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November 24, 1978 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-11-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

6 — SUPPLEMENT TO THE JEWISH NEWS

The Chiefs
Of Stet

A Quarter Century of Service

(Continued from Page 5)

began duties at Sinai in
internal medicine and
surgical
specialties
under
Hospital-
University affiliation.

Fifteen men graduated
from the Shapero School
of Nursing under the
Government program in-
stituted a year earlier.

The Surgical Intensive
Care Unit opened during
the year and Sinai's
Psychiatry Residency
Program became fully
accredited.

Harry C. Saltzstein, M.D.

1953 1955

-

Kiki Sills was named
President of the Guild.

Ruth Hermanoff was
named President of the
Shapero School of Nurs-
ing.

Nate S. Shapero was
elected President of the
Board of Trustees.

1965

Groundbreaking
ceremonies took place
for three major additions
to the hospital — the Ab-
raham and Anna Srere
Radiotherapy Center,
the Sinai Guild Staff
Residence and the
Hamburger-Jospey Re-
search Building.

Ruth Hermanoff was
named President of the
Guild.

1963

Saul Rosenzweig, M.D.

1956-1960
(Deceased)

The dedication of the
Samuel Frank Medical
Library took place this
year and this addition
represented a major con-
tribution to continuing
medical education and
research at the hospital.
Today the library con-
tains approximately
20,000 volumes and
regularly subscribes to
500 medical journals.

I. Jerome Hauser, M.D.

1961 1967

-

The Shapero School
of Nursing undertook a
program to train un-
employed males as
nurses under the aus-
pices of the U.S. De-
partment of Labor.

In this year also, the
Wayne State University
College of Medicine
Graduate School an-
nounced affiliation for
doctoral training in
physiology.

Hyman S. Mellen, M.D.

1968 1972

-

Edith Sobeloff was
named President of the
Shapero School of Nurs-
ing.

1964

Eli M. Brown, M.

1973 1975

-

A multi-million dollar
development program
was announced with the
latter half of the '60s to
witness Sinai Hospital's
greatest plant expansion
with the addition of six
major facilities.

t t

Lloyd J. Paul, M.D.

1976-1978

1966

Apartments for medi-
cal personnel were made
available following the
dedication of the Sinai
Guild Staff Residence
which was made possi-
ble by Guild fund-raising
activities.

Plans began this year
for a Research Building
on campus.

.

Esther Maddin was
named President of the
Guild.

1967

The Abraham and
Anna Srere
Radiotherapy Center,
which provided a means
for rendering a sophisti-
cated mode of
specialized treatment to
anyone requiring these
services, was dedicated.

The
Hamburger-
Jospey Research Build-
ing, a four-story facility
for the furtherance of in-
vestigative activities,
opened this year thanks
to the contributions of the
Samuel and Louis Ham-
burger and Maxwell Jos-
pey families.

.

The Shapero School
of Nursing became the
first school of practical
nursing in Michigan to be
accredited by the Na-
tional League of Nursing.

Beryl Winkelman al-
lowed for the installation
of an eight-bed Coronary
Care Unit called the Isa-
dore and Beryl Winkel-
man Heart Care Center.,

Sinai's Psychiatric
Outpatient Treatment
Center opened.

The Shapero School
of Nursing began an ex-
pansion program while a
cooperative program
with Wayne State Uni-
versity School of Nursing
was instituted.

Gertrude
Zemon-
Gass, Ph.D., was named
President of the Shapero
School of Nursing.

Shared services wilh
the Metropolitan North-
west Detroit Hospitals
Corporation (duad-
rangle) also began. (The
Quadrangle is a
cooperative association
of four area hospitals
formed to develop ways
for each to concentrate in
specific health services.
Besides Sinai, other
members of the Corpora-
tion are Mt. Carmel
Mercy Hospital, Provi-
dence Hospital and
Grace Northwest Hospi-
tal.)

1968

Augmenting existing
meeting quarters, the
Paul and Helen Zucker-
man Auditorium and
Conference Center was
officially dedicated.

A third unit of apart-
ments on the Sinai cam-
pus opened. The Stella
and Rena Frank Resi-
dence for Staff was given -
by the Harrison and Leon
H. Frank families.

Groundbreaking
ceremonies for the
Center for Continued
Care, a gift of Max J. and
Rose Zivian, took place.

Diane Hauser was
named President of, the
Guild.

1971

Hyman S. Mellen,
M.D., was elected Chief
of Staff.

A gift of the James and
Lynelle Holden Fund al-
lowed for the acquisition
of a 16-million volt linear
accelerator.

Beryl Winkelman was
named President of the
Guild.

In this year the Max M.
and Marjorie S. Fisher
Pavilion opened. This
new wing added 156
beds for acute care, a
pre-operative holding
area, a 26-bed recovery
room, a 17-room opera-
tive suite and a 12-bed
surgical intensive care
unit.

1969

The Max J. and Rose
Zivian Center for Con-
tinued Care, the pioneer-
ing effort at providing
transitional medical care
for patients no longer re-
quiring acute care but not
yet ready to return to
their homes for con-
valescence, opened.

Morris Garvett was
elected President of the
Board of Trustees.



A gift from Samuel and
Isabelle Friedman al-
lowed for the institution
of the Samuel and
Isabelle Friedman
Laboratory Wing.

1970

A gift from Isadore and

(Continued on Page 7)

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