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February 22, 1991 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-02-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

DETROIT

Sinai

Continued from Page 1

4

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1991

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efforts have been attributed
to increased census figures
at the hospital for the last
two months. The hospital
has averaged between 385
and 420 in-patients each
night since the doctors
began the campaign.
"We will lose momentum
unless we keep going and I
think we can," said Dr.
Melvyn Rubenfire, chief of
medicine.
Before the doctors formed
their coalition, administra-
tors focused efforts on fin-
ding a suitable partner for a
merger. Sinai brought in
consultants from Touche
Ross, now Deloitte and
Touche, to map out a merger
strategy, and then hired Mr.
Greene and Paul Szilagyi,

vice president of finance,
from the firm to implement
the plan.
In the past two years, all
efforts have been focused on
a merger. Yet, Sinai has
called off talks with the
giant Henry Ford Health
Care Corp. and the Detroit
Medical Center Corp.
Once doctors expressed in-
creased interest in the
hospital's viability, trustees
opted to try to keep it an in-
dependent facility.
"This is the beginning of
what is going to be new," Dr.
Beckman said. "It repre-
sents a milestone. The board
is honestly going to find the
best group of people to get
this done."

Yavneh

Continued from Page 1

Yavneh officials originally
chose to rent space at the
Center because there was
concern about establishing a
day school at a temple, Mr.
Jonas said. "We wanted to
start on a neutral site to get
the community used to the
concept of a day school," he
said. "We buried the ter-
ritorial hatchet when we
went to the Jewish Com-
munity Center."
Although Yavneh has
been happy at the Center,
"we always knew it would be
a temporary solution. There
was no way we could stay
and grow at the Center," he
said.
When Yavneh began look-
ing at sites east of the
Center, it originally looked
at another neutral place, the
United Hebrew Schools
building, Mr. Jonas said.
But as the daytime home of
Darchei Torah, UHS
couldn't accommodate an-
other day school.
While Temple Israel had
space available, Yavneh of-
ficials felt Beth El, with its
closeness to Southfield and
Oak Park, was better suited
to the school, he said. Details
of which rooms Yavneh will
use have not been finalized.
Before the decision to
move was made, Rabbi
Daniel Polish of Beth El and
Yavneh officials spoke to
other Reform clergy about
their plans and why it was
done, Mr. Jonas said.
"We have the support of
every rabbi," he said. The
Reform clergy has also
agreed to sponsor Yavneh
Shabbats where the school
will be featured throughout
the service.
The move will do more
than put the school in the

center of Detroit's Jewish
community. Because Beth El
is offering use of its facility
to Yavneh rent-free, it will
give the school better finan-
cial footing. -
Yavneh and Jewish Com-
munity Center officials said
the school has fallen behind
on its rent payments, but
will not reveal the amount.
Whether Yavneh pays what
it owes the Center before it
leaves "is between Yavneh
and ourselves," said Dr.
Mort Plotnick, the Center's
executive director. "It is a

Yavneh will move
from the Jewish
Community Center
to Temple Beth El
this year.

very sad thing to see them
go, but I think it's a good
move on their part. It will
lower their costs."
The school has a budget of
$200,000, Mr. Jonas said.
Most of that comes from tui-
tion, which ranges between
$3,000 ,and $4,400 a child.
Over the past three years,
the Jewish 'Welfare Federa-
tion has given Yavneh ap-
proximately $140,000, of
which $25,000 was allocated
this school year.
Rabbi Polish said the tem-
ple offered the space rent-
free as a show of support to
the day school. "We really
want to help them get
started. I really believe very
much in day school edu-
cation. Both of my sons went
to day school. This is a great
step forward for Yavneh."
Denise Alter, whose son,
Jordan, 5, is enrolled in

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