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April 08, 1994 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-04-08

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

Detroit

Lakeside lexus Rolls Back Prices Beyond 19901

A LS400 Leased For

The Healer

A Righteous Gentile's grandson takes top honors at Bar Ilan.

per month for
36 months

STEVE STEIN STAFF WRITER

H

This Is Now.

TODAY

A 94 LS400 Leases For

'599

per month for
36 months

,C4 L-1EXL-1

of

L_FIKESICIE

A DIVISION OF THE MEADE GROUP

M-59 (Hall Rd.) At Schoenherr 1-313-729-7900
1-800-480 LAKE

Across from Lakeside Mall

•On approved credit. Based on 38-nto- closed-end lease. 15,000 mites per year. 15e
per nine over. 2500 cap reduction doWn plus *400 env fee, SSOO security, deetinelort,
tax, Oconee and plates extra. Lessee has no obligation to purchase vehicle at lease
end; lessee has option to purchase st lease end et est niedual value; LS S31.822-

c 7VorthuZod gelirelerc5 4

SILVERWARE
CHINA AND
CRYSTAL
SALE

is name is Vainutis K.
Vaitkevicius. In the med-
ical community, howev-
er, everybody knows the
native of Lithuania as Dr. V.
He's also regarded as one of the
world's finest clinical oncolo-
gists.
During the early years of his
life, Dr. V. was surrounded by
death and destruction. Since
then, he has devoted himself to
healing, and those efforts will
soon be recognized by Israel's
Bar-Ilan University.
Dr. V., president of the Michi-
gan Cancer Foundation (MCF),
has been named Scientist of the
Year by Bar-Ilan's Cancer,
AIDS and Immunology Re-
search Institute. It's rare for a
gentile to win the award, but
Bar-Ilan officials were im-
pressed with Dr. V.'s creden-
tials.
"I'm grateful and very hum-
ble," said Dr. V., who is
Catholic. "Mainly, I appreciate
the fact that the people at Bar-
Ilan are concerned about what
we're doing in my field."
Dr. V., 67, will receive the
honor in ceremonies on the uni-
versity's campus in Ramat-Gan

THE BRIDAL STORE

and treatment, Dr. V. is a won-
derful humanitarian and he's a
devoted teacher," said Paul
Zlotoff, president of Detroit
Friends of Bar-Ilan University.
Dr. V. has done pioneer work
in function-preserving surgery
for esophagus, rectal and anal
cancers, and he's credited with
establishing the MCF-Prentis
Comprehesive Cancer Center.
The facility is a partnership
between the MCF, Wayne State

"I'm grateful
and
very humble."

University and the Detroit
Medical Center and is regard-
ed as one of the leading cancer
treatment centers in the Unit-
ed States.
Dr. V. has been a professor
in the Wayne State School of
Medicine since 1962. In 1989,
he retired as both chairman of
the department of internal
medicine at Wayne State and
chief of medicine for Harper-
Grace Hospitals and the Detroit

ry

SAVE 25%-60%
EVERYDAY

TH E D ETRO IT J E WIS H NE WS

ON THE FOLLOWING
NAME BRANDS

18

CALL FOR PRICES

• STERLING SILVER
• SILVER PLATE
• STAINLESS STEEL

WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD
TELL US IF
WE'RE WRONG*

LENOX CHINA

•REED & BARTON
•TOWLE
•LUNT
•GORHAM
•WALLACE
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• RETRONEAU
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ROSENTHAL
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*Certain exceptions apply.

orthuidod

geWelerC5

EST 1947

11110111111tiig NAV

f •

NMI

'

BRIDAL
REGISTRY

2602 N. Woodward
at 1214 Mile Rd.
Royal Oak 549-1885

Hours: Tues. & Wed. 10-6, Thurs. 10-7
Friday 10-6, Saturday 10-5
Closed Mondays

Your Hosts: Al & Ruth Beigler

Vainutis K. Vaitkevicius

on April 10. He left for Israel
April 4 and will return April 12.
It's Dr. V.'s second trip to the
area; he remembers touring
Haifa and Jerusalem with his
father just before World War II.
"Beyond his enormous con-
tributions in cancer research

Medical Center.
A resident of Pleasant
Ridge for nearly 30 years, Dr.
V. and his wife, Ingeborg, have
six children and nine grand-
children. They've been married
since 1951, the same year
Dr. V. graduated from medical

school in Frankfort.
It was a journey filled with
tragedy that led Dr. V. to
Frankfort.
When he was a teen-ager,
Dr. V. watched as his parents
and two brothers were sent to
Siberia by Lithuania's Russian
occupiers. They were among
200,000 Lithuanians taken
there as political prisoners. Dr.
V.'s father died in Siberia; he
didn't see his other family mem-
bers for years.
In 1944, Dr. V.'s grandfather
was arrested by the Nazis for
hiding two Jewish children. He
was sent to a nearby prison,
where he was executed. The
children died in a death camp.
Dr. V. was taken to a labor
camp in Germany. While there,
he severely injured a finger in
a machine accident at a Nazi
munitions factory, ending his
dream of becoming a profes-
sional pianist.
When the war ended, Dr. V.
went to the American zone in
Frankfort to study internal
medicine. He did his internship
at Grace Hospital before serv-
ing as a first lieutenant in the
U.S. Army during the Korean
War.
"I lived with my
grandfather and my
materal aunt on a
farm after my par-
ents were sent away,
and they were the
main reasons why I
turned to medicine,"
he said. "Both were
physicians. My aunt
is 90, and she
stopped practicing
only three years ago."
Dr. V. doesn't
think cures for most
forms of cancer will
be discovered soon,
but he can't rule out
that it might happen
during his grand-
children's lifetime.
"During the last
decade, genetic stud-
ies have helped us
recognize early
symptoms," he said.
"We're detecting
what's happening in
cells before the can-
cer begins.
"The problem is for every ad-
vance we make, people's habits
set us back. Things like smok-
ing, overeating, a lack of exer-
cise and exposure to certain
chemicals have been shown to
have connections to cancer." I=1

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