BORMAN page 16 FEATURING SPECTACULAR FURS, LEATHERS, AND MICROFIBERS improve the quality of care for the residents at the facil- ity," she said. "I am 70 per- cent hopeful that Borman Hall will pull through. The 30 percent threat is that we won't have achieved enough understanding on the staff level in the specific time frame the state gives us." Home administrators forecast a cost for correc- tions at Borman Hall, but they have not projected a specific dollar amount. Members of the executive committee of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit met Wednesday, in part to discuss the Home. Executive Vice President Robert Aronson said Federation will have no plan of action until some- time after executive com- mittee members review the written report next week. Plans for moving the Borman Hall facility to a location, possibly in West Bloomfield, are on hold for at least a year. ❑ Residents Hope Home Won't Close RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER Home's survival. Her father, Henry Wiener, 86, had a stroke and needs constant care. Ms. Tendler doesn't know what she'll do if the Sale ends All furs August 31st. labeled Shop early for to show best selection! country of origin 181 S. Woodward Ave., 1 BIk. S. of Maple, Next to the Birmingham Theatre • 642-1690 Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30, Thurs. 'til 8:30 DAVID SYME IN CONGER Introducing a new recording: ROCK FORMATIONS with SIMONE VITALE BAND TUESDAY, AUGUST 24 8:00 P.M. GIC BAG THEATER (WI • d at 9 Mile) Call (313) 681-2417 or HUDSON'S, HARMONY HOUSE & SOUND WAREHOUSE CALL-FOR-TIX (313) 645-6666 20 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 Home shuts its doors. "My dad has been here for Borman Hall resident Henry Schwartz and volunteer Sol Wainer. I wo weeks ago, the Michigan Department of Public Health charged Borman Hall Jewish Home for Aged with serious violations of state codes, but many residents of the 212-bed facility say they're grateful to be living there. Etta Morris is an elderly, two-year resident of Borman Hall. In 1947, she served as head nurse for the Jewish Home for Aged, which now includes Borman, Fleischman Residence and Prentis Manor. Today, Ms.. Morris says she enjoys living at Borman Hall, just as she enjoyed working for JHA decades ago. "It's very comfortable here," she said. "I have no complaints about the Home at all," said her daughter, Anne Isner. "My mother receives excel- lent care. Her medication is given on time. When I reach my mother's age, I would come here and I would trust them implicitly. If it closes down, I'll have a screaming fit." Dorothy Tendler also feels strongly about the almost six years. If he hadn't been here, I don't know if he'd be around." Ms. Tendler visits her father about four times a week. That's more attention than most residents receive from their relatives, said resident Harry Weinsaft, 70. He says the biggest problem with the Home is rampant loneliness. "I am very thankful I'm here." Harry Weinsaft "People come over here for one purpose," he said. "This is a layaway place. It's almost like a hospice. The doctors and nurses give me as much treatment as I pos- sibly can get. The people here on staff do the best they can... "I have seen hundreds of people die, but not from old age or mistreatment. They die from loneliness. They've got nobody," he said. While living at the Home, Mr. Weinsaft has passed the time by painting, a love he credits Borman Hall with encouraging him to pursue. "When I paint, I forget about the things that are going on around me. If this Home hadn't given me the opportunity to be creative, I would've been dead a long time ago," Mr. Weinsaft said. "I am very thankful that I'm here. It's given me a reason to live." ❑