Jewry's Role in Human Events LEAVING THEIR IMPRINTS ON THE WORLD Our columns have often showcased Jewish men and women whose achievements have been honored by the world's most distinguished body of their peers: The Nobel Prize Committee. What is most astonishing is how many of our kinsmen were named to its rolls since the award program was implemented in 1901. The century has seen people of Jewish origin win more than twenty-percent of the prizes given--while we number less than one-quarter of one-percent of the world's population. It is also a matter of interest that many of our Nobel Laureates were born elsewhere than America and have been represented in every category within which the awards are presented. Honorees such as: NADINE GORDIMER (1923-) b. Springs, Transvaal, South Africa Novelist She published her first work at age fifteen and has since produced ten novels and more than 200 short stories. Her writings movingly lashed out against the cruelties of apartheid and .decried racial segregation for what it was-- degrading to her native country and to other African states. Through the experiences of her characters, Gordimer explored clearly and without sentimentality how officially-imposed prejudice and repression devastated lives and offended the basic principles of social justice. She was the first woman in a generation to win a Nobel Prize for Literature (1991), and has had several of her books banned by the former South African government. While in mid-career, Gordimer also taught and lectured at colleges in the U.S. and supported political movements to rescind her nation's racist policies. Among her best known and most poignant works were A Guest of Honour (1970), The Conservationist (1974), Burger's Daughter (1979) and A Sport of Nature (1987). KONRAD BLOCH, Ph.D. (1912-) b. Neisse, Germany Biochemist Cholesterol has become a health topic of concern that eclipses most others in popular and medical discourse. Among its early and most prominent researchers is a foreign born Ph.D. (emigrating to the U.S. in 1936) who won a 1964 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "for discoveries of the mechanism of cholesterol and fatty acid metabo- lism." Konrad Bloch escaped Nazism after earning a chemical engineering degree in Germany and obtained a doctorate at Columbia University in 1938. Soon after, he launched studies of unsaturated fatty acid components .which he continued through the 1950s as a professor of biochemistry at Harvard. In hand with several collaborators, Bloch discovered how . cholesterol is synthesized in the body and the relationship of its blood levels to the formation of atherosclerosis--a breakthrough in understanding cardiovascular disease. The former associate editor of the Journal of Biological Chemistry was also a prolific writer with hundreds of scientific papers dealing, as well, with the metabolism of proteins and amino acids. GEORGE CHARLES de HEVESY, Ph.D. (1885-1966) b. Budapest, Hungary Chemist Within half a decade, the tireless researcher was instrumental in bringing three important findings to the world of science. In 1923, then a colleague of Neils Bohr, he co-discovered a new chemical element which he called hafnium. That same year, while at the University of Freiburb in Germany, he developed the first biological use of radioactive tracers for which he was to earn a Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1949. And by 1926, de Hevesy introduced X-ray fluorescence--a new system for calculating the chemical composition of rocks, minerals and meteorites. After a dramatic escape from wartime German oppression--aboard a fishing boat to Sweden--the professor took refuge in Stockholm University's Institute of Organic Chemistry. Here he continued biological research into the effects of radiation, particularly as they relate to cancer and anemia. Much honored internationally for his pioneering discoveries, de Hevesy also received a prestigious Atoms for Peace Award in 1959. - Saul Stadtmazier Visit many more notable Jews at our website: www.dorledor.org 6/26 1998 18 COMMISSION FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF JEWISH HISTORY Walter & Lea Field, Founders:Sponsors Harold Berry & Irwin S. Field, Co-chairmen Harriet F. Siden, Secretary Study Taking Shape Hillel proceeds with its long-range planning process. 113 JULIE WIENER Staff Writer illel Day School needs to overhaul its board and administrative structures, develop a clearer mission statement, evaluate its curriculum and take steps to ensure its future fiscal viability According to a recent letter sent to Hillel parents, these are some of the pre- liminary findings of a long-range plan- ning process initiated this spring by the 40-year-old Conservative day school. Hillel formed a long-range plan- ning steering committee that hired Washington DC-based consultant William Weary to help evaluate a range of issues. Some of the issues are use of volunteers, fund-raising, com- munity outreach, public relations, and communication among parents, administrators and teachers. , Two teachers are on the 13-person steering committee, chaired by board members Lisa Weiner and Rich Grossman. According to a recent letter to par- ents drafted by Weiner and Grossman, Weary reviewed a "foot-high stack" of documents and spent three days inter- viewing faculty, administration, board members, students, parents, alumni and community members to gain familiarity with all aspects of Hillel life. He facilitated the first of three board and administration retreats and will lead a faculty retreat and a corn- munity retreat this fall. The process will conclude with Weary writing the first draft of a long- range plan, which the steering com- mittee will revise and present to Hillel's board for approval and imple- mentation. Weiner's and Grossman's letter said the process has exposed Hillel's strengths as well as its challenges. Among the school's strengths are per- petuating Jewish values, forging strong friendships among students and par- ents and teaching religious and ritual skills, they told parents. The letter did not address teacher I morale, but Weiner and Grossman told The Jewish News that Weary inter- viewed at least 20 teachers, and that faculty will have further opportunity to give feedback at the fall retreat. The Hillel Day School Teachers' Association, an affiliate of the Michigan Federation of Teachers, stat- ed its interest in an independent review of the school in January, a week4 after the board, alleging a history of misconduct, voted to dismiss longtime teacher Shula Fleischer. The teachers' association briefly considered hiring its own consultant independent of Hillel's board, but appears to have dropped that plan. Hillel Day School Teachers' Association President Malka Littman could not be reached to comment on 1 the current long-range planning process. Fleischer, former president of the teachers' association, is contesting her dismissal through an arbitration process, which concluded hearings on June 10. A binding decision is expect- ed by the end of summer, said the arbitrator, Erwin Ellmann. Hillel President Steven Margolin 4 declined to say how much the school is spending for the long-range plan- ning process. Weary said he has con- sulted for almost 200 institutions, including a number of Conservative day schools. ❑ Clarification Rick Goren, not "Oren," as noted in the June 19 edition, is the director.of development at Tamarack Camps. Albert Ben Drihen was pictured on page 78 of the June 19 edition. He is deputy mayor of Migdal FlaEmek. Partnership 2000 was launched by the Jewish Agency for Israel's Department of Rural and Urban Development, not the United Jewish Appeal as noted in the June 19 edition. 10 4