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DAY AND FOR ALL YOUR GOOD WISHES, CONTRIBUTIONS AND GIFTS IN MY HONOR. WOLF GOLD Rochester (JTA) — A U.S. magistrate was expected to decide this week whether Anne Henderson Pollard has been subjected to cruel and unusual punishment by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, or if her medical complaints are exaggerated to generate public sympathy for her hus- band, convicted spy Jonathan Pollard. A student group last week protested the sentences and demanded the release of the Pollards at the Justice Department in Washington. Anne Pollard testified in her own defense last week to a lack of medical treatment, and her deteriorating rela- tionship with Dr. Martha Grogan, medical director of the Federal Medical Center here, who is Pollard's treating physician. She suggested their rela- tionship worsened after two articles on her medical condi- tion appeared in the New York Times in the summer of 1988. According to Pollard, Grogan called the Times' stories a "pack of lies" and became 'abrupt, short and unpleasant." The 28-year-old Pollard said she "would be the happiest person in the world" if the court allowed her to see her private physician, who prac- tices in Chicago. But U.S. Attorney Robert Small said at the hearing that Pollard's condition had been deteriorating long before her imprisonment, even when treated by doctors with whom she had a good relationship. He said she received medical treatment during 88 percent of the 709 days of in- carceration, and had been seen by 35 physicians, in- cluding 22 from the Mayo Clinic. Small said doctors from Mayo diagnosed her as hav- ing irritable bowel syndrome, a serious but relatively com- mon ailment that is not life-threatening. The government argued that Pollard has consistently refused to be treated by doc- tors in Rochester as an "un- conscious desire to be ill" in order to generate public sup- port for a reduced sentence for her husband. Pollard's attorneys, however, claimed that the government had "prescribed stress" for Pollard by moving her to hostile surroundings at the Federal Medical Center here. Pollard has served more than two years of two concur- rent five-year sentences. She was convicted as an accessory after the fact in her husband's spy activities for Israel. Meanwhile, the North American Jewish Sttudents' Network has begun a move- ment demanding the release from prison of the Pollards because they feel that Jewish leaders have failed to act. "The students started the Soviet Jewry movement when the Jewish community was silent," Rabbi Avi Weiss, chairman of the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry said. "We are starting a national Pollard movement, and we are demanding in front of the Justice Department, 'Free Pollard Now.' " However, some major U.S. Jewish groups have apparent- ly been monitoring the situa- tion. Jess Hordes, Washington representative of the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, said his group is "con- tinuing to monitor the situa- tion," particular Pollard's health. Rabin Disputes Death Toll Tel Aviv (JTA) — Defense For Children International blames the Israel Defense Force for the deaths of 70 Arab children — from teen- agers to youngsters under 6 years old — during the first year of the Palestinian upris- ing which began in December 1987. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin disputed the figure. "Only 22" minors were kill- ed, Rabin wrote in response to a complaint by the president of the Israeli branch of the organization, former Supreme Court Justice Moshe Etzioni. But a Defense For Children International source in Jerusalem questioned Rabin's figures. The organization has com- piled a report on child deaths related to the intifada, which it says it will release official- ly soon. According to the source, 35 of the 70 Arab children died from gunshot wounds, 31 from tear gas inhalation, one from beatings and three in other incidents.