Dreisboach & Sons
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Compmq
Detroit's #1 Cadillac Dealer

Dr. Sidney Charn
Memorial Dedicat

per month
24 months
$2,431.00 down

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Dr. Sidney Goldman, Mary Butler, Anat Shiftan and Ronald Streit help dedicate the
Chamas Memorial Wall.

* First month's lease payment of $399.00 plus $450.00 refundable security deposit and consumer down payment of $2,431.00 for a total of $3,280.00 due at lease
signing. Taxes, license. title and insurance extra. You must take delivery out of dealer stock by 4/6/94. GMAC must approve lease. Example based on a 1994
Devine $34.903.00 MSRP. Monthly payment is based on a capitalized cost of $29,825.00 for a total of monthly payments of $9,576.00. Option to purchase at
lease end for $22,337.00. Mileage charge of $.10 per mile over 30,000 miles.

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COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN

p

rovidence Hospital re-
cently unveiled a memo-
rial wall created in
memory of Dr. Sidney
Charnas, an orthopedic surgeon
who served on staff there for
more than 40 years.
The memorial wall adjoins
the orthopedic and rehabilita-
tion units. It includes the uni-
versal symbol of orthopedics —
depicting a tree held straight
by a rope and a stake — and
several blocks of tiles which will
list contributors to the Sidney
Charnas Memorial Fund.
Dr. Sidney Goldman, section
chief for orthopedic surgery at
Providence and a colleague of
the late Dr. Charnas, helped
bring the Charnas Memorial
Wall to the hospital.
"Dr. Charnas is remembered
as one of the longest serving or-
thopedic surgeons on staff at
Providence. Medicine was his
life, and his dedication to the

hospital and his fellow physi-
cians was so great that we
wanted to create a permanent
tribute," Dr. Goldman said.
Dr. Charnas joined the Prov-
idence Hospital medical staff in
1947 and remained a member
of the staff until his death from
heart disease in 1988. After
graduating from Wayne State
University's School of Medicine
in 1940, Dr. Charnas went on
to serve as a captain in the U.S.
Army during World War II.
He was in charge of orthope-
dic sections in military hospi-
tals both in England and
Germany before returning to
the Detroit area in 1947 to set
up a private practice. In 1964,
he was named president of the
Detroit Academy of Orthopedic
Surgeons and chief of staff at
Providence. He served as pres-
ident of the hospital's medical
staff in 1975.

❑

An Israeli Response
To Drug Addiction

ELLIOT M. KRAMER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

You've said we're in a class by ourselves & we thank you for the compliment!
Complete interior design services from blueprint review & construction specifications, to furniture
selection & custom fabrication; from windows & walls to the last scented soap...
These are the services that set us apart.
We're so glad you've noticed the difference.

Barbi Krass • Linda Bruder • Wayne A. Bondy

allied member ASID

Jennifer Thomas
The Courtyard

32500 Northwestern Highway • Farmington Hills • 851-7540

M

usrara, a predomi-
nantly lower-class
Sephardi community
in the heart of Jerusalem,
received its reputation as a
tough neighborhood in the
early 1970s as the home of
Israel's Black Panther social
protest movement. As one of
the centers of drug and
criminal activity in the
Israeli capital, Musrara was
one of the first to receive
assistance under Project
Renewal, an urban and social
redevelopment program.

In 1987, the leaders of the
2,200 resident neighborhood
made an emotional plea to
the leaders of the Los Angeles
Jewish community, the city
twinned the Musrara under
Project Renewal, for help in
combating their persistent
drug problem. (Of the 400
residents in the 16-40 age

group, 100 have been iden-
tified as heroin users.) To
date, 35 individuals have
been treated by the newly
established program.
Lacking in expertise, a

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