4.111mummiummers•-•

Soviet Harassment Continuing

(Continued from page 12)

other young Soviet Jew, is
being harassed and threat-
ened with enforced con-
scription. His parents do not
want to emigrate. In an-
other development, the
NCSJ said that Vladimir
Kislik and Boris Tsatskis,
both of Kiev, applied for
renunciation of Soviet citi-
zenship and were refused.

The Student Struggle
for Soviet Jewry has
learned of another victim
of Soviet harassment, un-
known in the West since
his trial in 1971.

Rostislav Natanovich Ep-
pelfeld of Kharkov was sent-
enced to six years' special
regime — the most severe
form of imprisonment —
for "anti-Soviet agitation
and propaganda." Eppelfeld
stated to the court that his
motivations were not anti-
Soviet, but arose from his
desires to emigrate to Is-
rael.
Eppelfeld continued his
pro-Israel statements and
frequently protested the
anti-Semitism of the camp

administration in the
Potma labor camp, where
several other Jewish prison-
ers of conscience are also in-
carcerated. In retaliation,
he was sentenced to the no-
torious Vladimir Prison for
three years, from May 1972
to May 1975, then shipped
back to Potma.
Eppelfeld may be con-
tacted by writing him at
Uchr. 5110/1 Zh. Kh., Mos-
cow, RSFSR, USSR; and his
wife Sofia and their
10-year-old daughter at:
Prospect Kossiora 156, cor-
pus 5, apt. 27, Kharkov,
Ukrainian SSR, USSR.

In Paris, three members
of the Rothschild family
were in the front ranks of
20,000 French Jews who
marched in a mass demon-
stration against the con-
tinued harassment of Jews
in the Soviet Union.

The march was organized
by the Representative Coun-
cil of Jewish Institutes in
France (CRIF) on the occa-
sion of a national day of so-
lidarity for Soviet Jews.

vuouer 11/, 17/3 13

IM VCTI UII JCVTI,f1 ncvv3

-,41

place in Marseilles where
3,000 demonstrated for
Soviet Jews; in Nice,
Strasbourg, Lille and Tou-
louse.

In New York it was re-
ported that Lazar Berman,
the Soviet pianist who until
recently has seldom been
heard in the West, will
make his New York debut
Jan. 17 with the Brooklyn
Philharmonic at the Brook-
lyn Academy of Music.
A famed Soviet Jewish
violinist and his musical
family will soon arrive in
the U.S. with the help of
United HIAS Service (He-
brew Immigrant Aid So-
ciety). Albert Markov, his
wife and two sons are now
in Vienna, being processed
for immigration to the
United States.
During the first nine
months of this year, 4,100
Soviet Jewish refugees have
arrived in the U.S. with the
help of HIAS.

Deadline

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The Jewish News local
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Almogi 'Assured' Agency Post

JERUSALEM (JTA) — would hinge on the votes of
Labor Party circles claim the World Confederation
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Mayor Yosef Almogi to the Mizrachi.
The 21 "non-Zionist"
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Party Leadership Bureau Governors met in caucus
was expected to formally last Thursday and resolved
that both Dulzin and Al-
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Meanwhile, the Laborites mogi would be "acceptable"
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They agreed, too, that
110-member Zionist Gen-
eral Council to guarantee whomever the Zionist Gen-
Almogi's election when the eral Council elects as World
Council meets in January. Zionist Organization chair-
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The Jewish Agency board
Agency Executive would fol-
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