be a lawyer. So when his father sold
the family business in 1965, Adelman
went to law school. "They had a pro-
gram at Michigan where you could go
through non-stop. Instead of the usual
two semesters a year and a summer
off, you could go through in 27
months," he said.
Married in 1961 to the former
Judith Rose, the Adelmans have four
children and live in Birmingham.
Both enjoy a passion for book collect-
ing.
Daughter Laurel, 35, is married
and lives in a suburb of Philadelphia.
Jeff, 31, is a lawyer in Detroit, but not
with Honigman Miller. He is active in
the Michigan-Israel Chamber of
Commerce. Michael, 27, lives in
Grand Rapids, where he is district
sales manager for a pharmaceutical
company. And Elizabeth, 26, is an art
student at Eastern Michigan
University.
Adelman has long been active with
the Central Business District
Association (CBDA) of downtown
Detroit. He serves on their board of
directors and executive committee,
and was the group's chairman in 1986.
He is also on the board of the Detroit
Economic Growth Corporation. ❑
Trade Issues
Are Resolved
Jerusalem (JPFS) — Israel and the
United States have agreed on trade
concessions in talks aimed at resolving
problems with the free trade accord,
the Israel Industry and Trade Ministry
announced.
According to the agreement, the U.S.
will exempt Israel's imports arriving via
ports from the custom users fees. The
only countries that enjoy this exemption
today are Canada and Mexico, within
the framework of NAFTA.
In exchange, Israel has agreed to
allow the import of American food
products that had previously been
blocked due to Israeli standards,
which require that food be packaged
according to specific metric sizes.
The U.S. argued that this was bla-
tant discrimination against American
food products compared with imports
from Europe and was blocking busi-
ness opportunities in Israel.
The agreement on the issues was a
result of talks that Industry and Trade
Minister Natan Sharansky held with
U.S. Trade Representative Charlene
Barshefsky in Washington during his
visit to the U.S. last month.
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Annual percentage yield effective as of 2102/98 and subject to change without notice. $2,500 minimum balance required on
money market accounts. Statement fees may reduce eamings if rrinimum balance not maintained. ©1998 Sterling Bank & Trust, F.S.B.
Clawson (248) 435-2840 • Commerce Twp. (248) 669-3993
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