Straus was the youngest son of Lazarus Straus, founder of the R.H. Macy depart- ment store chain. While his brothers were active in the business, Oscar preferred pol- itics. After working on Grover Cleveland's successful bid for the presidency, he was named minister (later ambassador) to Turkey. Oscar Straus was a devoted pacifist who worked tirelessly for the establish- ment of a political body that would me- diate international disputes. A founder of the American Jewish Committee and the first president of the American Jewish Historical Society, he also served as U.S. secretary of commerce and labor. He was the little flower, a much-loved politician and the perfect man to head New York City, with its impressive Ital- ian and Jewish communities. Fiorello La Guardia was born to a Jewish mother and an Italian-Catholic fa- ther. Naturally, they raised him to be a Protestant. La Guardia's career began when he was 20, at which time he was appointed U.S. consul to Fiume, Italy. In 1907 he returned to the United States, where he was an in- terpreter at Ellis Island. He was especially equipped to help Jewish immigrants not only because of his mother, but because he was fluent in Yiddish. In 1916, La Guardia was elected to Con- gress by his largely Jewish and Italian dis- trict. He held various governmental posts, including three terms as mayor of New York. La Guardia spent much of his political life fighting corruption. He also brought a great deal to the city in terms of parks, schools and new roads. And he remained, throughout his life, especially sympa- thetic to Jews. In Congress, he sponsored a resolution that called on the United States to oppose anti-Semitic actions in Poland, and after World War II he came to the aid of many Jewish refugees. Her name is most familiar was an au- thor, but Grace Paley also was a leading peace activist. Born in 1922, her straightforward, sometimes almost brutal writing about life in inner-city New York earned her nu- merous accolades. But Paley, born Grace Goodside, was most committed to social issues. In 1978, for example, she was one of 11 protestors who walked onto the lawn at the White House. Carrying a banner that read, "No Nuclear Weapons! No Nu- clear Power! US or USSR," the protes- tors were arrested. Paley also has participated in many vigils and demon- strations on behalf of civil rights. She ex- plained: "I always assumed that's what Jews were about." William Kristol, born in 1953, is a rare breed: a prominent Jewish Republican. The son of conservative spokesman Irv- ing Kristol, William served as a top aid to former Vice President Dan Quayle. Today an outspoken commentator, he liked to ex- plain his activism by saying, "My role is not to hum quietly, but to change the world." SPORTS Benny Leonard was not the kind of guy you wanted to mess with. He was raised on the Lower East Side, where he quick- ly learned to fight to survive. Throughout the early part of this century, authorities regarded him one of the greatest light- weight boxers of all time. He was born in 1896, and by the time he was a teen he was boxing for money, which he turned over to his parents to help support the family. What a nice boy. Years later, Leonard was so good he was bringing in $1 million annually (and this was in the 1920s). He was the hero of the Lower East Side, and even his foes in the ring described him as a gentleman. be in boxing until I breathe my last," he once said. But Leonard's Mom was worried for her son's safety, and she constantly begged him to quit. When she became deathly ill in 1925, Leonard did just that. In later years Leonard tried, and failed, to stage a comeback. He became a referee until his death of a heart attack, appropri- ately enough right in the ring, in 1947. He is a member of the Boxing Hall of Fame. When he wasn't working as a spy for the OSS (the predecessor of the CIA), Mor- ris "Moe" Berg, born in 1902 in New York City, was a major league catcher who reportedly inspired the phrase, "good field, no hit." He also was a scholar, who held degrees from Princeton University and the Columbia University School of Law. He spoke 12 languages. He's a dentist today, but back in the 1960s and 1970s Mark Spitz, born in 1950 in California, was an Olympic champ and continues to be regarded by many as the greatest swimmer ever (move over, Esther Williams!) Honored as "World Swimmer of the Year" in 1967, 1971 and 1972, Spitz set 33 international records, and was award- ed seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympics. And to think, he wanted to be a Hebrew teacher! Barney Ross, (born Barnet Ra- sofsky) born in 1909 in New York, fought more than 250 amateur boxing games by the time