I UP FRONT Why Was 'Count Chocula' Wearing A Star Of David? David, Beider telephoned the General Mills headquarters in Minneapolis. Special to The Jewish News And he was not the only one. General Mills has received a lan Beider of West Bloomfield sat down with his 4-year-old number of telephone calls and letters daughter Rachel for a from concerned (if not angry) con- breakfast of Count Chocula (non- sumers around the country who are kosher) cereal last week and began to also wondering about Count Chocula's connection to the six- feel a little guilty. Afterall, they usually keep a pointed star. How did the star-studded Count kosher home. "But she likes it," he thought to from Transylvania make it to a grocery story in West Bloomfield? himself. Apparently, the Count and his star were printed as part of General Mills' new Halloween campaign to promote the cereal. A computer- generated image of Bela Lugosi was taken directly from the 1931 film Dracula — in which Lugosi donned a large six-pointed medallion — and was placed next to the comic figure Count Chocula. And, while the background of the Dracula photo was electronically erased, the star remain- ed. "It was just an unfortunate slip," explained General Mills public rela- tions manager Bill Shaffer. "There was no intent to offend anyone." But clearly, many are offended. "We don't need this type of Jewish identification with blood-thirsty vam- pires," said Beider, a certified finan- cial planner at E.F. Hutton. "I just Lugosi with his Star of David. don't want young impressionable Suddenly, the box began to haunt minds associating Jews with blood suckers!' him. In the meanwhile, Count Dracula There on the box cover, together and his medallion have ended up on with Count Chocula, was Count four million boxes of Count Chocula Dracula — carrying a candlestick and cereal which now line the shelves of wearing . . . a Jewish star! Puzzled by the relationship bet- supermarkets around the country. ween the Count and the Magen Continued on Page 20 LILA ORBACH A a a Beth Hayeled's Alissa Skarf, David Adelman, Keith Silverman and David Brown enjoy the Shaarey Zedek succah. 'Tip' Stumps For Dukakis And AJCampaign Pledges LILA ORBACH Special to The Jewish News f former U.S. House Speaker Thomas P. (Tip) O'Neill has his way, Massachusetts' Governor Michael Dukakis will be the next president of the United States. Speaking this week at a fundraiser for Allied Jewish Campaign con- tributors of $25,000 or more at the West Bloomfield home of Joel and Shelley Tauber, O'Neill discussed the upcoming elections as well as the pre- sent state of the campaign. Keeping in line with his baggy- suited, 260-pound bulk and back- I slapping ways, the old-style Irish Catholic Democrat praised Dukakis and belittled his involvement in the recent Biden scandal in which the senator was caught pilfering from other politicians' speeches, including a speech by British Labor Party leader Neil Kinnock. "I gave that Kinnock speech 40 years ago," joked O'Neill. In spite of the fact that Dukakis' campaign aides were held responsible for revealing Biden's plagiarism, O'Neill feels the campaign should move on. "If the Democrats are going to win the election, they have to focus Continued on Page 20 ROUND UP Swastikas On Mitzvah Mobile The Lubavitch Foundation's Chabad House on Wheels, a 27-foot mobile home that is used as a "mitzvah mobile," was spray-painted with swastikas last weekend. The vehicle was parked in the lot adjacent to Cong. Mishkan Israel Nusach H'Ari on Nine Mile Road in Oak Park. A neighbor who is a Holocaust survivor discovered the vandalism Sunday morn- ing. He volunteered to remove the swastikas. Chabad member Joel Margolis said the vehicle had recently been painted, and the swastikas were - removed without damaging the new paint. The Chabad House on Wheels was used this week in the Detroit and Toledo areas, pulling a mobile succah so that Jews could recite the blessings over the lulav and etrog for Succot. Police have no suspects in the vandalism. Chabad spokesmen believe that the incident is "an isolated case of juvenile delinquency!' Beth El Group Seeks Recall A group calling itself the Temple Beth El Action Com- mittee is seeking to recall the congregation's board of trustees and officers for their decision not to extend the con- tract of Rabbi Dannel Schwartz beyond June 30, 1988. A letter sent last week to the temple's approximately 1,500 member families and signed by Dr. F. Barry Abrams, Michael Nosanchuk and Carol Ehrle criticized the board's decision regarding Rabbi Schwartz and invited members to attend a meeting in support of a recall on Oct. 27. Dr. Abrams and Diane Lynn won election to the tem- ple's board in July at an an- nual meeting attended by ap- proximately 1,000 members. They defeated persons recom- mended by the board's nominating committee and ran on a platform that called for the retention of Rabbi Schwartz. Following a vote by the tem- ple's board of trustees not to renew Rabbi Schwartz's con- tract beyond June 30, 1988, Beth. El President Jerome Ash and Rabbi Schwartz issued a joint statement an- nouncing the board's decision and stating that Rabbi Schwartz will be pursuing other interests. Ash could not be reached for comment on the letter. UHS' Role To Be Studied United Hebrew School board members were inform- ed this week that the search for a new superintendent has been halted until mid- January while a new Jewish Welfare Federation commit- tee clarifies the role of UHS. In a letter to board members, UHS President Dr. Barbara Goodman said clarification was necessary before candidates were brought in for interviews. The new committee will be chaired by Joel Tauber, chair- man of the executive commit- tee of Federation, and will in- clude Federation Executive Vice President Marty Kraar, Dr. Goodman, and others. U.N. Honors Women's Council New York — The Interna- tional Council of Jewish Women was among the organizations honored as a peace messenger by the United Nations. ICJW is represented in the United States by the National Coun- cil of Jewish Women. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5