Egypt Acquires Rocket Ships from Russia (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) WASHINGTON — The Egyp- tian government has just ac- quired some of Russia's new "Komar" class naval rocket ships capable of firing a ship-to-shore missile bearing a conventional 1,650-pound warhead, it was re- ported here Tuesday. The vessels have been sent to Egypt by the Soviet Union in addition to rocket and missile weapons, it was learned. The "Komar" is the same class of Naval Craft recently furnished by the USSR to Cuba. The range of its rockets is between 15 and 20 miles and the weapons are especially effective against coastal cities. Shimon Peres, Israel's Deputy Minister of Defense, arrived here Tuesday to negotiate costs and delivery dates of the Hawk ground-to-air missiles with Pr esident Kennedy's White House staff and with other gov- ernment officials. He was ac- companied in his talks by Is- rael's Ambassador A v r a h am Harman. EEC to Continue Talks with Israel on Euromart Ties (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) BRUSSELS—The Council of Ministers of the European Eco- nomic Community, the policy- making body of the European Common Market, opened Tues- day a two-day meeting with a decision to continue negotia- tions with Israel on arrange- ment of Some kind of trade ties with Euromart. The first round of such talks started last November. The date of the second round of talks re- mains to be decided but the EEC Commission was asked to start contacts with all interested parties to fix a date. Sources in the six-nation community indi- cated that the present Council of Ministers session was ex- pected to bring considerable progress in completing the EEC position on application for trade ties by such smaller coun- tries as Israel, Turkey and Iran. ENJOY KOSHER ZION PRODUCTS STRICTLY KOSHER FOR PASSOVER I 100% PURE ri t b 17 11) BEEF PRODUCTS • Frankfurters • Corned Beef • Knackwurst • Pastrami • Peppered Beef • Salami • Liver Sausage • Bologna U.S. INSPECTED AND PASSED SS DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE EST. I THE SIGN OF QUALITY! KOSHER ZION SAUSAGE COMPANY OF CHICAGO AT LEADING. GROCERIES, RESTAURANTS DELICATESSENS AND SUPER MARKETS Brandeis Professor Reprimanded for Outburst During Cuban Crisis WALTHAM, Mass., (JTA)— Dr. Abraham L. Sachar, presi- dent of Brandeis University, said he had received almost unanimous support from his board of trustees in his action of reprimanding a faculty mem- ber who told Brandeis students during the height of last fall's Cuban crisis that she hoped that America would be defeated and shamed before the world in the event of war with Cuba. The reprimanded faculty member is Dr. Kathleen Gough Aberle, a British anthropologist, who submitted her resignation earlier this month. Her husband, Dr. David Aberle, an American citizen who is also a professor of anthropology, tendered his resignation along with hers. The Brandeis president said he rep- rimanded Mrs. Aberle "not be- cause she expressed a dissent- ing opinion, but because of the recklessness and the irresponsi- bility of her language." Mrs. Aberle was a visiting lecturer at Wayne State Univer- sity from September, 1959, to July, 1960, and taught at the University of Michigan in the summer of 1957. Soviet Police Disperse Jewish Groups Praying in Private Homes NEW YORK (JTA)—Details about a wave of anti-Jewish re- ligious persecutions conducted recently in the Soviet Union, chiefly through the dispersal of religious Jews attending "min- yans" in private homes, were revealed here. Two such incidents were re- ported from Kharkov, one of the largest Jewish communities in the Ukraine; one in Gomel, White Russia; a third at Kolo- mea, Ukraine. In each case, Soviet police burst into private homes where religious services were being held due to the fact that local synagogues had been shut down by the government authorities previously. The two Kharkov in- cidents occurred on Sept. 30, 1962, the first day of Rosh Hash- anah, and on Oct. 8, Yom Kip- pur. Kolomea's anti - Jewish raid while the dispersal of the "min- yan" in Gomel took place on a Sabbath, Feb. 23, 1963. At Khar- kov, the Jew in whose home the "minyan" had been held, was given a heavy fine. Previously, Story of Polish Jewish Life in Duvdevon Novel "Hatzkel the Water-Carrier" by A. Duvdevon, published by Pageant Press (101 5th, NY 3), has an interesting plot. For those who are unacquainted with old world life and customs, with the narrowness of Jewish existence in isolated Polish communities, will learn much from it. The people depicted by Duv- devon are unusual types. Only those who had lived in anything approximating the era when there was such an existence amidst poverty and religious stoicism can possibly picture to themselves the water-carrier, who was an ignorant man for whom a bride was found, and an orphaned girl who was left with a family in the town of Piaski under description here; the boys and girls who were trying to rise above the medievalism of the community; the tragic life of the daughter of Hatzkel and Zysel who finally fled from Pi- asi