!al 1;151v iir 'II. Schweiker Demands Guarantees for Israel WASHINGTON (JTA) — Sen. Richard S. Schweiker (R. Pa.) said that "any Middle East peace package must guarantee secure, rec- ognized and defensible bor- ders for Israel" which, he added, "will be my test in evaluating any Mideast set- tlement." Opposing a com- promise on the Jackson Amendment to the Trade Re- form Bill affecting Soviet emigration policy, Schweiker said, "we must further the efforts of the Soviet Jewish Afraid of the High Cost Of TV Repairs?? Call Ron Schultz 543-0314 For experienced reliable , service at reasonable prices. No charge for in home esti- mates. community to gain its free- dom. He made his pledge for "continuing commitment to the goal of a strong Israel" in receiving the Israel prime minister's medal "in recogni- tion for his outstanding con- tributions to the state of Is- rael." It was awarded to him at an Israel Bond dinner Sunday at the Mountain View Inn in Greensburg, Pa. Schweiker said that he was "insisting" that in Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's meetings with the Syrian gov- ernment "the plight of the Syrian Jewish community be dealt with now, rather than deferred for indefinite future action." He also said he op- posed the funds the adminis- tration is asking for in its new aid bill. "I'm going to fight this new giveaway," he said, "all we've gotten from Students at Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel, massive American capital in- vestments in Arab countries learn how to play a new game entitled "Help—Pollution!", devised by the university's school of education to teach the has been an oil embargo." public the dangers of nollution and how to avoid them. Raphael Schneller, director of teacher training at Bar- Ilan's school of education, shows two students how to play the game which is similar to "Monopoly." The players try to accumulate property in the vicinity of Israel's Sea of Galilee, but must act at the same time both individually and cooperatively, to prevent pollution which lowers the value of their property. Bar-Ilan, Israel's only religiously oriented university, devised the game as part of a nation- wide program to teach ecology and the prevention of en- vironmental pollution to high school students. The game will also be marketed to the general public by the Israel Society for the Preservation of Nature. Mother's Day Gift Sale Polyester Pant Suits $ 199° were $30 Handbags $8" value $20 Print Short Sleeve Shirts $990 value $14 Long Robes $ t; 'Help-Pollution'—Educational Game Developed at Bar-Ilan 1 1 9° were $18 Long Hostess Gowns $ 09° value $16 Print Pajama Pant Suits $ 1 9 9° were $30 Master Charge BankAmencard ad,w,g s, wArt oust smut 23 Mile & Von Dyke, Shelby Plaza 3160W 12Mile, Berkley. Open doily 10 to 6 — Mon., Thurs., Fri. til 9 Sundays 12 to 5 Women Student Rabbis Hope to Fight `Subtle Inequities' • • ••••••••••••••••••: !HARRY THOMAS • LOS ANGELES (JTA) — The two women studying for the Reform rabbinate at the California school of the He- brew Union College have ex- pressed the hope that, as rabbis, they will be able to battle "subtle symbolic and ritual inequities" against women in Judaism. Laura Geller, 23, and Rosalind Gold, 24, said they were "subtle" inequities in Judaism which are not as blatant as the Judaic legal problems for women. Miss Geller noted that "the language we pray in for ex- ample, is totally masculine. Our 'perfection model' is male. For the most part, the woman is traditionaly defined in terms of home responsi- bilities, not those of the syna- gogue." : FINE CLOTHES • • How to Buy Really Exclusive : • • • Expensive Notional Makers — . @Year Round and Tropical Weights • I I • KIAMESHIA LAKE, N.Y. (JTA) — Sanford Solender, executive vice president of the New York Federation of Jewish Philanthropies, charged here that anti-pov- erty agencies ignored the Jewish poor in New York City and said his and other organizations were taking legal action to make welfare centers more accessible and more hospitable for poverty- stricken Jews seeking assist- ance. Solender addressed 1,200 delegates attending the bien- nial convention of the Work- men's Circle, the national Jewish labor fraternal order, at the Concord Hotel. He said a survey conduct- ed by the federation dis- closed that 270,000 Jews liv- ing in the metropolitan area had incomes below the na- tional poverty levels. According to Solende r, more than 200,000 Jews in families of four or more earned about $4,800 annually and 50 per cent of the couples earning $3,000 or less a year were aged. Solender said the majority of the impoverished Jews lived in "h o s tile ghetto areas: Crown Height s, Brownsville and Morrisania, where they dare not venture from their homes for fear of physical violence." He contended that elderly Jews were "harassed" at welfare centers by other "minority groups who resent their presence." Addressing the opening session of the convention, Harold Ostroff, who was re- elected president of the Workmen's Circle, charged that "President Nixon and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger have made a griev- ous error" when the U.S. voted for an anti-Israel reso- lution in the Security Council last month "because the Kis- singer-Gromyko deal called for such action." A resolution adopted at the convention urged President Nixon to add the fate of Soviet Jewry to the agenda of his visit to Moscow in June. Another resolution urged the U.S. to continue its mili- tary and economic aid to Israel. In a message sent to the Workmen's Circle conven- tion, Premier Golda Meir re- affirmed her nation's desire for peace but rejected capit- ulation "to unreasonable de- mands or compromises of our vital security needs." William Stern, the Work- men's Circle executive direc- tor, told the delegates that his group has $13,000,000 in assets and a membership of 53,465 nationally. He report- ed that on May 17 the Work- men's Circle and the For- ward, the only Yiddish daily in this country, will move from the lower East Side lo- cation after 65 years to a new location in mid-town Manhattan. The move, he said, will cost the Workmen's Circle more than $500,000. Saturday Parking Rule in NY Debated NEW YORK (JTA) — City Councilman Stanley Simon of the Bronx and Howard Gold- en of Brooklyn are drafting legislation to suspend alter- nate side of the street park- ing on Saturdays. 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