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Franklin
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1.973-0038
2935 Birch Hollow
Ann Arbor, MI 48108
Local Contact -
Enid Bienstock
851-7640
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6,15°' 6,33%
5.40%
5.50%
5.70%
5.65%
MANUFACTURERS
COMERICA
NBD
MICH. NAT.
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Tuesday, December 3th - 7:30 p.m.
HADASSAH HOUSE
5030 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield
RATES AS OF 10/31/90 BASED ON $5,000 BALANCE
$10,000
MONEY FUN
Passbook Security B
High Interest Rate
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Franklin
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Fa 3
6,70°'°
6,
6.00%
5.70%
6.10%
5.65%
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NBD
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RATES AS OF 10;31190 BASED ON 510.000 BALANCE
18 MONTH CD
PLAN SOMETHING
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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All indoor Baseball train-
ing facility featuring
Baseball, Softball and
Basketball.
RATES AS OF 10/17190 BASED ON $10,000 BALANCE
HOME EQUITY LOANS 9111
Highest Loan Limit B
Lowest Rate
mot
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80%
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12,00%
75%
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12.00%
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12.00%
75%
RATES AS OF 10131/90
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A
T
E
GRAND
SLAM
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• Pick-up &
Delivery
1111111•111MIL.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1990
348-8338
LEASE FOR LESS
• Fleet
Call
Discounts
108
42930 W. 10 Mile
Between Novi and Meadowbrook
Dreisbach & Sons Cadillac
• Free Loaners
11417E. . : —
IT NEVER RAINS
IN OUR PARK!
C
• High Mileage Leases
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N
New York (JTA) —
Leaders of Jewish commun-
ity federations across the
United States have agreed to
continue funding the reset-
tlement of Soviet Jews in
this country in a way that
distributes the financial
responsibility among all
Jewish communities.
The agreement on collec-
tive responsibility, adopted
last week during the Council
of Jewish Federations Gen-
eral Assembly in San Fran-
cisco, essentially renews an
accord reached last
February in Miami, at a
meeting convened specifical-
ly to deal with resettlement
issues.
Under the plan, each fed-
eration is responsible for set-
tling a specific number of
emigres, determined by the
size of the community and
the amount of money it rais-
ed during its 1989 general
fund-raising campaign.
If the community does not
settle that number, it must
contribute $1,000 to a na-
tional pool for each Soviet
Jew it does not absorb. The
money in the national pool is
then distributed to the com-
munities resettling more
than their "fair share" of
Soviet immigrants.
The collective responsibili-
ty program was developed,
"because Jewish tradition
has always linked com-
munities together," explain-
ed Bernard Olshansky, CJF
assistant executive vice
president.
A total of 121 communities
participated in the program
this past year, out of about
141 that were eligible to do
so, and CJF executives hope
that more will take part next
year. (Canadian federations
that belong to CJF are not
participating, because of dif-
ferences in the two coun-
tries' refugee admission pol-
icies.)
Those U.S. federations
that did not participate
chose not to because "some
of the smaller communities
felt that they couldn't afford
it," according to Jerry
Levinrad, CJF director of
refugee resettlement pro-
grams.
In fact, the collective
responsibility program has
proven to be most beneficial
for the smaller communities,
Mr. Levinrad said, making it
easier for them to accept
refugees and to increase
their Jewish population.