YEAR IN REVIEW 5749 YEAR IN REVIEW PAUL COWAN, the 48-year-old New York journalist who chronicled his own transition from assimilated to deeply involved Jew, died of leukemia. BARBARA TUCHMAN, the best selling author whose historical accounts of war and the people involved in it earned her two Pulitzer Prizes, died at the age of 77. • HOWARD SIMONS, a Washington Post editor who went on to head the prestigious Niemann Fellowship program at Harvard, died of cancer at 61. In his last year, he wrote a book, ARYE DULZIN, who represented the old style of leadership in heading the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization until being forced out several years ago, died in Israel at 76. Jewish Times, chronicling the experiences of a variety of American Jews. heading West in the next decade. In all, it was a year of extraor- dinary change regarding Soviet Jewry, for not only were thousands of Jews being allowed to leave but there was a new sense of openness within the USSR. A Jewish cultural center opened in Moscow, with Jewish dignitaries from around the world on hand; Aeroflot agreed, in principle, on direct flights from Moscow to 'Ibl Aviv; and Israel Radio was allowed to be broadcast. The down side of this open- ness was that anti-Semitic na- tionalist groups within the USSR were allowed to express themselves, raising anxiety among many Jews, who were the target of ugly rhetoric. Prayers At Auschwitz Ugly rhetoric aimed at Jews came from a different source this year: the Catholic Church. An emotional but relatively minor issue — the appropriate- ness of a convent on the grounds of Auschwitz — became an international cause that seriously damaged Catholic- Jewish relations. After Jewish groups had protested the insen- sitivity of maintaining a con- vent on the death camp site, an agreement between European Jewish and Catholic leaders was made, calling for the convent to be moved and an interfaith THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 59