HIGHLY RATED Court Bound Ex-nursing home administrator faces charges in patient's wandering. C APY MONEY MARKET A t Paramount Bank, we always look out for your best interest. Our CD's and Money Market accounts offer the highest returns in the area. That is because we believe our customers are our greatest asset. Paramount Bank is your hometown bank. From our convenient hours to our wide range of products, we work hard to meet all your financial needs. Of course, all accounts are FDIC-insured. Visit today or call 1 800 421 BANK and discover the bank where personal service is Paramount. - - - The reporting of the incident was the issue. BRANCH 1732 West Maple Road • Birmingham, MI 48009 (248) 723-4800 • FAX (248) 723-4848 HOURS: MONDAY-FR1DAY 9-6 • SATURDAY 9-12 PARAMOUNT BANK Your Hometown Bank HEADQUARTERS • 30850 Telegraph Road. Suite 250, Bingham Farms, MI 48025 . (248) 046-3400 • FAN (248) 646-5187 FDIC INSURED Annual l'ereeniage Yiel(I lor balances of S500 1111110111.1111 •s', -- 30U 11111111110111. LENDER Annit,i1 ', eft- L - nagelick) lor balances of DESIGNS IN DECORATOR LAMINATES LTD. It Doesn t Have To Cost A Fortune... Only Look Like It! Featuring Specialties • Wall Units • Bedrooms • Dining Rooms • Home Theatre • Tables • Offices • Formica • Woods • Stones • Glass • Lucite Lois Haron 248-851-6989 10/ 1 1 N c eg ) f Allied Member ASID • v JI 1. J harges filed against a Jewish nursing home by Michigan's chief prosecutor last week were directed at an individ- ual and not the facility, said a Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit official. When an 81-year-old Alzheimer's patient at the Marvin and Betty Danto Family Health Care Center in West Bloomfield wandered outside for 30 minutes last January, the crime was not in the frostbite she suffered, and which required treatment at Beaumont Hospital, but in the failure to report the incident to regulators, alleged Michigan Attorney General Jennifer Granholm. She also filed charges against three other Michigan nursing homes last week. Linda Funds, 50, of Huntington Woods, Danto's former administrator, was charged with a misdemeanor count of failure to report abuse, mistreatment or neglect of a patient. She pleaded not guilty at her arraignment Wednesday in 48th District Court in Bloomfield Hills. A Nov. 1 pretrial date was set. The max- imum penalty upon conviction is 90 days in jail and a $100 fine. "This action by the attorney gener- al is targeted toward an individual and not toward the facility itself," said Mark Davidoff, Federation's chief operating officer. "The Federation . continues to be actively involved in working with the Danto center in improving its programs through COJES (Commission On Jewish Eldercare Services.)" "The reporting of the incident was the issue," said Angie Szumlinski, Danto's new administrator, who can't comment directly about the incident. The alarm systems were checked in February and have been cleared by the • Michigan Department of Consumer Industry Services. "We are comfortable with the sys- tems that are in place," she said. No further incidents have taken place, and we give good care." Dr. Marc Chicorel, a West Bloomfield podiatrist who practices at nine Detroit-area nursing homes, including Danto, and at a clinic in Holly, agrees. "Overall, I feel the patients get regular attention, look- ing from the outside in, compared to the many homes I have been to in the metro Detroit area over the years," he said. In his opinion, the Danto center is "right up there in the quality of care." Fl — Harry Kirsbaum Settlements Sought German vice consuls field questions about bank litigation for Shoah victims. A n informational discussion by vice consuls from Germany about Swiss Bank litigation for Holocaust vic- tims will be held in Oak Park at 3 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 7, at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building of the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. The discussion will cover eligibility and the application process in both the Swiss Bank and new Austrian Bank litigation. Jewish Family Service of Metropolitan Detroit is sponsoring the meeting, and its staff will assist individuals with applications. The vice consuls and a representative from the Holocaust Claims Conference will respond to questions. "The applications that are out there are only the preliminary applications," said Rachel Yoskowitz, JFS director of Citizenship and Immigration Services. "The objective is to make it easier for the survivors to fill out complicated forms. We also want to make it cost- effective." — Harry Kirsbaum For information, call Rachel Yoskowitz, (248) 559-1500, ext. 275.