A fflericam 'elvish Periodical eellter

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

Friday, May 10, 1946

So They Tell Me— Polish Woman

By LOUIS W. ENFIELD

A little Jewish boy by the name
of Sammy lived in the city of
Odessa In Russia some fifty years
ago. His family had recently mov-
ed into a street wfth the preten-
tious name of The Avenue of
Philosophers and they were the
only Jewish family there.
Ar On his first day there, Sammy
:It eat out for a stroll and almost
mmediately ran into a little red-
.-headed ragamuffin, barefooted and
dressed in rags who called him a
dirty Jew. Being a head taller
than the urchin, Sammy knockad
him down.
According to all standards of
J
behavior of Russian boys, the ur-
chin should have run away crying.
He did not do that. Instead, he
stood up and rushed to do bat-
tle. Sammy was surprised and an-
noyed. He drew back his trusty
right fist and clouted his opponent
in the nose, drawing a fountain
of blood.
Under these circumstances, any
Russian boy would have fled. To
Sammy's dismay, this one didn't.
He rushed in again, still yelling,
"You dirty Jew." Once again he
hit the ground and this time Sam-
my jumped on him for good meas-
ure.
Two old Jews walked by and
saw the unusual spectacle of a
Jewish boy not only fighting back
a Russian but actually licking
him.
"Good, good," they remarked
and went on.
Sammy was more perplexed than
ever. This Russian was not behav-
ing like any Russian boy he had
ever fought with before. He di-
rected a well aimed kick and the
Russian lay still for the moment.
Sammy left the scene but he was
more perplexed than ever. All
through dinner, he pondered the
matter. Why had the Russian boy
fought' back in a hopeless cause,
a cause completely without justi-
fication. Russian boys just didn't
do that.
The more Sammy thought about
it, the more perplexed he got. He
decided to do a little discreet in-
vestigatio n. The investigation
brought out a complete explana-
tion. It was not a satisfactory ex-
planation nor a happy one. But
it gave the reason for the uphill
battle in a lost cause.
The boy was not a Russian at
all. He was a Jew, the only other
one on the block.

,

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Rescues Three
Jewish Orphans

Suffering the common tragedy
of Poles under the German occu-
pation, heart heavy and alone,
Joanna Samoluk, a Polish Chris-
tian woman, wandered desolately
in the fields in Tremblowa, near
Tarnow, on a day a year ago.
And there in the fields, she
found three human creatures
even more miserable than herself
—more miserable because they
were tiny children, unable to care
for themselves. They were Jewish
children--that Joanna learned lat-
er. They came from the area of
Czortkow. That, too, she ler.riv-1.
T• young to tell their story, the
children could only say that they
had been liberated --- by whom,
from where, Joanna never learned.
And Joanna took them to her
heart. She fed them, and some-
how clothed them. Mid in the
months that followed she was
able to piece out some more in-
formation about them. Mojsze
Fuchs, 2 years old, and Dorcia
Fuchs, four years old, knew they
were sister and brother. They
could remember their last names,
but they didn't know—or remem-
ber—the first names of their par-
ents. Miscia Lilienthal, three,
could remember a little more. She
knew that the Fuchs children
were her cousins. She knew that
her mother's name was Regina,
and that she was a dressmaker;
and that her father's name was
Rachmiel, and that he drove
horse-drawn trucks.
A pTlotograph of the group, of
Joanna, and of the three children
warmly clothed beside her, was
sent from Poland to the Location
Service of the Hebrew Sheltering
and Immigrant Aid Society, and
now HIAS Is seeking to locate
American relatives of the chil-
dren, and the brother of Joanna
Samoluk, who, when last she
heard from him years ago, was a
farmer somewhere in New York
State.
Meanwhile, and until the rela-
tives are found, Joanna continues
to care for the children, as if
they were her own.

