N EWS PRICE One Price One Price 041 a m . % t O (11 •cp ( 7 ) • You Won't need it at One PRICE Cleaners All items are only $2.79* each and every day! Shirts 99" every day! Highest quality cleaning around (hangers only) *No household items or fancy garments, some restrictions apply. Same day service. Price subject to advance payment. 2-piece minimum. Same day service. 3 shirt minimum 31217 14 Mile Road 932.3222 at the Triangle at 14 Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. (next to Office Max) One Price PRICE One Price your waste is Impeccable... Ours is Unforgettable/ Traditionally, Wedding Cakes have been nice to look at but nothing special to eat. Our Wedding Cakes put an end to that! Tantalize your - guests with flavors such as chocolate mousse, strawberry, kahlua, lemon, chocolate chambord torte, or one of our many cheesecake flavors. Our Wedding Cakes are made from the finest chocolates, butter, fresh. fruits anal creams. To enhance the subtleflavors, we frost your selections with. lightly sweetened fresh whipping cream. We extend an invitation to the bride and groom to make an appointment for a private wedding consultation and corn/Ai-mental)/ sample tasting. 044142 1: P 1 1- 41/4_44A Y OURS 464-8170 72 I FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1991 Austrian Vandalism Prompts Protest March Vienna (JTA) — At least 5,000 people marched through the rain last week in a silent protest against anti- Semitism in Vienna. The demonstration, occa- sioned by recent vandalism at a historic Jewish cemetery, may also have been a response to a new poll showing pervasive anti- Semitism at most levels of Austrian society. The march, organized by the Austrian Students Association, had the support of almost all of the national political parties. Many members of Parliament par- ticipated. They marched through a heavy downpour from the Judenplatz to the Memorial Against Fascism and Racism, where Professor An- ton Pelinka, a political scientist, addressed the crowd. In the past two years, 72 Jewish graves have been destroyed in the Vienna area. The most recent desecrations occurred during the night of Oct. 10. Several gravestones were toppled and remains scat- tered at Tor I (Gate 1) of the Zentralfriedhof, or Central Cemetery, where no Jewish burials have taken place since 1938, the year of Adolf Hitler's annexation of Austria. Since the vandals struck, security has been tightened around Jewish institutions and cemeteries. Mr. Pelinka referred to that when he observed, "It is sad enough that members of the Jewish community have to sit in their synagogues while arm- ed police forces are watching over theirsecurity. "Now, in addition, the Unguarded graves are being desecrated," he said. The march against anti- Semitism was supported by President Kurt Waldheim, who has served his six years in office under the shadow of a Nazi past. It had the backing of the Social Democratic Party, the Conservative Party, the Greens and various youth organizations. Only the center-right Freedom Party remained aloof. • Its chairman, Jorg Haider, labeled the cemetery desecrations mere "vandalism." Similarly inclined was Mayor Helmut Zilk of Vienna, who insisted that the upturned gravestones were just a "boy's prank" and not a sample of "Viennese anti-Semitism." Mr. Zilk is known to have been distressed by an American Jewish Com- mittee-Gallup Institute poll taken in Austria last summer and released last week, which disclosed strong currents of anti- Semitism in a substantial portion of the population. In reaction, he canceled a conference based on the poll findings that was to have opened here Sunday under the joint auspices of the Vienna municipality and the AJCommittee. Mr. Zilk gave as his reason the decision to advance the date of the City Council elec- tions to Nov. 10. His attitude was surpris- ing, considering that Mr. Zilk recently played host to The march against anti-Semitism was supported by President Kurt Waldheim, who has served his six years in office under the shadow of a Nazi past. Mayor Teddy Kollek of Jerusalem and was made an honorary member of the Senate of Tel Aviv Univer- sity. Johannes Voggenhuber, head of the Green party, charged that "this kind of minimizing is the most common form of anti- Semitism." The vandalism occurred on the day Mr. Kollek's Austrian-born wife visited the grave of her grandfather, Adolf Schwartz. Some sources suggested that Mr. Zilk was resentful because the desecrations would not have been widely publicized had they not coincided with Mr. Kollek's visit. Meanwhile, a special police task force is watching the area until Election Day. Tor I of the Zentralfriedhof is the oldest part of the cemetery. It is famous for the Jewish writers, musi- cians, intellectuals and their families buried there. It con- tains the remains of the Vienna branch of the Rothschild family and of Jacob and Amalia Freud, parents of Sigmund Freud. 4-• 4 -4 -4 -4 4 4 '•1