Something Extra Covering The World merica's major newspapers and news- magazines gave significant coverage to the Iraq war, but whether they did enough to prepare and enlighten readers about terrorism and related issues before 9-11 is a legitimate concern. A top Los Angeles Times editor hammered on this theme in his greetings at an awards banquet of 80 Jewish journalists last week in California. The ban- quet, the highlight of the four-day annual confer- ence of the American Jewish Press Association, took place at Universal Studios in Universal City. "Did we travel enough to those obscure countries many of our readers couldn't find on the map?" asked Alvin Shuster, the senior consulting editor. "Before 9-11, did we deal enough with the prospect of terror at its roots?" "Of course not," he said, "but those of us with major operations overseas made the effort. For example, our reporters did quite a few stories on the rising threat of Islamic fundamentalism." Mideast coverage has strong local interest around L.A. Los Angeles County has the largest concentra- tion of Muslims and the second-highest number of Jews outside the Mideast (Metro Detroit ranks sec- ond and 11th, respectively). To cover Operation Iraqi Freedom, the Times assigned 30 reporters and photographers to the region. "Some, of course, were imbedded with the troops, that innovative approach to war coverage," Shuster said. "I had qualms about it at the begin- ning, ly. but it seems to have worked quite effective- ni of Detroit's Schulze Elementary School that she grabbed a shovel on May 28 and helped plant a tree in the school's front yard. The school is located south of the former Jewish Community Center at Meyers and Curtis. The tree is a gift from the JCCouncil in apprecia- tion for Straus' years of service to the community. In addition, its planting marks the founding of the Schulze Alumni Organization, a member of the Detroit Jewish Coalition for Literacy (DJCL). The alumni will begin tutoring at the Detroit school during summer school and will continue during the regular school year. A program of the JCCouncil, the DJCL comprises 34 member organizations, with 370 volunteers who tutor and provide other services at 36 schools in Detroit, Oakland County and other sites. To volun- teer, contact Phyllis Jarvis at (248) 642-5393 or e- mail Jarvis@jfind.org — Diana Lieberman of '61, was_ reunion chairman, heading a 20-person planning committee. Goldstone gave kudos to corn- mittee member and former Temptations' guitarist and songwriter Cornelius Grant, Class of '61, of L.A., who headed up the party's entertainment. Those who flew in from the Detroit area included Doreen Curtis Hermelin of Bingham Farms, Class of '57; Susu Miller Sosnick of Bloomfield Hills, Class of '61; and Norton "Norty" Stern and Sherrie Gross Stern, Class of `62, of Farmington Hills. The committee planned for 150 guests and twice as many came, said Goldstone. So her committee contacted another Mumford alumnus, Dr. Kenneth Burnley, Class of '60, current superintendent of Detroit Public Schools. Any money left over will be donated to Mumford High School. "Mumford was a special place," Okum said. "The Jewish, Afro American and gentile communities lived close to one another, knew one another and the bonding at Mumford was incredible." — Sharon Zuckerman 55 The Times now has five reporters based in Iraq with others working from Afghanistan, Israel and Egypt. "Normally," Shuster said, "we have about 33 reporters permanently stationed overseas — a few less than the New York Times, a few more than the Washington Post." Shuster, a former Los Angeles Times foreign editor and a current Columbia Journalism Review con- tributing editor, worries about world coverage. "I worry about whether the media in general will continue to devote the time and energy and talent to covering global issues in the way they have since 9-11," he said. "I worry that too soon, too fast, the media will forget Iraq and Afghanistan, and the rest of the world, and once again turn inward. Do we really . want to go around the world in 80 seconds or one minute, depending on your cable network?" There's no waffling at the Los Angeles Times over interest among Americans in global news. As Shuster put it: "Explain the issues, make them relevant, present them with skill and style, and the readers will be there. That's been our experience. So we'll keep at it." —Robert A. Sklar Schulze Alumni Unite etroiter Kathleen Straus is president of the Michigan Board of Education and immedi- ate past president of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. But it was in her capacity as a parent of two alum- D Kathleen Straus wields a shovel at Schulze Elementary School. Former Mumford grads and spouses: Pattye Asarch of Mar Vista, Calif; Joyce Crenshaw of Los Angeles; Howard Goldberg of Oxnard, Calif; Joel Gilman of Beverly Hills, Calif; Karen Goldstone Encino Calif; David Molitz of Henderson, Nev.; Gloria Taylor of Pacoima, Calif; Rick Gold of Laguna Beach, Calif; and Leslie Molitz of Henderson, Nev. Mumford 'West' Wins Fellowship bile the first graduates of Detroit's Mumford High School celebrated their 50th reunion in Detroit last month, more than 300 for- mer grads also gathered in Los Angeles for the first Mumford reunion on the West Coast. Former and current Detroiters swooped into L.A. for the gala reunion party May 24 at the El Caballero Country Club in Tarzana, and continued their festivi- ties at a picnic the next day. They came from as far as Hawaii and Florida as well as Utah, Washington, D.C. and, of course, Detroit. Although the event was open to all Mumford alumni, a majority of the atten- dees were from the classes of 1953-1970. "We don't see people from high school often so this was really special. The atmosphere was wonderful," said Ron Okum of San Marino, Class of '58 and past president of the Rose Bowl. Karen Rodgers Goldstone of Encino, Calif., Class taff writer Sharon Luckerman has been select- ed to participate as a Gralla Fellow in the Gralla Fellows Program for Journalists in the Jewish Press at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., July 20-24. She will join 17 other journal- ists from around the country in Zuckerman classes about American Jewry, including the study of Jewish texts and history, interfaith rela- tions and issues concerning the current and his- toric Israel-Arab situation. The fellows will meet Jewish and Muslim schol- ars and tour sections of Jewish Boston. —Keri Guten Cohen w s ITN 7/ 4 2003 11