and Asia.

Julius C. Michaelson

Michaelson Outlines Proposed Program

Julius C. Michaelson. Demo­cratic candidate for Senator from the Firs t District in Providence which covers the en lire eas t side of the city, speaking before a committee of businessmen. profssional men and educators for Michae lson, outlined the following program for attracting industry to the State of Rhode Island :

I. Crea te a Technical Ad­visory Commission to find new products for manufacture .

2. Strengthen the Rhode Is­land Development Council.

3. Offer tax incentives to business .

4 . Train and retrain workers for 1963 ski lls through expand­ed use of vocational schools.

5. Make Rhode Island at­tractive to businessmen. their families and their employees through sound legislation in the fields of education, recrea• tion, highway p lanning and law enforcement .

6. Modernize the 142 year­old constitution.

Mr . Michaelson said that his qualification for this task are experience as an attorney rep• resenting varied businesses and labor; personal success i n bringing to Rhode Island a new company ; service under three governors, studying and draft­ing State laws, and board membership of a life insurance company located and invested in Rhode Island .

LIBERALIZE RULES JERUSALEM - The Israel

Treasury h as a n n o u n c e d another liberalization of travel currency rules. Israelis going abroad hereafter will . be allow­ed a $400 travel a llowance for each trip instead of the $400 previously allowed for one trip a year.

At Weizmann Institute - Dr. Rolph Taylor-Smith of Sie rra Leone, winner of a Weizmann Institute of Science Fello~ship, surveys the plea sant Institute grounds at Rehovoth with hi s wife and their three boys, Robert, Richard and Raymond, ranging from one to eight years . The 38-yeor-old chemist will conduct research on chemical properties of natural p lants during hi s year 's stay in Israel . He is among the first African sc ientists to come to the famed Re­hovoth research center for advanced study, in line with Israe l' s program of aid to the new notions .

i-

----------l.'---· _. ___ .._ ___ -- -~----- -----

Miss Beryl Wolff Becomes Mrs. Elliott I. Chapman

Rabbi Eli A. Bohnen, assisted by Cantor Jacob Hohenemser, officiated at the 6 P.M. wed­ding on Sunday, Oct. 28 of Miss Beryl Wolff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob G. Wollf of 284 Hamilton Street, to El­liott I. Chapman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chapman, of 84 Westbourne Terrace , Brook­line, Mass. The ceremony was followed by a reception in the · Temple Emanu-El social hall.

Wearing a bell-s i I ho u et t e gown o! silk brocade fashioned with a sculptured neckline and long tapered sleeves, the bride was given in marriage by her father. Tiny crystal beads ac­cented the floral design of the gown which extended into a full court train. A bouffant veil of English illusion fell from a crown of matching crystals.

She carried a prayer book cascaded with white orchids, stephanotis and white roses.

Miss Karen Feldman, maid of honor, and Mrs. Melvin Gabriel, sister of the bridegroom, ma­tron of honor, wore street length dresses of emerald green brocade with matching pill boxes accented with French maline .

Phillip Chapman served as· best man for his brother. Ush­ers were Bruce L . Wolff, broth­er of the bride, Richard H . Fish, Elliot Belt, Dr. Sidney Borison, Melvin Gabriel, broth­er-in-law of the bridegroom, and Kenneth Strachman.

The couple will reside at 1375 Commonwealth Avenue, Allston, Mass. after a wedding trip to the Carillon Hotel in Miami Beach, Fla.

Rabbi Layman, Cantor Yolkoff To Be Installed At Beth Israel

( Continued from Page 1) is also interested in adult Jew­ish education and will super­vise classes in the study of the Bible, Jewish history, elemen­tary and conversational He­brew and appreciation of Jew­ish music. Some of these class­es are already in operation.

Rabbi Layman is married and the father of two children, David Rachmlel, age 3 years and Jonah Samuel, 8 months old.

Mrs. Layman is the former Ruth Apatoff, also a native of Philadelphia. She was a teach­er In the public schools of East Organge, N. J. for four years.

Cantor Arthur Yolkoff served as a cantor in Portland, Ore., before he joined the staff of Temple Beth Israel as its mus­ical director and youth super­visor.

At Portland, where he of­ficiated as Cantor at Temple Neveh Shalom, he also served the national United Synagogue Youth as its regional director for Northwest United States and Canada.

Cantor Yolkoff was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., and is a grad­uate of City College of New York and the Cantor's Insti­tute of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America.

He has had considerable can­torial experience. Active in many special programs for Jewish Musical Festivals, Can­tor Yolkoff, before coming east, presented the first Portland performance of the Ernest Bloch "Sacred Service".

In addition to officiating at Synagogue Services, Cantor Yolkoff will orepare boys for Bar Mitzvah. He will direct all Temple and Hebrew school musical activities. In this con­nection, he ls now organizing a Temple choral group. The Cantor is advisor of the Beth Israel · U.S .Y. and director of the Sabbath Youth Service. In the Temple's Adult Education pr,ogram, he will teach a class every . Wednesday beginning Nov . 14, in ''Appreciation of Jewish Music."

The installation committee includes Charles G . Greenstein, chairman, Mrs. Samuel Boch­ner and Samuel A. Cohen.

Bridge By Revoke

No one vulnerable . North deals.

North •-A J 10 8 5 •-10 ♦-K Q 8 3 •-K 10 4

West 1111-K Q •-A 9 8 6 ♦-A 10 9 7 •-92

East • - 7 4 3 •-K 4 3

6 ♦-5 4 2 .-QJ76

South •-9 6 2 .-Q J 7 5 2 ♦-J ..,_A 8 5 3

The Bidding: North East 1 • pass 3 • pass pass pass

South 2. 4. West 3 ♦ pass

Opening lead: Queen of clubs. North took the club lead with

the king in the closed hand ; then led lo., to the Jack of dia­monds which West took with the ace. West led the ace of hearts and then a small heart which North trumped. North sluffed two hearts from dum­my on the )<Ing and queen of diamonds; led last small dia­mond and overtrumped East in the dummy with the nine. North then led a spade from dummy, overtook West's king and returned Jack of spades which West took with tlie queen. West returned a heart and North trumped. North then led the ten of clubs, East covered and the dummy won with the ace. North then led the eight of clubs, then trumps last club in closed hand to make the con­tract.

Comment : North correctlY figured the POSitlon of the op­ponent's cards and played the hand well.

-----------------------------------------~ ..

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Providence - R~ I. Papers

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Comments On Conservative Movement Dear Editor :

111

~ Our Younger Set- Marcia Shari and Brina Dee, n ine yea r old twins, and Robin Judith Ho­:§ henemser, five years old , are t he daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Manfred Hohenemser of l l l ~ Overhill Raad . Mrs. Benjamin Knopow is maternal grandmother. They a re the nieces of Dr.

and Mrs. Jacob Hohenemser.

It is not my purpose to come to the defense of the Conserva­tive Movement. nor is it my jntent to vindicate Conserva­tive Rabbis, who represent the Movement, for they certainly need no vindication . It is not even my desire to reproach Mr. Harris Miller whose letter, criticizing the Rabbis. appeared In the Hera ld of October 26. MY sole purpose is to refute certain statements appearing in Mr. Miller's· letter. I am also questioning the validity of re­marks in the letter with re­ference to ridicule of Orthodox Synagogues .

I have been a member of a Conservative Temple for many years, and never . once, have I heard a Rabbi condone the driving of an automobile on the Sabbath or High Holidays, ei­ther to attend Ser vices or otherwise . I did hear a Rabbi say that if a worshiper could not attend a Service because of distance, or difficul ty in walk­ing because of hea lth reasons , he did not object to that per­son riding. However. the Rabbi made it quite clear that using a car for any other purpose was not permissible.

The "fences" that Mr. Mil ­(Continued on Page 13)

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POI.ITICAL ADVERTISE:\IF.ST 1'0(.ITl( 'AI. I\O\'t:ltTl!'-E.,1F.ST 1'01,ITl('AI, AIJ\' t : ltTISt:'.U EST 1'01.IT I CAI., ADVERTI S E:\I EST

VOTE FOR R ·E y N O L D S . Tll _E MAYOR • NOV.E . . .

FOR

CONTINUING PROGRESS IN

HOUSING

1711 DWELLING UNITS COMPLETED is the outstanding. record of continuing progress in housing during Mayor Rey­_nol~~'J en_!!re. F9r tbe elderly, for the low­~ncome family, Mayor Reynolds has dem­onstrated dramatically his concern for human problems an~ has done something about them.

DEXTER MANOR-a 200 unit ultra-con­venient apartment house incorporating the latest innovations for the health and comfort of the elderly.

HARTFORD PARK-a 748 unit commu­nity for low-income families, with one building reserved exclusively for . use by

· the elderly.

MANTON HEIGHTS-three-story brick

and one-story frame houses for a total of

330 units for low-income families.

ADMIRAL TERRACE-278 units in one­

story brick buildings, built for low-income

families.

CODDING COURT-119 units for low­

income families housed in brick .buildings,

three stories high.

SUNSET VILLAGE-36 units for elderly

folk with low incomes. Two-story motel­

type dwellings with second floor bal­

conies.

In addition to the , ing developments Mayor Reynolds' te1 developments are , the city by the Pro thority. These incluc unit community homes, giving pre· Chad Brown, with : brick buildings for and Roger Willia n housing units for 1,, three-story bu ildirt< tion. For continuing he vote for Mayor W November 6. He h cord of experience

WILL1AM H. EDWARDS

FRAfllK J. McGEE

MARTIN F. NOONAN

MILDRED . DEAN

Co-Chairmen; Senior crtnen,Diihton

BARBARA JOHNSTON. ·.Chairnuiii, _Women's Division . -JAl:IC l.Aff.ERTY · ·Choirll'ian; Y outff Di¥isio11

E

Chairm,

MAYOR WALTER H. REYNOLDS FRIENDS OF REYNOLDS COMMITTEE

Robert W . Kenyon, Chairman, Ralph F. Fargnoli,' Co-Chairman, M~s. Howard Presel, Dr. George E. Charon, Mrs. Whitney T. Perkin

.J

In Hollyw~od

By Barney Glazer

HOLLYWOOD, CALIFOilNIA-- lulold Is old hat at this late date, Ben Goffstein, affable Riviera Warners will use a favorable de­Hotel (Las Vegas) prexy, is con- clslon as a test case to protect centrating his driving vitality on future filming of Broadway hits. snagging a tab version of "My Goffsteln seeks "My Fair Fair Lady" but must fir~t await Lady" with two concessions -- in the outcome of a court case involv- tab version and on a two-a-night Ing Warner Brothers vs David basis. He has the latter conces­Merrlck. After . purchas ing "The slon firmed but must await the World of Suzie Wong," Warners court decision for the tab ap­would restrict all road showings proval. Warners doesn't feel that of the play to only "class per- a slimmed-down presentation ls formances" in order to protect a "class performance ... Its motion picture boxoffice at all • • • theaters projecting the film ver- WALTER Wanger, courageous sion man he, ls writing a book about

. Although "Suzie Wdng" In eel- his four years wlth"Cleopatra"-­

ro1.11·1cAL ADVERTISE~IF.NT

:>rementioned hous­completed during re, three additional ;o administered for dence Housing Au-Valley View, a 256

• two-story frame ,ence to veterans; 2 units in one-story ,w income families, . Project with _744 -income families, in --of brick construe-

:sty and integrity, ter H. Reynolds on an outstanding re­

,d accomplishment.

look for it during January or Feb­ruary .... Guess who is the voice of that television cutie, Charlie the Tuna -- Herschel Bernardi! .... No matter how close you are to musical mastermind David Rose, he never discusses his ear­ly marriage with Judy Garland.

