ATTENTION Business Professionals When you place your printing or duplicating order, do you expect... QUALITY? ACCURACY? ON TIME DELIVERY? COMPETITIVE PRICES? CARLA JEAN SCHWARTZ LOCAL COLUMNIST Name: Jacob Jack Schwartz You Bet! Age: 74 Place your next order with TRANSPRINT...we deliver! ***INTRODUCTORY OFFER DISCOUNT*** 10% Off Your Order of $100 or More Limit 1 Per Customer Offer Expires 12/15/92 Complete Printing & Bindery Services Delivering Quality at Competitive Prices 24300 Oneida Oak Park, MI 48237 Jim McCarthy Family: He is married to Jay (Jenette) Shorr. He has three children. His daughter, Robin Stern, is a hospital administrator and resides in San Diego. One son, Stanley, is an attorney in Chicago, while his other son, Alan, is a physician in Newport Beach. Education: He received an accounting degree from St. Johns University in New York. He attended graduate school at New York Univer- sity. Transprint- 313-547-6230 Jack Schwartz: War Veteran 1 POND A NEL . z 0 a IS PLEASED TO WELCOME TRICIA SPECIALIZING IN MANICURES & PEDICURES Residence: Farmington Hills Synagogue: Congregation Beth Achim Organizations: He is the state commander of the Jew- ish War Veterans. He is the president of the Joint Memorial Day Association, responsible for putting wreaths on graves of Mich- igan's 20,000 veterans of all denominations. He is also chief of staff of the Allied Veteran Council of Wayne County and a member of Amvets and the American Legion. He is on the board of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and a delegate to the Jewish Community Council. Hobbies: Golf, boating and fishing 29977 ORCHARD LAKE RD . FARMINGTON HILLS 855-1050 20% Off Portraits is Month A Gol e Q&erg Photog phy 330-2420 W Senio C' r ilitii izens Childre Birthday • - (in Nove When. Thesda Nov. ,t17 , Nov. 18 Wedn Thursd , Nov. 19 Favorite Book: The last book he read was An Ameri- can in Vietnam. Latest Accomplishment: He was elected to the Com- manders Group of the Vet- erans Organizations of the State of Michigan that meets regularly with the governor and government officials. He is one of 50 members of this elite group that works for all veterans and their families. "I am the first Jew to ever have been elected to this," stated Mr. Schwartz. Philosophy: "Be good to others and try to help others." Background: Jack Schwartz grew up in an Or- thodox home in New York with his parents, Abraham and Gussie. His neighbor- hood was all Jewish, and he met his first non-Jewish friends at the Eastern District High School in Brooklyn. After he graduated high school, he attended Brooklyn College. When he received a scholarship to St. Johns University, he transferred. In 1939 he and his univer- sity friends went to protest against the Nazis in Madison Square Garden and In 1939 he and his university friends went to protest against the Nazis. were beat up. "We tried to make the world aware of what was going on," he recalled. After graduation, he worked as a cost accountant for a company that made machine gun parts for the war. In 1942, he enlisted in the Army and stayed for more than four years. He began as an airplane mechanic, but then worked as an accountant ter- minating the government contract with General Mo- tors. In 1947, he became a member of the Jewish War Veterans and has been ac- tive for 45 years. "I re- member it vividly because I was sworn in with Walter Klein, then the executive di- rector of the Jewish Com- munity Council, and Judge Lawrence Gubow." While in Detroit, he met his wife on a blind date ar- ranged by his sister-in-law, Lillian Stein. "We are still fixed up 47 years later." He began working with his father-in-law, who owned a restaurant. He then opened up one of the first kosher food carry-out restaurants, Jack's Food Box on Nine Mile and Coolidge. The business was not successful, and he went back to work for the Army for 25 years. He began as a cost analyst and was promoted to the director of contract administration in Michigan. He said that whenever he felt anti- Semitism, he spoke up. He retired in 1978 and is now a consultant. He spends much of his free time working with programs for veterans, including homeless, drug and hospital projects. He is always recruiting new members and telling old members to become active. "We need numbers," he said. 0