DETROIT OUR MISSION EXCELLENCE WITH COURTESY Free t::.. Pick Up and Delivery within a seven mile radius. Lifetime* Guarantee on paint and workmanship. Finest equipped shop in the Northwest area. Our state of the art equipment and premium quality paint allows us to guarantee no fading or peeling for as long as you own the vehicle. Located Three Miles West of The Jewish Community Center (One mile west of Haggerty) on the North side of Maple Road FARMINGTON HILLS COLLISION NORTH Bring this ad and pay only $8 per day for rental car 2325 E. West Maple Walled Lake, MI 48390 313 - 669-4000 (unlimited mileage) Hours: 8 A.M. - 6 P.M. Monday-Friday Saturday 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. BEST MEN'S SUIT BUYS! Sportcoats 97 Student Sizes - 36 - 40 R,S Only Suits Available in Sizes: 3-Day ITT 91 1QQ9 Sinai's satellite opera- tions, a rehabilitation center in West Bloomfield and a resonance imaging center in Farmington Hills, are filled to capacity these days, Mr. Sheingold said. "They are absolutely overwhelmed with patients. That's another sign that the medical community has con- fidence in what Sinai has to deliver." The relatively low Jewish patient census, however, remains a thorn in the hospital's side, although it doesn't seem to bother Mr. Sheingold. "The Jewish Assistant Editor 32 Men's Suits $225 value $9921 S225 value 29L' S225 value 149E $225 value 69-31 $225 value S 1 8922 $225 value S 1 99-92- Pure Silk Ties $991 comp $25 32080 John R • Across street from Target • 1/4 Mile S. of Oakland Mall Frida s noon - 9 Saturda S 10 - 6 Sunda s 11 - 5 3Iarl • Suit OOOOOO • ••• ATI 11 LTIC CU I SIM'S ALSO! housekeeping is better, he said. "The attitude is exciting now. It's the difference bet- ween something growing and something decaying." According to Mr. She- ingold, who assumed Sinai's helm last January, the key to Sinai's situation today is the renewed confidence it has earned in the commun- ity. "Last year, the Heritage Ball demonstrated that the (Hospital) Guild, the board and the medical staff sup- ported this institution and raised $400,000. I think that was the beginning of the resurgence of Sinai Hospital." ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Suit Mart Classic Corduroy ' Continued from preceding page A BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL 36 37 3S 30 40 41 42 43 44 46 4S Sinai community is slowly coming back on the bandwagon," he said. Jewish patients are in- creasing at about the same rate as non-Jewish patients. Sinai admitted 2,300 Jewish patients last year, 15 per- cent of its 18,000 patient total. Figures for the first six months of 1992 reflect the same percentage. "It's always been between 13 and 17 percent," said Karen Hyruciak, a hospital spokeswoman, and never higher than 22 percent even before the Jewish population moved away from the hospital area. As for the future, Mr. She ingold predicted a steady re- covery. "I think next yea will mimic this year," he said. "Your goal is to remain a little beyond what you put into capital spending so you can (invest and) replenish your reserves." Sinai's profit represents a 3.7 percent margin above its costs, a percentage Mr. She- ingold termed reasonable. "The average U.S. hospital runs between 3 and 5 per- cent," Mr. Sheingold said. And since "costs are con- tinually escalating in the health care industry, espo-- cially non-salaried areas," ' he said, "Sinai will probably run in that range." ❑ Fisher Grant To Benefit Families Of The Disabled' *Limited to current owner No frills warehouse allows FANTASTIC deals on famous name menswear! • Hassle-Free Self Service • Low, low mark-up! • 1st Quality I local organization that benefits the de- velopmentally disabled has received a major grant from the Max M. Fisher Jewish Commun- ity Foundation. Keshet, the West Bloom- field-based organization for parents of special-needs children, was awarded $27,372 to create new sup- port groups, develop new programs and increase awareness about the needs of the disabled. Keshet's plans include in- creasing the number of facilitator-led support groups where parents, grandparents and siblings can discuss relevant issues; the development of a parent- to-parent program where participants assist other families with disabled mem- bers; the creation of a mon- thly newsletter and a 24- hour hotline; and designing family programming centered on the Jewish holi- days. Headed by Ronelle Grier, a mother of a young child with developmental disabilities, Keshet of Detroit is part of a national association that started in 1983 in Chicago. The group was started by parents concerned about the limited number of Jewish services available to families of the disabled. Today, Keshet of Detroit comprises a 14-member. board of directors and has hosted such programs as a model seder and a Saturday night parents' social. Among the groups with which it has worked are the Jewish Community Center's Special Needs Committee, Hillel Day School, Temple Israel, the Jewish Association for Residential Care, Jewish Experiences For Families (JEFF), and the Agency foL Jewish Education. Upcoming programs in- clude a Sept. 16 speech by Barbara Halpern, who will discuss "Managing stress ,' when there is a person with special needs in the family," and a family Sukkot event.