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(Just 1/2 Mile South of Nine Mile), Southfield Monday-Friday 8 am-5 pm, Saturday 8 am -Noon BOYS' WINTER BREAK BASKETBALL CAMP February 19-22 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 42930 West Ten Mile Rd. ELLIE'S WEIGH BETWEEN MEADOWBROOK AND NOVI ROAD GRAND SLAM U.S.A. EVERY SATURDAY AT 10 am, & 1 p.m. 348-8338 NOW MEETS AT 682-1717 NOVI J JEWELRY APPRAISALS At Very Reasonable Prices. Call For An Appointment V(' established 1919 FINE JEWELERS Lawrence M. Allan, Pres. GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA IN GRADING AND EVALUATION 26 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1991 Harris said. "Doctors worked hard to bring the census up. The trustees felt that for the long range, this would be best. "We need somebody with more hospital experience," Mr. Harris said. "Bob stepped in without any hospital experience and did a super job. He brought together all of the different factions of the hospital. He developed a rapport. He brought back the hospital's Jewish identity. Everybody loved him. We don't harbor any bad feelings toward him. We just needed something more." Mr. Harris said he did not know if being Jewish was a criteria for the new ad- ministrator. "We may be beyond that today," he said. ❑ Budget Bites Conditional FREE Loaner Car - Please Present Ad With Order FREE RUB-OUT WITH ANY COLLISION JOB OVER $500.00 Cellular Specialists Co. 357-3960 enhance the hospital's Jew- ish heritage. He is credited with bring- ing back to the hospital a firm Jewish identity. Under the Steinberg administra- tion, Sinai's logo was chang- ed to include a Star of David. In the past two years, ad- ministrators had been focus- ed on finding a suitable partner for Sinai during an erratic health care era that has left hospitals throughout the country scrambling to survive. In merger talks with Henry Ford Medical Center and the Detroit Medical Center, Mr. Steinberg 's agenda included maintain- ing that Jewish ambiance. "When the doctors decided to really get going, we had to get re-dedicated," Mr. 30400 Telegraph Road Suite 134 Birmingham, MI 48010 (313) 642-5575 DAILY 10-5:30 THURS. 10-7 SAT. 10-3 $60,000 state contract forced JVS last week to eliminate its Displaced Homemaker Program, which provided job-training for widowed and divorced women who wanted to re-enter the work force. The program, Mr. Ascher said, had been a model in the state since the early 1980s. Mr. Ascher, who recently testified before the Michigan House of Representatives appropriations committee, said the cuts primarily threaten programs for the disadvantaged. He said he will go to Lansing in the coming weeks to lobby government officials. Anticipating state cut- backs, Oakland County last week slashed 4.5 percent of its funds from recipient agencies. Bath JARC and Kadima receive county funds. "We're sitting on pins and needles. It's pretty scary," JARC Executive Director Joyce Keller said. "We're entering an era of confusion. The days of more govern- ment money are quickly dwindling. Our mission is to make sure the people we serve are affected as little as possible." Ms. Keller said she is not sure where JARC cuts will be made. She said she may need to trim staff hours for each of the 12 group homes, where 75 clients reside. Kadima, which operates a six-person group home, a seven-person apartment program and an outreach support program, will lose two newly created spots for its apartments. In the last year, the apartment program expanded from four to seven slots and was gearing up for two additional positions. "I'm thankful we hadn't filled those slots yet," Kadima Executive Director Miriam Iwrey said. "We need to expand. Housing is so critically needed. The community has to make commitments for these agencies." Meals on Wheels serves hot meals to about 200 clients from Jewish Family Service and Jewish Federa- tion Apartments each week- day. It is funded in part with "It's like the state is putting a gun to our head." — Al Ascher money from the Area Agen- cy on Aging and the Oak- land/Livingston Human Service Agency, which also is a target of cutbacks from the state. Meanwhile, officials of the Jewish Welfare Federation said they are finalizing plans to hire a community lobbyist in Lansing. Inter- views for the position took place this week. This, offi- cials said, would give the Jewish community a legislative advocate. Now the Federation will ask agencies to pool resources to pay for the lobbyist's services. "We are under incredible pressure," said Federation