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August 31, 1973 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-08-31

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Soviet Harassments Bring More Protests

Ulpan in Arabic

JERUSALEM (JTA)-The
(Continued from Page 1)
successful method of the
Before leaving Moscow the
ulpan in serving as a crash
course for learning Hebrew Israeli delegation told news-
is now being used to teach men that the harassment,
whistling and booing "reflect
Arabic in Israel.

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on the ability of the Russian
organizers to stage competi-
tions in accordance with in-
ternational rules and in the
spirit of fair play."
The delegation added that
the continuous incidents "had
a deterimental effect" on the
Israeli team, and protested
the treatment of the Israeli
basketball players and their
Jewish fans by uniformed po-
licemen and civilians.
The Israelis were at the
center of a dancing throng of
athletes who broke up the
formality of the closing cere-
monies in Lenin Stadium. The
athletes had been scheduled
to march out of the stadium
in formation, but they
stormed past marshals and
rushed across the field, form-
ing rings and dancing in the
rain.
(The final tally of game re-
sults showed the Israeli team
defeated Puerto Rico in
basketball, 77-61, and Japan
73-62, but failed to win any
championships. In volleyball,
the Israeli team lost to Bul-
garia by a score of 3-2.)
National Jewish organiza-
tions continued to denounce

8—Friday, August 31, 1973

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

the harassment, saying that Man Nabbed for Vow Against Katzir's Son
the hostility and epithets di-
JERUSALEM (JTA) - A been identified were involved
rected at the Israeli sports- Jerusalem man was remand- in the theft of Katchalsky's
men and against Jewish spec- ed in custody for 15 days car in Jerusalem last month.
tators at the games clearly by a magistrate's court for
disqualified the Soviet Union sending a threatening letter
from serving as host nation to Meir Katchalsky, son of
in the 1980 summer Olympics. President Ephraim Katzir,
,Fine Clothes For Over 36 Years .
School children in gym and for stealing his car.
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The suspect, Meir Asraf,
clothes and American sports
At 10 Mile Next to Dunkin' Donuts ,
Open Daily to 6, Thursday to 8 •
figures demonstrated in front was arrested after police
of the Soviet UN Mission in were tipped off that he and
SUNDAY 11 to 4
New York to protest the in- several others who have not
cidents in Moscow.
T h e demonstration was
sponsored by the Bnai Brith
Metropolitan Council and the
Greater New York Confer-
ence on Soviet Jewry.
About 40 Moscow Jews
have written to the Interna-
tional University Sports Fed-
STILL THE WORLD'S LARGEST
eration that an atmosphere
of anti-Semitism had been
created around the Israeli
athletes and their Jewish fans
Free Loaners
in Moscow.

Technion Study
Rates Crime
Victim Chances

HAIFA - The average
Manhattan dweller faces an
eight-out-of-10 likelihood of
being the victim of a violent
crime - rape, violent as-
sault, armed robbery, mur-
der - at least once during
his lifetime. Also, he can ex-
pect, on the average, to be
victimized twice during his
lifetime by such crimes.
These were some of the
findings of a statistical
analysis of New York City
crime rates-from the stand-
point of the victim instead
of the criminal - made by
Prof. Benjamin Avi-Itzhak of
the Technion-Israel Institute
of Technolocv and Prof. Ruel
Shinar of the City College
of New York.
The analysis forms part of
a larger study, "Quantitative
Models in Crime Control,"
published in the June issue
of t" Journal of Research
on Crime and Delinquency.
The figures for the entire
city give the average citizen
a 57 per cent chance of fall-
ing victim to violent crimes.
at least once. and predict
that he will fall victim .85
times, statistically speaking.
"People living in other
large American cities share
the plight of the New York-
er," said the Israeli re-
searcher, "because the aver-
age crime rate for cities
with over 250,000 population
is almost as high as New
York's, and many large
cities are even higher."
Alongside what the authors
consider to be the recent
"crime explosion" is, in their
opinion, a relatively mild re-
sponse by officialdom in
combating the situation. They
say this is because the net
effect of the steep rise in
crime rates recently is not
yet felt by the public since
the rate has been high for
only a few years and thus
many people have yet to ex-
perience it.
In effect, they haven't
lived out their average 70
years and received their
"quota" of crimes.

Avoid popularity if you
would have peace.-Abraham
Lincoln.

H RY THOMA

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PACKER • PONTIAC

The National Conference
reported that V. Valtsov,
nephew of the Russian Jew-
ish scientist and activist Al-
exander Lerner, was arrested
and sentenced to 10 days in
jail because he tried to enter
a Moscow area where the Is-
raeli team was competing.
He was arrested although he
held a ticket for the event,
the NCSJ said.

In Starlight, Pa., the 198
student leaders attending the
annual Hillel Summer Insti-
tute adopted a resolution "de-
ploring the brutal and repre-
hensive treatment of Jewish
spectators attending the
World University Games in
Moscow by Soviet security
officers."

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They urged the Olympics
Committee "to take this out-
rageous conduct under ad-
visement when it meets in
Vienna next year to select a
site."

Some 100 Jewish and non-
Jewish college students and
adults demonstrated in front
of the Soviet Consulate Gen-
eral in downtown Montreal in
protest against the harass-
ment.

*

Olga Korbut
Befriends
an Israeli

TEL AVIV (JTA) -
Against the background of
organized Soviet harass-
ment of Israeli athletes
and Jewish spectators at
the World University Stu-
dent Games in Moscow, a
warm friendship was re-
ported to have developed
between an Israeli basket-
ball player and Russia's
outstanding gymnast, Olga
Korbut.
The tall, bespectacled
Yehoshua Schwartz and
Miss Korbut, both of whom
speak English, met at var-
ious events and then went
to dances together.
Schwartz said in a tele-
phone conversation with
his family here that the
gymnast "dances very
well."
Miss Korbut, apparently
unconcerned about pos-
sible hostile official re-
action, visited the Israeli
athletes. S h e intimated
that her mother was half-
Jewish.
Schwartz, who said he
intended to maintain con-
tact by correspondence
with the gymnast after he
returns to Israel, declared,
"We are now good
friends."

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