Father's Provision in Will—`Marry Jewish'—Contested by Son YOUNGSTOWN, 0. — A lawsuit is pending here in- volving a Jewish doctor's unusual will that requires his son to marry a Jewish girl or else lose his inherit- ance. The suit was filed in Pro- AI's bate Court here by the son, Daniel Jacob Shapira, in an attempt to void a portion of the will of his father, Dr. David Shapira, a psychia- trist. The will said the younger Shapira had to marry "a Jewish girl born Foreign Car Service SPECIALIST IN VOLKSWAGEN Another son, Mark, was given similar conditions, but was given a five-year limit. He has not filed suit. AND PORSCHE CARS CALL 548-3926 548-4160 541-9704 1 018 W. 9 MI e Rd. Alfons G. Rehme FERNDALE, MICH. of Jewish parents within seven years of his father's death or else lose his share of the in heritance," an Ohio newspaper reported. If the son did not comply, the will states the money was to go to Israel. An inventory of the estate is incomplete, however, one report estimat- ed Daniel's share at $100,- 000. Between Live nois a Pinehurst _ Defendants in the case are Mark; a daughter, Ruth Shapira Aharoni, the third beneficiary in the will; the State of Israel; and Union National Bank, executor of the estate. Appeals for Levich So Far in Vain officials answered that "since Brind, sentenced to 21/2 he has been drafted — that years in 1971, has been means he is healthy." singled out by prison guards The case of Evgeny Levich and other prisoners in anti- has attracted the attention of Semitic attacks. The NCSJ prominent political and aca- said that it is apparent that demic figures who have is- they- plan to make Brind's sued appeals to Soviet relatively short sentence a authorities on his behalf. difficult one. Jewish sources in the So- Anniversary of Massacre viet Union reported that of Jewish Artists Marked Alexander Temkin, whose 13- NEW YORK (JTA) — The year-old daughter Marina 21st anniversary of the mas- was abducted from their sacre of 24 Jewish poets and Moscow home and sent to writers in the infamous Lu- the "Orlyonok" prisoners' bianka Prison in Moscow camp, has written an open was marked Monday with letter to lawyers all over the the reading of their poems in world asking them to inter- Yiddish and English by vene in his care to help re- Columbia University stu- verse the decision which de- dents on the steps of the prived him of parental New York Public Library. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Stanley H. Lowell, chair- Friday, August 17, 1973-11 rights. Two daughters of Mark man of the Greater New Dymshitz, the Jewish pilot York Conference on Soviet who was sentenced in De- Jewry, which sponsored the cember 1970 to death and readings, said that the deaths his sentence later commuted of the Jewish writers, poets to 15 years imprisonment for and public figures was the allegedly attempting to climax of a four-year cam- smuggle a group of Soviet paign by Soviet authorities Jews out of the country in to eradicate Jewish culture a plane from Leningrad, ar- in the USSR. Between 1948 and 1952, 217 rived in Tel Aviv Monday. Elizabetta, 20, and Julia, Jewish writers, 108 actors, 17, arrived alone because 87 painters and sculptors their mother decided to re- and 19 musicians were ar- main in the USSR and wait rested, most of them later dying in Soviet labor camps. for her husband's release. Lowell said the tragedy Among the arrivals was NEW YORK (JTA) — "I am surrounded by stone walls which thus far have proved to be impenetrable to my personal efforts," prominent Soviet scientist Benjamin G. Levich said after months of appeals on behalf of his son, Evgeny, a 25-year-old astrophysicist. Evgeny was drafted into the army May 16, in ap- parent retaliation for his father's activities in his own struggle to obtain permission to emigrate to Israel. In response to Prof. Le- vich's contention that his son is unfit for military duty, - Lev Korenblit, a 51-year-old physicist, who was sentenced to three years' imprisonment in 1971 for Zionist activity. He was released last June. His wife and daughter ar- rived in Israel last year. He said he served in a labor camp near Potma. The regime, he said, was diffi- cult but he succeeded in studying Hebrew through books he received. The National Conference on Soviet Jewry reported that Arkady- Shpilberg, who was sentenced to three years' strict regime at the May 1971 Riga trial, has been re- leased from prison in the Soviet Union, and that Yuli Brind has been transferred to Voroshilovogradskaya Pri- son in Oblast Petrovskaya. Aug.20th thru 25th ON THE TERRACE * LIVE ANIMAL ACTS! * CLOWNS * AERIALISTS * FUN GALORE! 3 Performances Daily 10:30am - 2:30 pm 7:30 pm SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT! Northwestern at Eight Mile & Greenfield IT'S FREE! IT'S FREE! made Soviet Jews more de- termined than ever to dedi- cate themselves to their his- tory and culture. He urged American Jews on the anniversary of the massacre to "rededicate our efforts to help free Soviet Jews, so that they can ful- fill themselves as Jews whenever they desire." Meanwhile, the Workmen's Circle urged the present leadership of the Soviet Union to "rehabilitate the names and reputations of those murdered on the basis of outrageously false charges." The Workmen's Circle said the 24 were mur- dered "for no other reason, than that they were Jewish and vital to Russian Jewish life." `Death With Dignity' Concept Dangerous: Talmud Scholar The "right to death with dignity," the general feeling that doctors should not over- ly prolong the lives of the incurably ill, is decried by a talmudic scholar who con- tends that the decision to terminate life is beyond man's competence and warns that the concept could lead to the elimination of lives felt to be a burden upon society. Rabbi J. David Bleich, on the talmudic faculty of the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theo- logical Seminary and as- sistant professor of philoso- phy at Stern College for Women, writes on the new field of bio-ethics, "Estab- lishing Criteria of Death," in a recent issue of Tra- dition, published by the Rabbinical Council of Amer- ica. Rabbi Bleich states that "It is exceedingly difficult to argue against the indi- vidual's right to 'die with dignity,' which is rapidly joining motherhood, the Fourth of July and apple pie as one of the great American values." Stating that one has a right to dignity both in life and in death, he asks speaking, is a 'right?' " Contending that even the most sophisticated defini- tions of death, including the new definition "brain death," are constantly being debated by the medical profession, Rabbi Bleich argues that "as long as life is present the decision to terminate such life is beyond the competence of man." Pragmatically, he says, "a decision not to prolong life means precluding the appli- cation of some new advance in therapeutics to secure a remission or cure for that patient should a break- through occur." Rabbi Bleich asks "If the comatose may be caused to `die with dignity,' what of the mentally deranged and the feeble-minded incapable of 'meaningful' human ac- tivity? Withdrawal of treat- ment leads directly to overt acts of euthanasia; from there it may be but a short step to selective elimination of those whose life is deem- ed a burden upon society at large." Brain death and irrever- sible coma, writes Rabbi Bleich, are not acceptable definitions of death accord- whether "death, properly ing to Halakha (Jewish law). ;.• ' ,