REMEMBER Pete Martin w_bo used to write those prolific pro­files of celebrities for the Satur­day Evening Post? He's now wdt-ing Jerry Lewis' life story for a hard-cover book. Put Pete and Jerry together and what do we have? Martin and Lewlsl

PIITSBURG'S unlimited musl­~al talent, Hank Levine, ls arrang­ing-conducting another album for Frankie Carle, featuring a medley of Jimmy McHugh compositions . .. Anyone remember when Jimmy McHugh used to accompany this gallery's brother, Billy Glason, on the piano at the Crescent House, Revere Beach (Boston)? Says Glason: "McHugh is one of the world's gr eate st song writers, but

! I've always kidded him that he ls also the world's worst piano player."

J EFF Chandler, la te beloved star, will be featured as the cen­tral figure in Movleland Wax Mu­seum ' s uBroken Arrow" set. The Museum is located near Disney­land.

PLANNING for the construc­tion of the new Hollywood Museum across from the Hollywood Bowl was continued at the second an­nual convention of the organiza­tion in Desilu Studios. President Sol Lesser made it clear that the project will be named "The Holly­wood Museum," not "The Motion Picture Museum." It will be dedi­cated to the four arts -- movies, TV, radio and recording not only of the past , but of the present and future as well.

This reporte r was invited by glamor ous actress Alena Murray to add a few words to the tape which will be placed in a corner­s tone of the new Museum and re­moved October 13, 2062, "which will be," noted George Jessel, "just before the next Nixon-Brown

· debate." Said Producer John Guedel:

"What Sol Lesser Is dolrig for the Hollywood Museum will make up for all the Bobby Breen pictures he has ever made ."

CHECK your NBC-TV schedule , for the "Sam Benedict" segment . titled "Hear the Mellow Wedding ' Bells" with a possible November 3 showing date. It relates about Mort and Sarah Friedman, played by Zohra Lampert a11d .Larry Bly­den, who have had only a civil wedding. The arrival of their baby Is at hand when they decide to have a Jewish wedding, with Jo­seph Schlldlcraut portraying Rabbi Gottlieb. It's nlp and tuck which will occur first, the wedding or the birth, while Sam Benedict, played by Hugh O'Brlan, attempts desperately to collect the requir­ed mlnyan.

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Fred Kelman Photo ;,,

Committee Meets - Members of the committee for the Annuol Donor Event of the Provi - !O dence Chapter of Hodossoh met recently at the home of Mrs. Stanley Grossman . Seated, ~ • i left to right, ore Mesdames Israel Mondell , Benjamin Glosser, Donor affair choirmon; Henry ~ I Kowodler, Guest and President of the New England regi on; Horry Seltze r, Irving Wiener, vice­president o f the New England region, Standi ng ore Mesdames Stanley Grossman, Stanley To l­chinsky, Abraham Berman, Jerome Feinstein, president of the Providence Chapter; Meyer Sovo l, Samuel Michaelson, and Arthur Rosen . Not present when the picture was token were Mesdames Nathan Somors, Maurice Hendel, Irving Abrams and Benjamin Brier. The affair wi ll be held on Tuesday, Jon . 8 at Temple Emonu-EI.

ORGANIZATION . NEWS

TWEEN JAMBOREE Tween a gers at the Brockton,

Mass.. J e wish Community Cen­ter will play hos t to junior high schoolers from Providence and Worcester at a gala " Tween Jamboree" on Monday , Nov . 12. it was announced this week by Steve Feinstein, tween worke r at the Provide nce · J ewish Com­munity Cen ter .

Tweens participating will leave the Eas t Side Center at I P .M .. arriving in Brockton at 2 :30 P.M. in time for a pro ­gram of swimming. bowling, gym activities. gameroo.m . and movies. A buffet dinner will be se rved early in the evening. fol­lowed by a giant "Twista rama" . P a rticipants will a rrive back a t the Providence JCC a t approxi­mate ly 9:30 P .M. tha t evening.

Attendance is open to all junior high school boys and girls by ad vance registra t ion only. R egistrat ions will be limited. a nd will be closed on Nov. 8 . R egistrations will be accepted at either J ewish Community Center building .

TOURNAMENT RESULTS The winners in the Duplicate

Bridge Tournaments h eld last Sunday evening at the East Side Jewish Community Cen­ter are.

:!:: 1- Louis St. Germain and Philip Schronog-81.

:t2-Mrs. Abby Potter and Mrs Dorothy Manchester-80.

#3-Mrs. David Lewinstein and Mrs. Joseph Lapatin-76.

#4-Dr. Robert Luber and Jerome Salter-71 ½.

#5-Mrs. Jack Davis and Mrs. Samuel Markoff-70 .

;,,6-Rudy Freudenberger and Mrs. Eugenia Tellef-69.

#7-Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hodosh-68½.

Average for the evening was 67 .5 .

The next tournament will be conducted at the East Side Center this Sunday beginning at 7:30 P .M. Play Is open to all experienced bridge players, both Center Jnembers and non­members.

II! !Continued from Page 12 )

ler mentions were actually set up within the required limits because our Law-Makers . in their wisdom. knew that the world was not standing s till , and in the event that lawful bounda ries were overstepped . t he invaded area would s t ill be within the confines of the law­ful limits. These so-ca lled " fences" are not be ing "tra mp­led down ": on the con t ra ry , t hey are be ing ins ta lled high er a nd sturdier. and extended on­ly enough to accommodate our more expa nsive and modern mode of· living. I and ma ny othe rs like myse lf. know bette r today, wh a t lies b eyon d t he " fences" than we did \\'hen we were younger and be longed to the Or th odox G'roup . This is 1962 and t his is America, a nd unless we want to tu rn back t h e h a nds of t ime . we must of necessity move back the •"fences' ' : t o preserve our ancient heritage and nurture our religious bequest s .

At this very moment the Catholic Church whose r ituals and traditions have for cen­turies stood unmovable, like the Rock of Gibraltar. is making sweeping changes and reforms in order to make Catholicism more palatable to its modern day followers. To match the times, religion must be revamp­ed even at the expense of cus­tom and tradition as long as the basic principles of faith, and prayer remain unaltered .

To the statement by Mr. Mil­ler that "some people h a d been in the habit of ridiculing Or­thodox Synagogues as being noisy and lacking decorum," I can only say that I agree with

?rl.aill,.ox !II

those people. I a g ree because from my experience as a bo~ and young man I know this to be true . I remember when it was necessary, a ll through the Orthodox Service . for the '' shamus" to pound away on t he " clapper" to s ilence the noice of chatter. I can still r e ­call the fury on the " Chazan's" face a s h e suddenly stopped chantin g and turned to the congregation for silence. I re ­m ember the High Holy Days when Lhe children ran about sh outing and playing at the very doors of the "Shoo!" while the older people jammed the h a llways and entrances sm oking and chatting a s if they were guests at a social func­tion .

Such disrespect, I am happy to say. does not exist at Con­servative T emples and perha ps not •. in the Orthodox "Shoo!" of t oday. I venture to say that the dignity and decorum that Mr . Miller found at the new Mishkan Tfi lo Synagogue is mos t likely an adoption of Con­servative conduct, because I can remember the lack of such qualities when the n ew Mish­kan Tfilo was the old Howell Street "Shoo!."

Sincere ly yours . Harry Albert

SECOND INCIDENT TEL A VIV - An Israeli ·ar­

mored car patroling the Syrian frontier ran over a land mine inside Israeli territory last weekend. No one Was injured.

The occurrence was the sec­ond along the Syrian border in the last week. A mine exploded under an Israeli army vehicle.

FRED SPIGEL'S KOSHER FOOD CENTER

225 -229 PRAIRIE AVENUE

GA 1-8436 MA 1 6055

MAYFLOWER - REG. 39¢ 8 oz. fA,RD 81SHOP

,Y.~~•9 lusiflessmen's Israelis Crack Mathematical ·Riddle Whipped Cream,Cheese cont. 2.3c ftEG.69¢

"'oi;,.. ·

TUESDAY

VEMSER 6 ce-Chairmen

,.NEW YORK - Selent!Sts. '1'.t . Israel's Weizmann Institute · of · Scienee have cracked a clai;slc

mathematical Tlddle and are usin g the solution to make de­tailed predictions of the tides of every seaport in the world as well as at points beneath the oceans. This is said to be the first time that world tides have ever been calculated from pure theory a lone .

The study; which also has ·beariritr ·on .theories •of ,the cos­mos, was revle'R!ld . .1n a report of the Instltute's scientific .ac­tivities made public h ere by Dewey D. Stone, chairman of the Board of Governors of the Institute.

The breakthrough was scored by a combination of n ew math­ematical tools and electronic computer techniques, the report added .

HEAVY Sf-lER:1"0NGUES lb. 49c Sabbath Information

Housewives , . Light Sabbath

Candles

Tonight 4:22 Next Friday at

4:14 P.M.

PICKLED WATERMELON

Is Back In Season

·I

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.. ... = DELIGHTFUL DINING ...

LA FESTA will be held every Wednesday nening. Music, The ROME gay costumes, buffet. Visit our attractive new Cockt ail

R t Lounge. Banquet rooms available for parties. We are still 8S GUrant se<Ying a fine Italian Cuisine, featuring "La Carretta." Also

Route 1 delicious Steaks, Lobsters, Chicken. Roast beef, Saturdays N. Attleboro, 1 M1n. and Sundays. Open Daily at S; Sundays at 12. George at the

MYrtle t-t041 console every Fri ., Sot. and Sun. ·

Johnson's Hummocks

245 Allens Ave. Toi. HO 1-

Selected by "Gourmet" as one of N. E's finest. Famous for Ocean Fresh Sea Foods since 1905. Four Dining Rooms. Fabulous Prime Ribs and Steaks in Prime lib Room. Lobsters -...from our own tanks. Cafe Midnight 'til 1 a .m. - Cocktails. Own Bakery. Children's Menu. Parking for 500 cars. Open every day.

l! 1' ,j Vocal Group

l:h SEYMOUR LADD PRESENTS Jhe 1, ~~ America'• Moat Excitins

me l em ~NN p~~~g~ WED., NOV. 7th, 8:30 p.m. LOEW'S THEATER Tickets $3.80, 3.00, 2.20 NOW ON SALE Cranston Muaic Center, Ladd Muaic Center & Loew'a Box Office

Planning Committee - The committee planning for the New England Region Jewish Notional Fund Dinner to be held Sunday, Dec. 2 at Temple Emonu-EI , in honor of the 80th birthday of Mrs. Archibold Silverman ore shown above . Left to right, they ore Ernest Nathan, Rhode Island JNF president; Mortin Temkin, Horry Finkelstein, Mendel Fisher, Arthur I. Dorman, dinner chairman; Dr. !lie Berger, and Jacob Cohen, execut ive director of the JNF.

EDWIN S. SOFORENKO

HOWARD S. GREENE

ORGANIZATION NEWS

TOURO FRATERNAL Ben Rabinowitz, president of

the Touro Fraternal Associa­tion, announced the events which the organization has scheduled !or November and December.

Pollttcal Advertisement Polttlcal Advertisement

ALL LINES OF INSURANCE FOR BUSINESS, INDUSTRY, HOME

AND PERSONAL PROTECTION

211 ANGELL STREET

UNion 1-1923

INSURANCE

UNDERWRITERS, INC.

