"She had to leave every day at 6 a.m. for the one-hour bus ride to Jerusalem," said Lillian Gold of her daughter. "Having a cooperative hus- band and living on kibbutz all helped." • 5.• From the pages of The Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. Promises, Promises An Ordination Fulfills A Dream When the Union of American Hebrew Congregations held its annual meeting in Israel in March, a Detroiter com- pleted a lifetime journey. Marilyn (Miri) Gold Leichman, 49, was ordained at the UAHC conven- tion, becoming the third Israeli woman rabbi. A product of Berkley High School and the University of Michigan, Gold went to Israel as a gift from her par- ents for graduating from Congregation Shaarey Zedek's Hebrew High School. Coming back from her USY summer trip, she told her mother, Lillian, Israel was the place she wanted to live. Gold spent her U-M junior year studying at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She made aliya in 1976 and lives in Israel at Kibbutz Gezer, between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, near R _ amla, because it keeps kosher. Her decision to become a rabbi came after officiating at her daughter's bat mitzvah. Gold enrolled in a joint program, earning a master's in Jewish philosophy from Hebrew University and ordination from Hebrew Union College in five years. A black, Jewish mayoral candidate in San Francisco is borrowing a page out of Israeli Prime Minister-elect Ehud Barak's campaign playbook — and making relations with Israel a center- piece of his campaign strategy. Mark "Moshe" Hardie, a 28-year- old lawyer and convert to Orthodox Judaism, has adopted "One San Francisco" as the central theme of his Republican campaign, "echoing the successful 'One Israel' campaign of Barak," according to a report issued by his campaign team. Hardie, running against incumbent Mayor Willie Brown, has promised to make Jerusalem the primary sister city of San Francisco and to open a trade office there. Hardie is also promoting development of a state-of-the-art Jewish commercial center in San Francisco, with kosher restaurants, Jewish bookstores, Judaic shops and family-oriented movie theaters; mak- ing kosher meals available at all city- owned dining facilities, and placing an eruv, or a wall, around San Francisco to facilitate Shabbat observance. He called on several Jewish mem- bers of the entertainment industry, including Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg, David Geffen and Michael Eisner, to serve on his cam- paign committee because, as Hardie said, "I stand for tzedaka,” or charity. Remember When • • Marla Feldman holds gifts for refugees. A Housewarming For Kosovars On the note of "It is better to give than to receive," Rabbi Marla Feldman's housewarming party last weekend turned into a gathering of gifts for some soon-to-be new immi- grants from Kosovo. Feldman, assistant director for domestic concerns at the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit, recently had moved into a new condo. She was struck, she said, by the contrast between the blessings of her life and the tragedies of the Kosovar refugees who are moving here with lit- tle beyond the clothes on their backs. "Literally, the same week I had my housewarming, we got our first refugee family at the Jewish Family Service," Feldman said. "My hope is that items that my friends and family brought to my home will be shared with them." She gave her friends a list drawn up by the JFS and told them that she would rather have their "presence" and have them share their "presents" with those who really needed some help. The dish- es, glasses, flatware and towels will soon be in the hands of those who need them. Marking 100 Tears Of Detroit Jewry Pictured are members of the first high school graduating class of the United Hebrew Schools in 1928. Following graduation, the class organized an alumni association with Max Weine as its president. Weine, bottom row, second from left, later distinguished himself as one of the community's leading rabbis. 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. 1989 Philip Slomovitz, editor emeritus of the Jewish News was re-elected to the board of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Dr. Susan Hershberg Adelman, a Southfield pediatric surgeon, was chosen to be the first woman to preside over the Michigan State Medical Society. 1979 The State Correctional Facility at Auburn, N.Y., a maximum-security prison, agreed to provide kosher food for Jewish inmates. Albert and Libbie Posen, mem- bers of Adat Shalom Synagogue, marked their 50th wedding anniver- sary by donating a fully equipped ambulance to Mogen David Adorn, Israel's emergency health service. 1969 Mark Spitz, of Indiana University, became the ninth swimmer in the 45-year history of the NCAA championship to win three titles in one year. The ruins of an Egyptian temple to Hather, the cow-headed goddess of the desert, have been discovered in the area of Solomon's Pillars at the southern end of the Negev. Lawrence W. Crohn was re-elected to a second term as president of the Jewish Community Council. Mr. and Mrs. Henri Goldberg ,/ were honored at a party given by the Jewish Folk Chorus prior to their departure for California. Goldberg was conductor of the chorus for 17 years. 1949 The Internal Relations Committee of the Jewish Community Council, directed by Julius Weinberg, report- ed that negotiations are under way to bring frozen kosher meat to the community. Henry Bernstein, Harry Glasgold, M. Solomon and Ben Yomen are prize winners of the first annual Michigan Jewish Artists Show.