AA A This Prayers for Courtney Cantor; inching toward a deportation; Community Council gets on-line. A dozen of Courtney Cantor's closest friends from the University of Michi- gan mourned her death by attending Maariv services in her memory at U- M Hillel last Tuesday through Thurs- day evenings. "I think it was really important for them. We needed to give them space, a focus at the end of the day, to really mourn Courtney and to connect to each other," said Rabbi Rich Kirschen, Hillel associate director. "Not that it's easy to put any kind of framework on such a tragedy, but we gave them a place to go to pay their respects." The daughter of Sherry and George Cantor of West Bloomfield, Courtney, 18, died Oct. 16 in an acci- dental fall from a window in her sixth-floor room in Mary Markley Hall on the Ann Arbor campus. The freshman was enrolled in the 21st Century living-learning program at Markley. The Reform-style Maariv services paralleled the shiva ser- vices Courtney's family was attending in West Bloomfield. The stu- dents concluded with lighting a yahrtzeit can- dle, reciting Kaddish and consoling each other, Kirschen said. A former Nazi concen- tration camp guard liv- ing in Sterling Heights is one step closer to being deported to Croa- tia. The U.S. Board of Immigration Appeals last week upheld the deporta- tion order entered last year against Ferdinand Hammer, 78. Hammer's attorney, William Bufalino II, did not return phone calls from The Jewish News, but told The Detroit News he would appeal the deportation order to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincin- nati. Hammer has 30 days to appeal, aar said Eli Rosenbaum, director of the Department of Justice's Office of Spe- cial Investigations (OSI). "This clearly hastens the day on which we'll be able to remove him from the United States," said Rosenbaum. Hammer was stripped of his U.S. citizenship in 1996 And did not appeal. In prosecuting the 1996 denaturalization case, the OSI success- fully proved that Hammer served as an armed Nazi Waffen-SS guard at Auschwitz, Sachsenhausen and Flossenberg death camps and had obtained U.S. citizenship by supplying erroneous infor- mation about his wartime activities. The Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit has come up with a new way to inform political watchers. E mail Advocate sends messages to subscribers and gives information updates on public policy issues, notice of events and legislative action alerts. To subscribe, e-mail Rabbi Marla Feldman at feldman@jfind.org or call (248) 642-5393. All ■ w. Remember When • • • From the pages of The Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 1288 Musicians in six European countries united across airwaves from Rome to perform a tone poem composed to mark the 50th anniversary of Kristallnacht. Crystal Psalms was written by Alvin Curran and per- formed by violinists in Copen- hagen, cellists in Amsterdam, trom- bonists in Frankfurt, saxophonists in Paris and flutists in Vienna. Prime Minister Menachem Begin suggested that the prime minister's office and the Foreign Ministry be transferred to east Jerusalem. This was to reinforce Israel's stand that the capital remain united and under Israeli sovereignty. - 100-Year Celebration Of Detroit Jewry Children at the Woo dward Avenue Jewish Communi Center get some pointersfrom librarian Rose Ellias. Pictured with her, circa 1930s, are: Mil- ton Bogrow, Rachel Friedman, Irving Schuraytz and Bernice Rich. Photo courtesy of the Leonard N Simons Jewish Community Archives/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. 0/30 - '41•11 1111.1111•111111111110.- The Danish fishing boat Astrid, which was part of a flotilla of small craft that ferried Danish Jews to safety in Sweden in 1943, was per- manently landbound at the foot of Mt. Carmel as a monument to the bravery of the Danish people. Mattiyahu Sharon, retiring press counselor at the Israel Embassy in London, was found shot to death in his apartment with a pistol beside the body. Midrasha College of Jewish Studies opened the first Hebrew Ulpan to be held in Detroit. Teacher Joshua Be'eri conducted the class at the Midrasha building on Schaefer Highway for two hours each Tues- day for 20 weeks. Bertram Loeb of Ottawa, one of the leaders in the establishment of the first supermarket in Israel, com- mended Nathan and John Lurie of Detroit for their share in the effort. 1948. ................... Dr. Carlos Prio Socarras, newly elected president of Cuba, said he opposed the plan to partition Pales-- tine into separate Arab and Jewish states. Cuba joined the Arab states last year at the U.N. General Assembly in voting against the par- tition resolution.