2 Families" Reach U.S.:, Other•
ace Prison in Soviet Union

N nes ,,,;( s i Rih t iffs,± THE
1)emand for I h.hatt.

COLUMBUS, 0. (JTA) — Ohio
State University has announced
that based on student demand it
has decided to offer an interdis-
ciplinary program leading to a
bachelor of arts in Jewish Studies.
To be initiated in the fall term,
the program will permit interested
students to apply any one of 51
courses in the departments of Ro-
mance language, literature, his-
tory and philosophy toward the
Jewish studies degree.
Among the 51 courses in these
departments are such courses as
Foundations o f
"Philosophical
"The Jewish
Mysticism" a nd
Community and Its Concern for
Human Welfare."
Previously, the school offered
majors in Hebrew language and
literature and Jewish history.
However, explained Dr. Yehiel
Hayon, associate professor of
Hebrew, the students "wanted
a more general, interdisciplinary
approach than a BA in Hebrew,
so we began developing courses
in Jewish studies." He said he
expected about 15 students to
declare majors in Jewish
studies this fall.
The program is designed for
graduate studies in Hebrew, Jew-
ish history or Jewish philosophy.
Ohio State presently offers an
MA and PhD in Jewish history.

Ex-Jordanian Minister
Wants to Stay in Nablus

JERUSALEM — Former Jordan-
ian Foreign Minister Walid Salah
has submitted an application to
the Israeli authorities requesting
permission to settle in his former
home town of Nablus, the Jeru-
salem Post reports. He is a cousin
of Jordan's present foreign minis-
ter, Abdullah Salah.
Salah, a lawyer who was known
for his close relations with Egypt's
late President Nassar, made his
application shortly after arriving
in Nablus from Amman for a visit
under the summer visits scheme.
He crossed the Jordan a short
while before the 100,000th visitor
arrived at the bridge.
Salah, 55. would be one of sever-

a l : former Jordanian ministers who
came back to settle in Judea and
maria following the Six Dav
in He had been in Kw.sait for
-
years, moving there follow
••,,.! repeated friction between .o
Jr
clan and Floypt.
At one time, Salah headed thy
Jordanian Bar Association. He be-
gan his political career in the mid

1950s, gaining prominence at the
Bandung
Afro-Asian conference.
But he left politics 10 years later
r, the midst of the inter-Arab con-
1 , .cts He is
Lig '1:),• respected
among
, Indus.
Salah s at - rival ci ;r:,
d
ti.e
visit of another former Jort'anii, -
minister, Ismail flijazi.

Regarding Glezer's private
life, the article said that he had
been divorced twice and in.
dulged in unnatural practices.
Jewish circles likened the ar-
ticle to the work of Julius
Streicher, editor of the Nazi-era
journal Der Stuermer, and to
the press attacks on individual
Jews during the Stalin era. But
the circles said that this type
of journalism had been dormant
since the end of the Stalin era.

Glezer was graduated from Mos-
cow University in 1934, receiving
a higher degree in 1960 for a
thesis on schizophrenia. For four
"ears thereafter. he researched
the brain and lectured in biology.

In 1964, he accused two profes-
sors of anti-Semitism and left the
university, but in 1966 he was .a
Soviet representative to an inter-
national biological congress in
Bratislava. He published several
books in West Germany, Britain
and the United States, and some
of them have become standard
works. His latest book, published
in the U.S., was "The Brain in
Figures and Tables."

Glezer became interested in Is-
rael in 1963- He learned to speak
Hebrew from beginners lessons
over Kol Israel, and in January
of this year applied for exit visas
for himself and his aged mother.
He was immediately dismissed
from his post at a government re-
search institute and subsequently
arrested.

The draft evasion charges
against Berman were "trumped
up," according to Jewish sources,
who claim that he is not subject
to military service at this time.
Besides, they added, he volun-
tarily sought to register for the
military, but was rejected because
he had applied for emigration.
Then, the sources said, the KGB
(security police) threatened him
with trial if he did not serve.

• •

•

111

ROME—Two men bearing an
Indian and a Jordanian passport,
were arrested by police here last
weekend in connection with a plot
to bomb an El Al jet that was
carrying 148 passengers and crew
to Tel Aviv on Aug. 16.
Four passengers were injured
slightly in the incident.
Police spotted the men from
photographs taken by two British
18-year-old women whom the two
men had dated here for a week.
The women were persuaded by the
men to board the plane, bringing
along a parting gift that police
said later contained a time bomb.
It went off shortly after takeoff.

clues.

