(NEWS REID GLASS & PLASTICS • SPECIALISTS IN CUSTOM SHOWER ENCLOSUERES • EXPERTS IN CUSTOM MIRROR DESIGN AND INSTALLATION 20% OFF Mirrored Bi-Fold Closet Doors Australia May Abandon Hunt For War Criminals ADD BEAUTY AND DIMENSION TO ANY ROOM Call today for a free estimate, or visit our Southfield showroom for a consultation. 22223 Telegraph Rd. (South of 9 Mile) 353-5770 — Interior decorators and Builders Welcomed - - Custom Glass Experts Since 1964 — The metro area's largest selection of watches, bands and batteries! For the area's largest seiection of watches. Keeping I)etroiters right on time since 1927 SOUTHFIELD: (Southfield & 12 Mile) 552-0080 PONTIAC: (Voorheis & Telegraph) 333-2263 FARMINGTON HILLS: (Orchard Lk. & 13 Mile) 851-0440 Full service watch and jewelry repair. WATCH BANDS MT. CLEMENS: (Canal & Garfield) 263-7700 MADISON HEIGHTS: (12 Mile & Dequindre) 541-0808 *Iv la's New Merchandise Arriving Daily 6692 Orchard'Lake Rd. • W. Bloomfield In The W. Bloomfield Plaza 851-4410 BOOKS We Buy and Sell Good Used Books LIBRARY BOOKSTORE 545-4300 Open 7 Days Books Bought In Your Home 36 FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1991 M. Sempliner Sydney, Australia (JTA) — Although there are said to be hundreds of war criminals living in Australia, speculation is rife that the government may soon abandon its efforts to bring them to justice. Concern mounted follow- ing the surprise resignation of Robert Greenwood as head of the Justice Ministry's Special Investigations Unit, set up to trace Nazi war criminals who have found haven in Australia and br- ing charges against them. The unit was set up under recent legislation that per- mits Australian courts to try alleged war criminals for offenses committed abroad. The constitutionality of the law has been challenged in the High Court. Mr. Greenwood's announcement that he is returning to pri- vate practice as a barrister was all the more surprising in that it was made only days before the High Court is scheduled to hand down its decision. Mr. Greenwood's contract would not have expired for three months. He has been replaced as unit director by his former deputy, Graham Blewitt. Mr. Blewitt denied that either the court challenge or criticism of the unit's per- formance was responsible for Greenwood's resignation. The Australian media have accused the investiga- tions unit of failing to bring charges against any signifi- cant numbr of war crime suspects. The opposition in Parlia- ment has charged that the $10.5 million spent so far has produced "no real result." Mr. Blewitt said in a radio interview that there are "hundreds" of war criminals living in Australia. But in- vestigating them is very complicated, and evidence is not readily available, he said. So far, 11 cases await a decision by the government whether or not to prosecute. What would have been Australia's first war crimes trial was canceled on the eve of its opening last summer after the defendant, Ukrai- nian-born Ivan Polyukhovich, was mysteriously shot. Police indicated the wound was self-inflicted. Mr. Polyukhovich's at- torneys subsequently in- itiated the High Court challenge to Australia's war crimes legislation. Mr. Greenwood said after his resignation that even if the High Court rules that his multimillion dollar in- vestigations had no legal basis, they certainly had a moral one. "We have put a proposi- tion before the Australian people that there are such things as war crimes and crimes against humanity. We have tapped a moral force," Mr. Greenwood said. He urged broader legisla- tion to include criminal refugees from regimes such as those of Pol Pot in Cam- bodia and Saddam Hussein in Iraq. Turkey, Israel Discuss Mideast Water Pipeline Jerusalem (JTA) — Turkish President Turgut Ozal and Israeli opposition leader Shimon Peres met last week in Amsterdam and discussed a bold proposal for Turkey to pipe water to the Middle East. The two countries' leaders met at the fourth Global Panel conference, a prestigious international seminar held in Amsterdam, where both were invited to speak. Many experts say water is more important to the future of the Middle East than oil. The project Messrs. Ozal and Peres discussed calls for - pip- ing water, which is plentiful in Turkey, to arid Saudi Arabia and to water-poor Israel, the West Bank and Egypt. The two giant pipelines would take seven years to build, at an estimated max- imum cost of $20 billion. The oil-rich Saudis could easily finance the project alone and would hardly feel it, spread over seven years, Mr. Peres said. The Israeli said he liked Mr. Ozal's down-to-earth ap- proach to the water problem and was impressed by his decisiveness and vision.