and soon sent steamship tickets to bring her parents to America. The Hatzkel story is well mo- tivated, and the interjection of descriptions of all the Jewish festivals as they were celebrat- ed in Piasi makes Duvdevon's book additionally instructive. To its detriment, however, is the author's insistence upon using entirely too many Yid- dish, Hebrew and Polish words —many of them poorly translit- erated, the translations inade- quate, the excessive resort to them totally unnecessary. Even though the author has lived in this country since 1922 and has been a Hebrew teacher, even some of his Hebrew words are misapplied. It is regrettable that what could have been a very good novel was spoiled by ir- relevant material. The plot still suggests itself for a deeply mov- ing story. he had been arrested, but re- leased the same day. The Feb. 26, 1963, issue of Lvovskaya Pravda, organ of the Communist Party in Lvov, re- ceived here, reported that death sentences for "economic crimes', were imposed in that Western Ukraine metropolis on at least four men who are obviously Jewish, named Averbuch, Aksel- rod, Fuks and Rosenblatt. Six others among 10 in that mass trial who received long prison sentences and had their property confiscated were believed to be Jews. Their names were given as Kleinman, Kravitz, Langman, Poisner, Shayevitz and Weiz- man. Catholic's Book `Preventative' Against Bigotry "A potent preventative against infection by that insidious virus of Anti-Semitism" was a Cath- olic reviewer's reaction in The Tablet, to Henri Daniel-Rops' study of Christ among the peo- ple of Israel, "Daily Life in the Time of Jesus," published by Hawthorn Books. The Catholic author's avowed purpose in writing the book was to provide the general reader with a record of life in Pales- tine during the life of Christ, based partly on the social, intel- lectual and archaeological his- tory of the period and partly on his own observations in mod- ern Israel. The book has been selected as a subscription book by the Religious Book Club, a Protestant organization, in addi- tion to its popularity among similar Catholic outlets. "Jesus Christ," writes the author, "whom the Christians worship as God but (whom they hold to be) also truly man,' was a Jew . . . He was not only a Jew by His origins, in the manner of His everyday life and His habit of mind, but His spiritual message had its deep roots in the Jewish soil of Israel . . ." Through his tireless research and his deep interest in Juda- ism, the author probes into, and attempts to resolve, several vex- ing questions long in the minds of contemporary Jews as well as interested Catholics. The Student Council voted 8 to 7 to censure Dr. Sachar for "violating academic freedom." The 262-member faculty who voted on the matter admitted that Dr. Sachar "had the right to disassociate the university" from Mrs. Aberle's speech to students; however, it approved a prepared statement by the Faculty Senate terming Dr. Sa- char's reprimand "an error of judgment that could be inter- preted as an infringement of academic freedom." Dr. Sachar, in his statement, said: "As president of the uni- versity, I had the responsibility to reprimand her." He pointed "with pride' 'to Brandeis' rec- ord, during its 15 years of exist- ence, in regard to faculty free- dom. He noted that the very vote by those members of the faculty who disagreed with him on the Aberle issue "vindicates our contention that the faculty is not only competent in their fields of specialization but are independent in spirit and judg- ment." Joseph F. Hirsch Man of the Month IT IS A PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCE THAT JOSEPH F. HIRSCH HAS received the man-of-the-month award as the most outstanding Representative of our Detroit-Gold Agency, for the month of April. The award is in recognition of his excellent service to his policyholders and our Agency during this month of April. Detroit Gold Agency 18930 GREENFIELD ROAD—BRoadway 2-0100—Detroit 35 MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL Life Insurance Company SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS • ORGANIZED 1151 Deputy Knesset Speaker Aharon Grinberg Dies Appe-teasing (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV — Aharon Yaakov Grinberg, Deputy Speaker of the Knesset, died Tuesday morning at Ayelet Hashahar settlement while on a tour of the Galilee with other members of the Knes- set Internal Affairs Committee. He was 62. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon at the head- quarters of the National Relig- ious Party of which he was a member. Grinberg was stricken with severe pains Monday night and died early Tuesday morning. Born in Poland, he came to Palestine in 1935. Kosher Passover for ... s . -. . . ....................,..,—..-- Watch your appetite! Here comes Vita Herring, marinated to tease, tempt, beguile. Start your next meal with a her. ring appetizer; or make it the main course for a meatless meal that is deliciously `different. It's ready to serve right from the jar; featured in food store refrigerated cabinets, VITA. HERRING()