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BERKLEY • (810) 546-2590 CID BIRMINGHAM • (810) 646-8787 LLI CLAWSON • (810) 435-2840 I-- ROCHESTER • (810) 656-5760 CD CC )-- UJ SOUTHFIELD • (810) 948-8799 LU W. BLOOMFIELD • (810) 855-6644 , "We create solutions."® 60 ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIELD EFFECTIVE AS OF 11/15/96. RATES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. 'MONEY MARKET: 52,500 MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIRED. STATEMENT FEES MAY REDUCE EARNINGS IF MINIMUM BALANCE IS NOT MAINTAINED . Municipal Bonds Listing Receive Weekly Report heightened awareness of op- portunities for women." The result, according to Ms. Johnson-Wynn, is that many employers have not only hired and promoted more women, but policies are now common in the profession to accommodate the lifestyles of those women who choose to balance a career with the demands of motherhood. After years of placing their ca- reers as top priority, both Ms. Rubin and Ms. Nelson have made recent decisions that have fundamentally changed their lives. Last November, Ms. Nelson was married. She's cut back on her participation in the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan De- troit. But she continues to find time to serve as a board mem- ber of the Child Abuse Neglect Council of Oakland County (CANCO) and the Women Sur- vival Center of Oakland County. And, within the last several months, Ms. Rubin has an- nounced that she's seeking the 52-3 District Court judicial seat, which covers northeastern Oak- land County. Since she cannot accept campaign contributions until next year, Ms. Rubin has established a rigorous schedule to speak to community groups and spread the word of her im- pending candidacy among her colleagues. As a third-generation barris- ter, Ms. Rubin's ambition re- flects a family tradition. Her grandparents were both attor- neys, and her grandmother, Melba Rubin, was the first woman from the Detroit area to serve as assistant state attorney general. And, after nearly 30 years, her father retired recently from the attorney general's office. "It might be in our blood to be prosecutors," she said. Growing up, Ms. Rubin often watched her father argue for the prosecution. One time, she re- called, she was shocked to see her father go head-to-head with a defense attorney, then after- wards, shake his hand and ask him to lunch. That was the moment when she realized civil- ity and advocacy were insepa- rable. "He taught me that you can bring in the principles you use in life to being an attorney," she said. "If attorneys got along bet- ter, maybe then we wouldn't be nit-picking in court." As a prosecutor, and hopeful judge, Ms. Rubin said she can be stone-faced and objective, but not indifferent. In a drunk driv- ing case where a 19-year-old mother was killed, Ms. Rubin re- called arguing her case in court, then going out to the hallway to cry alongside members of Moth- ers Against Drunk Drivers. `Those cases are preventable," she said. "Two lives are wasted plus the families are forever changed." Meanwhile, most of Ms. Nel- son's cases are appointed by Wayne, Oakland and Macomb courts, but she won't handle a murder case nor a case if a child has been exploited or victimized. "My conscience couldn't take it," she said. While more women have in- tegrated the legal profession, women attorneys are regularly confronted with prejudices about their gender. On a bitterly cold January morning, Ms. Rubin answers the phone in her third floor office in the Prosecutor's Office. The voice on the other end is anything but cordial or warm. It's the father of a woman who claims she was raped. He wants the person who's been accused to be imme- diately locked up. _/ In a detached and judicious manner, Ms. Rubin explains that she has asked investigators for more information before she'll seek a warrant. With growing hostility, the angry father tells Ms. Rubin that she's letting the attorney of the accused walk over her. She listens and waits. She's heard the line before. "That caller wouldn't have talked to a male (\ attorney like that," she said. Finally, she persists, and ex- plains that everyone is entitled to due process of law. Li