Mr. Griffin. Well now, you were born in 1917?
Mrs. Kaminsky. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. And there came a time about 1921 when your family broke up. What became of you when Jack was put in a foster home?
Mrs. Kaminsky. Well, I was also put in a foster home. I was in several. It’s pretty vague to me, to be truthful, but I remember being in a couple of them, I think, until I was about 9 years old. Then, the family came together again.
Mr. Griffin. Did your mother and father visit you while you were in that foster home?
Mrs. Kaminsky. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. How——
Mrs. Kaminsky. My mother, especially. My mother did; I don’t remember about my father so much.
Mr. Griffin. Why were all of the children put in foster homes at that time?
Mrs. Kaminsky. Well, I don’t know about the older ones, but we younger ones were. The older ones may have been—I think I might have been around—you say 1921. I thought I was about six which would bring it to 1923. Now, say the sister next to Jack is about 8 years older than I am. She would have been 14——