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WIGLER MONOGRAMMING WITH PURCHASE OF SHIRTS I SE OUR 1 I MONOGRAMMING SERVICE ] iptt 29511 Northwestern Highway Park West Plaza, Southfield eiutiel3 enaviel a rBETTFit CLOTHES & CUSTOM TAILORS LADIES' & MEN'S ALTERATIONS SPECIALIST TUXEDO RENTALS Lowest Prices I 354-3610 Holiday Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10:30-5:00 Summit By-Play ALL AT DEEP DISCOUNT PRICES r : of $20 or more, until NEWS Thurs. til 8:00 p.m. 357-1722 Tel-Ex Plan, Telma. N. of 10 Mile Mal= 1111111111MMI=111111111111111 The Professionals' Choice For Investors Salomon Brothers itat- IIII 1 Ifrive0entra MICHIGAN INSURED TAX-EXEMPT SERIES NUMBER 1 8.58% DOUBLE TAX-FREE* MICHIGAN For 75 years investment professionals have turned to Salbmon Brothers for its advice and expertise on financial mat- ters. Now. you can take advantage of that same expertise as Salomon Brothers announces this double-tax- free product designed for Michigan investors like yourself. This Salomon Brothers Unit Investment Trust offers you a combi- nation of benefits that make it one of the most attractive tax-exempt oppor- tunities available to Michigan investors today. ■ Double-tax-free monthly income' ■ Insured payments of principal and interest'• ■ The Units in the Trust rated AAA by Standard & Poor's ■ Convenience ■ A diversified. fixed iortfolio of Michigan Municipal Bonds ■ No management or redemption fees ■ Liquidity at the then-current net asset value ■ Minimum investment of approxi- mately 51.000 And. of course. you enjoy the benefit of having Salomon BI others bond experts select the bonds which make up the Trust. For a free brochure and Pro- spectus containing more complete information (including charges and expenses) about putting the Salomon Brothers Unit Investment Trust to work earning you double-tax-free monthly income. contact the Investment Rep- resentative listed below. Naturally there is no obligation of any kind. Please read the Prospectus carefully before investing or sending money. For more information, contact: First of Michigan Corporation Fokl %ivinbcr. N..t.%% lurk 'tut k Etc hange, Inc . • ler tie tint rings are tree from federal state and local income tax ec However capital gains if any, will be subject to tax This ent return represents the net annual interest incorne at ti.i estimated annual expenses divided by the public offer itio prir • St 014 88 per unit on 10 25 85 This current return will vary with changes in the public offering price interest income or annual expenses "Insurance on municipal bonds in no way assures market value which will fluctuate with changes in market conditions The AAA rating from Standard & Poor s results from insuratic• relating or to the bonds and not to insurance on thr. wills of the rr, ist T he insurance does not remove market risk since it does John G. Hoagland 1000 W. University Rochester, Michigan 48063 Phone: (313) 651-8880 not quarailtee the market value of the Trust units The prompt payment of bond interest and princip?lis insured The terms of the qlsuranr e are m ore fully described in the Prospectus Nn tour ( -, r 'Million is made as to the insurer s ability to meet its commitments T his advert isc.ment is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy any of these securities The offering is made only by the Prospectus Copies of the Prospectus may be obtained in any State in which this announcement is circulated only from such dealers ori brokers as may lawfully offei these securities in such Stati. that last month when they were arrested, but delegates to the Council of Jewish Federations General Assembly last week had to be quietly warned of the ground rules. Avital Shcharansky, wife of Soviet Prisoner of Conscience Anatoly Shcharansky, on Thursday invited the 3,300, delegates to the CJF to join her in silent protest Friday morn- ing. Some 600 broke away from the CJF sessions during the two days to honor her invitation, using CJF shuttle busses or walking from their hotels to the Embassy on 16th Street, just a few blocks from the White House. In a quiet voice that could barely be heard above the noise of the passing traffic, Avital told of her hopes that "Reagan will bring our case in the strongest terms" to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at the summit meet- ings in Geneva this week. "We have," she said, "400,000 hos- tages in Russia." She said Anatoly has spent the last two months in solitary confinemnt, given only bread and water and that his mother has received five letters from him this year instead of the 20 permitted by Soviet law. She added, "Anatoly is dying day by day in the wish to go to Israel ... We should all make aliyah ... Next year in Jerusalem." In her composed, soft voice, she urged the gathering to join Sunday's demonstration in Lafayete Park, across from the White House. Avital left Wash- ington on Friday to join human rights demonstrators in Geneva. 1986 Campaign Continued from Page 1 tures. A graduate of Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., Will re- ceived a degree from Oxford University and a Ph.D. from Princeton. He has taught politi- cal philosophy at Michigan State University and the Uni- versity of Toronto. The Dec. 17 event will signal the start of an intensive period of campaigning with meetings scheduled for all Campaign di- visions by the end of the year. Final Telethon , With less than two months to go before the end of the year, volunteers will call on all unse- cured pledges that remain from the 1985 Allied Jewish Cam- paign, during a final telethon on Monday. This will enable the Cam- paign to reach its budgeted goal of $22.2 million and assure that humanitarian services at home, in Israel and overseas, can be met. Contributors who make and pay their 1985 pledge now can still take advantage of 1985 tax benefits for charitable contribu- tions. Abe Stolar The visitors dispersed as a shuttle bus dropped off another 50 CJF delegates. For brief sec- onds the sidewalk and plaza area cleared as the two busloads exchanged places. A few of the delegates drifted across the street to stand by the high iron fence guarding the Soviet Em- bassy and to talk to District of Columbia police watching the proceedings. Two children dres- sed in native Russian costumes and carrying flowers, accom- panied by their parents, walked past the delegates, through the Embassy gate and into the building. "If it were only that easy for Soviet Jews to come the other way," one delegate ob- served. Another was intrigued by a street sign placed next to the Embassy grounds, renaming the area "Sakharov Square" in honor of dissident scientist An- drei Sakharov. It appears to be the District of Columbia's own quiet protest. Others talked of the daily vigil conducted at the Embassy by the Washington Jewish community since the late 1970s. Some mentioned the cooperation of the labor union headquarters across the street, permitting the demonstrators to use their plaza for the last six years, only rop- ing off a narrow walkway for viAlitors to the building. Tenants of neighboring buildings, the demonstrators were told, were considering a law suit against the Soviets because of the com- munications equipment atop the Embassy. They fear the health hazards of microwave transmis- sions similar to those bombard- ing the U.S. Embassy in Mos- cow. But for this day, the main topic of concern is Anatoly Shcharansky, deteriorating in a Russian prison for the crime of trying to legally emigrate from a biased land. A Soviet spokesman in Geneva tried to counter the pre-summit human rights pres- sure. Spokesman Leonid Zamyatin told Western reporters last Friday, "In the United States there are major pogroms against the Jews, and there are legal organizations against Jews." He said 315 synagogues had been desecrated in Brook-