Explore the Alternatives to Promote Good Health Front, Left to Right: Kim L. Miller, M.D. and Robert C. Levine, M.D. Rear, Left to Right: David Brownstein, M.D. and Jeffrey E. Nusbaum, M.D. Our group of family practice physicians are board certified in their field. They provide a full range of medical services including gynecology and pediatrics. The "no scalpel" vas- ectomy is a procedure available at our office. In addition, some of our physicians have special training in holistic and alternative medicine. This includes vitamin and nutritional therapy, manipulation, acupuncture and hypnosis. We offer evening hours and Saturday appointments to accom- modate our patients' busy lifestyle. Farmington Hills Family Practice Wayne State University 32910 W. 13 Mile Rd. #C301 Farmington Hills, Michigan 48334 Telephone: 810-851-1600 Huron Valley Hospital Studio in Harvard Row Mall 4/04,,,,quawifs The HOLIDAY HOURS November 26 - December 17 Mon.- Sat. 9:30-6:00, Thurs. 9:30-7:00 SPOT SUNDAY 12:00-4:00 50`) /0-70°/0 OFF ALL NAME BRANDS • Vertical Blinds • Pleated Shades • Levolor Blinds • Wood Blinds 21728W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, Ml 48076 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulting Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5 c 352-8622 L Tanl New Rochester Hills 651-5009 Jewish-Christian Group Opens Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein's effort to build bridges between Jews and Evangelical Christians jumped into the political arena with the formal establishment of the Cen- ter for Judeo-Christian Values in Washington. The center, which will be the Washington hub of Eckstein's In- ternational Fellowship of Chris- tians and Jews, was announced at a Tuesday news conference featuring Sen. Joe Lieberman, D- Conn., and Sen. Dan Coats, R- Ind. "The inclusion of those leaders as honorary co-chairs is a micro- cosm of what this center is all about," Rabbi Eckstein said in an interview. "One is an Orthodox Jew, one an Evangelical Christ- ian, one a Democrat and the oth- er a Republican. The Center is really intended to grasp the cen- trist positions our two communi- ties share, positions that haven't been grasped because of the po- larization of our politics." Rabbi Eckstein has tapped longtime Jewish activist Chris Gersten as executive director of the Center. Mr. Gersten served as director of the National Jew- ish Coalition, the central group for Jewish Republicans; later, he served as director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement in the Bush administration. The Center has also been en- dorsed by Christian Coalition di- rector Ralph Reed and former education secretary William Ben- nett; Rabbi Eckstein has also re- ceived encouragement from some Jewish leaders like Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Reli- gious Action Center of Reform Judaism, a group that has strongly opposed the Christian right agenda in Washington. Rabbi Eckstein said that the Center will be "somewhere be- tween an advocacy group and a think tank" in function. "Our first goal is to identify a variety of values that we share as Christians and Jews," he said. "Then we will delineate and ex- plore public policy positions that stem from those shared values and inform the public about those positions." In other words, the group will lobby Congress and engage in grassroots political advocacy. Lobby Reform Impacts Jews Jewish groups were generally pleased with the lobby reform leg- islation finalized by Congress — even though the new law, which broadens the definition of "lobby- ing" in ways that will include Jew- ish groups with more generalized functions, will be a bureaucratic