All Seiko Products On Sale 50% OFF RACES page 15 One Week Only 7/1 8-7/23 CLEARLY ELEGANT This see through, skeleton-movement mantel clock comes with gilt case, sub-second hand, REAL TIME and a beautifully curved crystal. Approximately 8" high x 81/2" wide. SEIKO TIME JEWELRY DESIGN & MFG. LTD. Applegate Square • 29847 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Michigan 48034 • (810) 356-7007 He wants to see government of actuarial reports and assure made more efficient and respon- that reserves are sound and ex- sive to the taxpayer. penditures are necessary and vi- "I'd like to see increased coop- able." eration with other governments The winner of that primary in the region," Mr. Fernquist will face Democrat Carol Kohut said. Mr. Fernquist will face ei- for the seat. ther David Moffitt or Sally Os- The race in the Democratic pri- ann, both of Farmington Hills. mary for the 21st District in- Democrat Steve Steinhardt is cludes Debbie Dohaney, Nancy running unopposed in the 11th Quarles and Gregory Miles. District, which consists of Com- Mr. Miles wants to address merce Township, Wolverine Lake budget and fiscal matters in the Village, Wixom and parts of West county as well as crime preven- Bloomfield Township. tion and aging infrastructure. He will face the winner of the Ms. Dohaney said that a ma- Republican primary, Nancy Din- jor problem in Oakland County gledey or Richard Andich. is controlling the increasing cost Ms. Dingledey said that it is of operating county government. crucial for Oakland County to "In solving this problem, perks reach total institution of the com- and fringe expenditures must be munity mental-health full-man- cut from future budgets," Ms. Do- agement program, which means haney said. that all mental-health money in The winner of the Democratic Oakland County will flow primary in the 21st District, com- through the mental health board prised of parts of Royal Oak and the county mental-health Township, Oak Park and South- budget will increase from $30 field, will face Republican million to $100 million. Ms. Taub Charles Kleinbrook of Southfield is also anxious to see the county in November. implement full management, Democrat Ronald Zate and Re- which allows the county more publican Donald Jensen, both control over community mental- from Birmingham, are unop- health programs. posed in the primaries. They will Ms. Taub said she would like square-off in November for the to crack down on unnecessary 15th District seat, consisting of travel expenses because she feels Berkley, Royal Oak and Birm- unnecessary vacations are being ingham. taken on taxpayers dollars. Democrat Suzanne Osmer of Dan Devine and Marilynn Beverly Hills is unopposed in the Gosling are running in the Re- 13th District primary, consisting publican primary in the 14th Dis- of parts of Bloomfield Hills, trict, consisting of Bloomfield Franklin Village, Bingham Hills and parts of Birmingham Farms, West Bloomfield, Bloom- and Troy. field and Southfield Townships. Some of the issues addressed She will run against Republican by Mr. Devine, an attorney and Thomas Law of West Bloomfield. director of the Women's Survival In the 19th District, Democrat Center in Pontiac, include care for Kurt Lopez and Republican the elderly, crime and violence, Donn Wolf, both of Farmington a solid-waste plan and education. Hills, are vying for the seat. The Ms. Gosling, the incumbent 19th District encompasses Farm- and a former engineering drafts- ington, Farmington Hills and man, said: "As a finance com- parts of Southfield. ❑ mittee member, I will insist on Staff Writer Jennifer Finer long-range planning, monitoring contributed to this article. . A summer gi 0 - exAtothait wid Tate JANICE CHARACH EPSTEIN June j0, 199# — 909110 Is, 1994 MUSEUM GALLEHY . (3)eciarMeet tie yirtists Opening keception ju_67- 2la, 6:00 — 9i/ektyme - "Stars Sik, fklvers" tiltimf- 46ton, Caren .ftlekr6nk- Upper Level Gallery Sane- a Levin, Juetkoyo Doe Stevitz, lug rcierniai Ste (en C. Cooper Main Level Gallery Gallery Hours: Sunday, 11:00 - 4:00 p.m., Monday - Wednesday, 11:00 - 6:00 p.m., Thursday, 11:00 - 8:00 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 6600 W. Maple Rd., W. Bloomfield, MI - For Information Please Call 661-7641 Independence Not New For Akiva Principal LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER W hile Rosalie Lake di- rects the secular stud- ies of Akiva Hebrew Day School students, she is beginning a Jewish educa- tion of her own. The new principal of general studies at Akiva is not Jewish. She doesn't live in a typically Jewish area — Lake Angelus is home. However, the realm of private education is not unfamiliar to her. Since 1972, Ms. Lake moved her way up from teacher at Roeper School in Bloomfield Hills to director of lower grades at Can- terbury School in Ft. Meyers, Fla., and Shipley School in Philadelphia. Upon returning to Detroit several years ago, Ms. Lake worked at the Friends School in Detroit and Valley School in Flint. 'This is a very different expe- rience for me, but my background is in independent schools. The challenge is to make secular stud-