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Memorial books (Holocaust) in subject [X]
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1Title:  The Bialystoker memorial book    
 Creator:  Bialystoker Center (New York, N.Y.) 
 Publication:  Bialystoker Center, New York,1982. 
 Call #:  DS135 P763B5 
 Extent:  x, 331, xi, 326 p. illus. 29 cm. 
 Subjects:  Memorial books (Holocaust) | Jews -- Poland -- Bialystok | Bia±ystok (Poland) -- History
 
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2Title:  Yizker-bukh: nokh der òhorev-geòvorener Yidisher òkehile òTshizsheòve    
 Creator:  Kanc, Shimon. 
 Publication:  òTshizsheòver Landsmanshafòtn in Yiâsroel un Ameriòke, Tel-Aviv,1961. 
 Notes:  Yiddish or Hebrew. 
 Call #:  DS135 P763C99 
 Extent:  1206 columns : ill. ; 28 cm. 
 Subjects:  Jews -- Poland -- Czyçzewo -- History | Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Czyçzewo | Memorial books (Holocaust) | Czyçzewo (Poland) -- Ethnic relations
 
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3Title:  Harry Stone Papers     
 Creator:  Stone, Harry 
 Dates:  1943-2006 
 Abstract:  Harry Stone (1917-2007) was a business leader in Cleveland, Ohio, active in politics and philanthropy. He was the son of Jacob Sapirstein, the founder of American Greetings Corp., a manufacturer of greeting cards. Stone was a member of the Glenville High School Class of 1935. In addition to the positions he held at American Greetings, Stone also owned radio stations WIXY and WDOK and was engaged in real estate and international trade and finance. Among his many civic activities, Stone was a trustee of Brandeis University, the Jewish Community Federation, and the Cleveland Sight Center. Stone married Beatrice Farkas in 1936. The couple had three children, Phillip J, Allan D., and Laurie. After the death of Beatrice, Harry married Lucile Tabak Rose in 1960. Her children from a previous marriage were James M. Rose and Douglas B. Rose. In the 1960s Stone was campaign chairman for United States Representative Charles Vanik. His relationship with Vanik proved beneficial to the Jewish community in 1973, when Vanik asked Stone and his brother Irving for help in scheduling a vote on the Jackson-Vanik Amendment, which required the USSR to allow Jewish emigration to the United States in order to qualify for most favored nation status. The Stone brothers asked Representative Wilbur Mills of Arkansas to schedule the vote; American Greetings was at the time the largest employer in Mills' Arkansas district. Stone also served as a consultant to the United States Departments of Commerce and State. the collection consists of annual reports, bulletins, certificates, correspondence, greeting cards, newspaper clippings, a petition, proclamations, a program, a speech text, a statement, and a yizkor (memorial) book. 
 Call #:  MS 5099 
 Extent:  0.40 linear feet (1 container) 
 Subjects:  Stone, Harry, 1917-2007. | Stone family. | American Greeting Publishers, Inc. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews, Soviet -- Emigration and immigration. | Jewish businesspeople -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Greeting cards industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Memorial books (Holocaust) | Grajewo (Poland) -- History. | Grajewo (Poland) -- Genealogy.
 
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