Political Advertisement

Past President's Night will be held on Nov . 14, honoring past president Burton Sall<. Enter­tainment will be provided by the Touro Choral Group under the leadership of Samuel Ber­dl tch . First nomination of of­ficers will be held .

New candidates wlll take thelr degree on Nov. 28 and on thls evening the final nomina­tion of officers wlll be made.

A Ladles' Nlght wlll be held on Sunday evening, Dec . 2 at

Politica l Advertisement

the Garden Room of the Sher­aton-Biltmore Hotel !or Touro members only and their ladles. J oseph Andre and his orches­tra will !urnlsh the music.

Business meetings of the or­ganization will be held on Dec. 12 and Dec. 26.

Election of officers wlll be held at the meeting on Dec . 19.

SPECIAL SERVICES Special Sabbath services to

welcome new members into the Cranston J ewish Center will be held tonight at 8: 30 o'clock .

Rabbi Saul Leeman wllJ speak on "A Man Righteous in Hls G en er at ion." Cantor Jack Smith will chant the llturgy and Mrs. Ellls Rosenthal will be at the organ.

An Oneg Shabbat will follow the service.

EDUCATION COMMITTEE The Family Education Com­

mittee of the Temple Beth El Sisterhood will present "Ethics of the Fathers," a study and discussion group conducted by Rabbi William G . Braude, on Monday at 10 :45 at the Tem­ple. Mrs. Irving Wiener is chairman of the group.

Polltlcal Advertisement

:J/ie (}f a~loneJ

In 1961-1962, Bernard

l. was appointed to the important Judiciary Committee of the House _of Representatives, and the Committee studying Juvenile Delinquency.

2. introduced legislation to repeal the unfa ir unincorporated business tax; introduced revised motor vehicle code that en­hances safety of the road; introduced legislation to force financial institutions to advertise interest rates at their true rates so that the public would not be misled; introduced legis­lation providing for marking of imported goods to protect do­mestic manufacturers; fought to keep driver education bill at 25 year old level; fought against a State income tax; voted to improve teachers' retirement benefits and for increases in benefits in workmen's compensation and temporary disability.

wouf J appreciale lhe opporlunif'I

lo. conlinue

lo te o/ Jervice lo 'JOU f

RE-ELECT BERNARD C. GLADSTONE

In the Community, Bernard 3. is President of the Summit Avenue PT A

Safety Chairman of the R. I. Congress PTA Vice President East Side Neighborhood Council (Past

President) Building Fund Chairman Temple Beth Sholom (Past

President) Vice President Seekonk Pool Board of Directors B'nai B'rith; the Bureau of Jewish Educa­tion and many other worthwhile organizations. Member of the Committee on the amendment of laws of the Rhode Island Bar Association.

In 1963-1964, I pledge to continue being a doer rather than a promiser.

RE-ELECT Vote

Democratic BERNARD C. GLADSTONE· Representative

5th District

1-Accounting, Bookkeeping

BOOKKEEPER, experienced in double entry through trial balance. Ac­counts payable and· receivable. Pay-~e.rf.r~t~~asonable rates, liSG

BOOKKEEPING service through bal­ance sheet, fully equipped. Rates reasonable. CE 1-4788 anytime after 5, 11-9

2-Antiques

ANTIQUE buggies end sleighs, also Western stage coach, Democrat buggy and surrey. Also have an­tique papier mache large tray, rare piece. CE l-0181.

THE CELLAR Door, Route 101, Old Hartford Pike, antiques, gtfts. Thel­ma and Dorothy Dame. 12-28

3-Apartments For Rent

EAST SIDE, Weyland Square, Eldo­rado Apartments. 3 spacious rooms, modern, immaculate, large closets. Tile, range, refrigerator. $105. 724-3975.

WESLEYAN Ave., 132, Elmwood and Broad. Attractive 3 rooms, 2nd. Utilities furnished. PL 1-2449, EL 1-9660.

ELMWOOD SECTION NEW SHALIMAR APARTMENTS

99 MELROSE STREET Deluxe 4 room suites. Recently com­pleted! Air conditioning, Individual heat control. Parking. Electric stove, refrigerator. Food disposal. Colored, tiled bath, tub enclosure. Panell1ng. Clothes washer and dryer. · Storage faclllties. Now available for lease. $135 monthly.

GA 1-1801 WI 2-1894 12-14

6-Ash, Rubbish Removal

CELLARS, yards, attics cleaned, $5. On the spot service. JA 1-5797, PL 1-3463. 11-30

Sa-Building Materials

4 x 8 lumber from 14' to 32' long construction hemlock approximate• ly i0,000. WI 1-3139. urn

TEARING down large mill : 200,000 feet 2" matched planking, 1,000,000 bricks, timbers, piping, etc . Nation• al Wrecking Co., Inc., 164 Branch Ave. UN 1-0422. 1-18

Sb-Business Equipment

GROCERY, Restaurant, Office Furni­ture, Showcase, Registers, Provi­dence · AucUon .. Room No. 2, Cran-

. ston, PL 1-1315. 12-14

Sbb-Business Opportunities

BAR on North Main, established 20 years, 6 tap Simard system. Full size shuffle board, etc. Reason sick­ness. Call MA 1-9608, or SOuthgate 1-8175. 11-16

9-Carpenters And Builders

ALTERATIONS and remodeling, re­creation rooms, no job too small. Moshier, DE 1-1591. lo-63

ADDITIONS, recreation rooms anci home remodeling. Free estimates. Reasonable prices. RE 7-3340, RE 7-8268. 11-30

AARON, Carpentry, roofing, painting, papering, cement work. $5 up. For prompt service. EL 1-6539. 12-28

CLIP and save. Tile, new bathrooms, kitchens, playrooms, garages, dor­mers, etc. Lowest prices! PA 6-0499, PA 3-9679, 723-4342.

CARPENTRY, cabinet work, additions, remodeJtng, kitchens, bathrooms, rumpus rooms. Quality work at the right prlc(, EL 1-3938, EL 1-578\-63

COMPLETE construction work, all work guaranteed. Anthony's Build­ing Co., CE 1-0589. 12-14

GENERAL construction, cabinetmak­ing, formica counter tops, recrea­tion rooms, remodellng, repairing. Store interiors. TE 1-4888. urn

10-Cement, Asphalt Work

ALTERATION - Asphalt and cement oavtng. General contracting. Also. machinery rentals. UN 1-7673, EL 1-8676. 5-"3

ASPHALT driveways, sidewalks, park­lnR areas. Driveways 30 x 12, $70. AJ.c::t'l seaJcoatlng. TE 1-4395. 12-21

Asphalt driveways, sidewalks and parking areas. Driveways, 50 x 9, $65: other sizes in proportion. Also soeclal in Seal Coating driveways, 30 x 9, $16.50. All work guaranteed. Free estimates.

ROYAL PAVING CO.

TEL : 751-3303 11-3"

ASPHALT 1rlveways, all sizes, dur­able, smooth finish. Fully guaran­teed 5 years. Reasonable. Also Seal Coating. Universal Paving. PL 1-2076. 11-30

ASPHALT DRIVEWAY

9 x 45, special $45. Ail other s izes

~ea~r~i;_~r~o~~w:~es~la:11 o;o;cai1::: anteed.

NEW ENGLAND PAVING CO.

621-f510 DE 1-7917

11-9

ASPHALT WORK

:~~t~~"pr':,t~~~1;f As~~r d':fvve';,i;~ parking areas for home and lndustrd&-1

areas. Manufacturers of "Blacktop" pavements. Hot and cold mixes.

MONDILLO CO. CEl--

Long utabllshed WI 2-Tflf

12-7

10-Cement, Asphalt Work CEMENT work, asphalt, ready mix,

Additions, Alterations, Aluminum Sldlng, Garages. EL 1-8789, EL 1-8676. lCH.3

GENERAL contractor, •11 kinds of ce­ment work, sidewalks, driveways, buUdthg. All typ'es trencblng, cess­pools, excavating. Free estlmates. GE 4-0421. 12-21

CEMENT contracting: Garages, sin• gle, $850; double, $1,250; cement­clnder blocks, complete. Angelo Mirando, 285 Laurel Hll1 Ave., EL 1-8524. 11-9

CEMENT: Colored patios, 10 x 20, $125. All cement flagstone and rteld­stone work. Backhoe service. Free estimates. RE 9-1102. DE 1-1829.

11-30 CEMENT repairs; chimneys, steps,

flaklng, leaking cellars. Brick point• ed. UN 1-4842, UN 1~992 anytime.

11-30

c~':t~:Jays~tT:!iun:ai~ti~rs, s~~~:';~~ and dry wells. Save dollars, ca ll ,A . E. Johnson, PA S.7534.

LANDSCAPING, Asphalt driveway, small Jobs, patch repairs, water ft~bJ~'r2~- 30 years experle~l

SIDEWALKS, cement and asphalt, small job accepted, call ST 1-786'!.

11-30

12-Clothing, Furs

FUR coat, mouton lamb, practically new, reasonable. RE 7-2996.

SILVER fox coat, ¾ lenith. Spring coat, new Dresses. Size 20. Invalid 's walker. PL 1-8109, mornings, eve-

W;~~-~N- G_ g_o_w_n_ l•-•-•-, - f~loo- r- lo_n_g_th- , slze 12-13. WI 1-2553.

12aa-Commercial For Rent

10,000 · sq. ft., one story, like new, 355 Dexter St., UN 1-4508, WI 1-6292. 11-23

LINCOLN, R. I.

Space for rent, 150,000 sq. ft. Hea ted and sprinklered.

PA 5-1339

11-23 MANUFACTURING sp.ace for rent,

25,000 sq. ft. in one bulldlng. Call PA 3-7557. ufn

OLNEYVILLE: 1,250 sq. ft. ground floor, sprinklered, heated. Ante ll Realty, 50 Valley, DE 1-2239. 11-30

PAWTUCKET manufacturing space. 2,000-50,000 sq. ft. High celltngs, hea t, elevators, watchman. First, 2nd floors, $50 up. PA 5-2610. 11-30

PAWTUCKET, new building, 3,850 fee t, height 13' clear, large door. PA 5-1207, PA 2-9320. ufn

PROVIDENCE

One block from New Post Office. Previously the American Sllk Spin­ning. Various spaces, from 2,000 to 60,000 sq. ft.; sprinklers, rone heat, full power fluorescent lighting, cy­clone draw fans, elevators, convey­ors, off-street and adjacent parking.

For further information call

GA 1-5505

Evenings PL 1-3181

12ac-Draperie•, Slipcovers

DRAPERIES, custom made In my home. Reasonably priced. Call EL 3-3459 anytime. 1-11

13-Dressmaking, Alterations

AL TE·RATIONS on dresses, coats, suits. Call after 5:30 p.m., WI 1-2714, Atlantic Ave., Providence.

1-18

1 Sa-Farm and Acreage

BARRINGTON : Hampden Meadows. Approximately 2 acres or beautiful partially wooded waterfront pro{>­erty Box 568 Jewish Herald. 11-2.3

16-Firewood, Fuel.

FIREWOOD, flreplace ·1oas .. . Delivered, reasonable. RE 7-9453. If no answer, RE 7-1410.

FUEL oil, 200 gal., $25.25. Burner serv­ice. S&H Green Stamps. HUlsgrove 011, RE 7-1079. , 11-23

OAK fire logs cut, seasoned, for stove or fireplace, $17 cord. Eve­nlngs WI 2-4236.

