This Week
For Openers
A
Shull Paperclips
paperclip is fairly easy to make, inexpensive and, in most
cases, inconsequential.
Yet, even the lowly paperclip can stand up and be
counted.
NBC News reported last week that a rural Tennessee middle
school is trying to collect 6 million paperclips
to represent the 6 million Jews murdered by
the Nazis during World War II. As of April
10, the school vas half way to its goal.
The "Paperclip Project" at Whirwell (Tenn.)
Middle School carries more symbolism for the
community than first meets the eye. The rural
town has a population of 1,600 and 10
churches. The school population is 456 most-
ly poor white kids. There are six blacks, one
Hispanic, and no Asians, Catholics or Jews.
ALAN HITSKY Half the students qualify for the federal free
lunch program.
Associate Editor
Teaching the Holocaust and the effects of
hatred are something new to many in the
town.
German reporters heard about the project and spread the word
through a book. Now, the school receives two
boxes of mail — approximately 30,000
paperclips — daily and is searching in
Germany for a railroad boxcar
from the Holocaust to hold the
paperclips and serve as a
museum.
Teacher Sandra Whirwell
said paperclips were chosen
because many Norwegians wore them during World war II as a
sign of solidarity with Jews.
The swelling paperclip collection is impressive, but Whirwell
teachers and students say the letters that come with them contain
painful stories.
'At the age of 16, I was taken from my family in Paris and
shipped off to a concentration camp," reads one. "I have a cousin
in Texas who has a number on his arm from Auschwitz," reads
another.
The school has received 8,000 letters and is looking for money
— and paperclips — to continue the project. To help, write
Whirwell Middle School Paperclip Project, 1130 Main Street,
Whirwell, TN 37397-5055. ❑
GRAPEJEWZ
© , 001
By Goldfein
W
hat is the connection between Christian
saints John, Luke and Louis and where
thousands of Jews reside today?
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Yiddish Limericks
A man mused, "I'd date her again.
Zee funfit un hinkt* now and then.
She sits there fizrshtumpt, - *
Her feet are tsekrumpt,***
But other than that, she's a 10."
— Martha Jo Fleischmann
NEED
GooD ROLE MODELS
- She mumbles and limps
unable to speak
--" disfigured
May 3-4-5
Zelda
May 10-11-12
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Quotables
.
On the Boardwalk
"My non-Jewish friends keep wondering what is
drawing me to Jewish choir classes in the
evenings instead of going to a disco with them.
I can't tell exactly, but probably it is the feeling
of being at home and with your own people."
— Olga, 15, who was one of 500 participants
from the former Soviet Union and Israel at the
Fifth International Jewish Children's and Youth
Art Festival in Moscow.
"If we want to change anything in Polish-Jewish
dialogue, we have to work with young people."
— Andrzej Folwarczny, a member of Poland's
Parliament on a visit of Jewish teenagers from
around the world during the March of the Living
in observance of Yom HaShoah.
RO(-E MODELS ARE (MPoRTANT 1.
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oVERcomes H Is Lin TATIDNS, AND'
To OUR
BECOMES A GREAT LEADER OP
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MIS PEOPLE
Margaret O'Leary
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
BY Mendel
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KID5 TODAy
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Don% Dow
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GUESSED 111AT
TRE- RABBI READS
"HARRd POTTER"
248-626-7776
Hair Care
()Cosmetics
Hai r piecegi
Scented,
t Candles
Nail C'\
Body-
els,
(,k) o W
Mon -Fri...9am
Th u rs...9am-7
Sat_l Oam-5pm
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West Bloomfield 48322
(248) 538-4330
4/20
(248) 538-4329 Fax
7
2001