The Finest in Men's Fashion Footwear is at released after the raid. He was executed by the French under- ground immediately after the war for collaboration with the Nazis. Another possible suspect is Lucien Bourdon, a farm worker at the time, who disap- peared from Izieu several days after the arrests. He served during the final months of the war as a guard in the Saar- bruck concentration camp in Germany, where he was ar- rested by American forces. Bourdon, still alive, has been summoned to take the stand at the Barbie trial. Child Survivors Are Sought New York (JTA) — Child sur- vivors of the Holocaust are be- ing sought worldwide to con- tribute information to the Jerome Riker International Study of the Organized Persecu- tion of Children. As part of the study, the Polish and Yiddish depositions of 141 child sur- vivors, given after World War II to the Jewish Historical Com- mission in Warsaw, are being translated into English. Many of the children were liv- ing then in children's homes, and one of the purposes of this search is to find other residents. Another is to find out what has happened to the child survivors and to enable them to discuss their experiences with their peers. The study may be contacted at 30 Soundview Lane, Sands Point, N.Y. 11050. COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL Hot Tar-Built-Up Roofing Southfield I West Bloomfield 18161 W. 13 Mile Rd. I 2495 Walce 646-2452 I 682-7336 Barbie Trial Leaves Informers' Identity Open Lyon (JTA) — A 43-year-old mystery was raised at the trial of Klaus Barbie last week as witnesses testified about the arrest and deportation to death camps of 44 Jewish children sheltered at a former summer camp in the village of Izieu, near Lyon, in April 1944. The youngest was five, the oldest 17. All perished, as did the six adults arrested with them. Barbie, the wartime Gestapo chief in the Lyon district, is accused of having ordered the arrests and, according to one witness, was at the railroad station to watch the children herded onto boxcars for Auschwitz. But none of the witnesses could answer the question which has puzzled French authorities for more than four decades: Who de- nounced the children to the Gestapo? Barbie was not in the prisoner's dock. After being brought to court under pro- test to be formally identified by six witnesses, he was returned to St. Joseph prison, where he intends to remain for the duration of the trial. French law allows defendants to be absent from court. Bar- bie claimed that right on May 13, the second day of his trial. The four witnesses who ap- peared recalled that on April 6, 1944, at 9 a.m., the children at Izieu were sitting down to breakfast when a truck with six German soldiers arrived, followed by a civilian car with three Gestapo agents. Pleadings were of no avail. Forty-five children — one of them a non-Jew, who was re- leased shortly afterwards — were put aboard the truck along with the six adults who staffed the shelter. They were taken to prison in Lyon where, after a brief stay, they were sent to Auschwitz. Two of the children were shot there and 42 died in the gas chambers. One of the witnesses, Leon Reifman, is the sole survivor of Izieu. He was 17 in 1944. He alone saw the truckload of soldiers drive up to the shelter and managed to climb from a window and hide in under- brush until the convoy drove away. The person or persons who tipped off the Gestapo remain unknown. France Culture, a State-owned radio station reported that it was the Mayor of Izieu who wrote to Gestapo headquarters de- nouncing "the Jewish char- acter" of the shelter. Others suspect the father of the non-Jewish boy who was WOOLF ROOFING THIRD GENERATION ROOFERS Plan to hear the person who in the eyes of an entire nation became the conscience of the Watergate Hearings! Senator LOWELL WEICKER JR. A liberal Republican from Connecticut, Senator Weicker fights for small business, shows great concern for the nation's health, champions the cause of the disabled, is an advocate of energy conservation, and is one of the best friends of Israel. Don't miss his talk at the --- Jewish National Fund Testimonial Dinner Device Helps Blind 'See' Jerusalem — Students and faculty at the Jerusalem Col- lege of Technology (JCT) are developing a touch-sight de- vice, designed to enable the blind to perceive images of objects around them. According to JCT president Prof. Zvi Weinberger, the human eye locates and iden- tifies objects by recognizing their edges. The JCT touch- sight device will make use of advanced optics and com- puterized image processing technology to locate the edges, or boundaries, of ob- jects and to then register those boundaries on a small, hand-held device. The blind person can feel, with their fingertips, the variations in light which represent the out- lines of the objects around them. Honoring Wednesday, June 24, 1987 Congregation Shaarey Zedek 27375 Bell Road, Southfield / $150 per person For Reservations, Phone 557 6644 or write to - JEWISH NATIONAL. FUND 18877 W. Ten Mile Road, Suite 104 / Southfield, MI 48075 39