Remember When • That From the pages of The Jewish News • •,,..4h,O, for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 1989 Bound for Israel; bound for Poland; seeking survivors; recognition for an art historian. On the heels of Michigan Miracle Mission III to Israel, Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson is embarking on his own sojourn to the Jewish state. The New York-based American Jewish Congress is sending the out- spoken Patterson, along with seven other United States municipal leaders, on a free trip to Israel May 9-15. Once there, they will join colleagues from 45 countries (no Arab ones are invited, however) for the 19th Annual Jerusalem Conference of Mayors, a week of sessions and touring. "This is a very practical conference. It's not a junket just to visit Israel," said AJCongress Executive Director Phil Baum. "Jerusalem has problems in common with mayors across the world, and this is a useful format for address- ing the similarities and differences." Among the conference's aims: pro- moting greater global understanding of Israel and, according to a press release issued by the AJCongress, affirming to the mayors that "Jerusalem must remain the undivid- ed, eternal capital of Israel." Patterson, who has never been to Israel before and is a self-described "his- tory buff," said he is looking forward to seeing the historical sites of Jerusalem and Nazareth, as well as witnessing the Israeli elections and meeting his coun- terparts from other countries. Working through the United States Conference of Mayors, the AJCongress selects participants it believes "would profit from the experience," said Baum. While Patterson is in Israel, Governor John Engler will be visiting Poland. With his eyes possibly cast on a vice presidential nomination on the Republican ticket next year, he embarked on a five-day trade mission 5/7 What makes politicians smile? Left: Brooks Patterson; center, John Engler; right, Spencer Abraham to Poland on Wednesday, including a tour of Auschwitz. Ten percent of Michigan's residents are Polish-Americans, according to the Governor's Office, while 85 percent of the 100,000 Jews living in the Detroit area have Polish roots, said Michael Traison, an attorney at Miller Canfield. He has offices in Poland and works on restitution issues. Traison suggested the visit to Engler and set up a tour of Auschwitz with Jerzy Buzek, prime minister of Poland, and other officials. The gover- nor will also visit Poznan, the GM plant in Katowice and Warsaw. Now that Sen. Spencer Abraham has introduced legislation to create a tax exemption on settlement payments to Holocaust survivors by organizations cooperating with the Nazis, he is looking for help to get the bill passed. In order to make the strongest case possible — to get this legislation passed, I intend to take stories of metro-Detroit survivors to the United States Senate," he said. According to the Holocaust Memorial Center, Michigan is home to approximately 2,000 survivors; a major- ity of them live in Oakland County. Any affected survivor interested in giving testimony to the Senate, should contact Rachael Bolander in Abraham's office, (202) 224 6550. - An art historian from Wayne State University is being honored by Hebrew Union College next week. Joseph Gutmann will receive an hon- orary degree from the New York-based college, a seminary for Reform rabbis, cantors and educators. Gutmann, a Huntington Woods resident, is Art History Professor Emeritus at WSU. He is a widely respected and prolific author of 18 books and hundreds of articles in journals and encyclopedias. Gutmann writes a monthly column on Jewish art issues. Marking 100 Years Of Detroit Jewry Fanny Levin and Chana Michlin were trained in first aid to work in Palestine with the Palestine Legion, June 26, 1918. Photo courtesy of the Leonard N. Simons Jewish Community Archives/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. If you have information about this photograph, please call Heidi Christein, Jewish community archivist: (248) 642-4260. The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations of Metropolitan Detroit hosted a reception honoring U.S. District Court Judges Avern Cohn and Bernard A. Friedman. Downtown-Fox 1, Class A League champion during the regu- lar season, also won the B'nai B'rith Men's Basketball League Playoff championship. 19'19 Israel agreed to a cease-fire in south Lebanon after its artillery delivered the heaviest bombardment of Palestinian strongholds since Israeli forces invaded that territory a year ago. The freighter Ashdod became the first Israel-flag vessel ever to navi- gate the Suez Canal. 1969 Arthur Robert Gralla, a 35-year Navy veteran, has been promoted by President Richard Nixon to vice admiral and was named navy inspector general. He is the fourth Jew to attain this rank. Max M. Fisher, head of New Detroit Inc., was named by the president to mobilize a coordinat- ing committee of volunteers. 1959 Former Detroiter Dr. Morris Weitz, a professor of philosophy at Ohio State University, is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship for a year's study in Europe. Planes sprayed chemicals to assist, labor gangs on the ground fighting an invasion of yellow locusts. The problem is in the Jordan Valley and at Ein Gedi on the Dead Sea. 1949 Gov. G. Mennen Williams was enrolled as an honorary member of the Zionist Organization of America. The Women's Division of the Sholem Aleichem Institute spon- sored a "Restaurant Day" at the Workmen's Circle Center on Linwood with home-cooked meat:\