-4 1. 4 p 44
4 ,4!'
a similarly named Berman's Deli.
Mrs. Berman, defending her fam-
ily's store after her husband is
knocked unconscious, comes at
the intruders with a butcher
knife. Mr. Turner's nimble friend
finished her by comically smash-
ing a glass container of "kosher
pickles" on her head. Mr. Pierce's
trash is loaded with inane anti-
Jewish crap like this.
Mr. Pierce's imagination and
re-enactment of the Protocols of
the Elders of Zion has managed
to place the salvation of America
on the destruction of the Jews.
Like the forged Protocols, Diaries
is a reminder that the Jews as a
people continue to be blamed for
economic upheavals, govern-
mental crisis and social uncer-
tainty.
Although the books are some
67 years apart, in both furtive
Jews exploit "equality" move-
ments and foment to achieve
dominance over the weakened
gentile population. In the end,
Earl Turner's story may be only
a product of Mr. Pierce's vivid and
active excursion into historical
fiction. But its basic theme is all
too familiar. The book's central
ideology — the Jews have sold
out the morally good and the
United States in the process — is
of grave danger to American prin-
ciples that protect and nurture
us all.
Tim McVeigh may have read
The Turner Diaries, sold it at
gun shows across the nation
and found meaning in its
words. I found only terror in its
designs. 0
The reason so many pea
come here is s no accden
i
Whether it's a few stitches or a broken bone,
you want the assurance that you'll be seen as an
individual. Not a number.
And when you come through these doors,
that's exactly how you'll be treated.
In our emergency department and trauma
rooms, our physicians and staff offer you
the special care and attention you'd expect
from a smaller hospital. Yet as part of
The Detroit Medical Center, affiliated with
Wayne State University, the resources available
to you are anything but small.
So no matter what brings you here, not only
will we heal your injury, we'll also ease your mind.
For more information on these and other
Toronto (JTA) — A suspected
war criminal was intercepted at
Pearson Airport here when he
tried to slip back into Canada.
Konrad Kalejs, 81, was a key
officer in the notorious Arajs
Kommando unit of the World
War II Latvian Security Police.
Mr. Kalejs had been scheduled
for an Aug. 4 deportation hear-
ing in Toronto. But he voluntar-
ily left the country June 21 for
Australia — hours before his vis-
itor's visa expired.
After he left Canada, his name
was added to a watch list of per-
sons who would not be permitted
entry into Canada.
Mr. Kalejs, who is an Aus-
tralian citizen, was deported from
the United States in 1993 after a
U.S. appeals court identified him
as a high-ranking officer in the
mobile killing unit, which mur-
dered tens of thousands of Lat-
vian Jews, Gypsies and
Communists during the war.
services, call our Physician Referral Service at
(810) 360-3450. You'll see how easy it is to get
the right care, right here.
f
To M-59
5,
N
Huron Volley Hospital
1601 E. Commerce Rd.
Commerce Twp.
Commerce Rd.
Commerce Rd.
SEPTEMBER
Officer Nabbed
At Airport
71