Wednesday, October 14, 2015

J.D.L. 1968--1973



September 14, 1929, New York Times, page 5, Stronger Guards Patrol Jerusalem; Moslem Holy Day Passes Quietly, Though Disorders Had Been Predicted. Shots Heard Again In City; Preparations Are Made to Rebuild Areas Which Suffered in Rioting. Plan to Reconstruct Villages. Personnel of Commission, by Joseph M. Levy, Staff Correspondent of The New York Times. Despite, or perhaps because of the expectation that trouble would again break out in the Holy City today, which was the Moslem Sabbath, the day passed entirely without incident, due to the fact that the city was guarded even more heavily than usual by both military forces and the police. View original in TimesMachine,

October 19, 1933, New York Times, Tardieu Says Reich Tries 'Blackmail'; Asserts She Seeks to Repeat Gains Made in Threat to Arms Parley Last Year, by Andre Tardieu, Former Premier of France, The greater part of the press errs in considering Germany's withdrawal from the Disarmament Conference and threat to leave the League of Nations as a bombshell or as a revelation, at last, of Germany's real policy. View original in TimesMachine,


August 1, 1946, AP - Chicago Tribune, page 1, Bomb Starts Fire In German Hotel; Kilian Trial Scene,
August 1, 1946, AP - Chicago Tribune, 2 U.S. Officers Tell Detention By Reds 27 Days,
August 1, 1946, AP - Chicago Tribune, page 6, Truman Orders Aids Home For Palestinian Talk
August 1, 1946, Chicago Tribune, page 7, Big Arms Cache Is Discovered In Tel Aviv Church; Army Chaplain Uncovers Secret of Synagog, by Clay Gowran, (Chicago Tribune Press Service)
August 1, 1946, AP - Chicago Tribune, page 5, A.M.A. Journal Rips Oculists Taking Rebates,



June 20, 1968, New York Times, Persecution of Soviet Jews Described to House Panel, synagogues had been closed. Within the Soviet Union at this moment," Rabbi Meir Kahane told the House Un-American Activities Committee, "Judaism is gasping for its breath." View original in TimesMachine,

August 6, 1968, New York Times, 15 Jews Protest Action By N.Y.U.; Pickets Ask Retraction of Hatchett's Appointment, Fifteen Jewish demonstrators picketed New York University yesterday urging the removal of John E. Hatchett as director of the new Martin Luther King Jr. Afro-American Student Center. View original in TimesMachine,

January 20, 1969, New York Times, page A22, 2 Harlem Pastors Disagree on Exhibit, by Rudy Johnson, The controversial "Harlem on My Mind" exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which was viewed yesterday by record numbers, was praised by one Harlem minister -- Adam Clayton Powell -- and scorned by another. View original in TimesMachine,

January 23, 1969, New York Times, page 1, 2 Teachers' Cases Sent To Donovan; Board Declines to Order Charges of Anti-Semitism, but Bids School Chief Act, by Leonard Buder, The Board of Education rejected yesterday a resolution that would have directed the Superintendent of Schools to bring charges against two Negro teachers accused of having made anti-Semitic remarks. View original in TimesMachine,

January 25, 1969, New York Times, page 15, Outcry Growing Against Bigotry; City Council President Urges Action on Anti-Semitism, by Thomas F. Brady, Francis X. Smith, President of the City Council, and Bernard Botein, retired Presiding Justice of the Appellate Division, urged immediate action yesterday to meet increasing acts and expressions of anti-Semitism. View original in TimesMachine,

January 28, 1969, New York Times, WBAI-FM Rejects Jewish Group's Demands on Anti-Semitism, The directors of radio station WBAI-FM have rejected demands by a Jewish group that it eliminate all expressions of an anti-Semitic nature and that it dismiss Julius Lester, on whose program an anti-Semitic poem by a 15-year-old Negro girl was read last month. View original in TimesMachine,

January 30, 1969, New York Times, Rabbis Oppose Booth, The New York Board of Rabbis asked Mayor Lindsay yesterday not to reappoint William H. Booth as the city's Human Rights Commissioner. View original in TimesMachine,

January 31, 1969, New York Times, page 1, Museum Withdraws Catalogue Attacked As a Slur on Jews; Museum Withdraws Disputed 'Harlem on My Mind' Catalogue, by Peter Kihss, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, bowing to pressures from Mayor Lindsay and other political leaders and Jewish organizations, yesterday withdrew its "Harlem on My Mind" exhibition catalogue, which had been attacked as anti-Semitic. View original in TimesMachine,

February 7, 1969, New York Times, page 74, Officials of WBAI Invite Critics to Help Solve Problems of Community Unrest and Racism, by George Gent, WBAI-FM, which has been criticized for having permitted anti-Semitic sentiments to be aired on its programs, called on its critics yesterday to join the station in constructive efforts to solve problems of community unrest and racism. View original in TimesMachine,

February 8, 1969, New York Times, page 21, Back Civil Rights, Jews Are Urged; Reform Rabbis Fear Split on Anti-Semitism Issue, by George Dugan, Jews were urged yesterday to continue to take part in the civil rights movement and not to permit the anti-Semitism of some black militants to cause a split between Negroes and Jews. View original in TimesMachine,

February 17, 1969, New York Times, page 68, Racism Aired at Rally Backing Community Control of Schools, by Arnold H. Lubasch, Racism was denounced and emotions were aroused yesterday at a rally to support community control of the city's schools. View original in TimesMachine,

March 17, 1969, New York Times, page 1, City High Schools Ordered To Name Security Officers; Junior Highs Are Included in Action by Donovan Aimed at Student Disruptions, by M. A. Farber, Superintendent of Schools Bernard E. Donovan ordered every high school and junior high school in the city yesterday to name a security official as part of a plan to stem increasing student disruptions and violence. View original in TimesMachine,

May 2, 1969, New York Times, page 27, Court Test Due On City College; Gallagher Must Show Why School Shouldn't Be Open, by Murray Schumach, Two show-cause orders were served yesterday upon Dr. Buell G. Gallagher, president of City College, in an effort to force him to reopen the school, which he closed last week after a student look-in. View original in TimesMachine,

May 10, 1969, New York Times, page 1, Forman Burns Writ On Church Disorder; Forman Burns a Court Order Barring Disruption in Church, by Edward B. Fiske, The trustees of the Riverside Church obtained a temporary restraining order yesterday enjoining James Forman, the black militant, from creating further disruptions at the interdenominational Protestant church. View original in TimesMachine,

May 18, 1969, New York Times, Defense League Scored By Rabbi; He Likens Group to Whites in 'Robes and Hoods', A Reform Jewish leader yesterday scored the Jewish Defense League, and said that those members who stood in front of a major synagogue recently to "protect" it were "barmen." View original in TimesMachine,

May 19, 1969, New York Times, page 33, Rabbi Urges U. S. To Guard Worship; Karasick Asks for Laws to Prevent Interruptions, by Irving Spiegel, The head of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America yesterday called for Federal legislation that would make the interruption of any religious worship a "severely punishable crime." View original in TimesMachine,

May 28, 1969, New York Times, page 1, Lindsay Attacks Dual Admissions For City College; Bids Board Reject Proposal to Exempt Slum Students From Grade Qualifying; 'Quota System' Scored; Mayor Indicates Readiness to Back His Objections With Power of Budget Lindsay Attacks C.C.N.Y. Proposal, by Murray Schumach, Mayor Lindsay yesterday attacked the tentative proposal for dual admissions to City College as a "quota system" and urged its rejection by the college's Faculty Senate and the Board of Higher Education. View original in TimesMachine,

June 2, 1969, New York Times, page 88, 60,000 March on 5th Avenue to Celebrate Israel's 21st Birthday, by Irving Spiegel, The bands played, the floats sparkled in the sunlight and shouts of "Chai Yisroel" (let Israel live) resounded as 60,000 men, women and children marched up Fifth Avenue yesterday to mark Israel's 21st anniversary as a nation. View original in TimesMachine,

June 25, 1969, New York Times, Editorial, Dream or Nightmare?, Some thirty self-appointed vigilantes, armed with chains, lead pipe and baseball bats, mustered defiantly in front of a house of worship in Manhattan one evening last month to "protect" it against a Negro militant petitioner whom the rabbi and his congregation were prepared peacefully to receive. View original in TimesMachine,

June 25, 1969, New York Times, page 25, Jewish Militants Step Up Activity; Paramilitary Skills Stressed -- B'nai B'rith Critical, by McCandish Phillips, The Jewish Defense League, a militant Jewish group founded here last July, is making a major bid for financial support and new members in a campaign against what it regards as threats to Jewish life and survival. View original in TimesMachine,

June 30, 1969, New York Times, page 38, Letters, For Defense League, by Martin M. Mosho, Regarding your June 25 editorial ["Dream or Nightmare?"], the thinking members of New York's vast Jewish community should find comfort in the Jewish Defense League. It is necessary, well conceived, and worthy of moral support. View original in TimesMachine,

July 1, 1969, New York Times, page 20, Jewish Extremists Scored by Council For View on Force, by Irving Spiegel, A national coordinating body of Jewish human relations groups today condemned Jewish extremist groups that threaten "violent and coercive tactics" in defense of "Jewish security and Jewish interests." View original in TimesMachine,

July 3, 1969, New York Times, page 30, Letters, Defenders' Opposed, by Marilyn Eisenberg, In Martin M. Mosho's June 30 letter he praises and asks for support of the Jewish Defense League. View original in TimesMachine,

July 18, 1969, New York Times, page 67, Judaism. Council. Denounces A 'Call To Violence',  A coordinating body of all branches of Judaism denounced yesterday what it described as "calls to violence and vigilantism emanating from various quarters including a small and unrepresentative segment of the Jewish community."

August 7, 1969, New York Times, page 25, School Is Firebombed in Fourth Night of Violence in Passaic, by Slvan Fox, A school was firebombed, garbage cans were flung into the streets and rocks and bottles were hurled at policemen here tonight as violence erupted in this city's Puerto Rican slums for the fourth straight night. View original in TimesMachine,

August 9, 1969, New York Times, Picketing Suit Dismissed, View original in TimesMachine,

September 5, 1969, New York Times, page 35, Marchi Lays 'Urban Crisis' to Fear and Distrust, by Alfonso A. Narvaez, State Senator John J. Marchi said yesterday that fear, distrust and the lack of an orderly climate were conditions that had led to a "great urban crisis" facing New York City and that had given rise to militant organizations. View original in TimesMachine,

September 16, 1969, New York Times, page 5, Arabs at U.N. Guarded After Reported Threats, Special to The New York Times, Secretary General Thant announced at the start of the Security Council session today that measures had been taken to protect some members against personal harm. View original in TimesMachine, [PDF]

September 21, 1969, New York Times, Jewish Defense League Protests at U.N. Missions, View original in TimesMachine,

October 10, 1969, New York Times, page 52, Mayoral Candidates Bar Bloc Appeals, by Irving Spiegel, The three major candidates for Mayor said yesterday that they were not making any political appeals to religious or racial groups, particularly the "so-called Jewish vote." View original in TimesMachine,

October 10, 1969, New York Times, pages 1, 20, U.S. Rebuffs Mexico On Smuggling Drive; U. S. Rebuffs Appeal by Mexico For End of Drive on Smuggling, by Felix Belair Jr., Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 — The United States has rejected a Mexican Government appeal for a prompt termination of Operation Intercept, the campaign against smuggling of marijuana and dangerous drugs across the border into this country.

October 13, 1969, New York Times, page 49, Powell Sees 'Breaking Point' on Harlem Building; Says He Will Leave U.S. If State Goes Ahead With Controversial Project, by George Dugan, Representative Adam Clayton Powell said yesterday that he would leave the country if the proposed state office building in Harlem was constructed. View original in TimesMachine,

October 14, 1969, New York Times, page 32, Lindsay, at Temple in Queens, Calls Powell Irresponsible, by Paul L. Montgomery, Mayor Lindsay reacted sharply last night to mention of Representative Adam Clayton Powell at a campaign appearance before the Queens council of B'nai B'rith. View original in TimesMachine,

October 14, 1969, New York Times, page 24, Dissent Breaks Out at 'Family of Man' Parley Here, [PDF] At a news conference marked by dissent and disruption, the president of the Council of Churches of the City of New York, Dr. M. L. Wilson, announced that President Nixon, scheduled as the guest of honor of next Monday's Family of Man awards dinner, could not attend.

October 15, 1969, New York Times, page 46, Defense Group Scored, by Theodore Bijel, View original in TimesMachine,

October 18, 1969, New York Times, Minor Candidates Meet On East Side, Three minority party candidates for Mayor last night denounced the war in Vietnam, capitalism, imperialism, the mapor party candidates -- and to some extent each other -- in a meeting on the Lower East Side. View original in TimesMachine,

October 21, 1969, New York Times, page 46, Letter, J.D.L. Actions Praised, by Sol Raffalow, I am a Jew and I am a New Yorker too just like Theodore Bikel who attacks the Jewish Defense League in his letter of Oct. 15. The sight of these stalwart and courageous men standing guard in front of Temple Emanu-El on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan recently must have been a reassuring sight to many Jewish people of this city. View original in TimesMachine,

October 30, 1969, New York Times, page 40, Mayor Derides Controller's Relief Plan; Record Job Total Cited By Lindsay; He Calls Rival's Proposal on Training 'Very Bad', by Homer Bigart, Mayor Lindsay derided yesterday a plan by Controller Mario A. Procaccino to cut the welfare rolls. At the same time he reported the highest total employment in the city's history -- 4,111,000 jobs. View original in TimesMachine,

November 2, 1969, New York Times, Procaccino Aide Admits Reprints; Says He Sent Out Literature Scoring Mayor on Jews, by Douglas Robinson, The literature, a reprint of an article in The Jewish Press by Rabbi Meir Kahane, national chairman of the Jewish Defense League, says there has been "an incredible erosion of Jewish rights" during the Lindsay View original in TimesMachine,

November 28, 1969, New York Times, Jewish Crime Unit In Boston Scored; Defense League Assailed by a Jewish Community Group, by John H. Fenton, Special to The New York Times, An effort by the Jewish Defense League to establish "anti crime patrols" in Boston has aroused vigorous objections among leaders of the Jewish Community Council, View original in TimesMachine,

December 26, 1969, New York Times, Jews Protest Soviet 'Bias', Seventy-one members of the Jewish Defense League, headed by their chairman, Rabbi Meir Kahane, picketed yesterday United Nations Mission, 136 East 67th Street. Carrying signs,, View original in TimesMachine,

December 29, 1969, New York Times, Anti-Soviet Protest Here, The Jewish Defense League, headed by Rabbi Meir Kahane, continued its "100-hour vigil" yesterday in front of the Soviet Union's Mission to the United Nations on East 67th Street to protest what the league, View original in TimesMachine,

December 30, 1969, New York Times, page 46, 14 Jews Arrested In Soviet Protest; League Paints Airliner, Invades Offices Here, by Irving Spiegel, Fourteen members of the Jewish Defense League were taken into custody yesterday after a series of coordinated actions at Kennedy International Airport and two Soviet offices in Manhattan. View original in TimesMachine,

December 31, 1969, New York Times, 27 Young Jews Seized After Soviet Union Protest, The police seized 27 young persons last night during a demonstration outside the Soviet mission to the United Nations....the mission, at 136 East 67th Street, between Lexington and Third Avenues. Most of them were members of the Jewish Defense League. For the last three days, the league has conducted protests against alleged Soviet persecution, View original in TimesMachine,

January 1, 1970, New York Times, Lindsay Is Accused In Protest Clash, The national director of the Jewish Defense League charged yesterday that Mayor Lindsay's office was responsible for the league's confrontation with the police Tuesday night outside the Soviet Mission to the United Nations., View original in TimesMachine,

February 2, 1970, New York Times, page 30, Protesters Upset Russians' Recital; Invade Carnegie Hall Over Soviet Treatment of Jews, by Donal Henahan, Young demonstrators protesting alleged persecution of Jews in the Soviet Union disrupted last night's duo recital...the recital, a group of about 20 young persons picketed the performance and passed out leaflets in the name of the Jewish Defense League, 156 Fifth Avenue, calling on the audience to "Stay Away." The leaflets charged that the Soviet, View original in TimesMachine,

February 3, 1970, AP - New York Times, Protest At Concert Laid To 'Hooligans', The Soviet Government newspaper Izvestia charged today that the "hairy figures" who disrupted the New York concert of David Oistrakh and Sviatoslov Richter were only front men for Zionist organizers....were complaining of alleged Soviet mistreatment of ,Jews. Outside the hall, leaflets passed out in the name of the Jewish Defense League. urged concertgoers to stay away. "But one must note," the Izvestia correspondent wrote,, View original in TimesMachine,

February 24, 1970, New York Times, Jewish Defense League Pickets Jewish Federation, About 80 members of the Jewish Defense League picketed the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies yesterday to demand more money for Jewish schools and neighborhood self-defense. View original in TimesMachine,

February 25, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Pompidou Asserts France Wants U.S. To Stay In Europe; Amity Despite Differences Is Stressed as He Meets With Nixon for Over 2 Hours; His Welcome Is Warm; Visitor Says Mideast Policy Favors Neither Arabs Nor Israel and Seeks Peace Pompidou Says French Want U.S. to Stay in Europe, by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times, President Pompidou today forcefully conveyed France's desire to strengthen her ties with the United States despite various policy divergences and to see the American military and economic presence maintained in Western Europe. View original in TimesMachine,

March 3, 1970, New York Times, page 9, Leading Soviet Intellectuals Add Their Names to National Press Campaign Denouncing Israel and Zionism, by Bernard Gwertzman, Thirty-seven prominent Soviet intellectuals, including two Nobel Prize physicists, added their names today to the anti-Israeli campaign, set off by Israel's bombing of a metalworks near Cairo on Feb. 12. View original in TimesMachine,

March 27, 1970, New York Times, 28 Photos Defaced In Soviet Show Here, Twenty-eight pictures at the "U.S.S.R. Photo '70" exhibit here were defaced yesterday, apparently as a protest against the Soviet treatment of Jews. The militant Jewish Defense League issued a statement praising those responsible for the defacement but denying that any of its members had had a part in it. View original in TimesMachine,

March 27, 1970, New York Times, U.S. Jewish Woman Defends the Soviet, Izvestia, the Soviet newspaper, has published a letter from an American Jewish woman that takes the American press to task for "absurd accusations" about the treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union....the world, but she maintained that the Soviet Government did not foster it. She objected to the activities of the Jewish Defense League, saying that she believed that the organization s demonstrations might antagonize the Soviet, View original in TimesMachine,

May 2, 1970, The Free Lance-Star, [Fredericksburg, VA] page 9, Rabbi Meir Kahane Evokes Praise Or Rage, NEW YORK - the mere mention of a 37 year-old Orthodox rabbi named Meir Kahane is guaranteed to evoke either ...

May 16, 1970, New York Times, page 11, Radical Jews Disrupt Service At Emanu-El; 2 Are Arrested, by Edward B. Fiske, Two members of the Radical Jewish Union of Columbia University were arrested yesterday after they disrupted services at Temple Emanu-El to protest the war in Southeast Asia....worshipers. Also escorted out of the sanctuary by plainclothes men but not arrested was Eli Schwartz, a member of the Jewish Defense League, who reportedly also spoke out during the service and told the other demonstrators to do, View original in TimesMachine,

May 21, 1970, New York Times, page 14, Synagogue Scene Of Soviet Protest By Jewish League, by Edward B. Fiske, Fifty members of the Jewish Defense League occupied an Orthodox synagogue opposite the Soviet Mission to the United Nations yesterday to protest persecution of Jews in the Soviet Union.Synagogue Scene Of Soviet Protest By Jewish, View original in TimesMachine,

May 23, 1970, New York Times, News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day, schoolchildren and three adults in Israel earlier in the day. Arab representatives charged that the attacks came from the Jewish Defense League. Cl:4.1 Undergraduates at Columbia University said some at the university grossed from, View original in TimesMachine,

May 23, 1970, New York Times, page A1, 11 Israelis Killed In Rocket Attack On a School Bus; Israeli Children Are Principal Victims of an Ambush Close to Lebanon; Arab Villages Shelled, by Lawrence Fellows, Special to The New York Times, JERUSALEM, May 22--Eleven persons were killed and 21 wounded, most of them children, when a school bus was ambushed this morning in Israel, about 500 yards from the Lebanese border.

May 23, 1970, New York Times, page A1, Three Arabs Beaten Near U.N. After Bus Is Attacked in Israel; 3 Arabs Beaten at Offices Here After Attack on Bus in Israel, by Thomas F. Brady, Three Arabs were severely beaten here yesterday in their offices near the United Nations....eight children and three adults were killed. Arab representatives charged that the attacks here came from the militant Jewish Defense League, and one Arab ambassador to the United Nations said he believed .that "New York is no, View original in TimesMachine,

May 24, 1970, New York Times, page 12, Police Are Posted Outside Arab National and Business Offices Here Following Beating of 3 Activists; Arafat Warns of Retaliation, by Robert D. McFadden, Police details were posted outside Arab consulates, United Nations missions and business offices here yesterday following the beatings of three Arab nationalists in their offices near the United Nations on Friday....victims, Dr. M. T. Mehdi and Ghazi Khankan, held a news conference yesterday to repeat their accusations against the Jewish Defense League; and to warn that they intend to arm themselves and "shoot to.kill" in the.event of another, View original in TimesMachine,

May 25, 1970, New York Times, page 4, Jewish Activists See Ranks Growing, by Michael T. Kaufman, Since its founding in the summer of 1968, the Jewish Defense League has withstood the criticism of most major Jewish organizations and has pursued its vision of militant preparedness with karate classes and neighborhood patrols. View original in TimesMachine,

May 25, 1970, New York Times, page 4, A.J.C. Condemns All Terrorists; Urges Repudiation by Jews of Reprisals Against Arabs, by Irving Spiegel, The national biennial convention of the American Jewish Congress called today on Jews to "condemn and repudiate the indefensible recourse to lawlessness" exemplified by the attacks on three Arabs in New York last Friday.... the American Jewish community," the statement declared. In New York, Rabbi Meir Kahane executive director of the Jewish Defense League, replied last Friday, when asked if his group "took credit" for the attack on the three Arabs: View original in TimesMachine,

June 4, 1970, New York Times, Communist Paper Invaded By Jewish Defense League, About 30 members of the Jewish Defense League yesterday invaded the offices of the Communist newspaper. The Daily World to protest what they said was the newspaper's failure to report on the plight of Soviet Jews. ...of the Jewish Defense League yesterday invaded the offices of the Communist newspaper. The Daily World to protest what they said was the newspaper's failure to report on the plight of Soviet Jews. View original in TimesMachine,

June 6, 1970, New York Times, Vigilantes by Any Name, The self-appointed vigilantes of the Jewish Defense League have disrupted services, marred parades, picketed museums and radio stations, defaced photographic exhibits, broken up concerts. Their leader hinted strongly that the organization took credit but could not admit it for attacks on Arab representatives in offices near the United Nations. The police have not yet identified the criminals responsible. View original in TimesMachine,

June 24, 1970, New York Times, Jews Raid Office Of Amtorg Here; 27 Defense League Members Held in Soviet Protest, by C. Gerald Fraser, At least 27 youthful members of the Jewish Defense League brought routine import-export business to a sudden stop yesterday afternoon when they stormed through offices of the Amtorg Trading Corporation in retaliation for recent arrests of Jews in the Soviet Union. View original in TimesMachine,

June 25, 1970, New York Times, page 20, J.D.L. Chief Sees 'Collusion' Here; Says U.S. and Soviet Acted on Arrests in Protest, by Emanuel Perlmutter, The head of the Jewish Defense League charged yesterday that the United States Department and Soviet representatives had acted in collusion to promote severe charges against 28 league members arrested Tuesday at the offices of the Amtorg Trading Corporation, a Soviet Government trade agency. View original in TimesMachine,

June 29, 1970, New York Times, 3 J.D.L. Members, Including Kahane, Seized in Brooklyn, Three members of the militant Jewish Defense League, including its chairman, Rabbi Meir Kahane, were arrested outside a police station in Brooklyn last night for allegedly hurling bottles at policemen who attempted to disperse a crowd of the league's followers. View original in TimesMachine,

June 30, 1970, New York Times, page A4, Soviet Advises Correspondent For C.B.S. to Leave Country, by James F. Clarity, The Foreign Ministry today advised William Cole, Moscow correspondent for the Columbia Broadcasting System, to leave the Soviet Union because he had "engaged in activities incompatible with the status of a foreign journalist."...account of the ransacking of the office of a Soviet commercial organization in New York last week by members of the Jewish Defense League. It also described Time as "reactionary" and "anti-Soviet," while stating that Mr. Orekhov was..., View original in TimesMachine,

June 30, 1970, New York Times, page 45, Williamsburg Violence Reflects Tension in Area; Kahane, Released by Police, Says Hasidim Asked Aid From the J.D.L., by Martin Gansberg, Penn Street in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn was the scene of street fighting on Sunday night as Hasidic Jews and blacks threw bottles and insults at one another until the police took control....young people taunting each other. But on Sunday night there was more violence than usual. About 24 members of the Jewish Defense League, an organization set up to combat anti-Semitic activity with force, were invited by some Hasidim, View original in TimesMachine,

July 9, 1970, New York Times, Letters to the Editor of The Times, ...faith that some day the respectable ones will move out of their ivory towers into the realities of the world. If the Jewish Defense League has indeed used violence against the Soviet Union and its American puppets, it is because, View original in TimesMachine,

July 28, 1970, New York Times, Militant Jews Paint Slogans at Estate Of Soviet on L.I.,  Members of the Jewish Defense League climbed over the wall surrounding the Soviet Union's 38-acre estate here today and used a spray can of red paint to write slogans in Hebrew and English on the walls, a gatepost and on the roadway. View original in TimesMachine,

August 21, 1970, New York Times, Television, 7:00 a.m. (4) Today: Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the Jewish Defense League Day View original in TimesMachine,

August 30, 1970, New York Times, Protection Here Asked by Soviet; U.S. Assailed on Raids by Jewish Defense League, Special to The New York Times, The Soviet Government newspaper Izvestia today charged American authorities with endangering Soviet-American relations by failing to protect Soviet diplomats and citizens in the United States from what it called "Zionist thugs." View original in TimesMachine,

September 9, 1970, New York Times, Outrage Is Voiced By Church Groups; 'Banditry' Charged, Religious organizations in New York voiced outrage yesterday at the hijacking by Arab commandos of airlines Sunday and the continued detention of passengers and crew members in Jordan. ..."their own lives will be forfeited if anything happens to the passengers." Rabbi Meir Kahane, national chairman of the Jewish Defense League, a militant group that claims a nationwide membership of 8,000, said that if any hostages, View original in TimesMachine,

September 13, 1970, New York Times, London Is Willing To Free Hijacker; Cabinet Issues a Statement to Bar Misunderstanding About Leila Khaled, The British Government announced tonight that it was prepared to hand over Leila Khaled, the 24 year-old woman hijacker, as part of a settlement with Arab guerrillas. An anonymous ' representing himself as a spokesman for an organization called the Jewish Defense League told a press association late tonight that three leading members of an Arab commando had been..., View original in TimesMachine,

September 17, 1970, New York Times, Goldberg Assails Nixon's Role in Mideast Crisis; Accuses Laird of a Remark Undercutting the Position of Israel on Protests, Arthur J. Goldberg told a crowd of 500 in a Brooklyn synagogue last night that the Nixon Administration had made "one of the worst mistakes ever made by an American Administration," in its handling of the critical Middle East cease-fire negotiations....constitutional protection. The Jewish Press was previously edited by Meir Kahane, the founder and director of the militant Jewish Defense League. He continues as a columnist for the paper. Earlier yesterday Lawrence F. O'Brien,, View original in TimesMachine,

September 29, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Anti-Arab Jet Plot Laid to Seized Pair, by Morris Kaplan, An Israeli Army veteran and his wife, accused of trying to board a London-bound plane here with a live hand grenade and four loaded guns hidden in their clothing, were reported yesterday to have planned to hijack an Arab airliner and take it to Israel....bank that a check for $159.77 made out to the couple on Aug. 17, 1970, by the Jewish Defense League had not cleared because of insufficient funds. The Jewish Defense League has since its founding here in 1968 grown, View original in TimesMachine,

October 1, 1970, New York Times, Jewish Defense League To Aid Hijacking Suspects, The Jewish Defense League is trying to raise bail for the young Brooklyn couple who were arrested Sunday as they allegedly prepared to board a flight for London with fraudulent passports, four revolvers and a live hand grenade. View original in TimesMachine,

October 7, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Bomb Wrecks Office Of Palestine Group; Palestine Office Damaged By Bomb, by Michael Knight, The offices of the Palestine Liberation Organization were extensively damaged by a bomb blast last night. Several other offices on the third floor of the Architects Building at 101 Park Avenue, near 40th Street, were also damaged. No one was hurt....She refused to answer questions. The phrase "Never Again" is a slogan of the Jewish Defense League. Spokesmen for the Jewish Defense League could not be reached for comment early this morning., View original in TimesMachine,

October 7, 1970, New York Times, page 37, Dance: Moiseyev Troupe Pays US a Return Visit; Felt Forum Provides an Ideal Setting, by Clive Barnes, Of course there are many folk dance companies, but only one Moiseyev Dance Company--the first, the original, the grandfather of them all, and still the greatest....stage, makes a perfect setting for the dancers. The evening had a sad postscript. There was picketing outside by the Jewish Defense League, protesting the treatment of Soviet Jewry and requesting that American Jews stay away from, View original in TimesMachine,

October 8, 1970, New York Times, A Jewish Militant Arrested as Abettor In Plot to Hijack Jet, The administrative director of the Jewish Defense League, Harry Pearl, was arrested here yesterday on charges of having falsified passport affidavits for a couple accused of planning to hijack an Arab airliner to Israel. View original in TimesMachine,

October 9, 1970, New York Times, Arab Group Offers Reward, Arab-American Relations yesterday $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of any member of the Jewish Defense League who might be found guilty of bombing the offices of the Palestine Liberation, View original in TimesMachine,

October 13, 1970, New York Times, Synagogue Melee Protested By Jewish Defense League, About 50 members of the Jewish Defense League marched last night to protest the disruption of Yom Kippur services at a Brooklyn synagogue Saturday and the beating of several of its members, outside, by a group of Puerto Rican youths. View original in TimesMachine,

October 21, 1970, New York Times, page 47, Op-Ed, The Jewish Contradiction, by Arthur I. Waskon, The Jewish community in America is now living in a situation unprecedented in 2,000 years of Jewish history but only its young people are facing the fact, and even they have just begun to....insurgencies younger ones can make nothing Jewish of anything else. Might they turn on to vigilante Judaism of the Jewish Defense League sort? Scarcely. To mast young Jews it stinks of racism, repression, and reaction. So the die, View original in TimesMachine,

October 30, 1970, New York Times, page 48, The Abzug-Farber Contest: Plenty of Colors, by Grace Lichtenstein, Barry Farber, the Republican-Liberal candidate for the House of Representatives from the 19th District, was driving through the Upper West Side one afternoon recently when he spotted his Democratic opponent, Mrs. Bella S, Abzug, campaigning on the corner of 72d Street and Broadway....meeting at the High School of Music and Art, where her daughter was a student. On Wednesday members of the militant Jewish Defense League, who said they were supporting Mr. Farber, picketed Mrs. Abzug's Sheridan Square campaign, View original in TimesMachine,

November 13, 1970, New York Times, page 46, Jewish Federation Seeks To Bar Disruptive Acts, The Federation of Jewish Philanthropies obtained a showcause order in Manhattan Supreme Court today barring the Jewish Defense League from committing any disruptive acts at federation headquarters, 130 East 59th Street. View original in TimesMachine,

November 19, 1970, New York Times, Jewish Group Suing to Block a Panther Meeting, by Morris Kaplan, The Jewish Defense League and its executive director, Rabbi Meir Kahane, brought suit yesterday to prevent the Black Panther party and the Young Lords from meeting tomorrow night at Thomas Jefferson High School in Brooklyn. View original in TimesMachine,

November 24, 1970, New York Times, 6 Policemen Slightly Hurt When Car Hits Barricade, Six policemen were hurt last night, none seriously, when a car was driven into wooden barriers set up in front of the Soviet Mission to the United Nations during a demonstration by the Jewish Defense League. ...The police said about 150 demonstrators were picketing near the mission at 136 East 67th Street when the car, allegedly driven by a, View original in TimesMachine,

November 26, 1970, New York Times, page 1 Bomb Damages Russian Offices Here; Soviet Jews' Plight Cited by Callers Pipe Bomb Damages Soviet Airline Offices Here, by Alfonso A. Narvaez, A pipe bomb exploded in the doorway of the Soviet Union's airline and tourist agency offices at 45 East 49th Street early yesterday, shattering windows in the two-story structure and causing slight damage to displays. The four identical calls ended with the phrase "never again." This phrase has been used as a rallying cry by the Jewish Defense League, a militant organization that has been picketing offices of the Soviet Union here to protest the, View original in TimesMachine,

November 26, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Washington Condemns 'Senseless' Act and Orders Tightened Security; U.S. Condemns Blast and Orders More Security, by Hedrick Smith, The Nixon Administration, embarrassed by a string of incidents against Soviet offices here and in New York, issued a strong statement today condemning the "senseless, criminal" bombing of the Soviet airline office in New York. ...protesting the treatment of Soviet Jews. On Monday night, two persons were arrested during a demonstration by the Jewish Defense League at the Soviet mission to the United Nations. Six policemen were hurt when a car drove into, View original in TimesMachine,

November 26, 1970, New York Times, Orthodox Leaders Score Bombing as Irresponsible, Special to The New York Times, Top leaders of Orthodox Judaism in this country denounced the Jewish Defense League today as "destructive" and "irresponsible." View original in TimesMachine,

November 26, 1970, New York Times, News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day, ...condemnation followed a formal Soviet protest. Cl:3-4.J Orthodox Jewish leaders, meeting in Washington, denounced the Jewish Defense League as "irresponsible" despite that organization s denial of involvement in the bombing. :1-2.1, View original in TimesMachine,

November 27, 1970, New York Times, page 18, Soviet Buildings Closely Guarded; Security Tightened at Offices Bomb Inquiry Pushed, Federal and local police officials increased security at the Soviet Union's diplomatic and commercial buildings here yesterday as an investigation continued into the explosion early Wednesday morning of a pipe bomb in the doorway of the Soviet airline and tourist office at 45 East 49th Street....Soviet authorities. The calls ended with the phrase "never again," a phrase used as a rallying cry by the militant Jewish Defense League. Rabbi Meir Kahane, national director of the organization, has denied that any member of his, View original in TimesMachine,

November 28, 1970, New York Times, page 23, Mrs. Meir Assails Anti-Soviet Terrorism Here, Premier Golda Meir today sharply denounced a recent bombing and sabotage attacks against Soviet agencies in New York City in apparent protest against the alleged persecution of Jews in the Soviet Union. ....airliner last June. The calls ended with the phrase "never again," which is used as a rallying cry by the militant Jewish Defense League. Rabbi Meir Kahane, the league's national director, denied that any member of his group had, View original in TimesMachine,

November 28, 1970, Reuters - New York Times, page 23, Pravda Says U.S. Abets Acts,

November 29, 1970, New York Times, page 198, Lincoln Hospital; Behind the Conflict Over the Pediatric Post, by Harry Schwartz, Einstein Medical College, one of the nation's most prestigious medical schools, was created and is heavily supported by Jewish philanthropists. Yet this month it was widely accused of anti-Semitism and last week its Dean's office was the scene of a protest sit-in by members of the Jewish Defense League. And at the same time other Bronx groups were accusing the college....Lincoln Hospital, View original in TimesMachine,

December 12, 1970, New York Times, Disappointment Voiced Over Bolshoi, by Lawrence Van Gelder, An expression of disappointment by the city's Cultural Affairs Commissioner and a statement of determination by the Jewish Defense League marked the reaction yesterday to the Soviet Union's cancellation of appearances here next year by the Bolshoi ballet and opera companies. View original in TimesMachine,

December 12, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Moscow Cancels U.S. Visit By Bolshoi Opera, Ballet; 'Provocations by Zionist Thugs' Are Charged Hurok Booked Tours Moscow Cancels Bolshoi's Visits to U.S., by Bernard Gwertzman, The Soviet Union today canceled planned visits to the United States by the Bolshoi Theater's opera and ballet companies next spring, charging that the American authorities had failed to stop "provocations by Zionist thugs." ...provocations against Soviet personnel in the United States by extremist Jewish groups. They have often singled out the Jewish Defense League for blame. The most recent incident, which provoked a strong State Department, View original in TimesMachine,

December 14, 1970, New York Times, pages 1, 51, Bombings Cost Militants Potential Gains in Support; Incidents Are Alienating Many Radicals and Youths Who Might Join; Cause Student Ambivalence; Is Found Bombings Cost Militants Potential Gains in Support, by Douglas E. Kneeland, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 13 "We told them to bomb it, to blow it up. And then they blew it up. And we said, 'My God, they blew it up!"

