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Show Rose (1 / 2 /8 ) page 15 Mr. K ~r. R Mr. K Mr. R Mr. K Mr. R Mr. K Mr R ti~e ••. anyway, that was about t he time I me t Gene gertz. When I got home I didn't recogni ze him. Be wal ked up to me at some Jewish meeting like E'Nate Brith or something like that, and told me who he was. Then he told ~e what they did with him, vou know, wtth the letters finally, because they got so he'd read them a letter r and the~ they'd tear tt up . So, he finally asked them "well, why do you ask me to read a letter that you say 1s important, and then you tear it up?" So, finally, I guess it was Butcher that said to him "what we do is get a letter and we get 3 or 4 different people to read it so we know that we have 3 or 4 people that don't know each other and we know we're getting an accurate translation. Now we've got you to the no1nt that you're our last bet. We always come to you last, and tf the letter has no meaning to us, then there's no point tn saving tt, so we tear it up." It's interesting that you describe how scared he was, too. Oh, God, I'll tell you something, I laugh now -I wasn't laughing then ••. I pitied the guy. I pitted anybody that lived with this kind of fear. It's pretty ~owerful. I couldn't believe it ••• I couldn't live that way ••• I couldn't do it. Things must have been really bad. I'm not saying to you that I wouldn't feel fear, but I would have had to have reacted to it. You mean differently? Well, in precisely his situation as it related to him and to me, I don't know that I could ~ave acted any differently from what he did, but I'~ talking about what happened to him in Germany. I |