NEWS Imm". GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Everything, But Everything Is On Sale .. . Harris Takes Over AJCommittee Rescue 50% OFF Nothing Held Back We're Selling To The Bare Walls • Paper Party Supplies • Great Cards • Gifts • Stationery • Gag Gifts • Picture Frames • Invitations IT ALL GOES! SO3 AND lxik11 OND . F savp 8 e lx0 01 4801 9 10;1ske 04 OSAGIAPRO voxs, t IA 31045 Mon -Sal."1-Novs 10-B, St.m. A2.-5 GOON 0.13) 855-303 Permit #100 Festival New Year's Eve Celebration!! Janus Productions & the Jewish Community Center present I DO! I DO! U.S. Savings Bonds make good business sense! Call today to find out just how much Bonds can do for you 1-800-US-BONDS Starring Nancy Gurwin & Joe Lannen Directed by Edgar A. Guest, III FULL SERVICE SIT DOWN DINNER catered by Sperber's $75 per person • Hors d'oeuvres - 7:00 p.m. • Show - 9:15 p.m • Dinner - 7:30 p.m. • Dancing after Midnite at the Jewish Community Center 6600 West Maple West Bloomfield Works Of Art Filled & Personalized For Your Baby 6 Children's Gifts rtna (313) 683-3999 ' 6'.)4441 For further information and reservations call 661-1000 ext: 112 293 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1990 or 354-0545 Toy & Gift Bottoms Filled With Fun & Function Local and Nationwide Delivery JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent T he recent announce- ment that David Harris would succeed the ailing Ira Silverman as executive vice president of the troubled American Jew- ish Committee came as no surprise to observers of the Jewish organizational world. There was a sense of in- evitability to Mr. Harris' as- cent. Even his detractors suggest that few other leaders on today's Jewish scene have been so clearly marked for leadership. But Mr. Harris takes the reigns at a particularly troubling time for the 85- year-old organization. Recently, the group's fi- nancial woes forced a painful reorganization, including a number of layoffs and pro- gram retrenchments, as well as the demise of its maga- zine, Present Tense. Indeed, Jewish groups of all types are experiencing a time of tremendous challenge, both financially and in terms of carving out a meaningful role for them- selves in the complex lives of modern American Jews. AJC officials are no doubt hoping that Mr. Harris's charisma will help turn things around for their organization. Once con- sidered the wealthiest and most respected of the na- tional Jewish groups, best known for its research and centrist positions on a range of international and nation- al issues, AJC has come to be perceived as elitist. Mr. Harris is often quoted in the news, a fact that offi- cials of other Jewish organ- izations acknowledge, sometimes begrudgingly. "He's the first Jewish media superstar," said one such official. The statement was part compliment, part complaint. "He has a way of attracting reporters from the big papers. When they want comments about a Jewish issue, David is the person they tend to turn to. And more often than not, he has something cogent to say." "He is a charismatic fellow," said Michael Miller, executive director of the New York Jewish Commun- ity Relations Council and one of the real shakers in the Jewish world. "I think David Harris is one of the David Harris most able Jewish profes- sionals today. His com- munications skills are definitely a very important plus." Mr. Harris, 41, is a tall man with a distinctly Ivy League look. But his face is frequently set in a look of worry and he has described himself as a "professional worrier." Mr. Harris came to pro- minence in Washington in 1987, when he was ap- pointed to fill Hyman Bookbinder's shoes as Wash- ington representative for the American Jewish Com- mittee — a daunting task, given Mr. Bookbinder's dy- namic personality and legion of friends in high places. But Mr. Harris, a graduate of the University of Penn- sylvania who did graduate work in international rela- tions at the London School of Economics and Oxford Uni- versity, had already made a successful career in Jewish advocacy. Before his AJC appointment, he worked for the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society in Rome and Vienna, and served as Washington director for the National Conference on Soviet Jewry. Mr. Harris' style is all coolness and detachment. He chooses his words with much deliberation. He resists questions about his self- image, about his strengths and weaknesses, and he has a tendency to intellectualize things, to talk in abstract terms. But beneath the surface is a passion that has guided his life. In a rare excursion into the personal, Mr. Harris de- scribed the factors that have shaped his occupational life. "My own immediate fami-