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CHECK THIS
HANDY CHART

111110rJA CURET
ME OF INN
IUBI OM © III
110ISTIK NNW
mu NINE
NB 1111 MR
AIME, FIEE
Kr ES00111T
NOSTIE =SUJET
111,011E1110250XT
filf PISNWIT
WEI tESISDIT
MOE =SW
MONS 10:12SUJIT

MAUI
HARD
A
12%
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A

11000
SOFT
F
40-60%
0
F
F
B
F
F
B
A
A
F

CEDAR
SOFT
F
4060%
C
F
F
8
F
F
F
A
A
F

IWIU
SOFT
F
40-60%
D
F
F
A
F
F
F
A
A
F

FREE DECK
DESIGN SERVICE

A = SUPERIOR
B = GOOD
C = PASSING
D = POOR
F= FAILURE

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Lake Road

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Jonathan Pollard Files
For Divorce From Wife

New York (JTA) —
Jonathan Pollard, serving a
life term in prison for spying
on behalf of Israel, has filed
divorce papers against his
wife, Anne , citing
"irreconcilable 4ifferences"
as the reason for ending the
marriage.
Anne Pollard received the
papers July 18 in her bed at
New York's Mount Sinai
Hospital, where she has
been receiving treatment for
a digestive disorder.
Her medical condition
worsened during her 40-
month stay in prison, where
she was sentenced after
pleading guilty to being an
accessory after the fact to
possession of classified
documents. She was released
from a Manhattan halfway
house in March.
A statement released by
an attorney for Jonathan
Pollard states that he "very
deeply regrets that this ac-
tion must be taken and
wishes his wife the very
best, but also desires to
make clear that she no
longer speaks for him for
any purpose."
The statement added that
Pollard had planned divorce
action earlier, but "postpon-
ed taking this action for
several months due to his
wife's ongoing testing for il-
lness and unavailability to
visit him at the prison."
Anne Pollard was
"absolutely beside herself"
over the divorce action, said
her attorney, Mark Baker. A
statement released on her

behalf quoted her as saying,
"I am deeply grieved by this
action as I had hoped for
children and a life together
someday."
Baker blames Jonathan
Pollard's family for influenc-
ing him against his wife.
The couple have not seen
each other in four years and
have not communicated in
several months.
The divorce action follows
months of growing animosi-
ty between the two families
since Anne Pollard's release.
Each side has accused the
other of trying to monopolize
and control efforts to free
Jonathan Pollard.
"People who have their
own agendas are exploiting
the fact that Jonathan
cannot meet with Anne
without others present,"
Baker said. Judith Barnett,
an attorney for Jonathan
Pollard, responded that
"this is a decision which was
made 100 percent by
Jonathan Pollard."
She declined to elaborate
on his specific reasons for
wanting a divorce, saying
that "this is not a dispute
which we want to deal with
in the press. Like any
divorce, it's a very, very per-
sonal matter."
The Pollards were married
on Aug. 9, 1985. Three mon-
ths later, on Nov. 21,
Jonathan Pollard, then a
U.S. naval intelligence
analyst, was arrested out-
side the Israeli Embassy in
Washington.

'Peyote Case' Spurs Bill
To Restore Rite Rights

Washington (JTA) — A bill
has been introduced in both
the Senate and the House of
Representatives to require
state and federal govern-
ments to show a compelling
governmental interest for
any law that prohibits a re-
ligious practice.
The Religious Freedom
Restoration Act seeks to
restore the protection for re-
ligious practices to what it
was before the April 18
Supreme Court decision in
Oregon Employment Divi-
sion vs. Smith, widely
known as the "Peyote Case."
That decision was seen by
religious and secular groups
throughout the country as
virtually negating the First
Amendment clause barring

any infringement on the es-
tablishment of religion.
Many of these groups have
organized into the Com-
mittee for the Free Exercise
of Religion. At a Capitol Hill
news conference Friday, the
coalition was represented by
diverse groups such as the
American Jewish Congress,
Agudath Israel of America,
the American Civil Liberties
Union and the National
Association of Evangelicals.

Rep. Stephen Solarz
(D-N.Y.), who initiated the
restoration bill and in-
troduced it Friday in the
House, said at the news con-
ference that "support for
this bill is ecumenical, both
religiously and politically."

