THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS U. S. Congressmen Protest Repression of Soviet Jews (Continued from Page 1) Sen. Edward M. Kennedy urged Mr. Nixon to press for t'open doors for Soviet Jews." Kennedy described his recent midnight meeting with Soviet activists on his visit to Mos- cow. "After listening to them, I bring you a message," he told the crowd. "They remain committed to their ideal. They remain firm in their faith. And they remain de- termined to live in Israel in freedom." Israel's Foreign Minister Yigal Allon told the ICnesset Tuesday night that Israel had "reason to hope" that the United States would raise the issue of Soviet Jewry "at the highest level" during the summit conference in Mos- cow. He said the issue hvl been discussed with President Nixon during his recent visit here, and t h,e r e were "grounds for assuming" that the appeal "had not fallen on deaf ears." Anon, who is also deputy premier, was responding to motions by Likud on the stepped-up harassment of Jewish activists in advance of the Nixon visit to Moscow. The Zionist General Coun- cil sent President Nixon a cable asking his intervention. Nuclear physicist Andrei D. Sakharov on Monday in Mos- cow urged _President Nixon and Leonid I. Brezhnev to take up the issues -of free emigration and free exchange of information in their talks. He asserted the importance, of "the freedom of emigra- tion and return" for all per- sons, as set out in Article 13 of the United Nations Gen- eral Declaration of Human Rights. In another communication to President Nixon, Harold Ostroff, president of the Workmen's Circle, assured him that "No Soviet Jew poses a threat to your visit" to Moscow. "Reports that So- viet Jews are being corralled and imprisoned during your stay should evoke strongest protests from you." Reports over the weekend that the Soviet government was prepared to guarantee in writing to allow 45,000 Jews to emigrate annually to Israel failed to receive confirmation at the White House, the State Department, or in the Senate. The National Conference on Soviet Jewry and the Great- er New York Conference on Soviet Jewry reacted to the reported 45,000 per annum quota offer with disdain. The Soviets are "playing a cyni- cal numbers game with hu- man lives," said a joint state- ment issued by Jerry Good- man and Malcolm Hoenlein, the executive directors of the national and New York groups. The fact that the Russians may have advanced a quota is an admission by the So- viets "that countless Jews are eager to leave the USSR," the statement said. It added, "In principle, we are strongly opposed• to negotiations based on num- bers rather than on human rights. Our goal is total and free emigration." (According to reports reaching London from Soviet Jewish activists, the quota promise given Kissinger, if true, would not solve the problem because it would be filled by Jews from the Baf- fle states, Georgia and Mol- davia, who presently receive visas while Jews in MoScow and Leningrad would still be unable to get them.) The reports said that Kiss- inger on June 6 discussed the alleged Soviet offer with Sens. Henry M. Jackson (D. Wash.), Abraham Ribicoff (D., Conn.) and Jabob K. Javits (R. N.Y.). Aides to those senators said at the time that "some movement" was indicated by the Soviet government through Kissinger toward re- laxing its emigration policy and that they had asked Kissinger to discuss the matter further with the So- viets. They refused to discuss "numbers." Some senatorial sources suggested that the reported Soviet offer of 45,000 was de- liberately leaked at this time by the State Department sources to create a situation which would indicate to the Soviet leaders that the Nixon administration is doing its utmost to kill the Jackson Amendment. A number of Soviet Jewish activists have been given permission to emigrate to Is- rael before President Nixon Limited Number of Openings Still Available For Day Camp and Nursery Mishkan Israel Lubavitcher Center -14000 W. 9 MILE RD. Oak Park, Mich. You can now register your son or daughter in our DAY CAMP Monday - Thursday 1-4 Ages 3-6 Air Conditioned Play Area — Outdoor Play- ground Area — Snacks — Trips — Transportation — Individual Attention Cheapest Rates In Michigan Call Mrs. Fraidel Segal at 548-2666 or 548-0446 arrives in Moscow, the Stu- dent Struggle for Soviet Jewry reported. They include Boris Ruben- shtein, 49, a Leningrad phy- sicist; Itzhak Goitberg, 46, Kishinev mathematics pro- fessor; Alexander Galich, 55, of Moscow, composer of sa- tiric songs widely circulated "underground" in Russia; and Alexander Korotukov of Kiev, a screenwriter. In other developments, a group of activists who staged a demonstration in Red Square were picked up by the