OPINIONS page 6 PEOPLE ARE POSITIVE ABOUT FRANKLIN BANK. community that must do something about ***." - Might I suggest to those chronic whiners that instead of constantly lambasting the Jewish community, they try raising interest in their issues in a positive way. If you're really certain the "Jewish community is doing nothing about ***" try designing a program and br- ing it to your temple or syn- agogue. Ask to be a guest speaker, host a lecture, ap- proach a Jewish organiza- tion and seek support. But keep your lectures to yourself. If not enough is be- ing done, remember that old adage about for whom the bell tolls. Oh, and by the way, the chicken was just delicious. O Italian Skinheads Have Extremist Ties 6 6 They're very friendly and convenient for me. They're open Saturdays. . . 9 9 Franklin Bank continues to win friends, with features people tell us are important to them. Like caring financial professionals who take the time to understand your needs. Banking hours that work with your schedule. And commercial checking with the lowest fees in metropolitan Detroit. JOE MACHIORLATTI Mr. Joe's Bar Southfield When you're a small business or practice, you appreciate the importance of personal service and attention to customer needs. So do we. Come in or call today to be a part of the good things happening at Franklin Bank. Franklin Bank N.A. Here to serve you. 358-5170 FDIC INSURED Southfield • Birmingham • Grosse Pointe Woods For insurance call S'l WARSHAWSKY, C.L.0 7071 Orchard Lake Road Suite 110 In the J&S Office Bldg. W. Bloomfield, MI 48322 626-2652 Office Phone See me for car, home, life and health insurance Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there. GET YOUR NEXT PAIR OF SANSABELT slacks at a sensible price. Why pay more when we offer them at discount? We even include FREE tailoring. Discount prices start at: $ 3 plenty of free parking behind our store sizes 32-60 JOHN R MEN'S WEAR 543-4646 M-Th 9:30-6:30, Fri. & Sat. 9:30-8, Sun. 11-5 9 smile a Joke R Take 1-75 to 9 Mile Rome (JTA) — There are only about 1,000 or so hard- core neo-Nazi skinheads in Italy, according to official estimates. But Interior Minister Nicola Mancino is concerned about signs that the violent shaven-headed youths have increasing contact with right-wing extremists abroad. In a report to an Italian Senate commission, Mr. Mancino warned last week that members of the Rome- based Political Movement of the West, the biggest skinhead group here, have had "increasingly intensive contacts" with right-wing extremists who fled to Lon- don to escape Italian law. Also alarming, he said, is the apparent "return to ac- tivism" of several extremists linked to right-wing ter- rorist attacks that took place in the 1970s and 1980s. "The phenomenon of anti- Semitism should not be minimized," he said. "To say that it is under control doesn't mean that right- wing extremism has been canceled out completely, either in terms of violence or anti-Semitism." Mr. Mancino said that 44 acts of anti-Semitism had been registered so far this year. He said he worried that any appearance that the au- thorities are "lukewarm" in reacting to anti-Semitism and skinhead activities might be seen as "tacit ap- proval" and lead to "more significant actions against the Jewish community." Mr. Mancino also said there has been a sharp rise in acts of violence against Third World immigrants in Italy in the first half of this year. This, he said, could in- dicate that "the xenophobic-) political message of militant groups of the radical righ?, are regularly received and acted upon by the skinheads." _ At the same time, Justice Minister Claudio Martelli visited the hospital bedside of Zuhir Sayad, a Palestiri- ian boy who was severely beaten by classmates in a Rome school a few days ago. "A young Palestinian was beaten up because he want- ed to defend the Jews. It's a little incident that nonetheless is very instruc- tive," Mr. Martelli tole reporters as he left the hospital. Eban Narrates Documentary New York (JTA) — Thirty- nine years ago, Israeli statesman Abba Eban wat- ched as the Israeli flag was first raised at the United Nations. At that moment, he felt that "the status of the Jew- ish people in history had ir- reversibly changed," he re- cently recalled. The former Israeli ambas- sador to the United States will share those and other' memories in "Israel, a Nation is Born, with Abba Eban, a Personal Witness," a five-part television doc- umentary on the history of the Jewish state. The series, which depicts-- the birth and evolution of the state of Israel, will premiere on WNET, the public television station in New York, on Dec. 6. It will be made available to public television stations nation, wide, according to William Baker, president and chief executive officer of WNET.