UP FRONT YOU'RE COVERED With Our New T-Shirt! Subscribe Today To The Jewish News And Receive Our New T-Shirt With Our Compliments! From the West Bank to West Bloomfield — and all points in between — The Jewish News covers your world. And now with our new T-shirt, we cover our new subscribers, too. It's durable, comfortable, easy to care for and attractive. And it comes in an array of adult and children's sizes. But most important, your new subscription will mean 52 information- packed weeks of The Jewish News, plus our special supplements, delivered every Friday to your mailbox. r A great newspaper and a complimentary T-shirt await you for our low subscription rates. Just fill out the coupon below and return it to us. We'll fit you to a T! Please clip coupon and mail to: JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME This offer is for new subscriptions only. Cur- rent subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks delivery. ADDRESS CITY (Circle One)- ZIP 1 year: $26 2 years: $46 Out of State: $29 Enclosed $ (Circle One) 20 STATE ADULT EX. LG. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHILD SMALL FRIDAY APRIL 22, 1988 , Continued from Page 5 racial slurs, "is an annoyance — not a threat." Dunn, 35, of Detroit, is one of 15 people named last week in several indictments for allegedly possessing and distributing LSD, PCP and weapons. Marcia Cooke, a black U.S. magistrate, last week refused to release the self-professed racist on his own recognizance. She called him dangerous and a threat to the black community. Yet Paul D. Borman, chief federal defender and vice president of the Jewish Com- munity Council, appealed the action for his former client. Borman contends that Cooke jailed Dunn for his beliefs and not for the alleged .crime. A federal district judge upheld Cooke's decision, angering Borman but leaving ADL officials content. "Based on the evidence, I did not feel he should be de- tained pending the trial," said Borman, who declined to com- ment on Dunn's past racist and anti-Semitic actions. Borman said the federal defender's office has reassign- ed the case to a court- appointed criminal justice panel attorney for technical reasons. He said common witnesses in the multiple in- dictments could present a conflict of interest. The case, he said, was not reassigned because of Dunn's Nazi beliefs. "I take my oath of office very seriously," Borman said. "I will always honor my Con- stitutional commitment." Had he stayed on the case, Borman said he could have been objective. "You have to be careful that your own passions and biases don't supersede someone's Constitutional rights," Lobenthal said. "We shouldn't be too hard on Paul Borman. He has a job to de- fend indigents. He was not defending Dunn as a Nazi." Federal charges against Dunn and the others stem from a four-year investigation by the Detroit Police Depart- ment and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. According to DEA Special Agent William Coonce, undercover officers purchased 53,000 LSD tablets over a 2 1/2-year period. Police also seized 40 firearms during the investigation, he said. If convicted, Dunn faces five to 15 years in prison, Coonce said. A trial date has not been scheduled. "If Dunn goes away, it won't affect the group," Lobenthal said. "He's not smart enough to hold the group together. He needs the group more than the group needs him." Dunn, who goes by the alias Ted, calls himself the leader of the 22-member neo-Nazi group. Several teens belong to the Westland-based SS Action Group. Lobenthal said SS Action Group members have not kill- ed anyone. He said some members meet periodically with the Ku Klux Klan. Dunn, he said, is an "oafish man who would be less-than- mediocre if he didn't wear a swastika." To date, he said, SS Action Group members have limited activities to demonstrations, distributing leaflets and mak- ing anonymous phone calls to black and Jewish leaders. Federal attorneys said several of the group members who were arrested admitted to being members of white supremist or neo-Nazi organizations. But Lobenthal said Dunn is the only person familiar to the ADL. A local television news show last weekend reported that a Jewish hit list was un- covered in the investigation. Yet Coonce said he hadn't seen a hit list of any sort. 'Skinheads' Grow In Numbers, Violence Jewish News T-Shirt Offer Yes! Start me on a subscription to The Jewish News for the period and amount circled below. Please send me the T-shirt. Neo-Nazi New York (JTA) — Accor- ding to a recent survey con- ducted by the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, so-called "skinhead" youth gangs are continuing to expand their membership, at- tack members of minority groups and vandalize synagogues. "The Skinheads — An Up- date on 'Shaved for Battle' " is a follow-up to an ADL report of last October about the racist youths, primarily boys, who shave their heads, wear Nazi insignia and harass and attack members of racial and religious minorities. Gangs are composed over- whelmingly of teenagers, in- cluding children as young as 13 and 14, according to the report. However, the ADL and others note not all youth who have adopted Skinhead hair- cut or garb are racist or neo- Nazi, wishing only to show defiance of their elders. The revised report claims that 20 to 25 Skinhead groups operate in 12 states.