17-Floor Servicing

FLOORS washed and waxed, also all general cleanJng. :Reasonab1e. Lar­ry's Home Cleaning. TE 1-3901. 8-63

FLOORS washed, waxed, polished and buffed. Homes-commercial. Reason­able. 861-5517 between 4--6 p.m. lo-63

VICTORY FJoor Surfacing. Sanding, reflntshlng, waxing, commercial, residential. Best Work, reasonable price. TE 1--5852. 12--28

1 Sa-Furniture Refinishi119 UPHOLSnRtNO - rebuilt llke new:

Custom made furniture, mattresses, box springs. Free estimates. Barring­ton Upholstry, 68 Maple Avenue, CH 5-2980. 12-1◄

-- - ------- - ------- ----------- --- - - - - ------ -~--.,...

19a-Gutter Service

GUTTERS, roofing, chimneys, porches, paintlng, carpentry, insured, esti­mates. Rounds Co., JA 1--454.l after ~ lM

20-Heating, Plumbing

21-Help Wanted - Women ATTRACTIVE womffl wanted for full

or partttme sales. No experience necessary. Call GA 1-4221. 11-16

CASH IN on the big Fall and Christ­mas selling season representing Avon cosmetics. GA 1-2908.

22-Hi-Fi, TV, Radio RADIO, Television, repairing by ex­

perienced, reliable man, all makes, reasonable. Call after 4, TU 4-2969.

10-63

23-Home Repairs

ALUMINUM SIDING

storm windows, doors, gutters, addi­tions, patios, porch enc losures, ce­ment steps, aluminum raUs, rooflng. On the spot estimates. 50 years ex­perience.

TE 1-77◄1

11·16 BB&L Construction Co. Building

Contractors. All types-new con­struction, renovations, additions re­pairs. CE 1-0553. • 8-63

ROOFING, Roof patching, Chimneys repaired and rebuilt , gutter work. Guaranteed. Insurance, estimates. PL l-6847. Jl -9

23aa-Household Goods

CARPETS, Ru95, Lowest prices any­where . Half off! Terms. Furniture Discounts Village , 68 Taunton Ave., East Provide nce, 434-35-49 .

CARPETING, enough wall-wall car­peting with padding for 3 rooms, 32 sq . yd. $85. Also 9x 12 broad­loom, $35. Call anytime, dealer. PA 2-3450. 11-16

TABLE CLOTH, linen, beautiful hand­made, a ll cut work . 126x72", 12 napkins, HO 7-7280.

23c-Jobs Wanted-Men

ATTENTION home owners, business m en! Handy ma n services, yards raked , lowest rates. RE 9-7065. 9-63

24-Jobs Wanted - Women

IRONING done In my home. Ruson-able rates. VA 8-0505. 12-7

WOMAN desires Ironing, own home; or housework gentleman's home. 1.25 hourly, after 3, 941-7815. ufn

24a-Laundering

LAUNDRESS will do fine laundering in her home. Called for and de• livered. UN 1-7980. 12-7

25-Lawns, Landscape

LANOSCAPIE ma 1ntena~ce. Free es­timates. Go anvwhere, PA 2-7142, 723-1024, after 6 p.m.

MANURE. Odor frff, dellvered and roread for P.verJ?reens, shrubs, gar• dens, e tc. 941-9199. ufn

SOUTHIEPN New England Tree Re­moval. Regbt.ered anrf insured. FrP"'! estimates. Reasonable rates. EX­press 7-7978. 11-30

26aa-Lots For Sale

JOH,.~TON, 9 lots . corner of Oneida and Normandy Sts. Call PL 1-9526.

11-9

26b-Merchandise Wanted

COUNCIL Thrift ShOD urgentlv n~@ds chltrlren's re-usahle clothing. A lc;o . -,_,.n• ... women's. hQui;:ehoM Artlclec . .1ewelry. 174 Ives St. GA 1-0955. 11-J6

?7-Miscellaneous For Sale

ENCYCLOPEDIAS, used, are hard to find. New sets on easv terms, bei;:t rteS1.l. WritP. Encyclopedias, 387 Broadwav, Providence. 11-16

RFLJl. X-A-CIZOR, 4 dials, H advertised I" f'Rshi.,n rn,RellzinP, PXce1lent rnn­dltlon. Cost $300, sell $150. PL 1-8400.

11.~

w•-.nr:x. ~r. Clean. Lestotl. gaUOf1 i:trs only S?. uer gR11on. C,..,ntrar.tor's ~Prvice. t~ no"ri Street, East Prt'lvl­rt@nrP. (';"R A.4::100. 12-14

SNOW REMOVeRs -q,,., Y""T'- r>'lw! 'T'oo bri>rids, ~now 1'1rr1 . B"l-a Cat. Snow Flvr. Moto M,-wer. Parts, we service what we sel l.

PETKO PROOUCTS 1720 Mineral Spring Avenue

North Providence EL 3-245" l?.- 1 ◄

28-Movin11, Storaae, Truckina

A. C, Ethier Inc., Diano and furniture movlnir. Lor..111, long distance truclt- ­

lng. PA 2-"896. 1-11 iifovcRS~. on• truclc:, 2 men.

~7 hour1v: 3 lY'en. S9 hour1v. B I, .T T'""'""·· Jnr .• Pawtucket, It. I., PA R-11917 ,.nvttme. 10-6.1

2Sa-Musical Merchandise ACCORDION, 120 beu. •ln,ost new,

reasonable, can EL 3-2855:!:. ORGAN, Hammond model S6. prac­

Ucallv new. benr.h included. Ask­inl $650. RE 7-7925.

29-Nursing Homes VACANCIES (4), In small private rest

home, 2432 Pawtucket Ave., East Providence, 434-2409. 11-9

29a-Offices, Desk Space

BENEFIT St,..._: Office near Court House, air conditioned, room or suite. For lease. Parking lot. Call DE 1-8333.

BROADWAY, 117: Office space, 220 sq. fL, $35. Call TE 1-4462 or 647-2176. 11-16

CRANSTON, 761 Park Ave.: First floor front ofrtce, heated. By ap­polntmenL WI 1-4500.

EAST PROVIDENCE, office space now avaUable, large or small, busi­ness building, reasonable. GE 8-5131. 11-16

HILLSGROVE, near airport, 1500 sq. ft., newly decorated. Acoustical celling, Ule floors, good parking. Ideal, service organization, light industry. Avallable Dec. 1. fur­nished or unlurnlshed. Call RE 9-2000. ufn

PROFESSIONAL office - 3 rooms, newly renovated. Private entrances. Heat and air condttlonlng, venetian bllnds. Reasonable rent . VA 1-2025.

11-16 WARWICK Ave., 142': Office sp.ace,

2 rooms, air conditioned. Parking. HO 3-824◄, CH 5-3492. 11-16

WARWICK: Professional office, two rooms, tile lavette, beat, air con­ditioning, prime location, Uke new, ~v~~!7ocf_ntrance. MatUOn Re:tfG

WARWICK Avenue, 1104. Slngle, dou­ble or triple office suites. $35, $70,

11-16 I $100. White. ST 1-1814.

WAYLAND Square near, office, 300 sq. ft. , light, heat , air conditioning supplied. 41 Seekonk SL, Provi­dence, DE 1-5304.

30-Paint'g, Paper'g, Decorat'g

AL TE RATIONS : Interior, exterior painting, paperhangtng, floon re • finished , o1asterlng. H. Fishman, 2.4 Georgia , WI 1-5122.

BUNGALOWS ~lnted, $100, cottages, $200, 3 families , $300. Free estimates. Call K-K, 724-2571. 12-28

INTERIOR and exterior painting. Cell­lngs, walloape rtng. Quality work­manship. R. MacIntosh, PL l-'513.

12-28 MODERN Painting Company paints

homes, factories, etc. 5 o r more homes - S50 deductible. Free estl • m111tes. Fully insured. Call n ow ! RE 7-0148. 11-9

NATIONWIDE Pa inting and Decorat­ing. All work guaranteed , Interior and ex terior . Free estimates. UN 1-5611. lo-63

R. E. BENNETT & SON

Contractors

painting, gutters and carpentry. Pa­perhanging, masonry work , spraylng, fully insured, 45 years experience.

Tel . 4Jl..224'

11-9 PAINTING

Interior, Exterior

Paoerhanglng, carpentry, roofs and ,rutters repaired. Reasonable prices. Free es timates. Guaranteed.

F. NOTARIANNI

HO 1-4397 ST 1~90 1-4

PAINTING, Interior, exterior. Satis­faction assured. Reasonable. ST 1-2698. urn

WALLPAPER. 200 patterns, at 1/2 price. Cardl Hardware, 711 Oaklawn Ave. , Cranston, WI 2--0600. 12-28

31-Pet Column

ATTENTION Kennel owners: Beef brisket bones, untrimmed, 10c per lb. Call GE 4-1297. 11-16

BEAGLES, 8 months; 2 males, 2 fe­males, all good hunters. EXpress 7-3006, UN 1-4402.

COLLIES, 1 male, · female, AKC reg­istered, wW accept any reasonable offer. CE 1-0557.

POMERANIANS, AKC registered, fe­males. Hartley, EX 7-7225.

POODLE, Black female, toy, spayed, year old. AKC registered. Won­derful children's pet. Forced to sell. $100. , JA 1--4170.

POODLES, black miniatures, 2 fe­m~les, AKC registered, 14 weeks inoculated. Call HO 7-9342. 11-9

POODLE Parlor: Cllpplng, grooming, shampoo, hair styllng and nallacures. Reasonable. PA 5-9710, PA 3-7682, PA 3-8581. IH>3

POODLE, sliver gray, male, S weeks old, AKC registered. EL 1-2576.

PUGS, 2 male, 2 female, 11 weeks old, wormed, shots, paper trained. CH ~986.

32-Plastering

CEILINGS plastered, one day aervlce. Reasonable. Patches and repair work. E. Anderson, JA 1-2880. 8-63

35-Private Instruction

Pl:e~~ .::r:;:.::ecr.~1n=-Bo~m~ Call evenln11, EL 1-6221. 11-3(1

TUTORING: AlgebraHILatln, French,

~~:!in~;hke?if::"n• 1-03~5.ry, Eng~1~9

.. ...

NORTH Kingstown, split level, 4 bedrooms, fireplace, built-ins, rec­reation room, garage, circle loca- -Uon. FHA approved. Littlefield, ~ TU 4-2154. El

37-Real Estate Wanted _.

BATTISTA: Tel. 737-5067. Realtor _!< n:~~ al~nJYP:~~::1~rt~ep~~~bl: :il! service. 11-16 0

CRANSTON neighbors. Buyers wait- ~ lng. Homes and land. Relocattnc: ii: Freewaf evacuees. Saccocclo Real- b:I tors. S 1-0901. 11-9 l'l

WARWICK, Cranston, 2-3 bedroom ~ ranches needed. $10,000 to $15,000 range. Pearson Realty . HO 7-7128. ~

11-16 3 __ 7_a ___ R_e_a-lt_o_rs ________ ,i ,

"' --------------, CARROLL, Margaret T.: East Provl dence, ruverslde, Rumford . Sales rentals. ResldenUal, commercial. G 4-1468. 12-

38-Roofing, Siding

EXPERT leak repairing, guttering palntlna- , carpentry. No Job too small , free estimates. RE 7-6506.