December 14, 1970, New York Times, Television, 10:30(13) Free Time: Dotson Rader and Heywood Burns, co-hosts; Film of the Jewish Defense League and discussion with league members; also Russian music and dancing (21)Sports Special, View original in TimesMachine,

December 14, 1970, New York Times, page 53, Drive to 'Liberate' Jews In Soviet Urged by Kahane, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the head of the militant Jewish Defense League, today called on American Jews to begin a campaign to "liberate" Jews in the Soviet Union. View original in TimesMachine,

December 19, 1970, New York Times, page 28, Defense League Barred From Harassing a Charity, by Robert E. Tomasson, The militant Jewish Defense League was barred by court order yesterday with interfering with the fund-raising activities of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. View original in TimesMachine,

December 19, 1970, New York Times, pages 1, 11, Army to Destroy Germ War Stock as Nixon Pledged; Biological and Toxic Arms Will Be Disposed of at 4 Storage Arsenals; WORK WILL TAKE A YEAR; $12.2-Million to Be Spent to Neutralize Supply That Cost $726-Million, by Dana Adams Schmidt, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 The Army announced today detailed plans to destroy its biological and toxic weapons in accordance with pledges made by President Nixon. But the United States will continue research on defenses against weapons of this kind.

December 19, 1970, Reuters - New York Times, page 2, Defendant at Leningrad Trial Said to Charge Anti-Semitism, [PDF] MOSCOW, Dec. 18 (Reuters) A Soviet Jew accused of trying to hijack a Soviet plane and fly it abroad said in court that he planned the attempt because of anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union, informed sources said today.

December 21, 1970, AP - New York Times, page 6, Gun Issue Aired At Soviet Trial; Question Reported Dropped in Plane Hijacking Case, MOSCOW, Dec. 19 (AP) Informed sources said today that a ballistics expert had testified that the gun used in an airplane hijacking attempt in Leningrad last June was not in firing condition, and as a result the prosecutor had agreed to drop the question of firearms in the trial of 11 defendants.[PDF]

December 21, 1970, New York Times, page 16, 5 Demonstrators Arrested Near Soviet's U.N. Mission, by Irving Spiegel, Five persons were arrested and seven slightly injured as violence flared yesterday afternoon during two anti-Soviet demonstrations by Jewish and Polish groups....Lexington and Third Avenues, where the Soviet Mission to the United Nations is situated. Later members of the militant Jewish Defense League also tried to upset the wooden barricades and were forced back. As a result, traffic..., View original in TimesMachine,

December 21, 1970, New York Times, Letter to the Editor; Why the Bolshoi Isn't Coming, by Judd L. Teller, New York, View original in TimesMachine,

December 22, 1970, New York Times, pages 1, 8, Soviet Rules Out Gains For Israel; Honoring Arabs, Kosygir Says Agreement on Peace Means No Concessions; Soviet Tells Israel Not to Expect Gains Through Peace, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, Dec. 21—Premier Aleksei N. Kosygin warned Israel today against expecting any concessions in return for agreeing to a peaceful settlement of the Middle East crisis. [PDF]

December 23, 1970, New York Times, page 1, 6, Nazi, Guilty in 400,000 Deaths, Is Sentenced to Life by Germans, BONN, Dec. 22 Franz Stangl, a key aide in Hitler's mass slaying of Jews in war time Poland who spent 17 years in a Brazilian hideout, was sentenced to life imprisonment by a Dusseldorf court today. He had been found guilty of murder in "at least 400,000 cases." [PDF]

December 24, 1970, New York Times, Colombo Is Guilty In Perjury Case; Lied to State About Record Cleared on 3 Counts Colombo Guilty on 2 Counts of Perjury; Cleared on 3, by Robert E. Tomasson, Joseph Colombo, who has been described by the Government as a major underworld figure, was convicted of two counts of perjury yesterday for having lied about his criminal record to a state agency. [PDF]
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December 25, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Soviet Dooms Two Jews In Plane Hijacking Plot; Nine, Including Two Not Jewish, Given Camp Terms—U.S. Group Asks Pope, Nixon and Churches to Intercede, MOSCOW, Dec. 24—A Leningrad court tonight found all 11 defendants guilty of planning to hijack a Soviet airliner and sentenced two of them to death by the firing squad. Nine others received prison-camp terms ranging from 4 years to 15. [PDF]

December 25, 1970, New York Times, page 4, Jewish Groups Denounce Soviet Death Sentences, by Irving Spiegel, Jewish organizations yesterday strongly protested the death sentences of two Jewish prisoners in the Leningrad hijacking trial and other groups staged demonstrations in front of the Soviet mission to the United Nations, at 136 East 67th Street. View original in TimesMachine,

December 25, 1970, New York Times, page 23, Quakers Attempt to See the President, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Dec. 24— Members of the American Friends Service Committee attempted to deliver to the President today a report condemning Vietnamization and United States policies on the war in Vietnam.

December 25, 1970, New York Times, Op-Ed, page 29, Jerusalem the Golden; Foreign Affairs, by C. L. Sulzberger, [PDF] PARIS—Peace prospects in the Middle East are probably less bad today than at any time since 1967. That is not to say prospects are good, simply that talks between both sides will almost certainly be resumed and that pressures by the Big Four powers and by public opinion in Israel, Egypt and Jordan are conducive to agreement.

December 25, 1970, Reuters - New York Times, page 8, In Ancient Megiddo Area, Arabs and Jews Coexist, [PDF] MEGIDDO, Israel, Dec. 24 (Reuters)—Jew and Arab are living harmoniously on this plain—believed to be the Biblical Armageddon—where St. John said in Revelations that the forces of good and evil would fight the last great battle at the end of time.
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December 26, 1970, New York Times, page 1, Israeli Knesset Asks Clemency For Soviet Jews; At special-Session, It Calls Upon Moscow to Release 11 in Hijacking Case; Mass Meeting Staged; Leningrad Paper Charges 'Zionists' Were Aware of Plans to Seize Plane, TEL AVIV, Dec. 25 Israel's, Parliament, meeting in special session, called on the Soviet Union today to cancel the death sentences ordered for two Russian Jews convicted of a hijacking plot. It also asked freedom for nine other defendants given prison-camp sentences of 4 to 15 years in the Leningrad court case yesterday.

December 26, 1970, New York Times, page 1, French Communists Join In Protests on Sentences,
Around the world yesterday, Jewish and other leaders protested the death sentences in the Soviet Union for two Jews convicted of having attempted to hijack an airplane.[PDF]

December 26, 1970, New York Times, page 4, Soviet Charge 'Zionist Circles' Knew of Hijacking in Advance, by Bernard Gwertzman, Moscow, Dec. 25 A Leningrad newspaper charged today that "Zionist circles" in Israel knew in advance of the plans to hijack a Soviet airliner by the 11. Soviet defendants found guilty, of treason yesterday in Leningrad.
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December 28, 1970, New York Times, page 3, Second Trial in Leningrad Is Said to Be Postponed, by Bernard Gwertzman, MOSCOW, Dec. 27—Unofficial sources said today that Soviet authorities have postponed a new trial of nine persons—all of them Jews—who are charged with anti-Soviet agitation and organized anti-Soviet activity.

December 28, 1970, New York Times, page 3, 11 Arrested in Protest at Soviet Mission, Militant Jewish demonstrators protested outside the Soviet Mission to the United Nations last night and 11 of them were arrested in a clash with police.

December 29, 1970, New York Times, page A1, Lindsay Urges U.S. Stand, by Irving Spiegel, Mayor Lindsay called on Secretary of State William P. Rogers yesterday to issue a "national statement" concerning the Soviet death sentences against two Jews in the Leningrad hijacking case. ...the United States mission to the United Nations yesterday. The New York police said last night that members of the Jewish Defense League had briefly occupied the Park East Synagogue across the street from the Soviet mission and at, View original in TimesMachine,

December 29, 1970, New York Times, page A1, U.S. Plea on Doomed Jews Reported Made to Soviet; Moscow Terms Severe Sentences 'in Spirit' of Antihijacking Pact, by Bernard Gwertzman,
MOSCOW, Dec. 28—Tass, the Soviet press agency, said today that the severe sentences meted out to 11 defendants— nine of them Jews—in last week's Leningrad trial were "in the spirit" of an antihijacking convention endorsed Dec. 16 by the International Civil Aviation Organization.

December 29, 1970, New York Times, page A1, Vatican Asks Clemency -- 'National Statement' Urged by Lindsey, by Hedrick Smith, WASHINGTON, Dec. 28—The United States has reportedly made a discreet appeal to the Soviet Union to commute the death sentences of two Soviet Jews convicted in Leningrad earlier this month of planning to hijack a Soviet airliner.

December 30, 1970, New York Times, Rabbi Who Rallies Aid for Soviet Jews by Herschel Schacter, The date was April 11, 1945. The place was Buchenwald....While the conference deplores the activities of such militant organizations as the Jewish Defense League, some Jewish organizations and groups regard the conference itself as too aggressive and prefer, View original in TimesMachine,
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January 6, 1971, New York Times, page A1, Soviet Warns U.S. It May Retaliate For Harassment; Threatens Reprisals Against Americans Unless Jewish Militants Are Curbed, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, Jan. 5 — The Soviet Government, angered by continued harassment of Soviet representatives in the United States by militant Jewish groups, has threatened to retaliate against Americans stationed in Moscow.

January 6, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Soviet Warning Rejected; U.S. 'Shocked' at 'Threat', by Richard Halloran, Special to The New York Times, WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 — The United States has firmly rejected the Soviet Union's warning that Americans should no longer expect the Soviet Government to protect them in the Soviet Union.

January 6, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Soviet Complains to U.N., Special to The New York Times, The Soviet delegation, in a protest to Secretary General Thant, said it reserved its right to bring criminal proceedings against leaders of the Jewish Defense League and suit for the "physical damage and moral injury sustained" during demonstrations by the league at the Soviet Mission on Dec. 27 and 28. View original in TimesMachine,

January 7, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Protecting Russians Here a Hard Job, by Lawrence Van Gelder, Providing security for Soviet installations here is a complex problem for the New York City police. View original in TimesMachine,

January 7, 1971, New York Times, page 3, 6 Visit U.S. Embassy In Moscow Protest, Special to The New York Times,

January 7, 1971, New York Times, pages 1,3, New Trial of Jews Adjourns in Soviet; Reopening in Doubt; Trial in Leningrad Opens and Adjourns, by Bernard Gwertzman, MOSCOW, Jan. 6 — The trial of nine Soviet Jews accused of organized anti-Soviet activity opened in Leningrad this morning and was promptly adjourned to at least Monday, usually reliable Jewish sources said. [PDF]

January 8, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Soviet Steps Up Anti-U.S. Protest; American Official, Accosted on Street, Is Questioned About Jews' Actions Here, Special to The New York Times, The Soviet Union today stepped up its campaign to protest against harassment of Soviet representatives in the United States by militant Jewish organizations. View original in TimesMachine,

January 8, 1971, New York Times, page 8, Italian Red Paper Chides Soviet On Barring Jewish Emigration, Special to The New York Times, ROME, Jan. 7 — A dispatch from Moscow in the Italian Communist party newspaper L'Unita today said that the Stalinist heritage and a "lack of understanding at present" were making life difficult for Soviet Jews who wanted to emigrate to Israel.

January 8, 1971, New York Times, page 8, Army Officer in Leningrad Plot Gets 10 Years in Court-Martial, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, Jan. 7 — A Leningrad military court today sentenced Lieut. Vulf I. Zalmanson to 10 years in a prison camp on charges of participation in the planned hijacking of a Soviet airplane in June, usually reliable Jewish sources said.

January 9, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Blast Damages Soviet Building In Washington; No Injuries Are Reported as Predawn Explosion of Bomb Breaks Windows; A Cultural Office Hit; State Department in Apology -- Gromyko Makes 'Stern Protest' to U.S. Envoy; Bomb Explodes At Soviet Office, by Richard Halloran, Special to The New York Times, A small bomb exploded outside a Soviet cultural building here before dawn this morning, harming no one but shattering the glass in several windows and hurling an iron gate to a roof 250 feet away. View original in TimesMachine,

January 9, 1971, New York Times, Jewish Defense League Denies, But Won't Condemn, Bombing, by Irving Spiegel, "Never again!", the motto of the militant Jewish Defense League, was one of the slogans shouted in a telephone call to a news agency in Washington yesterday after the Soviet Embassy's cultural building had been bombed.Jewish Defense, View original in TimesMachine,

January 10, 1971, New York Times, page 20, For a Police Inspector Here, Vodka Symbolizes Soviet Diplomats' Goodwill, by Kathleen Teltsch, On New Year's Eve, a bottle of Russian vodka was carried from the Soviet Mission to the United Nations, on 67th Street, across the street to the 19th police precinct....Mission charged that bottles filled with paint Sad been hurled through a window by "Zionist hooligans" of the militant Jewish Defense League Moreover, Yakov A. Malik the chief delegate, had complained to United States authorities, View original in TimesMachine,

January 10, 1971, New York Times, Federal Officials Consulting, Federal officials were reported consulting over the weekend on ways to improve protection of foreign diplomatic installations. View original in TimesMachine,

January 10, 1971, New York Times, U.S. Cars Damaged In Soviet Actions; Two Vehicles Are Vandalized in Protest Campaign, by Bernard Gwertzman, Two American diplomats' cars were vandalized and an embassy officer was accosted today in the latest acts of retaliation against Americans for the harassment of Soviet personnel in the United States by militant Jewish organizations. View original in TimesMachine,

January 10, 1971, New York Times, page E2-E3, Threats and Bombs -- A Nasty Phase For the Two Nations; U. S. and Russia, by Harry Schwartz, Soviet-American relations entered a nasty phase last week. It culminated early Friday morning with a bomb explosion outside a Soviet cultural building in Washington. View original in TimesMachine,

January 11, 1971, Los Angeles Times - The Tuscaloosa News, page 22, Jewish Defense League; An Ultra-Militant Group,

January 11, 1971, New York Times, page 2, Jewish Defense League Plans to Harass Russians; Jewish Militants Plan Harassment, The head of the Jewish Defense League said yesterday that his group was forming teams to "follow, question and harass" Soviet diplomats in the city. View original in TimesMachine,

January 11, 1971, New York Times, page 15, B'nai B'rith Assails Kahane, Special to The New York Times,

January 12, 1971, New York Times, page 10, Russian Asserts 'Hoodlums' Trail Diplomats, The spokesman for the Soviet Mission to the United Nations said that Soviet diplomats had been followed yesterday on foot and by car "by gangs of hoodlums" from the Jewish Defense League as major Jewish leaders and Government officials condemned harassment of Russians in the United States. View original in TimesMachine,

January 12, 1971, UPI - New York Times, Nixon Condemns Attacks, President Nixon condemned as "morally wrong" today the bombing attacks on Soviet facilities in the United States....can Jewish community leaders !n.condemning such attacks as injurious to the cause of Jews in the Soviet Union, The Jewish Defense League has denied responsibility for the bombings but has not condemned them. The western White House View original in TimesMachine,

January 12, 1971, New York Times, page 1, U.S. Protests Harassment Of Americans in Moscow, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, The United States Embassy protested to the Soviet Government today against what is considered an officially inspired campaign of harassment and vandalism against Americans in Moscow. View original in TimesMachine,

January 13, 1971, New York Times, page A1, Jewish Defense League Plays Grim Game With the Russians; Defense League Plays Grim Game With Russians, by Murray Schumach, The six young men from the Jewish Defense League were standing on the northwest corner of 67th Street and Third Avenue, waiting for Russians to harass. Policemen and wooden barricades kept them out of 67th Street between Lexington and Third Avenues, where the Soviet Mission to the United Nations is situated., View original in TimesMachine, [PDF]

January 13, 1971, New York Times, page A1 Jewish Militant Is Arrested Here; Leader of Defense League Is Seized for Failure to Answer Riot Charge; Jewish Militant Arrested for Failing to Appear on Riot, by Lawrence Van Gelder, Rabbi Meir D. Kahane, the leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, was arrested yesterday in the organization's midtown office on a Criminal Court bench warrant issued after he failed to appear for a hearing on riot, View original in TimesMachine, [PDF]

January 13, 1971, New York Times, page A14, U.S. Embassy Gets Protest From a Rabbi in Moscow, by Bernard Gwertzman, Yehuda-Leib Levin, the Chief Rabbi of Moscow, signed a petition today accusing militant Jewish groups in the United States of "emulating Fascists" in their tactics. The petition said Soviet Jews did not want such "unsolicited protectors." ...was the only development in the campaign protesting harassment of Soviet representatives in the United States by the Jewish Defense League. United States Embassy officials said they hoped the Soviet authorities had decided to halt, View original in TimesMachine, [PDF]

January 13, 1971, New York Times, page A14, Soviet Incidents Taper Off, ...the State And Justice departments were still discussing the problem, brought about by the threats made by the Jewish Defense League and had not reached any conclusion on how to deal with it. View original in TimesMachine,

January 13, 1971, New York Times, page A15, Spearhead of the J.D.L.; Meir David Kahane, by Paul L. Montgomery, The elevator slid to a stop at the cluttered loft floor on West 42d Street and the tight, dark figure of Rabbi Meir David Kahane burst out shouting "Harass the Russians, that's the only way." The young members of the Jewish Defense League crowded around, giving their leader a hero's greeting as he told them in his excited, hyperactive way of his time in court yesterday. ...of Rabbi Meir David Kahane burst out shouting "Harass the Russians, that's the only way." The young members of the Jewish Defense League crowded around, giving their leader a hero's greeting as he told them in his excited, View original in TimesMachine,

January 13, 1971, New York Times, page A21, Court Requires a Warrant for Domestic Wiretaps, by Steven V. Roberts, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

January 14, 1971, New York Times, page A1, Grand Jury Will Hear Charges Against Jewish Defense League; Grand Jury Will Hear Jewish Defense League Cases, by Lawrence Van Gelder, The New York County District Attorney's office informed the Jewish Defense League yesterday that it was putting before a grand jury, View original in TimesMachine, [PDF]

January 14, 1971, New York Times, page A3, Harassment Disrupts Lives, Russians Say, by Kathleen Teltsch, The families of Soviet diplomats say harassment by the Jewish Defense League has altered their lives and made them feel at times that they are living under enemy occupation. View original in TimesMachine,

January 14, 1971, New York Times, page A10, Harriman Pays Visit To Gromyko; Prepares for Muskie's Talk With Kosygin Tomorrow; Prepares for Muskie's Talk With Kosygin Tomorrow, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

January 14, 1971, New York Times, page 36, Editorial, Offensive Defense, ....contemptible tactic of harassment perpetrated against Soviet citizens in this city by the young toughs of the so-called Jewish Defense League only puts them on the same plane -- and it is a low one -- as the thugs employed by the, View original in TimesMachine,

January 15, 1971, New York Times, page A8, A Brick Shatters Aeroflot's Window Here, by Murray Schumach, The plate-glass window of the Soviet tourist agency and airline, at 45 East 49th Street, was smashed yesterday morning by a brick thrown from a speeding car....between Madison and Park Avenues, and is shared by ! and Aeroriot. The window-breaking came during a period in which the Jewish Defense League has been conducting a program of open harassment of Soviet personnel here to dramatize, View original in TimesMachine,

January 16, 1971, New York Times, page 11, 3 In J.D.L. Indicted On Gun Charges; They Are Accused of Buying Rifles Under False Names, by Arnold H. Lubasch, Two leaders of the Jewish Defense League and an associate were indicted by a Federal grand jury here yesterday on charges that they used fictitious names to buy three rifles. View original in TimesMachine,

January 16, 1971, New York Times, Letters to the Editor, Shadowed U.S. Tourists, by David E. Eisenberg, Shadowed U.S. Tourists But the shadowing of Soviet representatives by the Jewish Defense League can only be met with a feeling of satisfaction by all Americans who from personal experience, View original in TimesMachine,

January 16, 1971, New York Times, page 11, Some Soviet Emigres in Israel Back Harassment Tactics Here, A militant group of former Soviet Jews living in Israel voiced support today for the Jewish Defense League's harassment of Soviet institutions in the United States. ...cancellation had been forced by the Jewish Defense League was the first public surrender by the Soviet authorities to Jewish pressure. Cablegrams were sent to Rab. bi Meir Kahane, head of the Jewish Defense League, View original in TimesMachine, [PDF]

January 16, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Muskie, Kosygin Confer 4 Hours; Exchange Views on Mideast and Indochina at Kremlin -- Need for Amity Cited Muskie and Kosygin Talk for 4 Hours at Kremlin, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, Premier Aleksei N. Kosygin told Senator Edmund S. Muskie today, in a Kremlin meeting lasting nearly four hours, that both the United States and the Soviet Union would benefit from peace in the Middle East and Indochina and a general improvement in relations. ...expressed disbelief that authorities in Washington were not at least condoning the anti-Soviet activities of the Jewish Defense League. Session With Gromyko Mr. Muskie's reception here, ,ineluded a 2.hour-40. minute session with, View original in TimesMachine,

January 17, 1971, New York Times, page E1, J.D.L.: Dangerous Campaign To Harass Russians, by David A. Adelman, His father and grandfather had been rabbis in the city of Safed, a part of the Ottoman Empire now known as Israel. He had himself studied Talmud, at the Flatbush Yeshiva, and now, in August, 1968, Meir David Kahane was the rabbi of a small synagogue in Queens....sent the young men forth, armed with clubs, to patrol the areas. As the organization grew, it acquired a name, the Jewish Defense League, and a summer camp where members were instructed in judo, karate and the use of firearms. View original in TimesMachine,

January 17, 1971, New York Times, page 1, U. S. Sending Guards Here To Protect Soviet Mission; U.S. Sends Guards To Soviet Mission, by Murray Schumach, Federal guards, specially trained to work at diplomatic buildings, were sent here from Washington at Mayor Lindsay's request yesterday to replace policemen who have been on duty outside the Soviet Union's Mission to the United Nations. ...mission on 67th Street between Lexington and Third Avenues because of the harassment of Russians by members of the Jewish Defense League protesting treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union. How many men were sent by order of President, View original in TimesMachine,

January 17, 1971, New York Times, page 65, Moscow's Embassy In Canberra Bombed, A bomb damaged the Soviet Embassy in Canberra early today after a letter sent to a newspaper and signed the "Australian Jewish Defense League" threatened harassment of Soviet diplomats in Australia. ....bomb damaged the Soviet Embassy in Canberra early today after a letter sent to a newspaper and signed the "Australian Jewish Defense League" threatened harassment of Soviet diplomats in Australia. View original in TimesMachine,

January 17, 1971, Reuters - New York Times, page 65, 2 Soviet Jews Get Visas To Emigrate,

January 18, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Police Strike Talks Deadlocked;; Lindsay Is Calm; Says Safety of City Is 'Assured' -- No Rise in Crime Reported Deadlock Continues in Talks on Police Strike Here, by Robert D. McFadden, Negotiations to end the city-wide policemen's strike were reported to be "gravely deadlocked" yesterday as the wildcat walkout deprived New York of 85 per cent of its patrolmen for a fourth successive day. View original in TimesMachine,

January 18, 1971, New York Times, page 6, Israel Condemns 'Terrorism' in U.S. in Support of Soviet Jews, Special to The New York Times, The Israeli Government today condemned "acts of terrorism" in the United States in the campaign to force the Soviet Union to allow Soviet Jews to emigrate to Israel. View original in TimesMachine,

January 18, 1971, New York Times, page 18, 60 U.S. Guards, Asked by Lindsay in Police Strike, Begin Protecting Soviet Mission; Jewish Militants March On 67th St.; City Police Arrest 3 Youths -- Federal Force Taken Off Washington Jobs, by Lacey Fosburgh, About 60 Federal guards sent from Washington to help city policemen guard the Soviet Union's mission to the United Nations during the wildcat strike by patrolmen began standing watch there yesterday. ...about a block away, on 66th Street and Third Avenue. I The arrests took place in mid-I afternoon as about 40 of the Jewish Defense League marched up and down on the southwest corner of 67th Street: and Lexington Avenue chanting, View original in TimesMachine,

January 19, 1971, New York Times, page 42, League Officials Quit, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

January 19, 1971, New York Times, page 42, Thant Condemns Violence, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

January 19, 1971, New York Times, page A1, 8 in J.D.L. Indicted For Protests in City; 8 in Jewish Defense League Are Indicted for Protests Here, by Edith Evans Asbury, Eight officials and members of the militant Jewish Defense League were indicted yesterday on a variety of charges, including assault, inciting to riot, rioting, criminal mischief and burglary. View original in TimesMachine,

January 20, 1971, New York Times, Letters, J.D.L.'s Wrong Approach, by David Freudberg, Letters to the Editor: J.D.L.'s Wrong Approach To the Editor: Recent actions by the Jewish Defense League have once again defeated its professed purpose and furthered the repression of in the United States, View original in TimesMachine,

January 20, 1971, New York Times, page 1, J.D.L. Calls a Halt To Its Harassment Of Soviet Diplomats; Harassing Tactic Halted By J.D.L., by Juan M. Vasquez, Rabbi Meir D. Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, announced yesterday an "indefinite moratorium" in the organization's campaign of harassing Soviet diplomats and members of their families. ...Rabbi Meir D. Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, announced yesterday an "indefinite moratorium" in the organization's campaign of harassing Soviet diplomats and members of their families.J.D.L. Calls a Halt To Its, View original in TimesMachine,

January 20, 1971, New York Times, page 12, Soviet Charges U.S. 'Connivance'; American Delegate at U.N. Denies Aiding Militants, by Kathleen Teltsch, Special to The New York Times, The United States today rejected Soviet and Iraqi diplomats charges of American "connivance" in the harassment of their missions by demonstrators. View original in TimesMachine,

January 21, 1971, New York Times, page 34, Letters, Taste of Soviet 'Life', by Jeffrey Blinder, I should like to express my sympathy with Mrs. Grigoryev and with Dr. Avdeyev, wives of Soviet diplomats here. (News story Jan. 14.) It is unfortunate that their life in America has degenerated into the kind of life experienced by people under enemy occupation. ...himself to act as spokesman for the Jewish community of New York, I can only speak for myself. I congratulate the Jewish Defense League and other concerned Americans for bringing a little bit of "home" to the Soviet officials in the, View original in TimesMachine,

January 21, 1971, New York Times, page 9, Jewish Defense League to Boycott Products of Concerns Dealing With Soviet, by Will Lissner, The Jewish Defense League began a consumer boycott yesterday against the products of United States companies doing business with the Soviet Union. View original in TimesMachine,

January 21, 1971, New York Times, page 9, U.N. Releases Note By Moscow On J.D.L., Special to The New York Times, The United Nations made public today the text of a Soviet letter complaining about harassment by the Jewish Defense League. View original in TimesMachine,

January 22, 1971, New York Times, page 39, Op-Ed, A Soviet View On Jews, by Spartak Beglov, Soviet public opinion is quite naturally disturbed by the terrorist acts perpetrated against Soviet institutions and their personnel in the United States by the Zionist Jewish Defense League. It cannot help but wonder about the implications of this campaign for American-Soviet relations and the cause of international peace. ...the terrorist acts perpetrated against Soviet institutions and their personnel in the United States by the Zionist Jewish Defense League. It cannot help but wonder about the implications of this campaign for American-Soviet, View original in TimesMachine,

January 22, 1971, New York Times, page 39, Op-Ed, The Right to Leave, by Morris B. Abram,
The recent vengeful trial of Jews attempting to leave Leningrad, the brutal beating and recapture of the Lithuanian seaman seeking asylum on an American Coast Guard vessel, the expressed fear of Solzhenitsyn that if he accepted a Nobel prize in Stockholm, he would be barred forever from his Russian homeland — all these events say something sad and significant about the Soviet Union fifty years after the Revolution.

January 23, 1971, New York Times, page 6, Doomed Lithuanian Asks for Clemency, MOSCOW, Jan. 22 — Vitautas Simokaitis, the Lithuanian under a death sentence for attempting to hijack a plane to Sweden, has appealed for mercy to the Lithuanian legislature's ruling body, official sources said today.

January 23, 1971, New York Times, page 7, 6-Month Curb on Travel by Rostropovich Reported, by Bernard Gwertzman, MOSCOW, Jan. 22 — Mstislav Rostropovich, the cellist was reported today to have been barred by Soviet authorities from traveling abroad for at least the next six months, presumably because of his public denunciation of Soviet cultural policy and his vigorous defense of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's right to receive the 1970 Nobel Prize for Literature.

