THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26 Friday, July 2, 1976
Ford. Asked to Withdraw Gen. Brown's Nomination
Lunch is New
at
Grogshop II.
WASHINGTON (JTA) —
Congresswoman Bella Ab-
zug (D-NY) stated Tuesday,
"We should not reward bi-
gotry a second time" and
called on President Ford to
withdraw the nomination of
Gen. George S. Brown for a
second term as chairman of
Florida's Banks
to Purchase Bonds
Now you can start your
Grogshopping early. At lunch,
from 11: 30 till 2. You'll get
the good, hearty things you like.
Start with some super
homemade soup. Wrap yourself
around your favorite hot or
cold sandwich served with fresh
fruit. Or our special
cheese board and spinach salad.
And to make it all sensational,
our famous drinks. You'll like what's
new at Grogshop II.
Lunch. How about. today?
NEW YORK — Governor
Reubin Askew of Florida
signed a bill permitting
state commercial and sav-
ings banks to purchase
State of Israel Bonds. Up to
now, only national banks in
Florida could invest in Is-
rael Bonds.
The new law was enacted
only a week after Governor
Hugh Carey of New York
had signed a similar bill al-
lowing savings banks, sav-
ings and loan associations,
and credit unions in his
state to add Israel Bonds to
their investment portfolios.
Nineteen other states and
the District of Columbia
have also passed legislation
enabling savings banks to
buy Israel Bonds.
GROGSHOP II
STOUFFER'S NORTHLAND INN
21000 Northwestern Highway • 357-4700
Restaurant
and
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Lounge
Is Famous For
* FRESH LAKE PERCH (Small)
* PETITE FROG LEGS
* DOVER SOLE Amandine
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Fine Seafoods—Steaks—Chops
Monday Thru Saturday, 11 a.m. til 12 Midnight
Closed Sundays
YOUR HOST-FRANK STRATTON 1
Reservations
626-1587
or
626-1697
6560 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD AT WEST MAPLE (15 Mile)
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
She Cited "inappropriate
and unacceptable anti-Jew-
ish remarks" made by Gen.
Brown during Senate
Armed Services Committee
hearings on his nomination
on Monday. At the Senate
hearing, Gen. Brown was
questioned about a widely
publicized statement he had
made in 1974 claiming that
Jews exerted too much in-
fluence on Congress and
owned the banks in this
country, and the newspa-
pers.
Asked whether he still
felt Jews exerted undue in-
fluence, Gen. Brown said,
Jewish Inmates
Get More Holidays
NEW YORK (JTA) — The
federal Bureau of Prisons
has expanded its list of rec-
ognized religious holy days
when Jewish inmates may
abstain from their work as-
signments from two days to
all 13 when work is forbid-
den to Jews, under an agree-
ment negotiated by the Na-
tional Jewish Commission
on Law and Public Affairs
(COLPA). Sidney Kwestel,
COLPA president, said that,
under the previous policy,
the bureau accepted only
one day of Rosh Hashana
and Yom Kippur as "rec-
ognized religious holidays."
Under the new agreement
qualified inmates are not re-
quired to work on the two
days of Rosh Hashana,
Yom Kippur, the four days
of Sukkot, the first two and
last two days of Passover,
and the two_clays of Sha-
vuot.
TBQ's Other Place
3067 DOUGALL RD.
Detroit Phone:
963-8944
58 PARK ST. E. TBQ Home Of World Famous
(Opposite Tunnel
Car Exit)
(519) 258-3663
Spare Ribs
Bar-B-0 Chicken and
Char-Broiled Steaks
• Breakfasts •
Sun.-Thurs., 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. Fri. & Sat., 7 a.m. to 4 a.m.
0 HWY 431
To HWY
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-41
HuRtfev
P ace
Mon.-Sat., 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
grztEp2a,tional .CatEzz7.1, of iNdlinction
IJ
or
i
o
0
0
b 3 Ald 1 P Oli
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Windsor Phone:
969-6011
Succulent Seafoods,
Great Steaks,
International
Specialties
and
Choice Cocktails
• Private Party Facilities •
DOW ,ALI. RD
DUEL TTC WE
nu
TuNNIt
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OF ; R017
Inside and Outside Catering
• Bar & Bat Mitzvas • Showers
• Weddings • Banquets • Reunions
• Swim Parties • Stags • Bowling Parties
• Anniversaries • All Occasions
Our Exceptional Home-Made Pastries
Exclusively Supplied By
Tosttuj cNaee
client to express himself
more carefully."
Noting that the President
had recently condemned
similar remarks about Jew-
ish influence made by Spiro
Agnew, the congresswoman
said, "The remarks of Gen.