he was 18. He won lightweight and junior welterweight crown, defending his title five times. His life story became the basis for the movie Monkey on my Back, detailing his addiction to drugs which began after he was wounded in World War II. Believe it or not, there were a number of great Jewish bowlers. Sylvia Wene Martin, born in 1928 in Philadelphia, was a five-time All-America champ, while Rose M. Weinstein of Wilkes Barre, Penn., was All-America in 1962. (What's in that water in Pennsylvania, anyway?) Probably the most influential Jewish bowler was Louis Stein (1858-1949), a founder of the American Bowling Congress who established the 16-pound limit on bowling balls. MEDICINE If your teen-age daughter spends half her life on the phone, you have Emile Berliner to thank for keeping her entertained so long. Berliner, born in 1851, invented a microphone without which there would be no modern tele- phone. Berliner was an inventor from early on, but certainly his greatest creation was a microphone that could receive and send voices through a wire. He sold the patent to a little company called Bell Telephone. (Unfortunately, few know about Berlin- er's work in this area, but perhaps a fa- mous film maker will make a movie about it someday, and he could use the line, "E.B., phone home.") Berliner's next project was the creation of a flat disk made of rubber played on a musical ma- chine called the gramophone. Of course, it's difficult to find records or record-players today, but believe or not they once ex- isted in many, many homes. But perhaps Berliner's most important contribution was his discovery that by scalding (lat- er, pasteurizing) milk, parents could prevent many childhood diseases. He formed the Society for the Prevention of Sickness, and convinced the Department of Agriculture to establish milk standards in 1907. It's as easy as A, B1 and B2, C and D: The man behind the vitamins was one Casimir Funk, a native of Poland who immigrated to the United States in 1915. Funk was study- ing beriberi when he discovered a sub- stance which pre- vented the disease. He called it "vita- mine" (vitamin B). Funk later estab- lished his own foun- dation for medical research and wrote numerous articles on biochemical issues. He was the first to identify and advocate the value not only of vitamin B, but of vit- amins A and C, as well. Children ever since have been healthier because of his discovery, though the horrid taste of cer- tain vitamin pills often leaves them in a funk. Issachar Zacharie was a man who truly cared for the sole of one of this coun- try's greatest presidents, Abraham Lin- coln. Born in 1827, Zacharie was Lincoln's chiropodist — and also his spy. A native of England, Zacharie had clients including Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun before he began caring for the president's feet in 1861. The two soon formed a close friendship. Two years af- ter they met, Lincoln sent Zacharie to New Orleans, asking him to report back on the Confederate military leadership there. Later, Zacharie represented the president in secret meetings with Con- federate leaders Jefferson Davis and Ju- dah Benjamin. When newspapers learned of Dr. Zacharie's political intrigue they pre- dictably had a field day. One paper de- scribed him as having "enjoyed Mr. Lincoln's confidence perhaps more than any other private individual...He was courted, feted, flattered by high officials because he was regarded as standing so high in the graces of the President who has often left his business apartment to spend his evenings in the parlor of the famous bunionist." Gertrude Elion, of New York City, was the first woman ever named to the National Inventors Hall of Fame. She also received the 1989 Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine for her work that led to creating numerous drugs used in fighting leukemia. He began his research in 1926 in New York, continued it in London, then re- turned to the United States where in 1961 Albert Sabin announced the cre- ation of an oral polio vaccine. Thanks to this discovery, polio has virtually been eliminated. Throughout his life, Sabin focused his work on resistance to viruses and infec- tious diseases. In World War II, he served as an officer with the Surgeon General of the United States, where he researched epidemics and their possible impact on the U.S. military. Sabin was active in numerous Jewish causes, including serv- ing on the board of governors of both the Hebrew University and the Weizmann Institute of Science, and with the Tech- nion. He later emi- grated from the United States to Is- rael, where he was president of the Weiz- mann Institute of Sci- ence. CONTRIBUTIONS page 56 55