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.