I The Best Seat In The House Vouchers Continued from Page 1 KATHY HACK HEALTHY FEET HINTS: Have your feet measured regularly. The size of your feet changes as you grow older. Have BOTH feet measured. Most people have one foot larger than the other. Fit to the largest foot. Product Of The Month 7 6 Mansfield *AI FlackS noes PLUMBING PRODUCTS 26221 Southfield Road Cascade. (between 10 and 11 Mile Roads) 313 Water Efficient Fixtures The distinctive Cascade china toilet. European design - yet made in the U.S.A. A water-ef- ficient toilet with only 1.6 gallons of water used per flush. 557-4230 "THE SIGNATURE OF FASHION" Handbags, Jewelry, Accessories, Fabulous Fakes Naturally 20% OFF Decorative styling acids flair to contemporary baths. Located Inside Crossu , inds Mall Lone Pine & Orchard Lake Road $156. 20 851-4460 InstallationReferral Available sJOCKEY FOR HER COTTON PANTIES cAlanagement Specialtie8 Corp. (313) 548-5656 25% OFF G 2800 W. 11 Mile Rd. • Berkley, MI 48072 LuchiscLingerie MAPLE ROAD (15 Mile Rd) AT LAHSER Between Greenfield and Coolidge Studio In Harvard Row Mall OAKLAND PLAZA — 14 Mile at John R WEST OAKS II — Across from 12 OAKS Samsonite FURNITURE SUMMER SPECIAL REGATTE — 4 Leisure Chairs, 48" Glass Table Reg. $1124 immediate delivery On Sale for .. $769 95 Sittin 9 Pretty 50%-70% OFF Evergreen Plaza 19747 W. 12 Mile, Southfield • 552.8850 ALL NAME BRANDS Open Mon - Sat 10-6 • Thurs 10-7 • Sun 12-4 • Vertical Blinds • Levolor Blinds • Pleated Shades Wood Blinds 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, Ml 48076 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulting You Have Grounds For Calling Shecter Custom Design • • Re-landscaping Hours Mon Sat 10-5 352-8622E--:- New ✓ Rochester Hills 32 FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1992 651-5009 NEWS I FREE TREE with any • Commercial Maintenance • Commercial Snow Removal Landscaping LANDSCAPING, INC. Min. order of $1,000 with this ad 398-7800 Kenneth Shecter & Michael Shecter would have the choice where to send their children. The parent — not the government — is making the independent deci- sion." Vouchers would be awarded on a four-year basis, with eligi- bility determined by each state. Parents could use the money for tuition and other school fees, for transportation to and from school, and for supplementary academic services such as a tu- tor or after-school programs. Advocates say the G.I. Bill for Children will result in an im- proved educational system and better students. Their financial concerns lessened, middle- and lower-income families could en- joy what the wealthy have had for years: the chance to study at the school of their choice. And, with additional government funding channeled through the vouchers, schools also would ben- efit. Among the bill's biggest sup- porters are Catholics, whose schools comprise some two- thirds of all private elementary students, according to the U.S. Department of Education. The average tuition at Catholic schools is $1,327 a year, with $1,915 the average for all private schools. But the Jewish community also stands to benefit, the Agu- da's Mr. Zwiebel says. Annual tuition at Jewish day schools nationwide runs into the thousands, with $4,000 the av- erage in Detroit. Some parents would prefer a Jewish education, but send their children to public schools solely because of finan- cial considerations. Furthermore, Jewish day schools often are strapped for funds because of the large num- ber of scholarships they grant. The G.I. Bill vouchers could help alleviate some of this burden, ad- vocates say. NJCRAC's Diana Aviv, how- ever, believes benefits to the Jew- ish community would be minimal. About 80 percent of Jewish parents send their chil- dren to public schools, which "would be weakened" by imple- mentation of the GI Bill for Chil- dren, she said. Akiva Hebrew Day School Headmaster Rabbi Zeev Shi- mansky supports the voucher system, which "would be very helpful both to schools and par- ents who pay public school tax- es but get nothing from them." Secular education must be supported, he said. "But the rights of the religious also should be safeguarded." He said he does not see a con- flict between the separation of church and state and the GI Bill. "Denial of religion was never the view of the founding fathers," he said rather, the Constitution stresses that the state should adopt no one specific religion.