..'"AINOPIPousosimibto.wowomomp. 2nd ANNUAL AUTUMN IN DETROIT Wilder Continued from preceding page COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION AND SHOW SEPTEMBER 7 & 8th. 1991 HELD AT THE im ■ DOMINO'S FARMS 2111 44 Frank Lloyd Wright Drive • Ann Arbor, Michigan 48018 • 800-29-Classic Automobile enthusiasts, this is one event you surely won't want to miss. See over 400 classic, exotic, and collectible autos of the 50s and 60s plus visit the Domino's Collection Automobile Museum, the Frank Lloyd Wright Museum, Tiger Baseball Museum and the Animal Petting Farm. Fun for the whole family for only $6.00 general admission; children _under 12 FREE. This is the place to sell your classic, collectible and exotic automobile. Low entry fees plus only 5% selling commission. Make Domino's Farms the place to market your automobile. Show Hours Friday, Sept. 6. Vehicle check-in plus Sat. 7th, 8 am.-11 p.m.; Sun. 8th, 10 a.m.-6 p.. CONSIGNMENTS STILL BEING ACCEPTED C Charleston • Seroka Productions Classic Auctions International AUTUMN IN DETROIT, INC. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION OR COLOR BROCHURE CALL 1-800-367-7605 or 1-800-444.6568 ;Inn.) mw Israel has welcomed hundreds of thousands of Soviet and Ethiopian immigrants with open arms. Now it's your tum to lend a hand. Your Israel Bond dollars will help Israel provide jobs and housing for the new immigrant families. Participate in State of Israel Bonds' critically important High Holy Day appeal. Contact your local Bonds office. 313-352-6555 (V.R.I.) VARIABLE RATE ISSUE 8.21% Current Rate of Interest* *Through August, 1991 (For Bonds purchased through July. 1991; Bonds purchased in August will bear September 1 rate - not available at press time.) MINIMUM SUBSCRIPTION: 525,000 MATURITY: MARCH 31, 2002 ZERO COUPON SAVINGS BOND Current Price: S3,190 Through September 30. 1991 Representing 7.50% Effective Yield to Maturity MATURITY: S6,000 on March 31, 2000 THESE SECURITIES MAY BE SUITABLE FOR PENSION AND PROFIT SHARING PLANS, KEOGHS AND IRAS. (I.V.R.I.) INDIVIDUAL VARIABLE RATE ISSUE 6.96% Current Rate of Interest' `Through September, 1991 (For Bonds purchased through August, 1991: Bonds purchased in September will bear October 1 rate.) MINIMUM SUBSCRIPTION: S5,000 (52.000 or 52.500 for IRAs only) MATURITY: 12 years from Issue Date CURRENT INCOME 4% BONDS AND 5250 CERTIFICATES ARE ALSO AVAILABLE. This is not an offering, which can he made only by prospectus. A copy of the prospectus may be obtained from: DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION FOR ISRAEL STATE OF ISRAEL BONDS 29201 Telegraph Road, Suite 324 Southfield, MI 48034-7654 56 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1991 The governor is considered one of the most promising of the few Democrats who still might run for president in '92. tinue the recent tradition of strong political alliances between Virginia's chief ex- ecutives. and the state's Jews. Mr. Wilder, as did Virginia's last two gover- nors, Gerald L. Baliles and Charles S. Robb, "has brought his own personality and own vision to Israel, Holocaust education and interpretation, and Virginia- Israel relations," said Robert Hyman, executive di- rector of the Richmond Fed- eration. In 1985,. Gov. Robb led a state trade mission to Israel. The next year, Gov. Balials created the Virginia-Israel Commission, a two-year economic development pro- gram that explored joint- ventures, technical exchanges and other busi- ness opportunities. As lieutenant governor, Mr. Wilder accompanied federation officials on a United Jewish Appeal mis: sion to the Soviet Union and Israel in 1987. "He was keenly interested in Soviet Jewry," Mr. Hyman said. "He has a pen- chant toward human rights." While in Israel, Mr. Wilder encountered the first wave of Ethiopian Jews that had come to the Jewish state under Operation Moses. "He saw black African Jews being resettled in freedom in Israel," said Mr. Hyman. "They gravitated to him, and he to them." Middle-class blacks in Virginia support Gov. Wilder, but others criticize him for not doing more as governor to help the Virginia black community. Gov. Wilder argues that blacks who say he sold out to Jews "aren't real leaders." Pitting blacks and Jews against each other, he said, "works to the advantage of some people, but not to ad- vantage of the two groups." When elected governor in 1990, Mr. Wilder was precisely the kind of presi- dential candidate Democrats were looking for: A southern moderate, a fiscal conser- vative, a social liberal. Even better, he was black — and he wasn't Jesse Jackson. While the governor said he has been friends with the Rev. Jackson since 1962, he asserts that he has polit- ically distanced himself from the civil rights leader. Gov. Wilder thinks he is immune from the "Jackson effect" — the assumption that a black presidential candidate will alienate white voters. Overall, Virginia's gover- nor is convinced that blacks and Jews "don't have bad re- lations," and his supporters say he solves black-Jewish problems by pretending they don't exist. As relations between blacks and Jews worsen in some hot spots around the country, the coalition Gov. Wilder has forged between the groups in Virginia seems to be keeping the peace in his state. But whether it makes for a model presiden- tial candidate remains to be seen.0 •