ENFERIA1NIVIENT Debra Silberstein holds the weekend anchor post at Channel 4. News Beat Almost as soon as Debra Silberstein adopted Detroit as her home she's off to a new assignment JOANNE ZUROFF Special to The Jewish News n her five years here, Channel 4 weekend co-anchor Debra Silberstein has become an ardent fan of and a "good-will ambassador" for the Motor Ci- ty. As Channel 4's education reporter she has done extensive studies on educational issues. She has also covered political events, disasters and celebrations and has interviewed con- troversial individuals and public figures. Silberstein says of her work, "It's different every day. If a major story happens, everything changes, and that kind of spontaneity has always held my interest. You never know if you'll be covering . . . a shooting at a high school or five babies born to one mother or a plane crash or the fact that one little girl survived. That's the kind of thing that always keeps me on my toes and always keeps me very aware of what's going on." But now, Silberstein has some new challenges. She will leave her an- chor and reporter post at WDIV July 13 to become the weekday anchor at WKRC-TV, an ABC affiliate in Cin- cinnati, Ohio. Although she is excited about her new Silberstein said she will find it difficult to leave Detroit, her family and friends. "It's very bit- tersweet for me and my husband. - Some of the best friends I made have been here in Detroit. I will miss my friends the most:' Silberstein said that it would "take a whopper of a job" for her to leave the Motor City. "This is it!" she exclaimed. What she also will find difficult is dealing with a completely different news organization. For the past seven years she has been affiliated with Post-Newsweek. "It will be real hard to have different bosses?' she said. A native of Morton Grove, Ill., a Chicago suburb, Silberstein says she's always had an affinity for English and has always loved writing. Further inspiration came from Allan Alter- man, Silberstein's stepfather, who was a CPA as well as a part-time radio broadcaster. "I think he had a great influence on me," Silberstein muses. "He always had the love of radio and from him I caught the 'disease' of be- ing a news junkie and always watch- ing the news in Chicago . • .. seeing all the different people and how they covered a story and how one station covered it differently than another?' Silberstein first came to Michigan as a student at Michigan State University. She liked its broadcast program, and during her freshman and sophomore years, volunteered at WELM, a cable station. "I had a one- track mind and that was journalism," she admits. Taking advantage of MSU's over- seas study program, Silberstein went to England during the summer of her sophomore year. She studied interna- tional politics and. wrote a thesis on "The Differences in American and British Television News?' In Engithid, she met Detroiter Marc Curtis, who was to become her husband eight years later. In her junior year at MSU, Silber- stein landed a "real job" at Lansing's WVIC radio, covering school board meetings and city council activities. That summer, when the Republican convention convened in Detroit, she interned at WJBK, Channel 2. Returning to MSU for her senior year, Silberstein worked as a reporter for WILX, Channel 10 in Lansing. "Things happened kind of fast during my college years," she recalls. "I went, within the course of a few months, from reporter to noon anchor to 11 p.m. anchor." By the second quarter of her final year, Silberstein was going to classes in the morning and doing her news shift nightly. "I molded my own curriculum because I was in the business so much earlier. I set up independent study programs and internships?' During her internship at Channel I GOING PLACES WEEK OF June 17-23 SPECIAL EVENTS TOLEDO ZOO 2700 Broadway, Toledo, pandas Le Le and Nan Nan, through August, admission. 419-726-3272. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Virgil Thomson program: today, film "The River," followed by discussion and concert at Varner Recital Hall; Saturday, lecture at Sunset Terrace, concert at Varner, admission. 370-3013. MOTOR CITY HORSE SHOW Bloomfield Open Hunt, 405 E. Long Lake, Bloomfield Hills, Wednesday. through June 19, admission. 644-9411. COMEDY COMEDY CASTLE 2593 Woodward, Berkley, Frankie Pace, today and Saturday, Malone and Nootcheez, Tuesday through June 25, admission. 542-9900. COMEDY CASTLE AT PUZZLE'S 29900 Van Dyke, Warren, Kip Adotta, today and Saturday; Bill Schift, Tuesday through June 25, admission. 751-6010. DOWNTOWN COMEDY CASTLE Westin Hotel, Detroit, Bill Thomas, today and Saturday; "Hobson," Monday through June 25, admission. THEATER FARMINGTON COMMUNITY BAND, CHORUS AND MUSICALE Farmington Harrison High School, "Oklahoma!," through Sunday,admission. 661-4604. BIRMINGHAM THEATER 211 S. Woodward, Birmingham, "Girl Crazy," now through July 10, admission, 644-3533. SHAW FESTIVAL Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, and "You Never Can "Dangerous Corner," now through Oct. 15, "Hit the Deck," now through Oct. 16, "War and Peace," now through July 31, "Peter Pan," now through Oct. 16, admission. 416-468-2172. GREENFIELD VILLAGE Henry Ford Museum Theater, Dearborn, "Two Blind Mice," Fridays and Saturdays, now through July 16, plus this Sunday, admission. 271-1620. ON STAGE RESTAURANT 48 W. Adams, Detroit, "Le Continued on Page 63 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 61