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Sunday T.00 a..m.-6..00 N013 GE'sTIIE BEST QUALITNI LOVES' T PRICES Sinai Hot Kosher CORNED BEEF. . 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I I I $ 4 99 b Extra Fancy Washington Golden DELICIOUS APPLES. 1 1 1 1 1 1 49* U.S. #1 10 lb. bag IDAHO POTATOES. . FRESH BROCCOLI 69 cbunch 1 1 1 1 FRESH CUT FLOWERS DAILY $ 139 MIGDAL CHEESE $5 99 3 lb. loaf 10 oz. pkg 3199* GREENFIELD'S NOODLES. . Borden's '1/2% SKIN/ MIL K . I 1 1 1 1 I 1 I I 1. 79 1J al. All Specials Good Through May 4th, 1988 law•• ■ ••si• ome — The redis- covery of a pro-Hitler, anti-Semitic letter by pre-war Italian physicist Et- tore Majorana has added to the mystery surrounding him. Majorana, who disappeared without a trace in 1938, was one of a group of young Italian physicists who, work- ing with Enrico Fermi, in- itiated studies on energy that eventually led to the develop- ment of the atomic bomb. At least two books have been written about Ma- jorana's disappearance, with one author claiming the physicist either committed suicide or entered. a monastery due to guilt after realizing the potential destructive capacity of the atom. Majorana was doing research in Leipzig, Germany when he wrote the pro-Nazi letter to future Nobel physics laureate Emilio Segre, in March 1933 — two months after Hitler came to power. In 1966, physicist Edoardo Amaldi, who had worked with Majorana and Segre in the 1930s, mentioned for the first time that Majorana had greatly admired Germany and had written to Segre to defend Nazi policies. Segre in 1975 confirmed he had received such a letter, but claimed that it was lost when the ocean liner Andrea Doria sank in the Atlantic. Only in recent months has Serge admitted that the letter still was in his possession. It will be published in full in the magazine Storia Contem- (Contemporary poranea History), but the newspaper La Stampa printed excerpts. Publication came when con- siderable attention has been focussed on Jews in Italy in the wake of the continuing clashes in Israel's ad- ministered territories, in reaction to the Kurt Waldheim affair, in response to shifting relationships bet- ween Jews and the Vatican and in a re-examination of the Jewish experience in Italy during World War II. American historian Susan Zuccotti's book on the Holocaust in Italy is just be- ing issued now in Italian translation and is being treated as a major literary event. Majorana's letter to Segre, dated May 25, 1933, was an apology for Hitler's anti- Semitic policies and a defense of the Nazi philosophy, with which the writer apparently knew his friends were not in agreement. He wrote: "It may appear that the proportion of Jews in Germany is tiny in light of the false statistics (one percent). "In reality, they dominate finance, the press, the political parties and in Berlin they were even in the numerical majority in some professional fields, for exam- ple, prosecutors. But neither religious motives nor racial prejudice is enough to explain by itself the impossibility of coexistence. "In Italy we are used to con- sidering the Jews as a historical survival to which we do not deny our full respect and we don't object if any of them feels proud of his origin," he wrote. ". . . In Germany, the situa- tion was very different and, without analyzing the causes, one can say with certainty that there existed a Jewish question that did not show any signs of resolving itself spontaneously," he continued. He said, "Jews had no desire to assimilate and that it!s inconceivable that a population of 65 million should allow itself to be guid- ed by a minority of 600,000 who openly declared that they wanted to constitute a people by themselves." "Some affirm that the Jewish question would not ex- ist if the Jews knew the art of keeping their mouths glosed." Majorana also wrote that the situation of the Jews in Germany at the time was not as bad as it seemed outside, and he accused new Jewish immigrants into Germany — "the dangerous Jewish im- migration from primitive communities in Slavic coun- tries, mainly Poland" — of formenting troubles. "Among those new im- migrants are provocateur rab- bis who, so they say, invite persecutions in order to solidify the unity of their peo- ple," he wrote. In making public the letter, Segre said he had been sur- prised that "a mind as acute and critical as that of Ettore could have accepted all that propaganda of Goebbels he read in the newspapers, without realizing that even if some of the criticism (very few) were not completely without foundation, the en- tirety had an iniquitous and sinister scope."