411111111181•111111111111111111111111811, Bre z hnev's Visit Stirs Speculation (Continued from Page 1) These circles point out that while Brezhnev, who is due to hold important economic talks with President Nixon, would like to enjoy as pleas- ant a political climate as possible during his stay in the U.S., the Soviet Union has suddenly reduced the number of exit visas granted to Jews. This month, these circles say, fewer than 800 visas were granted, about half of those allocated for a similar period in past months. "It looks as if someone in the Kremlin is trying to make Brezhnev's talks in Washing- ton as difficult as possible," these sources told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Brezh- nev is scheduled to arrive Saturday for the 10-day U.S. visit. The U.S. Senate's commit- tee on foreign relations, in its recent action authorizing an Sapir to Honor Two at Philadelphia Event NEW YORK — Lewis J. Laventhol and Isadore H. Krekstein will receive a spe- cial State of Israel Award at a tribute dinner June 24 at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel, Philadelphia. Pinhas Sapir, Israel's min- ister of finance, will make the presentation. The event is on behalf of State of Is- rael Bonds. IF YOU TURN THE UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T FIND A FINER WINE THAN additional $36,500,000 to as- sist the resettlement of So- viet Jews in Israel was by a vote of 11-4. The four opponents of the measure were Senators Ful- bright, Mansfield, McGovern and Aiken. The 11 voting for the measure were Senators Church, Symington, Pell, Mc- Gee, Muskie, Humphrey, Case, Javits, Scott, Pearson and Percy. 17,000 Former Soviet Jews Urge Senate to Adopt Jackson Amendment NEW YORK (JTA) — Ye- cheskel Poliarevich, a form- er prisoner in a Siberian strict regime labor camp now living in Israel and chairman of the Association of Former Prisoners of Zion, arrived Sunday at Kennedy Airport from Israel with a petition signed by 17,000 Soviet Jews who recently emigrated to Is- rael, asking the Senate to adopt the Jackson Amend- ment. The petition, sponsored by the association in conjunction with the Association of Soviet Immigrants in Israel, was brought to Washington by Poliarevich and Yitzhak HeimOwitz, an Israeli lawyer who was born in New York and settled in Israel in 1968, and Mikhail Shepshelovich, a Soviet Jewish activist who recently emigrated from the USSR to Israel. The three men presented the petition to Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D. Wash.) and other con- gressmen on the steps of the Capitol Building. Poliarevich and Heimowitz are members of the Herut Party in Israel. (Petitions bearing the names of approximately 17,000 So- viet Jewish immigrants in Israel urging the U.S. Con- * SPRINKLER SYSTEMS O INSTALLATION . SERVICE Call For Free Installation Estimate 559-5595 ALLIANCE SPRINKLER CO. "The Sprinkler SpeCiaiists" 17061 JEANETTE SOUTHFIELD For Custom' Drapery Cleaning, Call . DRAPERY CLEANERS "All That The 'Nome We Also Wash & Finish Drip Dry Curtains Professionally WE DO ALL THE WORK REMOVE AND INSTALL 891-1818 Suburban Call Colley Reverse Charges * gress to adopt the Jackson- Mills-Vanik legislation sup- porting free emigration from the Soviet Union were pre- sented Monday to Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D. Wash.). and Rep. Charles A. Vanik (D. Ohio) in Washington. ("The promise of the Soviet government to suspend im- plementation of the infamous education t a x regulation," the petitions said, "does not solve the problem of masses of Jews throughout the Soviet Union who want to follow in our footsteps — to return to our land. The problem is the denial of this human right." The presentation was made on the Capitol's steps.) Seventeen Moscow Jews were arrested and later re- leasd with a warning that if they continued to demonstrate they would be "sent away," the National Conference for Soviet Jewry reported. Six of the arrested Jews were seized outside the Kremlin walls after they began a hunger strike to protest the failure of Soviet authorities to grant them exit visas. The other 11, all activists, were picked up at various points in the city. There was no indication w ti e