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Suite 300
Southfield, MI 48034

810-353-0880
Fax 810-352-8666

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THE JEWISH NEWS

...

Next time you feed your face, think about your heart.

48

Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are-high in saturated
fat and cholesterol. The change'II do you good.

American Heart Association

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

EVIDENCE page 47

court accepted documentary ev-
idence that the former Red
Army conscript had served as an
SS auxiliary guard after he fell
into German hands. The prose-
cution stood or fell on his iden-
tification as Ivan by 17
survivors. In the end, Mr. Shef-
tel dug up documentary evi-
dence that another Ukrainian,
Ivan Marchenko, was the mon-
ster who operated the gas cham-
ber.
"Judicial history tells of nu-
merous people who were execut-
ed, due to mistaken identification,
for crimes we know they never
committed," Mr. Sheftal said.
"Therefore, with all the pain that
we may feel in letting someone we
sincerely believe was a Nazi war
criminal go free, we shouldn't even
start prosecuting him if the sole
evidence against him is eye-wit-
nesses. And it doesn't matter how
many of them there are."
Mr. Sheftel invokes psycholog-
ical research that was particular- _
ly relevant in the Demjanjuk case.
'When a group of survivors who
escaped from Treblinka gathered
in the forest, they discussed the

revolt that made it possible for
them to escape," he said. "Many
of them described in detail the
death of Ivan the Terrible as they
`saw' it with their own eyes.
"Yet, we know for sure that
Ivan the Terrible lived at least till
March 1945, while the revolt was
on August 2, 1943. Furthermore,
if a survivor sees someone who re-
sembles a sadistic camp guard,
then because of his understand-
able strong will to punish and take
revenge on such a bastard, it is
easy for him to persuade himself
that this is the man."
The danger of hanging an in-
nocent man, Mr. Sheftel added, is
even greater in. a high-profile tri-
al like that of Mr. Demjanjuk.
Despite his convictions, main-
stream U.S. publishers, Mr. Shef-
tal complained, refused to touch
the book.
Maybe, as he charged, it wasn't
politically correct. But maybe be-
cause they were still wondering,
like many of us who covered the
Jerusalem trial, just what Ivan
the Not So Terrible was doing as
an auxiliary SS guard. 0

American Jews
Support Netanyahu

Washington (JTA) — On the eve
of Benjamin Netanyahu's first
visit as Israeli prime minister, a
newly released poll showed that
American Jews support the
Likud Party leader.
Although about 31 percent of
American Jews say they would
have cast their ballots for Ne-
tanyahu in May's election, some
62 percent now say they view
him either "very" or "somewhat"
favorably.
Nearly two-thirds of the 860
American Jews polled between
July 2 and July 6 believe the
new prime minister will contin-
ue to pursue peace, a process
about 81 percent "strongly" or
"somewhat" approve of as it was
conducted by Netanyahu's pre-
decessors, Shimon Peres and
Yitzhak Rabin.
The poll was released by the
Israel Policy Forum, an Ameri-
can group established in support
of the peace process.
Almost all queried, 98 per-
cent, believe in the importance
of a strong relationship between
the United States and Israel,
and 82 percent believe Ne-
tanyahu will maintain good, if

not excellent, relations with
America.
The continuation of the peace
process is important to a strong
U.S.-Israel relationship, accord-
ing to 95 percent of those polled.
Nearly two-thirds of those
surveyed said they believe Mr.
Netanyahu -is sincere "when he
says he wants to continue the
peace process."
The poll also found that some
63 percent were "concerned to
hear about the new influence of
the religious parties in Israel,"
while 27 percent said they were
"hopeful" about this develop-
ment.
Religious parties won 23 seats
in the 120-seat Knesset in the
May 29 elections.
Approximately 44 percent of
those questioned identified
themselves as Reform, 33 per-
cent Conservative, 8 percent Or-
thodox and 14 percent as other
categories, including Recon-
structionist.
The poll, conducted for the Is-
rael Policy Forum by Penn &
Schoen Associates, has a mar-
gin of error of plus or minus 3.5
percent.

Publicity Deadlines

The normal deadline for local news and publicity items is noon
Thursday; eight days prior to issue date. The deadline for birtI•an-

nouncements is 10 a.m. Monday, four days prior to issue date; out-
of-town obituaries, 10 a.m. Tuesday, three days prior to issue date.
All material must be typewritten, double-spaced, on 8 1/2x 11 pa-
per and include the name and daytime telephone number of sender.