January 24, 1971, New York Times, page 1, The Complex Past of Meir Kahane; Meir Kahane's Past -- as Scholar, as Author 'Michael King' and as Founder of J. D. L., by Michael T. Kaufman, The story of Meir Kahane moves from Talmudic academies in Brooklyn to a congregation that rebuffed him, to an existence under an assumed name unknown to most of his friends and then to the re-emergence of Rabbi Kahane -- this time as the founder of a militant Jewish group embroiling itself in international controversy....As founder of the Jewish Defense League he has, with little more than a mimeograph machine, drawn the recognition--and the United, View original in TimesMachine,

January 25, 1971, New York Times, page 19, Sunday Police Detail at Bus Terminal Reinforced, by Martin Gansberg, More than 30 policemen, including at least one captain and one lieutenant, were on duty yesterday on the main concourse of the Port Authority Bus Terminal in midtown Manhattan in an unusual display of force....manpower on Sunday because of problems that had arisen as such diverse groups as the National Renaissance party, the Jewish Defense League, the Black Panthers and the Young Lords solicited funds and distributed literature, View original in TimesMachine,

January 28, 1971, New York Times, page 1, U.S. Protests Attack On Two in Moscow; U.S. Protests Attack on Two in Soviet; Drive on Dissent News Seen, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, The United States Embassy protested today against the second assault in the last three days on American newsmen in what appeared to be a campaign to discourage meetings between correspondents and Russian dissidents. View original in TimesMachine,

January 30, 1971, New York Times, page 34, Jewish Defense League Plans To Resume Harassing Russians, by Irving Spiegel, The Jewish Defense League announced yesterday that it would resume its anti-Soviet harassment tactics. Irving Calderon, national coordinator of the militant, View original in TimesMachine,

January 31, 1971, New York Times, Chinese Students Here Protest Tokyo Claim to Isles, ... denounced Japanese aggression against China in the nineteen-] thirties and the marchers, adopting the-slogan of the Jewish Defense League, shouted "Never Again", View original in TimesMachine,

February 4, 1971, New York Times, J.D.L. Told To Give Letters To U.S. Jury, Rabbi Meir Kahane and other officials of the Jewish Defense League were ordered yesterday to turn over the organization's correspondence to a Federal grand jury here tomorrow morning, but Rabbi Kahane said later he would refuse to comply. View original in TimesMachine,

February 14, 1971, New York Times, page BQ106, Maccabee Patrols Monitoring Police In Fight on Crime, by Rudy Johnson, Samuel Schrage, the Hasidic rabbi who six years ago formed the Maccabees citizen-law enforcement group in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, says his organization has switched its emphasis to monitoring the police to make sure that they were doing their job. ...scrutinized one area of operation. Some Left to Join J.D.L. Noting that the Maccabees had lost some members to the militant Jewish Defense League, Rabbi Schrage said the patrol group had dwindled over the last two years from more, View original in TimesMachine,

February 15, 1971, New York Times, Defense League Resumes Protests Against Russians, The Jewish Defense League last night resumed its tactics of anti-Soviet demonstrations and harassment of Soviet diplomats and their families, which the organization had suspended last month. View original in TimesMachine,

February 15, 1971, New York Times, page 11, Soviet Said To Let 7 Families Leave; Jews Reported Going This Week, Most to Israel, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, Feb. 14 — Soviet authorities were reported today to have given unexpected permission to seven Moscow Jewish families to leave the country. All have been vocal in complaining about Soviet visa policies and most had been turned down previously. [PDF]

February 16, 1971, New York Times, page 15, Police Seize Head of Defense Group; Act on Soviet Complaint of Harassment by Rabbi, by Linda Charlton, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, was arrested on charges of harassment and verbal abuse yesterday on a complaint signed by a staff member of the Soviet Mission to the United Nations. View original in TimesMachine,

February 16, 1971, New York Times, pages 1, 12, Israelis Disregard Critics and Press Jerusalem Housing Projects, by Henry Raymont, Special to The New York Times, JERUSALEM, Feb. 15 — Disregarding local and international critics, the Israeli Ministry of Housing announced today that it would move ahead with plans for four sprawling housing projects in the Biblical hillsides that surround Jerusalem. [PDF]

February 18, 1971, New York Times, page 24, Suspect Is Linked To J.D.L. Weapons, 26-year-old Philadelphia man, described by the United States Attorney in Brooklyn as a major supplier of weapons to the Jewish Defense League, was under arrest here yesterday on charges of violating the Federal Firearms Control Act. View original in TimesMachine,

February 19, 1971, New York Times, page 36, Letter, J.D.L. -- Concerned Minority, by Gerald W. Wohlberg, M.D., Like most Jewish Americans I abhor the use of violence and emphatically dissociate myself from the destruction of Soviet property, allegedly by the Jewish Defense League. However, I find my attention drawn to what appears to be a new phenomenon: a militant minority group, rapidly, intensively and uniformly rejected by everyone. View original in TimesMachine,

February 20, 1971, AP - New York Times, page 8, Cars of 3 Russians Attacked in Washington Area; One Auto Set Afire -- State Department Apologizes to Soviet Embassy, The cars of three Soviet diplomats were attacked today in nearby Maryland in actions deplored by the United States as senseless and criminal. ...Kahane, head of the militant Jewish Defense League, was going on trial in New York on charges arising out of inci- against Soviet installa-I tions some time ago, [ When asked whether he was implying that the Jewish Defense, View original in TimesMachine,

February 20, 1971, New York Times, page 1, 2, Jews in Soviet Are Warned Against Espousing Zionism; Pravda Warns Soviet Jews Not to Espouse Zionism, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, Feb. 19 — Pravda, the Communist party newspaper, warned Soviet Jews today that anyone espousing Zionist beliefs would "automatically become an agent of international Zionism and hence an enemy of the Soviet people." [PDF]

February 21, 1971, New York Times, page 8, Soviet Paper Says Judge Here Tried To Blackmail Aide, The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda charged yesterday that a judge in Criminal Court here had tried to blackmail a Soviet newsman into dropping charges against members of the militant Jewish Defense League who allegedly assaulted him in December, 1969, in the New York offices of Tass, the Soviet press agency. View original in TimesMachine,

February 23, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Kahane, at Trial, Says Police Blocked Access to Synagogue, Rabbi Meir Kahane testified at his own trial on charges of obstructing governmental administration yesterday that he attempted to cross a police barricade only after he was denied access to a synagogue across the street from the Soviet Mission to the United Nations. The .38-year-old national chairman of the Jewish Defense League is on trial on the misdemeanor charges and' another of resisting arrest arising from a, View original in TimesMachine,

February 24, 1971, New York Times, page 6, Kahane Is Guilty In Disorder Case; But Jury Dismisses Count of Resisting Arrest, by Juan M. Vasquez, Rabbi Meir D. Kahane, the national chairman of the Jewish Defense League, was convicted here yesterday on charges of obstructing governmental administration and disorderly conduct, View original in TimesMachine,

February 24, 1971, AP - The Nashua Telegraph, Rabbi Meir Kahane Arrested In Belgium, by Carl Hartman,

February 25, 1971, New York Times, Followers Here Protest, Thirty members or the Jewish Defense League protested the ouster of Rabbi Kahane from the Brussels conference yesterday by occupying the offices of the American Jewish Conference' on Soviet Jewry at 55 West, View original in TimesMachine,

February 25, 1971, New York Times, page 18, Sees Loss for Democracy, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

February 25, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Kahane, Barred by Parley, Is Ousted From Belgium; Kahane Is Barred by Conference on Soviet Jews and Expelled by the Police From Belgium, by Henry Giniger, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the controversial leader of the Jewish Defense League, was expelled from Belgium today after he had been refused admittance to a conference of Jewish organizations on the situation of Soviet Jews. View original in TimesMachine,

February 26, 1971, New York Times, page 1, World Jews Make a Plea To Moscow; Parley in Brussels Calls for Freedom to Emigrate, by Henry Giniger, Special to The New York Times, The leaders of organized world Jewry appealed to international opinion today to urge the Soviet Union to give its Jewish citizens the right to their own cultural and religious life and the right to emigrate. View original in TimesMachine,

February 26, 1971, New York Times, page 2, Brussels Declaration on Soviet Jews, BRUSSELS, Feb. 25 — Following is the text of a declaration issued in English today by the World Conference of Jewish Communities on Soviet Jewry: [PDF]

February 27, 1971, New York Times, page 26, Letter, Dissenting Views?, by Marion Magid, Surely it takes only a modicum of political literacy -- and editorial responsibility -- to understand that a piece of official Soviet invective like the recent diatribe [Op-Ed article Jan. 22] against the Jewish Defense League by Spartak Beglov of the Novosti Press Agency in Moscow does not constitute a legitimate "dissenting view" on the question of Soviet anti-Semitism -- on a par in some implied debate with the differing views printed alongside it. View original in TimesMachine,

February 27, 1971, New York Times, page 1, School Disorders Worry City Aides; Queens Junior High Incident Is Sixth in Last 2 Weeks -- No Pattern Discerned, by Paul L. Montgomery, School officials are becoming increasingly concerned about outbreaks of disorder at public schools here in the last two weeks. View original in TimesMachine,

February 28, 1971, New York Times, page E2, Soviet Jews; The Big Question At Brussels Was How to Help Them, by Henry Giniger, Special to The New York Times, The plight of 3.5 million Jews in the Soviet Union was dramatized here last week at an unusual assembly of Jewish organizations. They got together in the Belgian capital because they felt that, next to the defense of Israel, what happens to their Soviet brothers is the most important problem facing Jewry today. View original in TimesMachine,

March 3, 1971, New York Times, page 11, Soviet Assails a U.S. Reporter; Expulsion Is Demanded in a Moscow Newspaper, Special to The New York Times, A Soviet newspaper called today for the expulsion of Anthony Astrachan, the Moscow correspondent of The Washington Post, for articles about the problems of Soviet Jews that were described as "slanderous concoctions." View original in TimesMachine,

March 3, 1971, New York Times, page 42, Letter, Barring Kahane From Parley, by Reed Straus, While disassociating myself from the counterproductive and indeed foolish tactics of the Jewish Defense League, I regard the barring of its leader, Rabbi Meir Kahane, from the conference held in Brussels on the situation of Soviet Jewry as an obvious hypocrisy. View original in TimesMachine,

March 7, 1971, New York Times, Melee Puzzles Music-Art School; Beaten Teacher Lauds Its Spirit,
People at the High School of Music and Art appeared puzzled but not nervous last week over an incident 10 days ago in which a social studies teacher was seriously beaten in a confrontation between black and Jewish groups. ...Students Union; of which Mr. Gissinger is faculty adviser, held a meeting after school on Feb. 25. Eli Schwartz Of the Jewish Defense League was invited to speak. About 55 students attended. Just before 4:30 P.M., when the school, View original in TimesMachine,

March 11, 1971, New York Times, Picketing at the U.N., A group of about 20 young men and women who said they planned a hunger strike in sympathy with Soviet Jews barred from emigration picketed across the street from the United Nations entrance yesterday. The pickets said they represented the Jewish Defense League. View original in TimesMachine,

March 11, 1971, New York Times, page 9, 100 Jews Stage a Moscow Sit-In; Protest Ends Peacefully as Police Empty Building, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, March 10 — More than 100 Soviet Jews demanding permission to emigrate to Israel were forced tonight to leave an office building of the Supreme Soviet that they had been occupying for several hours.

March 16, 1971, New York Times, Scuffle Disrupts Kahane Talk, A scuffle broke out between Maoist followers and Jewish students at McGill University today when the Maoists a speech by Rabbi Meir Kahane[ of New York, founder of the militant Jewish Defense League. View original in TimesMachine,

March 19, 1971, AP - New York Times, page 15, Soviet Protests to U.S., The Soviet Union has again protested harassment by the Jewish Defense League and requested that the Administration "assure normal working conditions" for the Soviet Embassy and its personnel here. View original in TimesMachine,

March 19, 1971, New York Times, page 15, Emigration Policy Of Soviet on Jews Is Reported Easing, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, March 18 — Unconfirmed reports circulated in Moscow tonight that Soviet authorities had decided on a further and more extensive liberalization in their policy toward Jews seeking to emigrate to Israel.

March 22, 1971, AP , New York Times, page 1, 800 Protesters for Soviet Jews Arrested in Capital; 800 Protestors Seized In Capital, About 800 persons chanting "Freedom now!" blocked an intersection near the Soviet Embassy and were arrested today during a demonstration protesting treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union. Led by Rabbi Meir Kahane of the militant Jewish Defense League, tile sign-carrying protesters in the sit. down surrendered to the police without struggle. View original in TimesMachine,

April 1, 1971, New York Times, page 30, Trespassing Trial of Kahane Ends in a Hung Jury Here, View original in TimesMachine,

April 4, 1971, New York Times, page 21, Polish Radio Spy Shifts His Attack; Zionists the Target of Agent Who Worked in Munich, by Alfred Friendly Jr., A Polish secret agent who worked for Radio Free Europe and recently returned here to publicize his exploits has shifted his attacks from the American Central Intelligence Agency to the role of "Zionist subversion." View original in TimesMachine,

April 4, 1971, New York Times, page 64, Italian-American League's Power Spreads, by Fred Ferretti, The Italian-American Civil Rights League -- an energetic, well-organized and militant pressure group -- reports that since its formation here nine months ago it has spread from its New York base to 19 states and that its membership and funds are rising steadily. View original in TimesMachine,

April 5, 1971, New York Times, page 66, Policemen Seize 17 Before J.D.L. Holds Hightstown Protest, Special to The New York Times, Thirteen persons were arrested today in nearby East Windsor and four others were arrested here -- all on charges of possession of dangerous weapons -- shortly before 100 members and supporters of the Jewish Defense League marched in protest against recent cross burnings. View original in TimesMachine,

April 14, 1971, New York Times, Kahane Sentenced To Pay Fine of $500, Rabbi Meir Kahane was sentenced yesterday to pay $500 or serve 90 days in jail on a conviction arising from a demonstration two years ago near the Soviet Mission to the United Nations. .."community decide which they choose to obey and which] they choose to disobey." Rabbi Kahane, the leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, was convicted Feb. 23 on charges of obstructing governmental administration. View original in TimesMachine,

April 15, 1971, New York Times, page 10, Glen Cove Says It Can't Provide Extra Guards for Soviet Mission, by Roy R. Silver, Special to The New York Times, President Nixon has been advised by Mayor Andrew J. DiPaola that because of its financial position, Glen Cove will no longer be able to provide extraordinary police protection to the Soviet Mission here. View original in TimesMachine,

April 16, 1971, UPI - New York Times, Protest in Washington, United States to provide "appropriate protection'' for embassy personnel. State Department officials said today. The Jewish Defense League claimed responsibility for the incident. The protest note said a group had approached three View original in TimesMachine,

April 16, 1971, AP - New York Times, Dutch Blast Damages Russian and U.S. Offices, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, April 15 (AP) --An explosion rocked the Soviet trade delegation's building here early today and damaged the United States Consulate next door. ...reports, a message found near the building said: "Never again! Let my people go!" These are slogans used by the militant Jewish Defense League in the United States when harassing Soviet diplomats in protest against the treatment of View original in TimesMachine,

April 19, 1971, New York Times, Russian Jews' Rights Urged at Rallies, Jewish leaders yesterday called on the Soviet Union to restore the cultural and religious rights of Jews and permit them to emigrate, particularly to Israel. Their appeals were emphasized by demonstrations at Hunter College and on Long Island. ... United Nations, at Glen Cove, ,. L, where 200 Nassau County guarded against any . There were no incidents. The militant Jewish Defense League had been denied a rally permit. About 100 members of the Long Island Committee for Soviet View original in TimesMachine,

April 21, 1971, New York Times, page 5, Kahane Is Arrested In Protest On Iraq, Rabbi Meir Kahane and nine of his young supporters in the militant Jewish Defense League were arrested last night in a demonstration outside the Iraqi mission to the United Nations on 79th Street near Fifth Avenue. View original in TimesMachine,

April 23, 1971, New York Times, page 41, Bomb Explodes in Midtown Soviet Trading Office, by Martin Arnold, A bomb in an attach case exploded yesterday at the offices of the Amtorg Trading Corporation, the Soviet trade agency, on Lexington Avenue. No one was injured. View original in TimesMachine,

April 24, 1971, New York Times, Five-Year Term Imposed On a Jewish Militant Here, A Jewish Defense League member who had pleaded guilty to making false statements in his application for a passport was sentenced in Federal Court in Brooklyn yesterday to five years in prison. Judge John R. Bartels imposed the maximum sentence on Avraham Hershkovitz, 26 years old, of 1615 46th Street in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn and stayed its execution until May 7. His bail was increased from $50,000 to $65,000. Hershkovitz and his wife, Nancy, 19, were arrested Sept. 28 at Kennedy International Airport as they were about to board a London-bound United Arab Airlines plane with loaded guns hidden in their clothing. They were accused of planning to hijack the plane to Israel. He was carrying a passport issued in the name of Gordon Joseph Ryder of Los Angeles. View original in TimesMachine,

April 24, 1971, New York Times, Harrying Of Envoys Denounced By Bush, George Bush, the United States permanent representative to the United Nations, made a vigorous denunciation last night of recent harassment of foreign diplomatic missions here. ...the Amtorg Trading Corporation, 335 Lexington Avenue, said they were seeking Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the militant Jewish Defense League. Rabbi Kahane said in a statement that he would be "happy to meet the police at , time to, View original in TimesMachine,

April 25, 1971, New York Times, page 23, Soviet Protests Harassment Here; U.S. Ambassador Given Note on Attacks on Offices, Special to The New York Times, The Soviet Union delivered a protest to the United States today over continuing attacks against Soviet offices in New York. View original in TimesMachine,

April 25, 1971, New York Times, page 23, No Comment in Washington, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

April 25, 1971, New York Times, page 20, Hussein Reported to Ask Mufti To Return to Jordan From Exile, by Peter Grose, Special to The New York Times,

April 26, 1971, New York Times, pages 1, 21, Parade Here Salutes Israel's 23d Year, by Irving Spiegel, To the repeated, joyous chant of "Am Yisroel Chai" (the people of Israel live), thousands of men, women and children paraded up Fifth Avenue yesterday in celebration of Israel's 23d anniversary as a nation. View original in TimesMachine,

April 30, 1971, New York Times, page 66, 23 Arraigned Here For Invading Office Of Board of Rabbis, Twenty-three members of the militant Jewish Defense League were arraigned in Criminal Court yesterday on charges stemming from the league's invasion of the offices of the New York Board of Rabbis on Wednesday.23 Arraigned Here For, View original in TimesMachine,

May 1, 1971, New York Times, pages 1,8, Russians Said to Have Let 1,300 Jews Leave in April, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, MOSCOW, April 30 — Soviet authorities have permitted more than 1,300 Jews to emigrate to Israel this month, reliable Western diplomatic sources said today. This is believed to be the largest number of Jews allowed to depart in one month since Israel was founded in 1948. [PDF]

May 1, 1971, New York Times, page 11, U.S. Announces It Will Boycott Moscow's World Film Festival, by Benjamin Welles, Special to The New York Times, The United States will not participate in the Moscow International Film Festival this year and will not accredit a delegation to it, the State Department announced today. View original in TimesMachine,

May 1, 1971, New York Times, page 22, Judge Lets the J.D.L. Hold A 'Vigil' at Soviet Estate, State Supreme Court Justice Bernard S. Meyer ruled today that he Jewish Defense League had the right to .conduct a "prayer vigil" this Sunday outside the gates of the Soviet..., View original in TimesMachine,

May 1, 1971, New York Times, page 37, Kahane Jury Deadlocked; New Trial Set for June 28, The second trial of Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the Jewish Defense League, and two of his followers on 1969 charges stemming from an incident at the Soviet press agency here ended yesterday in a hung jury. Kahane Jury Deadlocked; New,. View original in TimesMachine,

May 3, 1971, New York Times, page 26, 77 in J.D.L. Seized in Sitdown On 3d Ave. Near Soviet Mission,, by Irving Spiegel, Seventy-seven members of the militant Jewish Defense League were arrested yesterday afternoon on charges of disorderly conduct for staging a sitdown that obstructed traffic on Third Avenue, near the Soviet Mission to the United, View original in TimesMachine,

May 3, 1971, New York Times, page 26,, Vigil at Summer Compound, About 250 .to 300 persons held an orderly prayer vigil sponsored by the Jewish Defense League outside the summer compound belonging to the Soviet Mission o .the United Nations here, View original in TimesMachine,

May 5, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Soviet Stressing Better U.S. Ties; Top Aides Are Said to Get Orders to Work Seriously for Negotiated Accords Soviet Stressing Better Ties With U.S., by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, Top Soviet officials have told American diplomats here that they have been ordered to try seriously to negotiate agreements with the United States, reliable sources said today. View original in TimesMachine,

May 5, 1971, New York Times, page 34, Blacks and Jews in Melee at Brooklyn College; Singing by. J.D.L. Members Interrupts Soul Music and Leads to Battle, by Joseph O. Haff, A fight between black and white students, the latter members of the Jewish Defense League, was broken up shortly after noon yesterday on the Brooklyn College campus by 100 city policemen and college security guards after a 20 minute, View original in TimesMachine,

May 6, 1971, New York Times, page 47, Kahane and Defense League Curbed in Brooklyn Dispute, Rabbi Meir Kahane and the Jewish Defense League were temporarily enjoined yesterday from violence or-the threat of violence on the Brooklyn College campus. The school was the..., View original in TimesMachine,

May 7, 1971, New York Times, Letter, Jews in the Soviet Union, by John J. Kapstein, The despicable acts of violence and harassment conducted by the Jewish Defense League in the U.S.A. are obviously the work of a small minority not connected with American citizenry as a whole, Jew or Gentile.Letters to the Editor, View original in TimesMachine,

May 8, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Duke Ellington Will Tour Soviet; U.S. Officials Are Pleased, Seeing Russian Intention to Continue Exchanges Duke Ellington to Make Tour of Soviet, Special to The New York Times, Duke Ellington and his orchestra will visit five Soviet cities this fall as part of the Soviet-American cultural exchange agreement, the United States Embassy announced today. View original in TimesMachine,

May 9, 1971, New York Times, Letters, Cultural Exchange Still On?; Cultural Exchange, by Stanley Lipson, Chairman, Merrick Chapter, Jewish Defense League Merrick, L. I., I READ with interest the article by John Browning entitled "Don't Let Cultural Exchange Die!" There is one misstatement of fact which I would like to correct. Mr. Browning writes: "Right now the future of this [ the exchange] program is in jeopardy....concert going public will boycott Russian performances on humanitarian grounds. View original in TimesMachine,

May 12, 1971, New York Times, page 37, Bernsteins Raise $35,000 for the Berrigan Defense, by Charlotte Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Bernstein, whose 1970 fundraising party for the Panthers Legal Defense Fund triggered widespread criticism, gave another civil liberties gathering Monday night -- this time in behalf of the Rev. Philip F. Berrigan and his five codefendants. View original in TimesMachine,

May 13, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Soviet Asserts Jews Consulted Israelis in 1970 Hijacking Plot; Soviet Charges Jews Consulted Israelis in 1970 Plot, by Bernard Gwertzman, Tass, the Soviet press agency, said today that the Israeli authorities had been consulted by the group of Soviet Jews accused of plotting last year to hijack a Soviet plane to flee the country. View original in TimesMachine,

May 13, 1971, New York Times, page 1, 7 In J.D.L. Seized As Conspirators; U.S. Agents Arrest Kahane and Others on Indictments Alleging Arms Violations, by David Andelman, Rabbi Meir Kahane and six other members of the Jewish Defense League were arrested last night by United States Treasury agents and charged with conspiracy to violate Federal gun and bomb regulations. View original in TimesMachine,

May 13, 1971, New York Times, page 18, Stolen F.B.I. Papers Described As Largely of a Political Nature, by Bill Kovach, Special to The New York Times, The self-styled Citizens Commission to Investigate the F.B.I. says that 40 per cent of the documents it stole on March 8 from the Federal Bureau of Investigation office in Media, Pa., involved investigations of a political nature while only 1 per cent involved organized crime. View original in TimesMachine,

May 14, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Kahane and Colombo Join Forces to Fight Reported U.S. Harassment; Kahane, Colombo Form An Alliance, by Morris Kaplan, Joseph A. Colombo Sr., a reputed underworld figure who founded the Italian-American Civil Rights League, and Rabbi Meir Kahane, militant leader of the Jewish Defense League, joined forces yesterday to fight what they called harassment by the Federal Government. View original in TimesMachine,

May 15, 1971, New York Times. page 30, Editorial, Colombo-Kahane, Civil Rights League are really exercized about the plight of Soviet Jews, while the most fanatical adherents of the Jewish Defense League can hardly regard the efforts to ban the word Mafia from the English language as a cause to..., View original in TimesMachine,

May 16, 1971, New York Times, page 61, Italian-American Rights League Builds Strength in Several Major Cities, by Fred Ferretti, The New York-based Italian-American Civil Rights League is gaining strength as a national organization, involving itself in grass roots community projects and attracting new members in several major cities. View original in TimesMachine,

May 16, 1971, New York Times, National Notes; Odd Couple, ...week were Joseph A. Colombo Sr., founder of the Italian American Civil Rights League, and Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League. Of Rabbi Kahane, Colombo said he is "fighting for his people in Russia and we re fighting for, View original in TimesMachine,

May 18, 1971, New York Times, Jewish Agency Gets Order Against J.D.L., The State Supreme Court yesterday permanently barred the Jewish Defense League from invading or disrupting the executive offices of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies here. View original in TimesMachine,

May 19, 1971, New York Times, page 20, Kahane and a Black Leader Pledge Unity, by Charlayne Hunter, Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the Jewish Defense League, ceremonially broke bread yesterday with Dr. Thomas Matthew, head of a black self-help group, in the latter group's Harlem factory yesterday, and the two men pledged a, View original in TimesMachine,

May 25, 1971, New York Times, page 22, Kahane Agrees to Curtail Brooklyn College Activities, Rabbi Meir Kahane agreed yesterday that he and members of his militant Jewish Defense League would refrain from disruptive activities at or near Brooklyn College. Trouble involving black and white students erupted on the campus, View original in TimesMachine,

May 27, 1971, New York Times, page 45, Notes On People: Bernstein Incurs J.D.L.'s Wrath, by Albin Krebs, First Leonard Bernstein was severely criticized for having held a fund-raising gala for the Black Panthers. That got him in so much hot water that when he decided to hold a similar affair for the Rev. Philip F. Berrigan, the antiwar priest, he did it so decorously that it took two days for the public to find out. View original in TimesMachine,

May 29, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Jerusalem's Old Jewish Quarter Is Losing Its Arab Character, by Peter Grose, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] JERUSALEM, May 25 — "It's deplorable what the Jews are doing to Jerusalem," an Arab nationalist in Beirut said recently. "They're putting up their new buildings even inside the Old City — they're totally destroying the Arab character of the old Jewish Quarter."

May 29, 1971, New York Times, page 25, A Crime Family's 65-Year Journey Into 'Legitimacy', by Fred Ferretti, [PDF] When Giuseppe Lupollo arrived in New York from southern Italy in 1905 he began immediately to create a Mafia family dedicated equally to crime and to legitimate pursuits.

May 29, 1971, New York Times, pages 1, 33, La Guardia Jet Is Hijacked And Flown to the Bahamas, by Grace Lichtenstein, [PDF] A man who said he had a large quantity of explosives strapped around his waist took control of an Eastern Airlines 727 jet in midair last night and, after landing and allowing the passengers to debark at La Guardia Airport, hijacked it to Nassau in the Bahamas.

May 30, 1971, New York Times, pages 1, 37, Hijacker Is Held on Air Piracy Charge, by Martin Gansberg, [PDF] A former New York policeman, seized in the Bahamas as he stepped off an Eastern Airlines 727 jet he had hijacked Friday night with a weaponless but terrifying bluff, was returned to the city on air piracy charges yesterday.

May 30, 1971, New York Times, page 37, 3 Who Quit Klan Tell Of Dissent; Say Pennsylvania Klavern Has Few Members Left, by Donald M. Janson, Special to The New York Times, Bitter dissension is wracking the eastern Pennsylvania klavern of the United Klans of America. View original in TimesMachine,

May 31, 1971, New York Times, pages 1, 2, African Christian Sects Grow Rapidly; Burgeoning Independent Christian Sects Becoming New Force in Africa, by Edward B. Fiske, [PDF] Every Sunday morning bathers and picnickers at the Bar Beach on Victoria Island off Lagos, Nigeria, find they must wend their way through numerous clusters of white-robed figures facing out to sea.

May 31, 1971, New York Times, page 2, Israeli Successes Linked To a Cadre; Basic Force of 45,000 Men Seen as Responsible for Military Pre-eminence, by Drew Middleton, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, May 27 — Israel's military pre-eminence in the Middle East rests largely upon about 45,000 professionals — officers, noncommissioned officers and enlisted men — in the army, navy and air force.

June 2, 1971, New York Times, page 46, Hasidic Group Marks Its 100th Year, by Israel Shenker, A one-night conference of ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jews of the Satmar movement -- a group named for the Austro-Hungarian town in which it was formed -- held a 100th anniversary meeting in Brooklyn yesterday. View original in TimesMachine,

June 5, 1971, New York Times, page 26, U.S. Backs Police On Mission Guards, The United States moved today to intervene on the side of the New York Police Department in a court case in which the department is a defendant against complaints by apartment building owners and tenants in the area around the Soviet Mission on East 67th Street....inconvenience of residents. Stiff security precautions have been taken around the mission, at 136 East 67th Street, since the Jewish Defense League and other groups began waging a campaign of protest against what they see as the, View original in TimesMachine,

June 5, 1971, New York Times, page 17, Sports of the Times; Handicaps and Other Small Moments, by Robert Lipsyte, ... professional-amateur tournament will be held rain or shine. That's the kind of duffers we are." No Problems The other league, the Jewish Defense League, is no stranger to major sports, either. Two years ago today, the J.D.L., View original in TimesMachine,

June 6, 1971, New York Times, page D23, Letter, "No Hate", by Karl Vally Weigel, In a paper which prides itself on showing its readers "both sides of the coin," not mainly one point of view, I feel that you have given the "Hate Russia Campaigners" too much space by printing both Friede F. Rothe's and Stanley Lipson's comments. View original in TimesMachine,

June 11, 1971, New York Times, page 32, 100 J.D.L. Backers Seized In Protest, More than 100 supporters of the Jewish Defense League, including its militant leader, Rabbi Meir Kahane, were arrested on disorderly conduct charges late last night when they sat down in the intersection of Third Avenue and East 67th Street, half a block from the Soviet Mission to the United Nations. View original in TimesMachine,

June 18, 1971, New York Times, page 24, Metropolitan Will Seek Art Switch With Russia, by Grace Glueck, Officials of the Metropolitan Museum of Art will journey to the Soviet Union within the next few weeks to explore possibilities for an exchange of art exhibitions between the United States and the Soviet Union, it was learned yesterday. View original in TimesMachine,

June 22, 1971, New York Times, page 22, Mack Truck Offices Picketed, ...their intention to step-up harassment of United States concerns dealing with ,tile Soviet Union, eight members of the Jewish Defense League . a sit in yesterday for little more than an hour at the Empire State Building headquarters, View original in TimesMachine,

June 25, 1971, New York Times, page 23, Wiretap Hearing Set Here Today; U.S. Says National Security Is Involved in J.D.L. Case, by Eleanor Blau, A hearing on the legality of a Justice Department wiretap on the Jewish Defense League will be held in Federal District Court in Brooklyn this morning. View original in TimesMachine,

June 26, 1971, New York Times, page 15, Italian-American League Said to Pressure Shops, by James F. Clarity, Scores of merchants in the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn have told the Kings County Board of Trade that they will close their stores Monday -Italian-American United Day -only because they are afraid of boycotts or broken windows if they stay open. View original in TimesMachine,

June 27, 1971, New York Times, page 3, U.S. Rabbi Holds Service in Moscow, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, A rabbi from New York on a visit here was called upon to conduct this morning's Sabbath services in the Moscow Synagogue because of the hospitalization of its only rabbi, 77-year-old Yehuda Leib Levin. View original in TimesMachine,

June 28, 1971, New York Times, page 18, Jewish Defense League Gains Adherents in Cities Across Country, by Robert E. Tomasson, They gather in private homes in Greenwich, Conn., in a meeting hall in Chicago's North Side and in an office in Los Angeles. There is talk of guns and karate and the emphatic conviction that "if the Jew is kicked, he will kick back." View original in TimesMachine,

June 29, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Columbo Shot, Gunman Slain At Columbus Circle Rally Site; Killing of Assailant Not Done by Police, Official Says, by William E. Farrell, Colombo Is Shot and His Assailant Is Slain in Columbus Circle Before Rally Starts Thousands Crowd Scene As Group's Chief Falls, Before thousands of stunned spectators and amid heavy police security, Joseph A. Colombo Sr., the 48-year-old reputed chief of a Brooklyn Mafia family, was shot in the head and critically wounded at Columbus Circle yesterday less than an hour before a massive Italian-American civil rights rally began. [PDF]

June 29, 1971, New York Times, page 20, Colombo: A Man With Several Roles, by Lawrence Van Gelder, Joseph Anthony Colombo Sr. was appearing at Columbus Circle in his role as a founder of the Italian-American Civil Rights League yesterday when he was shot down. View original in TimesMachine,

June 30, 1971, New York Times, page 26, Italian-American League Absolves Blacks of Attack, by Fred Ferretti, The Italian-American Civil Rights League told its 32 chapters in the metropolitan area yesterday that "the black community should not be held responsible" for the critical shooting of Joseph A. Colombo Sr., the league's founder. View original in TimesMachine,

July 2, 1971, New York Times, page 29, The Clergyman: Still a Source of Counsel to His Congregation, by Enid Nemy, In the last decade, the direction of the church has changed in varying degrees, but one factor has remained immutable. Clergymen of every faith have retained their role as the court of first resort for the problems of their parishioners. View original in TimesMachine,

July 3, 1971, The Evening News [Newburgh, NY] Joe Columbo and Rabbi Meir Kahane Speak Their Piece, Now, read the exclusive articles coauthored by Joe Colombo, founder of the Italian-american Civil Rights League and Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish ...

July 6, 1971, The Evening News [Newburgh, NY] Columbo Backs Kahane's Goals -- For Italian Americans,
July 6, 1971, The Evening News [Newburgh, NY] page 11A, Columbo Called Mafia Chieftain,
July 6, 1971, The Evening News [Newburgh, NY] page 11A, 'Never again' Vow Guides New Jew, by Rabbi Meir Kahane,
July 6, 1971, AP - The Evening News [Newburgh, NY] page 11A, Columbo In Slight Improvement,

July 7, 1971, New York Times, page 75, Hearings Opened For Kahane Trial; Police Infiltrator a Witness in Jewish League Case, by Eleanor Blau, A patrolman who infiltrated the Jewish Defense League is to testify for the Government at the conspiracy trial of Rabbi Meir Kahane and about a dozen J.D.L. members. View original in TimesMachine,

July 10, 1971, New York Times, Kahane Enters Guilty Plea On One Charge, in a Deal; Kahane Is Guilty In a Conspiracy, by Eleanor Blau, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the head of the Jewish Defense League, and two other members of the militant organization pleaded guilty in Federal Court in Brooklyn yesterday to a conspiracy charge involving the manufacture of explosives.Kahane, View original in TimesMachine,

July 12, 1971, New York Times, page 30, Dynamite Is Left For Authorities; Site Is Disclosed by a Caller Who Says He Is in J.D.L., by Emanuel Perlmutter, One hundred and ninety-seven sticks of dynamite were found at 11 A.M. yesterday behind some shrubbery at the northbound side of Palisades Interstate Parkway 1,000 feet south of the Alpine Lookout in New Jersey. View original in TimesMachine,

July 13, 1971, AP - New York Times, page 10, Soviet Jews Seeking Visas Reported on Hunger Strike, [PDF] MOSCOW, July 12 (AP) — A group of 29 Jews from Soviet Georgia began a hunger strike today in Moscow's central telegraph office to protest lack of action on their requests to emigrate to Israel, Jewish sources reported.

