Perfect gift for any occasion. Australia Alters U.N. Policy Stance Product Of The Month IN- SINK-ERATOR® Steamin' Hot; Dispenser System. No kitchen is complete without it. It's the ultimate, time-saving cook- ing aid. Gives you 190° cooking hot water instantly. Serves up to 60 cups an hour for coffee, tea, soups - dozens of uses. Chrome plated finish spout. Quality - built by In-Sink-Erator with an exclusive in-home service warranty. $119.69 Installation Referral Available cillanagement8pecialties corp. (313) 548-5656 2800 W. 11 Mile Rd. • Berkley, MI 48072 Between Greenfield and Coolidge e vavxc s .0 tooiao oc oosl Endorsed By: Non-Partisa c Paid for by The Committee To The Detroit News "Justice Riley's record is exemplary. Her opinions show proper deference to the Legislature's law making function and the needs of the executive branch in maintaining order." -10/11/92 upreme! RE-ELECT JUSTICE RILEY TO THE MICHIGAN SUPREME COURT P.O. Box 2457. Detroit. Michigan. Charles R Rutherford. Treasurer The Simcha Scroll :4: The Perfect Memento of a Special Day For a bar-bat mitzvah for a wedding gift for a woman of valor for a Maimonides physician's prayer for the Riches of a Good Name scroll call: Traditionffradition! 557-0109 :4: Ara Sydney, Australia (JTA) — Australia's minister for for- eign affairs, Gareth Evans, has approved new, more pro- Israel policy guidelines for Australia's U.N. delegation. The guidelines, aimed at replacing inflammatory words with constructive language, bar the descrip- tion of the Palestine Libera- tion Organization as the "sole representative of the Palestinian people" and opt for the words "territory oc- cupied since 1967" over "Palestinian territory." Australian diplomats also will be instructed to fight more subtle attacks against Israel in the world body, such as resolutions that sin- gle out the Jewish state on disarmament and trade with South Africa. Australian foreign affairs officials do not believe that U.N. resolutions critical of Israel will be altogether eliminated, but they hope the Australian position will improve their tone. It has been stressed that the revision of instructions for Australia's represent- atives does not indicate a change in Australia's Mid- dle East policy. Major Australian Jewish organizations have been highly critical of Australia's U.N. voting pattern in re- cent years, despite the leadership role Australia took in the repeal of the 1975 U.N. General Assembly resolution denigrating Zion- ism as racism. The Executive Council of Australian Jewry raised the matter with the prime min- ister in July. The World Jewish Con- gress' Melbourne office and the Zionist Federation of Australia have stepped up lobbying in recent weeks, with Zionist Federation President Mark Leibler taking up the matter with the foreign affairs minister and with Richard Butler, the Australian ambassador to the United Nations. Helmut Kohl Vows To End Violence Bonn (JTA) — German Chancellor Helmut Kohl has vowed to step up efforts to combat neo-Nazi violence against foreigners living in Germany. In a meeting Oct. 14 with Ignaz Bubis, the chairman of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, the chancellor also said he fully under- stands the special concern of the Jewish community over the recent wave of attacks against foreigners. Mr. Bubis also met with President Richard von Weiz- sacker in Berlin, where the issue of neo-Nazi violence was again the focus of talks. Last week, Mr. Kohl angri- ly rejected criticism by Bubis that the government en- couraged nationalist violence against asylum- c seekers. Mr. Bubis had called it scandalous that neo- Nazi activists were routinely released shortly after being arrested. His claim was challenged by government spokesman Dieter Vogel, who said Bubis had "a rather unusual idea" about what the government was able to do. Meanwhile, the govern- ment's coalition parties passed a resolution last week calling for a change in the country's constitution to sharply limit the influx of asylum-seekers into Ger- many. The opposition Social Democratic Party, whose votes are indispensable to change the law, boycotted Neo-Nazi activists were routinely released shortly after being arrested. the parliamentary vote, arguing that it was nothing but a tactical maneuver. The Social Democrats have scheduled a special conven- tion to be held in three weeks to decide whether they will support the propos- ed constitutional change. Whatever will be in the future already was in the past. —Uri Z. Greenberg