INSTANT HOME LOAN APPROVAL "Tired of waiting for an answer on your home loan? Countrywide is the only national lowler who can immediately approve youx--1---- Beth Grossman Regional Vice President - – — Livonia M N masses Collection Livonia man prepares his vast collection for U-M. JILL DAVIDSON SKLAR STAFF WRITER At Countrywide,® home buyers meet face- to-face and work directly with the individual who has the authority to approve their loan. Contact your local Detroit area branch manager today for details! Open Saturdays by appointment - call today! ANN ARBOR DETROIT FARMINGTON HILLS LATHRUP VILLAGE 313/663-6767 313/891-7200 810/489-8500 810/443-2449 LrvomA. 810/476-6699 Novi 810/344-9050 TROY WATERFORD 810/680-9880 810/673-4860 An approved Neighborhood Project lender. AO 0 11 e 11 , r k s CT IM Count tatintirVide"- LOANS HOME -,-; rder to d e i;— r the Amer ieu 11 I) re u . Equal Housing Lender. © 1994 r,untrYwide Funding Corporation. Trade/service marks are the property of r. tfywtde Credit Industries, Inc. and/or i,,„-.uosidiaries. *Approval is subject to satisfactory property and conditions, ini.ecti, on the addendum attached to the certifir.. ,-• riiiA 94517-994 AIMIIMEMM WE SUPPORT NANCY ARLES * FOR OAKLAND COUNTY COMMISSIONER * Oakland County Commissioner, Lillian Jaffe-Oaks; Royal Oak Township Trustees; Congressman, Sandy Levin; State Representative, Maxine Berman; State Representative, David Gubow; Oak Park Mayor, Jerry Naftaly; Southfield Democratic Club Chairperson, Vince Gregory; Southfield School Board Member, Steve Kaplan VOTE NOVEMBER 8, 1994 * A Leader * A Listener * A Concerned Activist District 21 ( Southfield, Oak Park, Royal Oak Township) PAID FOR BY NANCY QUARLES for COUNTY COMMISSIONER COMMITTEE, HAROLD MONTGOMERY, Treasurer (810) 569-4130 E very day, Joseph Adler ris- terial has an important histori- es at 6:30 am. and propels cal value in its documentation of his walker into his study a period in Jewish and human ex- overlooking his lush front perience," said James Fox, assis- yard. Ignoring the view, he tant head of the library. "It is an spends several hours cataloging amazing collection and we will be and reviewing his 3,000 items of Holo- caust memorabilia and Judaica. Mr. Adler, who turns 99 in three weeks, has what in polite terms is called an interest, but is perhaps more appro- priately labeled an ob- session. He wants to save the past so ti-- future won't ' peat ...,.,,, --ics most hor- Fible mistakes. "This is what I do. I am interested in what is happening to JPWS- in the world," he said, --his words laced with a slight German accent. "I always have been." He knows that soon his collection, stuffed into about 200 boxes in a cramped study in Joseph Adler reaches for PHOTOS BY BILL GEMMELL his Livonia home, will some of his Holocaust artifacts. be in the hands of the University of Michigan's special happy to have it." collection library in Ann Arbor. The library plans to keep the He plans to donate the collection collection in a secure place but to U-M after he dies so students still make it available to Holo- can have immediate access to it. caust scholars. "It is most important to Mr. But for now, he meticulously labels each piece and creates a Adler and his family that the history detailing everything he school use the items for study. We plan to make sure their wishes knows about it. "I know where things are, but are fulfilled," Mr. Fox said. Also going to the library will be others don't know what I have," Mr. Adler's 1,000-volume library he said. The things, as he refers to of Judaica, everything from a tome about Golda Meir's life to a collection of drawings depicting life during the Nazi occupation. "If you have a question about anything- in Judaism, I could find the answer in one of these books," he said, gesturing to the packed bookshelves. A sample of the Judaica col- lection is a five-inch-thick book published in 1615 about the his- tory of the Jews in Frankfurt. It them, include pages and pages of is one of his favorites. 'The Nazis didn't get this one," stamps from the war, a Nazi par- ty card signed by Heinrich he said, fingering the pages, their Himmler and brown pieces of corners worn from almost four wallpaper from Anne Frank's centuries of use. When he speaks of the past, he family room. "From the perspective of the describes a time when he was a special collection library, the ma- successful real estate agent and . U-M plans to make the collection available to students.