OBSERVATIONS 13740 W. 9 Mile FOOTSTEPS PODIATRY CLINIC Next to Oak Park Post Office SPECIALIZING LASER THERAPY IN ADDITION TO THE TREATMENT OF D Bunions U Corns Callouses 0 ingrown Nails U Warts ❑ Pediatric Foot Care E] Diabetic Foot Care 0 Heel Pain 0 Sports . edicine Medicare and most insurance plans accepted as payment in full. I L S. LAZAR D P M 548-6633 A Ku Klux Klan member and other demonstrators are escorted by riot police as they watch a march of civil rights activists Jan. 18. Violence at the march prompted a second march Saturday which drew 15,000 protesters. FAUCETS, FAUCETS, FAUCETS FAUCETS WITH LASTING STYLE & QUALITY Black-Jewish Coalition Reaffirmed In Georgia MARGIE OLSTER Special to The Jewish News N Almet • Arrow • Baldwin • Hager • Hewi • jado • Kwilcset • OF Lawrence • Normbau • Dorma Door Closers • Schlage • K.W.C. Refreshingly Different Items • Moen • Paul Associates AT Fusital/Forges • Grohe • Kohler HERALD WHOLESALE • Valli &Columbo • Baldwin 20830 Coolidge Hwy. Bath • Delta • Aqua Glass • just north of 8 Mile Rd. Steamist • Artistic Brass • The (313) 398-4560 Broadway Collection • 4 10,000 Bathroom Jewelry • Dornbracht Bormix 80 • Bormalux Sanijura • Keuco • Auburn Brass • F.I.R • Monarch • Stanley • Broan • Nutone • Miami Carey J.C.D. Creations • Franklin Brass Colonial Bronze • Plexicraft • Koch & Lowy • Bates & Bates Shulte • Kroin • Luwa • HOURS: 9-5:30 OR CALL FOR A SPECIAL. APPOINTMENT ANYTIME MON/FRI, 9-3 SAT 32 Friday, January 30, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ew York — Blacks and whites, Christians and Jews, 15,000 strong, joined the largest civil rights march Saturday in Cumming, Georgia, since Mar- tin Luther King led the 1965 march in Selma, Alabama. The march marked a reaf- firmation of the Black-Jewish coalition for civil rights which blossomed in the 1960's, ac- cording to Rabbi A. James Ru- din, American Jewish Com- mittee director of interreli- gious affairs, who was a fea- tured speaker at the march. Rudin called the march an awesome display by Ameri- cans asserting their right to march and demonstrate peace- fully anywhere in this country. Saturday's march came exactly one week after the lit- tle town of Cumming, popula- tion 2,000, hosted a smaller but more violent march, brought to an abrupt and premature halt when Ku Klux Klansman hurled bottles and rocks at an interracial brotherhood march. Within a week, civil rights leaders, Jewish community leaders and Christian clergy organized a massive response to the violence. But the out- pouring of support over- whelmed the organizers who did not expect the huge turn- out, Rudin said after returning to New York. A convoy of some 200 buses carried the marchers from their meeting point in Atlanta to the outskirts of Cumming in Forsyth county, north of At- lanta. But they were not the only ones demonstrating Saturday. Several hundred counter-demonstrators, a handful of them Klansmen donning white sheets awaited the demonstrators in Cum- ming behind a human wall of security forces. Rudin described the.scene as the buses neared Cumming. "It was one of the only times in my life I feared for my physical survival. We saw the security forces on the roof with auto- matic weapons," Rudin said. "Then I saw about 15 men in white sheets, some of them ex- tending their right arms in a Nazi salute. The bus got very quiet, very tense. I had seen pictures of them. But it was the first time in my life I had ever seen the KKK in their white sheets, in broad daylight with the Confederate flags and the Nazi salutes." Rudin rode in a leadership bus, the second in the convoy, which also carried slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King's widow, Coretta Scott King. "We had been warned about snipers who might want to hit the leaders, especially Ms. King," Rudin said. After reaching the starting point of the march, Rudin and other leaders addressed the march in front of the county courthouse. "Once again, our nation has seen the ugly face of racism and bigotry, this time in For- syth County, Ga. but fear and intimidation will never stop Americans of good will from asserting their right to assem- ble peaceably," Rudin told the marchers. "I am proud to represent the American Jewish Committee in this historic march. Bigots and racists everywhere must learn that Americans who stand for justice and equality will do whatever it takes, for as long as it takes, to eradicate racist hatred from our midst." As the marchers moved (