DreisbNch & Sons 1994 DeVille Drive a new '94 DeVille for months with one SmartLease payment of 24 $10,875°° Ye■ AIMEE& XAMII ■ Lease for the low, low rate of L25%. Save s1521" off standard 24 month lease. •Smartlease plus payment of 510,875 includes accquisition fee. Taxes, license and title extra. You must take delivery out of dealer stock by 7131/94. GMAC must approve lease. Example based on a 1994 Deville $34,903.00 INV. Option to purchase at lease end for 523,385.00. Mileage charge of 5.10 per rode over 30,000 miles. 7 Mile & Grand River • (313) 531.2600 4461 CADILLAc CREATINC. A HIGHER STANDARID COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN You've said we're in a class by ourselves & we thank you for the compliment! Complete interior design services from blueprint review & construction specifications, to furniture selection & custom fabrication; from windows & walls to the last scented soap... These are the services that set us apart. We're so glad you've noticed the difference. Barbi Krass • Linda Bruder • Wayne A. Bondy allied member ASID Sharon Kory • Jennifer Thomas • Francine Sullivan allied member ASID 111 allied member ASID 32500 Northwestern Highway • Farmington Hills • 851-7540 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 On German Theater, Play On Criminal Bonn (JTA) — At one time he thought of getting a pistol and shooting Anton Malloth in re- venge for killing his grandfather. Instead he sat down and wrote a book. German Jewish writer Peter Finkelgruen's book, House Ger- many, has since been dramatized and is currently appearing to full houses at a theater in the west- ern German city of Dusseldorf. With the staging of the play, Handsome Tony, the 52-year-old Mr. Finkelgruen now hopes the former Nazi who killed his grand- father in Theresienstadt will fi- nally be brought to justice. The play by Israeli playwright Yehoshua Sobol tells the story of Malloth, 81, a former SS officer currently living in an old-age home with all his expenses paid for by the German government. Malloth — known as "Hand- some Tony" because of his devo- tion to spotless, neatly ironed SS uniforms — was sentenced to death in 1949 by a Czech court for having killed prisoners trying to escape from the Theresienstadt concentration camp in the former Czechoslovakia during World War II. In addition, according to eye- witness accounts, Malloth clubbed to death Mr. Finkelgru- en's grandfather, Martin, a Ger- man Jew, on the street in broad daylight on Dec. 22, 1942, the day he was brought to the Gestapo prison in Theresienstadt. Malloth, who had fled Prague in 1945, was sentenced by the Czech court when he and his wife were trying to build a new life in Italy. Malloth, who had grown up in northern Italy, was stripped of his Italian citizenship in 1956 be- cause of his war record, but ap- parently went back to live there after first obtaining West Ger- man citizenship. In 1983, Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal located Malloth in the northern Italian town of Merano, where many Nazi officials had found refuge. Six years later, the Italian authorities deported Mal- loth to Germany. The Germans arrested and in- terrogated him, and then re- leased him, claiming insufficient evidence against him. Despite the witnesses to Malloth's crimes, the German courts disregarded the Czech court's verdict, saying it had been based on indirect hearsay evidence. As a German citizen, the au- thorities said, Malloth was enti- tled to retirement benefits so he was sent to an old-age home in Munich with all expenses paid. It is possible that no one would have bothered the man in his old age if Mr. Finkelgruen had not learned about Malloth from a rel- ative. Mr. Finkelgruen, returning to . Germany in 1989 after working for seven years as a radio corre- spondent in Israel, was planning to write a book reconstructing the odyssey of his parents from Prague to Shanghai on the eve of World War II. "At my first stop in Prague, I met an old aunt, who had told me for the first time how my grand- father was beaten to death in Theresienstadt," said Mr. Finkel- gruen. He soon forgot about the fam- ily trip to Shanghai and began in- vestigating the fate of his grandfather's murderer. He became infuriated when he learned that German authorities had not taken legal measures The Germans arrested and interrogated him, and then released him. against Malloth. He was con- vinced that Malloth's story was a part of the German establish- ment's efforts throughout the years to protect former Nazis. According to Hermann Weiss- ing, a state prosecutor in the western German city of Hamm, some 130 former Nazis suspect- ed of committing war crimes are still at large in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia alone because of insufficient evidence against them. But Mr. Finkelgruen's book and the play on which it is based may soon have an affect after all. Last week, Mr. Weissing said in an interview that an unnamed witness from Austria contacted the police saying he would sup- ply them with sufficient infor- mation to incriminate Malloth. The prosecution is now exam- ining the case. Based on its find- ings, it will decide whether to press charges against Malloth. Arnold J. "Red" Auerbach, who won spots in both the NBA Hall of Fame and the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, led his team to nine NBA titles and was the first man- ager to bring a black into professional basketball in 1950.