Room without
bored.

$289Math*

The V6
Passat GLX

And our trac-
You need your
tion
control
space, right?
system,
Plus-
We understand
$2,000 Down Payment
Axle
suspen-
this. But we also
sion and ABS brakes let you har-
understand that no matter how
ness all those horses precisely as
roomy your car need be, there's
you please.
always room for a little excitement.
See your Volkswagen Retailer now
Enter the 1993 Passat GLX touring
about
the limited-time Passat GLX
sedan.
Special Value Lease. Tell them
Ample space for five, plus a new
in-line 15-degree 172 horsepower V6 you're inquiring about the room.
But you don't need bored.
engine that makes it incredibly easy
you.
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uburban

Amiiiii ■■■•■1
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AT THE TROY 1
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12,000 DOWN PAYMENT, $288.77 FIRST MONTH'S PAYMENT AND $300 REFUNDABLE SECURITY DEPOSIT DUE AT LEASE INCEPTION.
Offered to qualified customers, by VW Credit, Inc. through participating retailers until March 31, 1993. 48-month closed-end lease. Price based on
$21,690 Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price of a Passat GLX sedan with metallic paint, and destination charge less a combination of customer and/
or retailer contribution to capitalized cost reduction of $2,000, which could affect final negotiated transaction. Other options, retailer prep., taxes, regis-
tration extra. Lessee responsible for insurance. Monthly payments total $13,860.96. At lease end, lessee responsible for .10 per mile over 60,000 miles
and for damage and excessive wear. Option to purchase at lease end for $8,242 in example shown.

I

©1993 Volkswagen

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WESTERNIZING page 45

more complacent. We've
lost a lot of our entrepre-
neurial spirit," Mr.
Pyatenko said. "People are
sitting on their hands.
People are afraid to go
over there. People are
waiting for stability to set
in. But our investment
will breed stability. It's
the lack of investment and
the lack of progress that
facilitates some of the
instability."
Stability will take time
— possibly years. And for-
eign investors know it.
"Problems are part of
the territory," said Mark
Szymanski of Michigan
Trade Exchange, an Oak
Park company doing busi-
ness in Minsk. "You don't
solve the problems. You
manage them."
A highly trained and
diligent population of edu-
cators, engineers, doctors
and other professionals
will make U.S. invest-
ments in the old Soviet
Union bear fruit in the
long run, investors say.
Natural resources also
exist to be tapped to the
fullest, including oil, nat-
ural gas and agriculture.
But success presupposes
continued Westernization,
according to Mr. Schuster.
"My ability to do busi-
ness in Russia will be a
function of Russia's ability
to understand the con-
cepts of Western business,
their ability to deliver
their agreements as
planned and no interfer-
ence or government con-
trol," he said.
"It's a huge market
waiting to happen," said
Mr. Kovacs of Baltic
Technology Group. "The
recession in America is
proof that we've pretty
much peaked here in
terms of market growth.
Eastern Europe is the
next big frontier. Anyone
who's been over there can
see opportunity every-
where.
"Those who get in early
take the biggest risk, but
they also stand to reap the
biggest rewards," he
said. ❑

MARILYN CITRON, crea-
tive director of Citron Corn-
munications, recently won
the Award of Distinguished
Technical Communication in
the 1992-93 Technical Publi-
cations and Technical Art
Competition sponsored by the
Southeastern Michigan
Chapter of the Society for
Technical Communication.
This first place tribute was
awarded for the article "A
Fertile Prospect for Infertil-

ity" that appeared in the Oc-
tober 1992 issue of Pharmacy
Practice.
✓

Scott Lieberman

SCOTT B. LIEBERMAN

has joined the firm of
Schmaltz & Company, PC as
a staff accountant working in
the audit and tax areas.

ROBERT G. SCHUCH and
JONATHAN B. FRANK

have been added as members
of the firm of Mason, Stein-
hardt, Jacobs & Perlman. H.
ADAM COHEN has joined
the firm as an associate.

ERIC M. DOBRUSfN"' has
become a partner in the firm
of Harness, Dickey & Pierce.
He also serves as the ap-
pointed managing editor of
Latches, the official publica-
tion of the Oakland County
Bar Association.

Susan Barenholtz

SUSAN BARENHOLTZ,

president of Office Manage-
ment Consultants in Birm-
ingham, has been elected
president of the Greater-
Detroit Chapter of the
American Society for Train-
ing & Development.

BRADLEY J. NEWMAN,

former Detroiter, an attorney
with the St. Louis legal
auditing company of Stuart,
Maue, Mitchell & James, has
been named director of
attorneys.

CN

