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October 02, 1987 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-10-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

j

JEWELRY APPRAISALS

At Very Reasonable Prices Call For An Appointment

tette,6n

established 1919

A„

30400 Telegraph Road
Suite 134
-Birmingham, MI 48010

FINE JEWELERS

GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST

Ford

Continued from Page 1

(313) 642-5575

Daily 10:00-5:30
Thurs. 10:00-8:30
Sot. 10:00-5:00

AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA
IN GRADING AND EVALUATION

LESSONS IN LEASING

LESSON 1 -

LEASE FROM AN
ESTABLISHED
COMPANY.

All State II Car
Leasing has been a
leasing specialist for
more than 27 years.
We'll be here
tomorrow.

LESSON 2

LESSON 4 _

BEWARE OF
SUPER LOW
PRICES.

There are many
factors that determine
monthly payments (the
number of months,
the residual value, the
amount you drive,
etc.) Ail State II Car
Leasing will lease you
a car at a price you
feel comfortable with.
Without any hidden
costs that can make \
you miserable later.

.

LEASE FROM
SOMEONE WHO
CAN LEASE YOU
THE CAR YOU
WANT.

LESSON 3

LEASE FROM A
"FULL-SERVICE"
LEASING
COMPANY.

All State II Car
Leasing is an
independent leasing
company. Which
means we won't try to
lease you any specific
make or model car.
Just the car you want.

.

ALL SLUE II
(AV LEASING
COIRIPOL4111101%

24600 Gratiot Ave., East Detroit, MI. 48021 PHONE (313) 778 2800

-

FRIDAY, OCT. 2, 1987

Henry Ford II: Communal friend.
about world forces and helped
many!"
Fisher, Taubman and
Schwartz were active with
Ford in Detroit civic affairs
and in some business matters.
These included the United
Foundation, New Detroit,
Detroit Renaissance, and the
Renaissance Center.
Taubman issued a state-
ment through his Bloomfield -
Hills office which described
Ford as "one of the kindest
human beings I have ever
known?' Taubman said Ford
was a highly-sensitive in-
dividual who gave generous-
ly o _ f himself. "I will miss him
as a friend, and Detroit and
the world will miss him as a
life-long participant and
Benefactor."
Related story, Page 30

Canada Wasn't Always
Safe Refugee Haven

ROBERT L SEGAL

When you tease a car
from All State II Car
Leasing we handle
everything, including
the financing. Many
others sell their
contracts to
someone else.
"No Cost Loaners"
are included in
our leases.

20

boycott of Israel by maintain-
ing a plant in the Jewish
State. A warm association
with Max Fisher, which
began in the early 1950s,
ultimately led to an annual
Ford donation of $100,000 to
the United Jewish Appeal. "I
was on a boat in the Greek
islands when the Six-Day
War broke out," Fisher recall-
ed this week. "I was chair-
man of the national United
Jewish Appeal at the time,
and I received a wire from
Ford pledging $100,000 to the
UJA." That 1967 gift was
repeated annually for the last
20 years.
Alan E. Schwartz told The
Jewish News that "Henry
Ford was a man who had a
keen interest in the Jewish
community, Israel and Jewish
thought:' A past president of
the Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion, Schwartz described Ford
as "personally generous, a
man who made his contribu-
tions quietly . . . anonymous-
ly."
Schwartz would not agree
that Henry Ford II's interest
in the Jewish community was
a direct reaction to his grand-
father's anti-Semitism. "He
was a man who cared and was
concerned," Schwartz said.
"He functioned on a national
and international level. He
was concerned about the pro-
blems of cities, countries,
minorities. He didn't just
single out the Jewish com-
munity. He was concerned

Canada's reputation as a
most liberal sanctuary for the
uprooted was buttressed
recently when it accepted 173
Sikhs from India who landed
clandestinely on Nova Scotia
and claimed refugee status.
This ingathering represents
an about-face from Canadian
policy of 40-50 years ago, as
the book None Is Too Many, a
dramatic account of Canada's
rejection of Jews seeking
asylum from Hitler, points
out.
Authors Irving Abella and
Harold Troper, both professors
of history in Toronto, careful-
ly demonstrate Canada's
hostility toward Jewish
refugees through the use of
Canadian documents hereto-
fore unavailable. The ugly
picture of moral insensitivity
on the part of some Canadian
leaders chills the soul.
Consider these awful
vignettes:
For Canadian Premier

MacKenzie King, the refugee
issue was a greater menace to
Canada than Hitler was. In
fact, King emerged from a
meeting with the Fuerher
describing him as a sweet
person.
In 1938, he speculated that
the Nazi sadist might come to
be thought of as one of the
saviors of the world. (This was
an opinion not unlike British
Premier Neville Chamber-
lain's appraisal of Hitler:
"Here was a man who could
be relied upon when he had
given his word.")
The authors trace the
career of Frederick Charles
Blair, a key Canadian im-
migration policy maker who
loathed Jews passionately. He
prescribed a day for them to
heap humiliation upon
themselves, and sneered at
Jewish "habits." Blair swore
that Jews and other
"undesirables" would never
be admitted to Canada.
None Is Too Many notes the
constant hostility toward
Jews.

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