=MED GLASS & PLASTICS SPRING SPECIAL! AM. Time to Inspect and Repair Old, Cracked and Foggy Windows 15% OFF ALL INSULATED AND THERMOPANE GLASS • Complete Window and Doorwall ' Repair Service • Call For Free Estimate • Commercial and Residential 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 — Reading to Remember 7-he Last Selection Days of Remembrance April 26 to May 3 Swiss Exhibit Draws Big Crowds Geneva (JTA) — Curiosity about Jewish traditions and customs among the general public accounts for the high attendance at an exhibition on the history and culture of Jews in Switzerland, cur- rently on display at Lausarine's Historical Mu- seum. The exhibition was first mounted by the Federation of Swiss Jewish Com- munities in 1982 and has been seen in Zurich, Basel and Geneva. The current version stresses Jewish life in the canton of Vaud, where Lausanne is located. About 600 Jewish families live in Lausanne and a smaller number in Avenches, some 25 miles northeast, in the canton of Fribourg; where Jews from the French prov- ince of Alsace have settled. There are about 22,000 Jews in all of Switzerland. But the community is more or less self-contained and the non-Jewish population has had little opportunity to learn about Judaism. In the Middle Ages, Jews were forbidden to own prop- erty or to practice manual trades. During the Black Plague, which began in 1348, Jews were accused of poisoning the wells and were mercilessly persecuted. Only at the end of the 17th century were Jews granted some rights in Switzerland. Among Swiss Jews today the nagging memory per- sists of how Jews trying to escape Nazi atrocities dur- ing World War II were turn- ed away at the borders of neutral Switzerland, many of them to a certain death. The Lausanne exhibition focuses on the meaning of Judaism, its holidays, tradi- tions and ritual objects. The Jewish community has organized around it con- certs of Jewish music, a cabaret show featuring Jew- ish humor and an "open door" -at the synagogue. There, the rabbi of Lausanne, Saadia Morali, explains Judaism to non- Jewish visitors, many of whom never before set foot in a Jewish house of wor- ship. Voicts Jam*, is fltlsoft. 1914-1967 War Witnesses Refuse To Testify Harmony and Dissonance Author Sidney Bolkosky Will Speak on "The New Immigrants" Wednesday, April 29, 7 p.m., at Borders Novi (Sign Up for Seating) The Last Selection Is a Borders Best Bet, 30 Percent Off ($20.97) at Borders During April The Yiddish Alphabet Book Is One of Many Children's Yiddish and Hebrew Titles Available at Borders BORDERS BOOK SHOP Novi Town Center (313) 347-0780 [FREE TREE I LANDSCAPING, INC. 398, -7800 with any • • • • ;LANDSCAPING I minimum order $4000.00 with coupon • expires 5 15 92 - 30 FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1992 - i timmo o Kenneth Shecter Michael Shecter Relandscaping Commercial & Residential Custom Design Commercial Maintenance Sydney, Australia (JTA) — The demise of the Soviet Union is thwarting efforts to bring suspected Nazi war criminals to justice in Australia, a war crimes in- vestigator has charged. More than 12 cases against alleged war criminals living in Australia have had to be abandoned because Lithua- nian witnesses have refused to cooperate with Australian investigators, according to Graham Blewitt, director of the Special Investigations Unit assigned to gather evidence against Australian residents accused of war crimes. The unit was investigating a number of cases involving Lithuanian murder squads during the Nazi occupation. Mr. Blewitt said they would have led to a dozen trials, in addition to the three cases currently before the courts. But "numerous witnesses have reversed their deci- sions to testify since Lithuania seceded from the Soviet Union," he explained. The result is that only one person is expected to be charged. before the unit's operations are shut down in June. Changes in the Eastern European countries in gen- eral have confronted in- vestigators with difficulties, especially where former Nazis have been rehabilitated as "anti- Communists," Mr. Blewitt said. He disclosed that he has lodged a formal protest with the director of public pros- ecutions over the poor trans- lation of evidence in the case of Ukrainian-born Ivan Polyukhovich. . . He is accused of personally murdering 24 individuals and complicity in the murders of 850 others. The proceedings have been delayed while witnesses argued with the court translator over the descrip- tion of a weapon used by Mr. Polyukhovich. In contrast, when a witness was asked in Eng- lish if he had been forced to wear a yellow star, the translator, repeating the question in Hebrew, asked if had been wearing a "green sign."