July 13, 1971, New York Times, page 11, Kahane, Facing Jail Term, Vows More Attacks on Russians, by Emanuel Perlmutter, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the head of the militant Jewish Defense League, said yesterday, at a news conference that he and his followers would not be deterred from using explosives or other forms of violence against Soviet installations in this country if they considered it necessary. View original in TimesMachine,

July 18, 1971, New York Times, Federal Agents Seize Gun At a J.D.L. Camp Upstate, Upstate Agents of the United States Treasury Department seized a pistol last week during a two- day search of the Jewish Defense League summer camp ini Woodburne, officials said yes-I terday. The camp is in Sullivan County, View original in TimesMachine,

The New York Times, July 21, 1971

July 22, 1971, New York Times, page 36, 22 Members of NEGRO Leave For Soviet Goodwill Trip Today, by C. Gerald Fraser, Dr. Thomas W. Matthew, with his usual dramatic flair, brought Government officials from the United States and the Soviet Union to an old Harlem warehouse yesterday to brief members of his organization who leave today on a trip to Russia. View original in TimesMachine,

July 24, 1971, New York Times, page 26, Kahane Gets 5-Year Suspended Sentence in Bomb Plot, by Morris Kaplan, Rabbi Meir Kahane received a five-year suspended sentence, was fined $5,000 and was placed on probation for five years here yesterday for plotting to make a bomb. View original in TimesMachine,

July 26, 1971, New York Times, page 51, Soviet Aide's Auto Is Hit by Fire Bomb At Far Rockaway, An auto belonging to an attache of the Soviet delegation to the United Nations was fire-bombed and slightly damaged early yesterday morning outside the cottage used by the Soviet staff at 127 Beach 27th Street, Far Rockaway, Queens. ...fire-bombing of the cars was "in reprisal for the oppression of the Jews in the Soviet Union." Then he used the slogan of the Jewish Defense League, "Let my people go," and some words in Hebrew, ending the message with another J.D.L, View original in TimesMachine,

July 27, 1971, New York Times, U.S. Negroes in Moscow Offer Plan for Jews' Exit, two years. The blacks said they had made the proposal at the request of American Jews, in[ Rabbi Meir Kahane of the Jewish Defense League. Jews leaving under the proposed program would work for at least two years in a sort of United, View original in TimesMachine,

August 4, 1971, New York Times, page 5, U.S. Group Appeals To Kosygin to Allow Visit to Jewish Area, Special to The New York Times, Dr. Thomas W. Matthew, who arrived here 11 days ago at the head of an 11-man delegation from his National Economic Growth and Reconstruction Organization, or NEGRO, has appealed to Premier Aleksei N. Kosygin to allow the group to visit the capital of the Jewish Autonomous Region. View original in TimesMachine,

August 6, 1971, New York Times, page 2, U.S. Asks for Laws to Protect Officials, by Robert M. Smith, Special to The New York Times, The Administration asked Congress today for Federal authority to prosecute cases involving attacks on American and foreign officials and their families. View original in TimesMachine,

August 6, 1971, New York Times, page 38, Gun Drive Opened By Jewish League, The Jewish Defense League announced a drive yesterday to arrange for Jews to buy rifles and shotguns, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the league's director, who has been ordered by a court to have nothing to do with weapons, was present but did View original in TimesMachine,

August 18, 1971, New York Times, President Calls For Sacrifices; Critics Answered; Plea to 'Moral Power' Is Made by Nixon in Speech Here; President Asks Sacrifice To Support His Program, by Peter Kihss, View original in TimesMachine,

August 18, 1971, New York Times, page 7, Six Israelis Fet Soviet Invitation; Critics of Mrs. Meir Will Be Peace Group's Guests, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Aug. 17 — Moscow will be host next week to six prominent Israelis invited by the Soviet Peace Committee for a two-week tour.

August 19, 1971, New York Times, Rabbi Kahane Acquitted Of Two Criminal Charges, Rabbi Meir Kahane, director of the Jewish Defense League, was acquitted yesterday in Criminal Court in Manhattan of charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest last April 20. View original in TimesMachine,

August 23, 1971, New York Times, page 26, Slain Storekeeper's Mourners Grim, by Ralph Blumenthal, A grim procession of several hundred angry Jewish mourners followed the body of Beno Spiewak yesterday through the East Flatbush neighborhood where he was murdered in his candy store Friday. View original in TimesMachine,

August 25, 1971, New York Times, page 18, Kahane Plans Armed Patrols To Cut Crime in East Flatbush, by Emanuel Perlmutter, Plans to help residents of East Flatbush arm themselves with .22-caliber rifles, to set up nightly citizen radio car patrols and to post Jewish Defense League members with shotguns in local stores were announced last night by Rabbi Meir D. Kahane, head of the militant league. View original in TimesMachine,

August 31, 1971, New York Times, page 11, Kahame Bids 1,500 Take Up Weapons; Seeks to Organize Patrols in East Flatbush Area, by Emanuel Perlmutter, More than 1,500 people packed Samuel J. Tilden High School in East Flatbush last night at a meeting called by the Jewish Defense League to organize citizen car patrols and to arm residents of the area with .22-caliber rifles. View original in TimesMachine,

September 1, 1971, New York Times, page 41, Codd, Discussing Kahane, Warns on Carrying Rifles, by Emanuel Perlmutter, Chief Inspector Michael J. Codd warned yesterday that anyone carrying a loaded rifle or a shotgun either in a car or on foot would be arrested. View original in TimesMachine,

September 4, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Defense League Assailed by Soviet Jew, by Irving Spiegel, Special to the New York Times, A Russian Jewish scholar who suffered harassment and imprisonment in his successful fight to emigrate to Israel condemned today the "violent tactics" of the militant Jewish Defense League, contending that they were sharply alienating Russian intellectuals who have been sympathetic to Soviet Jews. View original in TimesMachine,

September 5, 1971, New York Times, page E1, Some Old Friends Are Dropping By the Wayside; Changed View, by Fred M. Hechinger, Americans have long prided themselves on their nation's role as the Melting Pot of the world, the new land where the "huddled masses" of the globe were welcomed and accepted and integrated into the larger society. The job was done in large measure by the public schools. View original in TimesMachine

September 6, 1971, New York Times, page 17, Kahame Appears At Zionist Parley; Calls Upon American Jews to Emigrate to Israel, by Irving Spiegel, Special to the New York Times, The Zionist Organization of America today allowed Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the militant Jewish Defense League, to address a plenary session of its national convention. View original in TimesMachine,

September 9, 1971, New York Times, page 31, 7 Members of Jewish Defense League Accused in a Plot to Bomb Soviet Offices, by Morris Kaplan, Seven members of the Jewish Defense League were accused yesterday of conspiring to bomb the Soviet Union's trade agency here last April 2 and to plant a bomb on June 12 at the Soviet Mission's estate at Glen Cove, L. I. View original in TimesMachine,

September 13, 1971, New York Times, page 45, , Ellington Hailed By Moscow Buffs; He Opens 5-Week Jazz Tour in Leningrad Tonight, by Hedrick Smith, Special to The New York Times, Duke Ellington flew into Moscow yesterday for the start of a five-week jazz tour of major Soviet cities and managed "I Love You Madly" in Russian to a group of jazz buffs who shouted their response in English -- "We love you back." View original in TimesMachine,

September 15, 1971, The Milwaukee Journal, News In Brief .Kahane Goes To Israel As Immigrant, Kahane, the American who heads the militant Jewish Defense League,

September 15, 1971, UPI - New York Times, Kahane Arrives in Israel, The head of the Jewish Defense League of New York, Rabbi Meir Kahane, arrived in Israel and said he would set up a world headquarters in and would divide his time between Israel, View original in TimesMachine,

September 20, 1971, New York Times, Taiwan Official Vows 'Fight to the Last' at U.N. The Foreign Minister of Nationalist China, Chow Shu-kai, vowed yesterday that his Government would "fight to the last" at the United Nations this fall to preserve its seat and to keep Communist China out of the world organization....spokesman said that the heavy security arrangements were because of previous harassment tactics by the militant Jewish Defense League against Soviet officials here. The police spokesman said that the Soviet delegation would be, View original in TimesMachine,

September 21, 1971, AP - New York Times, page 7, 2 in Jewish Defense League Seized at Soviet Embassy, Secret Service policemen arrested two Jewish Defense League members and dispersed 25 others in what the militant organization termed a, View original in TimesMachine,

September 27, 1971, New York Times, 2 Protesters Are Arrested Outside Soviet Mission Here, Two women were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct yesterday afternoon, in front of the Soviet Mission to the United Nations, on East 67th Street between Third and Lexington Avenues. View original in TimesMachine,

September 28, 1971, New York Times, Kahane Declares If Prisoner Dies, Russians Will, Too, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, asserted here today that Jewish militants would kill two Soviet diplomats somewhere if Miss Silva Zalmanson died in a Soviet labor camp.Kahane, View original in TimesMachine,

September 30, 1971, New York Times, Soviet Mission Neighbors in the Middle, by Edward Hudson, To many residents of 67th Street between Third and Lexington Avenues, the block has become occupied territory in an international war in which they are the innocent victims....block contains the 12 white brick Soviet Mission the United Nations, the target of frequent demonstrations by the Jewish Defense League and other militant anti-Soviet groups. For more than nine months now, the police have manned, View original in TimesMachine,

October 8, 1971, New York Times, J.D.L. Suing U. S. On Wiretapping; Novel Move Seeks Damages for 'Illegal' Surveillance, by Jack Rosenthal, Special to The New York Times, In an unusual civil suit, 16 officers and associates of the Jewish Defense League charged the Department of Justice today with illegal wiretapping and asked for a minimum of $732,800 in damages. View original in TimesMachine,

October 17, 1971, New York Times, Sending Hamlet Up the Flagpole, by Bob Newhart, that you and Will threw in as a gag, but assuming you were sincere, I am sure you can understand we would have the Jewish Defense League picketing us on "The Merchant of Venice," and the Chancery office down on us for "Measure for, View original in TimesMachine,

October 20, 1971, AP - New York Times, Kahane Deported, (From Canada) View original in TimesMachine,

October 20, 1971, New York Times, page 3, Canadian Jews March to Press Kosygin on Emigration, by Jay Walz, Special to The New York Times, OTTAWA, Oct. 19 — An estimated 7,500 Canadian Jews marched through downtown Ottawa today to demand that visiting Premier Aleksei N. Kosygin free Jews to emigrate from the Soviet Union. The Soviet leader did not see the demonstration, however.

October 21, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Four Shots Fired At Soviet Mission; Police Discover Rifle Later at Nearby Hunter College, by Steven R. Weisman, the Soviet Mission and said: "Much more could have been done. Never again." "Never again" is a slogan used by Ale Jewish Defense League. A league who was asked about the shooting said he had not been aware of it. In Washington, View original in TimesMachine,

October 22, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Shots at Soviet Mission Stir Bitter Debate in the U.N.; Shots at Soviet Mission Stir Vitriolic U.N. Debate, by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times, Soviet Mission to the United Nations. An !8-year-old Brooklyn youth described by the police as an "activist of the Jewish Defense League" was seized in midtown Manhattan and charged with illegal possession of the rifle used in the, View original in TimesMachine,

October 22, 1971, New York Times, page 45, Youth Seized in Firing at Soviet Mission, An 18-year-old Brooklyn youth described by the police as an "activist of the Jewish Defense League" was seized a half-block from the Soviet Mission to the United Nations last night and charged with illegal possession of the rifle, View original in TimesMachine,

October 22, 1971, New York Times, page 45, Administration Is Angered, The Nixon Administration reacted with anger and concern today over the sniper attack last night against the Soviet Mission to the United States. ...most recent in a series that have taken place in the last two years, many of them involving members of the militant Jewish Defense League. The Administration has made many apologies to Soviet , but today s was the most profuse, View original in TimesMachine,

October 23, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Moscow Protests To U.S. On Shooting; Laxity Is Charged in Note on Sniping at Mission Here -- U.N. Debate Bitter Moscow Protests to U.S. on Shooting, Special to The New York Times, The Soviet Union made a "resolute" protest to the United States today over the incident in which shots were fired at the building of the Soviet Mission to the United Nations in New York two days ago. ...relations has proceeded gradually despite the harassment of Soviet diplomats in New York and Washington by members of the Jewish Defense League, the militant organization that has been protesting what it views as mistreatment e f, View original in TimesMachine,

October 23, 1971, New York Times, page 25, Insults Traded at U.N., by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times, Soviet, Arab and Israeli Ambassadors traded personal and national insults today as the United Nations General Assembly bogged down for the second successive day in a battle over Jews, Zionism and anti-Semitism. the debate over the safety Of foreign diplomats hero when Yakov A. Malik, the Soviet delegate, m charged that the Jewish Defense League was responsible for the four shots fired into the .East .67th Street building housing the Soviet, View original in TimesMachine,

October 23, 1971, New York Times, Member of J.D.L. Is Freed In Bail; Youth Allegedly Bought Rifle Fired at Soviet Mission, by Morris Kaplan, An 18-year-old Jewish Defense League activist was released on $25,000 bail yesterday on charges that he lied about his identity to buy a rifle that allegedly was used on Wednesday night to fire into the headquarters of the Soviet, View original in TimesMachine,

October 26, 1971, New York Times, page 13, Kahane Is Rebuffed By Bush At Meeting, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, was rebuffed yesterday in an effort to meet with George Bush, the United States representative at the United Nations. View original in TimesMachine,

October 31, 1971, New York Times, J.D.L. Is Criticized By Jewish Leader; But Hoffman Also Assails Soviet and Arab 'Calumny', by Irving Spiegel, Special to The New York Times, The head of the American Jewish Committee, a prominent human relations agency, sharply criticized today the militant Jewish Defense League for what he called its 'wanton violence and repeated harassments" of the Soviet Union's, View original in TimesMachine,

October 31, 1971, New York Times, Job Done, Maccabees Of Brooklyn Break Up, by Harry Zlokower, ...most become members of the militant Jewish Defense League? "It is natural that a lot of people who belonged to my group were activists by nature,'' the 35-year-old rabbi. said. "Some joined the Jewish Defense, View original in TimesMachine,

November 1, 1971, New York Times, Youth Linked to Shots Fired at Soviet Mission Here Called 'Very Religious', Jewish circles, he came in contact with more militant young people, some of whom had joined with Meir Kahane and the Jewish Defense League. It was not long before he, too, became active in the organization and was named, View original in TimesMachine,

November 3, 1971, New York Times, Police and U.N. Plan for Arrival of the Chinese, by Douglas Robinson, Nations that are unlikely to draw demonstrators. 'Even during the harassment of Russian United Nations personnel by the Jewish Defense League, we did not assign them bodyguards,' Chief Grubert said. "We had Russian-speaking, View original in TimesMachine,

November 8, 1971, New York Times, 75 J.D.L. Members Are Arrested Here, The police arrested 75 members of the Jewish Defense League yesterday as they staged a sitdown on Third Avenue between 67th and 68th Streets. The sitdown grew out of their disappointment with the turnout for a protest they held, View original in TimesMachine,

November 10, 1971, New York Times, page 1, U.S. Asserts Soviet Jews Are Not Living in Terror; Soviet Jews Not in Terror, U.S. Asserts, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, The State Department told Congress today that although Soviet Jews had to endure special hardships, their condition had not worsened in recent years and they were not living in a state of terror. ...now under study, calling on the Russians to improve for Jews and allow them to emigrate. Mr. Davies denounced the Jewish Defense League for "extremist acts" against Soviet personnel and their families in the United States. View original in TimesMachine,

November 12, 1971, New York Times, Obituary 1 -- No Title, Marvin J. Baruch Doyen Emet United Jewish Students Coalition ef : College (the Jewish Students Union i Hillel, Yavnoh, Jewish Defense League and the Radical Zionist Alliance) mourn the of our respected and righteous friend, Rabbi.... View original in TimesMachine,

November 14, 1971, New York Times, Leonard Boudin:; The Left's Lawyer's Lawyer, by Paul Wilkes, ...as Joseph North, editor of the weekend magazine of the Communist Daily World, is speaking, two young men from the Jewish Defense League leap from their seats. "The Russians are killing Jews:" is one of their more intelligible, View original in TimesMachine,

November 17, 1971, New York Times, page 12, Gunter Grass Critical of Israeli Rightists, by Peter Grose, Special to The New York Times, Gunter Grass, the German novelist, accused right-wing groups in Israel today of exploiting tragic memories of the Nazi holocaust to further their own political fortunes. ...shouting demonstrators. Theatrical performances and concerts in major cities were interrupted by youths representing the Jewish Defense League and the Israeli Betar organization. The protestors were often shouted down in turn by the, View original in TimesMachine,

November 17, 1971, New York Times, page 60, 'Pulpit Freedom' Is Won By Rabbis; Conservative Vote Allows Use of Guest Speakers, by Irving Spiegel, Special to The New York Times, After an animated two-hour debate delegates from congregations of Conservative American Judaism strengthened today the role of the rabbis, giving them "complete freedom of the pulpit" and the sole right to determine who shall be guest speakers at worship services. ...blacks and Jews. One of the issues that led to the debate was the appearance of Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the militant Jewish Defense League, at various synagogues and also other contro-i versial figures. Some lay leaders have, View original in TimesMachine,

November 18, 1971, New York Times, page 7, Russians Bar Policemen From Roof of the Mission, Special to The New York Times, City policemen safeguarding the Soviet mission from attack want to be helpful, but the Russians themselves say there are limits to what they will accept. ....tour several roofs in the vicinity. Although the rifle used on Oct. 20 was located and the arrest of a member of the Jewish Defense League was made within 24 hours, the incident caused an angry debate with the Soviet Union, View original in TimesMachine,

November 21, 1971, New York Times, page 12, U.N. Envoys Assail U.S. On Security; Russian and Iraqi Call for Pressure to Stop Attacks, by Eric Pace, A furor about attacks on United Nations diplomats broke out here again this week, and Soviet and Iraqi delegates called for steps to bring pressure on the United States to stop them. ..paved with good intentions." Mr. Kolesnik decried what he called a campaign of criminal attacks "spearheaded" by the Jewish Defense League. Impugns U.S. Intentions He charged that the United States Government did not really want the, View original in TimesMachine,

November 21, 1971, New York Times, page A2, Anticrime Ideas Flow in Brooklyn, by Alfred E. Clark, The suggestions included Federal funds for voluntary auxiliary police patrols, establishing storefront narcotics centers to dispense free heroin injections, putting more policemen on foot patrol, legalizing gambling and providing travel expenses for any prison inmate who wants to live in a foreign country. ...hours a stream of speakers, including jt(dges, rabbis, prosecutors, aides to 'Mayor Lindsay and a counsel for the Jewish Defense League took to the lectern to recommend means to cut the rise i local crime. ,The meeting ,took place, View original in TimesMachine,

November 21, 1971, New York Times, page SM32, ' I'd Love to See The J.D.L. Fold Up. But -- '; Rabbi Kahane says: Rabbi Kahane The J.D.L. has a "Soviet-Southern" political strategy, by Walter Goodman, MY appointment with Rabbi Meir Kahane (Ka-HA-nee), founder, leader and pre-eminent personality of the Jewish Defense League, was for 2 P.M. at the Tel Aviv Restaurant on East Broadway, a few yards from The Jewish Daily Forward building. View original in TimesMachine,

November 24, 1971, New York Times, Chinese Flag Ripped Down At Rockefeller Center Plaza, Three teen-agers ripped the flag of mainland China from its staff near Rockefeller Plaza yesterday and drove off with it. ..new one up tomorrow," the spokesman said, pointing out at least two sets of flags are ill stock at all .Later the Jewish Defense League took for stealing the flag, saying it was done in "protest to the upcoming debate n the.., View original in TimesMachine,

November 28, 1971, New York Times, page SM34, ' Won't You Listen to the Lambs, Bob Dylan?'; ' Won't you listen to the lambs, Bob Dylan?', by Anthony Scaduto, THE setting is Madison Square Garden, Aug. 1, 1971: George Harrison, former Beatle, leads a group of fellow superstars in a Sunday benefit performance to aid citizens of East Pakistan. Twenty thousand fans are at each of two performances and thousands of others in the street hope to crash inside, for this promises to be one of those Events that later become part of a larger myth. ...interest in Israel and Judaism led him, over a year ago, into an unexpected relationship with Rabbi Meir Kahane and the Jewish Defense League. He has reportedly attended several meetings of the J.D.L. and is rumored to have donated, View original in TimesMachine,

November 28, 1971, New York Times, page E2, What Ever Happened To the 'Bad Guys'?; U.S. and Russia, by Bernard Gwertzman, On the evening of Nov. 5, while Henry A. Kissinger, the President's foreign policy adviser, was chatting with Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin at the Soviet Embassy's reception in honor of the 54th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution, two youthful members of the militant Jewish Defense League handcuffed themselves to a bannister. Embassy's reception in honor of the 54th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution, two youthful members of the militant Jewish Defense League handcuffed themselves to a bannister. View original in TimesMachine,

December 19, 1971, New York Times, page SM50, Letter, Rabbi Kahane and the J.D.L., by Sally Goldfarb, Kahane, but no easier for me to agree with him. According to Rabbi Kahane, the most important accomplishment of the Jewish Defense League has been to give American Jews -- "particularly the youth" -- "something Jewish to be proud, View original in TimesMachine,

December 23, 1971, New York Times, page 1, Large Soviet Art Show Will Tour U.S.; Large Soviet Art Show to Tour U.S., by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, The largest exhibition of ancient and contemporary art objects ever sent abroad by Soviet authorities will begin a United States tour in Washington next month as part of the Soviet-American exchange program. ...followed a year-long freeze caused by Soviet concern over possible harassment and clamage to the art objects by the Jewish Defense League. Officials from both countries are still wary of possible disruptions to the Soviet, View original in TimesMachine,

December 29, 1971, New York Times, Young Socialists Meet on '72 Strategy, by Martin Waldron, Special to The New York Times, The Young Socialist Alliance, a frequent target of the Texas Ku Klux Klan, opened its annual convention in Houston today with a plea that delegates "be a little extra cautious and a little extra courteous." Mr, Boehm said, in his opening remarks to the convention this morning, Mr. Boehm denied assertions by !the Jewish Defense League that the alliance was becoming anti-Semitic. Mr, Boehm said the was anti-Zionist and, View original in TimesMachine,

December 30, 1971, New York Times, Syrian Delegate Accuses J. D. L. Of 'Continuing Its Harassment', A Syrian delegate to the United Nations charged yesterday that the Jewish Defense League was continuing its harassment tactics against members of the Syrian Mission, which was vandalized Tuesday by two intruders. View original in TimesMachine,
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January 4, 1972, New York Times, J.D.L. Forms Group to Fight Lindsay's Presidential Bid, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, announced yesterday the formation of a Jewish political action committee to "work to defeat Mayor John V. Lindsay in his, View original in TimesMachine,

January 6, 1972, New York Times, Soviet Art in Capital for Six-City Tour, Special to The New York Times, Packed in gray crates marked "Nye Kantovat" (loosely translated "Do Not Tilt"), nearly 1,500 examples of Soviet arts and crafts have made their promised arrival at the Corcoran Gallery of Art for the first leg of a United States tour.... The two shows were delayed in their opening, it is reported, by Soviet concern over activities of the Jewish Defense League here. Reflecting he Amevtcan "consumer economy," the United States show will present such items, View original in TimesMachine,

January 6, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Tensions Rise in Rockaway After Woman's Slaying, by Ralph Blumenthal, " The important thing is to remain cool and let the police solve things," Mrs. Yetta Parnes was telling fellow tenants of her housing project in the Rockaways. "We must not let outsiders and radicals stir things up," she said. ...there are tensions between elements of a growing black population and the dwindling Jewish majority. The militant Jewish Defense League recently began a one day-a-week escort service for elderly shoppers, The group has also, View original in TimesMachine,

January 8, 1972, New York Times, Ex-Aide of J.D.L. Ordered Deported, Abraham Hershkovitz, a former office manager of the Jewish Defense League, pleaded guilty yesterday to conspiring to bomb the Soviet Union's trade agency here last April 2 and was ordered deported to Israel. View original in TimesMachine,

January 12, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Jackson to Run in Primary Here; Low Will Direct Campaign, by Thomas P. Ronan, Senator Henry M. Jackson announced yesterday that he would be a candidate in this state's June 20 Presidential primary. ...minority groups and that a number of blacks !were .working for him in his . Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of 'tile militant Jewish Defense League, and about 20 el' his followers attended the news conference and applauded Mr. Jackson, View original in TimesMachine,

January 13, 1972, New York Times, Soviet Art Show Opens In Capital; Corcoran Display to Travel to Five Other U.S. Cities, by Bernard Gwertzman, Yekaterina A. Furtseva, the Soviet Minister of Culture, apparently concerned over possible Jewish Defense League activity, called today on the American people and Government to protect the valuable Soviet arts, View original in TimesMachine,

January 14, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Lindsay in Bay State Test, Terming It 'Most Crucial', by Bill Kovach, Special to The New York Times, Mayor Lindsay of New York entered the Massachusetts Presidential primary today and called it "the most crucial test of all" for his campaign. ......the Parker House Hotel for a news conference. It was not entirely a demonstration. Half a dozen young members of the Jewish Defense League followed, the Mayor with constant calls of "liar" and "the man who destroyed New York City." View original in TimesMachine,

January 14, 1972, New York Times, page 12, Soviet Liberalizing Hinted if West Acts, by Theodore Shabad, Special to The New York Times, A politically prominent Soviet writer was reported today to have suggested that Moscow would relax its restrictions on political dissidents and emigration if Western radio stations beamed toward the Soviet Union ceased what he described as anti-Soviet propaganda. ...taxes. The talk, as it usually does. in the Soviet Union when Jews are discussed, came around to the activities of the Jewish Defense League, the militant Oewi.sh organization. Mr. Chakovsky told the Representative that the league, View original in TimesMachine,

January 19, 1972, UPI - New York Times, Police Halt 2 Protests Against Zionist Parley, Policemen broke up to demonstrations and arrested 30 persons today before the opening of the 28th Zionist Congress here. ...New Left movements and of the Jewish Defense League, headed by Rabbi Meir Kahane of New York. The Black Panthers were demonstrating to dramatize their demands for better for Sephardic Jews in Israel. The Jewish Defense, View original in TimesMachine,

January 19, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Zionists Divided as Parley Opens, by Peter Grose, Special to The New York Times, -Seventy-five years after Theodor Herzl assembled a band of Jewish idealists in Switzerland for the first Zionist congress, Zionism has become many things to many people. ...absence is troubling and disappoint-j ing some leading figures, the presence of Rabbi Kahane, head of the militant Jewish Defense League in New York, is likely to be more bothersome. He has warned that he will be heard even if he, View original in TimesMachine,

January 26, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Thousands of City Employes Attend Lindsay Benefit, by Martin Tolchin, Dozens of top city officials and thousands of city employes filled most of the Radio City Music Hall last night at a $300,000 benefit for the Lindsay for President campaign....Hills Residents Association and other organizations protesting low-income housing, the Gay Activists Alliance, and the Jewish Defense League. The Gay Activists were protesting what they view was insufficient public support by the, View original in TimesMachine,

January 27, 1972, New York Times, page 1, Fire Bomb Kills Woman, Hurts 13 in Hurok Office; Fire-Bombing in Hurok Offices Kills Woman Employee, Hurts 13, by Les Ledbetter, A young woman was killed and 13 other persons, including Sol Hurok, the impressario, were injured yesterday when a fire, caused by an incendiary device set in an apparent act of anti-Soviet vengeance, broke out in Mr. Hurok's midtown talent-booking offices. ...3 the fires bad been set to "the deaths and imprisonment of Soviet Jews." They shouted the slogan of the militant Jewish Defense League: "Never again?' A spokesman for the league, which has demonstrated and organized incidents to, View original in TimesMachine,

January 27, 1972, UPI - New York Times, Kahane Calls It 'Insane' Act, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, said today that the persons responsible for the fatal Manhattan fire were "insane." "It isn't the first time our slogan, View original in TimesMachine,

January 27, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 30, 7 Held At Concert After Disruption, Torrington, Conn., Jan. 26 (AP) -- Four young men and three teen-aged girls were arrested when small bottles of household ammonia were uncapped and rolled down the aisles during the performance of the Osipov Balalaika Orchestra tonight....taken to a hospital, where she was reported in good condition. Before the concert at the Warner Theater here, the Jewish Defense League demonstrated peacefully outside the theater to protest Soviet treatment of Jews. View original in TimesMachine,

January 27, 1972, New York Times, Hurok Attraction Here: Ashkenazy, Soviet Jew, By ironic coincidence, last night's Sol Hurok attraction at Carnegie Hall was Vladimir Ashkenazy, the Russian Jewish pianist who exiled himself from the Soviet Union eight years ago. ...them in sensitive positions:" Mr. Ashkenazy still retains his Soviet passport. Bertram Zweibon, a spokesman for the Jewish Defense League, which denied any connection with the fire-bombing of the Hurok offices, told The Times. View original in TimesMachine,

January 28, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Music: Polish and Ideas Mark Ashkenazy's Playing; Carnegie Hall Event Goes Unpicketed Pianist Shows Power in Rachmaninoff, by Harold C. Schonberg, Vladimir Ashkenazy's piano recital in Carnegie Hall started a bit late Wednesday evening, and the audience did not consist entirely of music lovers. Carnegie Hall's own security police were scanning everybody who entered the hall, looking into women's bags and men's attache cases. Bomb squad men and plainclothesmen from the Police Department were spread throughout the auditorium. ...is a Russian. Mr. Ashkenazy, however, no longer lives in the Soviet Union and is an outspoken anti-Communist. The Jewish Defense League, which has been picketing concerts of some Russian artists, indicated Wednesday that it had..., View original in TimesMachine.

January 28, 1972, New York Times, page 18, 4 Sought in Fire Bombing of Midtown Talent Offices, by Eric Pace, The police are seeking two teen-age youth and two men in their 30's who visited two midtown talent-booking offices minutes before flash fires raced through their reception rooms, Chief of Detectives Albert A. Seedman disclosed yesterday. ...developments in the case to release at this time." Another F.B.L spokesman dismissed as unworthy of comment a charge by the Jewish Defense League that F.B.I. agents had intimidated and even offered money to J.D.L. members and former, View original in TimesMachine,

January 29, 1972, UPI - New York Times, 4 Youths Freed on Bail, LITCHFIELD, Conn. Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Four youths, described as members of the Jewish Defense League, were free on $250 bond today after being arrested and charged with breach of peace for disturbing a Russian orchestra performance. View original in TimesMachine,

January 29, 1972, New York Times, page 33, Violence Scored at Bomb Victim's Rites, by Les Ledbetter, The president of the New York Board of Rabbis yesterday called on those who justify violence as a means to noble ends to renounce "that path down which our society has been moving," as a tribute to Iris L. Kones, the 27-year-old secretary killed Wednesday in the fire-bombing of a Manhattan talent-booking office. ...descriptions, along with what was !known about the fourth man, had been sent out in the multi-state alarm. A spokesman for the Jewish Defense League, which has denied any involvement in the bombings, said the Federal Bureau of Investigation. View original in TimesMachine,

January 30, 1972, New York Times, page E2, A Firebomb For an Impresario; Cultural Exchange, by Walter Goodman, Thick black smoke, flame and panic filled the 20th-story offices of Sol Hurok Enterprises at 56th Street and the Avenue of the Americas early Wednesday when a firebomb exploded, killing one person and injuring 13 others, including 83-year-old Mr. Hurok himself. The death of a 27-year-old receptionist raised the stakes in the on- going campaign against the Soviet Union for its treatment of Jews. ...injured last week when a firebomb made a shambles of the offices of Sol Hurok Enterprises, above. Suspicion fell on the Jewish Defense League but its leader, Rabbi Meir Kahane, said from Jerusalem: "I think the people that did this, View original in TimesMachine,

January 30, 1972, New York Times, page 51, Soviet Prints Yevtushenko Poem on Fire, by Theodore Shabad, Special to The New York Times, Yevgeny Yevtushenko today matched his showmanship on the stage of Madison Square. Garden with a display of political astuteness -by publishing a poem about the fire in the New York offices of Sol Hurok, the impresario, in Izvestia, the Soviet Government newspaper. ...keeping with official attitudes in the Soviet Union that have drawn parallels between some of tile activities of the Jewish Defense League, the militant anti-Soviet organization, and the persecution of 3ews by the Nazis. View original in TimesMachine,

January 31, 1972, New York Times, 2 Youths in J.D.L. Seized As Would-Be Bail Jumpers, Two teen-agers who said they were members of the militant Jewish Defense League were being held here yesterday after allegedly attempting to flee the country following their conviction in a sit-in demonstration.2 Youths in J.D.L. View original in TimesMachine,

February 2, 1972, New York Times, page 19, One Youth Is Cleared and Another Is Arrested in October Shooting Into the Soviet Mission, by Morris Kaplan, Handwriting and palm-print analysis led yesterday to the arrest of a 17-year-old former Jewish Defense League activist and the clearing of a rabbinical student in connection with the firing of shots into the Soviet Mission here. View original in TimesMachine,

February 4, 1972, New York Times, page A1, Murphy Suggests Roving Band May Have Killed 2 Patrolmen; Murphy Hints 'Crazies' Shoot Police, by Martin Arnold, Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy said yesterday that small, unstructured and unconnected bands of black youths, fired up by the rhetoric of better-known militants, might be responsible for some police killings....caused by such militants as Huey P. Newton, head of the Black Panther party, and Rabbi Meir Kahane, director of the Jewish Defense !League. They often use wild rhetoric, he said, to gather in supporters and raise funds and the, View original in TimesMachine,

February 6, 1972, New York Times, page 37, Education Board to Enter District 1 Ethnic Dispute, by M. A. Farber, The central Board of Education will try this week to resolve a conflict that has split the Community School Board in District 1 along ethnic lines, led to the retirement of the district's superintendent and resulted in violence at a local board meeting. View original in TimesMachine,

February 10, 1972, New York Times, page 1, Lindsay Assailed By Rabbi Leader; Forest Hills Plan 'a Sellout,' Charges President-Elect of New York Board; Rabbi Leader Assails Mayor on Forest Hills Plan, by Murray Schumach, The president-elect of the New York Board of Rabbis, in a bristling attack on the low income project now being built in Forest Hills, Queens, assailed the Lindsay administration yesterday and called for a halt in construction pending discussion and a reappraisal. View original in TimesMachine,

February 13, 1972, New York Times, Letter, Rabbi Kahane and the J.D.L. (CONT.), by Menashe Mikhailovich, Meir Kahane in his interview with Walter Goodman (" 'I'd Love to See the J.D.L. Fold Up. But --,'" Nov. 21) cynically boasted that "the J.D.L. had caused a serious breach between the U.S.S.R. and the United States." View original in TimesMachine,

February 17, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 23, J.D.L. Stages a Sit-In At 6 Candidates' Offices, Seeking support for a plan to exchange inmates in the Attica prison with Jews in the Soviet Union, members of the Jewish Defense League staged a sit-in today in the offices of major Democratic Presidential candidates. View original in TimesMachine,

February 24, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 35, J.D.L. Aide Freed of Charge, View original in TimesMachine,

February 27, 1972, New York Times, page A21, 'Goodwill' Moves By F.B.I. Hinted; Allegedly Stolen Data Tell of 'Liaison Contact', by Steven R. Weisman, Newly released documents said to have been stolen last year from the Federal Bureau of Investigation indicate that the bureau maintains extensive "liaison contact" with banks, hotels, trucking companies and news media to "create goodwill and develop sources of new cases." View original in TimesMachine,

March 12, 1972, New York Times, page 70, Fire Bombers Said To Pick Wrong Home, A Queens family of five escaped injury early yesterday when a fire bomb was tossed through a window of their Maspeth home in what police believe was a bungled attempt to harass a former Nazi prison camp official.

