rsrth' lif 203i refiLtrill'IT TILE DETROIT -JEWISH NEWS 24. :tridaijebruart 24- , 1918- in MO OM =sow pommommimilIsmemsmosomm a Get it all together... a Color Sentry, EVG and Remote Control =1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 gr , Press the button- get instant close-up! ZOOM picture is 50% larger! Turn set on _ or off—change channelsz-adjust volume—mute sound. I 1 1 1 1 The COLE • SJ1939W Decorator compact table TV with Space Command® 1000 remote control, EVG—Electronic Video Guard Ttining and Color SeWy, Automatic Picture Control. Simulated NOW ON grained American Walnut finish. SALE ONITH 0 MAAC_OLO lk® 11 The quality goes in before the name goes on® SEIKO II,- QUARTZ WATCHES a 40% OFF OSCAR BRAUN'S 3406 W. 12 MILE, BERKLEY, MICH. Corner Buckingham, 8 Blocks E. of Greenfield Hours: Mon. to Sat. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. I 1 .1 14k GOLD CHAINS I 40% OFF, I CAMERAS I Kodak - Polaroid I um a :111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111L-= other news claim they're #1 BUT THERE'S ONLY .11•11 ■ 1 ONE Jewish News Send a gift to a friend or relative TODAY and keep them abreast of happenings here, there and everywhere I= MN OM as IN OM W . MN an MB as as ON NM ea as MI OM • - — OM as MO • = 11 ■ 111111 NU THE JEWISH NEWS 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd. Suite 865 Southfield, Mich. 48075 - Gentlemen: Please send gift subscription to: Name Addre City From : ss IMMUNE State Occasion Zip Code DMC Urges Israel to Refrain From Starting_ Settlements During Talks With Egypt JERUSALEM (JTA) — The 15-member Knesset faction of the Democratic Movement for Change (DMC). urged the govern- ment to refrain from estab- lishing new settlements in the administered territories as long as peace negotia- tions with Egypt continue. Several members de- manded that the DMC pull out of the Likud-led coali- tion of the government per- sists in its settlement policies. A majority of the faction accepted the position of its leader,. Deputy Premier Yigael Yadin, to work quietly within the govern- ment against new settle- ments. The faction em- phasized that its call for a halt on new settlements was not connected to its stand on settlements in principle. Yadin told the MKs that the U.S. government could not understand or accept Israel's argu- ments for retaining its settlements in Sinai once peace was established with Egypt. He said Is- rael's continued insis- tence on keeping the set- tlements was damaging its position in the world. In a related development, Premier Menahem Begin told visiting American- Jewish journalists that Is- ZOA Summer Programs Geared for Students NEW YORK — Summer programs in Israel for high school and college students offered by the Zionist Or- ganization of Atherica are expected to attract nearly . 400 participants this- sea- son. This is the 16th year of ZOA Israel summer travel programs. According to Mel Gala, director of the ZOA Youth Department, the. ZOA is of- fering three Israel summer programs. The largest of these is ZOA Masada Israel Teenage Camp, located on the campus of Kfar Silver near Ashkelon. This prog- ram is designed for young people age 13-17 and can ac- commodate as many as 200 participants. The leadership training course (LTC) is run by Masada, the ZOA youth movement. LTC is designed to provide leaders for the Masada of ZOA youth movement and for the American Jewish commun- ity. The summer in a moshav program is de- signed for college stu- dents. In addition to the intensive touring pro- vided, participants spend several weeks living in the home of a moshav family and working on the moshav itself. For information on ZOA Summer in Israel programs, write Youth Department, ZOA House, 4 E. 34th St., New York, N.Y., 10016. rael's disagreements with the United States over set- tlements in the occupied territories would "not over- shadow the friendly rela- tions between the two coun- tries." war of self-defense. The U.S. holds that the settlements are illegal under terms of the Geneva Convention that spells out the rights of an occupying power. . Meeting with delegates to the convention of the American-Jewish Press As- sociation here, Begin said the settlements are legal under international law be- cause they were established on territories conquered in a . Wire service reports this week said that Defense Minister Ezer Weizman had won a Cabinet battle with Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon and - that the Cabinet on Sunday will de- clare a halt to new settle- ments. Rabbinic Responsa Computer Project of Israel's Bar-Ilan U. Tel Aviv judges are being introduced to the Rab- binic Responsa Computer Project at Bar-Ilan Univer- sity. The project enables lawyers and researchers to obtain Jewish law precedents rapidly from the data base of rabbinic questions and answers stored on the university's giant computer. These responsa were written over 1,500 years throughout the Jewish world and are a mine of information on day-to-day living throughout the various periods. National Mizrachi Women Leader to Address Local- Unit Batya Chapter, American Mizrachi Women, will hear Dvorah Masovetsky, hon- orary national president of American Mizrachi Women and honorary chairman of the Israeli Executive, 6:30 p.m. Sunday at Young Is- rael of Oak-Woods at the women's annual dinner. The chapter will honor Nora Lessman, a founder of the chapter and immediate past president. With her husband, Mrs. Lessman supports local, national and international charitable or- ganizations and is among the founders of Bar-Ilan University and the Techn- ion — Israel Institute of Technology. Mrs. Masovetsky is a member of the Foreign Press Association and a radio journalist. She has been a deleette to many World Zionist Congresses and has visited displaced persons camps in Italy and France following World War II as part of AMW's relief project. She also has been a columnist for the women's magazine. Dinner co-chairmen are U.N. Replacement? UNITED • NATIONS — Prof. Yehuda Blum, a Czech-born Israeli expert on international law, is. being considerel to head Israel's UN delegation when Chaim Herzog leaves the post later this year. NORA LESSMAN DVORAH MASOVETSKY Margie Green, Rose Lesser and Janice Berkower. Joanne Zuroff is chapter president. For reservations and information, call Mrs. Green, 569-2460; Mrs. Les- ser, 557-3908; or Mrs. Ber- kower, 557-8995.