INSIDE WASHINGTON h"-- Budget Shortfall Is Choking Soviet Jewry Influx To U.S. Eating Disorders JAMES D. BESSER Now, there's help for this secret sickness. ewish representatives here scheduled an emergency meeting on Wednesday to discuss storm clouds on the Soviet Jewry horizon. The problem involves the growing number of refugees seeking entry to the United States — and a refugee budget that has not kept pace, according to the American Jewish Committee's David Harris, whose concerns sparked the crisis meeting. The growing numbers are coming from a variety of areas — including the Soviet Union, where Jews are leav- ing at an accelerating rate thanks to liberalization by the Gorbachev regime. At the same time, Congress and the administration, fac- ing rising budget deficits, have not appropriated enough money to handle refugees at the currently predicted rates. The embarrassing gap be- tween rhetoric and reality first became apparent early this summer, when the State Department sheepishly re- vealed that money had run out to process Soviet Jews and Armenians seeking to escape the Soviet Union. Despite the "dire needs" ap- propriation and the coming of the new fiscal year, the budgets have still not been adjusted upwards. "Currently, 2000 Soviet Jews are leaving every month," Harris said, "At that rate, we will run out of both allotments and money by April 1?' The government, Harris said, is already looking for greater financial participa- tion by private resettlement agencies — and by the refu- gees themselves and their families. This growing 'priva- tization," activists worry, will discriminate against groups and individuals who lack financial resources, and it will place an enormous strain on already-overburdened resettlement agencies in this country. hide food. sneak away to eat. binge, then vomit. And you don't even know why. 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Come in at your convenience. ♦ 4 The Diamond People For Over 50 Years SVAAOUZ INPVIN(4 _0 645-9200 30555 SOUTHFIELD RD, CONGRESS BLDG, SUITE 100 (ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF 13 MILE ROAD) SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 32 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1988 Washington Correspondent j Findley Praise Givet Democrats Ammunition The Democrats, who have been blasted for the growing power of pro Arab elements within the party, got in a few licks of their own last week. The issue involved a mail- ing from the Arab-American Republican Federation. In- cluded was a letter signed by Paul Findley, the former Illi- nois congressman. Findley gave Bush the kind of praise the presidential con- tender could probably do without. Referring to Bush, Findley said "It is noteworthy that when I was under heavy attack by Israel's lobby in my ill-fated 1982 campaign, he resisted lobby pressure and spoke in my behalf at a home district fund-raiser." Michael Dukakis: Israel's errand boy? Findley referred to Michael Dukakis as "Israel's errand boy," and claimed that Dukakis receives money from pro-Israel PACs; in fact, Dukakis has rejected money from PACs of all types. The Democrats were _de- lighted. "I couldn't concoct a more fitting statement on why Jews should vote for Dukakis," said Hyman Book- binder, special adviser to the Dukakis campaign. "There hasn't been anybody in Con- gress with as long and consis- tent record of Israel bashing as Charles Findley!' Jewish Groups Join Critics Of Pro-Lifers When "Operation Rescue" attempted to close down abor- tion and family planning clinics through the nation last Saturday, a number of Jewish groups were on the fir- ing line with a different point of view. The Religious Coalition for AbortiOn Rights, which in- cludes most of the mainline Jewish groups, held a press conference earlier in the week to express its strong disap- proval of the goals and tactics of the anti-abortion forces. "What we are seeing is that anti-choice forces used their demonstrations in Atlanta during the Democratic Con- vention as a way of getting new attention," said Sammie Moshenberg, Washington rep- resentative of the National Council of Jewish Women, one of the groups participat- ing in the news conference. "The anti-abortion movement has always had an extremist stream in it — but the size of this event, and the focus is alarming to us." Tracy Salkowitz, vice presi- dent of the Religious Coali- tion and regional director for the American Jewish Con- gress, saw the effort to oppose Operation Rescue as a matter of basic civil rights. "Operation Rescue is an outrage," she said. "Our freedom of speech flourishes on differing values and ideas. It is outrageous that people should try to harass indivi- duals on their own personal choices — choices that are often very difficult, very per- sonal ones." But attempts to mobilize a network of pro-choice volun- teers to escort women seeking services at these clinics through crowds of protesters were hampered by Operation Rescue's tactics; protest organizers refused to reveal the exact targets in each city until the day of the planned demonstration. Also participating in "Oper- ation Respect" were the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, the American Jewish Committee and B'nai B'rith Women. Church-State Question Gets More Complex As issues go, separation of religion and state has generally been one of few points of consensus for Jewish activists. But the once-simple ques- tion is developing new wrinkles, according to Jim Castelli, church-state director for People for the American Way and author of a new book on the subject, A Plea for Common Sense. Among those shifts, accord- ing to Castelli, is a subtle change within the Jewish organizations that have played a leading role in church-state battles. "I have a sense that what might be happening is that some people with an cab-