National Committee for Bar- Ilan University in Israel. Rabbi Churgin saw his dream come true and served as BIU's first president, but he died suddenly in 1957. Phil Stollman became BIU's first Global Board chairman that same year, a position he held until 1984, then serving as honorary chairman for life. In 1966, the university had 2,000 students and 360 facul- ty, which grew to 5,000 stu- dents after the decisive Israeli victory in the June 1967 Six- Day War spurred a wave of aliyah. In the early 1970s, the Dr. Gerald and Leila Stollman in Israel at the Detroit community was key in celebration of BIU's 50th anniversary in June establishing the Judge Theodore Levin Chair in Law, which accelerated develop- campus. Real estate was something ment of Bar-Ilan's law school. Phil knew about as he and Max's suc- By the late 1980s, the small, experi- cess in Metro Detroit real estate and mental college had grown to a full- construction during the 1940s and fledged university of international rep- `50s made the money they would use utation, with 12,500 students in 35 to support their many philanthropies. academic departments. By Phil Phil located a suitable site for the Stollman's 90th birthday in 1994, campus north of Tel Aviv in Ramat there were 16,000 students. Before he Gan, but, according to Jerry, his dad died in 1998, Stollman saw aliyah had to convince Rabbi Churgin to from Russia nearly double the student include an orchard across the road in population within a few years, as plans the land allocation they requested and to expand the Ramat Gan campus and received from the government and the its five regional colleges in Ashkelon, Jewish National Fund in 1952. Ariel, Acre, Safed and Tzemah were BIU opened in 1955 with 56 stu- developed. dents, one building and six class- Today, BIU has more than 32,000 rooms, and growth was slow. Max and students: 22,000 in Ramat Gan and Frieda Stollman spent six weeks in 10,000 between the other five cam- Israel that year, working on campus puses. The orchard Phil Stollman plans after Max was appointed chair of insisted upon for future growth is now the Building Committee of the the architecturally striking new North Campus, home to nine buildings opened since 2000, with two more currently under construction. Impressive Reputation Jerry Stollman, himself a professor of American government and macro-eco- nomics at Oakland Community College, cautions that the way you judge a university is not how big it is, but how good it is." Bar-Ilan is home to respected scientific research institutes in physics, medicinal chemistry, mathe- matics, brain research, economics, strategic studies, developmental psychology, archeology, Jewish law and philosophy. The new Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center has drawn top academics and researchers from all over the world for groundbreaking work on Alzheimer's and brain tumors. "The jubilee year is a wonderful opportunity to thank Detroiters for their leadership and long-term com- mitment to the university," says Les Goldstein, Bar-Ilan's local executive director. "Our goal is to secure medi- um and large gifts to materially and substantially increase the strength of the university's research and academic quality. We want to continue to enhance our faculty, our doctoral pro- grams and our student body generally, while providing state-of-the-art resources essential to conduct cutting- edge research." A challenge, Goldstein says, is one that's common to all local non-profits, and that's to "expand efforts in a Jewish community that's not growing but reducing, and with unknown Jewish interests from the next genera- tion." Goldstein says the university has just taken the unprecedented step of renewing BIU President Professor Moshe Kaveh's contract for a fourth term, which the board of trustees extended to five years from the normal three-year terms. "Besides being a brilliant physicist, he is a terrific voice for moderation and reason within the Jewish world, particularly between the religious and the non-religious," Goldstein says. "It is a credit to the university that we are led by a man who accepts Jews and others as they are. Kaveh envisioned, funded, built and fully activated the new campus. As the campus grows, support now comes from many sources beyond Detroit, but Bar-Ilan will always be Detroit's proud legacy. 0 " Marking 50 Years . The Stollmans and Nusbaums continue to work on behalf of the university. Gerald and Leila Stoll- man and Bernard and Barbara Stollman are co-chairing Bar-Ilan University's Sept. 18 Jubilee Reunion Gala together with Joe and Fran Fetter and Irving and Barbara Nusbaum. The black-tie-preferred dinner will feature comedian Rabbi Bob Alper at congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield. For more information, call (248) 540-8900. Bar Elan Changed My Life' Lea Stollman Luger, development director of Yad Ezra, Metro Detroit's kosher food pantry, spent a year at Bar-Ilan from 1975-76 in a program for for- eign students. Phil and Max Stollman encouraged their niece to go, and it changed her life. Not only did she meet Richard Luger, who she would marry in 1979, but she adopted an observant lifestyle she had previously not found to be comfort- able or meaningful. . "The year was a really turning point for me reli- giously," Luger says. "I began to see the positive side of living a more observant life. Instead of Judaism being presented to me as a list of things that you can't do, I was able to witness and participate in all the positive aspects of Judaism." She particularly enjoyed keeping Shabbat with family and friends. "To me, keeping Shabbos is a reminder that though we can master our environ- ment, though we are as good as we are, we know there is a power greater than us. It puts life into per- spective." Luger last visited Bar-Ilan in 2003. As fondly as she remembered things, she found it to be even bet- ter. "I was incredibly impressed with how the cam- pus and student body has grown; and it seemed more inclusive that it was 30 years ago," she says, noting that when she was there, women couldn't wear pants on campus. "For students who want a more observant environ- ment, BIU can certainly provide that, but you can also be non-observant and take advantage of the wonderful programs that they offer and feel comfortable and excel. When I was there, the university tried to do both, but my guess is now it does it even better." BAR ILAN on page 64 Richard Luger and Lea Stollman, pictured here at Bar-Ilan in 1976, met at the university and were married in 1979. 8/25 2005 63