• THE SYNAGOGUE CAMPUS OF LIVING JUDAISM • JOIN US for the ANNUAL LUBAVITCH FOUNDATION DINIIER Benefiting the Synagogue Campus of Living Judaism Sunday, September 20, 1992 Elul 22, 5752 The Grand Manor at Fairlane Guest Speaker Elie Wesel Nobel Laureate, Author and Human Rights Activist Dinner Chairman Florine Mark Dr. ERIC GORDON SIDNEY FIELDS orn and educated in New York, Sidney Fields received his B.B.A. from the CCNY School of Business and worked briefly in the area before electing to try his fortunes in Detroit. "My wife, Jewel, urged the move," Fields said. "She believed our future was here." It was. Sidney Fields raised a family in Detroit, estab- lished a professional firm in Detroit and became involved in Detroit's Jewish community. In 1945, Fields helped found Zack, Fields and Company, a local accounting firm. In 1989 he retired, but his involvement in the field continues. He sponsors the Distinguished Tax Lecture at Wayne State University, 'an annual event that regularly features the finest tax experts in the country, and the Fields scholarship is annually awarded to the best accounting student in Wayne. Fields has also been a fervent supporter of Detroit's Jewish community, contributing, he guesses, to almost every Jewish organization in the city. Raised in an orthodox environment, Fields drifted from its rigorous tenets during his adult life, but finds himself returning to his roots, through Lubavitch. He serves on several committees for the Synagogue Campus of Living Judaism. He is a member of Bais Chabad Torah Center of West Bloomfield, and he attends Lubavitcher programs and classes. He par- ticularly enjoys his study sessions with Rabbi Herschel Finnan. His wife of 50 years supports his philanthropy and encourages his interest in education. Their children, who have chosen helping professions as their careers, follow their example. B "The Lubavitchers don't just talk about Jewish education. They're creating a Synagogue Campus of Living Judaism that will serve as a resource center for the region." native Detroiter, Eric Gordon received his Bachelor's and Master's degrees from Wayne State University and his Ph.D. from Michigan State University, specializing in educational psychology. He knew what he would do with his degrees while he was earning them. He started I.D.E.A. (Instructional Development and Evaluation Associates) while in graduate school. Today, the firm employs 30 who provide program evaluation services, as well as information manage- ment systems and promotional activities. Clients include Chrysler, Ford, General Motors and the State of Michigan Department of Education. When he's not working, Gordon is still working — this time for many Jewish organizations, devoting time, energy, financial assistance and his considerable administrative skills. His children, who attend Hillel and Akiva, local day schools, are acquiring the same commitment to the Jewish community. In addition to these activities, Gordon is also involved with Lubavitch. He dates his connection to the organization to his grandfather, a member of the original Nusach H'Ari Synagogue in Detroit. That institution later merged with Mishkan Israel and subsequently became the Lubavitch Center of Oak Park. Gordon's grandfather was also a friend and supporter of Rabbi Shemtov when he first came to Detroit. But it is not simply nostalgia that brings Gordon to Lubavitch lectures and Lubavitch events. "I believe we need to identify as Jews, and I see Lubavitch reaching out to our college youth, helping them establish and maintain their Jewish identities." His wife Sarah, a child of Holocaust survivors, supports these efforts. She, too, believes fervently in Jewish preservation. A "When Jews intermarry, they disappear. The Lubavitch are helping ensure that our Jewish children grow up to have Jewish children of their own." President, Weight Watchers Group THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27