March 16, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 5, J.D.L. Member Pours Blood Over Soviet Aide's Head, A member of the Jewish Defense League poured blood over the head of a Soviet diplomat tonight after crashing a reception given by the president of American University, George Williams. View original in TimesMachine,

March 17, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 4, Bush Cites Peril To U.N. Diplomats; Bids Congress Enact a Bill Toughening Penalties for Attack or Harassment Bush Backs Sterner Law to Protect Diplomats Here, by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, George Bush, the United States representative at the United Nations, implored Congress today to enact an Administration bill making it a Federal crime to harass or attack foreign diplomats in this country. View original in TimesMachine,

March 18, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 35, Soviet Embassy Won't Press Charges in Blood-Throwing, View original in TimesMachine,

March 19, 1972, New York Times, Op-Ed, Section 4, page 3, The East Moves West; Diplomats, View original in TimesMachine,

March 25, 1972, New York Times, page 31, Op-Ed, In Defense of the J.D.L., by Julius Gottesman, Had ten thousand Jews been executed by the Soviet Government this last year, the crescendo of imprecations hurled against the Jewish Defense League by the Jewish Establishment would have been shrill indeed. View original in TimesMachine,

March 26, 1972, New York Times, page A13, Russian Salesman Gets Mixed Reception in Nassau, by Ann McCallum, A traveling salesman from Russia came to Long Island last week and got the kind of mixed reception that salesmen and Russians frequently get. View original in TimesMachine,

March 30, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 36, Protecting Diplomats, On the morning after a Soviet diplomat was showered with blood by a young Jewish Defense League militant at a Washington reception recently, Ambassador George Bush went before a Congressional committee to plead for legislation making it a Federal crime to harass or attack foreign diplomats in this country. Some such action is imperative. View original in TimesMachine,

April 9, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Young Jews Seek Dignity in Karate, by Ari Goldman, The teen-ager stood silently in his white karate uniform as he watched his instructor demonstrate a new move. The boy began to imitate his teacher's motions by thrusting his right arm forward, but with the thrust his yarmulka fell to the floor. View original in TimesMachine,

April 11, 1972, New York Times, page 40, Letter, J.D.L. Antics, by Joseph Kutay, View original in TimesMachine,

April 11, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 40, The Plight of Syria's Jewish Community, by Joseph Harari, [PDF] The Syrian Jewish congregations of the U.S. with a total membership of over 25,000 people are deeply concerned about the plight of their families, relatives and friends in Damascus, Aleppo and Qamishli in Syria.

April 12, 1972, New York Times, page 3, U.S. and Soviet Set Teacher Exchanges, The United States and the Soviet Union today signed an enlarged two-year cultural agreement that for the first time envisions having American and Soviet lecturers give regular courses in each other's universities. View original in TimesMachine,

April 26, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 44, Sympathy for Jews, by S. Krizer, View original in TimesMachine,

April 30, 1972, New York Times, page SM14, It Is Very Hard To Smile at Albert Seedman When He Is Not Smiling at You; Albert Seedman, chief of detectives; Running the investigation of a gangland murder is an art, by Peter Hellman, AT 6:20 one morning last September, Albert Seedman, the city's chief of detectives, called me from his home on Long Island to say in a low but not at all sleepy voice: "We had a good one last night in Central Park. Meet me at the 86th Street station house at 8." View original in TimesMachine,

May 3, 1972, New York Times, Kahane Is Warned On Advocating Guns, Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the Jewish Defense League, was warned in Federal Court in Brooklyn yesterday to end his advocacy of use of guns by Jews or face jail on a court order to disassociate himself from the league. View original in TimesMachine,

May 9, 1972, UPI - New York Times, J.D.L. and Austrians Scuffle At Embassy, Members of the Jewish Defense League scuffled with Austrian officials during a brief sit-in at the Austrian Embassy today to protest the acquittal last Thursday of a former Austrian Nazi. View original in TimesMachine,

May 11, 1972, New York Times, Youths Get Voice, but No Vote, At Meeting of Jewish Congress, by George Dugan, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

May 12, 1972, New York Times, Jewish Congress Keeps Kahane Out; Cleveland Meeting Refuses to Hear Head of J.D.L., by George Dugan, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

May 25, 1972, New York Times, page A1, Anti-Soviet Bomb Plot Is Laid to 4 on L.I., by David A. Andelman, Special to The New York Times, A conspiracy to blow up the residence of the Soviet mission to the United Nations at Glen Cove was reported broken up here last night with the arrest of four reputed members of the Jewish Defense League. View original in TimesMachine,

May 26, 1972, New York Times, page 71, Kahane Protest Delays a Taping; Cancellation as a Guest on Cavett Show Sparks Sit-In, by John T. McQuiston, The taping of the "Dick Cavett Show" was delayed for an hour and a half yesterday afternoon when Rabbi Meir Kahane and 30 of his followers in the Jewish Defense League staged a brief sit-in in the theater lobby to protest the cancellation of the rabbi's appearance as a guest on the show. View original in TimesMachine,

June 11, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page E14, Subverting Language, by Stanley A. Kurzban, View original in TimesMachine,

June 11, 1972, New York Times, page 7, Arabs Back Iraq On Oil Seizures, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, June 10 — Ten Arab oil-producing countries accepted today the principle of giving financial support to Iraq and other countries adversely affected by Iraq's nationization of the Iraq's Petroleum Company and agreed on a meeting of their finance ministers to set the amount of assistance.

June 11, 1972, New York Times, page 26, Jewish Unit Here Raises Israel Aid; Joint Distribution Agency Sees Needs Increasing, by Glenn Fowler, [PDF] The Joint Distribution Committee, for nearly six decades a principal conduit through which American Jewry has given help to Jews in other lands, has lately increased the proportion of its aid to Israel because of greater needs in that country.

June 11, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 48, Stand-Alone Photo, Hijacker Arraigned

June 12, 1972, AP - New York Times, pages 1, 10, Premier Says Libya Aids 'Revolutionaries' in Ulster; Qaddafi Announces Support for Blacks in U.S. and Moslems in Philippines, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, June 11 -Premier Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya said today that his country was sending arms, money and volunteers to help "Irish revolutionaries" fighting British forces in Northern Ireland.

June 12, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Justice Minister Resigns In Israel; Close Aide of Mrs. Meir Was Attacked on Oil Inquiry, by Peter Grose, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
JERUSALEM, June 11 — Minister of Justice Yakov Shimshon Shapiro, a pillar of Premier Golda Meir's coalition Cabinet, resigned today under fire in a domestic economic controversy.

June 12, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 34, Skyjacking and Law, by Stephen M. Schwebel, [PDF] In your June 1 editorial on the massacre at Tel Aviv airport, you concluded your appropriate condemnation of that act of barbarism with two points which, it is submitted, were less appropriate.
June 17, 1972, New York Times, page A1, 4 J.D.L. Members Held in Bombings, by David Bird, Four members of the Jewish Defense League were arrested yesterday in the fire-bombings last Jan. 26 of two Manhattan talent booking agencies that handle Soviet artists. View original in TimesMachine,

June 19, 1972, New York Times, page 22, A Day for McGovern: Harlem and Brooklyn, by Linda Charlton, Senator George McGovern, nearing the end of his primary campaign, spent yesterday on the classical New York City political pilgrimage -- going from a Harlem church to meetings with Hassidic rabbis in Brooklyn. View original in TimesMachine,

June 21, 1972, New York Times, 3 in J.D.L. Plead Not Guilty In Bombing at Hurok Office, Three members of the Jewish Defense League pleaded not guilty in Federal court to charges of using incendiary bombs that caused one death and several injuries in the offices of the impresario Sol Hurok last January. View original in TimesMachine,

July 1, 1972, New York Times, page 24, Jewish Leaders Score 'Alarmists'; Parley Is Told a Massive Anti-Semitism Is Unlikely, by Irving Spiegel, Leaders of Jewish intergroup relations agencies, representing various sections of the country, denounced today as "irresponsible and reprehensible" any "alarmist assertions" that a massive wave of anti-Semitism was likely to confront the American Jewish community. View original in TimesMachine,

August 3, 1972, New York Times, Ukrainian Dance Company Target of Protesters Here, The performance of the Ukrainian Dance Company at the Metropolitan Opera House was interrupted last night when two young men rushed to the front of the auditorium and threw onto the stage plastic bags apparently containing a mixture of blood and vinegar. View original in TimesMachine,

August 5, 1972, New York Times, Metropolitan Briefs; 2 in J.D.L. Guilty in Bomb Plot, View original in TimesMachine,

August 22, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, Warning by Kahane, View original in TimesMachine,

August 24, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Arabs and Jews Protest In Israel; 3,000 March in Jerusalem to Assail Policy on Two Villages Near Lebanon, by Henry Kamm, Special to The New York Times, About 3,000 Arab and Jewish demonstrators marched across downtown Jerusalem this afternoon to the office of Premier Golda Meir chanting alternately in Arabic and Hebrew: "Justice for Berem! Justice for Ikrit!" View original in TimesMachine,

August 28, 1972, New York Times, page 8, Kahane In Hebron In Refugee Protest, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane and eight Jewish Defense League followers circumvented Israeli Army roadblocks this morning and entered Hebron, on the West Bank of the Jordan River, to dramatize their demand for the resettlement of Jews in the ancestral city. View original in TimesMachine,

August 28, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Uganda Modifies Expulsion Order; Some Noncitizen Asians to Remain for 12 Months, [PDF] KAMPALA, Uganda, Aug. 27 (AP) — President Idi Amin said today that some Asians who are not Uganda citizens would be allowed to stay on in Uganda after all.

August 28, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Soviet Journalist Privately Urges Jews Not to Pay New Exit Tax, by Hedrick Smith, [PDF] MOSCOW, Aug. 27 — A Soviet journalist today called for Soviet Jews to refuse to pay the new tax on educated emigrants, charging that it would doom thousands of Jews to years of waiting as "unsold slaves" until ransom money could be raised abroad.

August 28, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Israel Keeps Hands Off Sinai Arabs While Developing Tourism and Roads, by Henry Kamm, [PDF] RAN NASRANI. Israeli-Occupied Sinai, Aug. 21 — On this promontory, named by Arabs for unknown reasons "Head of the Christian." two coastal-defense cannon point their bulky barrels at the rock in the Red Sea grandiosely called Tiran Island and at the Saudi Arabian shore beyond.

August 29, 1972, New York Times, 2 Are Accused of Hiding Identities to Buy 3 Rifles, Two young men, one of whom had been arrested previously in connection with the lethal fire-bombing of the Sol Hurok office, were indicted yesterday on charges of falsifying their identities in the purchase of three high-powered rifles in Woodbourne, N. Y., View original in TimesMachine, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

August 31, 1972, New York Times, page 10, For Arab Villagers in Israel, an Intense Sense of Loss, by Henry Kamm, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEREM, Israel, Aug. 26 — The distance between this hilltop and Gush-Halav is a mile or two, down through the valley and up the next hill. But for the people who used to live here, the gap is measured in time, not space, and in the intensity of their sense of loss.
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The 1972 Munich Olympics "Israeli Tragedy," September 5, 1972, 4:40 a.m.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 1, 9 Israelis On Olympic Team Killed With 4 Arab Captors As Police Fight Band That Disrupted Munich Games; A 23-Hour Drama; 2 Others Are Slain in Their Quarters in Guerrilla Raid, by David Binders, MUNICH, West Germany, Wednesday, Sept. 6 — Eleven members of Israel's Olympic team and four Arab terrorists were killed yesterday in a 23-hour drama that began with an invasion of the Olympic Village by the Arabs. It ended in a shootout at a military airport some 15 miles away as the Arabs were preparing to fly to Cairo with their Israeli hostages.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 1, Mrs. Meir Speaks; A Hushed Parliament Hears Her Assail 'Lunatic Acts' Israel's Premier Assails 'Lunatic Acts', by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] JERUSALEM, Sept. 5—Her voice heavy and trembling with emotion, Premier Golda Meir today denounced "these lunatic acts of terrorism, abduction and blackmail, which tear asunder the web of international life."

September 6, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 18, Games Suspended; Service in Arena Is Set; Halt Is the First Since 1896, When the Classic Resumed — Egypt Team in Forfeit, by Neil Amdur, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Wednesday, Sept. 6 — The Olympic Games were suspended yesterday for the first time since competition in the modern era began in 1896.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 1, Reports First Said Israelis Were Safe, [PDF] Contradictory reports last night about the fate of the Israeli hostages seized by Arab terrorists in the Olympic Village threw the public into confusion all over the world.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 18, Nixon Tightens Security In U.S. Against 'Outlaws', by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Sept. 5 — President Nixon said today that 'extra security measures" would be taken in the United States to protect American citizens as well as visiting Israelis from possible attacks by Palestinian guerrillas. Nixon Tightens Security in U.S. Against 'International Outlaws',

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Leaders Around the World Express Horror at the Guerrilla Attack at Olympics; Head of U.N. Condemns Raid as a 'Dastardly Act', by Martin Arnold, The Arab guerrilla attack on the Israeli Olympic team brought forth worldwide condemnation and expressions of horror yesterday. View original in TimesMachine,

September 6, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 19, Israeli Team Had 18 Athletes and Coaches; Sketches of the Victims, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 5 (UPI) — The Israeli Olympic team consisted of 18 athletes and coaches, plus other officials. Fifteen athletes and coaches were housed at the Olympic Village, while two yachtsmen and one sailing team leader were at Kiel on the Baltic, site of the Olympic yachting competition.

September 6, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 19, Guerrillas, in Cairo Take Responsibility for Attack, [PDF] CAIRO, Sept. 5 (Reuters) — An Arab guerrilla organization called Black September claimed responsibility today for the attack on Israeli athletes' quarters at the Olympic Village in Munich.

September 6, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 19, Method of Release Specified, [PDF]

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 19, No Surprise in Beirut, BEIRUT, Lebanon, Sept. 5 — The Black September guerrilla organization's claim of responsibility for the attack on Israeli athletes in Munich came as no surprise here. [PDF]

September 6, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 19, Guerrilla Denial Reported, [PDF]

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 19, After Shooting at Airport, Frantic Hunt for Gunmen, by Alvin Shuster, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] FURSTENFELDBRUCK, West Germany, Wednesday, Sept. 6 — The frantic search for the missing Arab gunmen focused early this morning in and around this sprawling military air base amid the intermittent sounds of automatic gunfire.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Fedayeen Fulfill '71 Vow By Major Raids Abroad, by Eric Pace, [PDF] "We shall continue the struggle," a member of the Arab commando Central Committee declared a year ago in Amman, Jordan, and since then the commandos have staged a succession of major attacks outside Jordanian soil.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 20, Inside the Building: Story of an Israeli Who Escaped, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 5 — Shaul Ladany, an Israeli walking racer, was deep in "a very good sleep" in his dormitory at Olympic Village this morning when his roommates heard noises, peered out and saw a body being dragged out of another Israeli apartment below.

September 6, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 20, Spitz Arrives in London, Calls Arab Attack Tragic, [PDF] LONDON, Sept. 5 (Reuters) — Mark Spitz, the American swimmer who has won seven gold medals in the 1972 Olympics, flew hurriedly from Munich to London today after Arab commandos attacked the Olympic Village.

September 6, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 20, Spitz Guarded by Troops, [PDF]

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 20, Gate-Crashing at Village Easy Despite the Guards, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 5 — Anyone who wants to crash the Olympic Village badly enough, as Arab guerrillas did early this morning in search of Israeli athletes and officials, can succeed without much difficulty.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, page 40, Play Based on 4 Murders To Run at Public Theater, [PDF] A play based on the murder of four persons and the wounding of seven others in a Raleigh, N. C., shopping center last May, by a janitor named Harvey Glenn McLeod, who then took his own life, will be performed at the Martinson Hall of the Public Theater, 425 Lafayette Street.

September 6, 1972, New York Times, Editorial page 44, Murder in Munich,(An extreme example of NYT reality falsification.)

September 6, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 44, Slaughter of Hutu, by Jeff Lang, [PDF]

September 6, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 47, Politics And the F.B.I., by Tom Wicker, [PDF] The Watergate scandal, charges of Republican fund-raising irregularities, and the possibility that some big dealers made an illicit killing on the sale of $750 million in grains to the Soviet Union ought to revive interest in the pending appointment of a permanent director for the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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September 7, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 18, Battle Defended; Germans Term Action Necessary — Report 15 Arabs Hunted, by David Binder, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 6 — West Germany began a full-scale inquiry today into the Arab terrorism and German police action that left 17 persons dead and disrupted the Olympic Games yesterday. The Games Are Resumed As Controversy Mounts,

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 1, Arab Guerrillas Warned by Israel; Middle Eastern Nations Also Told They Will Be Held Accountable in Killings, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] JERUSALEM, Sept. 6 — Israel warned the Palestinian guerrilla organizations and indirectly the Arab nations today that they would be held accountable for the murders of 11 Israeli athletes and coaches in Munich. Israel Warns Arab Nations and Guerrillas on Accountability for Killings in Munich; Praise for German Effort Is Voiced by Mrs. Meir

September 7, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 19, U.S. Moves for World Campaign To Counter Political Terrorists, by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 -The United States embarked today on diplomatic efforts throughout the world and new security measures at home to try to curb international political terrorism following yesterday's killings of members of the Israeli Olympic team at Munich in the attack by Palestinian guerrillas.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 19, Despicable Act' Decried at Arena Rites, by Alvin Shuster, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 6 — The 20th Olympic Games resumed this afternoon, five hours after 80,000 persons gathered in the huge Olympic Stadium to mourn the 11 Israelis killed in the battle with Arab terrorists. 'Despicable Act' Is Decried At Service Held at Stadium,

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 12, Soviet Wheat Sale Faces G.A.O. Inquiry, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 — The General Accounting Office said tonight that it had agreed to investigate questions of profiteering raised by a Delaware Congressman in the big United States-Soviet wheat deal.

September 7, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 18, News of Olympic Drama: 22 Hours of Uncertainty, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 6 (AP) — Uncertainty over what was taking place persisted through the 22 hours of the Olympic tragedy.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Killings Expected to Spur Debate on Police Structure, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BONN, Sept. 6 — Yesterday's violence in Munich is likely to increase public pressure for a basic reform of West Germany's decentralized police structure.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Munich's Chief Is a Law-and-Order Man, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BONN, Sept. 6 — Dr. Manfred Schreiber, Munich's police chief who led the police last night as they tried to cope with the events that finally led to the deaths of nine Israeli hostages and four Arab terrorists, took office in 1963 with a firm resolution to "play it cool." Nevertheless, he has reacted to a rapidly rising crime rate with increasing toughness.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 19, New Yorkers Grieve Over Israeli Dead, by Martin Arnold, It ends, the Negro spiritual, with these words: "Thank God, thank God, they got peace at last." View original in TimesMachine,

September 7, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 19, Most Arab Governments Keep Silent on Slayings, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, 'Sept. 6 (Reuters) — A subdued Arab world today heard the news of the slayings at Munich with little public or official emotion.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Act 'Dishonors Our Time,' Pope Says, by Michael T. Kaufman, [PDF] From Castel Gandolfo, summer residence of Pope Paul VI, to Canberra, political and spiritual leaders used strong and direct language in expressing outrage, horror and revulsion at the events in Munich.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Growth of Politics in Future Games Seen, by Neil Amdur, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 6 — The tragic events that interrupted the 20th Olympic Games yesterday may have a profound effect on all large international athletic events in the future, including the 1976 games in Montreal.

September 7, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 19, Comment by Arafat,

September 7, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 19, Threat in Cairo,

September 7, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 19, Denunciation on West Bank,

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Moscow Police Seize 30 At the Lebanese Embassy, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

September 7, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 42, Munich, 1972 . . ., [PDF] Are medals and commercial contracts more important than human lives? That question rises inevitably in the wake of the incomprehensible decision to continue the 1972 Olympic Games. The bodies of the eleven Israeli athletes and coaches killed by Arab terrorists were still unburied when the games resumed yesterday.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 42, . . . Hijacking Uncurbed, [PDF] A consummate example of the fuzzy governmental thinking that leaves ordinary people vulnerable to fanatic terror the world over is now unfolding at a seventeen-nation conference in Washington. Thanks to diplomatic foot-dragging by the Soviet Union and France, a joint United States-Canadian proposal for establishing legal machinery to deal multilaterally with air hijackers is in danger of disappearing into the morass of good ideas that might have been.

September 7, 1972, New York Times, Op-Ed, page 43, The Seeds of Terrorism, by Tom Wicker, [PDF] Most of the world is saddened and shocked by the reprehensible violence that erupted at the Olympic Games, and calls are already being heard for something to be done about such unconscionable terrorism. But the question is, what can be done?

September 7, 1972, New York Times, page 45, News Summary; International,
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September 8, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 12, Munich Police Ordered 5 To Ambush 8 Terrorists; Chief, Defending Action, Says It Was Felt No More Marksmen Would Be Needed — 3 Surviving Arabs Are Charged, by David Binder, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 7 — The Munich police, strongly defending their unsuccessful attempt to rescue nine Israeli hostages from eight Arab terrorists Tuesday night, reported today that five sharpshooters had been assigned to the task.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 12, Israel Honors Her Dead At Tel Aviv Airport Rite, by Terence Smith, [PDF] LYDDA, Israel, Sept. 7 — Ten of the slain members of Israel's Olympic delegation came home today, their coffins met by a cortege of army command cars. All but one of the victims of the battle with Arab terrorists in Munich were honored at a formal state funeral under a broiling sun at the Tel Aviv airport.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 12, Lebanon Is Raided by Israeli Patrol; But the Brief Foray Is Said to Be Unrelated to Killing of 11 Athletes at Munich, by Juan de Onis, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Sept. 7 -An Israeli armored patrol supported by helicopters struck across the Lebanese border today in search of Arab commandos.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Palestinians Said to Plot 'Spectacular Act' in the U.S., [PDF]

September 8, 1972, New York Times, page 12, Cairo Says Bonn Seeks To Evade Responsibility; Alleges False Charges and Asserts Germans Were Planning Ambush and Appealing to Egypt at Same Time, by Henry Tanner, [PDF] CAIRO, Sept. 7 — The Egyptian Government accused West Germany today of trying to evade responsibility for the killing of nine Israeli hostages and five Palestinian guerrillas by making false charges against Egypt and other Arab countries.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, page 12, Black September Guerrillas' Strength Is Estimated at 300, by Eric Pace, [PDF] Fervent young Palestinians, convinced that the Arab commando movement must go completely underground, have swelled the year-old Black September organization's ranks to about 300 men, well-placed Arab informants reported in Beirut yesterday.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Rosh ha-Shanah Starts at Sundown With Prayers for Israelis Slain in Munich, by Irving Spiegel, [PDF] Special prayers will be recited in synagogues and temples at sundown today for the slain Israeli Olympic athletes as the observance of Rosh ha-Shanah, the Jewish New Year of 5733, begins.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, page 13, U.S. Olympians Glad That Games Went On, [PDF] The first contingent of American athletes and officials returned here from the Olympic Games yesterday, shocked by the deaths of 11 athletes and coaches from Israel, but pleased for the most part that the games had continued.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, page 16, Acting F.B.I. Leader, Unlike Hoover, Speaking in Support of White House, by Fred P. Graham, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 -L. Patrick Gray 3d, the acting director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, has departed from the nonpolitical practices of his predecessor, J. Edgar Hoover, by making a series of speeches that follow key points in the political line of the incumbent Administration.

September 8, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 32, Aftermath of Munich, [PDF] At the most poignant moment of Israel's grief, facing the flag-shrouded coffins of its dead Olympic athletes, Deputy Premier Yigal Allon showed courage in cautioning his outraged countrymen that the crimes of extremists do not warrant extremist reprisals. Denouncing the terrorists of Munich as an "untouchable sect," Mr. Allon declared, "I am happy to say that most Arabs are not like that."
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September 9, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 2, Scores of Israeli Planes Strike 10 Guerrilla Bases In a Reprisal For Munich; Al Fatah Target; Many Reported Killed in Raids on Camps in Syria and Lebanon;, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDFTEL AVIV, Sept. 8 — In a sweeping reprisal for the terrorist shooting of 11 Israelis at Munich, Israeli Air Force planes struck simultaneously today at 10 Arab guerrilla bases and naval installations deep in Syria and Lebanon. Israeli Jets Strike at 10 Guerrilla Bases

September 9, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 3, 9 Arab Guerrilla Organizations Said to Be Active in Germany, by Hans J. Stueck, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BONN, Sept. 8 — The attacks by Arab guerrillas in West Germany have focused public attention on the fact that the country's liberal immigration laws have made it a favorite arena for Arab underground activities.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 27, Killing of Six Laid To Ex-Nazi Guard; U.S. Deportation Hearing Here Told Woman Killed 6 as a Nazi, by Max H. Siegel, [PDF] Aaron Kaufman, a 71-year-old veteran of eight Nazi concentration camps, told a Federal hearing here yesterday that he had seen Hermine Braunsteiner, a former SS prison guard and now Mrs. Russell Ryan of Maspeth, Queens, whip five women and a child to death at the World War II concentration camp at Maidanek, Poland.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Waldheim Asks a Debate On Terrorism in General, by Kathleen Teltsch, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Sept. 8 — Secretary General Waldheim asked the General Assembly today to consider "measures to prevent terrorism." The move opened the way for a full-scale United Nations debate on the killing of 11 Israeli athletes at the Olympic Games in Munich by Arab guerrillas.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 3, 5 Arab 'Martyrs' Mourned in Mosques, But Munich News Hasn't Stirred Cairo, by Henry Tanner, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] CAIRO, Sept. 8 — At midday today in Cairo's hundreds of mosques, from the solid limestone monuments towering over the old city to the makeshift cinderblock structures in back alleys, Muslims stood silently as their imams intoned prayers of mourning for the five Arab "martyrs" killed in Munich.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Brandt Says Bonn Wants 'Ruthless' Inquiry Into Olympic Killings, by David Binder, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 8 — Chancellor Willy Brandt said today that his Government wanted a "frank" and "ruthless" inquiry into the 17 killings touched off last Tuesday by an Arab terrorist raid on the Israeli Olympic team here.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 4, U.S. Sets Up Intelligence Group to Combat Terrorism, by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 -The Government announced the formation of an intelligence committee today to deter international political terrorism in cooperation with intelligence services of friendly foreign countries.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Slain Israeli Athlete Is Buried In His Home Town of Cleveland, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] CLEVELAND, Sept. 8 — David R. Berger, one of the 11 Israeli athletes slain by Arab terrorists at Munich, was buried here today.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Egypt's No. 1 Diplomat Mohammed Hassan el-Zayyat, [PDF] Those who know him say that Mohammed Hassan el Zayyat is one of the most moderate of the Arab diplomats on the question of Israel. Indeed, they say he cannot be as moderate in public as he indicates in private that he would like to be.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Cairo Appoints a New Foreign Minister, by Henry Tanner, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] CAIRO, Sept. 8 — Mohammed H. el-Zayyat, former Ambassador to the United Nations and Minister of State for Information, was named Foreign Minister today in a Cabinet shuffle announced by Premier Aziz Sidky.

September 9, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 5, Mrs. Meir Outlines Jordan Settlement, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Sept. 8 (UPI) -Golda Meir proposed a peace settlement with Jordan on the eve of the Jewish New Year today but said Israel would never return to the pre-1967 war borders. At the same time Foreign Minister Abba Eban said it would be futile to discuss a treaty with an Egypt that supports guerrilla activities.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Jews Picket Israeli Office, [PDF]

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 8, U.S. Is Protesting Soviet Exit Taxes, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Sept. 8 — The United States has lodged an official protest with the Soviet Union over the imposition of a high education tax against two persons seeking to emigrate to the United States, diplomatic sources disclosed today.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 8, Philippine Communist Movement Reported Growing, by Tillman Durdin, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MANILA, Sept. 4 — Though still on a small scale, Communist activity in the Philippines has grown to the level where it produces incidents of violence every few days somewhere in the country.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 11, Slain 11 Mourned At Holy Day Rites; Arab Terrorism Decried at Rosh ha-Shanah Services, by Irving Spiegel, [PDF] New York's Jewish community mourned the victims of the Olympic Village massacre at Rosh ha-Shanah services at sundown yesterday, and the solemnity of the ancient ceremonies was heightened by the tragedy in which 11 Israeli athletes lost their lives.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 17, 18, Matthews and Collett Banned From Olympics, by Neil Amdur, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]  Matthews and Collett Banned From Olympics for Life, MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 8 — The International Olympic Committee barred today two United States track and field athletes, Vince Matthews and Wayne Collett, from all future Olympic competition, including the remainder of the current Games, for what it termed a "disgusting display" on the victory stand following last night's 400-meter run.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Editorial, Frustrating Terrorists, [PDF] Numerous inquiries are now under way probing the deficiencies in logistics and communications that contributed to this week's tragedy in Munich. Since the attack on the Olympic village was unprecedented, the West German Government was unprepared and had to improvise as events unfolded. The terrorists had the advantage of surprise, and of the near-chaos that surprise produced.

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Letters, Emigration Policy, by Bernard Joshua Kabak, [PDF]

September 9, 1972, New York Times, page 23, Op-Ed, The Jewish Vote, by Anthony Lewis, [PDF]  One troubling aspect of the 1972 campaign is the vulgar courting of the "Jewish vote." President Nixon's strategists say happily that many more Jews will vote Republican this year, and the pro-Nixon announcements of some Jewish leaders support that claim.
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September 10, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 16, 3 Syrian Planes Downed In Clash with the Israelis; 4th Arab Aircraft Reported Struck in Battle Over the Golan Heights; Mideast Tension Rises; Damascus Says Foe Lost 3 Jets -- Boat Reported Sunk Off Lebanon, by Terence Smith, [PDF]
JERUSALEM, Sept. 9 — Israeli Air Force jets intercepted four Syrian warplanes over the occupied Golan heights today downing three of them and hitting the fourth, an Israeli military spokesman announced.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 17, Arabs Mourn Dead in a Bombed Village, by Juan de Onis, [PDF] RAFID, Lebanon, Sept. 9 — A visit early this morning to this hillside town in southern Lebanon, one of the targets of Israeli jets in raids yesterday, found women wailing in the Moslem fashion for their dead while the men, including many from neighboring villages, dug in the wreckage in search of the missing.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 13, Details Provided On Munich Deaths; Autopsies on 11 Israelis Said to Show All Were Shot - 4 Found Burned as Well, by David Binder, [PDF] MUNICH, West Germany, Sept. 9 — An interim report on the autopsies performed on the 11 Israeli athletes and coaches killed Tuesday during an Arab terrorist raid reportedly shows that all were struck by bullets.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Rosh ha-Shanah Sermons Note Munich Murders, by Irving Spiegel, [PDF] The shadow of the murders of 11 Israeli athletes in Munich continued to dominate in a large measure sermons and messages yesterday on the first day of Rosh ha-Shanah, the Jewish New Year, 5733.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page 31, Synagogue Council Is Urged to Oppose Quotas; Panel on Social Policy Seeks 'Affirmative Action' Plans to Aid Minority Groups, [PDF] A special commission of the Synagogue Council of America has urged the council to oppose quotas but support "affirmative action strategies" to raise the number of disadvantaged minority groups in employment and higher education.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page 70, Former Chomsky Disciples Hurl Harsh Words at the Master, by Israel Shenker, [PDF] Sigmund Freud revolutionized understanding of the unconscious and founded the psychoanalytic movement. But then disciples, many of them professing loyalty to his insights, founded rival schools.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page 72, Pair Charged in Murder of Eight in Virgin Islands, by Jon Nordheimer, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] ST. CROIX, V.I., Sept. 9 — The police tonight charged two men already in custody with the murder of eight persons earlier in the week at the Fountain Valley Golf Club owned by Laurance S. Rockefeller.

September 10, 1972, UPI - New York Times, pages 12, Arab Aides Warned of Further Attacks, [PDF] CAIRO, Sept. 9 (UPI) — The Arab League Secretary General, Mahmoud Riad, opened a conference of Arab foreign ministers tonight with a warning that Arabs should expect further Israeli attacks, and with a call for a joint Arab plan of action.

September 10, 1972, UPI - New York Times, pages 12, Stand-Alone Photo, French Leader Visits Germany,

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page E1, , The Week In Review, Another Round in An Infernal Spiral; Arabs, by John Hess, Gathered in the name of peace and sportsmanship, the 20th Olympiad of modem times will disperse tomorrow under the shadow of an act of international terrorism. Once again, Arab guerrillas had struck suddenly against their foes, and when the blaze of gunfire ended at the airport outside Munich last Tuesday, 17 lives -- 11 of them Israeli athletes -- had been snuffed out. View original in TimesMachine,

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page E1, The Week In Review, Israelis: The Planes' Message: 'An Eye For an Eye', by Terence Smith, [PDF] JERUSALEM — Even before the full dimensions of the Munich massacre became clear, many Israelis had begun to consider how and in what measure Israel should take her revenge.

September 10, 1972, New York Times, page E16, Letter, Madness in Munich, by Albert H. Blumenthal, [PDF] The community of nations must not treat the tragedy in Munich as just another isolated incident to be mourned and condemned for a few days and forgotten. The barbaric madness that cost seventeen lives is but the most recent in a series of terrorist actions against the people of Israel and as such against decent people throughout the world.
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September 11, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 10, U.S. Casts a Veto In U.N. On Mideast, Citing Terrorism; Opposes Call for Cease-Fire That Does Not Mention the Munich Attack, An Emergency Session; Measure Deploring Violence on Both Sides Is Blocked by Soviet and China, by Robert Alden, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Sept. 10 — The United States tonight vetoed a Security Council resolution that would have called for an immediate halt to military operations in the Middle East but that did not mention the terrorist acts that led to Israeli air strikes against Syria and Lebanon.

