CLOSE-UP ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR INSURANCE??? 1 AUTO' 'HOM E) • multi-car save 150 /0 • safety save 10% •AARP member save 20% save 10% • non-smoker • over 55 years old save 10% save 30% •AARP • clean record save 20% (last 3 years) you save 50% you save 65% FOR MORE INFO - OR A FREE QUOTE Call MOSTYN INSURANCE GROUP 28208 Franklin Rd., Southfield Charlevoix Continued from preceding page Michael 352-2213 ttciEttE Cadillac SEE US FOR GREAT DEALS DAVID BURKE SALES & LEASING Cadillac Sedan DeVille's Immediate Delivery On from $18,999 ALLANTE *Just add tax, dealer prep charges and destination. locals and the Jews and there was a teenage confron- tation on the beach." Yearly Charlevoix visitor Chuckie Danto remembers the incident. "There was a fight on the beach, word spread and the next day most of the Jews left town." Rosalyn Goldstick, a per- manent Charlevoix resident says there are probably bet- ween five and ten year-round Jewish residents in Charlevoix. She and her hus- band, Clarence, attend Tem- ple B'nai Israel in Petoskey. "Some of the summer Jewish people in Charlevoix help support our temple. It's in its 91st year." Some people think that Charlevoix is being overdeveloped and over- crowded. "You can hardly get across the bridge," they say. Some think it is losing its casualness and catching up to the larger cities. But to true, devoted, diehard fans, summer without Charlevoix just wouldn't be summer. ❑ Detroiter Susan Weingarden spends her summers in Charlevoix. South Haven 7100 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 851-7200 Continued from Page 25 , - s ittA Fuller Fashion Boutique Sizes 16 to 24 up to 75% OFF ONE DAY ONLY SUN., AUG. 2, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. WE MUST GET RID OF ALL SPRING AND SUMMER MERCHANDISE TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR ALL-NEW FALL STOCK! Prior Purchases Excluded • All Sales Final w H Mile and Lahser 30 FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1987 Harvard Row Mall • No Layaways 354.459, Morris Horwitz and his assistant, Lisa Rafalson, in the Victoria's restored ball room: A homey, old-fashioned ambience. says she is "delighted" about. It was Iry Fidelman's parents who in 1911 bought the 80-acre farm about four miles east of South Haven which evolved into the resort. "It served all of our social needs," Sheila Fidelman em- phasizes. "It was our way of life." Celebrities performed and vacationed there. Some now- famous names worked and entertained at Fidelman's when they were, as yet, unknown. "In the '60s Loren- zo Music (television producer and the voice of Carlton the Doorman on Rhoda) was a bell hop. He waited tables, he worked by the pool. He was Jerry Music then." Earlier, Arte Johnson of TV's Laugh In worked at Fidelman's. "It was an ex- - citing time," she says with feeling. Despite the big names who frequented the resort, one of the family's favorite stories concerns their activity direc- tor, Tommy Lane, and a group of Persian Jews who were staying at the resort. Barry Fidelman tells the story with special enthusiasm: Once a week, the staff would put on a talent night which, under Tommy Lane's guiding hand, eventually became the Tommy Lane Show starring, of course, Tommy Lane. He was a stickler for professionalism, Barry recalls. Sporting a blond toupe, he affected the look and style of a Las Vegas lounge entertainer. He presented himself as the con- summate performer who could handle any audience with skill and ease. The Tommy Lane Show