Com m un ity *Opt 'SOO President Roosevelt wanted her help to bypass the immigrant quota restric- tions by allowing Jews into the country as his "guests" and lodging them at Fort Ontario, a decommissioned army training base in New York. Gruber, who instantly accepted the challenge, was given the rank of "simu- lated general" to protect her from being killed if she were captured by the enemy. The refugees were to be trans- ported on a ship with wounded American soldiers. "These people gave back to America what Americans had given them," Gruber said in her speech and book, which presents the personal histo- ries and accomplishments of the people she rescued. They include Alex Margulies, who developed the CT scan and MRI, and Rolph Manfred, who worked on the Polaris and Minutemen missiles. "I added 70 little bios (relating to the people res- cued) in the new edition of Haven, and we still feel like family. We meet all the time, and they still call me Mother Ruth. I figure as Mother Ruth, I must have 5,000 grandchildren, but the thought of how many more we could have saved still haunts me." As Natasha Richardson takes on the role of Gruber for the television pro- duction, Anne Bancroft will portray her mother and Martin Landau her father. Hal Holbrook will be Harold Ickes. "I think the script has captured the integrity of the story, and that's what's important to me," Gruber said. "They've also made composite charac- ters and listened to my suggestions. The script is very strong, and there are many flashbacks." Gruber went on to tell her audience about her experiences after the war, when, as a correspondent for the New York Post and later the New York Herald, her mission became to inform the world of the intolerable conditions in displaced persons camps. She want- ed to court public opinion and action so Jews would be allowed to go to Palestine. "Very few people knew what was happening to the survivors of the Holocaust," Gruber told the Hadassah members. "So many of the people known by survivors were dead, and their [former] neighbors were strangers. "I wanted to shake the world by its lapels and say, 'You know what hap- pened in the Holocaust, but do you know what happened right after the Holocaust? Help me get them out of those DP camps."' One of Gruber's most famous pho- tos, which appeared in Life magazine, was of the British Union Jack flag with a swastika, painted by refugees denied access to Palestine by the British. "The important issues today are no different from other times — peace and justice for all," she said. Gruber, whose career fanned out Gruber's mission was to inform the world of the intolerable conditions in displaced persons camps. 505 S. Lafayette • Royal Oak Call (248)398-9711 www.lorioross.com ••••;;; • • 4r 4 • ' • • OUTDO M Outdoor A pparel 30-507 OPP' 0 I Clearance Prices are for in stock Moonstone items only Hours: 10-7 M-F 10-5 Sat 1105 S. Adams, gre,,m 5/26 2000 44 248 723-9838 N. E. Corner of Lincoln & Adams in Birmingham Swim Lessons Model Rocket Camp Indoor Rock Climbing Wilderness Camping Basics Radio Control Airplane/ C S Collective Dance Arts & Crafts Cheerleading summer Day Camps with Field Trip Camps Goals a Fun, safety and Quality. Archery Waterskiinq Wake Boarding Tennis Roller Hockey Golf Advanced Golf Volleyball Soccer Basketball Football Ice Hockey Tots & Moms 5328 Highland Rd., Waterford, MI 48327 • Phone: (248) 673-0100 Fax: (248) 673-1084 into free-lance writing for newspapers and magazines as well as other books, also was ahead of her times in family values. Widowed twice, she had been encouraged to work by husbands, attorneys and social activists Philip Michaels and Henry Rosner. Her son, David Michaels, is assis- tant secretary for environment, safety and health with the U.S. Department of Energy and has followed in his mother's crusading footsteps. He has worked to get compensation for gov- ernment employees suffering ill effects from being in nuclear plants. Her daughter, Celia Michaels Evans, was an Emmy Award-winning video editor with CBS. "I raised my children with one goal, and that was that they become inde- pendent," said Gruber, who was able to realize professional goals because her first husband was willing to step in to care for the children, and she also was assisted by her mother and household help. "I was 41 when my daughter was born and 43 when my son was born," Gruber said. Both her children also waited until later in life to marry, and she now has four young grandchildren. "The (TV producers) invited me to be in Toronto for the taping of the mini-series, and that will be a whole new adventure for me," Gruber said. Li