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Please send me the T-shirt. 12 JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT P.O. Box 2267 Southfield, Mich. 48037-2267 Name This offer is for new subscribers only. Current subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks for delivery. Address City State Zip Signature 1 year: $33 Payment enclosed $ Adult L - 2 years: $59 Out of State: $45 Please charge my MC/VISA. # ex large - large medium Child - Exp. Date large medium small 1 N eW S Neo-Nazi Attack Raises Fears Toronto (JTA) — Police have arrested two neo-Nazis who assaulted and yelled anti- Semitic insults at the Jewish owner of an Ontario clothing store, raising anew ques- tions about the extent of right-wing racism in Canada. The confrontation began when Elliot Eisen, 50, owner of the Headin' West Store in Kitchener, asked a group of three people, two of them dressed in neo-Nazi garb, to leave his store. The intruders shoved Mr. Eisen, spat on him, shouted anti- Semitic slurs and threw his merchandise down on the floor of the store in Kitchener, about 60 miles from Toronto. Paul McGraw, 20, of Kit- chener was charged with ut- tering death threats and assault with a weapon. And a 17-year-old minor was charged with trespassing. They are both members of the white supremacist Heritage Front, according to Bernie Farber, a spokesman for the Canadian Jewish Congress. The incident came just four days after skinheads and members of the small, yet highly vocal, Heritage Front group clashed with anti-racist protesters in front of the Parliament building in Ottawa, shouting the Nazi salute "Sieg Heil," among other slogans. It was the worst outbreak of violence in the normally staid Canadian capital in several years. Jewish groups reacted strongly to the attack in Kit- chener. Jewish leaders also recall- ed an arson attack in November on the home of Mona Zentner, apparently triggered by a speech by British Holocaust denier David Irving. "It has opened up an un- fortunate new chapter of neo-Nazi activity in Canada," Mr. Farber said. "We can no longer be com- placent." Frank Dimant, executive vice president of B'nai Brith Canada, repeated his call for a "national multilevel task force" to examine the prob- lem of hate groups and hate propaganda and to recom- mend legal solutions. "This incident serves to drive home the fact that Canada is facing a serious problem from racism and violence," Mr. Dimant said. Despite the concern of the country's two main Jewish groups, the number of anti- Semitic incidents in Canada in 1992 dropped sharply from the previous year, ac- cording to an annual report released in March by B'nai Brith's League for Human rights. Rabbi Dow Marmur of Toronto's Holy Blossom Temple, whose congregation recently held a forum on an- ti-Semitism, said he was not surprised to learn that the incidence of anti-Semitism was on the wane according to these reports. "Jewish perceptions of an- ti-Semitism baffle resear- chers," Rabbi Marmur noted. "While there are strong indications anti-Semitism is actually decreasing in Canada, most Canadian Jews believe it is increasing. The objective facts . do not tally with subjective percep- tions. "While non-Jews appear to be more tolerant, Jews feel more vulnerable," he said. In a feature article May 24 in Toronto's Globe and Mail, titled "Overanxious About Anti-Semitism," the prestigious national daily noted, "Prejudice against Jews is seen to be reaching crisis proportions, as swastikas are painted on synagogues and. neo-Nazis peddle hate." Yet, the newspaper claim- ed, "polls show anti-Semitic views on a long-term decline, and watchdog groups may be creating tension by exag- gerating the threat to serve their own interests." Italian Shul Is Marred Rome (JTA) - Anti-Semitic and skinhead graffiti were scrawled on the synagogue in the northern Italian town of Merano earlier this mon- th, Federico Steinhaus, pres- ident of the local Jewish community, reported. Mr. Steinhaus said swastikas, the SS insignia and the cross-in- a-circle symbol of New Order, an ultra-rightist youth group associated with skinhead .a.c- tivities, were scrawled near the entrance.