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News Briefs

You've never seen a bank like this!

At Paramount Bank we refuse to nickel and dime our busi-
ness customers for things like deposit slips, deposit items or
"teller transactions."

Nor do we charge them for printing checks, wiring
money within -the U.S., or for just being our customer
that month.

Many customers tell us this free banking saves them
$500 and more a month. Check the chart to see how
much it can save you.

If you'd rather have free banking than fee banking, pay
your current bank one final fee.

Transfer your account to Paramount Bank.

1.800.421 •BANK

PAR

You've never seen a bank like this!

$180.00
$108.00
$135.00
$ 60.00
$192.00

Total

$675.00

•

*Service not available

Vocational rehabilitation & training
Senior adult volunteer opportunities
Adult day care
School-to-work-programs
Student internships

Refugee employment services
Career & educational counseling
Employment services and seminars

Retirement activities
Supports coordination
Supported employment
Independent living skills
Educational loans & scholarships
Displaced homemaker services

Tatyana Levina and her family fled their homeland to begin
life anew in the Detroit area. Through JVS job readiness classes
and referrals, Tatyana's husband gained work as a mechanical
engineer. Tatyana found it more difficult because she spoke
almost no English. At JVS, she explored her career options,
bettered her English and learned to use a computer. Her skills
won her job advancement and now she is considered by her
employer as, "a valuable worker we are fortunate to have." It
shows again, how Jewish values make life better in so many ways.

6/8
2001

28

248-559-5000

www.ivsdet.orq

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!MS

5821.00

S 192.00
$144.00
$180.00
S 77.25

$593,25

tThese fees may vary based on your business's individual needs and usage.

Branches • Birmingham 248.723.4800 • Farmington Hills 248.538.7600

$174

$240.00
$156.00
$225.00
$200.00

BANK ONE

AMPUNT

Monthly Fee
Per Check
Per Deposit Slip
Check Ordering Fee
Courier Service

CON4 ERICA

Business & Commercial Estimated Annual Feest

FDI C

Reform College
Names President

Cincinnati/JTA — The Reform move-
ment's Hebrew Union College-Jewish
Institute of Religion named Rabbi
David Ellenson as its new president.
Ellenson, a longtime professor and
administrator at the college's Los
Angeles campus, will replace Rabbi
Sheldon Zimmerman, who resigned
in December after being suspended
from the movement's Central
Conference of American Rabbis.

Shorter Hebrew
School Week OK'd

New York/JTA — The United
Synagogue of Conservative Judaism is
allowing its member congregations to
switch from three-day-a-week to
twice-a-week Hebrew school.
United Synagogue has long criti-
cized the twice-a-week plan, although
many synagogues did it anyway. Other
new Conservative education policies
approved this week included expand-
ing education standards to include
early elementary grades and high
school, and requiring that students
regularly attend Shabbat services.

Online Potential
For Shuls Eyed

New York/JTA — Twenty North
American rabbis have been selected to
form an advisory team exploring how
emerging technologies can help pulpit
rabbis in their work.
The project is under the auspices of
Synagogue Transformation and
Renewal, a year-old nondenomina-
tional organization. STAR also plans
to create a synagogue "supersite on
the Internet and help individual con-
gregations experiment with ways to
serve their members online.

Successor Eyed
For Solender

New York/JTA — The executive of the
Jewish Community Federation of
Cleveland has been tapped to succeed
Stephen Solender as the top profession-
al at the United Jewish Communities.
Solender will retire in 2003, but
Cleveland's Stephen Hoffman may join
the national group in another capacity
before that, said Joel Tauber, chair of
the executive committee of the UJC,
the umbrella organization for North
NEWS BRIEFS on page 30

