Sensational Prom Dresses A LONG WAY page 101 (previous sales & layaways excluded) 20% Off Irwin and his family spent five years in Montreal before coming to Detroit. Solomon opened a shoe store on Fenkell, where he tested the quality of leather by sinking his teeth into it. (The easier to bite, the cheaper the leather.) (only with this ad) MARGUERITE On The Boardwalk 6000114 (810) 932-5252 PASSOVERSti FROM THE ENTRE STAFF Ai Applegate Square • Southfield • 354-4560 CACS SiL g4.4.44 " Best Wishes For A Happy and Healthy Passover Our West Bloomfield Livonia Royal Oak 288.4440 17134 Farmington Rd. Northwood Shopping Ctr. 261.5740 7 -0330 Knoliwood Plaza 7414 Haggerty Rd. (at 14 Mile Rd.) (at 5 Mile Rd.) 3339 N. Woodward Ave. (at 13 Mile Rd.) 681.2223 Highlander Square 4189 Highland Rd. (E. of Pontiac Lk. Rd.) ae4 k a 7l ,itcrry 7'af44.00en rn NOW 810- 348-0090 • 48700 Grand River LIVONIA 313-522-9200 • 29500 W. 6 Mile Road BIRMINGHAM 810-644-1919 • 690 S. Woodward Right: "Uncle Sam" and his wife: Family first. Waterford Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-9, Sun. 12-5 Our ,Xed Above: Jack Kutnick and his wife, Ann. GtMW.h OUTOOMFLAWFUE Completely Casual for Over 50 Years! Solomon woke early each morning, dining on bread dipped in coffee, and came home late. Though he had no formal educa- tion, he was, his son says, an in- telligent and kind man. "I never remember him yelling at me, or laying a hand on me or my sisters and brothers. He just gave me a talking to, then would give me a couple of pennies and say, 'Now go out and buy some candy." Solomon's youngest son, Irwin, went to Cass Tech and was the first in his family to graduate from high school. Now he has children and grandchildren and great- grandchildren, all of whom he has helped along the way. It was his father's motto and now it's his, too, Mr. Sherman says. "Help the next generation, and then that generation will help out the next." I He saved every penny he made. He had a reason. Sam Kutnick had three broth- ers and two sisters back in Rus- sia, and he was determined to get them out. At first, money was the answer. By 1914, Sam had managed to bring over three brothers and one sister. They comprised a diverse group: the eldest brother was Or- thodox. The youngest, Phillip, was a painter who had become a hunchback after breaking his back in a fall. Getting Phillip admitted into the United States was a struggle. "My dad went to Washington, D.C., twice trying to get him in," Jack Kutnick says. But immi- gration officials were adamant: they didn't want anyone with a disability. Eventually, Sam got his broth- er Phillip to Canada, and then fi- nally to Detroit. But one sister remained in Rus- sia. Sam decided to go in search of her himself, and he took a boat back to Europe. When he could find nothing— to this day what happened to the last sibling is a mystery — he brought over her three children. In the United States, Sam found them homes with relatives, and one he raised with his wife, Ida, with whom he lived in an apart- ment on Dexter and Joy roads. Sam was successful profes- sionally for many years in his business, Detroit Auto Parts on Grand River and 12th Street. But 13 then he lost everything in the De- pression — only to start all over LL1 again. He was active with the Labor 0 Zionists, a dedicated supporter of ,9 E Israel who once purchased a tiny slice of the land of which he knew little. After World War II, fund-raisers offered up the Israeli land parcels to American Jews. "You didn't know what it was and you never saw it," Mr. Kutnick says. "But my father was patriotic so he bought it." (The family has since sold the property.) Sam traveled some- times, too. A favorite vacation spot was New York, where Sam Kutnick had cousins. A hotel was out of the question. "You were army. "My father wanted to go to Eu- with family," Jack says. "You dou- rope," his son, Jack, of Franklin, bled up and stayed with the kids." Until his death in 1954, Sam's recalls. But instead he landed in the United States, settling first in first commitment always was to Texas and then Detroit, where he his family. Everybody got togeth- came when he learned Henry er for dinner every Sunday night. Ford was paying the princely sum Everybody got along, regardless of religious practices or politics. of $5 a day. That's just how it was back But Sam wasn't really inter- ested in working for somebody then, Jack says. "Family ties were else. He knew he could make a lot closer, I guess, than they are more on his own, so he opened an today." ❑ auto parts store. hey called him "Uncle S a m . " Sam Kutnick was 15 years old when he left Rus- sia. He wasn't interested in at- tending a yeshiva and he certainly didn't want to join the Russian N N