NEWS OSI Calls Ohio Man A Nazi Camp Guard •••e kkiike.N'g ke The Quality Wood HartakFlooring -t IWZ hQ • No Wax Finish With 5 Year Warranty • Installs Fast! No Messy Sanding Or Finishing • • Five Decorator Colors To Choose From • BLOOMFIELD CARPET & FLOORING 39880 14 Mile Road — Corner of Haggerty Road — Newberry Square Plaza 624-4477 your waste is Impeccable... Ours is Unforgettable! Traditionally, Wedding Cakes have been nice to look at but nothing special to eat. Our Wedding Cakes put an end to that! Tantalize your guests with flavors such as chocolate mousse, strawberry, kahlua, chocolate chambord torte, or one of our many cheesecake flavors. Our Wedding Cakes are made from the finest chocolates, butter, fresh fruits and creams. To enhance the subtleflavors, we frost your selections with tightly sweetened fresh whipping cream. We extend an invitation to the bride and groom to make an appointment for a private wedding consultation and complimentary sample tasting. CPPindlP LI 61ir • v i ',tat i % 111 11; 4 Orr r, eexis t e ‘ZGO'4 •Y 0 U R S • 464-8170 8_8 FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1992 New York (JTA) — The U.S. Justice Department has filed a complaint to revoke the American citizenship of an Ohio man accused of con- cealing his wartime past. George Lindert, 69, a retired aluminum worker from Canfield, a city southwest of Youngstown, is accused of having been an SS guard at a concentration camp during World War II. According to the Justice Department's complaint, Lindert joined the Waffen SS in the spring of 1942 and was in the SS Death's Head Battalion at Mauthausen, in Austria, both at its main concentration camp and its Loibl-Pass subcamp. The complaint was filed July 7 in U.S. District Court in Cleveland by the Justice Department's Office of Spe- cial Investigations and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Ohio. It is OSI's fourth move against a suspected Nazi war criminal in recent weeks. According to the com- plaint, Lindert concealed his service as an SS guard when he entered the United States in 1955 and when he suc- cessfully applied for U.S. citizenship in 1962. He came to the United States from Salzburg, Austria, under the Refugee Relief Act of 1953. For 25 years, Lindert worked for Easco, an aluminum manufacturing plant in Austintown, near Youngstown. He retired in 1985. Lindert told the Cleveland Plain Dealer, "I was never SS. I was drafted in the army. What choice did I have? I was a guard at the camp, but I worked along the fence. I never saw anyone killed." To date, 42 Nazi war criminals or collaborators have been stripped of U.S. citizenship, and 30 have been deported. OSI's activities have been moving at an accelerated clip in recent months, with the office processing several cases against alleged Nazis living in various parts of the country. In early June, Michael Schmidt of Lincolnwood, Ill., a former SS guard at the Sachsenhausen concentra- tion camp in Germany, agreed to leave the country rather than face deportation proceedings. The following week, OSI filed charges of concealing -- his wartime past against Jonas Stelmokas, a retired Philadelphia architect charged with having been a high-ranking officer who helped Nazis murder Lithuanian Jews during- World War A week later, OSI filed c similar charges against Jack Reimer of upstate New York =, who, the office said, took, part in the mass killing of Jews in Poland. The department has been helped in its work by new access to documents obtain- ed from the archives of Lithuania, Russia, Ukraine and other Eastern European '- countries. OSI has been beleaguered of late because of doubts shed in Israel and the United States over the veracity of claims that con- victed war criminal John - Demjanjuk was the Treblinka concentration - camp guard known as "Ivan the Terrible." Demjanjuk has been sentenced by Israel to hang. But now the country's High Court of Justice is entertain- ing doubts as to whether the right man was convicted of the right crimes. Cr, Israeli Farmer Murdered Tel Aviv (JTA) — An 84- year-old citrus farmer from' Ra'anana, north of Tel Aviv, was murdered last week in his grove on the outskirts of nearby Moshav Batzra. Avraham Kinsler was found with his throat cut and numerous stab woundsc in his chest. Police said the killing had all the hallmarks of an in- tifada-inspired murder by Palestinian nationaists. But they have not entirely ruled out the possibility of "private criminal murder." Police investigations disclosed that Mr. Kinsler, whose wife had died three years ago and who lived alone since then, had gone out as usual early in the, morning. He employed no workers at this time of the year, taking I on laborers only for citrus picking. Mr. Kinsler, the father of three married daughters, I had boasted to his friends (1-- that "it's hard work in the grove which is keeping me alive."