• 11.∎ K l iqa I lusa ALAN ABR.AMS Special to the Jewish News S heldon Stone is accus- tomed to bringing a Jewish presence to businesses where Jews are not com- monly found. First, he worked at a Tennessee coal mine as a management con- sultant. Then, in Hawaii, he had to learn to speak Japanese in order to communicate with the majority of his clients. And now he's taken on a new challenge as chief operating officer of Dearborn-based Exhibit Enterprises Inc. Exhibit Enterprises is one of the world's leading exhibit and trade show production companies. They're the ones who are responsi- ble for a lot of the "Gee whiz, how did they do that?" displays. If you attended the 2000 North American International Auto Show at Detroit's Cobo Center in January, you saw a Dodge Dakota quad cab truck balance on its nose before its four full-sized doors opened up. Then the truck opened down the middle. The seats folded and unfolded, the body tilted for- ward, and the truck bowed and waved to the crowd. Or maybe you saw the spectacu lar leapfrog by a red Dodge Caravan over the heads of then Chrysler Chairman Bob Eaton and President Bob Lutz at the 1995 show. Or perhaps it was the Jeep that hung at a 45-degree angle on the side of a make-believe moun- tain at the 1996 show. Exhibit Enterprises' visual magic puts you up close and personal with a client's message. Exhibit Enterprises (EE) also built the two-level Dodge display area and collaborated on the Mercedes display at this year's auto show, as well as the displays for Larnborghini and Alpine Electronics. EE also works at the huge con- sumer electronics trade show in Las Vegas, the Society of Automotive • \\\VA\',' ■ '‘