Council President Paul D. Borman in his downtown office. Washington and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the eastern district of Michigan. "I was a prosecutor during the Warren (U.S. Supreme) Court and a defender during the Renquist-Berger Court," Borman said. "I thrive on adversity!' Borman's father, the late Tom Bor- man, repeatedly tried to lure him in- to the family business, Borman's Inc. So Borman acted as in-house counsel for the company for two years. Yet cor- porate counsel work wasn't satisfac- tory for Borman, who believes being on the defense side of the law makes him tenacious. "I always want to get it right. I feel very strongly about civil rights:' he said. "My parents were both im- migrants and both also felt strongly about poor people and their rights!' Gad-Harf joined the JCRC in in St. Louis in 1981 as a community relations associate and was promoted to the highest position when Norman Stack retired as executive director. Under Gad-Harfs leadership, the JCRC and the St. Louis Rabbinical Association formed the Jewish Fund for Human Needs, which provides support for organizations that serve poor people in St. Louis. He also led a major rally for Soviet Jewry, which The Council's new Executive Director David Gad-Harf. was followed by a large delegation from St. Louis attending the Washington rally before the 1987 U.S.-Soviet summit meeting. After college, Gad-Harf landed a position as a legislative assistant for former U.S. Sen. Dick Clark, D-Iowa, who was involved with rural health care. He later became the first ex- ecutive director for the National Rural Primary Care Association, a health-care lobbying group. When his wife, Nancy, enrolled in Washington University in St. Louis, Gad-Harf took the job with the St. Louis Council. It was during his first job in the Jewish communal world that Gad- Harf met Jewish Welfare Federation Executive Vice President Marty Kraar, at the time executive director for the St. Louis federation. "I'm still interested in health issues and have a strong commitment to the urban agenda;' Gad-Harf said. "I want to work for humane policies and programs for health care, educa- tion and employment!" Meanwhile, Gad-Harf and Bor- man are pooling their resources and meeting with members of the com- munity to achieve their goals — to im- plement the strategic plan they hope will give strength to the Council. ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25