Arrest, Anti-Semitic Poems Confront Harassed Soviet Jewish Activists LONDON (JTA)—Ten So- viet Jewish activists who were detained last weekend by Russian police were re- leased Monday, according to Jewish sources in the Soviet Union. The 10 included Viktor Pol- sky, a famous physicist and one of the leaders of the ac- by his car and injured. Evi- tivists. deuce points to the fact that Rumors persist, however, the woman was trying to that another show trial is in commit suicide. The 10 Jews, the making. Polsky still faces all of wham have been denied a charge of dangerous driv- exit visas to Israel, were held ing, stemming from an inci- in a Moscow jail until they dent in which a 19-year-old were released. The sources woman allegedly was struck said that none were charged. Others besides Polsky were Alexander Slepak, Vladimir Prestin, Valery Slepak, Dmi- try Romm, Pavel Abromo- vich, Arkady Rittman, Leo- nid Khorshevoi, Alexander Luntz and Mikhail Polatski. According to the reports, Our secret police picked' up five of the activists last Saturday and detained. the other five at after they organized a small demonstration outside the offices of Intourist, the state travel agency, demanding We Cater for All Occasions—Seating for 400 permission to emigrate. Jewish sources in the So- 211TO ■ Lt;1111t;41;2;4 '12;4 nt .;1 1 ■ ;2.'41 W.f... V.I.;4 ► • "bat. ' 4lit;111r at; 41%4;4 V . 4 7.1 171'11.;: „ I ...Z . I 0."*".: „ I ip:7,1 rr1 6' ; 7 31t10: .4 " . II "7.4 ■ .;...111:;:1"7:1 p.- A4 ip.;: "*.;: „11 viet Union reported that 13 Minsk Jews, including Col. Yefim Davidovich and "Red Army Heroes" Naum Alshan- sky and Lev Ovsitcher, have appealed to Soviet Prosecu- tor General Roman Rudenko 3t to start legal proceedings against the anti-Semitic By- elorussian poet Maxim Luz- hantin, whose new collection contains anti-Semitic poems echoing the tone and contents of Nazi wartime propaganda. In their letter, the 13 pro- testors point out that Luzhan- So. of 12Mile • tin does not actually use the word Jew but transparently Across from The TEL-12 MALL substitutes for it a similarly *: sounding "Khari" (polecat in Byelorussian). The "Khar- is" are then described as . .' bt; • lbw v itv 1,-2.;41,z * babt;; Kt ..? "LW "It ;II bat7,4 "Lt." lot; - 11,11... OZ . . ,1111I P— I ,:;:i r-11 ► PrZI P.... ■ :11 P.717: "base and fiendish. How did trinleMi OZ . P.T Shaiwitioah Couittry Club For All Occasions Call Banquet Manager 682-4300 V;LV;4 • 11. ";.. 4 TAMAROFF i BUICK-OPEL-HONDA rti. is STILL BEST BUYE1 pq 3t 28585 TELEGRAPH, V EH V in; 353-1300 I;t;4 V..3 tt: When You Think FATHER! 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Davidovich was wounded five times and awarded 15 medals; Alshansky was awarded 13 orders and med- als; and Ovsitcher received 15 orders and medals. Meanwhile Soviet censors expunged a fifth of the text of Khrushchev's memoirs which the Kremlin had al- lowed to he published in West Europe and America. The Soviet censorship was partic- ularly intent on cutting out all references by Khrushchev to the Jewish question in Soviet Russia. The former Kremlin chief's memoirs are now being published in the U.S. and in a number of West European countries. Sources reported that Val- ery Panov has been formally stripped of his title, "Hon- ored Artist," by a decree of the Presidium of the Sup- reme Soviet. The move was due mainly to mounting Soviet anger at the campaign against the forthcoming visit of the Bol- shoi Ballet to London, ac- cording to the sources. Those close to Panov say he fears that the withdrawal of the honorary title may only be the prelude to some more serious measure, such as a court action on charges of "malingering" or "parasi- tism." There has been a ground- swell protest movement in London against the ballet company because of the Sov- iet treatment of dissidents in general and Jewish appli- cants for exit visas to go to Israel in particular. The latest development has been the disclosure. to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency by a spokesman at 10 Down- ing Street that the "prime minister will not attend the first night of the Bolshoi Bal- let in London on June 12. He ment on this night." Under the circumstances, no senior member of the gov- ernment can - possibly assoc- iate himself with the Bolshoi visit, observers noted. Lord Laurence Olivier, who has been in the forefront of the campaign to secure emigration rights for Valery and Galina Panov, declared that it would be wrong and self-defeating for the friends of the PanoVs to demand that the British government ban the Bol:shoi Ballet tour. "How does one ask that two dancers be free to prac- tice their art where and how they choose while denying a whole company of artists that self-same right?" Lord Oliver asked. Jan Krylsky and his moth- er, Rachel, arrived in Vien- na on the wav to Israel, it was reported