Page Eleven

Please Help Make Detroit's War Dead
List Accurate; Send in Missing Names

This is a list of all the Jewish boys of Detroit
who made the supreme sacrifice in World War II.
We urge all parents and relatives of those whose
names are not on this list, and should be, to notify
the Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 525 Woodward, De-

Aaron. Louis
A tenet n, I lordon
Apple, Albert
A ronovitz, Israel
Aronsohn, Herman
Asher, Herman
Bader, Peter
Bale, Joseph L.
Baltuck, Lewis C.
Iterendt, Louis I..
Berger, Leon
Bernath, Leonard IL
Bernstein, Max
Bernstein, Philip
Bloch. Raymond
II timberg, Robert
Blunientield, David
Murillo, Jack
Bolm, Paul
Buttner, Sol
Canner, Bernard V
Cantor, Allen
Coblentz. "Harold
Cohen, Irving
I ',,tiro, .11111111i
Cohen, Milton S
Cohen, Morris
Cohen, Solomon
Colville, David 1'.
Davis, Charles 1'.
Duck, Jack
Davis, Leo
Deutsch. Robert
Eisen, Sam
Elson, Calvin
Elson, Stanley
Emery, Allen
Etntner, David 11.
Eserow, Sydney
Fagenbaum, Joseph
Falberg, Charles
Fauden, Frank
Fields, Albert
Fox, Don
Fr Hedberg, Jacob W.
Friedman, Abe
Friedman, Eugene

Friedman, Kurtz
Fundamensky, Hubei t
Geller, Herbert
Ginsburg, Daniel
(Badman, Abraham
Goldberg, Max
Goldberg, Morris J.
Goodman, Sidney G.
Gorelick, harry
Gottlieb, Morton
Green, Roy F.
Greenbaum, Charles
Greenberg. Bynum
Greenberg, Jerome H.
Grossman. 8Iordacal
Gurvis, Milton
Hardsteln, 111'1111Rn I.
Ilart, Theodore \V.
Herzberg, Lawrence
Hochman, Nathan
Rohn, Julius A.
Horn, Raymond E.
Horowitz, Bernard
hien. Ruben
Jacobs, Alfred
Jacobson, Rodney E
Radish, Abraham
Kahn, Warren 81.
Kanefsky, Hymen
Narbelnick, Albert
ii 0.68, Thomas
Katzen, Lester 1..
Kaufman, Herbert J.
Kempner, Saul J.
Kogan, Aaron
Kogan, Charles
Kopman, Joseph
liorinsky, Sol
Kona, Frederick
Krakow, Paul II.
Eritt. Joseph
Lash, Herman
Latzer, Solomon
Leibowitz, Sidney
Levin, George
Levine, Irving
Levine, Paul H.

REPORT FROM GERMANY

Seymour, William
Shafer, Raymond
Shapero, Cherie ,.
Shapiro, Arthur
Shapson, Gerald
Shaw, Lloyd W.
Sher, Mitchell
Skiff man, Harold E.
Silverman, Erwin
Silverman, Untold
Silverman, Morton A.
Silverston, Robert L.
Simon, Harold J.
Simon, Lewis A.
Slrotkin, Marvin
Skully, Gregory A.
Sobel, Oloymour
Spitzer, Joseplt
Stein, NI0Yer B.
Steinberg, Joseph
Steinway, Morris S.
Stern, Saul I.
Stevens, Harry
Statelier, Leon
St utmack, Don 1.7.
Talberg, Charles
Warner, Lewis .1.
Wax, John H.
Waxman, Murray 81.
Well, Max
Well, Victor IL
Weiner, Norman
Weisman, Robert P.
Weiss, Herbert
Wlenner, Robert N.
Milker. Alexander
Winokur, Jack
Yetz, Sol
Zaart, Isadore
aelby, Samuel
Zessar, LeRoy
Ziehr, Carl It.
Zhnberg, Bon
Zimmerman, Phillip J.
Zussinan, Raymond

THESE TWO IMPORTANT QUES-

TIONS ARE DISCUSSED DAILY AND

NEW YORK — The Religious-
National Bloc of the Mizrachi for
the 22nd Zionist Congress, an-
nounced recently that its cam-
paign for half a million shekorim
received added importance with
the National Council of Young
Israel joining the Bloc. Rabbi S.
M. Zambrowsky, executive direc-

1943.

