30% OFF CUSTOM FRAMING oseph(lur Li GALLERY Union Lake 363-3003 Orchard Mall 855-0633 NEW SUMMER HOURS FREE GIFT WRAPPING open doily 10-5:30 Wed. & Fri. til 9 M-F 10-5:45, Th 10-1, Sat. 10-5 WrINYIRAU13 JEWELERS Going to the Dogs 29536 Northwestern Highway . Southfield in the Sunset Strip CATS TOO Home Grooming in our Fully Equipped Mobile Unit PHONE: 357-4000 WHY CAGE YOUR PET ALL DAY? With Our Professional Curbside Service Your Pet Never Leaves Your Property Dial Down\ with a DOWN QUILT • ALL BREEDS • 10 YEARS EXPERIENCE • MAKE YOUR DOG LOOK LIKE A SHOW DOG FREE "FACTORY TO YOU SAVINGS" A L E CALL TODAY • OIL TREATMENT FOR YOUR • MEDICATED SHAMPOO APPOINTMENT • FLEA TREATMENT WITH ANY GROOMING TRAURIG'S Since 1919 QUILT & PILLOW SHOP I 474-8077 You are cordially invited to attend the Bois Chabad of West Bloomfield Annual Dinner In Loving Memory of Irwin I. Cohn Z"L M-F. 9:30-5:00 \1S r AT. 10:00-3:00 22050 WOODWARD, FERNDALE 547-2660 Patricia Gurin, Violinist Deborah Berman, Pianist Young Israel of Oak Woods 24061 Coolidge Oak Park, Michigan 34 Friday, June 27, 1986 ••• 5. 9 4 NEWS • West Germany Details Neo-Nazi Activities Bonn (JTA) — The Interior Ministry reported last week that neo-Nazi organizations in West Germany have a combined membership of about 22,500, that several of them are prone to violence and that extremists on the far right have one thing in common with extremists of the far left—anti Americanism. But while emphasizing that aspect, the Ministry made no mention of recent anti-Semitic manifestations involving members of the mainstream political parties that were serious enough to prompt a full scale debate in the Bundestag. These included a remark by the mayor of one town, affiliated with the ruling Christian Democratic Union (CDU) that "killing a few rich Jews" would balance the municipal budget. An official of the Christian Social Union (SCU), the CDU's Bavarian sister-party, created a scandal when he said, with in reference to reparations claims by Jews used as slave labor dur- ing World War II, that Jews always show up when money jingles in German cash boxes." The Interior Ministry's report noted that there were 78 neo- Nazi groups in 1985, the largest being the German Peoples Union with a membership of 12,000. The second largest, with a membership of 6,100, was led by the National Democratic Party (NPD). The NPD has made repeated but unsuccessful at- tempts in recent years to get its candidates elected to the Bundestag and to state parliaments. Its one success, the report said, was in the state elections of delegates to the Strasbourg- based Parliament of Europe where the NPD group won near- ly five percent of the popular vote. The report singled out two other groups, the "Social Revolutionists" and "National Revolutionists," as militants who resorted to violence. They have gained influence with the radical right, the report said. Both rightwing and leftwing extremists denounce American "imperialism" and spread hostility against Americans sta- tioned in West Germany, the report said. They depict Americans here as represen- tatives of a foreign power trying to impose its will on the German people against their own interests. The report said the 3,550 of West Germany's Arab residents are affiliated with such groups as the Palestine Liberation Organization. According to the report, PLO dissidents opposed to Yasir Arafat have failed to attract substantial support among Arab extremists. Religious Schism Worsens In Israel Master of Cere'monies: Paul Magy Dinner Chairpersons Eileen Borsand Larry Gormezano Fran Rogers Sunday, July 13, 1986 6th of Tamuz, 5746 six o'clock in the evening Guests Artists All Quilts made on premises I s. I 4 s Dinner Committee Carole Hollander Sonia Blumenstein Barry Howard Beverly -Engelhardt Adele Jacobs Lillian Feldstein Morris Mandelbaum Leba Friedman Frederic Ruby Dale Goodman Lucille Ruby Sara Green Claire Scholnick For Ticket Information Call Lucille Ruby 855-3563 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Jerusalem (JTA) — Police rescued a secular leader from enraged Orthodox Jews who surrounded his car on a Jerusalem street last Saturday evening after he fired a pistol in- to the air in a vain attempt to disperse the crowd. The incident occurred on Yosef Ben-Matityahu Street, bordering a religious neighbor- hood. Abraham Fritzi, chairman of the Jerusalem Committee Against Ultra-Orthodox vio- lence, drove there to investigate a barricade of garbage carts erected earlier in the day to block traffic because, according to the Orthodox, a passing car had hit one of their children that afternoon. He was stopped and his car was encircled by a mob of black- garbed men. He fired a single shot to no effect. When police ar- rived to extricate him, they were stoned, as was Fritzi's car. The windshield was shattered but there were no injuries. But calm reigned in Petach Tikva, scene of almost weekly clashes between ultra-Orthodox Jews and Sabbath movie-goers. The management of the Heichal cinema decided to keep the movie house closed as a one-time goodwill gesture after the (—) ( religious leaders in Petach Tikira agreed to control their cohorts. According to the theater manager, he wanted to give the police a night off to spend with their families. In Tel Aviv, several hundred people attended a rally organiz- -\ ed by Mapam, the Citizens Rights Movement and the Shinui party to protest at- tempts to force secular Jews to observe Orthodox religious practices. In another development, in New York, the Agudath Israel of America has urged Israeli Prime Mionister Shimon Peres to "spare no effort" to ease ten- sions between religious and secular Jews in Israel. A cable to Peres from Diaspora Mem- bers of the Inner Executive of the Agudath Israel World Organization referred to the vandalism against two syna- gogues in Tel Aviv and other antireligious violence. "We are shocked by the deterioration of relations be- tween the secular and religious that have reached such a point where synagogues are being desecrated by Jews, a scandal without precedent," the cable said.