WE ARE ALWAYS BUYING COIN COLLECTIONS FLATWARE DIAMONDS GEM STONES SILVER BARS BROACHES ROYAL DOULTON HUMMELS GOLD COINS ANTIQUE SILVER FRANKLIN MINT ANTIQUE JEWELRY CANDLESTICKS MUCHA ART POSTERS PENDANTS CHAINS OLD COINS COIN WATCHES STICK PINS JOURNEY page 59 EARRINGS ROLEX WATCHES PATEK PHILIPPE VACHERON PIAGET VAN CLEEF CARTIER TIFFANY SILVER COINS SILVER DOLLARS STERLING SILVER 10-24 KARAT GOLD POSTCARDS PAPER MONEY TEA SERVICE RINGS SCRAP GOLD BOWLS & TRAYS PAINTINGS We are interested in serving you, or your client, in the appraisal or the liquidation of your coins, jewelry, collectibles, or an entire estate. Please call or stop in. 1393 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, MI 48009 (313) 644-8565 Metro Dealer for Over 35 Years Pho to by Glenn Tne st Monday to Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. RERIOAR EYE MITITUTE Total Family Eye Care flEW MIMS WEICOME "r; crl • - • • • • • • • • • • • RK Surgery Glaucoma Therapy Diabetic Eye Care Cataract, Laser & Implant Surgery Allergies Emergencies Second Opinions Contact Lenses Fashion Eyewear Saturday and Evening hours available TRIMPORTRT1011 IPIRIIIIBIE 28905 Northwestern Highway, Southfield LLJ 558-5957 - 24 Hours LL1 CD Martin I. Apple, M.D. - Michael Y. Greenley, M.D. CL F- LU LLJ 60 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today, Call 354-6060 Elsie Simkovitz with postcards sent to her grandmother at Theresienstadt. details on the arrange- ments. Apparently, the Nazis first requested goods, not money, in exchange for Jews. This would include tractors and other tools, along with medicine unat- tainable in Germany. Himmler also demanded (no doubt in line with his move to curry favor with the war victors) plenty of posi- tive publicity in American newspapers about the Theresienstadt-Swiss trans- port. He cautioned, howev- er, that such stories must make Germany, appear benevolent, not weak. For reasons still unknown, the Germans eventually opted to take the five million Swiss francs, to be deposited to a small, pri- vate company in Berlin, in lieu of the tools and medi- cine. As promised, articles about the transport appeared in papers in New York, Detroit, Chicago and St. Louis. These communities, and others, also helped raise the massive funds needed to secure the release of the 1,200 Jews on their way to Switzerland. Requests for money — signed by the Council of Orthodox Rabbis, and Congregations Beth Yehudah, B'nai David, B'nai Moshe, B'nai Zion and Beth Abraham — appeared in The Jewish News. They began, "Do Not Remain Passive When Your Brothers Call For Help!" Initially, negotiations between the Swiss and Germans called for further transports, always Jews for money, from Theresienstadt to Switzerland. Herman Goering himself promised this would be arranged. The Nazis first requested goods, not money, in exchange for Jews. But as the war drew to a close, Hitler expressed no interest in saving the life of any Jew, even if it brought benefit to struggling Nazi Germany. Consequently, he vetoed the Goering deal. Meanwhile, members of the Theresienstadt-Swiss transport — including Bertha Weinschenk — arrived in the United States. It was an afternoon of "stir- ring scenes" and filled with "weeping with joy," the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported. Speakers lauded both Mr. Musy and the Swiss government for their humanitarian efforts. ❑