12-

39-Sewer, Cesspool Service

CESSPOOL, septic tank service, avail able 24 hours. Reliable , reasonable. Aames Cesspool Cleaners, GA 1 9029. U3

42-Special Notices

ARTESIAN well drilling, formerl Valley Artesian Wells , Wallace E

B:::1, s:::::t:~r~~~ ::u:.;:.~~l~ phases or beauty culture. Call P 2-9887. 11-3

EMBROIDERED articles, hand made Pillowcases, burea u sca r ves, tabl c loths, dish towels. Ideal for gifts Reasonable. 751-8520. i2-

HA YR IDES re-asonable. Perfect part Idea. Will pick up and return Horsesholng. Van Dyke 2-3460. 11-1

1

PHYSICIANS, DENTISTS, HOSPITALS

let us collect your past due ac count for a flat fee of $3.50 r egard less of the age or size of t1te ac count. Write

11 High St., Boston 10, Mass. Room 42 or Tel . 426-0475

11-9 SILVER, copper, brass refinished, r

plated. Silver Se rvice Co., 10 Lin coin Ave., Rlverslde, GE 4-7766. 12-21

44-Stamps, Coins, Books

ENCYCLOPEDIAS, Collier's, 24 vol­ume, major set, brand new. Terms a rranged. GE 8-6327. 11 -30

45aa-Trucking MOVING • Trucking . Deliveries any­

where, no Job too small . Reasonable rates call after 6 p .m., 351 -9503. 9-63

YOUNG man with truck will do odd Jobs. WI 1-2570 days, 941-3521 evenings. 11-30

48-Window Cleaning

PROFESSIONAL window cleaning at reasonable rates. RE 9-2088. 8-63

You Get Results From

HERALD Classified

Adsl Call

724-0200 ..

! '° ... .. '° ... ... .. =: Iii ; ill ... i ~ < Q .. = r.. Q

~ = ; ~ < .:I ~ ill Q 0

= = ill

= ...

··•

All forms of personal and business insurance

including - Life - Accident - Group - Fire -

Men are accident victims 3 times more often than women, the ALA reports .

CANDID WEDDINGS i BAR MITZVAHS

. Automobile - Casualty - Bonds

Murry M. Halpert ~f:\!A~~~t ~Tctffi!9o~ 800 Howard Bldg. DE 1-9100 Residence: DE 1-6949

Political Advertisement

ST 1-6769

Pollttcal Advertisement Political Advertisement

RE-ELECT

GORDON F. MULVEY TO SCHOOL COMMITTEE

To Vote For School Committee, You Must Pull Small Lever at Bot­tom of Second Column at Right Side of Candidate's Name so that an "X" Appears. Leave Lever Pulled Down.

Voting Places in Dist. 11G11 Are-

* Summit Ave. School * St. Raymonds School * R. I. Inst. for the Deaf * Jenkins St. School * St. Dunstan's School * Candace St. School * Sayles Gym, 95 Cushing St. * Metcalf Bldg., 55 Angell St. * Chad Brown Homes 255 Chad Brown St. * Branch Ave. School * New Fire Station 151 No. Main St.

* Mulvey a life-long resident of Provide!1ce; member of School Committee for the post nine­teen years; chairman for post nine years.

* Member New England School Development Council.

* Member of Association of School Business Offi­cials of the United States and Canada

* Member P.T.A. and other civic and religious organ izations.

For School Committee I Non-Partisan Dist. " G" - 4 years

Gordon F. MULVEY

J <-·---Pull This Small Lever Bottom of Second Column

COMMITTEE FOR MULVEY . .. BEN RABINOWITZ, CO-CHAIRMAN

PoUtlcal Advertisement Political Advertisement. PoUtleal Advertlsement

"ONE GOOD TERM DESERVES ANOTHER"

* Appointment of capable and quali­fied Planning Director.

* Appointment of a Redevelopment Agency.

* Adoption of a master pion and fed­eral certification of a workable com­munity program.

* Realistic school construction program.

* Appointment of full time Civil De­fense Di rector.

The Citizens Dailey

For Mayor Committee Urges

The Re-election of

MAYOR

Francis R. Dailey And The Entire

Democratic Party B_ased On

The Following Record

of Accomplishment

* Establishment of Office of Budget Director.

* Sound financing .

* Housing for elderly.

* Continued Sewer Construction.

* Adoption of a Capital Improvement program.

* Progress in all areas without a tax increase.

FOR HONEST AND EFFICIENT GOVERNMENT VOTE DEMOCRATIC 1st And 2nd Column

CITIZENS, DAILEY FOR MAYOR COMMITTEE

MICHAEL T. FEDERICO, CHAIRMAN - THOMAS J. PALMER, SECRETARY

Rev. DeWitt C. Clemens

'Religion In Schools' To Open '62 Institute At Temple Emanu-EI

"Religion in the Schools," a panel discussion, will open the 1962 Institute or Jewish Studies for Adults at Temple Emanu-El on Tuesday at 9 P .M . Participating in this pane I will be Msgr . Arthur T. Geoghegan, Diocesan Director or Providence Catholic schools; Reverend De­Witt C. Clemens, minister of the Mathewson Street Metho­dist Church, and Rabbi Samuel S . Ruderman or Temple Beth El . Fail River, Mass . The mod­erator will be Rabbi Eli A . Bohnen or Temple Emanu-El .

"Encore ," the theme or this year's lecture series, will bring back sever al speakers from past years. Lectures w111 be given by Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, Hal Lehrman and Rabbi Emanuel Rackman.

There will be three early eve­ning study groups beginning at 7 :45 o'clock. The Bible and its interpretation will be led by Rabbi Bohnen, Rabbi Saul Lee­man, Rabbi Joel Zaiman and Dr . Aaron Klein .

A workshop on the advance­ment of J ewish music will be conducted by Cantor Jacob

ANNUAL PARTY The Annual Party sponsored

by the Providence Chapter, Women's American ORT will be held on Saturday, Nov. 10 at 8 P .M . at the Shrine Temple, corner Rhodes Place and 2101 Broad Street. Proceeds of the affair will be used for the ORT Student Health Project.

Reservations may be made by calling Bev Manekofsky at HO 7-8689, or Roz Kurzer at WI 2-5007.

TO HONOR MEMBERS New members will be honored

at the late Sabbath services at Temple Beth Am which will be held tonight at 8:30 o'clock.

Rabbi Pesach Sobel will con­tinue his Torah study and wlil elaborate on the theme, "It Can Not Be Done Alone,"

Hostesses for the Oneg Shab­.bat wlil be Mesdames Daniel Cerel, Marshall B o r n s t e i n, E m i l e F r e e d m a n , Bernard Klemmer and Sydney Gold­stein.

R. I. SELFHELP Rhode Island Selfhelp will

hold a Social Get-Together on Saturday at 8:30 P.M. at the South Side Jewish Community Center.

Barbara Orson, actress and singer, will entertain. Mrs. Or­son, wife of a Providence phy­sician, has worked In all media of t he theater Including radio and television. She ls soloist at Temple Emanu-El and with the R.I. Civic Chorale.

TORAH FUND AFFAIR Members of the executive

committee in charge of the Torah Fund Affair of the Tem­ple Emanu-El Sisterhood are Mesdames Milton Dubinsky,

Msgr. Arthur T. Geoghegan

Fred Kelman Photo Rabbi Somuel S. Ruderman

Hohenemser, and Mrs. Aaron Klein will present a beginner and refresher course in Hebrew.

Heading the institute com­mittee are Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Bolusky. Assisting them are Mr. and Mrs. Donald Robbins, and Mesdames William F enner, Merrill Percelay, Saul Falcof­sky. Isadore Korn, Milton Scribner. Arthur Kaplan, · Max Winograd, Nathan Agid and Julius Epstein.

chairman; Arthur Kaplan and M a x Alperin, co-chairmen; Robert Block, reservations; Paul Corin, treasurer; Nathan Cur­land, hospitality ; and Archie Chaset, publicity.

Mesdames Harry Albert, Alan Flink, Sanford Kroil. Sol White, William Fenner, Harry Charron and Samuel Leger are captains for the affair which will be held on Dec. 4 at 1 P.M. in the tem­ple meeting hail.

PLAN FIRST MEETING The Providence Chapter of

Junior Hadassah will hold its first meeting on Sunday at the home of Susan Paris of 140 Ontario Street at 2 P.M.

Girls, 14 years old or over, are invited to attend.

SYNAGOGUE YOUTH The next meeting of the Na­

tional Conference of Synagogue Youth, Mishkan Tfila chapter. will be held Sunday from 7 to 9 P.M. at the synagogue. Elec­tion of officers will be h eld, and plans for a dance will be discussed.

HOLD PARTY Mrs. Richard Ehrens and

Mrs . Gerald Cherniack were co­chairmen of a Halloween party held for children at the Craw­ford Allen Unit of the Rhode Island Hospital on Oct. 29, sponsored by Hope Chapter, B'nai B'rith Women .

TEMPLE BETH DAVID Temple Beth David will pre­

sent its second in a series of late Frlday night religious serv ­ices tonlght at 8: 15 o'clock . The services wm be under the direction of Cantor Charles Ross. who will be assisted by the Temple Choir. An Oncg Shabbat will foilow .

TO GET INSURANCE .,, JERUSALEM - In the next

ftve years all citizens of Israel will be covered by government health insurance.

: ORGANIZATION NEWS . •. ,al group of 30 from. all over the United States.

ATTENDS CONFERENCE Mrs. Lewis Rice, president or

the Providence Chapter, Wo­men's American ORT, attended the National Board Conference of the organization which met in Miami Beach , Fla. The con­ference was convened to ena­ble women's American ORT to assess the problems it must face and to make plans !or their solution.

:Meat-eating nations, since ~ the dawn of history. have usually been the most agressi ve.

~ . . l'l

Avoid the Fall Rush. See ~s today

for free expert consultation, advice and estimate.

CALL GA 1-8096

Storage your little lur

MINK A SPECIALTY

MARK WEINBERG Custom Furrier

the Lapham Bld,e: . 290 Westminster St.

Individual - Fleet

CHOICE OF COLOR AND EQUIPMENT

Cadillac Chev Olds Lincoln Pontiac T-Bird

Others

Specializing In Personalized Sen•ice

Rates Include No Capital Investment

No Insurance Expense

No Repair or Tire Exp.

Your Special Plates May Be Used

Emerge!1cy Car Available

We Buy Your Present Cars

Call PA 3-4700

U.S.Y. SABBATH United Synagogue Yo u th

Sabbath will be held at Temple Beth Sholom on Friday, Nov . 9. Members of the group w!ll read portions of the services in Hebrew and English. At the Oneg Shabbat which wlll fol­low, members w!ll sing Israeli s o n g s and present Israeli dances . Other activities are planned by the group. Mrs. Vi­ta Smith is club adviser, and Miss Emily Gruenberg ls presi­dent. Teen-agers, 13 to 17 years of age, who are not af­filiated with other U.S. Y. groups, are invited to Join.

ADULT STUDIES Adult study groups at Temple

Beth Sholom w!ll meet every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock at the synagogue. Subjects to be studied are the weekly por­tions of the Bible, as set forth in the program of study of the R.I. Rabbinical Association. There wlll also be a course in the history and development of the prayer book.

TO HOLD RUMMAGE SALE Roger Williams Ch apter,

B'na! B'rith Women. will hold a Rummage Sale on Tuesday and Wednesday at 113 Potters Avenue from 9 A.M. to 2 P .M.

Anyone wishing to contribute merchandise may bring it to that address on Monday from 10 A.M . to 1 P.M . Donation of goods or services will earn cred­it toward the annual Quota af­fair of the organization.

Further information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. J . Harold Krasnoff at JA 1-0977 or Mrs. Hyman Mazo at UN 1-0865 .

