FREE SCHEDUU33 MAIITBINVICE for it to 36 inalls-38,000 mt on a leaser% 3 Great Cars...At Value Payments! "-* ,0 05***Xsn„ ry • ,,,, • • • • • • • • • • , /- / 41.7t •The au omo•ile shown has optional active package DOSE page 65 In May, he and Dale Jaslove, his business partner, launched Michigan HealthCARE Business Monthly under the aegis of Lawrence Street Ventures. Their office is in Southfield. Today, subscription requests are pouring in, many of them from insurance companies, medical suppliers and law firms. "The response has been truly staggering, better than we ever imagined. 'There's such a need for the information that our maga- zine produces, it's just unbeliev- able," Mr. Kamin says. "We're just at the beginning of major reform in the health-care industry and providers and physicians are al- ready scared to death of what's go- ing on out there. We're here to help them through it." The tabloid-size glossy is filled with articles by lawyers, doctors, accountants and health-care ad- ministrators on issues that range from processing claims to hiring employees to selling a medical practice. The debut issue features 18 articles. Unlike other publications de- voted to the constantly evolving world of health care — and there is at least one other locally — Michigan HealthCARE Business Monthly is kind of a self-help guide directed to administrators of medical practices, hospitals, nursing homes and physicians. "We seek out problems and con- cerns in the health-care industry and find solutions for the prob- lems. We don't just report the news," Mr. Kamin explains. "The magazine is apolitical. That's one of the neat things about it. We have no affiliations with any group, so they're not going to get biased editorial. We're on the cutting edge," he continued. Lawrence Street Ventures ini- tially sent out 12,000 issues to the likeliest subscribers in Wayne, Oakland, Macomb and Washte- naw counties. In July, the maga- zine will begin a controlled subscription drive, placing cards in the magazine. The annual rate is $22.95, but two- and three-year subscriptions are available. For every subscription sold, the magazine will donate $3 to the Barbara Karamanos Cancer In- stitute, formerly the Michigan Cancer Foundation. Mr. Kamin, who lives in Royal Oak, says they've already had in- quiries from private investors who are interested in starting up sim- ilar magazines in other states. ❑ An Ex-Hippy Recalls A Groovy Summer FRANK PROVENZANO SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS • Barry Klein (left) sang lead vocals with Lord Invader and the Penetrators in 1964. I 4i 11(011r. 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Offer ends June 30. 1996. B arry Klein came home to a hero's welcome on break from the so-called "Sum- mer of Love" in 1967's Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco. "It was like (Norman) Schwarzkopf coming back from the Persian Gulf War," the real- estate consultant recalls. Maybe the pedestal wasn't as high or exalted as it seemed. But the time has come for Mr. Klein to put those wild, crazy and bizarre days in perspective. Like many of his generation during the '60s, Mr. Klein took his mantra from LSD guru Tim- othy Leary: "Turn on, tune in, drop out." Thirty years later, he's ready to go public with the lessons learned from those days. "Oscar Wilde said, 'Experi- ence is the name that ma gives to his mistakes,' " says Mr. Klein. "Those days were a com- ing-of-age period, individually and culturally." He doesn't partake in hippie rituals but does readily admit that he inhaled. In fact, he ad- mits to a lot more in his re- counting of that summer 3 years ago in his yet-to-be-pub- lished memoir, Sex, Drugs and Rock & Roll: Haight-Ashbury in the Summer of Love, 1967. The tag line on the cover pretty well sums up the author's perspec- tive: "An Eyewitness Account by the 'de Tocqueville of Tokeville.' " While Mr. Klein is represent ed by an East Coast agent, he hasn't found a publisher for his book. However, he just finished writing last winter. A self-described prototypical hippie of that era, Mr. Klein hardly evokes the disheveled and anarchist image of an un- groomed flower child. Thes days, his hair is neatly trimmed