I BACKGROUND Fascism Continued from preceding page Sizzling Summer Sale Annual Patio Furniture Sales Event SAVE 30 - 60% ON OUR ENTIRE S1DCK PARAGON CUSHIONS Brown Jordan's best selling cushion set. Lifetime warranty. Regularly $1400 $750 tears- 33021 Grand River Ave. • Farmington • (3 bilis East of Farmington Road) Mon. Thur.Fri. 10-80 Tues. Wed. Sat. 10-5 • Sun 12-4 gm— Patio & Casual Furnishings irm Air 476-6550 CONSIGNMENT CLOTHIERS ► specializing in women's sizes (3-26), children's (0-14) designer fashions and accessories. • Quick turnover • Contemporary spacious environment • Easy • Profitable Convenient Free House Coll Service! 347-4570 43071 W. 7 Mile Highland Lakes Shopping Ctr.— Northville (2 ml. w/I.275) Specializing in Knit Separates .. . That tape you anywhere, Anytime Mon.-Fri. 10-4 • Sat. Closed 29107 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Michigan 358-4085 One week only 20E50% off PRESENCE II inc. at the claymoor 29260 franklin • sfld • located btwn. northwestern & 13 mile tues.-sat. 10-5, thurs. til 8 • 827-3344 40 FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1990 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' Help us keep winning. Boulogne, Rene Bousquet, the police chief who served his Gestapo masters so well, was almost certainly sleep- ing peacefully in his bed. Bousquet, now aged 81, is still fit and dapper. True, he has lived a life of relative seclusion since he was un- masked in 1978, but it has been a seclusion cushioned by the vast wealth he ac- cumulated as head of the Bank of Indo-China over a period of 30 years following the war. Simone Veil, a prominent French politician, was one of the children caught up in Bousquet's net. Miraculous- ly, she survived her ordeal in Auschwitz and finds it "particularly shocking" that Frenchmen suspected of crimes against humanity have gone unpunished. "Was he given special pro- tection," she asks, "or was there a political desire, reflecting the relatively broad consensus, to close the book on a period whose most odious aspects certain people would prefer to forget?" Annette Muller, another survivor of the round-up who was just 9 when she was interned with her mother and brother, "never thought they would arrest the wo- men and children." But they did: "They used rifle butts and jets of stream- ing water to separate the mothers from their children. The gendarmes tore off the women's clothes looking for Imm°11 " jewels and money. It was," she adds, "a purely French affair. I didn't see any Ger- mans." Whatever the reason, France has been unable and unwilling to come to terms with its wartime history. Today, 45 years after the end of the war, Muller finds it scandalous that not a single French official involved in the deportation of Jews to Auschwitz has been called to account. "Collaborators like Bous- quet live in luxury," she says. "Now Le Pen [leader of ,France's extreme-right Na- tional Front can make peo- ple laugh at jokes about the gas chambers. It's become normal to be a racist. But I know that racism means death." So, too, does Serge Klarsfeld, the Paris-based lawyer-cum-Nazi hunter who has instituted legal pro- ceedings against Bousquet but has yet to see the French judiciary take up the case. Klarsfeld believes that Bousquet is on a par with the worst of the Nazi war criminals. "He must be brought before a court." But he has not and, in all probability, will not. For now, all that Veil, Muller, Klarsfeld and hundreds of thousands of fellow French Jews can do is wrestle with the question: Why not? They are unlikely to find a satis- factory answer. ❑ 11 NEWS Fifth Israeli Mountaineer Plunges To His Death Tel Aviv (JTA) — The fifth Israeli mountaineer to be killed in a week plunged to his death Friday in a climb- ing accident in the French Alps. The mountain climber, Yitzhak Ziegler, 28, of Givatayim, near Tel Aviv, was a member of the prestigious Israel Alpinist Club, just as were four mountaineers who are miss- ing and presumed dead following an avalanche July 13 in the Pamir mountain range in Soviet Tad- zhikistan. Those four were part of an international expedition of 60 highly experienced mountain climbers, all of whom are believed to have lost their lives. Ziegler, likewise an outstanding mountaineer, climbed a peak in the Himalayas four years ago and filmed it for Israel Tele- vision. The four moun- taineers who are presumed dead in the Pamirs had also contracted to do a documen- tary on their climb for Israel Television. Ziegler had planned to ac- company the four other Israeli Alpinists on the international expedition, which was climbing Lenin Peak in the Pamirs. He canceled those plans at the last minute in favor of a solo climb up the 15,771-foot Mont Blanc in the French Alps. Ziegler slipped on ice and fell 900 feet while descen- ding the mountain. The missing Israelis in the Soviet climb are Binyamin Agur, Gabi Manobla, Dov Milo and Ya'acov Peleg.