UP FRONT After 58 Years In The USSR, Abe Stolar Finally Comes Home ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Features Editor A silver band is all that remains of the chains that once bound Abe Stolar to the Soviet Union. The band, a gift from an anonymous giver who heard him speak here this week, is a refusenik bracelet bearing Stolar's name and the year, 1975, he applied for permis- sion to emigrate. Stolar was in Detroit as part of a nation- wide tour. Stolar, 77, was born and raised in Chicago. His father worked as a correspondent for the Soviet paper Izvestia; his mother made artificial flowers. Both were staunch communists who often brought young Abe with them to party rallies. Born in Russia, the Stolars immigrated in 1909 to the United States to escape the czar. They were overjoyed when Lenin and the Bolshevik Party took control of their homeland. For many years, they dreamed of retur- ning to their birthplace to work and live with their fellow communists. In 1930, the Stolars learn- ed they would be allowed to come live in the Soviet Union. They couldn't believe their great fortune. "All communists dreamed of going to the Soviet Union," Abe Stolar said. "It was their Mecca." The father was the first to go. He settled in Moscow, where he rented an apart- ment for the family and began working as manager of the English-language Moscow Daily News. His work "really helped modernize the English-language press in the Soviet Union," Abe Stolar said. The next year, the elder Stolar brought over the rest of the family. Abe, 19, was hired at The Daily News as was his sister, Eva, the paper's chief proofreader. The second day after their arrival, all the Stolars became Soviet citizens. For the Stolar children, the Soviet Union was an adven- ture. As foreign nationals, they were permitted luxuries few Soviet citizens enjoyed. Abe Stolar remembers atten- ding the Bolshoi Ballet, see- ing free programs in Gorky Park and playing checkers at a local club, "where someone would get on the piano and we would all dance." 'If an announcer did so much as sneeze during a broadcast, he would be suspected of sending secret signals to the CIA. He also recalls touring the Red October Candy Factory and standing in the top of a cathedral near Red Square that overlooked the Kremlin. It was dark and heavy inside and "looked like the Abe Stolar and his wife, Gita: 'How can you be happy when everything around you is false?' art school. He had been in- terested in art from a young age — as a boy, he had cut out and colored cartoons from the newspaper. At art school, Stolar studied painting, drawing, stage decoration and advertising. He took a biology class with a teacher who was rarely in attendance. Although he had by then picked up a great deal of Russian, he would scribble down words he didn't know and take them home to his father to translate. After art school, he found work making drawings for a publisher. The job ended when his father was arrested. "It was dangerous for anybody to even be in contact with me." Throughout the 1930s, Stolar held a position with the Soviet news agency TASS. He also worked in a factory and painted faces on dolls with sawdust-filled heads. His mother helped support the family by selling bits of color- ful American-made cloth. Stolar served in the engineers' unit of the Soviet army from 1941-1947. "But I didn't dig any trenches," he said. "I sat in army head- quarters where I wrote daily reports and orders of the day because the officers didn't have time for any of that, though I don't know what they were so damned busy do- ing." He also wrote letters home for the Red Army soldiers, many of whom were peasants who couldn't read or write. Stolar said he hated the thought that, as a soldier he was "fighting for Stalin" — the ubiquitous Soviet leader. "He was all over the place," or higher were found to be nearsighted. The study also found cor- relations between near- sightedness and level of education. While 7.4 percent of men who had completed less than eight years of school were nearsighted, 19.7 per- cent of those with 12 or more years were myopic. tional bans on prayer in public schools. Daniel Weisman brought his concern about the prayer at Nathan Bishop Middle School ceremonies to the school's principal, Robert Lee. Lee told Weisman he shouldn't worry because a rabbi from "your own faith" had been invited to deliver the opening prayers. Weisman said the issue was not a matter of religious preference but of the separa- tion of church and state. Weisman appealed to the American Civil Liberties Union, which is bringing the case to trial. It is scheduled to be heard in U.S. district court in September. Continued on Page 16 ROUND UP The Big Scoop: Peace Pops Ben & Jerry's Homemade Inc., an all-natural ice cream company headed by Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, is giving war the cold shoulder with its latest crea- tion: Peace Pops. Available in four flavors — French Vanilla, Heath Bar Crunch, Cherry Garcia and New York Super Fudge Chunk — the Peace Pops ice cream comes in boxes with in- formation about 1 Percent For Peace., a non-profit organiza- tion whose goals include con- vincing Congress to redistribute 1 percent of the national defense budget to a peace agenda. Cohen and Greenfield, childhood friends who went cathedral in The Hunchback of Notre Dame," Stolar said. Yet for their mother, life in the communist country was agony. Their apartment — a two-bedroom flat for the Stolars, their two children and Eva Stolar's husband — had no gas and just one rusty sink in need of repair. She us- ed a kerosene burner to cook family meals. "Did she regret going to the Soviet Union?" Stolar said. "I don't think she could help but regret it." Stolar's father was at first delighted with life in the Soviet Union. But soon he, too, came to regret his deci- sion to move. The reason for his misery: Josef Stalin. Together with thousands of others labeled "enemies of the state," Stolar's father was a victim of the Soviet leader's purges. He was taken away in April 1937 and never seen again. "Ever since my father was arrested there wasn't a single night — and very often not a single day — when I felt secure and safe," Stolar said. "You never knew when they would come." Stolar's brother-in-law also was taken away to prison camp when Eva Stolar was pregnant with her second child. She learned of her hus- band's fate when one of her letters to him was returned. Stamped above the address was the word DECEASED. After leaving his position with The Moscow Daily News, Abe Stolar studied at a Soviet The Eyes Have It New York (JTA) — Near- sighted people may be smarter than those with 20/20 vision. Peace Pops: A message to Congress. into business with only an old-fashioned rock salt ice cream maker and a $5 cor- respondence course in ice cream making, will donate 1 percent of their business' pre- tax profits to 1 Percent For Peace. Ben & Jerry's ice cream is available in Canada, Ohio, Il- linois, New York, Florida, In- diana, California and several other states. Drs. Michael Belkin and Mordechai Rosner of Tel Aviv University, examining data from more than 157,000 young men who underwent the standard Israel Defense Force physical examinations, found a clear correlation bet- ween nearsightedness and IQ. According to the resear- chers, 15.7 percent of the Israeli population are near- sighted. But in recruits with an IQ below 80, only 7.9 were nearsighted. And 27.1 per- cent of those with an IQ 128 Father Sues Over Prayer New York (JTA) — A Rhode Island college professor has filed suit against a Pro- vidence middle school, claim- ing the recital of an invoca- tion and benediction at his daughter's graduation ceremony violated constitu- Compiled by Elizabeth Appelbaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5