n loss PRUDENTIAL HIGH YIELD FUND maximize your current income. 30 Day 1 Year Return* 8.31% 5 Year Return* N/A 10 Year Return N/A Since Inception 11.84% 30 Day 1 Year Return* 7.92% 5 Year Return* 9.07% 10 Year Return 10.44% Since Inception 10.50% Class A: SEC Yield (Inception 1;99) 9.19% Class B: SEC Yield (Inception 3179) 9.00% COMPILED R Higher current yields are just one good reason to invest. With the Prudential High Yield Fund, you'll also enjoy. • A diversified portfolio of high-yield fixed income securities • Professional management by The Prudential • Monthly dividend payments • Automatic reinvestment • No initial sales charge on Class B shares The Fund's investments are concentrated in medium to lower rated corporate bonds which are rated Baa or lower. For more complete information about the Fund, induding charges and expenses, call us today or send in the coupon below for a free prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest or send money. * SEC yiokis as of 9/30/93. Average annual total returns as of 9/30/93. Class A shares are subject to a front-end sales charge currently 4.50% and Class B shares are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge,. declining from 5.0% to 0.0% Past performance is not indicative of future returns. An investment in shares of the Fund will fluctuate as to principal and interest with changes in market conditions so that an investor's shares when redeemed may be worth more or less than their original cost Shares of this Fund will be offered through affiliates of Prudential Mutual Fund Management: Pruco Securities Corp., Prudential Securities Incorporated, Prudential Mrizrmil Fund Distribution, Inc. Jerome S. Bookstein Senior Vice President Adam Bornstein Financial Advisor 313-433-8534 or 800-521-9463 Prudential Securities Member S1PC ON ELKUS, owner of the Southfield-based Shirt Box, recently helped to raise $2,600 for several charities through a celebrity shirt auction. Mr. Elkus donated 40 white oxford shirts to local artists, who designed their own creations for the auction. Each artist selected his or her own charity for the shirts, which were modeled by lo- cal personalities, including tele- vision reporter MIKE HUCKMAN and Detroit Free Press columnist NEAL RUBEV. Among the artists were CAN- TOR HOWARD AND DAYNA GLANTZ, whose shirt comprised several pieces of jewelry that came from Mrs. Glantz's whole- sale business, Daywear. Proceeds for the Glantz creation, modeled by JARC Executive Director JOYCE KELLER, went to JARC. Proceeds for a shirt with clowns, modeled by Mr. Huck- man and created by 93-year-old artist HY VOGEL, went to the Jewish War Veterans. Other Jewish charities who were recipients: the Michigan Jewish Aids Coalition, B'nai B'rith Foundation and the City of Hope. I otsford Hospital recently 1D .1—)opened an expanded emer- gency department at its facility in Farmington Hills The department expects to log 42,000 emergency visits in 1994, a 20 percent increase over 1992 levels. It is located in the hospi- tal's new East Pavilion, a four- level, 92,000-square-foot facility also housing an expanded surgi- cal department, clinical labora- tory and heliport. Botsford President and Chief Executive Officer GERSHON I. COOPER said the expanded emergency department will "en- hance the hospital's capabilities in providing optimum health care for the greater community well into the 21st century." L SAPERSTELV, a Wayne .State University professor of physics who serves on the board of the Center for Peace and Con- flict Studies, next summer will begin a year-long fellowship that may give him a direct line to President Bill Clinton. Dr. Saperstein, who also teach- es history and supervises gradu- ate students in political science, has been awarded a one-year fel- lowship to the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in Washington, D.C. Meanwhile, beginning in Jan- uary, he will teach computers and physics at the University of Maryland. . STOCKS TAX-FREE BONDS MUTUAL FUNDS T A X E X M P F First of Michigan Corporation FoM INVESTMENTS Members New York Stock Exchange, Im Herman Schwartz N Senior Vice President - Investments Branch Manager T T R N A Travelers Tower / Suite 1020 A L P L A N N 26555 Evergreen Road / Southfield, Mich. 48076 G (313) 358-3290 S T Toll Free 1 800 826 2039 S TAX DEFERRED ANNUITIES IRAs MONEY MANAGEMENT - - - NOVI • Industrial • Retail • Office JONATHAN BRATEMAN PROPERTIES 474-3855 - B Y PCIIVIESEFIL_ everal Jewish builders are on the roster of the Builders Association of Southeastern Michigan's Dec. 7 leadership re- cognition program. Builder of the year is GILBERT "BUZZ" SILVERMAN, president of Holtzman & Silverman Con- struction Co. in Farmington Hills. HERBERT LAWSON, president of the Windham Re- alty Group of West Bloomfield, will be named developer of the year. Distinguished service awards will go to ROBERT BRODY, president of the Brody Group in Bloomfield Hills, for service to the apartment industry; SUSAN TOBIN, manager of the West Bloomfield Teen Center, for ser- vice to the BASM Women's Fo- rum; LESTER BURTON, president of Burton-Share in Birmingham, and MARK 'TED" JACOBSON, president of Mark Jacobson and Associates of Bing- ham Farms, for service on the Builders Board of the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulation. Michigan Senator CARL LEVI1V also will be honored for his public service career. ORON LAKS, an Israeli who moved to Michigan to help promote trade between Michigan and Israel, is the 1993 recipient of the Israel Trade Award of the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce of Michi- gan. Mr. Laks is president and chief executive officer of Robomatix In- ternational Inc., a robotics firm based in Novi. V 1_ 1 F T Cs counsel for Perry Drug Stores, Inc., has been promoted to the ad- ditional responsibility of chief ad- ministrative officer. Robert Betiow RATTY NESSEL has been .0 named an associate of the Detroit law firm Butzel Long P.C. D IN BRIEF: Patty Nessel A MY J. BROMAN has joined the Ann Arbor office of the law firm Miller, Canfield, Pad- dock and Stone as an associate in the health law department. A Dr. Dennis Blender R. DENNIS BLENDER, D has been promoted from manager to principal for Plante & Moran, a Southfield-based ac- Amy J. Broman counting and consulting firm. TANA GOLDMAN, formerly OBERT BERLOW, senior e.1 of Michigan, has joined the vice president and general KUDOS page 42 R