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LIMITED TIME OFFER 0 , ♦ ANNUAL PERCENTA(il: RATE Special *Effective annual yield based on deposits for I year at current rate. Limited time offer. Franklin Savings 26356 Twdve Rd. (At Nurdiwestern NEWS EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD* Call Or Come In for Details Today! (313) 356-2102 Bitburg Continued from Page 1 meeting was prompted by the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. Similar meetings are being requested around the country by the Na- tional Jewish Community Re- lations Advisory Council. JVVV national commander Samuel Greenberg has asked all Americans to wear a red armband and on Sunday "to remind of the precious lives lost during World War II." Greenberg said the day should be one of special remembrance "to reflect upon the gross at- rocities of World War II and remember all those who perished at the hands of the Nazi war machine. Before he left for Germany on Tuesday, President Reagan was pressured by demonstrat- ing groups and members of Congress to cancel the cemet- ery visit. Holocaust survivors joined six Congressmen in a protest outside the White House. On Wednesday, the Michi- gan Senate adopted a resolu- tion sponsored by Sen. Jack Faxon (D-Southfield). Last Friday, the U.S. Senate, in an overwhelming voice vote, asked Reagan to reassess his itinerary. Eighty Senators signed the resolution before the voice vote. A similar letter in the House, signed by 257 Congressmen, was sent to the West German Bundestag. • Rep. William Ford (D- Taylor) criticized the West German Parliament's defeat of a resolution urging Chan- cellor Helmut Kohl to release President Reagan of his com- mitment to visit Bitburg as a "snotty response" to the letter from Congress. The resolution was rejected by all deputies except mem- bers of the leftist Green Party which had sponsored it. In a debate on a "sense of the Con- gress" resolution calling on Reagan to reconsider the visit to Bitburg, Ford said the re- sponse was an indication of the "permanent damage" that the prolonged debate over the issue could cause to U.S.- German relations. Chancellor Kohl's ruling Christian Democratic Union and its coalition partners eas- ily defeated the Green Party motion to cancel the Bitburg visit. They also rejected a mo- tion by the much larger oppo- sition faction, the Social Democratic Party, which held Kohl to blame for the mishan- dling of Reagan's visit and consequent damage to West Germany's image and German-American relations. Kohl heatedly defended the scheduled visit to Bitburg and insisted that it was justified as "a gesture of reconciliation and a recognition of Ger- many's peaceful policies." Ac- cording to chief government spokesman Peter Boenisch, German-American relations would be severely damaged if Reagan were to cancel his visit to Bitburg. Before leaving for Germany Tuesday, President Reagan told reporters the "final word Reagan blamed the controversy on the media, saying, "They've gotten hold of something . . . and they're going to keep on chewing it." has been spoken" about the cemetery visit, and "I think it is morally right what I am doing and I am not going to change my mind about that." Vice President George Bush told a United States Chamber of Commerce meeting in Washington that "Ronald Re- agan has not changed in his abhorrence of the Holocaust. He never will. But the time has come for understanding and support for the President." Secretary of State George Shultz also defended Reagan. He brushed aside criticism and predicted that the critics "in the end may wind up ad- miring the person who has stood by his decision." Asked if Reagan would not pay a politi- cal price for his decision, Shultz said, "The political price would be heavier if he didn't." Reagan defended his planned visit to the Bitburg in a television interview with re- porters from six nations par- ticipating in this week's Bonn economic summit. He blamed the controversy on the media, saying, "they've gotten hold of something, and like a dog wor- rying a bone, they're going to keep on chewing on it." "I know all the bad things that happened in that war," Reagan said. "I was in uniform for four years myself. And again, all of those — you're asking with reference to people who are in the cemetery — were buried there. Well I've said to some of my friends about that, all of those in that cemetery have long since met the supreme judge of right and wrong. And whatever punishment of justice was