For The

LOCAL NEWS

UNBEATABLE DEAL
See LARRY KAPLAN

Hospice Receives
Oak Park Approval

New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing
Aar

man

THE UNBEATABLE DEALER

(313) 355-1000
(313) 355-6414

Across from Tel-12 Mall

28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696

3.9 0 /0**

* *B*Atill
T I O $ 1 000K

ANL%

PERCENTAGE

OR Yro'$600 CASH BACK!**

PLUS TO $ 7 50 OPT gr92,9"

(ON SELECT NEW CAR MODELS)

(ON SELECT NEW TRUCK MODELS)

1987 CELEBRITY 4 DR.

$2 „,G 0- t Ns

tinted glass, sliding rear window. blk. whl. mldg.. 1000 lb. payload
pkg.. 2.8 EFI V6 gas eng.. 5-spd. man. o.d.. p.s.. cast alum. whIs.
Cloth seats.

LIST

4

Tinted glass. rr. wino. oetog.. air conditioning. 2.5L EFI L4 eng.,
auto., tilt whl.. AMIFM ETR stereo. Stk. #946X

,

DISCOUNT

LESS FACTORY REBATE

LESS CASH ALTERNATIVE

$12,102
-$1477
$10,625
-$1000

LIST
DISCOUNT

$9841
-$500

LESS CASH BACK

111111.0111140111111111111111111111i

OR TAKE SPECIAL MINCE RATES N LEU OF CASH ALTERNA1WE

N\k-viv,*/
30

T
i s,Sv
s !GLA

Bided glee. tattoo equipment. dr. edge guard mictg . inter wiper system. au

coed•trt.. console. OW.. ye gas. 4-spd. auto w /overdrive. 20 gallon fuel
and
tent, Wt. poufs, Meeting. if am/en stereo cauett•. power window
locks. Stk. .e2

LIST
DISCOUNT

LESS FACTORY REBATE

LESS CASH ALTERNATIVE

$16,542
-$1758
$14,784
-)500
$14 284

T-glass, mats.. Mt. wiper, r•wind. del., air, spd. ctrl., tilt, EMI
AM/FM. 2.8L MFI V•6. auto/OD.Stk.#4

LIST

DISCOUNT

LESS CASH BACK

1987 CAVALIER
2-DOOR COUPE

1987 NOVA 4-DOOR
HATCHBACK SEDAN

$8840
-$665

NBE ATA M, E D E A L E R

LIST
DISCOUNT

LESS CASH BACK

NOW $7675*

$8175
-$00

2.0L EFI L4, II. blue. 4-spd. manl. trans., pwr. steering. wheel trim
rings. P 175/80F1.13 ALS. SrI3 tires.

LIST
DISCOUNT

LESS CASH BACK

CHEVROLET

28111 TELEGRAPH RD.
And 12 Mile at 1-696

r

.

-4

-4_0,0_7

$7917
-$422
$7495
-$1000

NOW $6495*

LOOK, SHOP, GET YOUR BEST DEAL, BUT DON'T BUY
UNBEATABLE DEALER!
UNTIL YOU SEE THE

r •

$12,802 -
-$1307
. $11,495
2:sno
.1

NOW 90,495*

NOW $13,684*

OR TAKE SPECIAL FINANCE RATES IN LIEU OF CASH ALTERNATIVE

1.8L 2BBL L4 Toyota. 5•spd.. man. trans.. P155 80R13 B oN
radials, trt.rrear carpet mats. Stk. #513

'THE

1987 CAMARO

1987 S10 BLAZER 4 WD

355 1000

"plats tax, title, destiutica
'3.9% for 24 tees., 5.9% 36 us.,
1.9% for 41 Nes., 9.9% fur 61 us.
wham. credit Dealer filacial pr-
ticipatioe may affect cussuer cost
'500 cask luck on S-10 Pickle. 103
S-10 Blazer, cu be pitied as Pori
mitt. Up to $750 oriel savings al
4-cyl. S-10 Pick! & Bluer. Up to
'500 potion savings a Y6 S-10 Pichp
& Blazer. Not avail. De S-10 El pic-
kups. Mutt take delivery ext of stock
by Merck 13, 1N1, for 3.9% APR w
cask back by March 31 to take Ural-
tage of possible oppo savings of ep
to '750.
'**On Camaro, Celebrity (4-cyl.).
Cavalier, Mora. Dealer participation
Mg affect comer csst.

