I LOCAL NEWS I WHATEVER THE BOOK SAYS YOUR TRADE IS WORTH MEL FARR WILL PAY... 4eA Sinai MORE PLUS . . . DRIVE ANY OF THESE CARS FOR JUST 1/ THE PRICE!* / 2 Mel Farr Ford C. Z - 5g) FORD Z4750 Orseaflold Rd. at 10 Ws Rd. MEL FARR FORD 24750 Greenfield Rd. Oak Park, MI 48237 0 RD . 961E3100 MIKE SCHNEIDER MARK NESSEL NEW '91 ESCORT DRIVE TODAY • .1. • • 1, • • AT 1/ PRICE! / • -,... 7 . ,:v: \\... 4 ma- A , .,,,,,,,,, ,,,-, '1741,1•?: \‘'N'7.7‘ ... .. , 4 , ... r,..... . , -w :.,. '' . „,. . \ 7,,,lz Ze7tN*.-) ,, ..":.'" •.‘, S1 ' .1 ‘. .0' Nvr, ....: s , . TOYOTA 1951 S. Telegraph Rd. Bloomfield Hills, MI 48013 l'''' NEW '91 TAURUS _ ' . tin%_7-_ N2.......k.,"'",,,\N\\N. AllialL .„E., ,,,,, ........ ,, 13111 I. Tologroph RU North of Swart Lake Ordlird Lk. Rd. r . MEL PARR TOYOTA DRIVE TODAY AT 1/ PRICE! Mel Farr Toyota 333E3300 JAY PUZIO Immo Rd. NEW '91 CELICA DRIVE TODAY AT 1/ PRICE! /2 NEW '91 CAMRY DRIVE TODAY Eze AT 1/ PRICE! /2 MERCURY LI NCOLN 4178 Highland Road (M•59 near Pontiac Lake Road) WATERFORD • 417.14101ead Rd. (M-00) Pontiac Ws Rd. Mel Farr Lincoln Mercury 683E9500 LOU GORDON OR MICKEY GOLDBERG NEW '91 TOWN CAR DRIVE TODAY • •P'.&:kaik• AT 1/ PRICE! /2 NEW '91 CONTINENTAL DRIVE TODAY AT 1/ PRICE! /2 • The Plan is available at all 3 Mel Farr locations. All Fords, Mercurys, Lincolns and Toyotas qualify for '/2 Price Program. • The Plan is a Company Authorized 2 year lease previously unavailable. See dealer for details. Customer must qualify. New '90 and '91 vehicles in stock only. 1/2 Price refers to MSRP. Prior sales excluded. Offer ends two weeks after last ad. 18 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1990 Continued from Page 1 legal committee to study their options should Sinai merge with the Detroit Medical Center. The doctors, many of whom sold their practices to Sinai, want to know if they are entitled to the right of first refusal should a merger or sale take place. Doctors said they formed the committee as a "crisis mode" after receiving negative response from the hospital's executive board and representatives from the Jewish community. Most of the doctors, afraid their jobs could be in jeopar- dy, would speak only on con- dition of anonymity. "If we close, we will take away the one thing that links the Jews and the non- Jews in Detroit," said Dr. Melvyn Rubenfire, Sinai chief of medicine. "Without the Jewish community being involved in the non-Jewish sector, we will create a rift of racism and anti-Semitism." One coalition member said a sale to DMC could mean the loss of 2,000 jobs, and the discount purchase by DMC of millions of dollars of Sinai's advanced medical technology. The physician said that DMC could sell some equip- ment for as low as 25 cents on the dollar. DMC also could have access to the hundreds of Sinai nurses at a volatile time in the health care industry when hospitals face a nursing shortage within Detroit. "The Detroit Jewish com- munity has a history of leav- ing dead carcasses of buildings behind it," the doctor said. "We don't want Sinai to be another memory." Dr. Loomus said he envi- sions a positive opportunity for Sinai. Yet, he said, with the nursing shortage and difficulty employing quality support staff members and maintaining a viable billing system, Sinai is not free from problems "We have to convince the Jewish community not to be afraid to cross Eight Mile Road," he said. "It's really a shame that the Jewish community doesn't know what Sinai is all about," another coalition member said. "We speak a lot in the Jewish community about the great need to raise money for many different Jewish needs. "There is a time-honored need in Judaism that calls for the healing of the sick. Sinai wasn't just created to be a place for a job for a Jew- ish doctor. It was created to be a beacon unto the world." Dr. Chaim Brickman, a Sinai specialist in the areas of Lupus and immunology, loves to tell the story of his residency in internal medi- cine at Hutzel Hospital. He walked into a room of a black patient who noticed his kippah and asked him why he wasn't on staff at Sinai Hospital. El [NEWS I Ex-Vichy Official Demands Fast Mal Paris (JTA) — A former high official of the Vichy regime is demanding a speedy trial to clear himself of charges of "complicity and assistance in committing crimes against humanity." Maurice Papon, 80, was formally indicted in 1983 on the basis of a private com- plaint by Nazi-hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld. But his trial has been repeatedly postponed. Mr. Papon charges that his accusers are politically motivated and trying "to convince public opinion that all Frenchmen were Nazi collaborators." Meanwhile, he has brought a libel suit against the left- wing weekly Le Nouvel Observateur for publishing an article last spring which described him as "one of the French ac- complices of the Nazi genocide policy." Mr. Papon, who was secre- tary-general of the depart- ment and city of Bordeaux from 1942 to 1944; was cleared of wrongdoing by an investigating committee after the war. Later, he served in the government of President Charles de Gaulle, became a banker and was finance min- ister during the regime of President Valery Giscard d'Estaing. But Ms. Klarsfeld and a number of prominent historians have accused Mr. Papon of employing the Bordeaux police and ad- ministration on behalf of the Nazis, to round up thousands of Jews for the death camps.