UP FRONT Pollards Solicit Jewish Support For Son's Case urging of his parents, Pollard said. When Jonathan finished his Staff Writer studies at Stanford, he entered the ome boys dream of becoming Navy over his father's objections. For the first several years, secret agents. They spend their days jumping in im- Jonathan thrived in the Navy, Pollard aginary black cars, slipping on said. He received three superior sunglasses and pretending they're the citations. Yet Jonathan was disturbed when indomitable James Bond. he saw that the United States had But not Jonathan Jay Pollard. Pollard was an idealistic boy who withheld from Israel information played the cello and loved sports, vital to its security, Pollard said. Pollard claimed, for example, that foreign languages and books, his the U.S. administration passed to father said. Israel doctored data which resulted in His fascination with learning was the Israel Defense Force losing almost encouraged by his parents, who made one-third of its men during the Yom certain Jonathan brought his school lessons along whenever the family Kippur War. Had his son revealed information traveled. "But the one mistake we (as that would S have hurt the United parents) may have made was that we States, Pollard said, "I would have exposed our children . to things been very unhappy." But all the infor- Jewish, good and bad," said Professor mation Joizathan passed on to Israel Morris Pollard, speaking this - week "had to do with the defenses of Israel before the Zionist Organization of only." Jonathan was arrested in America. Among these experiences, he said, November 1985 by the FBI at the were visits to Bergen-Belsen and Israeli Embassy, where he thought he would be able to receive immigrant Dachau. Pollard said he feared that "in status, Pollard said. He subsequent- some way, we were contributing to ly was put on trial and received a life what happened to Jonathan after he sentence. Pollard does not take issue with began serving in naval intelligence. He carried within his soul apparent- his son's guilt. What does anger him ly this statement that it (the is the sentence his son received and Holocaust) should never, never hap- the "avalanche of accusations" that followed his arrest. Among these were pen again." Pollard and his wife, Mollie, are that Jonathan was a drug addict — a traveling across the country to charge his father labeled ridiculous publicize the case of their son, a because as a top Navy analyst he former Navy analyst convicted of spy- was tested weekly for substance ing for Israel and sentenced in March abuse — and that he was a mercenary. Jonathan received from the Israel 1987 to life imprisonment. Standing in front of the flags of government money for his expenses the United States and Israel, Pollard only, Pollard said. He offered as proof the results of recalled his son's first visit to the polygraph exams Jonathan took over Jewish state. After graduating from high a nine-month period. The examiner school, Jonathan spent the summer concluded there was no evidence that at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot. Jonathan was a mercenary; that he He was so happy in Israel that he acted with no animosity toward the returned home only after the constant -Continued on Page 10 ELIZABETH KAPLAN S Marc Lindy blows the shofar. Dial-A-Shofar For Shut Ins Provided By Synagogue STAFF REPORT T hanks to Dr. Marc Lindy, those who can't get to ser- vices on the High Holy Days can dial in the new year with the sound of the shofar. The Troy Jewish Congregation will host the first Dial-A-Shofar at the urging of Dr. Lindy, a Southfield podiatrist whose hobbies include long distance bike trips, the French horn an _ d making shofars. Dial-a-shofar comes to 643-6520 on Sunday for erev Rosh Hashanah and will remain on the line for 48 hours. The recording will return on Yom Kippur. Dr. Lindy says he came up with the idea one day while thinking about shut ins and members of the disabl- ed community. Those who dial the number will hear an introduction by Rabbi Arnold Sleutelberg, who on the tape shares a brief history of the shofar. Next come the sounds of tekiah, shevarim and teruah. ROUND UP Strike Begins, Ends. Quickly Almost as soon as Hillel Day School teachers went on strike last week they settled, and school started on time on Tuesday. According to Marcia Fishman, executive director of the Conservative day school, the school and teachers were close to a settle- ment on Aug. 31. But after the teachers met that even- ing, they decided to strike the next day. By the end of the day, however, a settlement had been reched. Shula Fleischer, head of the teachers' negotiating team said that the teachers went on strike because "manage- ment wants to put a wedge between faculty and faculty," between new hires and long- time staffers. She said that management also wanted the teachers to give back some benefits, including some sick days. Fishman said that the strike was resolved when each side decided to give up something, but she declined to elaborate. Nudel Raps Israeli Life Aviv — (JTA) Former prisoner of conscience Ida Nudel is disappointed with the way Soviet Jews are treated in Israel and thinks some of them are better off in the United States. Nudel, who won a 16-year battle for emigration from the Soviet Union when she arriv- ed in Israel last Oct. 15, ex- pressed her disillusinment while taping an interview for a television show, "The Year That Was," to be aired Sept. 13. "Israel and Israelis are in- different to immigration from the Soviet Union," Nudel con- tended. Soviet Jews "prefer to be taxi drivers in New York and to earn money rather than driving a taxi in Israel and engaging in self- degradation," she was quoted as saying. A former economist- engineer at the Soviet In- stitute for Planning and Pro- duction, Nudel said, "When Soviet Jews ask me whether to immigrate to Israel, I tell them: If you are an academi- cian, don't come here before you learn some menial profes- sion:' THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5