Friday, November 22, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Bill Puglia no 14 A rare, quiet moment at home for Larry and Shelly Jackier. BY DEBBIE WALLIS LANDAU Special to the Jewish News arry and Shelly Jackier must often feel like the proverbial two ships passing in the night. Con- sider Oct. 9 for example. Larry, a United Jewish Appeal national vice chairman and national missions chairman, embarked on an eight-day Presidents Mission to Is- rael, Vienna and the Mauthausen Concentration Camp in northern Austria. The mission was the second-largest fund-raising trip of the year sponsored by UJA with the cooperation of the Jewish Welfare Federation. It was also Larry's third trip to Israel since January. While other Detroiter were sip- ping their first morning coffee Oct. 9, Shelly was at the Southfield Hil- ton preparing to welcome nearly 200 participants and guests to a day-long symposium on the recent United States Free Trade Agreement with Israel. As executive director of the new Detroit branch of the American-Israel Chamber of Com- merce, Shelly was seeing months of intense preparations culminate in this first joint venture between the Chamber, the Michigan Department of Commerce and the U.S. Com- merce Department. The next day she would be ensconced as usual in her cluttered office on the second floor of the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. She would make ar- rangements for a forthcoming recital by her Israeli folk dance group, Hora Aviv; try to locate Chamber board members to plan a future meeting; prepare some notes for a talk on be- half of Bar-Ilan University: and try to fulfill both parental roles for daughter Ariana, 14 1/2, and son Seth, 12, in Larry's absence. When Larry returned to Michi- gan on Oct. 16, the demands of his busy legal practice would again be- ckon. Co-mingled with his workday duties at Schlussel, Lifton, Simon, Rands, Kaufman, Galvin & Jackier are the responsibilities he shares with three other vice chairmen of the 1986 Allied Jewish Campaign. For the third consecutive year, Larry was elected vice president of the Detroit Holocaust Memorial Center. He's also local chairman of Project Renewal and a board member of United Jewish Charities. In addition, he serves on the execu- tive committees of Bar-Ilan Univer- sity, the Jewish Welfare Federation . and the Jewish Community Council. A longtime, ardent advocate of free- dom for Soviet Jewry, Larry — with Joel Gershenson and other local in- dividuals — was instrumental in the re-structuring of the Detroit Soviet Jewry Committee of the Jewish Community Council in the early 1980s. A myriad of other concerns — both global and local — challenge his energies daily. And he somehow finds time for them all. "Being active Jewishly can take away from the family unit," Larry admits soberly. But the bottom line is incredibly enriching friendships." Addressing the positive side of any challenge seems to come quite naturally to both Jackiers. They know there's no real shortcut to Is- rael, Moscow, or Ethiopia — except through communication. Building bridges is what both Shelly and Larry Jackier do so well. They cross not only physical miles but intangi- ble ones: gaps in understanding and information. The couple has had a significant impact on the way Detroit's Jewish community has come to support fel- low Jews in Israel and the Diaspora. While fund raising has been a major focus of their widespread efforts, the encouragement of solidarity with Jews in difficulty and the strengthening of American Jews' emotional links to the Promised Land have predominated their con- tributions. One of the major reasons Larry has become so enthusiastic about leading people on missions to Israel — and he does so several times a year — is because "It's very difficult