rsonal s • Kitchens • Bedroom Sets • Credenzas • Kitchen Tables • Cube Tables • Wall Units War Criminal In Costa Rica Low Prices and Quality! Ask Irwin & Laurie Groskind, Bloomfield 7tvp. Steven & Ruthie Moss, Farmington Hills Larry & Rhonda Katz, Farmington Hills Robert & Dr. Jill Friedman, West Bloomfield Estimates Installation Custom Laminate Furniture & Cabinetry Design, Manufacture & Installation Commercial & Residential DQUNO QICCI THE DETRO T JEWISH NEWS The Ultimate Leather Collection for Men and- Women Leather 6ale 20%-40% Off Qegul.a.r Price On Selected Items (previous 8t1108 e layaways excluded) This MU 18 Too Good To Mimi! Somerset Collection Troy 810-649-4433 San Jose, Costa Rica (JTA) — The Simon Wiesenthal Center has launched the latest cam- paign to force Costa Rica to ex- pel an accused Nazi war criminal. Efraim Zuroff, director of the center's Israel office, even went to the home of Bodhan Koziy- with a BBC television crew in tow — during the three-day vis- it to this Central American na- tion. Mr. Koziy was not at home at the time, according to neighbors. Mr. Koziy, 73, who apparent- ly has been living in a suburb of San Jose for the last decade, was a Ukrainian police official dur- ing World War II. In August, Rep. Michael Mc- Nulty, D-N.Y., personally hand- ed a letter — signed by 60 other congressmen — to Costa Rican President Jose Figueres that said, "Judges in the United States and prosecutors in Ger- many affirmed that Koziy was a Nazi policeman in Ukraine, where he shot and killed — amongst others — a 4-year-old." In 1982, Mr. Koziy, the own- er of a Florida motel, was stripped of his citizenship. The U.S. Justice Department ob- tained a court order to deport him in 1984, but he fled to Cos- ta Rica. Mr. Zuroff, then an investi- gator for the Office of Special In- vestigations of the Justice Department, had taken part in the investigation that led to the revocation of citizenship. In 1986, Costa Rica refused the Soviet Union's request for Mr. Koziy's extradition. A year later, the Costa Rican govern- ment overruled a local court or- der to extradite him to the Soviet Union. When Mr. Zuroff was in Cos- ta Rica this week, he also met with high-ranking government officials as well as with members of the Jewish community. "Our mission here was to see what it will take to see Koziy is kicked out of Costa Rica and hopefully put on trial," Mr. Zuroff said in an interview. Mr. Zuroff said the center wants either Ukraine to ask for an extradition or Costa Rica to throw him out. He added that throwing Mr. Koziy out "is more easily doable because it depends only on the Costa Rican government." Mr. Zuroff also said of Mr. Koziy, "This man is a hands-on murderer." In September, the Costa Ri- can ambassador to the United States, Sonia Picado, said in a statement that she was — hope- ful" that the extradition of Koziy would take place soon. Eritrean Leader Visits Israel Jerusalem (JTA) — The presi- dent of the East African nation of Eritrea made a brief visit to Is- rael, stopping over for talks with Prime Minister Shimon Peres and President Ezer Weizman be- fore heading on to Italy. After meeting with Mr. Peres, Eritrean President Isaias Afw- erki said that the two countries would step up cooperation in the fields of medicine and agricul- ture. Israel already operates a mod- el farm and medical facility in Er- itrea, which broke away from Ethiopia and gained its inde- pendence in 1994. During the visit, Mr. Afwerki denied that Israel had provided any military aid during Eritrea's recent dispute with Yemen over a Red Sea island. 'e don't need any experience or arms from anyone in this re- gion," he told reporters. Highway Appeal Is Rejected Jerusalem (JTA) — The Israeli Cabinet rejected an appeal by three ministers to reconsider con- struction of the Cross-Israel Highway. The controversial project has been touted by some as the an- swer to the country's jammed roads; its critics have called the highway an environmental dis- aster. Minister Yossi Beilin, Agri- culture Minister Ya'akov Tsur and Environment Minister Yos- si Sarid had called for the for- mation of a ministerial committee to review again the plans for the road. They joined environmental groups opposed to the plan who argue that the highway will not provide an answer to the coun- try's traffic problems and that in time it will destroy the remain- ing open spaces in central Israel, causing irreversible damage to the environment. The road is planned to stretch some 190 miles from the Galilee to the Negev. Construction of the road's first phase, a 55-mile stretch from Hadera to Gedera, has already begun. Supporters of the project, including Housing and Construc- tion Minister Benjamin Ben- Eliezer, argued at Sunday's Cabinet meeting that without the road, the nation's highways would turn into one huge traffic jam. He also said that environ- mental factors are being taken into account in the highway's planning.