Lel, ill, EpSI el II N.
Lewis, Leonard L.
Waltz, Mortimer N.
Lotman, Alexander
Lustig, Morton J.
Mallon, Daniel D.
Mandell, Irving
Marlowe, Leo K.
Mathis, Robert
May, Abraham
Mayer, Seymour
Meyers, Morris
'Miller, Morris
Mirowitz, Edward C.
Mogill, Alexander M.
Moldawaky, Sol
Moritz, Sigmund
Morris, Herbert W.
Moss, Joey
Myers, William II.
Nabatoff, Bernard
Nash, Sant
Neslikes, Leo
Newmark, Edward I.
imerstein. Law rellee
Passerman, Victor
Pearlman, Irving
Pearlideln, Saul L.
PlInick, David
Pokart, Sidney
Itacey, Sherwood L.
Raelilln, Joseph ('.
Rafelson, Robert J.
Rosenberg, Joseph
Rosenberg, Kenneth
Rosenberg, Leon E.
Rosenfeld, Kenneth
Rosenthal, Myron
Rubin, Harold
Sampson, William G.
Sapperstein, Melvin S.
Schechter, Herman
Schrelbman, Harry
Schultz, Jack E.
Schwartz, Edward
Segel, Jack S.
Bemansity, Jack

HOW'S YOUR qesaW
HOW'S YOUR 7

Council Joins in
Shekel Campaign

tor of the Religious-National Bloc,
in making public the news, said:
"The Young Israel, long asso-
ciated with the ideal of rebuild-
ing Palestine in the spirit of tra-
ditional Judaism, now mobilizes
all its forces for active participa-
tion in the Shekel Campaign to
strengthen the religious Zionist
Bloc."
---
INTERNING AT GRACE
Frederick Shevin, son of Mrs.
William Shevin, is now interning
at Grace Hospital, following his
graduation from the Wayne Uni-
versity College of Medicine in
March. He received his B. S. de-
gree at the U. of Michigan in

troit 26, Michigan, CAdillac 1040, at once.
We are planning a special Memorial Day issue
with the pictures of all these honored dead. If you
have not yet been asked for a picture, please get
in touch with the Chronicle.

EXCLUSIVELY BY—

Style Line •.
Hangs from
the Shoulder

BY DR. WILLIAM BRADY
What doctors call maintenance
treatment — that is, keeping the
patient from relapsing when per-
nicidIts anemia has, been practi-
cally cured — usually requires an
intramuscular injection of liver
extract twice a month.
Liver extract so administered
'hunt
is the least eTnensive

Imo

nn

BY GRACE BARBER
Although dress designers have
been helping out shoUlders that
need imnroving, clothes cannot be
worn well nor is the figure really
good unless the shoulder contour
is attractive.
Some of the more common
shoulder faults are the slump
which makes one look discour-
aged hue••••?.?(-up look
• AP
'
het

(Continued from Page 2)

Island was equally responsible for the deaths of the flyers because ho
gave the order for the march. That he was as much responsible as
wcre the, men who actually shot the flyers. The guards were guilty for
not protecting the flyers and treating them humanely, according to
the Geneva Convention. The other officers were guilty for following
the orders, illegal orders, of their superior.
During the questioning of one of the witnesses for the Prosecu-
tion, as to some statement one of the guards had made to her and her
husband (one of the accused) the T.J.A. asked the question, "Do you

\

consider the accused Heinemann your friend or your enemy?" Before
she could answer, Heinemann stood up and shouted "Enemy!" Heine-
mann was brought before the Court and cautioned against any further
outbursts. It was the first dramatic incident since the Court had
opened.
A touch of diabolical humor entered the picture when the wit-
nesses of the Prosecution testified to the fact that one of the fly-
era was a very short, fat flyer who was having trouble keeping
his pants up. The order from the Commander had been that the
flyers were to walk, at a fast pace, with their hands up all the way
and if they so much as dropped their hands, they were to he beat-
en or shot, "attempting to escape." The little flyer kept putting his
bands down to pull up his pants, which kept falling and made
him stumble, and the poor flyer was pretty badly beaten. Finally
he fell from exhaustion, with his pants down around his ankles.
1Vhen he wouldn't get up again after being "prodded" with the
butt of the guard's rifle, he was shot. The column proceeded into
town.
All during the reading of the statements by the Prosecution, ail
but the accused whose statement was being read, appeared bored and
inattentive. They nodded their heads and dozed off, they doodled with
pencil and paper, They whispered to each other, they smiled, they
sneered, they were(amused. It was easy to tell whose statement was
being read by the ;rapt attention he paid to what was going on.
The Prosecutioh rested.

.

(Next week's article will deal with the defense in this ease.)

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can apply now and use profitably.

Zhe gittrott free Ikon;

