ICE ON ICE Tell him a little ice is all it takes to melt your heart. Pour on the ice. Coolly elegant diamond jewelry that's guaranteed to melt your heart. Ask the man in your life to come in and see our seleCtion of exquisite diamonds from the Ice On Ice Collection. They're sure to have temperatures rising. A DIAMOND Is FOREVER. KING page 17 nity who have con- tributed $1,000 or more to the Allied Jewish Cam- paign. The event, spon- sored by the Jewish Federation of Metropoli- tan Detroit, will be held at Adat Shalom Syna- gogue in Farmington Hills. In nearly four decades, Mr. King has conducted 30,000 interviews with politicians, movie stars, sports figures and other newsmakers. He has written eight books, in- cluding his latest, How To Talk To Anyone, Anytime, Anywhere. "To me, talk is one of the great pleasures of life, something I've always Larry King: Gift of gab. loved to do," he says in the book's introduction. "One of 7 years old. My pals called me my first memories of growing up the Mouthpiece.' I've been talk- in Brooklyn is standing on the ing ever since." During his speech to Cam- corner of 86th Street and Bay Parkway and announcing the paign contributors, Mr. King will makes of cars driving by. I was discuss more childhood memo- ries and highlights of his career. He got his start at radio station WAHR in Miami Beach, Fla. Since 1985 he has hosted Ca- ble News Network's Larry King Live, the only worldwide phone- in talk show. In addition to writ- ing newspaper columns, Mr. King has received many honors, including the Peabody Award, five Ace Awards and the Broad- caster of the Year Award from the International Radio and Television Society. Mr. King lives in Arlington, Va. For more information on the Federation event, call (810) 642- 4260, Ext. 273. ID Correction The date for the Detroit Chapter of Mizrachi Reli- gious Zionists of America event at Mark Ridley's Com- edy Castle is March 19. Revealing History A WSU law professor's book highlights an anti-Semite: the first 41/11Iiiltee woman attorney in the United States. ALAN ABRAMS SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS , Fine Jewelers Est. 1919 B r illia n ce Since 1919 30400 Telegraph Rd. Suite 134, Bingham Farms • 642-5575 w U) LLI CC F- LU LLI F- 18 A nn Arbor author and Wayne State University law professor Jane Fried- man didn't create Myra Bradwell. Yet without Friedman, would anyone have known that the overlooked-by-history Bradwell was America's first woman lawyer? Almost certainly, it would have taken many more years for Brad- well to be admitted to the Na- tional Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, N. Y. But last Sept., Friedman found herself at the Hall of Fame induction cere- monies, accepting the honor on behalf of the woman whose biog- raphy she had written, and who was being admitted to this pan- theon of feminism because of her book. That's a combination of thrill and triumph very few writ- ers ever get to savor in their ca- reers. Myra Bradwell was far more than just America's first woman lawyer. She was the woman who dra- matically sprung the grieving widow of Abraham Lincoln from the insane asylum to which she had been unjustly confined by her son in one of the most shameful episodes of American history. And she was an anti-Semite. But Friedman managed to place that in historical perspective, de- spite having been victimized by The Biography of Myra Bradwell (212 pages, $21.95). Friedman is currently on medical leave from Wayne State and working on her third book, a novel. Her first book was a legal treatise called "Contract Reme- dies in a Nut Shell," a publisher-inflicted title that still raises her hackles. Born in 1941 as Mar- cy Joy Goldbarg, Fried- man legally changed her given name after her marriage. She vivid- ly remembers growing up in a predominantly German neighborhood "with a Nazi Bund gang of toughs across the street." Because her mother, Pearl Goldbarg, looked "like a Swede," she had been able to rent a home for the family un- der the name of Olson. But when their landlord found out that the 01- sons were actually Jane Friedman: Myra Bradwell's biographer. Goldbargs, he gave them the option of mov- moved from being a dry-as-dust ing or buying the house "so he legal tome as are the novels of wouldn't have to face the neigh- bors when they caught on," re- John Grisham. In the year since its appear- called Friedman during a recent ance, a number of mainstream interview in her art-filled Aim Ar- newspaper critics have hailed bor home. "My father, Harry Goldbarg, America's First Woman Lawyer: anti-Semitism growing up in St. Paul, Minn. Friedman's well-written biog- raphy, in its third printing from Prometheus Books, is as far re- c/\ r ,/ 7\