September 11, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 10, Lebanon Urges an Effort To Solve Refugee Problem, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Sept. 10 — President Suleiman Franjieh of Lebanon has begun a diplomatic effort to get major powers that are interested in the Middle East to tackle the Palestinian refugee problem, which underlies much of the violence in this region. Lebanon Bids Big Powers Act To Resolve Arab Refugee Issue
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September 12, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Israel Refuses Citizenship to Lansky, But Offers Him Special Travel Papers, Special to The New York Times,
September 12, 1972, New York Times, page 2, U.S. Has Not Acted, Special to The New York Times,
September 12, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 7, 20,000 in Jerusalem Ask Death in Guerrilla Cases,
September 12, 1972, New York Times, page 8, Munich Security Found Defective; Israel Criticizes Her Own Steps and Germany's, by Terence Smith,
September 12, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 8, An Apology for Munich By Terrorists Reported,
September 12, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 9, Bodies of 5 Arabs Flown To Libya; Guerrillas Killed at Munich Will Be Buried Today,
September 12, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Cairo Replies to Bonn Critics, by Henry Tanner, Special to The New York Times, "It cited a report by the American Broadcasting Company quoting the Munich police chief as saying that he followed Israeli instructions during the airport shooting in which the Israeli hostages died."
September 12, 1972, New York Times, page 10, Policy shift by U.S. at the U.N. by Robert Alden,
September 12, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 18, Murder Suspect Arraigned; St. Croix Presses Search,
September 12, 1972, New York Times, page 22, U.S., Citing Hijacking Rift, Cancels Talk With France, by Robert Lindsey,
September 12, 1972, New York Times, pages, 37, 39, Chaos, Tragedy Haunt Games, Special to The New York Times,
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September 13, 1972, New York Times, page 1, 23, Hoffa 'Lawyer,' Despite Dossier, Presented Film at White House, by Fred P. Graham, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 -William L. Taub, the mysterious figure who acted as "legal counsel" for James F. Hoffa, was able to arrange and attend the showing of a film on China at the White House last February, even though the Secret Service had a thick dossier on him. 'Lawyer' in Hoffa Incident Arranged Showing of Film on China at the White House Before Nixon Trip,
September 13, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 3, Market to Seek Action, "British diplomats, among others, pointed out that an antiterrorist program, to be effective, almost inevitably would have racist overtones."
September 13, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 3, Heroes' Burial Held For 5 Arabs In Libya,
September 13, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 3, Israel Vows Wide Fight on Guerrillas, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times,
September 13, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Waldheim Bids U.N. Act on Terrorism, by Robert Alden, Special to The New York Times,
September 13, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 4, Munich Autopsies Show Shots Killed 10 of 11 Israelis,
September 13, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 4, Amin Praises Hitler For Killing Jews,
September 13, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 9, 3 More Captured In Murders of 8; Anonymous Tip Results in Virgin Islands Arrests,
September 13, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 30, Lie Detectors Used For Klan Informers,
September 13, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 16, El Al Drops Security Man At Rome After Bomb Blast,
September 13, 1972, New York Times, page 46, Letters to the Editor, Tragedy In Munich, 1972, by Marsha Leventhal, I am appalled and incensed by the tragedy at Munich in which several of my fellow Jews were brutally and senselessly slaughtered by Palestinian terrorists. Equally distressing is the "yesterday news" treatment which these mishaps are too often given several days following the event. View original in TimesMachine,
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September 14, 1972, New York Times, page 16, Israel After the Slayings; Munich Events Seem to End Prospect Of Serious Talks With the Arabs Soon, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times,
September 14, 1972, New York Times, page 16, Moves to Curb Terrorists Are Discussed in Bonn, by David Binder, Special to The New York Times,
September 14, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 17, Military Court in Israel Dooms Guerrilla in Bombing of a Bus,
September 14, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 17, Military Court in Israel Dooms Guerrilla in Bombing of a Bus, TEL AVIV, Sept. 13 (UPI) — A military court sentenced an Israeli Arab to death today for a bomb explosion on a bus that wounded two persons in Tel Aviv nearly a year ago, the military command said. Israel has never carried out an execution of a guerrilla sentenced to die.
The court action came amid public demands to sentence all guerrillas, or fedayeen, to death after the slaying of 11 members of the Israeli Olympics team in Munich, West Germany, last week.
September 14, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Syrians Casual On Israeli Threat; The Capital Bustles Despite Possibility of New Raids, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times,
September 14, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 19, Plane Downed, Syria Says,
September 14, 1972, New York Times, page 53, Notes on People; Lansky Is Resigned, by James F. Clarity,
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September 15, 1972, New York Times, pages 1,4, U.S. Delays Uganda Loan Over Amin Note on Jews, by Benjamin Welles, Special to The New York Times,
September 15, 1972, New York Times, pages 1,4, U.S. Delays Uganda Loan Over Amin Note on Jews, by Benjamin Welles, Special to The New York Times, "The United States is holding up a projected $3-million loan to Uganda as a sign of displeasure over a recent statement by President Idi Amin supporting Hitler's slaughter of 6,000,000 Jews in World War II."
September 15, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Waldheim Aide Responds, Special to The New York Times,
September 15, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 4, Nations Offer Entry to Asians,
September 15, 1972, New York Times, page 15, Polish Jews in Denmark Find New Life Difficult, by James Feron,
September 15, 1972, New York Times, page 18, New Jewish Group Set Up to Manage Contributions Here,
September 15, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Notes On People: Rabbi Meir Kahane, by James F. Clarity, View original in TimesMachine,
September 15, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Protesters Hold St. Patrick's Rite; 2 Fasting Priests Lead an Antiwar Litany on Steps, by George Dugan,
September 15, 1972, New York Times, page 24, Schmitz Says U.S. Hides Data on Plot to Slay Wallace, by James T. Wooten, Special to The New York Times,
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September 16, 1972, UPI - New York Times, pages 1, 2, Hijackers Hold Plane in Sweden, Forcing the Release of Croatians,September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Soviet Hijackers Draw Long Terms; 2 Youths Who Took Plane to Turkey Are Sentenced, by Theodore Shabad,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Hijacking Is the Latest Croatian Action, by Raymond H. Anderson, Special to The New York Times,
September 16, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 2, Soviet Said to Transfer Writer to Moscow Prison,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Uganda Denies Statement By Amin Delayed U.S. Aid, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Editorial, African Racist,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Letters, For Meaningful Sanctions Against Skyjacking, by G. E. Kidder Smith,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Letters, Uganda's Loss -- Our Gain, by Nathan C. House, "...the expertise developed by these unfortunate people over the last half-century."
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Letters, Committee Stand on Quotas, by Philip E. Hoffman, President, American Jewish Committee,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 29, Op-Ed, Soviet Jewry: 'We Want Moral Outcry', by James A. Michener,
September 16, 1972, New York Times, page 29, Op-Ed, Soviet Jewry: A 'Just and Justified Measure', by Vladimir Katin,
September 16, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 1, Israelis Attack Bases In Lebanon,
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September 17, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 28, Israeli Raid Into Lebanon Sets Off Heavy Fighting; Tanks and Planes Clash, by Juan de Onis, 
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page 2, 9 Croatians Are Held in Spain After Hijacking, Special to The New York Times,
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page 23, Magazine Offers a Jewish Forum; New Biweekly Journal Deals in the Controversial, by Edward B. Fiske,
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Israelis Report That Armored Force Is Holding Its Ground Within Lebanon, by Terence Smith,
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page 32, Yom Kippur Rites Set For Sundown; 600 Jews From Abroad in City for Day of Atonement, by Irving Spiegel,
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page 39, Ex-F.B.I. Agent Named Bugging Case Witness, Special to The New York Times,
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page 30, U.S. Bids Nations Curb Terrorism; Officials Named to Mobilize Public and Private Effort, by Benjamin Welles, Special to The New York Times,
September 17, 1972, New York Times, page SM10, A radio station with real hair, sweat and body odor; WBAI, by Susan Braudy, View original in TimesMachine,
September 17, 1972, New York Times Magazine, page SM28, Blam! Blam! Blam! Not gun nuts, but pistol enthusiasts, by Paul Good,
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September 18, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 2, Arab Guerrillas Are Reported to Get Direct Shipments of Soviet Weapons, by Eric Pace,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Fatah Reports Beirut Ultimatum To Evacuate Southern Villages, by Henry Tanner, Special to The New York Times,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Israelis Leave Much Damage Behind, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times,
September 18, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 4, An Israeli Briefing on Raid: 'No Looting -- I Repeat, No Looting',
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Yom Kippur Rites Urge Dedication; Jews Told to Bolster Roles In Pushing Social Justice, by Irving Spiegel,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 7, Security Is Tights For U.N. Opening; Assembly Starts Tomorrow Amid Apprehensions, by Robert Alden, Special to The New York Times,

September 18, 1972, New York Times, pages 8, 53, Uganda Reports Invasion by Tanzania, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times,

September 18, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 8, Uganda: Lush but Troubled Nation, "General Amin became well known last month when he ordered the expulsion of thousands of Asian residents, most of whom are businessmen, shopkeepers and professional men."
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 8, Kampala Takes News Calmly, Dispatch of The Times, London,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 8, London Protests Arrests, Special to The New York Times,
September 18, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 8, 180 Asians Leave on Flight,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 23, Appeals Court Supports C.I.A. In Blocking Article by Ex-Aide, by Les Ledbetter,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 24, Reason on Guns,
September 18, 1972, New York Times, page 25, Op-Ed, Reflections on Violence, by Anthony Lewis,
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September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 1, 7, New Beirut Move In South Depicted, by Eric Pace, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 3, Uganda Invaders Reported Halted By Amin's Troops, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 2, U.S. Protests to Uganda Over Arrests, by Benjamin Welles, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 2, Britain Welcomes Ugandans Warmly, But Warns of Rebuffs They May Face, by Richard Eder, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 3, U.N.'s Persuasive Security Chief; Harold Allen Trimble, by Kathleen Teltsch, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 4, Yom Kippur Divides Jerusalem for a Day, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 5, Bonn Panel Praises Handling of Munich,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 5, Woman Rabbi, in First Yom Kippur Sermon, Calls for Individual Thought, by Irving Spiegel,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 10, Egypt and Libya Agree on Cairo as Joint Capital, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 11, Atheist Waver, Moscow Warns; Party Members Criticized Over Religious Ceremonies, by Hedrick Smith, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972 New York Times, page 14, Wiretap Evidence In U.S. Case Barred, Special to The New York Times,
September 19, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 32, Terror at Turtle Bay,
September 19, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 32, Irrationality in Uganda,
September 19, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 32, Soviet Jews Appeal to the World: 'Be With Us Today', by A.B.C.,
September 19, 1972, New York Times, page 52, Rockefeller May Act Today in War on Corruption,
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September 20, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 13, Booby Trap Kills Israeli In London; Envelope Blast at Embassy Injures Second Diplomat, by Alvin Shuster, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 10, Syria Is Detaining a U.S. Aide Despite Protest by Washington,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 10, Syria Is Detaining a U.S. Aide Despite Protest by Washington,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 10, U.S. Protested Sept 10, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 11, Arab League Acting as Mediator Between Lebanon and Commandos, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 12, Israelis and Arabs Attribute Rise in Guerrilla Terrorism Outside the Middle East to Failure and Frustration, by Eric Pace, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Devices Found in Paris, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Fighting in Uganda Is Reported Continuing as Kampala Claims Victory, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 17, Israelis and Arabs Attribute Rise in Guerrilla Terrorism Outside the Middle East to Failure and Frustration, by Eric Pace, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Pole, Obscure in '71, U.N. Assembly Chief, by Kathleen Teltsch, Special to The New York Times,
September 20, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 19, Coast F.B.I. Aide Demoted by Gray; Agent Is Disciplined After Recording Office Calls,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 46, Israel's Risks,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, Letter, page 46, Using Terrorists Against the State of Israel, by Heskel M. Haddad, M.D.,
September 20, 1972, New York Times, Op-Ed, page 47, Mideast: Soviet Exodus From Egypt, by Chaim Herzog,
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September 21, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 16, Bombs Mailed to Many Israeli Officials; Booby Traps Found Here and Abroad, by Lawrence Van Gelder,
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Amin Apparently Victor In Uganda; Exiles' Invasion Is Believed Decisively Defeated, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times,
September 21, 1972, AFP - New York Times, pages 6, Sudan Holds Libyans, [PDF]
September 21, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, pages 6, Three Americans Freed, [PDF]
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 13, 90 In House Send Appeal To Soviet; Urge End of Harassment of Jews Seeking to Leave, by Hedrick Smith,
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Among Other Signers, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Report On Munich Clear Officials; Inquiry Into the Death of Israeli Athletes Closed, Special to The New York Times,
September 21, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 14, Shooting Termed Necessary
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 16, Israeli Offices Here Stay Calm Despite Threats,
September 21, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 17, 2 Synagogues Damaged By Bombs in Buenos Aires,
September 21, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 17, Commandos Said To Yield To Beirut; Guerrilla Group Is Reported to Accept Lebanese Curbs, by Eric Pace, Special to The New York Times,
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 46, Letter, 1 -- No Title, by Fred Ehrman, [PDF]
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 46, Letter, Is Reprisal Justified?, by Patricia Simpson,
September 21, 1972, New York Times, page 47, Op-Ed, Politics And the F.B.I., by Tom Wicker,
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September 22, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 10, Israeli Says Peace Talks Must Wait End of Terror, by Tad Szulc,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 5, Uganda's Capital In Agitated Mood; Troops Reported to Believe a New Plot Is Imminent, by Charles Mohr,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Soviet Union Reported to Ship Only Small Arms to Al Fatah, by Eric Pace, Special to The New York Times,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, page 8, Letter-Bombers Sought by Dutch; Police Believe Terrorists Have Fled Netherlands, by Paul Hoffman, Special to The New York Times,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Mail To Israelis Here Is Screened; Police Bomb Expert Calls Devices Military-Like, by Edward C. Burks,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, page 11, An Ex-Terrorist Is Held In Israel; Police Say He's Linked With Anti-Arab Underground, Amihai Paglin, a key strategist of the Jewish underground in the closing years of British rule in Palestine, has been arrested here in connection with an attempt to form an anti-Arab terrorist campaign in Europe and America. View original in TimesMachine,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, page 26, F.B.I. Agent Under Attack Being Allowed to Retire; Agreement Rescinds the Suspension of Los Angeles Chief Who Had Been Investigated Over Finances, by Wallace Turner, Special to The New York Times,
September 22, 1972, New York Times, Letters, page 42, Can Defense Spending Be Cut $30 Billion?, by Julius Santner,
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September 23, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 10, Rogers and Eban Discuss Mideast; Agree in Washington Parley That Priority Be Given to Combating Terrorism; by Tad Szulc, Special to The New York Times,
September 23, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 6, U.N. to Debate Terrorism Despite China and Arabs, by Robert Alden, Special to The New York Times,
September 23, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 3, Uganda-Tanzanian Accord on Peace Is Reported,
September 23, 1972, New York Times, page 11, Scotland Yard Will Coordinate Investigation of Bombs by Mail, by Paul Hoffman,
September 23, 1972, New York Times, page 30, Letter, President Amin's 'Crime', by Morris Amchan,
September 23, 1972, New York Times, page 30, Letter to the Editor 1 -- No Title, by (Prof.) Martin Kilson, Harvard College,
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September 24, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 13, Uganda Fighting Is Seen Near End; Most of Invaders Reported Slain or Caught — Pursuit Into Tanzania Denied, by Charles Mohr,
September 24, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 10, U.N. Will Debate Terrorism Issue, by Robert Alden,
September 24, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 7, World News Briefs; 3 Croatian Hijackers To Be Tried in Spain,
September 24, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 9, An Arab Suspects Israelis Used Gas,
September 24, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 9, Jewish Activist in Moscow Freed After 3 Days in Jail, [PDF]
September 24, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 9, An Arab Suspects Israelis Used Gas, [PDF]
September 24, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 9, Rabbi Meir Kahane, [PDF]
September 24, 1972, UPI - New York Times, Article 1 -- No Title, An Israeli military source reported today that an injunction was issued yesterday against Rabbi Meir Kahane and 19 other members of the militant Jewish Defense League ordering them to stay away from the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip. View original in TimesMachine,
September 24, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 57, Prison 'Religion' Nettles Officials; They Fear It Could Erode Traditional Discipline, Special to The New York Times,
September 24, 1972, UPI - New York Times, pages 1, 74, Bishop Moore Is Enthroned in an 8 1/2-Hour Celebration, by Edward B. Fiske,
September 24, 1972, UPI - New York Times, pages 31, 77, Study Shows Courts Lenient With Mafiosi, by Nicholas Gage,
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September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Survivors of Maidanek Camp Honor Memory of Thousands of Fellow Jews, by James Feron,
September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Pope's Troubled Reign; Paul Still an Enigma on the Eve of His 75th Birthday, by Paul Hoffmann,
September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Amin Welcomes Peace Proposals; Discloses Somali Plan and Calls It 'Very Good', Dispatch of The Times, London,
September 25, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 6, Asians Arrive In Britain, [PDF]
September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Threats Said to Force Cancellation of Dinner, Special to The New York Times,
September 25, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 7, Israel Denies Gas Charge, [PDF]
September 25, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 7, Airlift to Syria Reported, [PDF]
September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 7, Commandos Say Beirut Eases Up; Travel Reported Relaxed -Asserted Gas Victim Dies, by Eric Pace, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 22, 7 Jews In Moscow Said To Be Jailed, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 25, 1972, New York Times, page 22, 2 Young Felons Plan to Testify In Riot Trial of Black Minister, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 25, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 36, Countdown at the U.N.,
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September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 1, 10, Opposition Chief Seized by Manila; 49 Are Detained, Including Two Governors, Under Martial Law Edict; Top Politicians Are Among 49 Arrested in Philippines. by Tillman Durdin, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] "The Government said today that 49 Filipinos — among them six members of Congress, two provincial governors and several newsmen — were being detained under the state of martial law imposed over the weekend."
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Lebanese Premier Says the Guerrillas Accept Restrictions, by Juan de Onis, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 7, East Africa Pact Is Gaining Favor; But Amin of Uganda Makes New Threat to Tanzania, by Charles Mohr, [PDF
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 7, Uganda Ousts British Aide, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 11, Manila's Actions Held Calculated; Politician Says Marcos Had Mind Set on Martial Law, by Richard Halloran, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 12, A High Marcos Aide Says in Washington That Martial Law May Last 2 Years, by Tad Szulc, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Brandt Says Rivals Tried To Buy Votes, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 13, U. S. Business Big In Philippines; Manila Agency Says 800 Have Stake in Economy, by Gerd Wilcke, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 15, Lithuanian Trial of Eight Starts; Hooliganism Case Presumed to Arise From Rioting, by Theodore Shabad, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Texts of U.S. Resolution and Draft Convention on Terrorism, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Interpol Urges Drive On Terror; Approves U.S. Resolution on 'Nonpolitical' Cases, by M. A. Farber, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Jet Hijacker Gets 20 Years After 10-Day Chicago Trial, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 22, White House Reported Working to Kill Part of Hijacking Bill, by Richard Witkin, [PDF] A Congressional storm appears to be building up over antihijacking legislation.
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 26, Quota Memo Held Job Rights 'Retreat', by Paul Delaney, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 26, 1972, New York Times, page 32, Witness Relates How Colombo Gang Slew Gallo; Mafia Informer Takes Stand at Trial of Gang Chief's Alleged Bodyguard, by Lacey Fosburgh, [PDF]
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September 27, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 57, Wide Disparities Mark Sentences Here; Wide Disparities in Sentencing Found in U.S. and State Courts, by Lesley Oelsner, [PDF]
September 27, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Israelis Say Arms Were Sent Abroad for Anti-Arab Terror, Special to The New York Times, The Israeli police confirmed here today that arms shipments air-freighted abroad for a terrorist campaign against Arabs had reached their destinations. View original in TimesMachine,
September 27, 1972, New York Times, page 35, 3 in J.D.L. Plead Guilty in Bombings, Three members of the Jewish Defense League pleaded guilty in Federal Court in Brooklyn yesterday to charges related to bombing incidents last year at two offices and property of the Soviet Union here. View original in TimesMachine,
September 27, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Old Synagogues in Jerusalem Opened, by Terence Smith, [PDF] JERUSALEM, Sept. 26 — A major link in the history of the Jewish presence in the walled Old City of Jerusalem was restored yesterday with the formal opening of four old Sephardic synagogues in the reconstructed Jewish quarter.
September 27, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 19, 4 Veterans Freed In Protest Plot; Contempt Charges Dropped Over Wiretap Dispute, [PDF] NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 26 (AP) — A Federal appeals court has dismissed contempt charges against four antiwar veterans who were twice jailed in Tallahassee, Fla., for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating protest plans for the Democratic and Republican national conventions.
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September 28, 1972, New York Times, pages, 1, 41, Fuld Suggests Sentencing By an Agency, Not Judges; Decries Disparities and Discloses State Study of Justice System, by Lesley Oelsner, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, New York Times, pages 41, Text of Fuld's Statement, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, New York Times, page 17, Kahane Unit To Run For Office In Israel, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane announced here today that the militant Jewish Defense League, which he heads, would form a political party and enter the Israeli parliamentary elections next year. View original in TimesMachine,
September 28, 1972, New York Times, pages, 1, 41, Fuld Suggests Sentencing By an Agency, Not Judges; Decries Disparities and Discloses State Study of Justice System, by Lesley Oelsner, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Marcos Broadens Scope of Arrests; Sends New List of People to Secretary of Defense, by Tillman Durdin, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 8, 1972, New York Times,page 12, Black September Guerrillas' Strength Is Estimated at 300, by Eric Pace, [PDF] Fervent young Palestinians, convinced that the Arab commando movement must go completely underground, have swelled the year-old Black September organization's ranks to about 300 men, well-placed Arab informants reported in Beirut yesterday.

September 28, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Israeli Military Aide Says That Lebanon Is 'Not Ready' to Stop Guerrillas' Operation in South, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, New York Times, page 12 Jews Ask Nixon to Bar Credits To Soviet Until Exit Taxes End, Special to The New York Times [PDF]
September 28, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Britain Asks U.N. Assembly Seek to Delay Expulsion of Asians by Uganda, by Robert Alden,
September 28, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 14, Uganda Reports Tanzanians Are Moving Toward Border, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 36, Black Panthers in Algiers Name Deserter as Chief, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 28, U.S. Is Dropping Action On Seale; Will Ask Court to Dismiss Chicago Contempt Case, [PDF]
September 28, 1972, New York Times, Letters, page 46, American-Made Mail-a-Bombs, by Arthur Fink, One of the most tragic aspects of the mail-a-bomb campaign against Israeli diplomats, so far overlooked by most observers, is the fact that the bombs used in the campaign are American-made gravel mines, and were first used by American forces in Indochina.
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September 29, 1972, New York Times, Letters, page 2, More Politicians Are Arrested in the Philippines, by Tillman Durdin, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Manila Imposes Strict Censorship on News Media, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 11, Rogers Sees Hopes for a Peaceful Settlement in the Middle East Despite Recent Setbacks, by M. A. Farber, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Eban Tells U.N. Israel Is Flexible Regarding Mideast Boundaries, by Robert Alden, [PDF] UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Sept. 28 — Foreign Minister Abba Eban of Israel reiterated before the General Assembly today that Israel did not seek to perpetuate the present ceasefire line in the Middle East or to freeze the situation as it now stands.
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Israel Declines Response, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 18, A Palestinian Leader Promises More Terrorism, by Juan de Onis, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Sadat Rejects Rogers Suggestion of Interim Suez Canal Accord, by Henry Tanner, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 19, Egypt Reported to Have Received Swing-Wing Plane From Soviet and to Have Been Disappointed, by William Beecher, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 25, Judge Asks Mandatory Terms For Repeat Criminals in State; Inquiry on Mafia Cases, by Nicholas Gage, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 36, Diapoulos Guilty Of a Gun Charge; Gallo's Alleged Bodyguard Faces Year in Prison, by Lacey Fosburgh, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 42, Editorial, Retreat on Hijacking, [PDF]
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 42, Letters, Ransom for Soviet Jews, by Robert Stolarsky
September 29, 1972, New York Times, page 42, Letter, Response to Vladimir Katin's 9-16 Op-Ed article, by Bruno Eneberg,
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September 30, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 15, 2 Attempt to Rob a Bank With 11 F.B.I. Men Inside, by James M. Markham, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Three Hurt in Jerusalem Blast; Arab Workers Nearby Are Held, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, page 6, British Panel Asks Reform Of Old Official Secrets Act, by Alvin Shuster, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Policy Ring Tied To Lansky Raided; Handled $50-Million a Year in Numbers Betting Here, by Morris Kaplan, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Israel Gives Lansky a Travel Document, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 14, F.B.I. Shifts Policy To Rotate Officials, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Palestinians Weigh Offer By Cairo on Government, Special to The New York, Times, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, page 116, Mitchell Said to Have Controlled Secret G.O.P. Intelligence Funds, [PDF]
September 30, 1972, New York Times, Op-Ed, page 31, Art -- for Man's Sake: I, by Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, the Nobel Foundation 1972, Translation by Thomas P. Whitney, [PDF]
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October 1, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 67, U.S. Inquiry Finds Corruption in Sale Of Airline Tickets, by Robert Lindsey, [PDF]
October 1, 1972, New York Times, page 67, Major Airlines Fear the Charters Are Winning Fare Competition, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
October 1, 1972, New York Times, page 12, Interpol's Restrictions Limit Resolutions Adopted at Its Frankfurt Conference, by Hans J. Stueck, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
October 1, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Awarding of a West German Peace Prize Stirs Memories of a Wartime Martyr of the Warsaw Ghetto, by James Feron, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WARSAW, Sept. 30 — "A cloudy morning, apparently an ordinary beginning to the day," wrote Janusz Korczak from the office of his Warsaw orphanage. It was Aug. 4, 1942, and it was to be no ordinary day.
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October 2, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 7, Manila Aide Sees Nation Without Guns, by Tillman Durdin, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MANILA, Oct. 1 — The power of the gun will be eliminated from public life in the Philippines when a drive now under way to collect firearms in private hands is completed, Secretary of Defense Juan Ponce Enrile said here today.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Japanese Buddhist Sect Dedicates a Huge New Temple, by Richard Halloran, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] FUJINOMIYA, Japan, Oct. 1 — With the sonorous recitation of the prayer "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo," 6,000 believers in the Nichiren Shoshu Buddhist sect dedicated their huge new main temple today at the foot of Mount Fuji.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, pages 7, Civil Cases Transferred, [PDF]

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 10, Rabbi Kahane Is Arrested in Jerusalem, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the controversial head of the Jewish Defense League, was arrested by the Israeli police today in an alleged plot to smuggle arms out of the country for use in a campaign against Arab terrorists abroad. View original in TimesMachine,

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 24, Black Professionals Hear Muslim Plea for Unity; Muhammad Urges Visitors to Work With His Sect But Many in New York Group Resent 'Lecture' at Parley, by Paul Delaney, [PDF] CHICAGO, Oct. 1 — Black Muslims and middle-class black professionals, who have ignored each other for years, met here today after a plea for unity by the Muslim leader, Elijah Mohammad.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 28, Missouri Parents Set Up Own School to Counter an 'Anti-Christian' Philosophy, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] ST. CHARLES, Mo., Oct. 1 Strains of "My Country 'Tis of Thee" and morning prayers are filling a once abandoned one-room school house near here that was converted for use by parents upset with the diet of anti-Christian philosophy they say the public schools here have fed their children.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 37, The Nonwhite War, by Herbert Mitgang, [PDF]
WASHINGTON — There is one human matter that is virtually unmentionable in the official American pronouncements about the Vietnam war. It concerns the casualties and refugees — practically none of whom are white — caused by present bombing policies over allied, enemy and neutral countries in Indochina.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 36, Aid for Ugandan Asians, [PDF] It was a prudent tactic for Britain to suspend its request for immediate United Nations General Assembly debate on the expulsion of more than 50,000 Asians from Uganda pending the outcome of an African initiative in the matter. Britain's request for United Nations help in resettling these unfortunates and in persuading Uganda's President Amin to extend his deadline of Nov. 8 for their departure was a thoroughly reasonable one, however.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 36, Letter, . . . Regardless of Color, Creed -- and Accent?, by Leon Wildes, [PDF] A Sept. 25 news article in The Times realistically portrays the historic fact that the tide of immigration is hardly more than a trickle and confirms in a positive way the vast contributions of our alien population to the country's melting pot.

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 40, Sentencing Disarray; Officials Indict the System of Justice; Emphasize a Need for Basic Changes, by Lesley Oelsner, [PDF] At first glance it was a most curious spectacle. The Chief Judge of the state was suggesting that perhaps the job of sentencing be taken away from judges. The United States Attorney was asking, "Why prison?" and saying that "we should have much more valid reasons for sending people to prison than we now do."

October 2, 1972, New York Times, page 41, Hasidim From Abroad Gather Here, by Irving Spiegel, [PDF] From around the world -Melbourne, Jerusalem, Casablanca — Hasidic Jews have been converging on Brooklyn's Eastern Parkway in the last several weeks for new guidance from their spiritual leader, Rabbi Meachem M. Schneerson, head of the worldwide Lubavitcher Movement.
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October 3, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 16, A.E.C. Staff Urges Five-Year Test Use For Indian Point 2, by Edward Cowan, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 — The Atomic Energy Commission's staff has recommended that the Indian Point No. 2 nuclear power plant on the Hudson River be allowed to operate for five years, although the staff said the present cooling system might kill up to five million, or more, young fish a year.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 12, Turkish Farmers See Poverty in Ban on the Poppy, by Henry Kamm, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] Farmers in Turkey Foresee Poverty in Country's Ban on Poppy Growing, ATLIHISAR, Turkey, Oct. 1 — The lovely poppy with the white or purple blossoms is their staff of life, as the villagers of this impoverished region of the central Anatolian highlands tell it, and every bit of it is put to good use.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Commandos Reject Exile Regime Offer, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 2 -The Palestinian commando leadership issued an indirect rejection today of the proposal by President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt offering recognition of a Palestinian government in exile.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 2, U.S. to Press for Treaty On Harboring of Hijackers, [PDF]

October 3, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 3, Manila Decrees Death Penalty For Slayings With Illegal Guns, [PDF] MANILA, Oct. 2 (Reuters) -The Philippine Government today decreed the death penalty for persons who kill with firearms that they are not authorized to possess under martial law.

October 3, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 3, Curbs on Banking Denied, [PDF] MANILA, Oct. 2 (UPI) -Secretary Tatad said today that Philippine National Bank officials had assured all depositors that there was no plan to limit bank withdrawals, contrary to rumors spread by "economic saboteurs."


October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 17, Arab at Munich Linked To Fatah; Jailed Commando Reported Close to Slain Hero, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 3 — One of the surviving Palestinian commandos involved in the killing of Israeli Olympic athletes at Munich was identified here today as a close collaborator of a slain military hero of Al Fatah, a guerrilla movement.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 17, Mebutu Says Amin Agrees To Extend Asians' Deadline,[PDF]

October 3, 1972, AFP - New York Times, page 17, Third Biggest Diamond Bought by Dealer Here, [PDF] FREETOWN, Sierra Leone, Oct. 3 (Agence France-Presse) — The third largest diamond ever found, the Star of Sierra Leone, has been sold, President Siaka Stevens announced here today.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 22, Respect Life Week Stresses the Unborn, by Laurie Johnston, [PDF] The nationwide Roman Catholic observance of Respect Life Week, inaugurated in the New York Archdiocese on Sunday by Cardinal Cooke, focused yesterday on "respect for the unborn" and today will emphasize "respect for the aged."

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 30, U.S. Team Joining Fight to Stem Rare Fatal Fever in Africa, by Lawrence K. Altman, [PDF] The United States Public Health Service, responding to a request from the Government of Sierra Leone, is sending a team of six experts to fight a new outbreak of Lassa fever, a mysterious, lethal viral disease.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 44, Editorial, 'Moment of Truth', [PDF] No legislative body could be more compassionate than the Senate when dealing with the financial needs of the 3.2 million aged, blind and permanently disabled people on the nation's welfare rolls.

October 3, 1972, New York Times, page 48, Chance Remark Is Linked To Clearing of Black G.I.'s, by Gladwin Hill, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Sept. 29 — John D. Weaver is an author known to his friends as a fanatical stickler for accurate details. Because of this, 167 black soldiers today stand exonerated of a crime that had tarnished their names for 66 years.
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October 4, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 35, Lindsay Charges 'Machine' Rule of State Bench, by Nicholas Gage, [PDF] Asserts Supreme Court Is 'Subject to All Possibilities of Venality' as a Result BACKROOM DEALS' CITED Mayor Assails Selection of Judges in Commenting on Leniency to Underworld Lindsay Charges 'Machine' Rule of State Supreme Court Breeds Corruption, In some of the strongest language he has used about the courts since becoming Mayor, John V. Lindsay charged in an interview that the State Supreme Court was highly inefficient and strongly susceptible to corruption because it was controlled by political bosses.

October 4, 1972, New York Times, page 17, Arab At Munich Linked To Fatah; Jailed Commando Reported Close to Slain Hero, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 3 — One of the surviving Palestinian commandos involved in the killing of Israeli Olympic athletes at Munich was identified here today as a close collaborator of a slain military hero of Al Fatah, a guerrilla movement.

October 4, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 46, Martial Law in Manila, [PDF]
The United States Government continues to maintain a discreet silence about developments in the Philippines, where President Marcos' martial law crackdown is now in its second week. This does not mean, however, that Americans are indifferent to the fate of their former Pacific colony.
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October 5, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 8, Senate Plan Bars Credits If Soviet Retains Exit Fees; 71 Join Jackson in Offering an Amendment to Protest Moscow 'Diploma Tax'; by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] Lend-Lease Talks Gain; Full Agreement Leading to a Commercial Accord Is Believed to Be Near Senate May Curb Credits To Soviet, WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — The Senate served notice today that it would block passage of a Soviet-American trade agreement now reportedly near completion unless Moscow rescinded heavy exit visa fees levied on Jews and others seeking to emigrate.

October 5, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 4, U.S. Checks Arabs To Block Terror, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] Residents and Travelers Are Being Screened to Protect Israelis in the Country U.S. Begins Screening Arab Residents and Travelers for Terrorists, WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — The Nixon Administration, acting on a promise by the President to protect Israeli citizens in the United States from terrorist attacks, has begun a major effort to identify Arabs residing in this country who are suspected of planning terrorism and to screen travelers from Arab nations more carefully.

October 5, 1972, AP - New York Times, pages 1, 14, An Increase in B-52 Raids Around Saigon Is Reported, [PDF] SAIGON, South Vietnam, Thursday, Oct. 5 (AP) — The United States command has reportedly ordered an increase in the number of B-52 bombing raids in the Saigon region.

October 5, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Letter-Bomb in Rome, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

October 5, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Bonn Bans 2 Palestinian Organizations, by David Binder, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BONN, Oct. 4 — West Germany announced today that it had banned two Palestinian organizations because they had threatened violence here.

October 5, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 5, Arab Store in Paris Bombed; Note Warns of Jewish Action, [PDF] PARIS, Oct. 4 (UPI) — An explosion badly damaged a palestinian bookstore today in what appeared to be Jewish violence against Arabs.

