Complete details of the cur-
rent building program of Sinai
Hospital will be revealed at the
hospital's annual meeting,
which will be held jointly with
North End Clinic, at 8:15 p.m.,
Tuesday, in the hospital's main
lecture hall.
The new four-story building,
which is expected to be com-
pleted by the spring of 1960,
will make 106 additional beds
available to the hospital.
One entire floor of the new
structure will be devoted to a
40-bed psychiatric unit. Funds
for this portion of the expan-
sion program were made avail-
able through a U.S. Govern-
ment Hill-Burton grant.
The new portion of the hos-
pital also will incorporate the
facilities of North End Clinic,
presently located at Holbrook
and Oakland. A separate build-
ing will provide a residence
for nurses.
Provisions are being made for
new X-ray, laboratory and phy-
sical medicine areas in the ex-
panded facilities.
The significance of Sinai's
added facilities will be dis-
cussed at Tuesday's meeting by
Dr. Saul Rosenzweig, chief of
staff and medical director of

""-"••'t*i_Oit0.00#

•

Dr. Berk

Dr. August

North End Clinic; Dr. J. Ed-
ward Berk, chief of the division
of medicine, and clinical asso-
ciate professor at Wayne State
University; and Dr. Harry E.
August, chief of the psychiatry
division, and clinical professor
of psychiatry at WSU.
Dr. Rosenzweig, actively as-
sociated with North End Clinic
since its inception 30 years ago,
will speak on the meaning of
the out-patient clinic and the
106 new beds n terms of im-
proved patient care.
The opportunities to expand

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and improve the hospital's edu-
cational program, in the light
of the new facilities is the topic
of Dr. Berk.
Dr. August, who is chairman
of the Michigan State Mental
Health Commission, will explain
the growing trend to include
phychiatric units in general
hospitals and changing attitudes
and methods in treatment of
mental illness.
Presiding at the meeting will
be Abraham Srere, Sinai Hos-
pital president, and Melville S.
Welt, president of North End
Clinic. A reception will follow.
Cost of the new facilities at
Sinai will run an estimated
$3,368,648, according to Dr. Ju-
lien Priver, hospital director.-
Of the total, about $1,500,000
in cash is available, including a
Federal grant approved early
this month for $500,000. The
Federal funds will be used to
build the 40-bed psychiatric
unit.
An additional $500,000 grant
from the Shiffman Foundation,
$375,000 from the Metropolitan
Detroit Building Fund and
$114,300 from the Ford Founda-
tion also have been approved.
The rest of the financing-
$2,000,000—will be met on a
bank loan taken out by the hos-
pital and endorsed by the com-
munity through the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation.
It is planned to make areas
in the hospital addition avail-
able f o r foundation or indi-
vidual philanthropy, thus re-
ducing considerably the amount
of the bank loan, Dr. Priver
said.
Being a community institu-
tion, it is a customary practice
to "sell areas" for private en-
dowment, he added.
Not included in the overall
cost of the hospital expansion
is the $250,000 nurses residence,
which has been already as-
sured through a grant by the
Slatkin family,

Poole, Olefsky,
Hertz's Talk on
Balfour Program

Under the direction of Valter
Poole, the Detroit Symphony
Orchestra played, for the first
time here, Petrushka's five Ori-
ental dances, based on melo-
dies by Nissan Cohen, as part
of the special concert arranged
for the celebration of the Bal-
four anniversary sponsored by
the Zionist Organization of De-
troit, at the Ford Auditorium,
Saturday night.
Another feature of the con-
cert was Bloch's Shelomo,
the Hebrew rhapsody for vi-
olincello and the full orches-
tra, with the eminent cellist,
Paul Olefsky, as soloist. Both
the orchestra and the soloist
distinguished themselves at
the performance.
Other selections played by the
orchestra were Mendelssohn's
Symphony No. 4, Smetana's
Molday and Tschaikowsky's Ro-
meo and Juliet Overture.
In a brief address after the
intermission, Dr. Richard C.
Hertz, senior rabbi of Temple
Beth El, interpreted the mean-
ing of Balfour Day as empha-
sizing "our devotion to Israel's
security." He said a two-way
bridge is being built between
Israel and the United States,
the youngest and the oldest
democracies, and he said there
is need for strengthening the
understanding between the Jew-
ries in the two countries.

Israel Archaeologists
Uncover New Finds

TEL AVIV (JTA)—A special
gate broken in ancient times
through the wall surrounding
the city of Jaffa, in honor of
Egyptian Pharaoh Ramses II,
was discovered by the Tel
Aviv municipal archaeological
department.
Workmen clearing Jaffa's an-
cient walls had come across
stones bearing Egyptian hiero-
glyphics. Upon examination,
the ancient Egyptian inscrip-
tion was found to include the
name of Ramses II. The new
discovery, according to scien-
tists here, confirms the chrono-
logical order of layers pre-
viously uncovered in Jaffa's
ancient walls.
Jean Paraux, head of a
French archaeological team in
Israel, announced the discovery
near Beersheba, in the Negev,
of ivory statuettes and ivory
jewelry more than 3,500 years
old.
Paraux described the two
statuettes, each about 10 inches
high, as a nude man's figure,
and the head of a woman. Both
are executed in the same style,
he said, and are considered
more beautifully turned out
than pieces of the same period
found in Egypt.

Israel Appeals TSO
Decision Halting Huleh
Expel Communists
Drainage Operations
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel from Israel Village

continued to press the United
Nations Truce Supervision Or-
ganization for permission to
resume work on its Lake Hu-
leh smap drainage project near
the Syrian border, which the
Syrians interrupted ten days
ago with a fusillade of rifle
shots.
The United Nations military
observers, after achieving a
cease-fire, asked Israel to sus-
pend its drainage project work.
The Syrians had objected to
the work, claiming it was being
done on Arab lands in the de-
militarized zone. Although the
UN has now conceded that
Israel is correct in its con-
tention that the parcel in
question is owned by Israel,
the Truce Supervision Organiza-
tion still insists that work
remain suspended "in order to
maintain tranquility."

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JERUSALEM (JTA) —Three
Israeli Arab Communists were
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passing out threatening propa-
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ganda, Premier David Ben
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Gurion revealed • in Parliament.
--Y(
Replying to a query submit-
ted by Tewfik Toubi, Arab Exclusively at
Communist deputy, the Premier
stated that after the July re-
volution in Iraq, the three men
passed out leaflets in Nazareth
and in Galilean villages warn-
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ing that Israeli Arabs who
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of the military governor.

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7—THE DET ROI T JEWISH NEWS—Friday, November 21, 1958

Sinai Hospital Expansion
Topic of Annual Meeting

