Pamyat Gang Takes Editor Hostage s& 93086 $489°! '93 Eldorado 36 Months ............. 41$0,MMWMMMLIMMMWWWWW pWpM.7,3. '93 Seville 36 00 Months *GMAC LUXURY SMARTLEASE 36 Months. First pymt plus $525 ref. sec. dep., $1500 doom and plate or trans- fer due on delivery. 4% sales tax additional. 33,030 mile limitation. 15e per mile excess charge over limitation. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end. To get total pymts. multiply pymt by 36 months. R + Tax Roger Rinke Cadillac ner ,,„„ Ge Family OGER RNKE CADILLAC otorc 1VM13. W17 I — 696 AT VAN DYKE 7 5 8 — 1 8 0 0 4111 DR. ALAN J. SCHRAM AND DR. LEE M. HOFFMAN ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF NORTHWEST PODIATRY P.C. Specializing in Medical and Surgical Treatment of the Foot and Ankle 5755 we MAPLE ROAD, SUITE 1 1 1 WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322 (313) 626-7180 DR. SCHRAM ALLEN PARK OFFICE (313) 386-7920 60 DR. HOFFMAN BERKLEY OFFICE (313) 546-4401 FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION WITH THIS AD Expires December 1, 1992 Moscow (JTA) — A gang of black-shirted members of the anti-Semitic Pamyat movement burst into the of- fices of a pro- democracy Moscow newspaper this week, held the editor hostage and videotaped the staff before leaving about 20 minutes later. They were gone before police arrived at Moskovski Komsomoletz, which bears the name of the defunct Communist youth move- ment but is now regarded as a leading pro-democracy paper. Pamyat leaders have fre- quently called the paper "Masonski Zhid-omoletz" (Masonic Kike omelette) and similar names; some Pamyat leaflets have framed the paper's masthead in a Star of David. Nonetheless, there is nothing particularly Jewish about the paper, whose editor, Pavel Gusev, is an ethnic Russian. The incident began as a weekly editorial meeting was in progress. About 25 to 30 members of Pamyat's Na- tional Patriotic Front faction sprang from several vehicles that suddenly appeared out- side the paper's main en- trance. Some rushed straight to the third floor, where Mr. Gusev's office is located, while others surrounded the paper's unarmed security guards, said witnesses. Locking Mr. Gusev in, the invaders read him a 10-point declaration that included demands he turn over the names of the paper's jour- nalists who have written "anti-patriotic" articles, and "apologize before the Rus- sian people." The invaders did not harm the editor or anyone else. Despite the ruffians' efforts to prevent anyone from calling the police, someone did succeed in summoning help. But police arrived too late to arrest anyone, prompting charges that they did not take the in- cident seriously. Initial reports said a single unarmed police captain arrived on the scene 40 minutes after being called. On Russian television a day after the incident, Mr. Gusev downplayed charges of police tardiness. But the bad taste lingered after the chief of the local police sta- tion, Lt. Col. V. Chasov- nikov, said publicly that police initially wondered whether the Pamyat attack had been "a friendly visit." No one has yet been ar- rested. From a license number taken down by a witness, police traced the driver of one car. He claimed he was not a Pamyat mem- ber and had been paid 1,000 rubles, about $3, to drive them. Lt. Col. Chasovnikov said suspects, if found, would be charged with hooliganism, which is punishable by anywhere from one to seven years in jail. "It's said that fascism is growing here," a front-page editorial in Moskovski Kom- somoletz said after the inci- dent. "Well, it's already grown, if a bunch of blackshirts can walk into the offices of a major Moscow paper in the middle of the day, dictate their conditions, threaten 'decisive measures' and then peacefully drive away." Numerous Russian public figures, both Jews and non- Jews, condemned the Pamyat action. Rome Marks Anniversary Rome (JTA) — Rome's Jewish community last week marked with renewed con- cern the 10th anniversary of an attack by Arab terrorists on the city's main syn- agogue, in which a toddler was killed and 40 people wounded. Anti-Semitic acts are still taking place, now coming from the right wing rather than Arab terrorists, Jewish leaders noted. "We are witnessing a new xenophobic and anti-Semitic wave in Germany and in Europe," Sergio Frassineti, president of the Rome Jew- ish community, told a memorial ceremony in the synagogue, held the night of Oct 8. Mr. Frassineti said that "all society and all au- thorities must be concern- ed." Racial attacks "could take place anywhere," he said. The ceremony, at which the Jewish community gave thanks to local hospital per- sonnel who cared for the wounded following the at- tack, was attended by local Jewish leaders.