Year In Review For Detroit, A Year Of Tighter Fiscal Control A "flat" Campaign during recessionary times causes the community to re-evaulate itself and make changes. PHIL JACOBS Managing Editor 2 HiIlel leachers went on strike for higher wages. ords like "strategic planning," "Days of Decision," and "prior- ity budgeting" set a constant undertone during the Detroit Jewish community's year of 5752. There were major changes, victories and de- feats, but most of them seemed set against a backdrop of a need for serious fiscal responsibility. In past years, Federation agencies could overextend themselves within rea- son with the knowledge that the um- brella agency would pick up the deficit. This year, however, that would change. A "flat" Allied Jewish Campaign forced Federation to insist that agencies cut back at least 5 percent. A flat Campaign drove the Federa- tion to "Days of Decision," an early sum- mer effort to close this year's Campaign and give Campaign and Federation leadership a more accurate idea of what monies they actually had. Days of De- cision brought the sluggish Campaign back to last year's total of $26 million. It also brought in hundreds of first-time givers. Federation moved its headquarters from what for years was the address of the organized Jewish community, 163 Madison downtown, to its new location in Bloomfield Hills on Telegraph Road. The headquarters was dedicated in the name of worldwide Jewish communi- ty leader and philanthropist, Max Fish- er. Even with its shiny new address, the Federation was watching its agencies like never before. It set up a committee to manage the Jewish Home for the Aged, which had taken some $4 million in supplemental allocations, an amount Federation could ill afford. Federation also stepped into the Agency for Jewish Education. A Giles Committee report advised Federation to leave the business of teaching ele- mentary school age children to area syn- agogues. It also brought in Howard Gelberd of San Francisco as its newly appointed executive director. Tlvs was a year, though, that hit area