October 5, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Israelis Disclaim Knowledge, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]

October 5, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Jordanian, in U.N., Says Israel Is Showing Internal Weakness, by Robert Alden, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Oct. 4 — The Foreign Minister of Jordan told the General Assembly today that there were signs of internal weakness in Israel that offered hope for in the Middle East.

October 5, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Amin Reiterates Asians' Deadline; Uganda Radio Denies Time for Expulsions Is Extended, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct. 4 — President Idi Amin was quoted by the Uganda radio today as saying that his deadline for the expulsion of thousands of Asian aliens still stood and that "he has no intention whatsoever of extending it."

October 5, 1972, AP - New York Times, An Increase in B-52 Raids Around Saigon Is Reported, [PDF] SAIGON, South Vietnam, Thursday, Oct. 5 (AP) — The United States command has reportedly ordered an increase in the number of B-52 bombing raids in the Saigon region.
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October 6, 1972, New York Times, page 1, 59, Oil Concerns Set Accord With Five Arab Countries, by William D. Smith, [PDF] Details of the Agreement for Eventual Control of Western-Held Concessions by Nations Are Not Disclosed 5 Arab Lands and Oil Companies Agree on Terms for 'Participation' Representatives of five Persian Gulf oil-producing countries and the major Western oil companies reached agreement here yesterday on terms for the five countries eventually to take over control of the companies' concessions in the area.

October 6, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 2, Uganda and Tanzania Say Their Dispute Is Settled, [PDF] MOGADISHU, Somalia, Oct. 5 (AP) — Tanzania and Uganda have announced the settlement of a dispute that flared up when Uganda's President, Maj. Gen. Idi Amin, accused Tanzania of invading his country.

October 6, 1972, New York Times, page 6, Rogers, At U.N., Meets Egyptian; Also Talks With Indian and Chinese Foreign Ministers, by M. A. Farber, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct. 5 — Secretary of State William P. Rogers met with high-ranking Egyptian and Indian officials today as he continued his individual talks here with more than 60 of the Foreign Ministers who are attending the General Assembly.

October 6, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Sadat Says Soviet Thwarted Peace; He Tells Interviewer Egypt Badly Needed MIG-23's, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 5 -President Anwar el - Sadat of Egypt said in an interview published here today that he "would have accepted a peaceful settlement" in the Middle East if the Soviet Union had delivered advanced armament to counter Israeli power.

October 6, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Jewish Federation Starts a Campaign For $30-Million, [PDF] The Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York last night started its campaign to raise $30-million for the support of its 130-member health, educational and social service agencies.
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October 7, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Kahane Says He Got Votes In Israeli Jail, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

October 7, 1972, New York Times, pages 6, 53, Abrams Approved As Chief of Army by Senate Panel; tennis Group Also Votes to Further Reduce Lavelle in Rank for His Bombings, by Seymour M. Hersh, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] INQUIRY APPEARS AT END; Air General's Pension Stays at 4-Star Level Under the Rules for Retirement; Abrams Approved as Army Chief by Senate Panel. WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 — The Senate Armed Services Committee voted unanimously today to confirm Gen. Creighton W. Abrams as Army Chief of Staff. It also voted to strip Lieut. Gen. John D. Lavelle of another star for unauthorized bombing in North Vietnam.

October 7, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 32, Palestinian Rebuke, [PDF] The cool reception that Palestinian guerrilla leaders have given to President Sadat's suggestion that they form a government in exile is not surprising. The militant Palestinian leadership has always eschewed the responsibilities that such a step would thrust upon them.

October 7, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Arabs at U.N. Promise to Retaliate Against Nations Curbing Their Nationals, by C. Gerald Fraser, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Oct. 6 — Arab foreign ministers said here today that they would retaliate against countries taking measures against Arab nationals simply because they are Arabs.

October 7, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Arabs Vow to Punish Bonn, by Henry Tanner, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] CAIRO, Oct. 6 — The Presidents of Egypt, Libya and Syria announced today that the three countries would retaliate against West German citizens for the "arbitrary and inhuman measures" taken against Arab nationals by West German authorities.

October 7, 1972 New York Times, page 35, Mideast Tensions Afflicting the Arab Communities Here, by John L. Hess, [PDF] Apart from the shish kebab on restaurant menus and the Syrian flat bread on supermarket shelves, the Arabic immigration is one of the less visible threads in America's ethnic weave.
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October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 2, Soviet Replying Vigorously on Emigration Tax, by Theodore Shabad, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 7 — It was the turn of the next speaker at a meeting of Moscow citizens convened to denounce Western critics of the Soviet Union's education tax on emigrants.

October 8, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 7, Hijacker in Italy Is Found Dead, [PDF]

October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 2, Soviet Replying Vigorously on Emigration Tax, by Theodore Shabad, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 7 — It was the turn of the next speaker at a meeting of Moscow citizens convened to denounce Western critics of the Soviet Union's education tax on emigrants.

October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 8, American Envoys In Moscow Irked; Feel Out In Cold Despite Warm-Up in Relations, by Hedrick Smith, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 7 — In the period of blossoming relations between the United States and the Soviet Union, the close-to-the-vest diplomatic style of the White House is demoralizing the career diplomats at the American Embassy who must conduct relations with Moscow over the long run.

October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 22, 100,000 To March On Columbus Day, [PDF]
Parades Slated on 5th Ave. Today and Tomorrow, Columbus Day — now a legal national holiday — will be observed tomorrow, marked by the closing of many public and business facilities and highlighted by the traditional mammoth parade up Fifth Avenue.

October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 35, Slain Man Taped Suspects' Talks; Had Recorded the Words of 2 Cited in Army Gun Theft,Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
STERLING, Conn., Oct. 7 — A witness, murdered here before he could testify in a Federal case involving a theft of Army rifles, had taped conversations with two men accused in the case three weeks before he was killed.

October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 40, Mormons Uphold Choice of Leader; 7,000 Priesthood Members Act at 142d Conference, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 7 — A solemn assembly unanimously upheld the appointment of Harold B. Lee as 11th prophet and president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints this weekend as church members crowded this city for their 142d semiannual general conference.

October 8, 1972 New York Times, page 76, Graft Charges Rare in Western Europe's Judiciary, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] LONDON, Oct. 7 — Charges of corruption similar to those leveled against American judges are rarely heard in Western Europe, with its older societies that emphasize merit rather than politics.
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October 9, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 25, G.O.P. Intensifies Drive To Attract Jews to Nixon, by Robert B. Semple Jr., Special to The New York Times, [PDF] G.O.P. Intensifies Push to Win Jewish Vote for Nixon, WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 — After months of working through the so-called establishment in the Jewish community, the men running President Nixon's re-election effort have taken their vigorous campaign to increase his share of the normally Democratic Jewish vote into the neighborhoods and the streets of the cities.

October 9, 1972 New York Times, page 3, Israelis on Front Line Watch Syrian Build-Up, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times,[PDF] SURMAN, Israeli-Occupied Syria, Oct. 6 — From the Israeli outpost overlooking the shattered ruins of this former Syrian village, the flat, brown plain stretches north and east to Damascus, some 40 miles away.

October 9, 1972, New York Times, Israeli Smuggling Suspect, View original in TimesMachine,

October 9, 1972 New York Times, page 30, Letters, Two Views of Mideast Terror, by (Abbot) Leo A. Rudloff, [PDF]

October 9, 1972 New York Times, page 31, Op-Ed, The Question of the Jewish Vote; "The heavy, unrelenting pressure the Israelis have put on U.S. Jewry to vote for Nixon is thoroughly demeaning.", by Eugene Borowitz, [PDF] What America needs most today is more democracy. By that I mean we need to bring everyone, particularly the presently powerless and under-privileged — Jews most certainly included — into the fullest possible participation in our economic and political life. Without this, I do not see America attaining the social stability and maintaining the national power which permit us to exercise international leadership.

October 9, 1972 New York Times, page 31, Op-Ed, The Question of the Jewish Vote; "McGovern's election would bring to power those whose morality would be very different than the majority of Americans.", by Seymour Siegel, [PDF] I have never voted for a Republican Presidential candidate. This year I shall vote for President Nixon, I have enlisted as an active worker in the campaign for his re-election.

October 9, 1972 New York Times, page 32, THERAPY SCORED BY HOMOSEXUALS; 'Aversion Cure' Is Protested at Psychiatrists' Meeting, [PDF] Members of the Gay Activists Alliance yesterday assailed a group of psychologists and psychiatrists meeting here, charging that "aversion therapy" for homosexuals amounts to brainwashing.
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October 10, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 35, Politicians Woo Italians at Columbus Parade; McGovern's Backers Halt the March — Governor Objects, by William E. Farrell, [PDF] A plethora of politicians of disparate political persuasions clustered together yesterday on a bunting-draped wooden stand on Fifth Avenue, sharing one thing in common in this election-year: a belief in the efficacy of the Italian-American vote.

October 10, 1972 New York Times, page 2, Uganda's Crisis Seems to Be Abating, But the Underlying Problems Persist, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct. 9 — As Uganda celebrated the 10th anniversary of her independence today, observers in East Africa and concerned residents were convinced that the country's real problems were those of leadership.

October 10, 1972 New York Times, page 31, Roberts Discerns 'Dangerous Climate of Hysteria' on Issue of Corrupt Judges, by David Burnham, [PDF] Bronx District Attorney Burton B. Roberts charged yesterday that "a dangerous climate of hysteria" has developed about the issue of corruption among the judges.

October 10, 1972 New York Times, page 45, Op-Ed, The Real Corruption, by Tom Wicker, [PDF] Taking note of the barrage recently leveled at him by George McGovern, President Nixon at his news conference last week adroitly fired back without seeming to fire back:

October 10, 1972 New York Times, pages 47, 54, Through a Solemn Sodom; Sex Shows and Massage Parlors: A Look at a Solemn Sodom, by John Corry, [PDF] The thing about Sodom is that it is so solemn. Here is a girl. She is wearing a gray nightgown, and she is dancing on a stage. She is doing something like a hula, and she is bouncing her hips. There is baby fat on them.

October 10, 1972 New York Times, page 49, Reporter's Safeguard; Bridge Case Raises Doubts About The Status of Privilege of the Press, by Lesley Oelsner, [PDF] Six days into his jail term, Peter J. Bridge of Newark is already journalistic history: His case is being billed by many in the media as the first direct fallout of the United States Supreme Court's decision last June in the Caldwell case, and hence, as an omen of bad times to come for the country's press.
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October 11, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 20, Rehnquist Defends His Role in Decision On Spying by Army, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]  WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 — Justice William H. Rehnquist said today that there was no impropriety in his participation in a Supreme Court decision last June although he had previously testified on the matter as a Justice Department official.

October 11, 1972 New York Times, page 6, Two Women Here Get Letter Bombs; Both Opened by Recipients but Neither Explodes, by Joseph P. Fried, [PDF] Two New York women long prominent in American Zionist affairs have received letter bombs similar to a bomb that killed an Israeli Embassy official in London last month. Both women opened the letters, but the bombs did not explode.

October 11, 1972 New York Times, page 54, Anglophiles Flock to Churchill Film Premiere and Party, by Charlotte Curtis, [PDF] The city's better Anglophiles were at the movies last night. They went to Columbia's twin theaters on Second Avenue to see their royal highnesses, the Duke and Duchess of Kent, and two living, breathing Churchills.
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October 12, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 8, The Black September Guerrillas: Elusive Trail in Seven Countries, by Eric Pace, [PDF] TRIPOLI, Libya, Oct. 7 — A hard-living Palestinian intelligence expert whose father was killed by Zionists a quarter century ago . .

October 12, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 18, France's Mission In Hanoi Wrecked During U.S. Raid; U.S. Is Regretful; But Pentagon Says a Hanoi Missile May Have Caused Blast, by Bernard Gwertzman, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 — The United States moved quickly today to express regret over the damage to the French Mission in Hanoi, but said the destruction might have been caused by a North Vietnamese antiaircraft missile and not by American bombs.

October 12, 1972 AFP - New York Times, pages 1, 18, Diplomat Is Hurt; North Vietnam Says 5 Others Are Killed — Paris Protests, [PDF] HANOI, North Vietnam, Oct. 11 — The buildings of the French diplomatic mission to North Vietnam were wrecked today during an American bombing raid on the Hanoi area, and Pierre Susini, its chief diplomat, was seriously injured.

October 12, 1972 New York Times, page 4, The Situation in Idi Amin's Uganda: Unpredictability Is the Order of the Day, by Charles Mohr, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct. 11 — When the presidents of Zaire and Uganda met in Kampala last week, Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire came away believing that President Idi Amin had agreed to extend the Nov. 8 deadline for expelling thousands of alien Asians.

October 12, 1972 New York Times, page 9, Jewish Groups Sifting Letters; Act to Balk Bombs, After Meeting With Officials, by Emanuel Perlmutter, [PDF] Jewish organizations in the city have adopted new security techniques as a result of the recent terrorist tactic of mailing explosives to Israeli diplomats and supporters of Israel.

October 12, 1972 New York Times, page 11, Data Bank Peril Held Overrated; But Study Urges Steps to Bar Privacy Invasion. by John Darnton, [PDF] Information data banks actually know a lot less about the personal affairs of individuals than the public believes, according to a three-year study by the National Academy of Sciences on the effects of computerization upon civil liberties.

October 12, 1972 AFP - New York Times, page 30, A Hijacker Is Shot At Frankfurt Field, [PDF]
FRANKFURT, West Germany, Oct. 11 (Agence France-Presse) — A hijacker was shot and captured here today by Frankfurt policemen.

October 12, 1972 New York Times, page 46, Diplomacy by Terror, [PDF] The devastation of the French diplomatic mission in Hanoi during an American air attack yesterday dramatizes the inherent contradictions of Administration policy in the effort to settle the war in Indochina.
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October 13, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 18, Aide to Nixon's Campaign Tied to Secret U.S. Data, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 — Former Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Mardian obtained confidential information from the Justice Department for potential use in President Nixon's political campaign after leaving the Government to work for the Committee for the Re-election of the President, according to sources close to the Watergate investigation.

October 13, 1972 New York Times, page 12, Aboard B-52 Bomber High Over Vietnam A Crew Takes Part in an 'Impersonal War', by Joseph B. Treaster, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] ANDERSEN AIR FORCE BASE, Guam, Oct. 4 — Six hours and 14 minutes after taking off from this Pacific island base, Capt. Terry Jennings' B-52 shuddered and 32,500 pounds of high-explosive bombs plummeted toward South Vietnam.

October 13, 1972 New York Times, page 38, Letter, Judicial Reform and Justice in Sentencing, by Charles G. Moerdler, [PDF] The recent series in The Times concerning the judiciary has, inadvertently, had and may continue to have serious adverse impact upon the administration of the criminal justice system in this state.

October 13, 1972, New York Times, Letters, page 38, Screening' Arabs in U.S., by George M. Karsa, The Nixon Administration's recent edict of "checking" and "screening" Arab residents and travelers to protect Israeli citizens in this country portends grave implications for the personal freedoms and liberties of not only the Arab residents and travelers but I dare say, in time, for the over one million Americans of Arabic descent. View original in TimesMachine,

October 13, 1972, New York Times, Letters, page 38, Perspective on Refugees, by Dennis E. May, M.D.,
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October 14, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 16, Kennedy Orders Bugging Inquiry; Subcommittee Will Look Into Political Spying Charges and Watergate Incident Kennedy Calls an Inquiry on Watergate and Spying, by John W. Finney, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 -Senator Edward M. Kennedy, as chairman of a Senate judiciary committee, has ordered a "preliminary inquiry" into the Watergate bugging incident and charges of political espionage and sabotage in the Presidential campaign.

October 14, 1972 New York Times, page 12, Soviet's Grain Shortage Brings Readjustments in the East Bloc, by James Ferron, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WARSAW, Oct. 13 — The Soviet Union's poor harvest and heavy purchases of Western grains and other foods are apparently having a considerable effect on Eastern Europe. Some Communist bloc nations are selling to the Soviet Union to help fill the shortages while others are negotiating for purchases of grain to replace supplies normally provided by Moscow.

October 14, 1972 New York Times, Op-Ed, page 33, Cowardice And Courage, by Anthony Lewis, [PDF] The destruction of the French diplomatic mission in Hanoi was one of those rare events that illuminate our condition. If we Americans look, we can see what has become of us in the Vietnam war. We can see what sort of men lead us.

October 14, 1972 New York Times, page 32, Editorial, Hijack Fiasco, [PDF]

October 14, 1972 New York Times, page 41, Narcotics Agent in Serious Condition, by Lawrence Van Gelder, [PDF] A Federal narcotics agent who was shot in a gun battle that resulted Thursday night in the deaths of another agent and two suspected narcotics dealers was reported in serious condition yesterday at Roosevelt Hospital.
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October 15, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 9, 170 Are Reported Killed In Jet Crash in Moscow, by Hedrick Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 14 — A Soviet Aeroflot Ilyushin-62 airliner crashed last night while preparing to land in the rain at Moscow and all aboard were killed in what was apparently the worst civil air disaster in history.

October 15, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 72,  Mail Clerk Hurt By Letter Bomb; Envelope Explodes in Bronx Post Office—Resembles Arab Terrorist Devices; Letter Bomb Injures a Bronx-Mail Clerk, by Emanuel Perlmutter,  [PDF] A mail clerk had both hands mangled yesterday when an envelope similar to those that have been sent by Arab terrorists exploded as he was handling it in a Bronx post office.

October 15, 1972 New York Times, page 3, Despite Outcry, Caning Prevails in British Schools, by Richard Eder, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] LONDON, Oct. 14 — A little more than 300 years ago a group of school boys went to Westminster to hand the Speaker of the House of Commons what they called "a modest remonstrance" against the use of caning in the schools.

October 15, 1972 AP - New York Times, page 7, Uganda Reports Killing 35 Captives, [PDF] KAMPALA, Uganda, Oct. 14 — Uganda troops killed 35 guerrillas captured during last month's abortive invasion from Tanzania during a riot at an army camp, a military spokesman announced today.

October 15, 1972 Reuters - New York Times, page 18, Palestinian Guerrilla Groups Said to Clash in Lebanon, [PDF]

October 15, 1972 New York Times, page 18, Exuberant Galilee Wedding Ends Feud in Zionist-Pioneer Clans, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] ROSH PINNA, Israel — The celebration began in the late afternoon, in the small towns and kibbutz villages of northern Galilee.

October 15, 1972 New York Times, page 72, Efforts Intensified Here In Letter-Bomb Search, by Ronald Smothers, [PDF] An official of the United States Postal Inspection Services here said yesterday that for the last month the agency had shifted personnel and employed sophisticated devices to intercept letter bombs such as the one that exploded yesterday in a Bronx post office.

October 15, 1972 New York Times, page 19, Foreigners Buy Homes In Israel; U.S. Jews Main Purchasers of Second Residences, by Moshe Brilliant, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Oct. 14 — More than 11 per cent of the investment in residences in Israel last year was made by foreign Jews, mostly Americans, purchasing second homes. The $45-million they are estimated to have spent is quite apart from the substantial investment by those who have moved here.

October 15, 1972 AP - New York Times, page 50, Kennedy Is Backed on Subpoenas in Watergate Case, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 14 (AP) — The Democratic majority of a Senate Judiciary subcommittee has approved plans by Senator Edward M. Kennedy, the chairman, to subpoena witnesses in an inquiry into the Watergate bugging incident.

October 15, 1972 AP - New York Times, page 55, Fatal Jet Faced Use As Monument; F-86 That Killed 22 Was Stripped to Be Unflyable. [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 14 (AP) — The F-86 Sabre jet what killed 22 persons when it crashed into a Sacramento ice cream parlor had been stripped down and sold to be used as a monument in Canada.

October 15, 1972 New York Times, page 67, Correction Panel Urges Replacement of Prison Chaplaincy System, [PDF] A task force appointed by the city's Board of Correction has called for abolishing the chaplaincy system in city prisons and replacing it with a system it feels would make more effective use of clergymen and laymen from local churches and synagogues.

October 15, 1972 New York Times, page 90, An End Is Sought To State Secrecy, by Ronald Sullivan, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TRENTON — State officials said this weekend that a comprehensive review of New Jersey's laws and regulations governing the secrecy of government documents may lead to legislative recommendations aimed at opening the state administration to greater public scrutiny.
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October 16, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 16, Israeli's Planes Strike 5 Targets In Lebanon, Syria; Bombing of Bases Reflects New Policy of Initiating Pursuit of Guerrillas, Two Dead, Beirut Says; Attacks Are First in Month — Commando Naval Site Is Reported Struck, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] JERUSALEM, Oct. 15 — Israeli Air Force planes struck at guerrilla targets in Syria and Lebanon today, a military spokesman said. The raids reflected a new policy of active pursuit of the Arab commando organizations outside Israel, according to senior military sources.

October 16, 1972, New York Times, page 1, Many U.S. Jews Are Torn Over Trading With Soviet; Soviet Exit Tax Raises Difficult Problems for U.S. Jews Who Do Business With the Russians, by Marylin Bender, Trade with the Soviet Union has become an emotional and divisive concern for many American Jewish businessmen since Moscow's imposition of emigration tax. View original in TimesMachine,

October 16, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 6, 150,000 at Auschwitz Pay Homage to Polish Martyr, by James Feron, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] OSWIECIM, Poland, Oct. 15 — More than 150,000 Polish Catholics gathered here today between the barracks and the crematoriums of the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camps to honor one of their priests who sacrificed his life here 31 years ago to save another prisoner.

October 16, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Rogers, Discussing French Mission, Says 'Faulty Bomb Drops Do Occur', by Bernard Gwertzman, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 — The Nixon Administration has concluded in private that off-target American bombs, and not a North Vietnamese antiaircraft missile, were probably responsible for the damage done to the French and other diplomatic missions in Hanoi last week, a high-ranking official said today.

October 16, 1972, AP -  New York Times, page 5,  A Soviet Source Puts Death Toll In Crash at 176, World's Highest, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 15 (AP) -A reliable Soviet source reported today that 176 people were killed Friday night when a Soviet passenger jet crashed and exploded near Moscow's international airport.

October 16, 1972 New York Times, page 8, European Israelis' Chief Rabbi: Shlomo Goren, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Oct. 15 — The shooting had hardly subsided in Israel's 1948 war of independence when Rabbi Shlomo Goren, then chaplain of the armed forces, discovered that Israeli paratroopers were not keeping kosher mess halls.

October 16, 1972 New York Times, page 8, European Israelis' Chief Rabbi: Shlomo Goren, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Oct. 15 — The shooting had hardly subsided in Israel's 1948 war of independence when Rabbi Shlomo Goren, then chaplain of the armed forces, discovered that Israeli paratroopers were not keeping kosher mess halls.

October 16, 1972 New York Times, page 9, New Chief Rabbis Chosen In Israel; Victory of Liberal Religious Elements Is Seen, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Oct. 15 — The chief rabbis of Israel's two religious communities were voted out of office today and were replaced by younger men with records of greater leniency in the interpretation of Torah law.

October 16, 1972 New York Times, page 12, Laos's Opium Country Resisting Drug Law, by Fox Butterfield, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] NAM KEUNG, Laos, Oct. 2 — Hidden beneath the dirt floors of this remote Yao tribal village near the intersection of Laos, Burma and Thailand are about 6,000 pounds of opium. But the black-robed Yao, who for centuries have cultivated the opium poppy for medicine and barter, do not know what to do with it.

October 16, 1972 New York Times, page 24, Intense Criticism, Continue to Decide on the Fate of Prisoners, by James Markham, [PDF] The 26-year-old black man, who was 18 when he was sent to prison for robbery, manslaughter and attempted murder, spoke softly but directly. Out in the yard of the prison at Auburn, N. Y., someone was playing a jaunty tune on a trombone.

October 16, 1972 New York Times, page 33, Republican 'Agent': A Secretive Man With Friends in High Places and Plenty of Money, by Steven V. Roberts, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] LOS ANGELES, Oct. 15 -Donald H. Segretti, the 31-year old lawyer accused of recruiting agents to harass and disrupt Democratic political campaigns, has led a shadowy and secretive life since his discharge from the Army last year.
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October 17, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 14, 3 Israeli Security Officials Ousted in Munich Killings; Israel Drops 3 Security Aides, Criticizes Bonn, in Slaying of 11, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] JERUSALEM, Oct. 16 — Premier Golda Meir announced today that three senior officials of the security service had been dismissed because of the failure to provide adequate protection for the Israeli Olympic team in Munich.

October 17, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 48, Grand Jury Writs Served On Hundreds Of Members of 5 Mafia Families Here; Staked-Out Police Waited Near Homes of Targets, by Robert D. McFadden, [PDF] Grand Jury Subpoenas Are Served on Hundreds of Mafiosi Here, At 8:45 A.M. yesterday, a sleepy-eyed Carmine Tramunti, the alleged boss of one of New York's five Mafia families, stepped out onto the front porch of his $50,000 home in Whitestone, Queens. He yawned, stretched, scratched his beefy midsection and looked up at the overcast sky, unaware of the eyes watching him.

October 17, 1972 New York Times, pages 1, 48, Chiefs In Dragnet; 100 Policemen Will Be Subpoenaed — Bug Used in Operation Staked-Out Police Watched Homes, by Sylvan Fox, [PDF] A special force of 1,200 policemen swept through New York City and its suburbs yesterday serving grand jury subpoenas on hundreds of members of the metropolitan area's five alleged Mafia crime families.

October 17, 1972 New York Times, page 17, Soviet Coverage of Crash Skimpy; Domestic Catastrophes Get Little Media Attention, by Hedrick Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF]
MOSCOW, Oct. 16 — For the discerning reader, there was no more to arouse attention than five husband-and-wife obituary notices in the Moscow press recording their "untimely" deaths.

October 17, 1972 UPI - New York Times, page 22, Plane With Hale Boggs Aboard Missing in Storm, [PDF] ANCHORAGE, Oct. 16 (UPI) — A light plane carrying the House Democratic majority leader, Hale Boggs of Louisiana, 58 years old, disappeared tonight in a rainstorm on a flight from Anchorage to Juneau.

October 17, 1972 UPI - New York Times, page 48, Gold Used Electronic Bug To Get Evidence on Mafia; Brooklyn Prosecutor Reveals Recording Device Was Planted in the Ceiling of Trailer in an Auto Wrecking Yard, by Martin Arnold, [PDF] Out in Canarsie, since spring at least, the pupils at Nazareth High School have been noticing a lot of Cadillacs coming and going near the auto-wrecking yard across the street.

October 17, 1972 UPI - New York Times, page 48, Hard Times for Mafia; Subpoenas Highlight Increased Effort by Federal and Local Crime Fighters, by Nicholas Gage, [PDF] For the 1,700 members of the city's five Mafia families, the good old days may be over. The subpoenas served on several hundred of them early yesterday morning were a rude reminder of more difficult times at hand.
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October 18, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 14, Official of Al Fatah Shot Dead in Rome, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] Jordanian, Fatah Aide, Is Slain in Rome, ROME, Oct. 17 — A Libyan Embassy employe, a Jordanian who is believed to have been a member of Al Fatah, the Palestinian guerrilla organization, was shot dead last night outside his suburban apartment.

October 18, 1972, UPI - New York Times, pages 1, 30, Hale Boggs's Plane Hunted Along South Alaska Coast; A Copter Reports Signals as Search Is Pressed for 4 Aboard Craft Hale Boggs's Plane Is Hunted in Alaska, by United Press International, [PDF] ANCHORAGE, Oct. 17 — More than 100 private planes joined 40 military aircraft, when weather cleared today, in searching along the rugged southern Alaska coast for a missing plane carrying the House Democratic leader, Representative Hale Boggs of Louisiana; Representative at Large Nick Begich, Democrat of Alaska, and two other men.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, page 12, 6 Jewish Scientists Protest In Moscow, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 — Six Soviet Jewish scientists in Moscow telephoned a message to the president of the National Academy of Sciences here today protesting their treatment in the Soviet Union and the refusal of the Soviet Government to permit their immigration to Israel.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Belfast Violence Angers Militants; Protestant Group Accuses Army of Stirring Riots, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BELFAST, Northern Ireland, Oct. 17 — Militant Protestants broke off all relations with the British Army today after a night of rioting in East Belfast in which two civilians were killed and five injured.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, page 46, Editorial, Israel's New Tactic, [PDF] The most recent bombing of Palestinian guerrilla concentrations in Syria and Lebanon by Israeli aircraft was not a mere retaliation for terrorist acts committed. On the contrary, the raid was heralded in Tel Aviv as the first move in a new policy of hitting presumed terrorists before they have a chance to strike.
October 18, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 94, Gold Says Mafia Has Infiltrated 200 Businesses; Prosecutor Credits His Bug in Canarsie Trailer With Turning Up Names Gold Asserts Mafia Has Infiltrated 200 Businesses, by James M. Markham, [PDF] The Brooklyn District Attorney, Eugene Gold, said yesterday that his electronic surveillance of a Mafia "headquarters" in a Canarsie junkyard had turned up the names of 200 New York businesses infiltrated or dominated by organized crime.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 94, Gold's Inquiry Into Mafia Will Call 2 L.I. Officials, by Nicholas Gage, [PDF] District Attorney Eugene Gold of Brooklyn has obtained subpoenas for two Long Island public officials as part of his investigation of several hundred Mafia figures in the city.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 41, Canarsie Parents Block Black Pupils From Entering School for 2d Day, by Iver Peterson, [PDF] 150 Canarsie Parents Prevent Black Children From Entering Junior High School for 2d Day, About 150 Canarsie parents blocked the steps of John Wilson Junior High School yesterday, preventing, for the second day, 34 black children from entering the school.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, page 18, Uganda Exiles in Rural Britain: A Difficult Time for Both Sides, by Richard Eder, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] STRADISHALL, England, Oct. 12 — The passengers climbed into the untended taxi at Bury St. Edmunds railroad station. A moment later the driver appeared, eating cookies from a bag. "Stradishall camp?

October 18, 1972, New York Times, page 26, Plot Charged To 2 In Yablonski Death, [PDF] PITTSBURGH, Oct. 17 (AP) -Two officials of the United Mine Workers were indicted by a Federal grand jury here today on conspiracy charges in the 1969 murder of Joseph A. Yablonski, the union insurgent leader.

October 18, 1972, New York Times, page 46, Editorial, The 'Albany Three', [PDF]
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October 19, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 15, Soviet Exit Fees Waived For Some; 19 Jewish Families Are Told They Can Go to Israel Without Usual Charge, by Hedrick Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 18 — Nineteen Jewish families in Moscow were unexpectedly given permission today to emigrate to Israel without paying the heavy exit visa fees that Soviet authorities have required of emigrants since mid-August.

October 19, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 31, Police Suspend Lieutenant For Alleged Link to Mafia; Officer on Force for 30 Years Accused of Warning Occupants of Phone Taps — He Has Put In for Retirement, by James M. Markham, [PDF] A 58-year-old police lieutenant was suspended from the city force last night for allegedly associating with mobsters in a Canarsie junkyard trailer that Brooklyn District Attorney Eugene Gold has identified as a secret Mafia meeting place.

October 19, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 22, Black Activist Given 34 Years On Carolina Disorder Charges, [PDF] BURGAW. N. C., Oct. 18 (UPI) — Ben Chavis, a black activist. was given sentences of up to 34 years in prison today after being convicted of charges stemming from racial disorders in Wilmington last year.

October 19, 1972, New York Times, page 32, 2 Named as Suspects in Mob Slaying, [PDF] Two men described as members of organized crime were named by the state police yesterday as suspects in the slaying of Carlo Lombardo, whose body was found alongside Route 17 near Monticello last summer.

October 19, 1972, New York Times, page 39, Alienation Held Spirit Of Today; Miss Holtzman Says Public Is Hostile Toward System, [PDF] Elizabeth Holtzman, who defeated Representative Emanuel Celler for the Democratic nomination in Brooklyn's 16th Congressional District, said yesterday that the public viewed this country's political system with contempt.

October 19, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 48, Confession Obtained Through Drug Use Is Voided by Court, [PDF] LE MARS, Iowa, Oct. 18 (UPI) — Within the next two days, Ernest J. Triplett will pack his few personal belongings, get into a state car and travel to his new home.

October 19, 1972, New York Times, page 51, Metropolitan Briefs: 'Wheaties' Protest at Nixon Office, View original in TimesMachine,

October 19, 1972, New York Times, page 52, G.O.P. and 'Spy' Plot; Nixon's Strategy Is Seen as Revealing Basic Views About Voters and the Press, by Robert B. Semple Jr., Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 -The essence of the Administration's recent counterattack to charges that some of President Nixon's assistants created or at least condoned a network of political espionage and disruption has been to denounce the charges and the newspapers that print them without explicitly discussing or denying the charges.

October 19, 1972, New York Times, page 59, Hijacking Suspect Captured In Oregon, [PDF]
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October 20, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 17, Politicians Cited In Mafia Inquiry; 'Handful' Named in Bugged Talks Will Be Called by Brooklyn Grand Jury, by James M. Markham, [PDF] A "handful" of Brooklyn political figures will be subpoenaed before a rackets grand jury as a result of evidence arising from the surveillance of a Brooklyn trailer identified as a clandestine Mafia meeting place, well-placed informants said yesterday.

October 20, 1972, New York Times, page 2, An Armed Uprising in Al Fatah Over Arafat's Role Is Put Down, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 19 — An armed uprising within Al Fatah, the main Palestinian guerrilla organization, against the moderate leadership of Yasir Arafat has been quelled with the mediation of the Algerian Ambassador here.

October 20, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Ex-Aide of C.I.A. Says U.S. Bombed Leper Colony, by Seymour M. Hersh, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 — A former Central Intelligence Agency official said in a new book published today that the Air Force bombed a North Vietnamese leper colony in 1966 after Air Force photo analysts mistakenly concluded that the buildings — surrounded by two rows of barbed-wire fence — were a North Vietnamese division headquarters.

October 20, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 7, Uganda Broadens Category of Asians Due for Expulsion, [PDF] KAMPALA, Uganda, Oct. 19 (Reuters) — The President of Uganda, Maj. Gen. Idi Amin, today ordered the expulsion of all Asians with Kenyan, Tanzanian and Zambian citizenship.

October 20, 1972, Reuters - New York Times, page 20, Study Says Navy's Antisubmarine Warfare Spending Will Rise From $2.5-Billion to $4.5-Billion by '75, by Drew Middleton, [PDF] The United States Navy's expenditure for antisubmarine warfare will rise from the current figure of $2.5-billion to about $4.5-billion a year by 1875, according to a study conducted by Frost Sullivan, a New York market research firm.

