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July 12, 2002 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2002-07-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

This Week

If our CD rates were any higher, we'd have
to give them oxygen.

NEWS DIGEST

from page 31

You've never seen a bank like this!

Visit our Birmingham or Farmington Hills branches, or call
1-800-421-Bank. Where great CD rates let you
breathe easier.

6 MONTH CD

2.75%*

4

12 MONTH CD

Gideon Toury because of their nation-
ality. She took the step after signing an
Internet petition last month calling for
academics to boycott Israel.
Academics around the world con-
demned the firings. Professor Stephen
Greenblatt, a Shakespeare scholar at
Harvard University in Cambridge,
Mass., described Baker's actions as
"intellectually and morally bankrupt."

Butcher Of Genoa
Gets Prison - Time

(

3.00% *

48 MONTH CD

4.75%*

FDIC

PARAMOUNT
BANK

A former Nazi SS offi-
cer was sentenced to seven years in
prison for his role in the massacre of
59 Italian prisoners in World War II.
Friedrich Engel, also known as the
"Butcher of Genoa," was found guilty
in a German court last week of order-
ing the murders in 1944.
Engel, 93, maintained he was a pas-
sive observer and did not supervise the
executions. Engel expressed regret for
the massacre, but insisted the killings
were justified by the rules of war.

Bonn/JTA



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*Annual percentages yield for balances of $500 minimum.
Rates subject to change at any time without notice. Penalty for early withdrawal.

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a pair of kitchen scissors all set
in a wood block. While supplies
last. Retail value $19.95. Subject
to change without notice.

•Annual Percentage Yield is effective as of
January 15. 2002. APY falls to 1.75%. and a
$7.50 monthly statement fee if balance goes
below $1000. 'Business or brokered accounts
not eligible_ Rates subject to change without
notice. Account must be open for a minimum
of stx months. Commercial checking accounts
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%TN

7/12
2002

32

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IIERIT1GE

Let us lend a hand

Internet Hate
On Increase

Los Angeles/JTA — Extremist activity
on the Internet has increased since the
Sept. 11 terror attacks in America,
according to the Simon Wiesenthal
Center.
"Extremist groups are undoubtedly
spending more of their efforts online,"
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean,
said about the center's annual report,
"Digital Hate 2002."
Researchers who examined some
25,000 Web sites per month identified
3,300 as "problematic," up from 2,600 a
year ago, according to the report.
Rabbi Cooper said the center was
particularly disturbed by a game called
"Kaboom!" in which the computer
user plays a suicide bomber.

Europe Culture Day
Draws 120,000,

New York/JTA — More than 120,000
visitors took part in activities across
Europe on the third annual European
Day of Jewish Culture, organizers said
Tuesday.
Some 500 events, including exhibits,
concerts, conferences and the opening
of Jewish heritage sites to the public,
took place June 16 in 230 towns and
cities in 22 European countries.

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