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Call Us Now at 855-4524 for A FREE Personal Consultation In Your Own Home or At Our Office THE BENSMAN GROUP 30230 Orchard Lake Road Farmington Hills, MI 48018 (313) 8564524 "THE LEADERS AND SPECIALISTS IN SENIOR INSURANCE PROTECTION FOR OVER 40 YEARS" Also Tune into Lawrence and Daryl Bensman on "The Senior Spotlight" every Wednesday at noon, WCAR (1090 AM) WE CONDUCT NURSING HOME AND HOME CARE INSURANCE SEMINARS - ORGANIZATIONS PLEASE CALL \ ____I\.____ _ 24 HOUR SERVICE , VISA, MASTERCARD CORPORATE BILLING 1 ,-N- - =\IMBItt,— _ _ - _ , . ..... , .,'i 4 .. ♦ - - SPECIAL SUMMER RATES -- ONE FREE HOUR WITH 1ST 4 HOURS PAID (Consecutive Hours Only) With Coupon •Not Valid with any other special package or offering FROM $35.00 PER HOUR • j R LIMO AIRPORT RATES TWO HOUR LIMO LUNCH SPECIAL USE OUR FLEET FOR BUSINESS OR PLEASURE $65.00 ONLY With Coupon *Certain restrictions may apply (313) 4771630 JEWELRY APPRAISALS At Very Reasonable Prices L 116 Oatette established 1919 X, n FINE JEWELERS GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA IN GRADING AND EVALUATION FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1989 Call For An Appointment 30400 Telegraph Road Suite 134 Birmingham, MI 48010 , (313) 642-5575 DAILY 10-5:30 THURS. 10-7 SAT. 10-3 Lech Walesa Ambivalent In Meeting With Jews New York (JTA) — Jewish organizational leaders emerged from an • hour-long meeting with Solidarity founder Lech Walesa Nov. 17 praising the Polish hero's sincerity in reaching out to them, but uneasy over his denial of Polish anti- Semitism and his attitude toward the conflict over the Auschwitz convent. Walesa was visibly torn between his desire to build a bridge of friendship between Poles and Jews and his ironclad loyalty to the Polish Catholic church and the Polish people, according to those who attended the closed-door meeting. While denouncing anti- Semitism, Walesa said he -did not believe hatred of Jews was part of the Polish character, and that Polish Catholic primate Cardinal Jozef Glemp is "not an anti- Semite." In the midst of the dispute over the Auschwitz convent, Glemp accused world Jewry of violating Poland's sovereignty and of poisoning the international media against the nation. Asking for a "common understanding" between Poles and Jews, Walesa said that "the Holocaust was our common tragedy. We must put an end to fighting and remembering our common past, work together to transform Poland's future." In response, Seymour Reich, chairman of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, which con- vened the meeting, told Walesa that while Jews "are prepared to engage in a new beginning with • Poland, we can't forget the past, or the anti-Semitism that was rampant in Poland." The most emotional moments. during the meeting, observers said, came when Polish Jewish survivors of the Holocaust addressed Walesa. Benjamin Meed, president of the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors, ask- ed Walesa to see to it that the remnants of Jewish life in Poland that remain, in- cluding synagogues and cemeteries, be preserved. Such preservation was necessary, Meed said, to re- mind future generations of the once-flourishing Jewish community in Poland and its destruction during the Holocaust. "I will personally guar- antee that any remaining Jewish holy sites will be declared historic shrines. Jews died in the concentra- tion camps simply because they were Jewish. This must and will be acknowledged," Walesa said in response. When presented with a 3,200-year-old vase , by the President's Conference, he kissed it, because, he said, "it came from Israel." Scholarships To Aid European Leaders BEN GALLOB Special to The Jewish News N ew York (JTA) — A Swede and South African have become the first two students enroll- ed in Yeshiva University's unique program to ease the shortage of trained profes- sional leaders for European Jewish communities. Shaul Friberg, 32, of Stockholm, is studying in the university's four-year cantorial school. Moshe Kruger, 25, of Johan- nesburg, is attending the university's Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Semi- nary, which requires five years of study for ordination. Dr. Norman Lamm, presi- dent of the university, an- nounced last -June the plans for the program, which was made possible by a seed grant. of $120,000 from the Doron Foundation of Tel Aviv, which fund education and welfare programs. Professor Jeff Gurock, Lamm's assistant, said, the the Doron-funded program is unique in that it requires overseas students to commit themselves to serve the Jewish communities in their native countries after graduation. Gurock said evaluation of potential candidates for the program was restricted to students studying at Israeli schools, and that the realities created by those re- strictions demonstrate the student commitment to Judaism. Each candidate is initially evaluated by the univer-