CLOSE-UP Holiday Dreams Do Come True At HOURS: 10-6 M-F 10-8 Thurs. 10-5 Sat. ried. They were part of a group who came from Europe, in probably 1908 or 1909, who defied convention. They were part of a group of these freethinkers: let's call them that, because I don't think they con- sidered themselves intellectuals. They were interested in politics; they were interested in changing the world maybe, but there wasn't that much to change at that time. They did a lot of reading and they would discuss. I don't know what they discussed, but I remember they used to discuss. Then, of course, when Bolshevism came on the scene, that's when you began to have splits in these freethinking ways. Some became socialists; some became communists." COCKTAILS EVENING FASHIONS Crosswinds Mall Orchard Lake and Lone Pine (313) 851-7633 OUR NEW STORES: CROSSWINDS MALL Orchard Lake at Lone Pine TWELVE OAKS MALL in Novi LAKESIDE MALL In Sterling Heights Daniel Bell 68, professor, Cambridge, Massachusetts I am a professor at Harvard University. My mother and father both came from the area between Poland and Russia, about 30 miles northeast of Bialystok, the area which shifted back and forth constantly. They didn't know each other in the old country. My mother came as one of five sisters. A brother was left behind and died in Poland. My mother's father was a me- lamed, a teacher, and he stayed, and I was named after him. My father came with his father. My grandfather was the eldest of about eight or nine boys, most of whom, as far as I recall, came over, and there was one sister. His family name was Bolotsky, but as I found out later that was not ac- tually the original name. His father or grandfather, probably his father, had been named Karlinsky. There was this edict in VISIT OUR OTHER FINE LOCATIONS: BIRMINGHAM Downtown on Maple DEARBORN Fairlane Town Center MILANO FUR & LEATHER FOR MEN & WOMEN Detroit Gallery of Contemporary Crafts 301 Fisher Bldg, MEMORABLE GIFTS Detroit, MI OF AMERICAN CRAFT ARTISTS 48202 • CERAMICS • GLASS • WOOD • WEARABLES • JEWELRY Mon-Sat 11-5 8/i /88F Visit the Garden Cafe, serving from 11 to 3. Gift Wrapping and Insured shipping available 26 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1988 Russia that if you were a younger son you were eligible for service in the army, so younger sons were often placed in other families or moved away and took different names in order to seem to be only children. He took the name Bolotsky. He came over here and for most of his life he worked, having a small business which was coal in the wintertime and seltzer and ice in the summertime. He had a horse and wagon, and one of my earliest memories was working with him, riding on a horse and wagon through the Lower East Side, saying, "Giddyup." That's the closest I've ever came to nature. It reminds me of Bernard Malamud's marvelous story where he goes out to Eugene, Oregon, and the character in the story is called Levin. Levin goes into the fields and looks with amazement and he says, "It's the first time a Levin has ever seen a cow, and the first time a cow had ever seen a Levin." I grew up on the Lower East Side. I had an older brother. My mother was a dress- maker and my father worked as a pattern maker, cutting dress patterns in shops. My father died in January 1920, when I was about eight months old. So when I grew up, we lived for about the first six or seven years with different relatives. But my grandfather also lived nearby on the Lower East Side, so I would go over there in the afternoons. My grandparents moved up to the Bronx when I was about five years old, but we remained on the Lower East Side because my mother worked in a garment factory. I was put in what was called then a "day orphanage." It was partly a day care center, partly an orphanage, because there were many children like myself who came from families where one or the other parent had died. It didn't have any city or state money. There was no such thing. It was supported by the local businessmen. It was a peculiar arrangement in that about three or four months a year, sometimes five months a year, I would stay there for weeks at a time. The other times of the year, I would only be there for the day, the reason being, of course, that in the garment industry, because of the seasons, there are long periods when you work ten or more hours a day. So I'd be there in the morning and I never knew in the evening whether my mother would come to pick me up. If she was working late, I'd sleep over. If there was no work, she would come and pick me up. So I used to joke, when the revolution comes I have_ the perfect proletariat background — both parents were workers, deprived, broken home, every situation of that kind. When I was about ten or 11 years old, my legal guardian was my father's younger brother. He was a dentist. His name was Samuel Bolotsky, and he used to have an office on the Lower East Side. He was mov- ing up to Second Avenue and then to the Bronx. They thought Bolotsky didn't fit well. A group of the cousins came together to change their names and they took three different names. Some took the name Bell, which is what my uncle Sam took. Some took the name Ballin. And some cousins took the name Ballot. That's when • I became Bell. Arthur Weinberg 70, writer, Chicago, Illinois I was a reporter for 33 years for Fairchild Publications. In later years I did book