militia. In Kishinev, 25 Jews staging a vigil were detained and later released. In Kiev, Vladimir Kisyluk, a night' watchman at a marina, was beaten up at work. Anna and Yuri Berkovsky went on trial in Novosibirsk Tuesday on charges of -pos- session of weapons and cur- rency speculation. In Mexico City, the Soviet Embassy for the first time, accepted a petition on behalf of a Jewish prisoner in the USSR. The petition, asking free- dom for Sylva Zalmanson, who is serving a 10-year sen- tence, was brought to the embassy on the fourth anni- versary of the first Lenin- grad hijack trial by a delega- tion of Jewish women. In New York, about 40 stu- dents demonstrated for two hours June 18 outside Lincoln Center where the Moiseyev Dance Company of Moscow - opened its current U. S. tour. Hungarian Rabbinical Seminary Awaits Students From Russia BUDAPEST (JTA) — Ten Soviet Jews have been au- thorized to come to Hungary to study at the Budapest Theological Seminary, ac- cording to '-unconfirmed re- ports here. If the reports prove to be true, the total - of 12 students currently attending the sem- inary would be raised to a record high of 22 students. The seminary now counts two Soviets among its stu- dents, Chaim Levitish, 20, of Moscow, and Adolph Chae- vitch, 20, of Birobidzhan. Hungarian Jewish commu- nity leader Geza Seifert told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that while in New York recently, he had been informed of the news by an American r a bb i, Arthur Schneir of New York. He said, however, that Hungarian officials had not yet confirmed the informa- tion. There is no indication as to when the Soviet rabbinical students might be expected to arrive in Hungary, and there is some speculation that their final number may be less than the announced 10. Seifert said he expected to find out more details on the subject during a trip to Mos- cow. During his Moscow visit, the Jewish leader said Call Goes Through: Rabbi's Wife Telephones Soviet Jewish Famtly "Operation Interference" made a major breakthrough last week as a Detroiter — one of .a few persons through- out the U. S. — reached a Soviet Jew by telephone. A Soviet campaign is under way to disconnect the telephones of its Jewish citizens. Participating in the project of the Detroit Action Com- mittee .for Soviet Jewry, Sarah Gorrelick, wife of Rabbi Benjamin H. Gorre- lick, rabbi emeritus of Cong. Beth Achim, contacted Shaul Goldblatt, father of Mikhail Goldblatt, a Hebrew teacher and mathematician. "The experience shook me to no end," she said. "It's something I'll always re- member." Mrs. Gorrelick made the call to Russia by using a fictitious name, Mary Brown, as the participants in the project were instructed. After a four-hour wait, the over- seas operator came on the line with the call. "I almost forgot that I was Mary Brown and not Sarah Gorrelick,"_she said. When the call was put through, she identified her- self in Yiddish. "I am Mary Brown, a Jew from the United States. I bring greet- ings from all of the Jews in the United States." She asked for the younger Goldblatt, but he was not at home, so she spoke to his father. Mrs. Gorrelick_ said he "was eager to talk." She conversed with the elder Goldblatt for about 10- 12 minutes, during which he kept repeating the - word "please" as if making an appeal. She said he thanked her several , times during their talk and "didn't want to hang up the phone." How- ever, Mrs. Gorrelick said, there was fear in his voice. Near the end of the con- versation, Rabbi Gorrelick got on the line and blessed Goldblatt in Hebrew and Yiddish. Mrs. Gorrelick end- ed the conversation with a wish that this year he reach Jerusalem. Among the participants in the project was Alan Rosen- berg, chairman of the De- troit Action Committee for Soviet Jewry. NEVER FORGETS No man learns the right way so quickly and well as the one who has once been misled. Speeding across intersec- tions is bad business, motorists. 18—Friday, June 28, 1974 he will attend a ceremony in Don't give up just because honor of the Soviet commu- you happen to be down. nity leader, Efroim Grigorie- vich Kaplun, who is cele- brating his 80th birthday. WAKE UP YOUR The Budapest Theological WARDROBE . Seminary is the sole institu- tion of its kind still operating in Eastern Europe and there- men's fore must serve a wide radius. However, apart from clothe s the two Soviet students, there with are no foreigners at- tending the the school. the Valery Panov Claims wok- Atheism but Loves Israel JERUSALEM — Ballet . of dancer Valery Panov, now living in Israel after winning his two-year struggle to emi- grate from the Soviet Union, admitted that he and his Gentile wife, Galina, are atheists. 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