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otiax ,,glass
ortl• l , nacct. that ,ptitto, ...A, that not
even •on pi dlyition yan cttcct thy pryylitli, water.

M(itintain \ Ally% is delis,. ri.1 to s o only in day,
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1 A.IICI

kVilt11‘,1:11T ■ t 1.1 , tt Vh , lint.1111

JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Jew-
ish Agency announced here that
it plans to open a new aliya office
in Dallas at the start of September
to coordinate aliya efforts in Texas,
I Oklahoma, Arkansas and New
' Mexi
Officials said that at the present
time. Jews in those states interes-
ted in settling in Israel must get
in touch with aliya offices in Los
Angeles or Atlanta.
The new office will be directed
by Joseph Shamir, 33, formerly an
Israeli emissary in the Los Angeles
office.

Ss

Jew ish
sources in the Soviet
Union reported that Jews in ma-
jor Soviet centers w ill hold a mass
hunger strike at the end of this
week to protest the new exit taxes.
The •drike is scheduled to be car-

\NATL. ! nyxt to an means lilted to lite and lit:alth
It is part tit
lxxly cells thy
thy (A , 11\ct t , r
try-, h 11111th:11J , anti it Ivxly

Jewish Agency to Open
Aliya- Office in Dallas

n urse, rapott,-,
Jew 1., h
- IT,
a oth , •rities , they
:1
h
;aa-
re,cis era A large mn`.•-•-
It•••ts irom around the world •
demning the sententai.g.
year old engineer.

"

Why Good Water
Means So Much

2 Men Arrested
in Link With El Al
Bombing Attempt

Vladimir Markman will appeal
three-ear hard-labor sent-n•t•

111111

ROYAL OAK

I relations instead of improving
them, resulting in a wave of strikes
which would never have co
about had the workers not drawn ,
encouragement from the, Histadrut
caief.

military service, Jewish -source.
reported. Levich was reportedly
kidnaped by militiamen recently
after leaving a hospital.

I In

222 N•WOODWARD
NORTH OF 11 MILE

He said that Ben-Aharon's u•
of such terms as "feudal baron,"
and "effendis" in referring to in
I dustrialists had worsened labor

Dr. Evgeny Levich, 24-year-old Classified
astrophysicist son of Moscow ac-
tivist Prof. Benjamin Levich. has
been ordered to serve two years

■ /1.1,,,,.(1

Friday, August 25, 1972-17

m...tadrui

(Continued from Page 11)
in a strict-regime, forced•labor
JERUSALEM ■ .IT.-11 -The Kr,.
from Novosibirsk and their two camp—for - anti-Soviet and Zionist
-et ''as rejected a demand by
.
children, arrived Sunday on a p p
( a. His
wh ich end-
pposit ion factions -
Gahal. t!
flight from Moscow. They wcre ed Tuesday night was held behind
State list and the Free Comer
reunited early this morning with closed doors. Grigory Berman, 26-
o debate what they termed Ills,
Trakeniski's 84-year-old father in } year-old philologi st ,
(en e
the
drut secretary general Yitzhak It
Los Angeles, the United Dias re- identical term in Odessa on con-
Sharon's
incitement
of
Israeli
ported.
! ',action for draft-evasion. His trial.
workers.
also
secret,
was
held
Au.
10.
The father. Rabbi Zaban Traken-
In asking the Knesset to strike
Glezer, who was born in Khar-
iski, who was president of the Jew.
the three motions from the agenda.
kov was arrested Feb. 7 after a
ish community of Kaunos. Lithu-
ibor Minister Yosef Almogi
ania before World War II , is now six-hour search of his Moscow
ten-Aharon had been democratic
borne turned up material deemed
an American citizen.
dly elected and was not respons-
• • •
'anti-Soviet" by the authorities.
"'e‘- day's issue of Pravda, the ible to any entity other than Ilista-
LONDON (JTA) — Two more
drut. including the Knesset.
Soviet Jewish activists have re- Soviet Communist Party news-
• wh
■ t i
Japer, contained a long article,
ceived stiff prison terms, it was
ed in asking for the special lines-
reported Wednesday by ,Soviet keyed to the trial, that described
set
session
during
recess,
S.
Glezer as a "rabid Zionist" who
Jewish sources.
man Abramov of the 'Aber
"slandered" the USSR in letters
Ilia Glezer, 41-year-old biologist
abroad and by feeding false in- • wing said the aim was not to
,jspecializing in brain research, was
limit self-expression but to I'm,
formation to "his friends in Is-
-sentenced in Moscow to three years
incitement and demagoguery.
rael."

Ohio State to Offer
BA in Jewish Studies

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