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I will read the prospectus carefully before I invest or send money. Send to: Jewish Community Prepares For Upcoming Year Of Politics L ocal politicians have been keeping their planners filled with appearances in the Jewish community. Spanning just under a three- week time period, Sen. Jack Faxon, D-Farmington Hills; Rep. Maxine Berman, D-South- field; Rep. David Gubow, D- Huntington Woods; Sen. David Honigman, R-West Bloomfield; and Macomb County Prosecu- tor Carl Marlinga are just some Name: Address: City/State/Zip Business/Home Phone Information contained herein is subject to completion or amendment. A registration state- ment relating to these securities has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These securities may not be sold nor may offers to buy be accepted prior to the time the registration statement becomes effective. This shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any State in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such State. LAST CHANCE! UP TO 60% OFF FURS • SHEARLINGS • CLOTH COATS • LEATHERS • IMPORTED KNIT OUTFITS • FURS • SHEAR- LINGS • CLOTH COATS • LEATHERS • IMPORTED KNIT OUIHIS • FURS • SHERLINGS • CLOTH COATS • LEATHERS • IMPORTED KNIT OUTFITS • FURS • SHERLINGS • CLOTH COATS • Robert %farm %at 6 Applegate Square • Northwestern Hwy. at Inkster Road 42 805 East Maple ■ Birmingham W 647-9090 Rep. Maxine Berman of the guests invited to discuss the upcoming vote on Proposal A and this year's election. Eight Jewish organizations teamed up to sponsor a grass- roots politics workshop at the Max M. Fisher Building in Bloomfield Township. The workshop, which was took place on Feb. 27, was aimed at getting more Jews involved in the political process and featured some of the declared candidates in various Michi- gan races. With the March 15 school finance vote just around the corner, B'nai B'rith Michi- gan Regional Council, The Jewish News, and the Nation- al Council of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section spon- sored a March 2 forum on school finance reform. The Jewish Parents Institute, an affiliate of the Jewish Com- munity Center, is doing the same on March 10, at the Center. The March 2 forum, at Adat Shalom Synagogue, was moderated by TV-2 news anchor Sherry Mar- golis and featured a six- member panel including Sen. Faxon, Rep. Berman, and Joe H. Stroud, editor of the De- troit Free Press. On March 10, a five-member panel of legislators, including Rep. Berman, Rep. Gubow, and Sen. Honigman, will talk about the pros and cons of Ballot Pro- Sen. David Honigman posal A. The proposal will ask Michigan voters to approve an increase in sales tax; an increase in the income tax as a major source of funding for schools will kick in if Proposal A fails. Also getting political: Jewish students at Michigan State Uiai- versity. On Feb. 21, Carl Marlinga, a candidate for U.S. Senate, and a representative from Sen. David Honigman's office (Sen. Honigman was invited but had to cancel) spoke to about 35 stu- dents and faculty about crime, Israel and politics. Mr. Marlin- ga also talked about his candi- dacy and compared events in Bosnia to the Holocaust. U-M Senior Works For Clinton Agenda T wice • a week, David Kramer of Bloomfield Hills, a University of Michigan senior, wakes up and goes to work interning at the Public Liaison's Office, right next to the White House. A typical day on the job in- cludes selling President Clin- ton's agenda to the public. His current bill of sale: the president's crime package. Mr. Kramer, 21, helps orga- nize meetings between commu- nity members and leaders from around the country and staff of the Clinton administration. The Public Liaison's Office plans such meetings hoping to per- suade local leaders to support the president's crime legislation. After the parties meet, Mr. Kramer helps provide govern- ment officials, including Vice President Al Gore and Attorney General Janet Reno who often speak at these meetings, with feedback on their presentations and the questions raised by the audience. As a participant in the Amer- ican University's Washington Semester Program, Mr. Kramer spends three days a week tak- ing classes at American Uni- versity and two days a week interning. Highlights of his internship include meeting the president and first lady on the White House lawn, and asking George Stephanopoulos, the senior ad- David Kramer viser to the president for poli- cy and strategy, if he thought the Clinton administration took on too much responsibility in its first year. Mr. Stephanopoulos said no.