NOTEBOOK In fashion...it's all a matter of taste. Don't conform - inform. Designer fashions as individual as you are. Prosecuting Nazis Continued from preceding page 31409 Southfield Rd. 642-3315 Also Inside • 29117 Northwestern Hwy. 357-4771 Bellissima Hair Design • Inside Emile Salon WiLLOWAY Day Camp, inc. Best SuirArnerEver/ POND AND LAKE • ARTS AND CRAFTS • DANCE • SWIMMING • POOL • NATURE PROGRAM ATHLETICS • PHOTOGRAPHY • ANIMAL FARM • TENNIS COMPUTERS • GO - KART • BOATING • FISHING CALL LORRAINE & ARNIE 356 8123 - 6 visits for $19.00 Your skin deserves careful attention and protection. We feel confident that the more you know, the better you'll feel about the Wolff System. TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Gift Certificates Available = 29555 Northwestern (N. of 12) Southfield, MI 48034 350-2430 3624 Rochester (N. of Big Beaver) Troy, MI 48083 524- 1 080 46 FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1988 committed under the Nazis, Sher said, "That would have been an offshoot. As an office charged with enforcing the law, that's not our primary function. Even though this case would have been educa- tional, that's no reason not to have settled it on the terms it should have been settled on." The Biological Clock (NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY-WITH THIS AD) CENTURY PLAZA Neal Sher in his Justice Department office. JN When Allan Ryan took over as OSI director in 1980, he told a reporter that OSI would probably be in existence for four or five years. When he was cleaning out his desk 42 months later to take a post at Harvard, he again estimated that OSI would probably be around another four or five years. And now Neal Sher, Ryan's successor, estimates that the office will last "another four or five years." By its very nature, OSI was not intended to be a long-term operation. Simple actuarial tables dictate its demise: There are only so many Nazi criminals extant; only so many witnesses either still alive or with sufficiently valid and vivid memories that would hold up in court. Exactly how many years are left in OSI's mandate is uncertain. Elizabeth Holtzman said that she "had envisioned OSI lasting as long as its job was done. Its job is certainly not done now." Martin Mendelsohn, OSI's first deputy director and now Washington counsel for the Simon Wiesenthal Center, noted that OSI "has been in existence longer than the U.S. fought in World War II. It may soon be in existence longer than the Thousand Year Reich. This is a mopping-up operation." Has OSI accomplished what it was created to do? "Do we have Nazis living in America?" answered Mendelsohn. But OSI can never prosecute every Nazi in the U.S. The biological clock is working against it. In the meantime, OSI will continue to file about seven new cases a year — a persistent, but admittedly slow pace. It will constantly add new names to its "watch list" — ex-Nazis living outside the U.S. not allowed into America. Three weeks ago, for instance, 8,900 names were placed on the watch list. And Neal Sher will continue to believe that his office's mission "is basically the right thing to do. "This country" he said, "was founded on the blood and sweat of immigrants. We gave safe haven to those who were perse- cuted and we shouldn't be giving safe haven to those who persecuted them. More importantly, we're giving everybody full rights and process. "Karl Linnas, for example, had his case reviewed by 17 tribunals in the United States. It was inappropriate to debate whether to deport him because he had a death sentence over his head in the Soviet Union. American justice spoke. The notion that it was un-American was absurd. To say you have no faith in the American judiciary system is to challenge one of the bulwarks of our nation. Somehow, there is a notion that we pick up people in the streets and ship them on planes in the dark of night. People who follow this should know better."