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If YOUR EVENT IS LESS TI-IAN A YEAR AWAY, PLEASE MAIL OR fAX US YOUR SIMCI-IA, AlONg MTh YOUR NAME, AddRESS, ANd phoNE NUMbER TO: 5/29 1998 128 Gratiot Ave. at 12 Mile Road Roseville, MI 48066 Fax (810) 771-7340 27676 Franklin Road Southfield, MI 48034 fax: 248-354-1210 he visited across the country. "This facility, I believe, gives more value to the shopper." It seems as though the only thing the family-owned business doesn't do is build its own lighting fixtures. But that hasn't always been the case. Just after the turn of the century, when Detroit Jews were catching the entrepreneurial bug, Nathan Silberstein began an electrical con- tracting business in 1912 to take the emerging concept of electric lighting into Detroit homes. In the early years of the business, Michigan Chandelier made some of its own fixtures. But the most popu- lar selling item was a package of fix- tures for an entire house priced at $100. In the 1930s, Silberstein pro- ceeded to open seven Detroit show: rooms in the heart of the Jewish community. "He wanted to have a place for customers to come in and see the lighting he would install in their homes," said Berne. By the late 1940s, the Temple Beth El congregant and his wife, Regina, began looking to their chil- dren, Alice, Milton and W. B. Doner, to continue the family entity. After serving in the Navy during World War II, Milton Doner took to the challenge. As the suburbs began to boom with construction, Doner followed close behind with Michigan Chandelier. Of Milton and use Doner's three children — Jacqueline, Richard and Jill — it was Richard Doner who expressed an interest in the family business. When Richard decided to pursue other interests, Berne resigned from his chemical engineer- ing position with Standard Oil Company to fill the void and satisfy his own entrepreneurial itch. "I came and stood in the lighting showroom and sold lights for five years," recalled Berne, who is mar- ried to W. B. Doner's daughter, Judy Doner Berne. President of Michigan Chandelier since 1983, Berne now oversees 64 employees and a business that draws $16 million in annual sales. "This company is now 2 1/2 times as large as it was when I became president," said Berne. "With this (Troy facility), we'll be three times as large by next year." Michigan Chandelier is headquar- tered at 20855 Telegraph Road in Southfield in a building that houses offices, a wholesale department and commercial sales. The company's three full-service facilities are located at 200 E. Second Street in Rochester, 45319 Grand River in Novi and 190 E. Maple in Troy. Just six years ago, the family wel- comed the fourth generation to the business, hiring Jonathan Ginsberg, an electrical engineer who married Berne's daughter, Jennifer. "Ed (Berne) had a position avail- able and the timing was right for our personal lives so we jumped on the opportunity," said Ginsberg, who left a high-tech company in Boston to work in the warehouse. "It was a big move for me and the family I was leaving behind, but it was a good opportunity." Since joining the firm, Ginsberg has held four positions and currently manages commercial lighting, where he's continued the strong growth pat- tern begun by his father-in-law. "The advantage of a family busi- ness is that you can pass down the culture and values," said Berne, who knows every employee by name. "There's a continuity passed dowi to me that I'm trying to pass on to Jon of the values and loyalty over the years that the various leaders have been able to engender." The Bernes, who are longtime members of the Birmingham Temple in Farmington Hills, have two other grown children, David and Deborah. When he talks about 85 years -of success in the lighting business, Berne is quick to credit the skilled and loyal employees who guide the customers through their purchases. Earl Mercer of Harper Woods joined the staff 65 years ago, after waiting with four of his friends in an employment line that stretched a block and a half long. "I was offered the job and I said_, I'd take it if they hired my friends, --) too. So they hired all five of us," recalled Mercer. "Back then, we worked for $13.50 a week." Through the years, Mercer has worked as a salesman at stores in Detroit, Grosse Pointe, Bloomfield Township, Rochester and Ann Arbor, some of which have since closed. These days, he works part time at the Southfield location and has no plans for retirement. "We're bringing the lighting up to date and bringing in new items all the time," said Mercer. "Nowhere do you get the attention like you do here ... and the follow-up. All my customers turn into friends." ❑