r e they would be sent if they dis- obeyed the orders not to dem- onstrate, the NCSJ said. The six were identified as Valery Krizhak and his wife; Dr. Alexander Luntz, a math- ematician; Dr. Vladimir Ra- ginsky, a physicist; Dr. Vik- tor Brailovsky, a cybernetic- ist, and Edna Nudel, whose occupation was not known. Panovs May Get Visas if They Desist From Anti-Soviet Agitation TEL AVIV (JTA) — An Is- raeli theatrical producer who Special Austria Security Force Protecting Soviet Jews in Transit BY RICHARD BRUCE, JTA Vienna Correspondent VIENNA (JTA) — A spe- the "bad books" of , neutral cial security force — code- Austria. But, during this an- named "Cobra" — has been niversary week, the authori- set up to protect Soviet Jews ties are taking no chances — emigrating to Israel via Aus- even a part of the forest tria during the anniversary surrounding Schoenau manor period of the Six-Day War. was thinned out to prevent The Jewish Agency rents a anyone from sneaking up by manor house at Schoenau vil- surprise. lage, near Vienna, that it uses as a stopover for hun- At- let -Me- dreds of Soviet Jews who travel to Israel via Austria. Well-guarded at the best of times, visitors to Sehoenau in recent days reported the grounds swarming with po- licemen. armed with sub- machine guns, German shep- herd dogs and helicopters swooping overhead. A r my jeeps and soldiers patrolled the area. Police sources and Vienna newspapers said the Israeli secret service had warned the Austrians of pos- sible Arab terrorist attacks on Jewish - run installations here during the anniversary period. The sources said the spe- cial "Cobra" force was put on "red alert" at Schoenau and at Vienna airport and railroad stations. They said the "Cobra" force was made up of specially-trained police officers, familiar with mod- ern-day guerrilla tactics. The men were brought in from all parts of this Alpine nation, the sources said. So far, no Arab attacks on J e wish installations have 11*%‘ ever been reported here. Many political observers at- TELEGRAPH tribute this to the fact the Arabs don't want to get into just returned from Moscow said that exit visas may be issued shortly to Valery and Galina Panov, provided that they maintain a low profile and desist from anti-Soviet agitation for a reasonable period of time. Yaacov Agmon, who at- tended the recent Interna- tional Theater Institute Con- gress in the Soviet capital, said he visited the Panovs, who were fired from Lenin grad's Kirov Ballet Co. 14 months ago after they applied for exit visas to go to Israel. Agmon said the Panovs told him they still wanted to go to Israel and that they were unable to get work. He said he approached Soviet author- ities, including people in the ministry of culture which hosted the ITI congress. Dan Raginsky, a Jewish scientist in Moscow, told the newspaper •Maariv that So- viet authorities are broadly hinting to Jewish activists that they will get visas if they "sit quietly" especially during Communist Party Sec- retary Leonid I. Brezhnev's visit to the U.S. beginning next week. According to Raginsky, 10 Jewish activists were re- cently summoned to KGB (secret police) headquarters and told that they would get their visas within two years or possibly by the end of this year if they behaved. Four other activists who have been given visas were warned by the authorities that their exit permits would be revoked if their friends continued to "make trouble." An exit visa will be granted to Gedalia Kipnis of Minsk who was recently released from jail where he had spent five months awaiting a trial which Soviet authorities can- celed last week, Jewish sources in the Soviet Union reported. At the same time, a Lenin- grad Jew who applied for an exit visa 18 months ago, was sentenced to a total of 21/2. years of "rehabilitative la- bor" at a Soviet labor camp for allegedly striking a res- taurant cloak room attendant. The sources said that Yepim Kritzevski, 26, who is mar- If- ried and the father of a one- year-old boy, will have to serve his sentence before he gets his visa. They said that Kritzevski attacked the at- tendant after the latter made anti-Semitic remarks. 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