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After considering sites in
other states, Elkon opted for
Michigan because it is home
to General Motors, Ford and
" Chrysler. With input from the
Commerce Department, the
company selected Benton
Harbor. The company also
considered two closed auto
assembly plants in Detroit
and a new site in Muskegon,
also on the state's west coast.
"The infrastructure of the
auto industry is best in
Michigan, and there are more
incentives in Benton Harbor,"
Meytahl said.
Meytahl said the first cars
will roll off the assembly lines
in early 1990. They will be
built in Benton Harbor and
sold through one of the Big
Three automakers, to be
selected later this month.
A sister plant is planned for
Israel, and would manufac-
ture the cars for the European
market, Meytahl said.
Through marketing
studies, Elkon and Entech of-
ficials found that three
millidn of the 50 million
physically disabled people in
the United States are capable
of driving cars. Of those,
many can not afford the
high cost of converting vans
for wheelchair users, officials
said. No company currently
mass produces a special car
for the disabled.
"Handicapped individuals
have the same needs and
values as everyone else,"
Aldikacti said. "They want
good-looking cars, too." E
Open Mon. -Sat. 8-6, Sunday 8-5
LOCAL NEWS
Jewish Ethics Series
Will Begin Thursday
Shepherd, a judge in the
Michigan Court of Appeals.
There is a charge.
, Refreshments will be served.
Babysitting is available by
reservation only. For informa-
tion, call the Midrasha,
352-7117.
DREAMS
CAN
COME TRUE,
"'""H NEWSIN
Exchange
Started
IT WILL
Dr. Fred Rosner
HAPPEN
TO YOU.
DISTINCTIVE
LADIES
EVENING
WEAR
OPENING IN MARCH
(OCKTAI LS
EXQUISITE FASHIONS
CROSS WINDS MALL• 4301 Orchard Lake road•West Bloomfield, Mi•313•851•7633
Midrasha-College of Jewish
Studies and Greater Detroit
Chapter of Hadassah will
cosponsor a series entitled,
"Jewish Ethics in the '80s" on
Thursday and March 17 and
24.
The series will be held at
the Midrasha LaMed
Auditorium, beginning at
10:30 a.m.
On Thursday the topic will
be "Jewish Medical Ethics: —
In Vitro Fertilization, Sur-
rogate Motherhood and Sex
Organ Transplants." The lec-
turer will be Dr. Fred Rosner,
a scholar, writer and lecturer
in the field of Jewish medical
ethics.
On March 17 the topic will
be "Judaism and Business
Ethics." The lecturer will be
Adena Berkowitz, a practic-
ing attorney who is com-
pleting her doctorate in ethics
and philosophy at the Jewish
Theological Seminary.
On March 24, "Legal Ethics
and Jewish Tradition" will be
explored by Hon. John H.
Washington (JTA) — The
U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Council and Yad Vashem, the
world's • only two national
Holocaust institutions, last
month agreed to their first of-
ficial exchange of materials
and services.
The agreement comes less
than one year after the coun-
cil's agreement with officials
from the Polish government
archives to exchange
materials. Sam Eskenazi,
council spokesman, said
negotiations are under way to
sign agreements with other
countries.
ADL Publishes
Memoirs
New York — A behind-the-
scenes look at the Anti-
Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith is provided in a seven-
volume set of oral memoirs
published by ADL in conjunc-
tion with its 75th anniversary
this year.
The volumes, entitled Not
the Work of a Day, contain the
recollections and comments of
ADL national lay leaders and
professional staff.