East Side Elderly Fight for Kosher Lunches By DAVID FRIEDMAN JTA Staff Writer NEW YORK (JTA)—Some 100 elderly Jews on Man- hattan's Lower East Side are waging what is apparently a hopeless fight to obtain fed- eral funds from City Hall for a kosher lunch program. But the group, which meets at the Educational Alliance on East Broadway, one of the city's oldest settlement houses, has vowed not to give up. Although many of the people involved are in their 70s and 80s, some suffering from the infirmities and dis- abilities that plague the old, they recently braved cold and windy weather to picket City Hall and other munici- pal buildings. Their demonstrations be- gan last November during the administration of Mayor John V. Lindsay and are con- tinuing now that Mayor Abraham D. Beame is in of- fice. Gloria Rosenbaum, coor- dinator of adult services for the Alliance, says the pro- gram would provide a hot kosher lunch five days a week for 175 people. It would be open to the elderly Jews and non-Jews in the area. Once the elderly come in for lunch, they would also be able to benefit from the com- prehensive services offered by the settlement house. Last summer, the Older Americans Act was passed by Congress providing $100,- 000,000 for food programs for the elderly of which $4,100,. 000 was given to New York City. The Alliance applied along with some 200 other organ- izations, and 55 were ap- proved for the flat $64,000 grant. Some additional funds were available, and the Al- liance thought it would be on the top of the list to get approval. But apparently it isn't. Alice Brophy, had of the Mayor's Office on the Aging, said that all of the groups which have applied are probably deserving. "There are 250,000 elderly living be- low the subsistence level in New York. How do you choose?" she asked. Miss Rosenbaum said these people, now living on Social Security, are either immi- grants or children of immi- grants who lived on the Lower East Side all their lives. Many have children but they do not want to leave the neighborhood they love and always lived in. She said that the Alliance knows that the $64,000 will not be enough, especially for kosher food. But the Alliance feels the program is so im- portant that it is willing to provide the additional funds — if it can get the federal funds to start. Black September Trains in Argentina NEW YORK (JTA) — Ar- gentine federal police have confirmed the arrest of Dan Karmi Reinsenstdat, a 30- year-old German national, who was found training youths for terrorist action. According to reliable sources, Reinsenstdat was a combat instructor for the Black September movement who was trained in special- ized camps in East Ger- many. The Buenos Aires news- paper "Mayoria" said Rein- senstdat was working with a French citizen, identified as Gerard Claude Ileron, who was also recently arrested in Cordoba. Both men have been trans- ferred to Buenos Aires where they are being interrogated by security officials, the newspaper stated. AJCommittee Urges U.S. Health Policy NEW YORK — The Amer- religion, sex, ethnicity, or ican Jewish Committee economic and social condi- urged "a broad-based coali- tions." tion of racial, religious, eth- nic and economic groups" to secure "a national health policy for the United States" to meet the health care crisis. The AJCommittee's board of governors said that a na- GIRLS and BOYS tional health policy "must 7 T017 IF You WANT TO LOSE S OR 50 LBS. be based on the conviction • Individual diets that the enjoyment of the • New Indoor Courts • Full Sports program highest possible standard of • Indoor Gyn., health care is a fundamental • Olympic size swimming pool right of every human being, • Cultural activities • Winter follow-up without distinction of race, OVER- EIGHT • C.I.T. Program • Pollen Free CAMP SHANE Ferndale, N.Y. 12734 26001 COOLIDGE HWY. OAK PARK 543-3343 Accredited &PC 1 &C ► Selma & kr Ettenberg Co-owners/Directors 2026 E. 37th St., Box 18 Brooklyn, N.Y. 11234 SEND FOR BROCHURE 22 Friday, March 29, 1974 — 60,000 pledges were made to the Keren Hayesod Emer- gency Campaign for Israel, and that some 70,000 persons, which included entire fami- lies, were involved in the fund-raising activities. For a country with only 22,000 Jews this was an unprecedented record, he said. TV Violence Draws Cabinet Criticism JERUSALEM (JTA) — Is- raeli cabinet ministers, de- bating the merits and defects of the nation's radio and television shows, rapped the television media for showing too many programs dealing with murder and violence. The discussion about the merits and defects of Is- rael's quasi-public • Broad- casting Authority during the cabinet meeting was occa- sioned by the presentation of the Broadcast Authority's new budget and the fact that Israel has a new broadcast- ing chief. He is Shimon Peres, the former minister of transport, who heads the newly estab- lished information ministry in the new cabinet. He takes over responsibility for broad- casting from Deputy Premier and Education Minister Yigal Alton. The religious ministers de- manded an end to Sabbath morning television which was introduced during the Yom Kippur War, but no decision was made on that point. Zionist Chairs Labor Faction in British Parlianient LONDON (JTA)—Ian Mi- kardo, 66, immediate past- chairman of the British La- bor Party and Labor mem- ber of Parliament, has been elected chairman of the Par- liament Labor Party, the Labor faction in Parliament. Mikardo is on the left of the party, and he defeated a candidate from the right of the party, Arthur Bottomley by a vote of 99-85. Mikardo is a life-long Zionist. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS DAN SK IM All Kinds of Great Playmates... Everything for your active young lady in our great collection of stretch nylon sportswear. Priced from $4.25 to $1 1 Sizes 4 to 6x and 7 to 14 BOYS 8 GIRLS tau/ lincoln center • pontiac mall • 270 w. nine mile • northville square wonderland • dykeland • tech plaza • north hill plaza Tv 4 e. 914-292:4644 sr 212-646-1112 "1 Dutch Dairy District Collects Funds for Israel in Milk Cans JERUSALEM — Milk cans from the dairy district of Freesland, Holland, served for storing money collected for Israel when no other suitable containers could be found to hold the contribu- tions which poured in during the early days of the Yom Kippur War. This was related recently in Tel Aviv by Rev. Lodewyk J. R. Ort, chairman of the Netherlands-Israel F r i e n d= shipLeague of Leeuwarden, the main town of Freesland, during a luncheon in his honor tendered by Israel's minister of finance, Pinhas Sapir. Rev. Ort marked the oc- casion by presenting Sapir with a certificate confirming his district's contribution to Israel, through the Keren Hayesod, of 100,000 guiders ($40,000). Most of the funds came spontaneously from non-Jews. When members of the Nether. lands-Israel Friendship League also ran out of milk cans to hold the money empty ballot boxes from the last local elections were used, he said. Yitzhak Palache, Keren Hayesod's representative in Holland, said that Holland boasted one of the highest proportions of non-Jewish contributors in the world. As a result, Keren Hayesod never had to conduct sep- arate fund-raising appeals there for Jews and for non- Jews. During the brief period covering the war and its aftermath, more than $5,000,- 000 was pledged for Israel, most of which has already been transmitted. Sapir noted that while Jews invariably felt as a nation alone, "Holland has consis- tently stood with us for the past 25 years of statehood, despite changing c i r c u in- stances and political pres- sures." The Dutch community also was lauded on the same oc- casion by Keren Hayesod's director general, S. J. Kreut- ner, who noted that some u tAti • westborn ■