• 21 Million Mortgage Ensures Sinai Hospital Expansion • People Make News Mrs. SUE ZOHAR- D E S H E H, instructor and teacher-trainer at the David Yellin Hebdew Teachers Col- lege Rachel Shazar Institute, has been invited to an inter- national meeting of the As- sociation for Children with Learning Disabilities which is being held through Sunday in Houston. She will report on the progress of learning disabilities programs in Is- rael. * * Detroiter Dr. ALAN NI- CKAMIN was inaugurated as president of the Southeastern Division of the Michigan State Podiatry Association at its annual dinner-dance. LET US COPY & RESTORE YOUR TREASURED PHOTOGRAPHS at reasonable rates PRESTIGE PHOTOGRAPHY KE 1-8196 JOE MILLER and HIS ORCHESTRA Music For All Occasions LI 5-1244 111 * j Sinai Hospital has obtained an FHA guaranteed motgage of nearly $21,000,000, the largest ever processed by the Detroit FHA office, for six building and alterations projects and refinancing of existing debt. Papers were. signed in the Detroit FHA offices Feb. 21 for the 25-year mortgage at an interest rate of 81/4 per cent. Citizens Mortgage Corp. of Southfield, a subsidiary of Manufacturers-Hanover Corp. of New York, is the mort- gagee. The mortgage enables Sinai to proceed with a long-range building program, according to Milton M. Maddin, hos- pital president. Approximately $12,600,000 in existing debt will be re- financed; the remainder of the $20,900,000 is earmarked for additions and enlarge- ments, he said. The closing climaxed nearly three years of tran- sactions with the departments of Housing and Urban De- velopment and Health, Edu- cation and Welfare, and the M i c h i g an Department of Public Health. The loan was made possible through Section 242, Title II of the National Housing Act. "11, presents resents a at Impnora singles singles party dance 1824 W 14 MILE ROAD Alvaros which authorizes HUD to in- sure mortgage loans for con- struction or rehabilitation of nonprofit hospital facilities a n d to supplement HEW guaranteed loans for the same purpose. HEW, acting as an agent of HUD, was responsible for determining the feasibility of the proposal. Its action was based on approval of Sinai's plans by the state health de- partment's division of health facilities planning and con- struction, headed by Richard A. Reihmer. Sinai officials first investi- gated FHA financing follow- ing a suggestion by Max M. Fisher, Sinai trustee. The cooperation of HUD, HEW, FHA and state health department officials was credited with the success of the application by Alfred L. Deutsch, Sinai treasurer and trustee, and Jerome Frank, chairman of the finance com- mittee. Expansion will begin this spring, said Dr. Julien Pri- ver, executive vice president of Sinai. "The opening of the Max M. and Marjorie S. Fisher Pavilion, previously approved by area planning authorities, added 156 beds. This expan- sion taxed the facilities of our two major diagnostic de- partments, radiology a n d laboratory medicine. At long last they can be expanded to care for the additional patient load," he said. 14.r.)0.11 91.7, SINAI HOSPITAL OF DETROIT there Cru i3ewear 3 plat no p lace our p lace C ruiaewear 13 our moil important 3ect3on 3o we re alwav p repared with a g reat collection and you Save 205 Open Sundays 12-4 Sat. til 6 daily to 5 Coolidge at Nine Oak Park For Perfect Fit & Comfort Is your Bra Uncomfortab Then Discover t Pennyrich Bra! It Lifts .& Shapes the Large Bust. Enhances the Small Bust without padding. Sold Only By Trained Fitters Sizes 24-46, jr. A to 11 Call Today for a Fitting and ask how you can earn a free bra International Music 355-4913 nb.e. 1.11 ■ 11A. 1.41.W.J.C• 1r This plot plan of Sinai Hospital shows the location of six building projects to begin this spring with funds from the $21,000,000 FHA mortgage. Mrs. Margaret English 846-4285 547-0586 F pieces, favors, & invitations for all occasions. A I INVITATIONS 20% OFF 1 FAVORITE by Bev Kurtis 353-9199 & artificial flower arrange- 0 silk ments to suit home or office R decor. r. SUE KUTINSKY DORSEY MENKEN original personalized 626-7312 — INVITES center- 626-5536 BAZAARS The Gas-less Weekend. r between. Cooli dge &Cooks. 2 miles east of Woodward for information call 557-5447 . 255-0727 /or The Pennyrich Bra AND HIS ORCHESTRA tickets available at door—$2.75 30meMing Sharp THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 36—Friday, March 1, 1974 with MAR. 3rd, 8:30 3 Sinai. Albert Kahn Associ- ates, Inc., is architect and engineer, and F. H. Martin Construction Co. is the gen- eral contractor. HENRY WAKNINE dress casual & ref re0-tments—ages18 -40 music by A Live and Men it In addition to doubling the present size of the radiology and laboratory medicine de- partment, Sinai will also: • Expand facilities for medical intensive care, card- iac diagnostic procedures and respiratory care services. • Add a snack bar and enlarge the present gift shop in the Outer Dr. lobby. • Build an underground material receiving building near the southeast corner of the hospital campus. • Enlarge an existing serv- ice building to accommodate additional air-conditioning equipment. James A. Hamilton Co. of Minneapolis, hospital plan- ning consultants, did the space utilization studies for Milton M. Maddin, Sinai Hospital president, seated_, left, prepares to sign Sinai's $21,000,000 mortgage, joined by John E. Kane, HUD area director, also seated, and, from left, John McFadden, HUD attorney; Dr. Julien Priver, Sinai executive vice president; John F. Burnie, senior vice president of Citizens Mortgage Corp.; Avern Cohn, Sinai at- torney with the firm of Honikman, Miller, Schwartz and Cohn; and Alfred L. Deutsch, treasurer of Sinai. Sephardic Community to Host Armenian Dancers at Social The Sephardic Community of Greater Detroit will hold a social evening of interna- tional dancing 8 p.m. Sunday at the Zionist Cultural Cen- ter. Refreshments will he served, and the meeting is open to all. Byron, Jacqueline and Patricia Melkonian will pre- sent a program of Armenian dancing in native costume and will lead audience par- ticipation. Melkonian, an instructor of Armenian dancing at the In- ternational Institute, is a senior at Wayne State Uni- versity and a former theo- logical student who spent a summer in Jerusalem. He plans to return there this year and will speak to the group on "Armenians in Is- rael." Plans will be completed for the annual spring fund-raising event, a Mediterranean Cab- aret Night, 8:30 p.m. March 9 at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. Music will be provided by a Greek-Armenian band, "The Rhodians" and will feature a floor show by the Zorba Dancers, a professional team of Greek dancers. There will be a full-course dinner and other entertainment. There will be delegations of Se- phardic Jews from Egypt, Morrocco, Cuba, Syria, Per- sia, Greece, Israel, Turkey and Iraq. For reservations and in- formation, call Shirley Behar, 557-8551; Susan Betsalel, 399- 7326; or Sylvia Sima, 557- 9393. At Somerset Inn, it's a lot nicer than you think it might be; just because we have so much - to take your mind off all the things that bother you all week long. A luxuriously comfortable room, for instance. Troy's finest dining at our L'Auberge and carefree hours in our Golden Grape. There's a four seasons pool for your use, and a double cinema right on the premises. And just across the lane, the 38 fine 5th Avenue shops of famed Somerset Mall. It can be a gas, even if your tank is empty. Call us now for reservations, won't you? rif SOMERSET INN Big Beaver Rd., east of Coolidge, Troy, Mich. 48084 Phone (313) 643-7800