DAVID HOLZEL

Staff Writer

B

y a vote of five to one,
the Oak Park School
Board decided Monday
to offer to lease the closed
Dewey Elementary School
building to the Hospice of
Southeastern Michigan, with
an option to purchase the
building. Should the hospice
decide to exercise its option,
the board would agree to the
sale, an Oak Park schools
spokesman said.
The vote, "puts us back to
square one," said Dr. Paul
Werner, the hospice's acting
director. "It just gives us one
more option.".
The Oak Park option is one
of six options that a broad-
based planning committee—
including representation from
the Jewish Welfare
Federation—will look at to de-
termine the future of the hos-
pice, whose lease at its present
Southfield facility runs out in
18 months, according to Dr.
Werner.
It is also the second most ex-
pensive option, he said, be-
cause it would involve $3.7
million in renovations, "al-
though in the long term it
might make sense to do it".
Only buying a piece of land and
building from scratch would be
costlier.
Alternatives to the Dewey
plan, according to Dr. Werner,
include finding a similar build-
ing in an area which, unlike
Dewey school, is zoned for med-

ical facilities, purchase a prop-
erly zoned building that al-
ready has beds, lease beds in a
hospital or extend the hospice's
lease in Southfield.
Within the next month a pre-
liminary feasibility study will
be made "to see what we can
afford to do in the next three to
five years."
Dr. Werner called Monday's
vote "courageous. It would
perhaps have been easier to
turn us down." An opposition
group of some 15 to 20 Dewey
school neighbors "plans to
fight us every step of the way,"
he said.
Some residents of the
neighborhood south of Nine
Mile Road contend that they
receive inferior municipal

Dewey School is
one of six options
the hospice is
considering.

services and are using their
opposition to the hospice to
push their point.
The hospice also plans to
open three satellite centers in
the Detroit area. The Oak Park
facility would include a teach-
ing center, a computer de-
partment, administrative
facilities for the entire hospice
network, as well as 25 patient
beds.
But, said Dr. Werner, if the
hospice is opposed every step of
the way, "we're out of the ball
game."

Interfaith Clergy Meeting
Today At Temple Beth El

Catholic, Protestant and
Eastern Orthodox Clergy from
the Detroit metropolitan area
will gather at Temple Beth El
in Birmingham today to take
part in the 45th B. Benedict
Glazer Institute on Judaism
sponsored by the temple.
Daniel Schorr, broadcast
and print journalist, will be a
featured speaker along with
Rabbi Hirshel Jaffe, co-author
of Why Me? Why Anyone?
Schorr will speak on "Ter-
rorism and the Media."
Rabbi Jaffe will speak on
"Who Comforts the Comfor-
ter?"
The institute, which is ex-
pected to draw more than 700
members of the Christian
clergy, is directed by Rabbi
Dannel I. Schwartz, senior
rabbi of Temple Beth El.
Schorr has long been iden-
tified as one of CBS News' top
correspondents covering the
Watergate scandal and the in-
vestigation of the CIA and FBI.
His news coverage has earned
him three "Emmy" Awards for
excellence in journalism.
Rabbi Jaffe, the spiritual
leader of Temple Beth Jacob in

Newburgh, N.Y., is commonly
known as the "Running Rabbi"
for completing the 1978 New
York City Marathon. He also
visited the hostages in Iran in
1980 to bring them spiritual
comfort.
The primary purpose of the
Glazer Institute is to promote
better understanding between
Jews and Christians through
educational means.
Other program participants
will be Rev. Gerald Doran,
president, Christian Com-
munication Council of Met-
ropolitan Detroit Churches;
Ms. Audrey J. Georges, direc-
tor of Catholic Social Services
for Western Wayne County;
Rabbi Marc S. Blumenthal,
rabbi, Temple Beth El; Paul J.
Dizik, president of Temple
Beth El; Mark Glazer; Rev.
Alex J. Brunett, director of
ecumenical and inter-religious
affairs, Archdiocese of Detroit;
Rev. Edward B. Willingham,
executive director, the Chris-
tian Communication Council
of Metropolitan Detroit
Churches, and Rabbi Richard
C. Hertz, rabbi emeritus of
Temple Beth El.

