T

e Ir\5,,,rar\ce

for 1 - 14waN Safety

Florida Man
Aided Nazis?

Lease a '97 Saab 900 S
3 Door

Lease a '97 Saab 900 S
Convertible

Lease a '97 Saab
9000 CS

According to a recent report by the

$279*

$389*

$419*

Safety, the Saab 9000 has the lowest

36 Months

36 Months

36 Months

New York (JTA) — The United
States has initiated proceedings
to revoke the citizenship of a
Florida man accused of perse-
cuting Jews during World War II.
Adolph Milius, 78, a retired
physician from St. Petersburg
Beach, Fla., is suspected of being
a member of the Saugumas, the
Lithuanian security police, for the
Vilnius province in the summer
and fall of 1941.
The responsibilities of the Vil-
nius Saugumas paralleled those
of the Nazi Gestapo.
The Office of Special Investi-
gations, the Nazi-hunting arm of
the U.S. Justice Department, filed
a complaint Dec. 10, in U.S. Dis-
trict Court in Tampa.
The complaint specifically al-
leges that Milius, also known as
Adolfas Milinavicius, took part in
the arrest of Jews seeking to es-
cape the Vilnius ghetto. The com-
plaint cites original wartime
records in the Lithuanian Cen-
tral State Archives.
"The Vilnius province Saugu-
mas played a key role in the an-
nihilation of more than 50,000
Jews in Vilnius," said Eli Rosen-
baum, OSI director.
In May, the United States de-
naturalized Aleksandras Lileikis,
former chief of the Vilnius Saugu-
mas. He has since fled to Lithua-
nia.
In June, Kazys Gimzauskas,
former deputy chief of the Vilnius
Saugumas, was stripped of his
U.S. citizenship. He also has since
fled to Lithuania.

Insurance Institute for Highway

driver-fatality rate of any car in the

study. In addition, the Saab 900 5-
door scored best among all mid-size sedans for injury loss in a report by the Highway Loss Data Institute. These

kinds of results spring from a design philosophy that emphasizes safety in unpredictable real-world situations

rather than controlled crash tests. And right now, our entire line of cars is available at prices that are compatible

with real-life budgets. For complete lease details and a

test-drive, see Glassman Saab.

c

irvi Your o - wr\ road. SAAB

•

Subject to credit approval, dealer prices may vary. You must place order or take delivery by January 3, 1997. Terms apply to 1997 900S 3 Door w/ 5 speed and sunroof, based on MSRP of
523,325 (including destination). 1997 900S Convertible w/ 5 speed based on MSRP of $35,520 (including destination) and 9000CS w/ 5 speed, leather/Power seat and sunroof. MSRP of $35,430
(including destination). Lease payment for the 9005 3 Door is $279 for 36 months with S1199 down. 900S Convertible is 5389 for 36 months with S1999 down, and 9000CS is $419 with $1999
down. Lessee is resp. for 1st month's payment, ref. sec. dep., down pymt., and 5450 acq. tee plus 6% tax. 12,000 miles per year allowed. 15¢ per mile over and for excess wear. Title and
tration tees extra.
regis-

Glassman S

Telegraph • At The Tel-12 Mall • Southfield
& Thursday 9-9
810-354-3300 Monday
1-800-354-5558
Tues-Wed-Fri 9-6

ALL 1996 CITY OF DETROIT SECOND-HALF
TAX BILLS HAVE BEEN MAILED

THE DE TROIT J EWISH NEWS

All REAL and PERSONAL property tax bills for the City of
Detroit have been mailed. If you have failed to receive a tax
statement please visit, write or call the Treasurer's Office,
Property Tax Unit, Room 136, City-County Building, Detroit,
Mich. 48226. Office hours are Monday through Friday from
8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Interest and penalty charges must be
added if Second-Half tax is not paid by January 15, 1997.
Failure to receive a bill will not defer accrual of Interest and
Penalty.

48

Kindly include Ward and Item Number of Assessed Address
when requesting bills by mail. When requesting Personal
Property bills, include the Personal Property I.D. No. or F.I.D.
No.

SECOND-HALF DUE
January 15, 1997

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mission of the profits — it was not
clear whether the amount was
the current or wartime value —
was likely to result in further calls
from Jewish groups to make the
early restitution.
The groups maintain that
Swiss banks are still holding bil-
lions of dollars in unclaimed as-
sets that belonged to victims of
the Holocaust.
One panel, which includes
Swiss, American and Jewish of-
ficials, has been formed to deter-
mine the extent and whereabouts
of these unclaimed assets.
A second group, including Swiss
jurists and historians, has also
been formed to probe Switzer-
land's dealings with the Nazis.
Switzerland's famed bank se-
crecy laws will be lifted to enable
the two panels to complete their
work.

Neo-Nazi Violence
In Germany

Bonn (JTA) — A recent wave of
neo-Nazi violence that left 10 peo-
ple injured has prompted police
officials to vow they will take swift
action against gatherings of right-
wing extremists.
In the most severeincident, a
hostel for asylum-seekers was set
on fire in the town of Neuburg in
the German state of Bavaria.
Most of the hostel's 66 inhabi-
tants fled before the building
burned down, but seven refugees
from the former Yugoslavia were
admitted to a local hospital for <—
smoke inhalation.
In another incident, in the
town of Neurupin in the state of
Brandenburg, a group of neo-Nazi
youths beat a Pakistani refugee.
The asylum-seeker was rushed
to the hospital with serious in-
juries. No one was arrested in the
Geneva (JTA) — The Swiss Na- case.
In the town of Libenwalde, also
tional Bank has publicly ac-
knowledged that it profited from in Brandenburg, neo-Nazis at-
its dealings with Nazi Germany. tacked passers-by they thought
The bank's vice president, were foreigners.
Police subsequently arrested
Jean-Pierre Roth, said at a news
conference that the bank's prof- 15 people who came to a local neo-
its had totaled 20 million Swiss Nazi gathering.
The spate of violence has re-
francs.
But Mr. Roth added, "There is minded observers of the wave of
nothing to indicate that gold from attacks against foreigners that
concentration camps was among reached a peak in 1992.
this."
He did not deny that at least
some of the gold had been stolen
by Nazi Germany from the coun-
tries it occupied during the war.
Mr. Roth explained that
The normal deadline for local
Switzerland had traded with
news and publicity items is
Hitler's Germany as part of its ef-
noon Thursday, eight days
fort to avoid Nazi occupation.
prior to issue date. The dead-
Mr. Itoth's comments came in
line for out-of-town obituaries
the wake of a mounting campaign
is 10 a.m. Tuesday, three days
launched by Jewish groups for
prior to issue date.
Switzerland-to make early resti-
All material must be type-
tution to Holocaust victims or
written, double-spaced, on
their heirs for unclaimed deposits
81/2 x 11 paper and include
they made in Swiss banks before
the name and daytime tele-
and during the war.
phone number of sender.
Observers said that the ad-.

Bank Official
Profits From Loot

Publicity
Deadlines

J

