It's a great time to change! 4 • 50 % MONEY MARKET - •5 O 0 O 0 A.P.Y. Come in to the Sterling office nearest you: Roseville —810-294-2950 Clawson — 248-435-2840 Commerce Twp. — 248-669-3993 sterling Sterling Heights — 810-268-5200 Southfield — 248-948-8799 Dearborn — 313-274-3030 • Troy — 248-649-3883 Farmington Hills — 248-489-9580 Warren — 810-558-4600 Grosse Pointe Woods — 313-882-2880 Waterford — 248-674-4901 Livonia — 734-462-4106 bank Lincoln Park — 313-383-4000 &trust West Bloomfield — 248-855-6644 Rochester — 248-656-5760 -we create solutions... www.sterlingbank.com Annual percentage Yield accurate as of 12/28/98 and is subject to change without notice. Money Market: $2,500 minimum balance required to open and must be maintained for stated APY. Fees INSURED may reduce earnings if minimum is not maintained. 1999 Sterling Bank & Trust FSB. FDIC the yachtsman 1105 S. Adams • Birmingham, MI 248 • 723 • 9839 YOUR. LARGEST SOURCE OF PATAGONIA JUST GOT BIGGER! NOW ON THE CORNER OF LINCOLN AND ADAMS. Ipp- patagonia • Ask about our Preventive Maint Advertise in our Arts & Entertainment Section! ,zze ofi 44.‘ 2/5 1999 z _.../Thvffir =Arts & Entertainment 18 Detroit Jewish News Call The Sales Department (248) 3544123 Ext. 209 Miami millionaire Irving Moskowitz in Jerusalem in January, 1999. He was in Israel to help shore up right-wing supporters of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. MATTHEW DORF Jewish Telegraphic Agency Washington Do you want to help make peace the central focus of the upcoming Israeli election? Donate $2,160. Your contribu- tion will put a sign on the side of an Israeli bus for two weeks. For $1,080 you can rent an illuminated sign for two weeks. Too rich for your blood? How about $540 for plastic signs, $144 for posters or $36 for stickers? "Advance the cause of peace in ways that even Israeli political parties can- not," Americans for Peace Now urged in a Jan. 26 fund-raising solicitation to American Jews announcing the centerPEACEcampaign." The request is hardly unique. Across the country, Israelis and their American supporters are making the rounds to raise money from American Jews who seek to influence the out- come of the May 17 elections in Israel. Although Americans for Peace Now is not publicly linking its mes- sage to any particular Israeli candidate or party, their effort is widely seen as an attempt to bolster support for Ehud Barak, the Labor Party's candi- date for prime minister. Most of the money raised outside of Israel is pledged behind closed doors. In fact, most of the fund-rais- ers, donors and those involved in the transfer of money refuse to publicly discuss their activities. Unlike contrib- "