Four Kishinev Activists Sentenced as 'Hooligans' NEW YORK (JTA) — Fol- lowing nationwide detentions in the Soviet Union March 1, four Kishinev activists were sentenced to 15 days on charges of "petty hooligan- ism" for attempting to pre- sent their cases to the local ovir, it -was reported by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry. The four are: Yak o v Shvartzman, Mark Abramo- vich, Leonid Bendersky and Sender Levinson. Two pas- sersby, Miron Dorfman and Yakov Starkman, were also sentenced. The NCSJ also reported that the wives of _these activists planned to stage their own hunger strike Friday, "International Wom- en's Day," a holiday ob- served throughout Commu- nist countries. Dr. Isaac Poltinnkov of Novosibirsk and his family are in trouble, the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry re- ported. The KGB came to their home last Thursday and read a document charg- ing the family with anti- Soviet activity which in- cluded, according to the SSSJ, provoking reactions abroad, staging a hunger strike at the central tele- phone station in Novosibirsk and giving information abroad by use of the tele- phone. The charge sheet also noted that members of the family had been expelled from Kiev after meeting with Jewish activists. According to the SSSJ, the Poltinnkov family was told that if they didn't find work in 15 days they would be charged with para- sitism. Such a charge car- ries a sentence of one to two years in jail. Kiril Khenkin, a former leading Moscow activist and journalist .who emigrated to Israel last October and is now in the United States .on a national speaking tour, told more than 100 students that a "wall of silence" was again being imposed on Soviet Jews. Addressing a New York area campus action confer- ence at Beit Ephraim at Columbia University spon- sored by the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, Khenkin declared that "no one has to be under the illusion that things are getting better" for Jews in the Soviet Union who are seeking to emigrate. He described emigration as still "selective, restrictive and absolutely unfree." To protest the Soviet Union's refusal to abide by the United Nations Declara- tion of Human Rights, the Greater New York Confer- ence on Soviet Jewry and the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry declared March 11-15 "Exodus Week." A series of actions took place at the Isaiah Peace Wall opposite the UN including vigils, fasts, studies, and readings from the book of Exodus, the UN Declaration of Human Rights and appeals by Soviet Jews. The plight of Valery and Galina Panov was drama- tized Tuesday on the occa- sion of Valery's 35th birthday by a rally at Plaza Square on Fifth Ave. and 59th St. Par- ticipants included celebrities of stage, screen, opera, bal- let and city officials. A rally of concern was held in London organized by the British Committee for the Release of the Panovs. * * * Christians, Jews Join Consultation in Chicago CHICAGO_ (JTA) — More than 50 Chicago-area Jewish and Christian leaders met in the offices of the National Conference of Christians and Jews here to study and act on the plight of Soviet Jewry. This Midwest Regional Con- sultation on Soviet Jewry was co-sponsored by the National Interreligious Task Force on Soviet Jewry, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, Chicago Conference on Religion and Race, and the American Jewish Commit- tee. In Encino, Calif., Odessa Street, at the crossing of Moorpark, was renamed for Mendele Moher Sforim. The ceremony was ushered in by the playing of taps and the unveiling of a papier mache tombstone which focussed on the slated desecration by Sov- iet authorities of the Odessa Jewish cemetery. Congress- man Barry Goldwater and other officials hosted the event. Mendele Moher Sforim, famous Russian Jewish writer, is buried in the Odessa Jewish cemetery. Purim. Observed at Lerner Residence LONDON (JTA) — Jewish sourc_es in the Soviet Union reported that large numbers of Jews in Moscow and other Soviet centers celebrated Purim. One of the Purim parties was held in the home of Prof. Alexander Lerner. Ten Kiev Jews sent a mes- sage of Purim greetings to Israel's president Ephraim Katzir. Novelist Outspoken on Jewish Issues WASHINGTON (JTA) — Soviet prize winning novelist Victor Nekrasov, who on Monday in Moscow, de- nounced official Soviet con- trols on writers and litera- ture, has also been outspoken Baptist Church Group Sees Israel NEW YORK — A group of 30 leaders of the American Baptist Churches, U. S. A., was in Israel for a 10-day tour to examine Jewish- Christian-Moslem relations in light of the tensions resulting from the Yom Kippur War. Among those on the tour was Rev. Louis Johnson, pastor of Friendship Baptist Church of Detroit, a black congrega- tion. The tour was arranged in cooperation with the Ameri- can Jewish Committee, THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS through its Christian Visitors 42 Friday, March 15, 1974 to Israel Program, and the Israel Government Tourist Office. Rev. R. Dean Goodwin, public liaison executive of the American Baptist Churches, said the Baptist group will hold its biennial convention next year, and the findings of the study tour group may contribute to formation of a policy state- ment adopted at that time. Another group of 30 Priests- journalists toured the coun- try under the auspices of the WITH commission on interreligious affairs of the American Zion- JULES and MARY ABRAMS ist information and organiza- tion department. News, Interviews and Beautiful Music Among the guests were Every' Monday, Wednesday and editors