1979,--Page 9 Magna cum laude grad remembers horrors of Nazi concentration camps LONGMEADOW, Mass. (AP) - "It business in his native Lodz, Poland, so proved to me I'm not old," Saul Torrey he worked as a furniture salesman and said as he sat in his study surrounded later as a traffic manager for an by papers, books, and photos of his four aluminum and metal distributing firm. grandchildren. "I feel the pride and Five years ago the aluminum firm achievement like any young man." changed management. Torrey, a Polish born Jew who sur- "I was out of a job," recalled Torrey. vived Nazi concentration camps, is "I had to go down. No one wants to go graduating magna cum laude Sunday lower. I had contacts all over. I could with a bachelor's degree in government have gotten a job in Baltimore or from Western New England College in Philadelphia, but my wife didn't want nearby Springfield. to move. He will celebrate his 69th birthday on "I SAID TO myself, 'What am I going June 8. to do?' Even while I was working I had BEADS OF perspiration roll down his a hobby of studying. I even went to the face as he talks of World War II and the Springfield Technical Community concentration camps that took, by hs College." count, a haunting toll of 100 persons He enrolled full-time at the two-year related to him or his wife, Beatrice, 61. community college and in 1977 received He pulls out a handkerchief to wipe his associate's degree in liberal arts. his face. It is so painful to talk about the Then he enrolled at Western New death of his parents and three brothers, England College for only $20 a semester and German warplanes bombing Polish under a special program for the civilian patriots "so close you could elderly. shake hands with the pilots." He said What will he do now that he has a his wife was so weak from hunger and degree? suffering from gangrene that she "I HAVE TO think about it," he says. crawled to him on her hands and knees "I'm going to look very hard for a job in when he located her at war's end after an office. I would like to go to law school having been imprisoned in a separate but they have more applications than camp. openings. I might go back and study His son, George, now 40, a professor Spanish and French without credit for of German literature, was one of 26 my enjoyment. children to survive the camp at Raven- "I feel education never finishes. More sbruck. Torrey also has a daughter, elderly people should do it. They would Regina Gleason, 31, who is married to have less time to think about their an attorney. illnesses. The best medicine is to TORREY ARRIVED in New York in engage the mind." 1949, and a few weeks later moved to Even if his degree doesn't gain him this area of western Massachusetts anything, he doesn't care. "After what because he had relatives in Springfield. happened to us," he says, "I cannot be His family had been in the furniture happy. But I feel good." State insurance spokesman blasts redlinin legislation LANSING (UPI) - A spokesman for State Farm Insurance Co. yesterday blasted insurance redjining legislation and suggested ending compulsory liability coverage could ease the pinch of high auto insurance rates for the poor. The comments came in testimony before the House Insurance Committee which is studying redlining or "essen- tial insurance" legislation. Committee Chairman Matthew Mc- Neely said he has set a June 15 deadline for action on the controversial measure. He said he will use "every legitimate method" to win committee approval of the bill, but also said he will consider the State Farm suggestion. Insurance redlining is the practice of discriminating against consumers on the basis of where they live. The anti- redlining bills also deal with discrimination based on age, sex and other factors. Critics say the practice contributes to the decay of urban neighborhoods by making them less attractive places to live. Under the bill before the committee, insurance firms would have to provide home and auto policies to all comers and could not cancel or refuse to renew except for non-payment. Rates could not be based on sex, marital status, age, or residence. An association consisting of all insurers doing business in Michigan would be created to indemnify insurers for the high-risk policies they write. State Farm claims the bill will force low-risk customers to subsidize high- risk policyholders through higher premiums. Perry called the debate over insuran- ce redlining "a fundamental conflict of interest between legislators who want to do good without increasing taxes and insurance companies who want to sell insurance as insurance and not as a vehicle for carrying out a social welfare policy." He said eliminating the requirement that all motorists carry liability in- surance under the no-fault law would ease part of the problem of high rates for inner city residents. Such a change could cut insurance costs for inner city residents by as much as 55 per cent, he said. The current law "requires the poor to buy insurance for the sole benefit of others," Perry said. Joseph Tuchinsky of the Michigan Citizens Lobby said redlining legislation is needed because many motorists with good driving records are now being forced to buy insurance from the assigned risk pool where rates are double those charged most consumers. M'CNeely said a similar redlining bill died last fall largely because of time problems in an election year. He said it's "a whole new ballgame now," and the measure's insurance industry foes have lost the leverage they enjoyed last fall. NEXT SUNDAY Saul Torrey is graduating magna cum laude with a B.A. in government. Torrey will be 69 on June 8 and is a student at New England College in Springfield, Mass. Kidnapper set free, nust go to Alaska underarms of his parole, must go im- REIDSVILLE, Ga. (AP) - Gary mediately to Alaska, where his father Steven Krist was set free yesterday, lives. less than 10 years afterfhe was convic- "He's got 72 hours to get to Alaska to ted and sentenced to life in prison for report to the parole people there," said kidnapping Florida heiress Barbara Balkcom. Jane Mackle and burying her in a box THE PAROLE of Krist, 34, was an- for almost four days. nounced by the Georgia Board of Par- Krist left the Georgia State Prison don and Paroles on May 4. Under the here in the pre-dawn hours, after being terms of the parole, he may not return released at 5:45 a.m. to the state of 'Georgia for any reason Carrying a large cardboard box and without consent of the board. accompanied by a woman identified as Some of those involved in the convic- his fiancee, he ignored reporters' tion and sentencing of Krist raised loud questions as he climbed into a rented objections to the parole, however. compact car. "Good Lord. It's a terrible mistake," "I'M GETTING into this car and said Superior Court Judge H. O. taking off," he said just before getting Hubert, who presided at Krist's trial. "I into the car. don't think he will ever be Warden Charles Balkcom said Krist, . rehabilitated." earn $100 a month for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare time. donate plasma You may save a life! It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week regular. $10 cash each donation, plus bonuses. this ad worth $5 extra New donors only. 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