The State Capitol Building: Scene of future debates. be forced to improve the schools." Gov. Engler has indicated that while he believes in hools of choice and charter hools, which would not be in by school boards, he is opposed to vouchers for use in private schools because they are unconstitutional. While he served in the state Senate, Mr. Engler, of Mt. Pleasant, was virtually an unknown to the Jewish community. He was elected to the state House at age 22, spending the following eight years there before moving on to the state Senate. He served there until he was elected governor. Since that time, he has met repeatedly with Jewish groups, arid he was the keynote speaker at the Jewish Community Council's annual meeting in June. In addition, several members of his cabinet recently visited Israel for the first time, opening doors in Lansing previously closed to the Jewish community. In the coming months, Mr. Engler is expected to announce the completion of an Israel-Michigan trade team. When talking about Mr. Engler, his supporters reit- erate the point that he has kept promises — some- thing they say candidates rarely do. They say he is an iconoclast whose ideas can correct economic prob- lems in the state by trim- ming bureaucratic layers and focusing on privatiza- tion. "John Engler has become the prototypical governor of the `90s," says Oakland County Republican Chair- man Jim Alexander. "I believe the governor has supported himself well for 1994 by supporting prop- erty tax relief and refunding education," says Les Greenwald, an attorney and GOP activist. "He has done precisely what he told the voters he would do, which makes him a very unique politician." Steven Victor, Michigan's local representative for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, is a friend of Howard Wolpe. Mr. Victor recently held a fund-raiser at his home for Mr. Wolpe. "Howard Wolpe is a Jewish candidate who has a record of achievement in Congress on some issues that are of interest to the Jewish community. He was chairman of the African subcommittee, and he worked for Ethiopian Jewry," Mr. Victor says. Though many Jewish women say they aren't yet prepared to announce their candidates of choice, some are torn between sup- porting Mr. Wolpe and Ms. Stabenow — both who they say are good on women's issues. Mr. Wolpe, 53, a 14-year congressional veteran from Lansing, retired from the House of Representatives last year after Michigan's districts were redrawn. He wants to be governor because "this state should be doing so much better than it is. A lot of people are anxious about jobs and hav- ing the finest educational institutions." Mr. Wolpe's pitch to the voters involves his will to re-train the work force for high-wage jobs, cut property taxes and develop a fair way to finance the schools. He says Michigan must become a leader in new technologies that will be key to the state's environmental and industrial future. In fact, all of the Democrats said they believe jobs and education need to be given high priority on a governor's agenda. Before serving in Congress, Mr. Wolpe, who holds a doctoral degree, was a professor of political sci- ence. He served on the Kalamazoo City Commis- SCHOOLS page 52