22—Friday, June 2S, 1971 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Kishinev Defendants Plead: Only Wished to Study Hebrew (Continued from Page 21) his intention not to participate in the trial because "my case is not under the jurisdiction of the "Kish- inev court," and "not a single wit- ness from Kishinev has been ques- tioned in regard to my case." The Jewish sources said that on the second day of the trial, de- fendant Anatoly Moiseyevich Gold- feld testified that most of the al- legedly anti-soviet material he hod had in his possession had been approved by he Glavlit, the publi- cation-censorship unit of the So- viet government. Gari Kirschner, accused of reproducing anti-Soviet material from Israel, did not deny the act, the source said, but con- tended that they were used only for private educational purposes. Abraham Trachtenberg was said by the sources to have asserted An Italian Hero on Last Mission of His Lifetime MILDRED, Pa. (JTA)—In this tiny town in the central part of the state, Essi Panichi has a dis- tinguished visitor. His 83-year-old brother, Samuel, has come for the first time from his home in Pia- nello di Cagli, province of Pesaro, Italy. Samuel Panichi's visit, however, is marked by more than the re- union of brothers after many years, for he has come to the United States with a mission. It was in 1944 that Panichi look- ed about and saw his fellow human beings slaughtered by the Nazis and the Fascists in his own country. He was able to save 25 Jews from death. Panichi's home and lands were burned as punishment and re- taliation by the Italian and Ger- man murderers. There were, however, two Jews whom Panichi, through no fault of his own, failed to save. Joseph Goldberg was the owner of a large store in Vienna, which he left behind as he fled from the Nazis. With his wife Emma, he reached Italy and the sheltering protection of Samuel Panichi. Jo- seph and Emma Goldberg, how- ever, rejected the offered route that led Panichi's other guests to safety and elected to try to get out of the country and to the Unit- ed States by themselves. They reached Genoa, but an informer pointed them out to the Nazis and they were put to death. One of the survivors led to safety through Panichi's efforts was the Goldhergs' son. Panichi knows that the son came to the U.S. and served in the army. He be- lieves .that the son is living in New York City. Unfortunately he does not remember the son's first name. Remains of Pre-Herod Building Uncovered in Old City Excavations JERUSALEM (JTA)—Prof. Nah- man Avigad, head of an archeolo- gical team, has disclosed that the remains of a pre-Herodian building of "monumental" proportions were unearthed during excavations in the Jewish quarter of the Old City last year. He said a column base almost two yards wide was found indicat- ing that the structure possessed columns at least 12 yards high, reminiscent of the Hasmonean palace once built in Jerusalem. According to Prof. Avigad, such columns were usually used in a temple rather than a palace. he studied the material in ques- tion for educational and cultural reasons. Defendant Semeon Abramovich Levit testified that his only inten- tion was to study Hebrew, the sources reported. (Tass said Tues- day that Shur was the only defen- dant to plead not guilty. Tass said Goldfeld, 'Kirschner. Aleksander Galperin and Arkady Voloshin knew the Jews who were convicted earlier in Leningrad for allegedly trying to skyjack a Soviet airliner.) Per Soviet custom,. the Kishinev trial is closed to other than espec- ially invited guests, but even so, the police are searching entrants and forbidding them to bring pack- ages into the courtroom, according to Jewish sources. In addition, in order to discourage crowds at the building, the authorities have closed down the nearby bus stop and situated it elsewhere. ADL Postpones Soviet Exhibit; Pickets Say No Disruption Intended NEW YORK (JTA) — The Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith said that it was "postponing, not canceling" an exhibit on Soviet Jewry that was escheduled to open Monday at its headquarters here. An ADL spokesman claimed the postponement until next week was necessitated because certain groups, according to her, had an- nounced they would disrupt the exhibit. The groups, the spokesman told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, are the Jewish Liberation Project, a Socialist-Zionist young adult or- ganization, and the Jewish Defense League. The spokesman stated further that the ADL postponed the ex- hibit in order not to subject visitors to "disruption and violence," and that the exhibit next week will be by invitation only. A spokesman for the JLP said it had not threatened either to disrupt or to indulge in any violence. "Our demonstration was called to conduct peaceful picketing outside, not inside, the the building," he stated- He told the JTA that the group welcomed the Soviet exhibit but that the ADL "is coming too late with too little," explaining that the plight of Soviet Jewry has not been a "top priority" undertak- ing by the ADL. The JLP spokesman said that the group's scheduled demonstration was to focus on three elements: the role of the ADL in Philadelphia in identifying leaders of the JDL to the FBI; the "smearing" of grass-roots medical organizations calling for community control of hospitals and thus allegedly inciting anti-Semitism; and the "showcase" nature of the "token" Soviet ex- hibit. He said the ADL's "informing" on the JDL constituted "spying on Jews for the FBI," adding: "Al- though we are opposed to the JDL's right-wing politics, what is at issue here is the action of a Jewish es- tablishment organization as an ac- tive collaborator with those who seek to suppress dissent." The JLP's statement also pro- tested the ADL's "defamation of radical health groups," a refer- ence to the ADL's charges, dat- ing back to January, that such groups as the Health Revolution- ary Unity Movement and the (Puerto Rican) Young Lords threatened the city with "turmoil, disruption, instability and lower professional sandards." Rabbi Meir Kahane, national chairman of the JDL, told a JTA reporter that his group had no in- tention of participating in the dem- onstration. Israel Bond Strike Over; 500 Employes Return to Work NEW YORK (JTA)—The 500 pro- fessional aand clerical employes of the Development Corp. for Is- rael, the Israel Bond Organization, returned to work across the count- ry Wednesday morning after agreeing Tuesday afternoon to a new two-year contract on the 39th day of their walkout. Under the terms of the contract, according to Erik Strong, spokes- man for Local 1707 of the Com- munity and Social Agency Em- ployes Union, AFL-CIO, the pro- fessionals will receive $1,000 .in- creases the first year and $800 increases the second year, and the clerical workers will get $10 a week more for the first year and $8 a week more the second year. Strong said the union also won a cost-of-living increase and an additional $100,000 in premiums for insurance and health benefits. and will not lose vacation, sick leave or seniority. The average salary for profes- sional workers under the expired contract had been $14,000 a year, and the average clerical worker's salary was $126 a week, according to the union. The union spokesman added that management withdrew its demands for the right to set arbitrary work- ing hours, to transfer professional workers arbitrarily, to set salary ceilings, to require retirement at age 65 without adequate pension, to reduce sick leave and severance pay and to grant new employes 'a minute to pray, a second the right to pay union dues with- out having to join the local. By noon Wednesday, a manage- ment spokesman would say only that there was "compromise on both sides." EXCLUSIVE SHOWING to die!" Grand Opening June 25 Detroit's First Sidewalk Cabaret Best dinner/drink/entertainment value in town. Now, wonderful wining, dining and entertainment in the new glassed-in patio porch of the Pontchartrain! We've moved from the top of the Ponch for the summer. There's a great new bill of fare, that features Charley's Sidewalk Cabaret Clambake and the finest in fresh fish flown in daily. Splendid drinks, happy music, interested service in a setting that's unique. Phone 965-0200. Reserve your table at the Sidewalk Cabaret. It's something new for your lifestyle! OA nolo A Ai PODiChClitraill Heart of the Civic Center !MAMMON WO 1.1111 NM PARKIN;