Beginning. My father got a job as a janitor. They did not call them supers in those days in apartment houses in Hells Kitchen. Those were my earliest recollections. I went to the public schools. My parents divorced when i was six. I lived with an aunt in one. One. They would not take me to school until i was seven. My education was in new york. I caught up with my education by with an high school accelerated curriculum. I went to city college in new york. At city college i majored in sociology. I was always interested in crime prevention. Maybe that related to my early recollections in a highly dense wase area, Hells Kitchen black because there were more crimes committed there than any place else. That may have stimulated my interest in crime prevention. Were you an only child . Benjamin i had an older sister. I lived with an aunt. They both remarried. They both lived happily after. My mother and father were related. They were second cousins. They were assigned to marriage at birth and
It was a compilation created to be shown as proof against the high command that was tried at the nuremberg military tribunal. The alliedlm shot by troops as they entered several of the larger concentration camps. , the state ines which they found many of the survivors, footage that many people will have seen today. It was one film at one time. How important was it as evidence . Important,was very not only because of the shocking nature, but it was the first or one of the first examples of film being used as evidence alongside all the documents they used to try these men. Is there still value in viewing it today . If you are anything of eight world war ii buff, you will have seen these images. It is interesting from a historical point of view to see the narration, how it was edited together, what the allies were trying to communicate in the courtroom and to people back home who were just then learning about these crimes. States will at this time present a documentary camps. Concentratio