Custom Mirrored Creations Top Quality Work, Top Quality Service Mirror your existing Bi-Fold Doors other Custom Services- * Tub and Shower Enclosures • Heavy Glass Table Tops • Glass Shelving • Mirrored Walls • Bars • Fireplaces • Pedestals (Beveled Edges Available on Glass) • Furniture 911112120RAGE Free Fat imat es Custom References & Glass \i'nrk 557-8776 FAUCETS, FAUCETS FAUCETS FAUCETS WITH LASTING STYLE & QUALITY NEWS Elie Wiesel Continued from Page 26 (Soviet Jews') courage and faith." Fifteen years later, noting U.S. quiescence about Soviet Jews, Wiesel said, "It is our responsibility, and ours alone, to ensure that their hope does not fade and die as they wait in darkness." As he has waged his quest, Wiesel has become, perhaps, more wise — and definitely more modest. His youthful ambitions were grandiose and sweeping; his adult vision has become not more con- stricted, but more simple. "When I was young," Wiesel has said,' "I believed fervently in the coming of the Messiah. I believed that every child could be one or help to become one. Today, I am less ambitious. To save the life of one child, one per- son is enough." One cannot say with any certainty that Elie Wiesel has saved a single life. But one can say that he has opened the eyes of the mor- ally blind, that he has given hearing to the morally deaf, that he — a survivor of the Holocaust — has used the Holocaust as a weapon against complacency and hate. Elie Wiesel has defied the death machinery of the Third Reich to embrace — almost as a silent, vigorous taunt in the direction of Hit- ler's bunker — the possibility that our world can be bet- tered, that we need not stumble into the mindless slaughters that the Third Reich portended. "To save the life of one child, one person, is enough." Yes, and to redeem oneself — and one's world — from the abyss of night is also enough. USSR Invites Wiesel To Visit Washington (JTA) — The Soviet Union has invited Elie Wiesel, chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, to visit the USSR to meet with Russian scholars and archivists on the fate of millions of non-Jewish Serbs, Ukrainians, Poles, Czechs, Russian soldiers and others killed in Nazi concentration camps during World War II, it was reported last week. The meetings in Moscow are to prepare for a conference sponsored by the Memorial Council at the State Depart- ment on February 20, 1987, on non-Jewish victims of the Nazis. Wiesel will also gather information for the U.S Holocaust Memorial Museum being built in Washington. France To Analyze Nazi Era Archives Almet • Arrow • Baldwin • Hager • Hewi • Jado • Kwikset • OF Lawrence • Normbau • Dorma Door Closers • Schlage • K.W.C. Refreshingly Different Items • Moen • Paul Associates • AT Fusital/Forges • Grohe • Kohler HERALD WHOLESALE • Valli & Columba • Baldwin 20830 Coolidge Hwy. Bath • Delta • Aqua Glass • just north of 8 Mile Rd. Steamist • Artistic Brass • The (313) 398-4560 Broadway Collection • 4 10,000 Bathroom Jewelry • Dornbracht • Bormix 80 • Bormalux • Sanijura • Keuco • Auburn Brass • F.I-R • Monarch • Stanley • Broan • Nutone • Miami Carey • J.C.D. Creations • Franklin Brass • Colonial Bronze • Plexicraft • Koch & Lowy • Bates & Bates • Ironaway • Shulte HOURS: 9-5:30 OR CALL FOR A SPECIAL APPOINTMENT ANYTIME MON/FRI, 9-3 SAT 28 Friday, October 17, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Paris (JTA) — len tons of top secret archives describing in detail the activities of French collaborators with the Nazis during the German oc- cupation of France will be analyzed by French histor- ians and members of the state prosecution. The archives, which consist of several million documents, are be- lieved to be the largest such collection not yet classified by any authority, it was revealed recently. The former head of the French Secret Service, Alex- andre De Marenches, revealed in a recently published auto- biography that upon his ap- pointment as head of in- telligence in 1970, he dis- covered to his amazement that 10 tons of documents were stored without ever hav- ing been examined. He said he did not have the means or the staff to undertake a thorough analysis but ordered that a few documents picked at random be examin- ed to ascertain their authen- ticity. He said the random selec- tion showed the documents were not only authentic but threw a new and tragic light on the Nazi occupation. Ac- cording to Marenches they showed that many people, honored as war and resistance heroes, had actually col- laborated with the Nazis and even paid for their services. Marenches who resigned in 1981, said the collaborators included "famous names" among the so-called war heroes. The President of the Na- tional = Assembly, Jacques Chaban Delmas, himself a former resistance fighter, called for an immediate through examination of these record. Chaban-Delmas said that leaving them in secret storage as they now are would bring discredit to all former resistance fighters. Defense Minister Andre Giraud said Monday that the archives will be handed over to the historical department of his Ministry to be exa- mined by its researchers and by the staff of the State At- torney. Giraud said the Na- tional Resistance Commis- sion, a consultative body ac- credited to the Defense Min- istry, will also be authorized to examine the documents. But even if incriminating t evidence is found it will not be admissable in French court because all war crimes, except genocide. are covered by the statute of limitations. 1