October 20, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 27, 'Spy Plane' Joins the Search for Boggs in Alaska, [PDF] ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 19 (UPI) — An Air Force "spy plane" joined scores of other aircraft today in the search for a plane missing with the House majority leader, Hale Boggs, and three other persons.

October 20, 1972, New York Times, page 33, Miss Davis Signs To Write Memoir; California Radical Accepts Bantam-Geis Book Offer, by Eric Pace, [PDF] Angela Davis has signed an agreement with Bantam Books, Inc., and Bernard Geis Associates, Inc., to write a book entitled "The Education of a Revolutionary, Mr. Geis announced yesterday. He also reported that a settlement had been agreed upon with the creditors of his company, which has been in financial difficulties.
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October 21, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 3, Mission Bombing Conceded by U.S.'; 'Mechanical Failure' Cited in Oct. 11 Raid at Hanoi — French Envoy Dies; Pentagon Concedes Bomb Hit Mission, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 — The Defense Department said today that it had concluded from an extensive investigation that it was an American bomb that "inadvertently struck" the French diplomatic mission in Hanoi Oct. 11.

October 21, 1972, New York Times, page 4, Soviet Said to Waive Exit Fee for 60 Jewish Families, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 20 — Jewish sources said here tonight that 60 more Soviet Jewish families have been told that they can emigrate to Israel without paying the high exit-visa taxes that Soviet authorities set earlier this fall.

October 21, 1972, New York Times, page 7, 'Jehovah' Sect Flees Malawi for Zambia, Reporting Attacks, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] LUSAKA, Zambia, Oct. 20 — About 10,000 Jehovah's Witnesses have fled from Malawi to neighboring Zambia following attacks by members of the Young Pioneers, the youth wing of the ruling Malawi Congress party.

October 21, 1972, UPI - New York Times, page 8, Search for Boggs Plane Aided By Improved Alaskan Weather, [PDF] ANCHORAGE, Oct. 20 (UPI) — Good weather today aided a host of pilots scanning the Alaskan coastline in the massive search for a plane carrying the House majority leader, Hale Boggs, and three other persons. The craft has been missing since Monday.

October 21, 1972, New York Times, page 26, Aurelio, Former Lindsay Aide, Employed by Rockefeller Center, by Frank Lynn, [PDF] Richard R. Aurelio, who as a chief aide to Mayor Lindsay often tangled with Governor Rockefeller, has been hired by Rockefeller Center, Inc., as a public-relations consultant.

October 21, 1972, New York Times, Letters, page 32, Machine Rule' of N.Y.C. Courts, by Howard C. Amron; Martin Begun, Ellen Atkin; Robert Ferrari; Beth Cosnow; Jerome Tarnoff; Marion Weinstein, [PDF] Mayor Lindsay has responded (news story, Oct. 4) to The Times' recent series on the courts with a string of cliches about the "machine rule" of the State Supreme Court in this city. His charges are a broad-brush smear of both the bench of the court and those involved in the nomination of candidates for election to that court.
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October 22, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Reports of Harsh Treatment of Arabs in West Since Munich Killings Are Producing Deep Resentments, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 21 — Reports of harsh treatment of Arab residents and visitors in Europe and the United States since the killings at the Munich Olympic Games are producing deep resentment in the Arab world.

October 22, 1972, New York Times, page 50, G.O.P. Tries Cheers and Chats on Youth, by Linda Charlton, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 — In a high school auditorium in suburban Virginia, a disk jockey divided the teen-aged audience into three sections and set them cheering in competition. In a Harvard common room, a young man talked about John F. Kennedy.

October 22, 1972, New York Times, page 78, Pilot in Crash Fatal to 22 Is Criticized, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] SACRAMENTO, Calif., Oct. 21 — The man who taught Richard Bingham how to fly the surplus fighter plane that crashed into a crowded ice cream parlor and killed 22 people here testified this week that Mr. Bingham should never have been allowed to fly it.

October 22, 1972, New York Times, page 73, Number of Policemen Killed and Hurt This Year Drops After Rising in 1971, by David Burnham, [PDF] Though far more New York policemen were killed and injured in violent conflicts during 1971 than 1970, the number of such incidents has abated so far in 1972, according to Police Department reports.

October 22, 1972, New York Times, page 73, Rabbis Are Shocked by Political Morals, [PDF] Leaders of American Reform Judaism expressed shock last week at what they described as "widespread evidence of gross immorality both in the government and in the current political campaign."
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October 23, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 3, Cambodia: A Fear of Forces Beyond Control, by Craig R. Whitney, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] Cambodia: A Fear of Domination by Historical Forces, PNOMPENH, Cambodia, Oct. 15 — Cambodia has passed her second anniversary as a republic and there is a general feeling here that even if the Vietnam war were to end quickly, Cambodia would be broken apart and dominated by forces beyond her control. There is also a feeling of resignation and a sense that resistance to inevitable historical forces is futile.

October 23, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 23, Boggs Air Hunt, in 6th Day, Hampered by Clouds, [PDF] ANCHORAGE, Oct. 22 (AP) — Tracking and backtracking, rescue airplanes dodged low-flying clouds today in the sixth day of a search for the missing House majority leader, Hale Boggs, and three other men.

October 23, 1972, New York Times, Editorial, page 30, The 'Sick' Foundations, [PDF] The philanthropic foundations are often attacked for the wrong reasons and defended on the wrong grounds. The attack usually comes from political quarters which consider any grant in support of innovation or progress as a sign of subversion. The defense generally takes refuge in the theory that foundations if left to their own devices will just naturally serve the public good.
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October 24, 1972, New York Times, page 8, Israel's Hopes for Stability in Gaza Wane, by Terence Smith,Special to The New York Times, [PDF] GAZA, Oct, 23 — "The thing to remember about Gaza," an Israeli officer in the military government here said today "is that nothing very good or very bad ever lasts very long."

October 25, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 11, Boggs Hunt Misled By Debris In Water, [PDF]
ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 25 (AP) — Debris was sighted today in the Gulf of Alaska near the flight path of a missing plane that carried the House Democratic leader, Hale Boggs of Louisiana, but it was identified as jetsam.

October 24, 1972, New York Times, page 13, Soviet Again Denounces McGovern's View on Emigration Tax, by Theodore Shabad, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] MOSCOW, Oct. 23 — For the second time this month a mass-circulation weekly has denounced Senator George McGovern for linking the Soviet emigration tax to the prospects of United States-Soviet trade.

October 24, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Four Surrender Jet In Bulgaria; Hostages Free, Turks Said to Seek Sofia Asylum, [PDF] ANKARA, Turkey, Oct. 23 (AP) Turkish hijackers surrendered late today and freed more than 60 hostages whom they had held aboard a Turkish jetliner for 38 hours at the airport at Sofia, Bulgaria.

October 24, 1972, New York Times, page 14, Portugal Condemned at U.N. For Senegal Border Incident, Special to The New York Times,  [PDF]

October 24, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 14, Amin Hospitalized, Uganda Radio Says, [PDF] KAMPALA, Uganda, Oct. 23 (AP) — Maj. Gen. Idi Amin, the President of Uganda, was admitted to a hospital today, and his doctors ordered him to take "a complete rest," the Uganda radio announced.

October 24, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 16, Air Force Asserts It Will Not Abandon Search for Boggs, [PDF] ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 23 (AP) — Despite bad weather, the Air Force refused today to give up hope as the search for a light plane carrying the House Democratic leader, Hale Boggs, and three other men entered its second week.

October 24, 1972, New York Times, page 24, Arson at Interracial Church in Queens Shocks Neighborhood, by Peter Kihss, [PDF] Flags flew from the neat homes in the southwest corner of Forest Hills yesterday, tributes to veterans who fought for American traditions. But there were also clusters of stunned people talking on 70th Avenue and on Loubet and Kessel Streets.

October 24, 1972, New York Times, page 31, 7 Jewish Leaders Give Nixon Support, [PDF] Seven leaders of Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish groups have praised President Nixon for his "noble efforts in inspiring our country toward a greater commitment of moral values."
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October 25, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 32, Worker For G.O.P. Recalls Sabotage; Secretary Asserts She Was Part of Anti-Muskie Plot in Florida's Primary, by Martin Waldron, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TAMPA, Fla., Oct. 24 — A 26-year-old Tampa secretary has said that she was part of a Republican scheme to sabotage the Presidential campaign of Senator Edmund S. Muskie in Florida last winter.

October 25, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 32, Worker For G.O.P. Recalls Sabotage; Secretary Asserts She Was Part of Anti-Muskie Plot in Florida's Primary, by Martin Waldron, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TAMPA, Fla., Oct. 24 — A 26-year-old Tampa secretary has said that she was part of a Republican scheme to sabotage the Presidential campaign of Senator Edmund S. Muskie in Florida last winter.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 73, Judge Acquits Hanrahan of Plot In '69 Chicago Raid on Panthers, by John Kifner, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] CHICAGO, Oct. 25 — State's Attorney Edward V. Hanrahan and 13 co-defendants were acquitted today by a judge of conspiring to obstruct justice in connection with the police raid in which a Black Panther leader, Fred Hampton, was slain nearly three years ago.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 46, Obit, Norman Norell, Designer, Dies; Made 7th Ave. the Rival of Paris, by Bernadine Morris, [PDF] Norman Norell Dean of U:S. Fashion Designers, Dies, Norman Norell, the dean of American fashion designers, died yesterday at the age of 72 in Lenox Hill Hospital. He never regained consciousness after suffering a stroke Oct. 15, the day Before he was honored by a retrospective showing of his designs for the last 50 years at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Israelis Intercept Letter-Bombs Mailed to Nixon, Rogers and Laird, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] TEL AVIV, Oct. 25 — Booby-trapped letters addressed to President Nixon and two members of his Cabinet have been intercepted by Israeli postal workers.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, page 2, Letter-Bombs Injure Arabs, by Juan de Onis, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 25 — Explosive devices sent by mail critically injured an Arab postman and a secretary here today, and other letter-bombs exploded or were intercepted in Algeria, Libya and Egypt.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, page 7, Soviet Aide Here Robbed In Park; Held Up Near West Side, He Is Not Injured, by David A. Andelman, [PDF] Valentin Zorin, one of the Soviet Union's top political commentators, currently assigned to the Soviet mission to the United Nations, was robbed at gunpoint of $154 while walking at midday yesterday in Central Park.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Wildcat Strikes Hit Israeli Government and Industry, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] JERUSALEM, Oct. 25 — Thousands of Israelis, from customs clerks to doctors, have been walking off their jobs in recent weeks.

October 26, 1972, New York Times, page 13, 7 Seek Taxation of 2 Jewish Units; Sue to End Exempt Status of Appeals for Israel, by Anthony Ripley, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 — A financial consultant, two Protestant ministers, three professors and a Washington State legislator filed suit today in Federal District Court asking the Internal Revenue Service to end the tax-exempt status of the United Jewish Appeal and the United Israel Appeal.
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October 27, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 16, Kissinger Asserts That 'Peace Is At Hand'; Saigon Says It Will Agree To a Cease-Fire New Talk Needed; U.S. Breaks Silence on Efforts and Urges Further Session, by Bernard Gwertzman, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 26—Henry A. Kissinger said today that "peace is at hand" in Indochina and that a final agreement on a cease-fire and political arrangement could be reached in one more negotiating session with the North Vietnamese "lasting not more than three or four days."

October 27, 1972, New York Times, page 3, UPI Stand-Alone Photo: Confrontation In Chili,

October 27, 1972, New York Times, pages 43, 46, Colleagues Still Mourn Slain Agent And Wonder: What Went Wrong?, by John L. Hess, [PDF] They were two of the most highly regarded young agents in the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. They had sprung many a trap on dangerous criminals, had faced drawn weapons before and survived, without ever firing a shot.
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October 28, 1972, New York Times, pages 1, 13, F.B.I. Ends Compilation of Data On Those in Congressional Races; F.B.I. Stops Collecting Candidate Data, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 — L. Patrick Gray 3d, the acting director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, disclosed today that for 22 years the bureau had been compiling "biographical data" on major Congressional candidates. He said he was ending the practice immediately.

October 29, 1972, New York Times, page 3, Nixon Signs a Bill To Give Diplomats Federal Protection, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 -President Nixon signed a bill yesterday making it a federal offense to murder, kidnap, harass or threaten foreign diplomats, senior visiting foreign officials or other designated "guests" in this country.

October 29, 1972, New York Times, page 9, Congress Rated On Jewish Issues; 5 Senators Get 100% From New Research Group, by Jack Rosenthal, [PDF] WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 — A new Jewish research organization, whose members refer to themselves as "Nat's Gnats," will publish next week the first ratings ever made of Congressional performance on issues of importance to Jews.

October 29, 1972, New York Times, page 20, Muslims Purge Police Members; Order Is Said to Fear They Were Undercover Agents, by Michael Knight, [PDF] The Black Muslims in New York have expelled dozens of their members who work as policemen. The action apparently came as the result of fears that some of the policemen might be undercover agents.

October 29, 1972, New York Times, page 31, F.B.I. Told To Aid Nixon, Time Says; Magazine Asserts Request Came From Ehrlichman, [PDF] Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 14 states were ordered to help the Nixon re-election effort by identifying local campaign issues related to criminal justice, according to Time magazine. It said the request for F.B.I. help had originated with John D. Ehrlichman, President Nixon's chief domestic adviser.
















November 18, 1972, New York Times, page 29, Notes On People: Rabbi Meir Kahane, by James F. Clarity, View original in TimesMachine,

November 22, 1972, New York Times, page 24, Moscow Circus Comes to the Garden, by A. H. Weiler, The Moscow Circus arrived at the Felt Forum last night for a six-week stand and proved that Juvenal and his fellow ancient Romans were as least half right in maintaining that what people want most is bread and circuses. View original in TimesMachine,

November 29, 1972, New York Times, page 45, Op-Ed, Enough Lamentations, by Meir Kahane, One would have imagined that it was the Fast of Tisha B'Av. Few of the Cabinet ministers of Israel wept and wailed so, on the anniversary of the destruction of the Temple, as they did on radio, television and before the eager press of the Jewish State. The tears, however, were not so much of sorrow as of outrage and they were accompanied by all manner of expressions of indignation, amazement and incantations. View original in TimesMachine,

November 4, 1972, New York Times, page 37, Metropolitan Briefs: Two of J.D.L. Get Prison TermsView original in TimesMachine,

December 13, 1972, New York Times, page 39, Stink Bombs Are Set Off At the Moscow Circus, Thirty stink bombs were set off at last night's performance of the Moscow Circus at Madison Square Garden's Felt Forum, the police said, but the show was not disrupted. View original in TimesMachine,

December 14, 1972, New York Times, page 5, Israel Terms Citizenship '99% Certain' for Kahane, View original in TimesMachine,

December 15, 1972, AP - New York Times, page 12, Kahane Appeals to Court In Israel Citizenship Bid, Rabbi Meir Kahane appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court today, saying that the Government was blocking his application for Israeli citizenship in an effort to restrict his activities as head of the militant Jewish Defense League. View original in TimesMachine,

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January 8, 1973, New York Times, page 12, Kahane Apologizes for Bid To Druses to Leave Israel, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, apologized formally today to Israeli Druses for having urged members of their community tc emigrate from Israel. View original in TimesMachine,

January 14, 1973, New York Times, page 56, 6 Jewish Groups Charge Colleges With Reverse Bias, by Murray Illson, [PDF] Charging continued "reverse discrimination" against white males in college admissions and hiring practices, six national Jewish organizations have sent what they say are 19 new examples to the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare.

February 5, 1973, UPI - New York Times, page 12, Kahane Charged in Israel With Inciting Arabs to Go, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, was charged today with inciting Arabs to leave Israel. The Jerusalem magistrate's court released him on $1,480 bail but set no hearing date. View original in TimesMachine,

February 6, 1973, New York Times, page 25, C.I.A. Discloses It Trained Police From 12 Agencies; C.I.A. Tells Koch It Trained Police, by David Burnham, [PDF] The Central Intelligence Agency has acknowledged training policemen from about a dozen city and county police forces in the United States on the handling of explosives, the detection of wiretaps and the organization of intelligence files.

February 7, 1973, New York Times, page 16, Kahane, 3 Others Indicted By Israel, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, and three others were indicted here today in connection with an alleged attempt to smuggle arms abroad for an anti-Arab guerrilla campaign. View original in TimesMachine,

February 12, 1973, New York Times, page 56, Metropolitan Briefs; 2 Groups Protest Treatment of Jews, View original in TimesMachine,

February 19, 1973, The Morning Record, Israelis Attack Jews For Jesus', Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the denied any responsibility, but says he "condones and praises" the act. The Israeli government, on the one hand, is afraid of

February 23, 1973, New York Times, page 9, J.D.L. Ends Sit-In After Promise By Churches to Study Demands; The League's Demands, by Eleanor Blau, View original in TimesMachine,

March 1, 1973, New York Times, Briefs on the Arts; Bolshoi in No Rush To Come to America Soviet Art Film To Tour U.S., Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine,

March 31, 1973, New York Times, page 11, Israelis Alarmed by 'Jews for Jesus'; Denounced by Churches Missions Are Infiltrated Teams Believed Sent In Cites the Inquisition, Special to The New York Times, Government leaders in Jerusalem are considering measures to curb Christian missionaries, who are said to have become more aggressive in Israel with the appearance of- the "Jews for Jesus" movement. View original in TimesMachine,

April 21, 1973, The Sumter Daily Item, A Militant Rabbi In Israel?, by Tom Tiede, JERUSALEM — (NEA) —Rabbi Meir Kahane has spent the last five years of his life trying to convince' the world that Jews are no different from other people in

April 21, 1973, The Sumter Daily Item, Bridge Crosses Troubled Waters In Middle East, by Tom Tiede, (NEA)

May 8, 1973, New York Times, page 9, Panther Buried In U.S. Cemetery; Shakur, Navy Veteran, Died in Jersey Gun Battle, by C. Gerald Fraser, Zayd Malik Shakur, a former minister of information for the Harlem chapter of the Black Panther party, who was killed in a gun battle with New Jersey state troopers last week, was buried yesterday in a simple Islamic rite. View original in TimesMachine,

May 11, 1973, New York Times, page 4, Kahane, 3 Others On Trial In Israel, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the military Jewish Defense League, went on trial with three others today on charges of attempting to export military firearms to the United States without authorization. View original in TimesMachine,

May 13, 1973, New York Times, Section 2, page 1, S. Hurok-Last Of the Red Hot Showmen; People are mistaken when they say if Hurok disappears his organization will fall apart", by Stephen E. Rubin, Solomon Isaievich Hurok, the last of the red hot showmen, is 85 years old and still letting off as much heat as ever. The undisputed champion impresario of the world, the man affectionately known as Papa Hurok, is of sound mind and body as well. But it all comes to naught when the loneliness sets in. Hurok tell's of his solitary evenings. View original in TimesMachine,

May 24, 1973, New York Times, Metropolitan Briefs; J.D.L. Offices Searched by F.B.I., Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and city policemen futilely searched the offices of the Jewish Defense League yesterday for "two concealed explosive devices." Officials of the militant organization charged that the agents had broken into a safe at its headquarters at 144 West 27th Street and had "stolen" membership and financial files, seized equipment and caused $1,000 in damage in a three-hour search. A spokesman for the F.B.I., View original in TimesMachine,

May 25, 1973, New York Times, page 70 , F.B.I. Says Threat Led To J.D.L Raid; Contends Action Was Based on Peril to U.N. Missions, The F.B.I. said yesterday that a search of headquarters of the Jewish Defense League on Wednesday was carried out with a Federal search warrant based on a telephone call warning that explosives would "be planted at the Russian or Iraqi missions to the United Nations." View original in Times Machine,

May 29, 1973, New York Times, page 38, Mikhail D. Millionshchikov Dies; A Leading Soviet Scientist, 60; Backed Space Accord, Special to The New York Times, Mikhail D. Millionshchikov, vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and the principal spokesman for scientific contacts with the West, died here yesterday at the age of 60. View original in Times Machine,

May 31, 1973, New York Times, page 47, Hurok Fire Trial Opens, Jury selection began yesterday in Federal Court in Manhattan in the trial of two 19 year-old members of the Jewish Defense League accused of participating in the fire-bombing of Sol Hurok's midtown office last year. View original in TimesMachine,

June 5, 1973, New York Times, page 38, Israeli Court Forbids Visit To U.S. by Rabbi Kahane, Special to The New York Times, An Israeli court today forbade Rabbi Meir Kahane from flying to the United States lest he organize disturbances there during the forthcoming visit by Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Soviet Communist party leader. View original in TimesMachine,

June 9, 1973, New York Times, Notes On People: Rabbi Meir Kahane, View original in TimesMachine,

June 21, 1973, New York Times, page 17, Soviet Diplomat's Car Is Fire-Bombed in Queens, by John Sibley, A Soviet diplomat's car, parked outside his summer home near the ocean in Far Rockaway, Queens, was destroyed by fire shortly before dawn yesterday. View original in TimesMachine,

June 21, 1973, New York Times, page 17, A Fire in Soviet Group's Hotel In Washington Is Investigated, by Paul Delaney, [PDF] On June 8, a fire broke out in a hotel linen closet here near rooms occupied by a Soviet delegation that helped plan the current visit of Leonid I. Brezhnev.

June 24, 1973, New York Times, Archie and Maude and Fred and Norman and Alan; A TV dynasty, by Martin Kasindorf, View original in TimesMachine

June 25, 1973, New York Times, Tires Slashed on Car Of Soviet Diplomat Here, View original in TimesMachine,

June 27, 1973, New York Times, page 57, Illegal Wiretaps Rejected In Ruling on J.D.L. Case; 3-Judge Decision Condemns Bombings at 2 Offices Here, but Blocks Efforts to Compel Key Witness to Testify; A Ruling On J.D.L. Rejects Wiretaps; Tapes Destroyed, by Arnold H. Lubasch, Government efforts to compel the key witness to testify in a fatal-bombing case were blocked by the United States Court of Appeals here yesterday in a decision vehemently assailing illegal wiretaps. View original in TimesMachine,

June 28, 1973, New York Times, page 80, Senate, 96-0, Approves Kelley As New Director of the F. B. I., Special to The New York Times, Clarence M. Kelley, President Nixon's nominee as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, was confirmed by the Senate today, 96 to 0. [PDF]

June 28, 1973, New York Times, page 1, 2 in J.D.L. Cleared In Hurok Bombing; 2 in J. D. L. Cleared in Bombing After Witnesses Balk, by Arnold H. Lubasch, Bombing charges against two Jewish Defense League members were dismissed in Federal Court here yesterday because two essential witnesses refused to testify despite an angry judge's warning about criminal contempt. View original in TimesMachine,

June 29, 1973, New York Times, page 19, Notes on People; Rabbi Meir Kahane, View original in TimesMachine,

June 30, 1973, New York Times, page 5, Israel Indicts Kahane in Abduction Plot; Bail Is Refused, Special to The New York Times, Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the mili tant Jewish Defense League, was indicted in Jerusalem today for conspiracy to abduct and murder foreign officials in the United States. View original in TimesMachine,

June 30, 1973, The Milwaukee Journal, Israel Jails Kahane On Plot Charge, ...the case was connected with plans to disrupt the recent American visit of Leonid Brezhnev, the Soviet Communist Party leader. Service . Rabbi Meir Kahane,

July 6, 1971, The Evening News [Newburgh, NY] page 11A, Columbo Called Mafia Chieftain,
July 7, 1973, New York Times, Notes on People; Rabbi Meir Kahane, View original in Times Machine,

July 11, 1973, New York Times, Badillo Weighing Bid as Independent, by Thomas P. Ronan, State Senator Robert Garcia, a close associate and campaign aide of Representative Herman Badillo, said yesterday that there was a 50-50 chance the Congressman would run for Mayor as an independent. View original in TimesMachine,

July 11, 1973, New York Times, Illegal Buying of 3 Rifles Draws 5-Month Sentence, Stuart Cohen, a 20-year-old member of the Jewish Defense League, was sentenced in Federal Court here yesterday to five months in prison for the illegal purchase of three rifles. View original in TimesMachine,

July 17, 1973, UPI - New York Times, page 11, Kahane Says He Proposed Bombing Iraqi Office in U.S., Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, said today that he had proposed to American associated that they blow up the now-empty Iraqi Embassy in Washington to draw attention to the plight of the 400 Jews he said were still in Iraq. View original in TimesMachine,

July 20, 1973, New York Times, page 63, Board Head Struck In Brawl at School; Fuentes Power Cut; Board Head Is Hit in Brawl Over Fuentes, by Steven R. Weisman, Fist fights broke out last night at a community school board meeting on the Lower East Side after a board member punched the board president as the panel was moving to strip the controversial district superintendent, Luis Fuentes. of much of his power. View original in TimesMachine,

July 21, 1973, UPI - New York Times, page 7, Charges In Israel Denied By Kahane, The leader of the Jewish Defense League, Rabbi Meir Kahane, pleaded not guilty in District Court today to charges of having conspired to kidnap and murder foreign officials in the United States. View original in TimesMachine,

July 29, 1973, New York Times, page E7, Education; The Fuentes Dispute; Bitterness, But Also Hope, by Steven R. Weisman, The view from the office of Luis Fuentes, the 44-year-old school superintendent in District 1 on the Lower East Side of New York, takes in no more than a couple rows of drab, crowded tenements. But to Mr. Fuentes, it is a view worth fighting for. View original in TimesMachine,

August 2, 1973, UPI - New York Times, page 4, Norwegians Say That Israelis Murdered Moroccan in Error, An extremist Israeli group called the "Wrath of God" murdered a 30-year-old Arab in Norway last month in the mistaken belief that he was a leader of the Arab guerrilla group Black September, the Oslo newspaper Aftenposten said today. View original in TimesMachine,

August 3, 1973, New York Times, page 12, Court Backs Ehrlichman Lawyer's View; Unanimous Decision, by Warren Weaver, The theory that President Nixon had the right to authorize "national security" wiretaps without a warrant, raised in behalf of John D. Ehrlichman in the Senate Watergate hearings, has been endorsed in a Federal District Court ruling here. View original in TimesMachine,

August 10, 1973, New York Times, page 35, Metropolitan Briefs; 6 J.D.L. Protesters Arrested, View original in TimesMachine,

August 10, 1973, New York Times, page 35, Metropolitan Briefs; Tiffany to Pay $7,500 in Bias Case,

August 10, 1973, New York Times, page 35, Homosexuals Get Police Promises; Precinct Chief Says Action Will Be Taken to Lessen 'Friction' in Chelsea, by Steven Weisman, Two hundred homosexuals marched on the West 20th Street police station last night to protest alleged police harassment. They came away with promises from the acting precinct commander to ease what he said had been "friction" between some homosexuals and individual officers. [PDF]

August 11, 1973, New York Times, pages 1, 6, Israeli Jets Over Lebanon Force Down Arab Airliner; Military Says It Diverted Wrong Plane in Search for Palestinian Guerrillas—81 Are Freed After 2 Hours, by Terence Smith, Special to The New York Times, [PDF] An Arab Airliner Over Lebanon Is Forced Down on Israeli Soil First Such Failure Lebanese Communique Airliner Returns to Beirut, Israel announced this morning that her air force had intercepted a Middle East Airlines jetliner outside of Beirut last night and forced the plane to fly to a military airfield in Israel. But a military spokesman later conceded that the wrong plane had been seized.

August 15, 1973, UPI - New York Times, page 4, Israel Sentences and Frees 2 in Jewish Defense League, A district court Judge yesterday sentenced two members of the militant Jewish Defense League to four months in jail for their role in arson at a Christian mission on the Mount of Olives in February. View original in TimesMachine,

August 29, 1973, New York Times, Letters to the Editor; J.D.L. Message for Moscow, by William R. Perl, View original in TimesMachine,

September 14, 1973, New York Times, page 6, Youth's Extradition From Israel Begun In Hurok Bombing, Special to The New York Times, Extradition proceedings are under way to return a 19-year-old youth now serving in the Israeli Army to New York to face a murder charge in connection with the fire-bombing of the offices of Sol Hurok, the impresario, early last year. View original in TimesMachine,

October 2, 1973, New York Times, page 1, Mrs. Meir Will Go to Vienna For Talks on Soviet Jews; Israelis Are Hopeful, by Terrence Smith, Special to The New York Times,

October 2, 1973, New York Times, page 1, Austria Hints Concession, by Paul Hoffman, Austria appeared tonight to be softening her announced decision to close special transit facilities for Soviet Jews emigrating to Israel.

October 3, 1973, New York Times, Austrian Rejects Mrs. Meir's Pleas On Transit Routes; Kreisky Says Individuals but Not Groups of Emigrants May Go 'Shortest' Way, by Terrence Smith, Special to The New York Times, View original in TimesMachine, Premier Golda Meir of Israel and Chancellor Bruno Kreisky of Austria conferred for nearly two hours today, but were unable to reach any agreement on facilities for the continued transit of Soviet Jews through Austria.

October 4, 1973, New York Times, pages 1, 8, Decision on Emigrants Has Divided Austrians, by Paul Hofmann, [PDF]

October 4, 1973, New York Times, Nixon Appeals to Kreisky To Review Action on Jews, by Bernard Gwertzman,

October 5, 1973, New York Times, page 3, Austria's Former U.N. Mission Attacked by 75 Militant Jews, by John T. McQuiston, Seventy-five young members of the militant Jewish Defense League attempted to force open the entrance gate of the Former Austrian Mission to the United Nations last night, injuring a police officer and breaking at least one window. View original in TimesMachine,

October 5, 1973, New York Times, Israel Countering Blacks Bid To Stay, Special to The New York Times,

October 5, 1973, New York Times, Israel Studies Ways to Keep Up Flow of Soviet Jews, by Terence Smith,

October 8, 1973, New York Times, pages 1, 69, Jews Here Offer Prayer and Vow Support, by Maurice Carroll, Amplified chants of "Am Israel Chail ("the people of Israel live!") boomed from banks of loudspeakers in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza yesterday. View original in TimesMachine,

October 9, 1973, UPI - New York Times, page 6, J.D..L. and Nazis Clash, View original in TimesMachine,

October 12, 1973, New York Times, Arab and Jewish Groups Stage Rallies in the Capital, Jewish and Arab groups staged rival rallies spurred by the Middle East war today in front of the White House. One man was reported arrested after scuffling with a female pro-Israel demonstrator. View original in TimesMachine,

October 14, 1973, New York Times, page 113, Youths Rally to Aid The Cause of Israel; Volunteers for Israel, by Ari L. Goldman, Four students held the corners of a large Israeli flag last Monday on the campus of Hofstra University and passers-by dropped in coins and dollar bills. By the end of the day more than $700 had been dropped into the flag for the Israel Emergency Fund of the United Jewish Appeal. View original in TimesMachine,

October 19, 1973, New York Times, page A1, 2 Bombs Explode In Union Sq. Bank; 10 Injured as Devices Go Off Simultaneously at Noon--Motive Unknown, by Marcia Chambers, Two pipe bombs exploded without warning in a crowded bank off Union Square yesterday, injuring at least 10 persons, blowing out 10 of the bank's windows and sending lunchtime strollers and shoppers fleeing for cover. View original in TimesMachine,

October 20, 1973, New York Times, page 10, Records Studied At Bombed Bank; Possibility of a Disgruntled Depositor Is Explored, by Linda Greenhouse, While the bomb-damaged Union Square branch of the Central Savings Bank remained closed yesterday, the police and Federal agents began examine ing records of the branch's 35,000 savings accounts, seeking clues to any disgruntled depositor who might have been motivated to set off the pipe bomb that injured 10 people there Thursday afternoon. View original in TimesMachine,

October 21, 1973, New York Times, pages 1, 26, Israel Reports Enlarging Of Foothold on West Bank, by Terence Smith,

October 21, 1973, New York Times, A Scuffle Erupts in Capital As U.S. Nazi Group Marches, A group of American Nazis dragging an Israeli flag toward the Israeli Embassy was set upon by members of the Jewish Defense League today and at least two persons were injured in the scuffle. View original in TimesMachine,

October 21, 1973, New York Times, Leningrad Orchestra Performance Is Canceled on L.I. Because of Mideast War, Special to The New York Times, A concert by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra scheduled to be held at the C. W. Post Center of Long Island University at Brookville tonight has been canceled by the Island Concert Hall, because of the Soviet policy of aiding the Arab nations in their war with Israel. View original in TimesMachine,

October 26, 1973, New York Times, page 93, Police Believe a Thwarted Extortionist Bombed Bank; Meeting at Academy, by Marcia Chambers, Detectives who have sought for a week a motive for the pipe-bomb explosion at a Union Square bank now "strongly believe" that the bomber electronically set off the two highly sophisticated devices after failing in a scheme to extort $100,000 from the bank. View original in TimesMachine,

November 1, 1973, New York Times, Mr. Nixon and the Press: A 27-Year Conflict; A view that he is not well informed. A view that he is not well treated, by Ben H. Bagdikian, View original in TimesMachine,

November 22, 1973, New York Times, page 38, Painter Is Killed In Synagogue Fire; Cause of the Flatbush Blaze Is Undetermined--Rabbi Cites Recent Threats Students on 2d Floor Recent Threats Cited, by Mary Breasted, One man was killed in a two alarm fire that burned out a two-story building housing a synagogue and yeshiva in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn yesterday afternoon. View original in TimesMachine,

November 23, 1973, New York Times, 300 Jews, Protesting 2 Fires Seek Added Police Protection, About 300 Jews, including yeshiva students, rabbis and a contingent of the Jewish Defense League, demonstrated yesterday in front of a Brooklyn yeshiva and synagogue that was destroyed by two fires in a 12-hour period. View original in TimesMachine,

December 5, 1973, New York Times, page 1, U.S. Attorney in Brooklyn Apparently Leaps to Death; U.S. Attorney Is an Apparent Suicide, by Fred Ferretti, Robert A. Morse, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, plunged to his death from his Fifth-floor Brooklyn Heights apartment yesterday afternoon, hours after he had told the chief judge of the district that he intended to resign. View original in TimesMachine,

December 5, 1973, New York Times, page 50, Panoply of Investigations, by Ralph Blumenthal,

December 12, 1973, New York Times, Metropolitan Briefs; Bricks Damage French Center Here, View original in TimesMachine,

December 21, 1973, New York Times, page 51, 2 in J.D.L. Are Arrested At Egypt's Mission Here, Two members of the militant Jewish Defense League were arrested yesterday as they demonstrated at the Egyptian Mission to the United Nations at 36 East 67th Street, the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced.



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