Peter Stine: Editor of "Witness" N ESS 1920 to 1935, Bolkosky served as A fledgling Detroit literary journal has attracted some big names in the field of writing MONA GRIGG Special to The Jewish News I s there really room for yet another literary journal in a world so full of them that, in order to draw attention, they have to give - themselves names like Zyzzyva and Pig Iron and Jam 7b- day? Sidney Lutz, Peter Stine and Sid Bolkosky think there is — in fact Lutz is so sure of it, he's willing to put his money where his mouth is. Lutz is the publisher of Witness, a brand new, slick literary quarterly published under the aegis of the Center for the Study of the Child, a non-profit organization based in Far- mington Hills and headed by Lutz. Bolkosky, a history professor and director of the honors program at University of Michigan-Dearborn, entered the picture when he received a grant last year from the Center for the Study of the Child to put together a multi-media curriculum for teaching the Holocaust in high schools. (The program debuts this fall in all Oakland County public high schools.) The author of The Distorted Im- age, a study of German Jews from mentor while Witness was still in its embryonic stage and was the consul- tant for the first issue, a theme issue devoted entirely to writings on the Holocaust. The idea for the magazine came about during a brainstorming session with the staff of the Holocaust cur- riculum. Lutz had a vision — at first admittedly vague — of a magazine where the writer, and ultimately the reader, would serve as witness to changing world and societal events. "I mean, what the world needs is another literary magazine — right?" Lutz said dryly, then added, "But, seriously, we just want to publish significant kinds of writings about contemporary issues that people should really read about and think about. And the people involved with this magazine understand my philosophy — my brand of humanitarianism and -charity. Beyond that, I tend to let people do what they- think is necessary. I don't feel that interfering in somebody's creativity allows them to be creative." The Center for the Study of the Child came into being in 1970, when Lutz was working on his Ph.D. in child psychology at the University of Michigan. He and a partner set up a non-profit organization in order to raise funds for a research project on child development. "It is still our non-profit arm, and I just kept the name because I like it," Lutz says, "though I can see how it can be confusing on the masthead of a literary magazine." Lutz also heads Lutz and Associates, a company that is "half software and data base, half training, writing, research and graphic arts," he says, though he's quick to add that, again, that's only part of it. The company employs some sixty people who work on projects ranging from managing tuition assistance programs for an auto company, to maintaining data bases for various political candidates and more than 30 non-profit organizations (including the Michigan Cancer Foundation), to developing a software program for a 200,000-employee multinational cor- poration for use in their self-insured workers compensation program. "You can just call us `schizophrenic,' " Lutz finally says, laughing, "but the point is that we have a lot of gifted and talented writers right here on our staff, and we wanted to give them something more interesting to do than just the routine corporate writing." Several Lutz and Associates staff are on the Witness editorial board or are slated as con- tribUtors for future issues. When the subject of editors came up, it was Bolkosky who recommend- ed Peter Stine. Stine is a former editor of Ann Arbor magazine whose own essays and articles have appeared in literary and commercial magazines and in newspapers. He came up with the magazine's name, clarified the concept, and, as editor, recruited some of the country's top writers as con- tributors — names like Joyce Carol Oates, Gordon Lish, Robert Coover, Lynn Sharon Schwartz, Madison Smartt Bell, David Ignatow, Alice Fulton and Charles Baxter. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 77