and publishers of Thursday, 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. some of the largest circu- lated Christian periodicals in the U.S. such as Thomas Benz, editor of "Ecumenic Magazine" which has a re- ported circulation of 2,500,000 and Art Armstrong, editor of "Defender Magazine." Armstrong said he intends to return ti Israel next month to produce a documentary on "The Promised Land." At the same time, seven Canadian mayors are also on tour by invitation of the min- istry of tourism and El Al. The delegation includes Pierre Benoit of Ottawa, — ROZHINKES mit MANDLEN THE JEWISH HOUR ON RADIO 1090 AR DiTRPITi Na I NM BRIM RADIO STATION on Jewish issues, an in- formed source said here. After the author had been publicly reprimanded by Premier Nikita S. Khruschev for being too complimentary to America in his hook, "On Both Sides of the Ocean," following his 11-day tour of the United States in 1960, Khrushcehv's successors lifted the ban on him. But in 1969 Nekrasov again was in difficulties for making a speech on the 25th anniver- sary of the massacre of Jews at Babi Yar near Kiev. Dur- ing World War II Soviet of- ficial policy has banned the erection of any memorial to the Jews at Babi Yar which is marked by a simple stone that memorializes the site but makes no mention of Jews. Javits Jacob K. Sen. (R., N.Y.) has asked the State Department to make "proper representations" to the Soviet government re- g a r d i n g non-delivery of cables and interruptions of telephone communications by Americans to Soviet resi- dents. In a letter to Secre- tary of State Henry A. Kiss- inger Javits attached "a list" of 31 of more than 1,000 "un- delivered wires" and also a list of phone calls that "have recently not been consum- mated or have been consist- ently interrupted in mid- passage." Gilles Lamontagne of Que- bec, Steven Juba of Winni- peg, Rod Sykes of Calgary, M. Sears of Saskatoon, Henry Baker of Regina and Jane Bigelow of London, Ont. Poale Agudath Israel Seeks Religious Olim NEW YORK — Poale Agu- dath Israel of America is seeking observant olim age 18 and over for Kibutz Shaalvim and other religious kibutzim in the Poale Agu- dath network. To promote religious aliya, Yitzhak Hildesheimer and Benjamin Luria, both of Kibutz Shaalvim, are parti- cipating in the Jewish Agency's Aliya Month pro- gram by encouraging young religious families to join the kibutz. For on interview with the shlihim, write Rabbi Schlomo Rabinowitz, executive direc- tor of Poale Agudath Israel. 147 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y. 10036. AAJE to Seek Trends in Jewish Education NEW YORK—The Ameri- can Association for Jewish Education and the American Jewish Committee will co- sponsor a national workshop here March 24-25 on trends and developments in com- munal education. A select group of Jewish educators and communal leaders will examine models in communal and other noncongregational J e w i s h schools. Participants will in- clude communal school prin- cipals, directors of local cen- tral agencies of Jewish edu- cation, federation executives and representatives of na- tional Jewish denominational bodies. Summer Institute at Brandeis U. WALTHAM, Mass.—Bran- deis University, under a three-year grant by the Ja- cob Ziskind Charitable Trust of Boston, has established an in-residence Summer Insti- tute on Jewish family life and history, to be conducted Aug. 11-25. The program is designed to bring together in a campus environment men and women who have demonstrated their commitment to the social and cultural values of Juda- ism as a vital force in the community with scholars who will provide a sound base in history, philosophy and the social sciences. Brandeis President Mar- ver H. Bernstein said the programs will "provide lead- ers of federations and other community organizations with extensive knowledge of Juda- ism both as an historical and as a relevant contemporary concept in order to bring greater quality to the fulfill- ment of their leadership roles." The two-week in-residence program, first of its kind at Brandeis, will include semi- nars on Jewish values in family life, Yiddish literature and current social and polit- ical developments in Israel. Directing the Institute will be Leonard J. Fein, Bran- deis' Klutznick Professor of Contemporary Jewish Family Studies and director of the university's Hornstein Pro- gram in Jewish Communal Service. A great many men have trouble figuring out whether they are facing temptation- nr missing an opportunity. OVER- EIGHT GIRLS and BOYS 7 70 17 IF YOU WANT TO LOSE 5 OR 50 LBS. • Individual diets • New Indoor Courts • • • • • • Full Sports program Indoor Gyr-rt Olympic size swimming pool Cultural activities Winter follow-up C.I.T. Program • Pollen Free CAMP SHANE Ferndale, N.Y. 12734 Accredited APC ACA Selma & k r Ettenberg Co-owners/Directors 2026 E. 37th St., Box 18 Brooklyn, N.Y. 1123i SEND FOR BROCHURE 4 914-292:4644 Ir 212-645-9112 Ir vN ARROWHEAD RANCH Michigan's Finest Dude Ranch BOYS & GIRLS 8-16 Emphasis in Horsemanship MINIMUM 3 HOURS RIDING DAILY ALSO Swimming - Archery - Tennis ONE TO EIGHT WEEK SESSIONS BEGINNING JUNE 30 to AUG. 24 Contact WILLIAM MORGAN After 6 p.m. 722-3921 YOUNG ISRAEL CAMP STONE MOSHEVET El AKIVA The director of Camp Stone the overnight camp operated by Young Israel and Bnei Akiva, located in Sugar Grove, Pa., will be in Detroit for slide presentation and dis- cussion with interested parents and campers (age 8 to 15). Date : Sunday, March 24. Time : 2:00 P.M. Place: Young Israel of Oak Woods 24061 Coolidge for additional indormation contact Shmuel Barchad 544-1549 t ill ■ „A- A