DISCUSSION GROUP The Brandeis Literary Dis­

cussion Group will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 13 at Temple Emanu-El at 10 A.M. The play to be discussed is "Carousel" by Oscar Hammerstein. Dis­cussion leader is i:vfrs. Perry Shatkin.

SISTERHOOD TO MEET A regular meeting of the

Cranston Jewish Center Sister­hood will be held on Wednes­day at 8: 15 P.M. at the Crans­ton Jewish Center.

After a short business ·meet­ing, members will participate in

Do You Realize ... • • • that from the clay you buy a life insurance contract you have a family that is financially protected for the full amount of the contract? In no other way can you create an immediate estate by paying an initial premium.

I am Sun Life's local representative. May I be of service?

ELLIOT F. SLACK 1018 Industrial Bank Bldg.

DE 1-2422

SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA

' . a version of "Never on Shab­bos," a musical comedy presen­tation.

LUNCHEON AN' Luncheon An' wUI be served

by the Cranston Jewish Center Sisterhood this Wednesday, and every Wednesday (with the -exception of school holidays). Homecooked meals wlll be served. The public ls invited to attend.

TO START SEMINARS Time Payments • Insured

628 Broad St. 24-HOUR SERVICE

GA 1-6864

JUST RECEIVED

Factory Closeouts !

WALLPAPER VALUES $1.00 - $2.00

29c - 39c ADLER

Hardware & Paint Co. 198 Prairie Ave. DE 1-8135

W llu~. f,L'~ SHOPP ING CE NTER

~ 0 C, l'l

f z C,

= l'l

~ _c,

~ C, > !< z. ~ l'l

The second series or seminars for teachers on "Judaism and Its Teachings" will begin on Monday at 8 P.M. with Rabbi A6raham M. ChUI as discus­sant on the theme, "Ritual and Mltzvot in - Jewish Life."

=====:!: ,---.:.P,;;oll::;l::;lc:,:•::,l ,:;A::;d_;:ve:,:rt.::t::;se:.:,m::;e::;n:.:,t _____ ..;.;;.::.;,;;;;;;.;,;;.,;.;~;;;;,;=.;....--1 ;

The meeting will be held at the Congregation Sons of Abra­ham. The Sisterhood of the Congregation wUI serve as hostesses. The meeting is open to education personnel in all departments.

TO ENTER BIBLE CONTEST The School Council has an­

nounced plans for · participation in the Fourth Annual Bible Contest. The contest is spon­sored locally by the Bureau of J ewish Education, on behalf of the Department of Education and Culture of the American Zionist Council.

The Bible Contest in open to all children in the religious schools of the community be­tween the ages of 12 and 16. Books covered are Numbers, Deuteronomy. Judges, Jonah , Micah and Ruth . Rhode Island finals wUI be held late in Feb­ruary , with the New England Regional finals to be held on March 31. There wUI be a special contest program !or children under 12 years of age.

Last year Rhode Island · had two national finalists in a tot-

Polltlcal Advertisement

Voters of the Ninth Ward - Providence Washington Park - Elmwood - Broad Street Areas

.., .

. . · 1,.:-, ~ . -.. .. .I: -.

Re-Elect

Robert J.

'

McOsker • 8 Years Experience • Attorney • Family Man

Elect

Edward S.

Goldin • Qualified • Attorney • Family Man

Vote Democratic Polltlcal Adve!.rt:.:;is::;e::,m:.:;e::,nl:_ _____ .:,P:::;olc;lt.:.:lc:::a:..I :..:A.::.dv:..:e;:.r::,tls;::e:.:;m.:.:e:.::n.:..t ---,

To My Friends and Past Supporters of the Ninth Ward:

Although I will not be a candidate for public office this year, I am most interested in the election of qualified candidates to continue the advances made by previous administrations of which I am proud to have been a part.

Councilman Robert J. McOsker, my former colleague, has unselfishly and efficiently served our ward these p~st eight years and deserves a vote of confidence to continue to give us the representation we need in our City Council.

Edward S. Goldin, seeking election as the second councilman from our ward, has the qualifications and dedication to give the ninth ward the finest represen­tative combination in our municipal government.

The record of "good government", synonymous with ~he tenure of Mayor Walter H. Reynold s , is a matter of common knowledge which does not need recitation. The transition which our crty is presently going through requires the continued leadership of Mayor Reynolds and a high caliber City Council. _

The names of Mayor Reynolds, Bob McOsker and Ed Goldin will appear in the second column. Be sure to pull the master lever for all Democratic candidates in the first and second columns.

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FRANK LAZARUS IS AN EXPERIENCED BUSINESS­MAN . . . He has the ability to attract new industry . . . meaning more and better jobs. He has the -knowledge to cut costs of government, meaning reduction in taxes. He has the know-how to make Providence prosperous and thriving again, to insure new opportunities.

PROGRAM .

• EXPERIENCED

• CAPABLE

• QUALIFIED

FRANK LAZARUS HAS SERVED 16 YEARS IN THE CITY COUNCIL ... He is well versed in City Government. He has served on all of the City Council Committees: finance, public welfare, city property, public works, licenses, ordinances, and accounts and pending suits.

FRANK LAZARUS IS A VIGOROUS, DYNAMIC LEADER ... He has been a fearless and fighting Republican leader in the City Council. He has proven himself to be one of the most sin­cere, faithful, and conscientious public servants in the history of this city and state. He introduced such programs as fluoridation of the city's water supply, numerous salary increases for police and firemen, the Providence Industrial Commission to promote new industries, free down­town parking on Saturdays, cash awards to city employees for time and money-saving ideas.

FOR ACTION REDUCE TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS

• Appoint An Active Industrial Development Commis­sion To Bring Space Age Industries - Electronics, Ceramics, Plastics, Component Parts-To Providence.

• A Business-like Administration

• Modernize Older Areas

• Improve. City Services - Especially Snow Removal

• Streamline Operation of City Government By Con­solidating Departments

• Develop Recreational Facilities - With Attention To Areas Lackiog Facilities.

Special

• Every Nie/eel That Is Collected And.Every Nickel Spent Will Be Reported To The People In Crystal Clear Language.

· Vote Republican

Pull The Master Lever

l The Lyons Den I , (Continued from Page 6)

lems, for he travels with a troupe of admiring females. And shooting a bird Is easy, too.

Whenever he finds a golf course near a stream stacked with fish, he starts phoning around for the bet.

Charles Goren Just ordered 7,200 decks of cards, 2,000 pen­cils, 10,000 score pads and 20 trophies. They're for his chart­ered bridge cruise of the Olympia, starting Jan. 15 .... Sidney Kings­ley, directing his "Night Life," acted out all 50 roles for the cast .... Bob Ryan, who plays the title role in "Mr. President," has be­come to JFK what Raymond Massey was to Lincoln. Monday night, after JFK's telecast, cab drivers and doormen called to Ryan, "Good speech, Mr. Presi­dent."

Last week, Justice Frankfurter made his first public appearance since his retirement from the Court. He came to the State Dept. to hear the U.N. concert given by Isaac Stern , the violinist. Frank­furter was wheeled Into the room and sat in his wheelchair. He told Stern: "Music hath powers to sooth the affllcted J lmbs."

!Olstrlbuted 1962, (by The Hall Syndica t e, Inc.) lAII Rights Reserved)

For six consecutive years the motor vehicle death rate in this country has declined. the 38,000 killed in 1961 being 200 less than the figure for 1960 and almost 2,000 fewer than the re­cord high of 39.969 in 1941.

GIVE ENDOWMENT WORCESTER. Mass. - Mr.

and Mrs . Jacob Hiatt h ave presented Clark University with a $250,000 gift to endow the Jacob and Frances Hiatt Chair in European History . Mr . and Mrs. Hiatt in 1961 endowed the Brandeis University Jacob · Hi­att Institute in Israel which gives students from United States schools a chance to study in Israel.

To Chair EYent - Mrs. Se­mon Weintraub is chairman of the Linen and Equipment Event sponsored by the Jew­ish Home for the Aged, which will be held on l),ursday, Nov. 15 at 1 P.M. at Temple ·Emanu-EI.

UJA D-DAY Samuel Shlevin is the chair­

man of the one-day solicitation for the Blackstone Valley Uni­ted J ewish Appeal to be h eld this Sunday. The solicitors will assemble at the Oak Hill Ten­nis Club for breakfast at 9 : 30 A.M. and will be briefed be­fore making their calls to mem­bers of the community .

This is Mr. Shlevin ·s third year as chairman of D-Day. He h as asked all the men in the area to do their best to increase their pledge .

TO PRESENT PROGRAM William A. Nelson. field di­

rector of American Youth Hos­tels, will present an illustrated discussion program ol\ A YC ac­tivities for children and adults at the East Side J ewish Com­munity Center, this Tuesday at 6:30 P .M.

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(Continued from Page 6) pen are some assumptions on where this showdown might lead. Specifically:

Assumption No. 1: The show­down stops at the quarantine, and while we go through an indefinite period of a war of nerves nothing worse than this occurs.

Under these circumstances, the Cuban crisis could be a modest "plus." It has united the nation. It has perked up world commodity prices and this Is all to the good. Any additional spending on mobili­zation and defense that a quaran­tine would Involve would be mildly helpful to the economy and cer­tainly not inflationary.

As for the stock market, de­spite its excellent performance during most of the day following President Kennedy's speech, and Its sensational comeback at the close of the day, It Is in for some rough weeks -- and would have been, no matter what the Cuban situation. This Is the period when selling to take losses for tax pur­poses always is a depressing In­fluence, and with million s of in­vestors sitting with big losses after this year' s slumps, tal< sell­ing before 1962 ends w ii I be particularly heavy. The break in the market thi s spring and ad­verse publicity about the mutual funds' records have slashed into public buying of mutual fun d shares -- and not only have the giant funds cut their buying of stocks, but many .... aJso are becom­ing net sellers .

The lower prices fall under liquida tion by fri ghtened amateurs, the better will be the bargains available in the stock market. But the bargain s will be bought by the cold-blooded profes s ionals. The public won't return until after prices have gone way back up again .

U the outcome is assumption No_. I, we still will need large­scale, across-the-board tax re­ductions -- and as soon as Con­gress can possibly vote them -- to get our economy off th! s plateau and back into a major, strong ex­pansion to full prosperity.

Assumption No. 2: The U. S. invades Cuba.

Under these circumstances, rhere surely would be a significant Increase in spending for moblllza­tion and defense and a resulting spur to our economy. But with goods in ample supply, production well below capacity, unemployment far too high, the hike In spending would not send us into another in­flation phase.

As for the stock market, It still would be subject to rhe in­fluences outlined above for the time being anyway -- and right now these influences are more powerful than rhe good earnings reports being Issued by many leading corporations, the fact that hundreds of blue-chip stocks have been battered down to attractive prices and that earnings-price re­lationships are more "normal" than in years.

The choice , of smart people who pay bills !

~

If the outcome is assumption -No. 2, that across-the-board, top­to-bottom tax reduction will con-tinue essential to give our econ­omy new incentives and thereby to accelerate our growth.

Assumption No. 3: A series of confllcis, dangerous and on-the­brlnk, in the trouble spots of the world.

Under these circumstances, the Increase in spending for mobiliza­tion and defense would be a dis­tinct stimulant to our entire econ­omy. The speculative fever which has done such damage In previous periods might re-emerge. Itwould damage us In the short-run and delay the tax reductions which we must have if we are to achieve a greater rare of growth and cut our unemployment rare over the long­term.

take stock dumped on the market by amateurs.

