28 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 1, 1985 Electronic Office Typewriter NEWS brother EM-80 • • 16.5" Carriage • Cassette Ribbon & Daisy Wheel • 2 Line Correction Memory • Bold Print, Auto Centering & Underscore • Automatic Paper Insertion • Computer Compatible And Much More On Mengele Trail O Continued from Page 1 f RETAIL 5699. COST $49800 Leif t - of 11 1P• ■ :t 111111111H11111101111111IIIIIHANHIIII111111111 Includes Fre e Deluxe Bevi f s Typing of Tapes, 2 Year Table, 2 Ribbons -ons & Extended Parts Warranty ti aft 11111111111111111 11111 Rent to Own at New Low Rates! . e Save up to 70% on all your office needs! 342-78 I 16893 Schaefer, Detroit Supplies • Furniture • Machines We Will Beat YoufBest Price GLASS & MIRROR BI-FOLD SUPER SPECIAL Existing Doors $123.99 Installed $128.99 Installed $145.99 Installed 4 ft. openings 5 ft. openings 6 ft. openings NEW MIRRORED BI-FOLD DOORS—FINEST QUALITY Slim Fold $190.00 Installed $200.00 Installed $250.00 Installed 4 ft. openings 5 ft. openings 6 ft. openings Lowest Prices On All Types of Mirrored Walls, Furniture, Bars, Cubes, Etc. Heavy Glass Table Tops, Shelving, Beveled O.G. Edges. Shower and Tub Enclosures, Replacement Windows. MIRRORED WALL SPECIAL — 12'x8' High $425.00 Call today for free estimates: 552-0088 Atlas Glass & Mirror PERFECTION IS OUR REFLECTION 552-0088 Where quality work, discount prices and you the customer make us #1 FACTORY AUTHORIZED HEARING AID SPECIAL 1 AID ALL IN THE EAR NO WIRES—NO TUBES—NO CORDS If You're NOT Hearing From Us, You Should Be! Will Compensate Hearing Loss -Up to 75 Decibles 90-DAY TRIAL Daily Hours 9:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. BY APPOINTMENT ONLY GEORGE M. IWANOW HEARING AID CENTERS THIS IS ALL YOU WEAR. IT PAYS TO DRIVE 10-40-100 MILES TO SAVE $. WEST SIDE Greenfield Plaza Shopping Center 22883 Greenfield Rd. Southfield — Ground Floor 559-9130 $59500 Reg. Price SPECIAL $24900 BOTH EARS $39900 WITH THIS ADVT. ONLY EAST SIDE Eastside Center Prof. Building 17800 E. 8 Mile Rd. Harper Woods — Ground Floor 371-9200 Senate Judiciary subcommit- tee's investigation into the Mengele case, arguing that the U.S. has a "special obliga- tion" to bring him to justice, and urging that the State 'De- partment "contact the gov- ernments of the nations that have been identified as having some connection with or in- formation about Dr. Mengele, and urge them to conduct internal investigations of their own, and to cooperate fully in this country's investi- gation and in the efforts of all other concerned nations." Martin Mendelsohn, the Wiesenthal Center's counsel, who was present on the dais at the press conference, suggested that the CIA lead the Mengele investigation. Sen. SpeCter announced that a second Judiciary sub- committee hearing on the Mengele case would be held March 19 to follow up on the work of the various agencies now involved. At a hearing of the subcom- mittee last week, Sen. Specter and his colleague, Sen. How- ard Metzenbaum of Ohio, in- quired into questions that arose early this year when the Wiesenthal Center and Sen. D'Amato discovered that the U.S. Army had once had Mengele in its custody. The questions: (1) Did Mengele, like Klaus Barbie the Gestapo "Butcher of Lyon," ever have any con- nections with the U.S. gov- ernment? (2) If Mengele had been in the custody of the Army, how did he leave it? Did he escape or was he released, and if he was released, why? (3) Where is he now? Testifying at the hearing were Sen. D'Amato; Lt. Gen. William E. Odom, U.S. Army assistant chief of staff for in- telligence; Mark Berkowitz, president of the "Candles" organization of Auschwitz survivors; Ernest Michel, a Holocaust survivor and execu- tive vice president of the United Jewish Appeal Found- ation; and Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Wiesenthal Cen- ter. Sen. D'Amato brought the subcommittee lip to date on the latest develop:gents in the case, which included a possible sighting of Mengele in Canada in 1962, and the testimony of two former Army enlisted men who said they had actually seen Mengele in U.S. custody in Germany in 1945. Sen. D'Amato also said that in 1980, ParaguayTi friends of Mengele had received Christ- mas cards from him posted in Portugal, and that in 1982 the West Germans had arrested on drug smuggling charges a man who claimed he had been Mengele's roommate in Paraguay. Rabbi Hier related the cir- cumstances under which U.S. involvement had come to light: A letter dated April 21, 1947, and signed by a Counter Intelligence Corps agent named Benjamin J. M. Gorby, Sen. Specter said that the CIA "had not been diligent" in investigating the Mengele case and urged correction of the situation. had been sent to the command- ing officer of the 970th CIC, informing him that Dr. Mengele had been arrested in Vienna. The letter, said Rabbi Hier, marked "the first time any document had made reference to a possible United States connection with Dr. Josef Mengele." It came into the possession of the Wiesenthal Center in recent months as part of a package of documents sent by the Army in response to a re- quest, made under the Free- dom of Information Act, for all U.S. documents in the case of Josef Mengele. Eventually, Sen. D'Amato and the Center sued in Federal Court for the release of four documents that the Army was withholding. Three of the documents have been re- leased, her said. Two deal withAhe case of Dr. Bernhard Mosberg, who is believed to have been murdered by Mengele during the war, and a third concerns correspondence between the United States and Canada about Mengele's sus- pected presence in Canada under an alias. A fourth document, which is British, has not been released. Under close questioning by Sen. Specter, Lt. Gen. Odom admitted that Army intelli- gence did not know who Gor- by's commander was, had not sought information in the case under his own initiative, and had no information about Gorby's letter to the comman- der of the 430th CIC detach- ment in Vienna, requesting that Mengele be interrogated about the fate of 20 Jewish children whom he had appar- ,