For The

UNBEATABLE DEAL
See LARRY KAPLAN

New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing
_ 411.11,

'Hearing'

nican

Continued from Page 6

THE UNBEATABLE DEALER

28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696

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

Across from Tel-12 Mall

oc

THE DEALS ARE
=I
HEATING UP AT THE
I
UNBEATABLE DEALERS SUPER :r i f :
SUMMER SELLEBRATION

ILI

: TA BLE DE ALE ' '

Get into
the Swing
of Savings!

FINANCING

THE LOWEST
IN HISTORY

annual percentage
rate
-47M,

NEW 1987 NOVA

NEW 1987 SPECTRUM

NEW 1987 CAVALIER

NEW 1988'BERETTA

28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
355-1000
at 1-696
MEW

10 FRIDAY, AUG. 21, 1987

0 1: ,

1.9

OFFER EXPIRES
SEPT. 30, 1987

*Based on approved credit.
1.9% APR on most new
1987 Chevrolet cars. Other
rates as low as 3.9% & 4.8%
APR available as length of
contract increases. See
dealer for complete details.

, 31 V30 318 11111 9 H1,

"-

11 111 30 31811 V3: N 3H1,

/.141,1‘111
- -41&11
-

:11111111 (

01 :111 11:1:111.1 t1:1 11 211 4.1 1 4:111

Suzanne Shifman,
Supervisor of AudiolOgy
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital
Pontiac

NEW 1987
CAMARO

NEW 1987
CELEBRITY

H U N BEATA : E

. 3111130 318 V1V38 N D 3141,

U NBE ATA BLE DEALE "

fTI

ment in Israel is one year as
opposed to approximately
four years in the United
States.
This is an erroneous state-
ment. Through the use of
auditory , evoked potential
testing a hearing impaired in-
fant can be positively iden ,
tified as early as four months
of age. Hearing aids can be
put on the baby by six months
of age or earlier.
The auditory brainstem
response for infants is
available in any large
medical center in the United
States. This test is done, for
example, at St. Joseph Mercy
Hospital, Pontiac; Sinai
Hospital; Beaumont; Pro-
vidence; Oakwood; Universi-
ty of Michigan Hospital; and
Children's Hospital of
Michigan.
Interested parents may con-
tact the audiology depart-
ments at these hospitals or
the Michigan Speech
Language and Hearing
Association, 855 Grove, East
Lansing, Michigan, (51.7)
349-7419 if they need a refer-
ral outside of the Detroit
M _ etropolitan area.

A Sunrise
At South Haven

My wife and I enjoyed David
Holzel's excellent feature
("South Haven Sunset," July
31). After three long decades
of not setting foot in South
Haven, it appears that South
Haven's future will be
anything but Judenrein.
What may come as a shock
to your readers is that South
Haven is undergoing a
renaissance, perhaps even
more intensly Jewish than it
has ever been. South Haven
may not have the number of
Jewish suburbanites as
Charlevoix and Traverse City

With the establishment of
Camp Agudah on the former
site of Fidelman's, some 40
parcels of land have been
quickly purchased in the last
several months by young
observant couples in order to
build summer residences. The
area is already partially sur-
rounded by a newly con-
structed eruv. There are plans
to rebuild the South Haven
mikveh and the weekend
guest house for Shabbat visits
is totally booked into next
summer .. .
All this points to South
Haven becoming a future
haven for the observant
Jewish community.

Howard B. Sherizen
Oak Park

I enjoyed David Holzel's
story on South Haven,
especially since I visited there
this summer after about 25
years away.
The arcade that was so
popular with teens is gone,
but other landmarks remain

The greatest pleasure for
me was seeing the former
Babock's Cottages on North
Shore. So many of the old ren-
tal cottages in South Haven
have been torn down for
newer developments, but
"our" cottages — where my
family went for several sum-
mers and met our cousins
from Chicago — still remain

Esther B. Tschirhart
Detroit

NEWS Imm"'"

`Jewish Culture
Is Improving'

New York (JTA) — There are
"fledgling signs that a dismal
picture" of Jewish culture in
the Soviet Union is getting
better, says Samuel Norich,
executive director of the
YIVO Institute for Jewish
Research. Norich was ad-
dressing a commemorative
ceremony Aug. 12 at the
Workmen's Circle in New
York for the 24 Yiddish poets
murdered Aug. 12, 1952 in
Moscow's Lubianka Prison.
Norich said that since the
1960's, books by the
murdered writers have been
published sporadically, albeit
with no biographies
underneath the author's
photographs.

Stray Animals
Need Homes

Los Angeles (JTA) — There
is a growing awareness in
Israel of the "need to provide
care and shelter for animals"
in that country, according to
Eytan Bentsur, Israel consul
general in Los Angeles, but
Israelis need help from
abroad to follow through with
activities and projects to im-
prove the animals' situation.
Speaking recently with
west coast members of the Ad-
visory Board of CHAI (Con-
cern for Helping Animals in
Israel), Bentsur pointed to
Israelis' increasing sensitivi-
ty to the problem of homeless
and injured dogs, cats, horses,
donkeys and mules in the
streets.
Israelis are now starting to
recognize the need to address
this in the spirit of
the Jewish principle of
preventing tsaar baalei
chayyim, the suffering of
animals, he said.

