il 25, 1975 The Jewish Floridian and Shofar of Hollywood Page 11 f me Are Allowed To Leave Ithoi ities appear to be Jto divide Soviet Jew- ling certain prominent fto emigiate while in- [ persecution of those Uniformed police led the vestibule of Lin synagogue as the trover services ended. Soviet Jewish ac- brought to trial in fks, while others re- visas. Goldfarb, a well- Ivist, told Westerners Vectedly getting per- emigiate, "I feel they In get rid of some ntimidate others." kvs given exist visas leeks are well known lot' this column: Mik- Bky, a cyberniticist; Suslo: Yevgeny and fi.e\;cri, sons of high- )viet physical chemist Levich, who has pave but has not re- mission. Lrtakovsky and his Ether, were also re- fcave been given visas, luld not be confirmed. ly is a co-organizer |i-Yar demonstrations. llLE some have been ht-i less known dis- being arrested and ''ashpits, 27, a den- prLs Tsitlyonol, 31, a tradesman, were five years in exile fating in a fifteen- - *' of Jews in labor camps which took place in front of the Lenin Library in downtown Moscow Feb. 24, 1975. Tiie two were sentenced under article 190 of the Soviet Criminal Code which "forbids participa- tion of groups that disturb pub- lic order." Nashpits and Tsitlyonol pleadeu "not guilty." ACCORDING to the foreign news service, Tass, however, "the hooligans got what they de- served." Aleksandr Lunts, the math- ematician, has been questioned again for almost eight hours by Soviet police. Several dozen policemen, some using bullhorns, pushed Jews from Moscow's synagogue as Passover services ended and hustled them away from the building into the downtown area. The police are fearful that gatherings outside the temple after services, are breeding dis- sident activities and are lead- ing to talk of Israel. THE CENTRAL Moscow syna- gogue is a focal point for meet- ings after services between foreigners and Soviet Jews. Ac- cording to one Western observer, "The discussions among Jews are threatening to the USSR." honstration in support The Passover service. which 4^tRm& :^^k^M [ yjiT*"o I ^^l_ ^E*k % i f "^K^' 1 l\ J ^H '^B ^H ^V 1 ^HJH k .of State of Israel Bonds in Broward County pic- Ith President Ephraim Katzir of Israel (second \t) during his recent visit to South Florida to torate the 25th anniversary of the Israel Bonds I. Robert M. Hermann, (left) is chairman of the )roward board of governors; William Littman, of the South Broward board of governors, and Vornstein, (right) is Broward County Trustees took two and a half hours last year, was of only 20 minutes duration t!iis year. It is not known if this had anything to do with the police action. ft ft ft Simas Kudirka. the Lithuan- ian sailor who tried to escape to freedom by jumping to a U.S. Coast Guard ship in 1970, was in Miami this month to make a plea for Soviet Jewry and other minorities in the USSR. Kudirka was returned to a Soviet fishing vessel by U.S. of- ficials in a widely publicized case. After being beaten, chain- ed, and dragged back to his ship, the 32-year-old spent sev- eral years in the USSR prison system serving time with Jew- ish dissidents. "WE MADE a promise that should any one of us get out, he would dedicate his life to tell- ing the story of what is really going on: in Russia," he told a Miami audience. "Let them give Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia their in- dependence back; let them knock down the Berlin Wall; let them leave Poland and Czechos- lovakia; let them release the Jewsthen they can start to talk a_out detente," Kudirka said. ft ft ft Victor Polsky, who left the USSR in December after four yea.'s of waiting during which he was anested numerous times. estimated several hundred thou- sand Soviet Jews still want to leave. Despite continued harassment and constant tones in the So- viet press of Jews begging to le- turnto "mother Russia," Polsk} toid L'ExprSM of France that more wou.d emigrate if the KGB did not make the application foi- a visa so frightful. 'I owe the favorable resolu- tion oi my case to Western pro- tests and public opinion," he said. ft ft ft AID IN the rescue of Mark Nashpits and Boris Tsitlyonol by rushing cables or letters ap- pealing their sentence to: Procurator General Roman Rudenko 15-A Pushinskaya Moscow, U.S.S.R. Letters and telegrams may be als) sent to: Anatoly Dobrynin Ambassador of the USSR 1225 16th Street N.W. vSashington DC Tl'.e United Nations UNESCO and Social Council New York, N.Y. Attending the recent coffee hosted by Drazia Berman (second from left) in behalf of the United Jewish Appeal- Israel Emergency Fund were Jill Hunter (left) Leona Brauser and Nan Schwartzenfeld (right). The Women's Division of the Jewish Federation of South Broward is winding up its 1975 campaign. Pictured at a coffee to benefit the United Jewish Appeal-Israel Emer- gency Fund hosted by Marion Wolfson (second from right) are Reba Smolken and Laura Sue Cohen (left) and Bernice Moskowitz. MEYER AIR CONDITIONING "Ask Your Neighbor About Meyer" Since 1952 CUT YOUR ELECTRIC BILL Have your system tuned up by a professional 923-4710 -PHONES- 925-0112 < \^Jsceolaman_are serving Irmen of the May ik You Brunch'' by the Women's of the Jewish Fed- \f South Broward. 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