Many highly respected brokers were , in fact, talking even as the market churned around at its lows early in the day about "a long­term buying range , moderately below or above these levels" -­and the upsurge In the final hour of trading was nothing short of spectacular. The Dow-Jones aver­age of Industrial stocks closed up more than 18 points with the tape running late, an extraordinary day by any standards.

Oh yes, assumption No. 4: All­out war between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

If this Is it, I have nothing to say on policy, prediction, profits, prices, anything. What "business outlook" could there be In a nu-clear war?

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Polltlca l Advertisement Political Adve rtisement

Norman Jay

BOLOTOW Democrat For Second Ward

CITY COUNCILMAN

HAS SAID:

"Only the party with the strength to accomplish its aims con actively represent you" .

"Your choice I ntell ,gent L~slators or practicing pol1tic1ons " \

" Democrat ic Councilmen con put the Word bock on the map of Prov;dence."

" We sha ll work for progress in Providence, rather than attack progressive legislation ." \

" We shall always be at your disposal. "

HE NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT VOTE THE SECOND COLUMN

Consecrate First-Graders - First g rade rs of the Templ e Sinai Re ligious School were consec reo ted o t Saturday morning serv­ices last week . Those consecra ted inc luded Janice Arlow, J a mes Berger, Leo Blackman, Cindy Beth Caste line , Debra Ann Cohen, Ma rc Davidson, Audrey Elma n, Be th Ga nd leman , Caro l Ge rtz, She lly Ge rt z, J ud ith Gordon, Cindy Horowi tz, Debra Kanto row it z, Shery l Kna sin, Debra Kotler, A lan Lyons, Marc Muse n, Steven Meyer, Marc Pe ll e t z, Pau l Peppe r, Shi r ley Sadler, Rob in Shap iro, Jamie Sigal, M ichae l We lger, Dav id White, George Si lve rma n, Robe rt Ste in, J e ff rey Robin­son, Rickie Abra ms a nd James Mi rman .

Rabbi Urges Ecumenical To Remove 'Invidious

Council References'

NEW YORK - A Manhattan rabbi urged last week that the Ecumenical Council remove "invidious references to the J ew" in Roman Catholic litu rgy a nd textbooks.

The rabbi. the R ev. Rober t L . Lehman, preached in t he Hebrew Tabernacle of Wash­ington Heights. 607 West 161st Street .

Politica l Ad vertisement

While considering unity of the Christain world. he said . the Council now meeting at the vatican should speak in terms of Juda ism a lso.

"There are too many passa ­ges in t he liturgy that cast aspersions on the re ligion of the J ew, his theology, his be­liefs and his practices," h e went on .

Politica l Adve r tisement

VOTERS OF THE

" In our modern day a nd age, when the church empaslzes peace and h uman brotherhood , it should cer tainly look upon one of the major Western faith s without prejudice and with un ­derstanding ."

Dr. Lehman, praised Pope J ohn XXIII for removing the words "perfidious Jews" from the Good Friday liturgy as a beginning .

He urged the scholars of the Council to reexamine the pic­ture of the J ew presented in textbooks for Catholic ch ildren around the world .

" In these books" . he said. "the J ew is presented as the worst type of sterotype , his ac­tions a nd beliefs a re Questioned in an undign i fied manner, and the J ew is cast in an unfriendly ligh t .

"The time has come for this inj ustice to be corrected ; at so vital a meeting the hand of friendship should be extended to a ll faiths of wh atever be ­lief."

Po litical Adve rtiseme n t

100,000 PERSONS The Hungarian J ewish com­

munity, which dates back to before the eleventh century, to­day numbers some 100,000 per­sons, two- thirds of t h em living in Budapest. - ----

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• • • • FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE • • • • Alfred

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~THE MERCHANT oF·· vENICE

Two Points of View

SHAKESPEARE

NO ANTI-SEMITE

by Dr. LOUIS MARDER editor of the Shak espeare News Leifer. He is a member of the faculty of Kent

State University.

LET us STOP once and for all the wide­spread comment that William Shake­speare was an anti-Semite!

It seems that every time a militant but sensitive Jew or a sensitive and crusad­ing rabbi hears of a production of The Merchant of Venice , he writes to the municipal authorities and demands that the play be banned from the stage or be eliminated from the school curriculum.

Back in 1932, the late Rabbi Edward Israel secured the temporary ban of The Merchant from the Baltimore public schools, and in 1955 a cancellation oc­curred in Philadelphia. On this latter occasion someone wrote that the ban was an affront to the intelligence of the peo­ple of Philadelphia and it wouldn't be long before committees would be check­ing the religious affiliations of villains in all plays. Another wrote, sarcastically, that it wouldn't be right to "encourage Shakespeare's only satire on Christian­ity. "

An even more notorious case was the six-months-long action in New York City, in 1949, when ex-magistrate Joseph Goldstein undertook a taxpayer's suit to have the play banned as a "cause of irreparable damage to the public school children." He declared that reading the play would "pay dividends in hate, preju­dice, intolerance, and bigotry in the gen­eration to come," and that the play was uavowedly anti-religious." However, on October 12, 1949, Supreme Court Justice Anthony J. DiGiovanna dismissed the suit declaring that only when a book was "maliciously written for the apparent purpose of promoting and fomenting a bigoted and intolerant hatred against a particular racial or religious gro_up should it be suppressed."

Naturally, the cause for all the con­troversy is misinterpretation of the play on the stage and in the classroom. Used properly by teachers who know their Shakespeare, the play can be shown to be an important document to make young people reflect on man's inhuman­.ity to man .

Just a "Merry Jest" Let the informed teacher point out that when Antonio comes to borrow three thousand . ducats for his spendthrift friend Bassanio, Shakespeare makes it abundantly clear that the Jew is being •ridiculed by the very man who now has the colossal nerve to ask him for money . And yet Shylock gives him the money at no interest for ninety days, just to show what he can be ; and the surprised Christi an is forced to admit that the Jew

grows kind. The forfei t of a pound of flesh if the ·debt is not repaid makes it a "merry jest" for both parties. Let the teacher defy her students to show how Shylock could poss ibl y have foreto ld that Antonio wou ld be bankrupt in ninety days, th at no Chri stian would come to hi s aid, and th at a pound of fle sh wou ld be fo rfeit. Is it possible? Never! Shylock never intended any ha rm . It was on ly when Lorenzo had run off with Shyloc k's daughter. Jessica, first see ing to it that she took with her plent y of her father' s mone y and jewels. and af ter Shylock had hea rd th at she had traded her mother's ring for a mon key, that the enraged Shylock demanded the po und o f fle sh.

Let the teacher po int out th at the very moti ve fo r the loa • in the first pl ace was for Bassa ni o to impress the rich Portia. win her fo r hi s wife. and then pay back to Antonio all. the past debt s due him. Ce rt ainl y there is no great honor here!

Let the teacher also po int out that eve ry touch of hum anity in the pl ay is added by Shakespeare who found noth­ing of it in hi s sources. The Jew has 110 motive but hatred in the original Italian talc , on which the Bard based his play. The original has no great speeches, such as: "/ am a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimen• sions , senses, affections, passions? . ..

Fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subjec t to the same dis• eases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and sum­mer, as a Christian is? If you prick us do we not bleed? , .. "

Let the teacher point out that the "quality of mercy" is strained by the Christians and not the Jews in this play, not only in the course of the action but in the final punishment of Shylock. Let the teacher add that a bond stipulating payment of flesh was illegal to begin with and that the case should have -been thrown out of the Venetian court.

The Merchant of Venice, as indicated previously, has been interpreted as a satire on the Christians, but this too is the wrong approach. Shakespeare's hu­manity can be shown to be above such pettiness. He is attacking neither the Jews nor the Christians; he is attacking individual characters. The great teacher, Professor Kittredge, wrote that if The Merchant of Venice is to be considered an anti-Semitic document, then Shake­speare was attacking the Moors in Titus, the Spaniards in Much Ado, the Italians in Cymbeline, the Viennese in Measure for M easure, the Danes in Hamlet , the Scots in Macbeth, the Britains in King Lear, and the English in Richard Ill .

Furthermore, since the beginning of the eighteenth century, the play acted with the Jew as the wronged figure has been very popular. When Henry Irving so acted the play in 1879, it broke all existing records.

If G. B. Harrison can say that the Jew seems to stand out as the on! ; man of worth in a worthless society, and J. Dover Wilson can say, "By God, the Jew is wronged," certainly the teacher can demonstrate this in class and vindicate Shakespeare from the charge of _anti­Semitism. She can also show that Shake­speare's Jew is one of the most humane to appear in literature -up to that time and that Shakespeare rose above the frequent hysteria of his time, Where others lash only the Jew with scorn, Shakespeare also lashes his opponents.

Let us, therefore , not ban Shakespeare from the stage or classroom. Rather let us have informed teachers and directors who could utilize a wonderful oppor­tunity to teach humanity through a great play by a great writer.

I he age-old controversy over the f,gure of Shakespeare's "Shylock" flared up again this summer when the New York Shakespeare Festival decided to mark tire opening of its $400,000 amphitheater in Central Park , on June 21 , with a produc­tion of The Merchant of Venice .

The N ew York Board of Rabbis pro­te.rted publicly against televising the pro­duction over WCBS-TV on grounds of offen.riveness. The Jewish War Veterans picketed tir e station. Nevertheless, the show, with George C. Scott as Shylock,· did go 011.

Here are two views on the Shylock nuestion:

by CECIL ROTH tire famous English historian and author.

WHITEWASHING SHYLOCK

W. C. Mocr~ody os Shylock.

I AM NOT quite sure when the white­washing of Shylock began . Probably it was some time in the seventeenth cen• tury, when some actor of genius tried for the first time to present him as a man instead of a monster. And this process continued when actors from Garrick on­wards ( not wholly oblivious, perhaps, of the numerical importance, even then, of Jews in theatrical audiences) vied with one another in trying to present him as a human being. And so the Shylock who appears on the stage today is an almost

· benign , much wronged Jewish financial magnate, and one sometimes almost ex• peels him to forego his pound •of flesh after having adequately scared his former client and present son•in•law. However, The Merchant of Venice must be con­sidered, not as actors have interpreted it, but as Shakespeare conceived it and his own company presumably presented it.

We are not confronted here with any mystery or difficulty, for the circum­stances are familiar. The play was written while the Marrano physician, Rodrigo Lopez, was being tried on a charge of having conspired to murder the queen and, although he vociferously expressed his attachment to Christianity, a minia­ture anti-Semitic storm was aroused in England as evidenced in the revival at this time on the London stage of Mar­lowe's scurrilous, improbable Jew of Malta. This was a mere succession of extravagances. Shakespeare, on the other hand, followed his usuai method. He took a fairly familiar folk-tale, or rather succession of folk-tales, wove · them , into a single story, made them seem to some degree plausible, imbued them with his genius, and interpreted them in im­perishable verse.

But the original material is there; and outstanding in the original material is the traditional stock-figure of the im­placable Jewish usurer, hating Chris­tianity and filled with undying enmity against Christians. That is Shylock. Only, Shakespeare being Shakespeare, he made the traditional Shylock into something approximating a human being. He is no less vengeful, but there is some reason for his vengefulness; he is a monster, but a mo nster with eyes, ears, senses, perceptions . However, this does not obscure the underlying monster. al­though it may make the character as a whole more plausible; and the actors who disguise the monster are to some ex-

teni misinterpreting Snakespeare's · lex He knew what his audiences wante, and gave it to them! But, at the sam time, he seized the opportunity to poir his own moral and adorn his own tale:

Jews in Shakespeare's Day Of recent years, it has become more an, more apparent that there was in Londo, in Shakespeare's day a small crypto Jewish community, and that if Shake speare had so desired, there was amp!, opportunity for him to become ac quainted with their characteristics an, wily -of life. Incidentally, they did no include in their numbers, so far as i! known, any money-lenders or usurers He could have met Jews in Italy , too. if it is true that he visited the cou ntry. But this is all beside the point. The stoc k-fi gure of the "Jew Usurer." as de­picted in The Ml'rcha11t , would probabl y have remain ed unchanged even had Shakespeare been familiar with the life of the Jewish community in London in all it s details, though the local color might have been richer and more pl ausible.

