A Pair Of Winners Henry Gold brings the title of assistant principal of the year back to Ferndale High School. DIANA LIEBERMAN StaffWriter T he announcement of Michigan's top assistant principal for 1999 looks much like the one issued two years ago. As in 1997, this year's title went to an administrator from the Ferndale Public Schools. The Michigan Association of Secondary School Principals (MASSP) selected Henry Gold for the 1999 award; in 1997, the title went to his co-worker and best friend, Herbert Ivory. "I call it Ivory's revenge," Gold said jokingly of the award. "Their friendship is a forerunner of what I hope the world will look like in the 21st century," says Ferndale Superintendent Marcee Martin. A shared commitment to students' welfare is the glue that keeps the team of Ivory and Gold together. Both define the job of school administrator as a teaching position — teaching responsibility and respect, decision- making and the implications of posi- tive and negative behavior. The two met in 1969 as newly minted social studies teachers. Ferndale hired about 50 new teachers that year, and, before the first day of class, they all took a bus tour of the school district. It was two years after the Detroit riots, not a propitious time to start an interracial friendship. Gold was the fair- haired, athletic son of Holocaust sur- vivors, who had continued his yeshiva education while attending Berkley High School. Ivory, at that time one of the few black teachers in the district, was the child of devout Southern Baptists. As we went to the different areas (of the district), this guy knew who lived there, the racial and religious makeup, what was going on," Ivory remembers. "I was impressed — and I myself graduated from Ferndale. " Diana Lieberman can be reached at (248) 354-6060, ext. 247, or by e-mail at dlieberm@thejewishnews.corn The two quickly clicked, in person- ality as well as interests. Their friend- ship has withstood student unrest, changing neighborhoods, standardized tests, funding crises and all the other irritants that have bombarded public education during the past 31 years. "Knowing Herb Ivory has made me a better person," Gold says. Last year, the district bought its administrators cell phones, and now the two are on the phone from morn- ing 'til night, Martin says. They tell me that, some days, they talk to each other more than they talk to their wives," she says. Last year, the two vice principals took over as interim co-principals. When Gold realized his friend wanted the job on a permanent basis, he stepped aside. "He told me, 'If you're going to apply, then I'm not going to apply,'" Ivory says. "Henry Gold would give you the shirt off his back. I would describe him as the best friend I have. Further expanding the ethnic mix, Ferndale's new assistant principal, Gary Sophiea, is of Lebanese descent. "It sends a wonderful message to students that you can be a success whatever your background," Martin says. What's most outstanding about Gold is his humanitarianism, she adds. "He has a marvelous sense of justice and the complete equality of all people." Gold, 53, of Lathrup Village, became an assistant principal at Ferndale High in 1988. A political science major at Wayne State University, -he'd planned to go into law, but a few education courses changed his mind. He never lost his interest in law, though, and in 1978, earned a law degree from the University of Detroit. Ferndale High is one of the most socially, eco- nomically and religiously diverse high schools in the nation, according to the MASSP. It's also one of the first schools to offer a Holocaust-related class, which is taught by Barbara Demlow. Gold's parents, Wolf and Felina, both were survivors of Auschwitz, and he makes a point of telling their story to the class each year. "We focus so much on the large number of people who were killed, and its right to do so," he says, But we also need to focus on the survivors, their courage, luck and those who helped them survive." As a child, Gold attended Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and spent some time at a yeshiva in Cleveland. "If you had told me then, I never would have believed the son of Southern Baptists would become my best friend," he says. In the school situation, the two function "like a left hand and a right hand," Gold says. We click as a team — it real- ' ly works." ❑ •Q • 0 Hemy Gold, Michigan assistant principal of the year, with best friend and , colleague Herbert holy, the 1997 winner 11/19 1999 7