by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry. The Soviet Jewish activist had been confined by Soviet authorities to the Sechovka mental institute. release was due, the NCSJ said, to international pressure. Krylsky was confined to the institute about a year ago and given "corrective treat- ment" for his activities in the struggle to emigrate. Kryl- sky, 21, had been accused by Soviet authorities of being a "militant Zionist." The Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry reported that 34 Leningrad Jews have de- clared they will stage a hun- ger strike June 15, the anni- versary of the Leningrad "hi- jack" arrests in 1970. The SSSJ also reported that 18 Soviet Jews were turned hack by police as they at- tempted to go to B_abi Yar outside Kiev to place a wreath in memory_ of the children killed in Ma'alot. U.S.-USSR Trade Expansion Agreement Recommended by Joint Commission • WASHINGTON (JTA) = A U.S.-Soviet commercial com- mission recommended at the end of a two-day meeting here that both countries con- clude a long term agreement to facilitate economic, indus- trial and technical coopera- tion. Secretary of Commerce Frederick Dent, who attend- ed the meeting, said the agreement would not need Senate ratification and ex- pressed hope the pact would be signed during President Nixon's visit to Moscow next month. The trade authorities Chief Rabbi Goren to Address NY Parley predicted that U.S.-Soviet trade would again exceed $1, 000.000,000 this year. The Export-Import Bank, meanwhile, granted a $180,- 000,000 loan to the Soviet Un- ion to help finance a fertilizer plant. The loan is the largest Ex-Im Bank has ever grant- ed to the Soviet Union. Eight provincial governors from the Soviet Union paid a courtesy' call on President Nixon at the White House Tuesday at the start of an eight-day visit to the United States. They were invited by the U.S. Governors Confer- ence to repay a visit by a group of American governors to the Soviet Union in Octo- ber 1971. Their visit follows closely on the four-day Washington visit last week by the eight- member delegation of the Supreme Soviet, which ad- vocated closer U.S.-Soviet trade relations. An effort by the Jewish Community Council to com- municate with the group failed. 2 Arrested in Attempt to Destroy Russian's Car NEW YORK (JTA) — Two youths who allegedly tried to set fire to a Soviet attache's car which was parked near the Soviet Mission to the Un- ited Nations were charged last weekend with malicious mischief. According to police, the youths, identified as Victor Van Cier, 17, and Stanley Spirn, 19, both of Queens, emptied a three-gallon can of gasoline over the car and were about to ignite it when police officers spotted them and arrested the duo. The car belonged to Vladimir Yezhov, a member of the mission. On May 19, a car regis- tered to the Soviet Mission and parked in the Far- Rock- away section of New York was set afire and heavily damaged. An anonymous cal- ler to two news wire agen- cies in the city said the "Sternist Committee" had set the fire to the car to pro- test the Soviet Union's cam- paign against Russian Jews. NEW YORK—Chief Rabbi of Israel Shlomo Goren will address the Rabbinical Coun- cil of America's annual con- vention to be held June 24- 28 in Miami Beach, it was announced by Rabbi Louis Bernstein, president. Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveit- chik, talmudic scholar and Yeshiva University professor, also will speak. More than 600 Orthodox rabbis from the U.S. and Canada are ex- pected to attend. The theme of the confer- ence, "Charting a Course for Future of Torah Judaism," will include such discussion THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS topics as "The Status of Re- Friday, May 31, 1974-17 ligious Jewry in Israel," "The Progress of Orthodox Education in the U.S." and "The Role of the Rabbi in Advancing the Principles of Orthodox Judaism." JIM BOLOGNA Dutch Jewish Paper Seeks Govt. Subsidy AMSTERDAM (JTA)—Due to financial difficulties, the only remaining Dutch JeWish weekly, "Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad," (NIW) has ap- plied to The Netherlands Ministry of Culture for an an- nual subsidy. The culture ministry re- cently undertook subsidizing a certain number of publica- tions which could not make financial ends meet, but whose continued existence was considered important. Over the past few years, the NIW, whose subscribers number 4,000, has been guar- anteed a subsidy of 80,000 guilders ( about $30,000) an- nually by the Dutch Ashken- azi Congregation. Men see a little, presume a great deal, and so jump to the conclusion.—John Locke. Formerly of Southfield Is Now Associated With the MERRILLWOOD BARBER SHOP Specializing in: Hair Cutting and Styling Coloring & Straightening Manicures Available 251 MERRILL Across from Birmingham Theatre For Appointment • 642-3253