Brown were as wrong, both
substantively and morally,
as those made by Mr. Ag-
new. Yet Gen. Brown's com-
ments cannot be dismissed
as an unsavory footnote. FIL
is a public official whose
views as stated under oath
clearly conflict with his offi-
cial responsibilities.
Therefore, I respectfully.
request that you withdraw to
the renomination of Gem,
Brown and thereby close
the book on this unfortun-
ate and recurring insult."
Congresswoman Abzug
added that if the President
failed to respond, she hoped
the Senate would vote to re-
ject the nomination.
FBI Arrests JDL Leader in
Shooting Plot on Russians
WASHINGTON- (JTA) —
Dr. William Peri, leader of
the Washington area Jewish
Defense League, was free
on $20,000 dollars bond last
Saturday after his arrest by
FBI agents Friday on
charges of conspiracy to
shoot into the apartments of
two Soviet embassy offi-
cials.
The 70-year-old psycholo-
gist had been indicted last
Saturday by a federal grand
jury in Baltimore on four
counts of conspiracy to har-
ass foreign officials and
with violation of federal
Woman Named firearms
laws.
UHAC Assistant Jeffrey S. White, an as-
sistant. U.S. attorney, said
NEW YORK — Edith r. the charges grew out of a
Miller has been named as previously unreported
the assistant to the presi- shooting incident around
dent, Rabbi Alexander M. midnight last May 23 at the
Schindler, of the Union of Prince Georges County
American Hebrew Congre-
gations.
Sisters ,Re-united
Windsor Has 2 Fine Restaurants
Tunnel Bar•B•Q
"In all candor, I do," and
later sought to qualify his
comments.
Gen. Brown said he was
wrong in asserting that
Jews owned the banks and
newspapers. But under
questioning he said, "I felt
that the Jewish commu-
nity in the U.S. had an un-
due influence on the Con-
gress of the U.S." He said
he still feels this way "but
I feel it is not unusual.
There are other special
interest groups that have
influence or seek to
achieve influence on the
Congress of the U.S."
In spite of the remarks,
the committee voted 13-2 to
confirm the general for a
second term.
, In a letter to President
Ford, Rep. Abzug said a
careful reading of Gen.
Brown's testimony "shows
that he did not actually
change his position but only
found it politically expe-
NEW YORK — To Mrs.
Ita Kroin it seems like a
miracle. To the staff at the
HIAS Search and Location
Department it's another
chapter in the long saga of
bringing families together.
Mrs. Kroin, a Jewish refu-
gee from the Soviet Union,
will be reunited in several
months with her sister, Mrs.
Kala Rubinowitz of Sao
Paulo, Brazil, after a sepa-
ration of 54 years. Mrs.
Kroin, now a resident of
Chicago, is 76-years-old.
Her sister is 81.
HIAS brought Mrs.
Kroin, her son, daughter-in-
law and grandson to this
country from Odessa just
one year ago. Almost imme-
diately, she filed a "location
form" with the Chicago
HIAS office.
After months of careful
investigation, Mrs. Rubi-
nowitz was "discovered"
in Brazil.
The two sisters can only
correspond in Yiddish as
Mrs. Rubinowitz no longer
remembers Russian.
Thrilled to find her "long-
lost" sister, Mrs. Rubinow-
itz has sent two round-trip
tickets — one for Mrs. Kroin
and one for her grandson.
-
apartment residences of
Rimgaudas Malishauskas
and Ivan Zavrazhnov, both
second secretaries at the
Soviet Embassy. No injuries
were reported.
White said Pearl was
charged with purchase of
a stolen 22 caliber rifle and
with trying to hire a for-
mer driver for the Israel
Embassy to shoot out the
windows in the apart-
ments of the two Soviet
Embassy officials. The
driver, whose name was
withheld, was not
charged.
Perl attended many an-
ti-Soviet protests in Wash-
ington, including some in
front of the Soviet Embassy,
mainly in efforts on behalf
of Soviet Jews. He told
newsmen last week that the
JDL planned to attend a
July 3 rally by the Ameri-
can Nazi Party in Lafayette
Park, warning there would
be "physical violence result-
ing in a bloodbath."
The shooting was the first
such incident reported in
the Washington area. Soviet
diplomats in New York City
have complained that shots
have been fired into their
residences on several occa-
sions.
Perl was charged under
the Act for the Protection of
Foreign Officials. Convi . .
tion could mean a sentenc
of up to five years or
$20,000 fine.
Moroccan Jews
Leaving Paris
JERUSALEM (ZINS) —
Reliable reports in Jerusa-
lem say yordim — former
olim — from Morocco who
are now living in Paris have
applied for and received
Moroccan passports.
Some of them have re-
turned to Morocco and oth-
ers have used their Moroc-
can passports to emigrate to
Canada. Reports that this
represents an organized
flight of Moroccan Jews
back to Morocco have been
categorically denied.