i! ;331 ,d• ifccf:( 1011 24 Friday, October 18, 1985 MEI KlAhli)1 - PHAr THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS CUSTOM FRAMING WHAT'S Iti fi MIME? ‘cd* Since 1950 i Over 9,000 EVERYTHING! SErviouz YOU'RE INTERESTED IN DIAMONDS, the Diamond People For Over 50 Years SuUTHFIELDT1D CONGRESS BLDG SUITE 100 IOW DI OCK SOUTH or 11 MU f ROADI LOCAL NEWS ,Posters, Prints- !Reproductions & Original Graphics ' In Stock `Fisher Meeting' Continued from Page 1 Ready Made Frames, Plastic, Wood, Metal, Ovals, Rounds FIELD ART STUDIO 2646 Coolidge Hwy. (i of I z Mae) Berkley • 399-1320 or 399-1327 HRS: 9•5 Mon.•Sat. or by appointment PHONE 645-9200 Max Fisher, at the podium, shares a light moment with his guests. Harvard Row's 1 h Anniversary A generation of community leader- ship. Their fathers, Samuel Frankel and Tom Borman, have attended the pace-setter gather- ings for years. The senior Bor- man, who will be 90 next week, has been taking Paul to the meetings since he was 7 years old. As always, the banter be- tween the host and his guests was light. When Fisher recalled that his first gift to the Cam- paign was $5 in 1933, Wilfred (Brud) Doner exulted that for once, in 1933, he had given more than Max Fisher. But behind the banter was a seriousness of purpose as con- tributors rose, one by one, to re- late a personal incident or dis- turbing piece of news that moti- vated him or her to announce an increased Campaign gift. A. Alfred Taubman, for example, described his own encounter with the plight of Soviet Jews when he was a visitor to Russia. Fisher enumerated the issues tha concern him: the challenge of absorbing more than 12,000 Ethiopian Jewish immigrants in the midst of Israel's economic problems; local needs, especially Jewish education; and the anti- Semitism voiced by Louis Far- rakhan. But, mostly, Fisher appealed to his guests' understanding of their responsibility as Jews. "This meeting will set the pace for Detroit and all Jewish com- munities across America," he said. "I don't know of any other city in the country that can do what we've done tonight." up to on our collection of Fall/Winter Shoes: and Handbags Former Envoy To Speak not all styles on sale all previous sales excluded , Also Available At Maison Sho•lime at Claire Pearon Somerset Mall, Troy 643*-0450 During his tenure as ambas- sador, Lewis was personally in- volved in every facet of U.S.- Israeli relations, as well as in all aspects of the ongoing Mid- dle East peace process. He worked closely with Prime Minister Menachem Begin dur- ing the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty and served as a key •member of the U.S. delegation at the 1978 Camp David Sum- mit. In recent years, Lewis helped faCilitate a steady improvement in,U.S.-Israeli relations and was one of the architects of a close strategic alliance between the two countries. Lewis and his wife SaltCho will also be present at the meet- ing, have been hailed as true friends of Israel who left an in- delible mark on the Jewishpeople and the Jewish state- Stanley D. Frankel and Paul D. Borman are chairmen of the 1986 Allied Jewish Campaign. Larry S. Jackier, Emery I. Klein, Graham: A. Orley and Joseph H. Orley are vipe- chairmen. Samuel Lewis Samuel Winfield Lewis, former U.S. Ambassador to Is- rael, will speak on behalf of the 1986 Allied Jewish Campaign at a cocktail reception Oct. 28 at KnollwOod Country Club. Campaign contributors of $25,000 are invited to attend die gathering with their spouses. 416e.