Those who maintain that the play is. in effec t, pro-Semite should remember one detail. The term "Shylock" has en­tered the English language not as a syno­nym for a wronged parent , but for a rapacious. implacable usurer. There are , in English lit erature. other figures of Jews. some of them sympathetic. But there is no other Jewish character that has added a word to the English lan­guage . In fact. the fictional character of Shylock has a reality in the popular mind far greater than that of any real Jewish character of recent history, at least. One has often heard a man in­su lted by being dubbed a Shylock. I do not recall having heard a philanthropist complimented by being called a Monte­fiore. or a Strauss. This figure of hateful derision is constantly considered and re­ferred to as a Jew, and a Jewish child who is in a class in which The Merchant is studied and read under the guidance of an insensitive teacher cannot fail to feel constantly uncomfortable, precisely what is most to be avoided in education.

The blind teaching of The Merchant is second only to the blind teaching of the New Testament story of the career and crucifixion of Jesus as a forcing­house of anti-Jewish feeling among the young.

Hdw to Teach Shylock This does not, however, imply that we Jews should press for the elimination of the play from school curricula. That, as it seems to me, is unwise, giving rise as it does to charges of undue influence, exces~ive sensitivity, and insufficient literary appreciation. What seems proper to me is to see that the play is taught against its historical background: show­ing how even Shakespeare could not rid himself of the prejudices of the age, showing how the profession of money-I lending was forced upon the Jews, telling how, in Venice in ·Shakespeare's day, Jews were tolerated ol!!Y on condition that they maintained "loan banks" for the benefit of the general population, how the story of the Pound of Flesh has no factual basis, but is recounted in a quasi-historic source with a Jew as vic­tim and a gentile as his persecutor. and so on. Thus, the teaching of the play could be made into an occasion· for a fuller unqerstanding of the difficulties of medieval Jewish life and the former abnormalities of the Jewish position, from which our people has made such a remarkable recovery. But, without such a commentary , the teaching of The Merchant cannot fail to cause acute dis­comfort to Jewish pupils. and to create an unsympathetic attitude among the non-Jewish.

I do not know whether a school edi~ lion of The Merchant , based on these principles and emphasizing these points, is available in America . If not, it would certainly be a worthwhile objective of a Jewish organization to secure the prepa­ration and publication of such a work. ■

Repri,ited from "A merican Judaism "

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I'

Department Of Navy To Initiate 'Full . Investigation' , Of Sixth- .Fleet Regulations .. ...

WASHINGTON - The De­partment of the Na.vy ma.de known tha.t Is ha.s Initiated "a. lull lnvestlga.tlon" ol reported Sixth Fleet · regula.tlons barring Jewish personnel from shore liberty privileges In the Ara.b port of Beirut, Lebanon. This wa.s r evealed to Rep . Seymour Halpern <R., N.Y.) by Ca.pt.

F .M. Lloyd, Deputy Chief of Na.vy Inlorma.tlon.

Lloyd Informed Halpern that "we have asked the Comma.nd­er-ln-Chlel, U.S . Na.vs.I Forces In Europe, to provide complete Information with regard to your recent communica.tlon concerning shore privileges for Jewish Na.vs.I personnel In Leb-

a.non. We have been a.ssured that no regula.tlon exists which restricts the right of a.ny group of U.S . Na.vs.I personnel from shore liberty In the Beirut area. ; however, a. full lnvestlga.­tlon of a.ny clrcwnsta.nces which might ha.ve ca.used com­pla.lnt ha.s been requested."

vy followed persistent reports tha.t the Sixth· Fleet published orders for guide.nee of Its ships, pertaining to restriction of Jewish personnel from shore privileges In Ara.b ports. It a.p­pea.red tha.t tlje Arab-Inspected a.ctlon wa.s being ha.pha.za.rdly applied by the Na.vy, Implemen­ted In some ca.ses, but Ignored

by ca.pta.lns of other ships. A "'-1 question existed whether We.sh- ~ !ngton ha.d been officially ad­vised on the steps ta.ken by the : Sixth Fleet to · comply with o Ara.b anti-Jewish blocks.de re- 1:1 qutrements. ~

Halpern's protest to the Na.-A Hera.Jct a.d B.lwa.ys gets

best ' result&.

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* I VOT~ STRAIGHT

OEM,OCRATIC

PERFORMANCE COUNTS AND THE -RECORD STANDS

JOHN A. NOTTE Governor

FERNAND J. ST. GERMAIN Congressman 1st District

JOHN E. FOGARTY Congressman 2nd Distr ic t

EDWARD P. GALLOGLY Lt . Governor

AUGUST P. LA FRANCE Sec'y of State

J. JOSEPH NUGENT Attorney General

RAYMOND H. HAWKSLEY General Treasurer

RE-ELECT Proven Leaders- Men with Vision and Imagination! ·

Democratic candidates have long merited the support and confidence of all Rhode Islanders because of their record of achievement. This trust has been earned because of their integrity, leadership and careful planning. But more importantly, the actions of these men reflect the Democratic philosophy of government- its concern for people and their hopes and aspirations. These men have kept faith with the people of Rhode Island by their conduct in state government and in Washington. These men are partners in the Forward Rhode Island Drive - improved efficiency in government with no tax increases, record employment and wages and continuing improvements in general health and welfare services. And they are partners in President Kennedy's new frontiers of state and federal relations where the emphasis is on human wants and needs . .

Democrati c State Com mittee, Joh n G. Mcweeney, Chai rma n

VOTE STRAIGHT DEMOCRATIC*

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Members -Of-Jordanian Army Help Collect Israeli's Eggs

JERUS~M- The eggs laid by the chickens of Miriam Mizrahi, a resident of Abu Tor, a Jerusalem border neighbor­hood, are sometimes collected for h er by members of the Jordanian Army.

Her hens live right on the border , and not being schooled in the fine points of Interna­tional law, often Jay their eggs in enemy territory . ·

So the Jordanian soldiers ga-

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ther the Israeli eggs, and some­times they turn them over to the Mizrahi children.

Mrs. Mizrahi expresses her thanks to the soldiers by send­ing them sweets and cakes.

When the Mizrahi family re­cently celebrated their daugh­ters' 12th birthday, they were pleased to receive a present for her from the Arab soldiers, two Jordanian Army headdresses.

At the same time greetings

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WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A

were exchanged across the bor­der. The Jordanians-called out to the celebrants In the Mizrahi home : "May Allah grant you a long life." The Mlzrachls re­plied : "May Allah grant you every blessing."

Publish First Non- Orthodox Guide To Jewish Ritual In U.S.

WANT ADVISER MONTREAL - The Cana­

dian J ewish Congress says It was invited to name an official Jewish religious advisor to work with the chaplain of Univ. Col­lege at Waterloo Lutheran Univ. in Waterloo, Ontario. The school has 90 Jewish students.

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NEW YORK - The first non­Orthodox Guide to J ewish Ritual to be published In the United States was issued recently by the Reconstructionist Press, a de­partment of the Jewish Recon­structlonist Foundation, founded by Prof. Mordecai M. Kaplan.

In- announcing the publication of the Guide Dr. Ira Eisenstein, president of the Reconstruction­ist magazine, declared, "The Guide is not a code; those who

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JOHN H. CHAFEE, YOUR NEXT GOVERNOR,

believes that Independents and Democrats wa nt the same kind of State the Republicans want. They want the same things for themselves and their children that John Chafee wants and they know that the important difference between Democrat or Republ ican this year lies in the calibre of the candidates.

John Chafee is running for Governor of Rhode Island with the support of persons of every political and economic background. He wants your support. He wants your vote.

John H. Chafee, a man you can trust, will:

1. Be a true Governor - independent in his think­ing - decisive in his actions - honest in his conduct.

2. Restore integrity and pride to government.

3. Provide a program of leadership.

Rhode Island

Your vote for this able and courageous Marine vet­eran, practicing attorney and father is a vote to restore good government to the State.

LET'S GET RHODE ISLAND ROLLING. CHOOSE THE MAN YOU CAN TRUS~

CHOOSE CHAFEE Elect the Team You Can Trust Vote the 3rd and 4th columns

Republican State Central Comm ltt .. , William T. Broomhead, Ch ai rman

were responsible for preparing it do not submit It as infallible and

· hence unalterable." He went on to explain that the 48-page booklet, which he edited, was the result of consultations between rabbis and laity. "Never before," he s11ld, "have the laymen been Invited to participate In the for­mulation of religious practices."

The Guide deals with home devotions, the Sabbath, festivals and High Holy Days, public wor­ship, personal occasions and kashrut.

Some of the Interesting feat­ures of the Gulde are the re­cognition of full equality for women in ritual matters, the abolition of the traditional dis ­tinction between the Cohen (priest) and the ordinary J ew, and recognition of diversity In ritual as legitimate under con­ditions of modern life.

Pennlts Sabbath Travel Regarding the Sabbath, the

Guide declares, "Travel on the Sabbath is not a violation when It is necessary In order to make possible joining one's family at meals or attending worship in the synagogue of one's choice, or in any way participating in an activity which Is In accord with the spirit of the Sabbath. This could include, for example, visiting the sick or participating In or attending a cultural func­tion."

Regarding dietary rules: "Our object should be to retain as much of its observance as is necessary for effective self­Identification w1th the people­hood and religion of Israel, while abolishing or relaxing the observances which do not serve that purpose . The follow­ing distinctions, however, seem reasonable: l) No regulations with regard to pots and dishes need be applied outside the home. 2) Foods consisting whol­ly , or in the main, of Biblically forbidden meat or sea food should not be eaten."

Boston Junior League To Hold Aud if ions For Metropolitan Opera

The Junior League of Boston.

DEMOCRAT AND Inc. announces that the Me­tropolitan Opera National Council wlll hold Its Regional Auditions In the New England area In Boston on F eb. 9 and 10, 1963. The purpose of these auditions Is to make It possible for young singers In the New England area to be heard and aided In their careers and to help discover new talent for the Metropolitan Opera.

Screenings will be held in Boston on Saturday, January 26. and those accepted will be eligible for the F ebruary au ­ditions .

All Interested applicants be­tween the ages of 19 and 35 years, who have resided in the New England area for the past twelve months and who are qualified, may apply.

Application blanks will be available at music schools, col­leges, and universities, or may be obtained by writing the Me­tropolitan Auditions Committee, The Junior League of Boston, Inc., 117 Newbury Street, Bos­ton 16, Massachusetts.

RECEIVE PRIZES UNITED NATIONS - Two

Jewish scientists, one an Amer­ican and · the other a Soviet Union citizen , received prizes of $10,000 each here last week plus UN. citations. for "out­standing research work In the causes and control of cancerous disease ."

The Jewish scientists, among seven thus honored by the United Nations, are Dr. Lud­wlk Gross, who Is on the stall of the U.S. Veterans Adminis­tration Hospital, In the Bronx ; and Dr. Leon H . Shabad. head of the Cancer Research Bureau of the Institute of Experimen­tal and Clinical · Oncology of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences.