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Continued from Page 6

of JFS clients live in the
northwestern suburbs."
Many people who need
counseling and other assis-
tance fail to request it
because help is not close by.
With individual and family
problems existing throughout
our widespread community,
outreach is not only ap-
propriate for a human service
agency, it is absolutely
essential.
While the letter writer's
concern for limited communal
resources is also appropriate,
we would suggest that
meeting vital local needs is,
indeed, "what serving the
Jewish community is all
about."
Creation of this JFS branch
office is the culmination of
years of cooperative planning
with the Jewish Welfare
Federation in search of better
ways to serve our community.
Thanks to the generosity of
endowment fund donors and
wise investment of its
resources, United Jewish
Charities is able to meet some
of our community needs that
cannot be covered by Allied
Jewish Campaign funds
alone.

Mark Schiussel
President,
Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit

LOCAL NEWS 1'1

Sinai Opens
Imaging Center

Sinai Health Care system
will celebrate the fall opening
of its Farmington Hills-based
Edward and Lillian Rose
Diagnostic Imaging Center
with an open house 4:30 p.m.
Aug. 27.
This center is named for the
Rose family, which has a long-
standing relationship with
Sinai Hospital.
Sinai Hospital President
Robert A. Steinberg, Dr.
Philip N. Cascade, chairman
of Sinai's department of
diagnostic imaging/radiology
and Dr. Michael Schwartz,
clinical director of the center,
will be joined at the ribbon
cutting ceremony by Farm-
ington Hills city officials,
civic leaders and invited
guests. The center will open
to the public in early
September.
Located at 32005 North-
western Highway, the
6,500-square foot center
houses the Siemens Somatom
Plus CT (computed tomog-
raphy) Scanner — currently
the fastest scanner available
for both routine and advanc-
ed medical application and
magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI).

