1UP FRONT' YOU'RE COVERED With Our New T-Shirt! Subscribe Today To The Jewish News And Receive Our New T-Shirt With Our Compliments! A great newspaper and a complimentary T-shirt await you for our low subscription rates. Just fill out the coupon below and return it to us. We'll fit you to a T! Jewish News T-Shirt Offer Please clip coupon and mail to: This offer is for new subscriptions only. Cur- rent subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks delivery. ADDRESS CITY (Circle One) STATE ZIP 1 year: '24 2 years: $45 Out of State: '26 Enclosed $ (Circle One) ADULT EX. LG. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHILD SMALL 16 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 Continued from Page 5 appointment. A confirmation hearing has not yet been scheduled, but Friedman ex- pects to be on the job by June. Friedman, 44, was ap- pointed to his present post in 1982 by former Gov. William Milliken to complete the term of David Breck, who was elected to Oakland County Circuit Court. Friedman has been re-elected twice. A graduate of Detroit Col- lege of Law, Friedman was an assistant prosecuting at- torney for Wayne County before starting his own law firm, Lippitt, Harrison, Fried- man and Whitefield. Friedman, who said he would have run for Oakland County Circuit Court if the nomination had fallen through, said the federal posi- tion culminates a dream. "I've moved up the ladder. It's been fun, but I've worked hard," he said. "My career make up has always been to move up a step at a time. This move is more than a step." News of Reagan's phone call prompted Bloomfield District Judge Edward Sosnick to an- nounce his candidacy for Oakland County Circuit Court judge. Sosnick said he would not have challenged Friedman for that post., Sosnick, whose term ex- pires in 1990, is vying for the seat being vacated by retiring Edward Sosnick Circuit Court Judge James S. Thorburn. Sosnick, 47, a former Oakland County assistant prosecuting attorney and a private attorney who served as counsel for several municipalities, is the first to announce his candidacy for the judicial post. The terms of circuit judges Francis O'Brien, Alice Gilbert and Breck expire this year. Filing deadline for the four open Oakland Circuit Court judgeships is April 4 for incumbents and May 31. for others. Eleven judicial terms expire this year in Oakland County's district courts. Continued from Page 5 It's durable, comfortable, easy to care for and attractive. And it comes in an array of adult and children's sizes. But most important, your new subscription will mean 52 information- packed weeks of The Jewish News, plus our special supplements, delivered every Friday to your mailbox. Yes! Start me on a subscription to The Jewish News for the period and amount circled below. Please send me the T-shirt. . Entertainment From the West Bank to West Bloomfield — and all points in between — The Jewish News covers your world. And now with our new T-shirt, we cover our new subscribers,. too: JEWISH NEWS 'T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME Friedman set in place, she sat in every one to determine how well one could see from each spot. The seating will be assign- ed, and the money raised from the program will cover the costs. The series is funded in part by the Michigan Council for the Arts and by the Man- ny and Natalie Charach En- dowment Fund at the Jewish Center. Silver said she hopes that this entertainment series will be the forerunner of an an- nual activity. However, it depends largely on communi- ty support. "We need com- munity support so we can do it again. These are expensive programs." The special events calendar begins Feb. 13 with two shows, 7 and 9:30 p.m., at the Maple/Drake Jewish Center. Other programs will be presented as follows: Sephar- dic band, Feb. 21, 3:30 p.m.; Marilyn Cantor, 8 p.m. Feb. 23, Maple/Drake Center, and 1 p.m. Feb. 23 at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building; Michaels and Oysher, Feb. 27 at 8 p.m.; Bel Kaufman, 2 p.m. March 13; wine-tasting party and entertainment, 8 p.m. March 12; and Evening on Broadway, 8:30 p.m. March 19. There is a charge for tickets which are selling quickly. For details, call the Center's cultural arts department, 6614000. HMC Project May Be Halted The Holocaust Memorial Center is reconsidering its plans to publish a comprehen- sive .encyclopedia of the Holocaust. The HMC's Academic Ad- visory Committee was scheduled to meet Monday evening to discuss the issue, but the meeting was canceled by Monday's sleet storm. Rabbi Charles H. Rosenz- veig, director of the HMC, said a similar encyclopedia was being planned "by another group." Rosenzveig said the HMC is considering joining the competing project, going ahead with its own en- cyclopedia, or "going in a dif- ferent direction." He expects a decision by the committee before the end of February.