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Irwin and Gloria Klein Dr. Harvey and Hermine Raimi Pearl Olshonsky Maxine Frankel Aaron Wallis Larry Sherman Jeff Sherman Dr. Norman andSandie Weiss Elyse Cash Arnold Weiss Glenn Ceresnie Lynn Ellias Lois Fisher Victoria Weston Yetta Weiss Dr. Marvin and Betty Hyman Dr. Karen Colby Weiner Dr. Robin Stone Leon and Maxine Feig Harriet Rotter Judith Holtz Dr. Sheldon and Sybil Mintz Rabbi Daniel Schwartz Norman Zucker Dr. Fred and Millie Minkow Barbara Schiff Dr. A. and Nancy John-Hodari Hadar and Lois Granader Marilyn Harwood Sylvia Stoller Beverly Dreyfus Ava Pollock Susan Rosin Marlene Hundler DE Linda Zuckerman Klein Dr. Sheldon and Phyllis Schwartz Bryce and Harriet Alpem Sid and Phebe Goldstein Pamela Sorock Carol Sue Coden Judy Cantor Dr. Richard Kamil Larry and Maxine Snider Robert and Wally Klein Ina Kirkstein Barbara Vorenberg Norma and Phillip Layne Dr Joel and Mindy Layne-Young Laura Well Lillian Burg Iry and Harriet Leider Dody Well Arlene Victor Ron and Cindy Granader Phyllis Friedman Harvey and Judy Rosenberg Aviva Robinson Henry and Linda Ross Ben and Sondra Nathan Robert and Marjorie Alpem Rosalie Butzel Susan Citrin Diana Feuer Herman Frankel Delores Trupp Susan Rogin Dr. Steven Rosen Howard and Nancy Shapiro Robert and Linda Finkel Jerome and Barbara Fanger Nina Dodge Abrams Eleanor Bluhm Henrietta Weinberg Esther Sherman Isadore Weiner Larry Creasy Dr Sanford and Beatrice Breiner Sharon Bader-Lipton Les and Fenei Greenwald Michelle Simon DE Bernard and Mary-Kay Green Janis Wetsman Thomas Klein Morris Milmet Dr. Alan and Susan Bolton Three well-known pro choice leaders: Judy Miller, former Michigan First Lady Helen Milliken, Democratic State Representative Maxine Berman. A.D. Otto Schoenfeldt the Dusseldorf Citizens Com- mittee succeeded in its ef- forts to have the West Ger- man Post Office issue a stamp honoring Heine. Federal Minister for Postal Services Georg Leber dropped his opposition, and it was decided that a Heine stamp be issued on Dec. 13, 1972. The extent of newly ac- cumulating revelations about the Nazi crimes relating to anti-Semitism are horrifying. An article in the Washington Post, July 9, by Marc Fisher from West Berlin, deals with an underground Berlin documents center, once the headquarters of the Gestapo phone-tapping operations. It is now American property, and as Marc Fisher states "probably the world's largest and most valuable collection of materials documenting the Third Reich." The Berlin center contains about 100 million pieces of paper in 30 million files. The Fisher article contains these revealing paragraphs about the Nazi anti-Semitic insanities: Files of the Nazi Party's courts describe cases of party members charged with uttering defeatist slogans, listening to British radio or failing to reveal an acquaintanceship with a Jew. A room filled with 10.7 million Nazi Party cards in their original cabinets also contains a file of people who were refused member- ship. Each rejection bears a reason: homosexuality, thievery, masturbation, or, in the case of a man who was refused in 1936, "treated by Jewish physi- cian!' In the Nazi crime list are not only fabrications but also thefts and multiple cheatings. Among the most currently detected is in a story that was featured by the New York Times on page one of Section B in its issue of July 9. It was headlined "Degenerate Art Survives Nazi Purge," by Grace Glueck. The first paragraphs speak for themselves: An exhibition that was staged by the Nazis to vilify artists like Picasso, Wassi- ly Kandinsky and Paul Klee will be presented in Los Angeles next year, but under very different auspices. The exhibition, called "Entartete Kunst," or "Degenerate Art;' was first shown in Munich in 1937, with the aim of demonstrating the "im- moral" influence of the avant-garde on German culture. Besides denounc- ing the great artists of the avant-garde, it disparaged hundreds of others whose work was considered "un- German:' The show's restaging by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art will pay homage to those artists while fully documenting the Nazis' at- tempt to degrade them. "lb me, it was a show just begging to be done," said Ms. Barron. The Theyleg documentary discovery can be best understood and appreciated with the text of my original article: As the State of Michigan plans for the great celebra- tion of the Golden Jubilee of the automobile, historic justice demands that we turn back the pages of time to 1864 and 1875, when a Jewish mechanic in Vien- na invented and then im- proved the benzine-driven motor vehicle. While the beginning of the automobile industry in Michigan is credited to March 7, 1896, when Charles King frightened pedestrians by appearing on our streets with the first horseless carriage, the in- vention of the automobile by the Viennese Jewish mechanic preceded this event by at least 21 years. Siegfried Marcus is the mechanical genius who in- troduced the great inven- tion which revolutionized science and industry in the world. His first benzine-driven car was patented in 1864. His second and improved car was completed in 1875 when he drove it on Vien- na's streets. His auto patents were registered in Germany and the town council of Mecklenburg honored the inventor by affixing a tablet to the house in which he was born. His first automobile was in the possession of the Vienna Automobile Club, but there is no way of knowing what has happen- ed to it since the advent of Nazism, the Nazis having gone out of the way to ig- nore any mention of the Jew Siegfried Marcus' great gifts. Some of the available records state that his 1875 automobile was preserved in the Vienna In- dustrial Museum. To Frank Theyleg, the special expression of gratitude for another indict- ment of Nazi falsifications and for recognition of the achievements of his great- uncle who is the "Jew Who Gave the Automobile to the World." ❑ Kate Shoenfield, Local Journalist ate Shoenfield, who died July 25 at the age of 93, had such an interesting career that these personal notes are valuable as additions to her obituary. As Kate Friedman, several years before her marriage to Alan Shoenfield, who became science editor of the Detroit News, she was society editor of the Detroit Jewish Chronicle. Kate also was the Chroni- cle's star reporter. It was in the years 1917 to 1920 when Jewish news sources were limited, before the emergence of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Therefore reporting the Sunday morning sermons of Dr. Franklin at the then Temple Beth El on Woodward and Temple was a major responsibility for this young reporter. Kate became the favorite of Dr. Franklin. She often had to take down his sermons in shorthand. For that genera- tion of Reform Jews her multiple activities in 'Ample Beth El as well were notewor- thy in the community. With her marriage to Allen Shoenfield she became an ac- tivist in Ann Arbor where she lived until 1985. The years at the Universi- ty of Michigan were a con- tinuation of communal devo- tions for Kate. She shared the interests of her husband who was editor of the Michigan Gargoyle, later as the expert whose articles on science in the Detroit News gained ac- claim and national circulation. K She enrolled and studied in the U-M College of Medicine. From 1942 to 1962 she was secretary to the heads of the school's surgical department. She assisted in medical tasks during World War II. She joined her daughters, Connecticut Superior Court Judge Frederica S. Brennen- man and Beryl Hines, and five grandchildren in Glastonbury, Conn., in 1985. Her entire life, except for the concluding years in Con- necticut were Michigan triumphs. Her life story ex- cites renewed interest in one of our state's most remark- able personalities. ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 43