THE BEST MORTGAGE RATES. PERIOD! "My Mommy and Daddy Refinanced Their Mortgage At World Wide Financial, Again!" Jill Silverstein, 2 years old WORLD WIDE FINANCIAL Cr) LLJ Southeast Michigan's Leader In Mortgage Lending LLJ H- LLI 0 LU 20 647- 1 19 9 1533 North Woodward, Suite 140 Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48304 POLLARD page 1 the event, which also fea- tured Seymour Reich, for- mer president of B'nai B'rith International. In the audience were some Pollard supporters, in- cluding members of the Michigan Committee for Freedom for Jonathan Pol- lard, and many who de- scribed themselves as simply curious about the case. In an interview, Dr. Pollard said he is hopeful that renewed attention to Jonathan will bring changes in his son's situation. Already, he says, Jewish leaders have raised the is- sue with President-elect Bill Clinton. Dr. Pollard believes the increased interest is the re- sult of a shifting perception among American Jewry. When news broke that Jonathan had been caught spying for Israel, American Jews were embarrassed by questions of dual loyalty, he says. But today, "there is a sudden realization" that the Pollard affair is about some- thing else. It is about "a mis- carriage of justice." A former civilian Navy in- telligence analyst, Jonathan Pollard was in 1985 sen- tenced to life in prison for passing U.S. military secrets to Israel. His sentence was the harshest in American history for such an offense. Since his imprisonment, Jonathan has endured con- stant harassment and un- warranted punishment, his father says. While confined in a feder- al penitentiary in Missouri, Jonathan was transferred to an insane asylum, though both psychiatrists and the prison director agreed he was not mentally ill. "Mr. Pollard ... was never clas- sified or managed as a psy- chiatric patient," prison director J. Michael Quinlan wrote in a letter to the Pollards' lawyer. Most recently, Jonathan — now held in a Marion, Ill., penitentiary — was accused of trying to incite a riot, Dr. Pollard says. The Pollards are perplexed. After all, their son is in solitary con- finement 23 hours a day (he is allowed one hour of exer- cise). Morris and Mollie Pollard visit their son, whom they call "Jay," for seven hours each month. His sister and brother also regularly visit, as do members of the ex- tended family. Many of their conversa- tions are in Yiddish, much to the frustration of prison officials, who monitor the visits. Most of Jonathan's time is spent reading and writing, Mrs. Pollard says. He sub- scribes to the Washington Post, the Economist, Ha- dassah and many Jewish newspapers in the United States. "He also prays," his father says. Despite Jonathan's anger with American government leaders, he feels no animos- ity toward his country. Mrs. Pollard recalls an incident in which a group of Russian lawyers came to visit him in prison, where they asked, "Do you have any com- plaints?" "Yes," Jonathan an- swered, recalling Soviet Jews. "Let my people go." Later, he confided to his mother, "I'll be darned if I was going to tell them any- thing bad about this coun- try." The less said about an- other government — that of Israel — the better, as far as the Pollards are con- cerned. "We're angry," says the soft-spoken Dr. Pollard. "But we cannot afford to lose our tempers on this thing." What Dr. Pollard will say about Israeli government leaders: "I don't trust them. This (Jonathan's case) is the first instance in history when the government that receives the benefit actual- ly acts as the executioner." Israel virtually abandoned Jonathan after his arrest, and its leaders have refused to discuss the case with the Pollard family. ❑ ROCK page 1 and threatened the judge. Bond was set at $20,000 and a preliminary exami- nation was scheduled this week on two counts of mali- cious destruction of proper- ty over $100, a four-year felony, and two counts of malicious destruction under Michigan's ethnic intimida- tion law, a two-year felony. Sgt. Scheel said Mr. Miller has no record of of- fenses related to ethnic in- timidation. ❑