THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 5, 1974-39 Monument Ex-Senator Ernest Gruening, • • Unveilings Outspoken Critic of Vietnam War OBITUARIES • Unveiling announcements may be inserted by mail or by calling The Jewish News office, 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Southfield, Mich. 48075, 424-8833. Written announcements must be accompanied by the name and address of the person making the insertion. There is a standing charge of $4.50 for an unveiling notice, measuring an inch in depth and $8.00 for one two inches with a black border. * * * The family of the late Gertrude Linden announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 1 p.m. Sun- day, July 7, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Lehrman will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. * 0 * The family of the late Jack Pickman announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 11 a.m. Sunday, July 7, at Machpelah Ceme- tery. Rabbi Sperka will offi- ciate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. * * * The family of the late Rae Sandles announces the un- veiling of a monument in her memory 2 p.m. Sunday, July 7, at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rabbi Goldschlag will offi- ciate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late ISRAEL FRANKFORT Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory 1 p.m. Sunday, July 7, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Schnipper will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late ABRAHAM HOPTMAN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory 12:30 p.m. Sunday, July 7 at Beth Tefilo Cemetery. Rabbi Levin will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late GERTRUDE RICHTER Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory 11:30 a.m. Sunday, July 7, at Che- sed Shel Emes Ceme- tery. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late BETTY TANNENBAUM Announces the unveil. ing of a monument in her memory 10 a.m. Sunday, July 7, at Machpelah Cemetery. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. NEW YORK — Former Senator Ernest Gruening, who was Alaska's territorial governor from 1939 to 1953, prior to becoming its sena- tor, died June 26 at age 87. He was a strong supporter of Israel. Mr. Gruening was elected as a provisional senator in 1956 after having successfully led Alaska to statehood. In 1958 he was officially elected to the Senate. The late senator was an active Democratic dissident and was one of the first out- spoken critics of the Vietnam War. He and Sen. Wayne L. Morse (D, Ore.) were the only senators to vote against the Gulf of Tonkin resolu- tion requested by the late President Lyndon B. John- son "to take all necessary steps to repel any armed attack" against United States forces in Southeast Asia. Sens. Gruening and Morse insisted that the resolution was unconstitutional because it was "a predated declara- tion of war power" reserved to Congress, tht New York Times reported. Sen. Gruening continued his fight against U.S. military involvement in Vietnam, and called acts of resistance to the war "justified." As a dissident dove, Sen. Gruening faced his first tough battle for re-election in 1968. His age, 81 at that time, was the major cause of his defeat to Mike Gravel, an Anchorage real-estate de- veloper. The son of a prominent physician, Sen. 'Gruening obeyed his father's wishes and earned a medical degree at the Harvard Medical School in 1912. However, he never practiced medicine. MARY BLOCK, 27116' Fair- fax, Southfield, died July 1. She leaves three daughters, Mrs. Joel W. (Sarah) Joseph- son of Hallandale, Fla., Mrs. Jules (Edith) Mehler and Mrs. Saul L. (Faye) Krieger; seven grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. LATE ERNEST GRUENING Instead, he began a jour- nalism career which led him through editorial jobs on the Boston Traveler, The Boston Journal, The New York Sun, The New York Tribune and The New York Evening Post. Following service in World War I, Sen. Gruening be- came publisher of New York City's Spanish daily, La Prensa, and traveled exten- sively in Latin America. By the time he became Alaska's territorial governor in 1939, he had already edited The Nation, and had been emer- gency relief administrator of Puerto Rico. He also had ad- vised the U.S. delegation to the 1933 Pan-American Con- ference. (He appeared in Detroit for a Jewish National Fund dinner and made other visits here.) PROMISE KEPT Having the last word solves nothing — it's having a word that lasts that really counts. four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. * * ROSE KATZ, 20235 Bilt- more, died July 2. Survived by her husband, Morris; two sons, David and Harold of Los Angeles; a daughter, Mrs. Irving (Ruth) Sloan of * * * Glenwood, Ill.; one brother, MAX BRAININ, 250 E. three sisters and eight grand- Columbia, died June 30. Sur- children. * * vived by a brother, Isadore; a sister, Mrs. Peter (Gussie) LEW LEWIS, 27445 Green- Orden; nephews and nieces. field, Southfield, died Jurie * 27. He leaves his wife, Bet- ANN COLLINS, 16500 N. tha; a son, Jerome A.; a Park, Southfield, died July 1. daughter, Mrs. Marvin C. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. (Arlene) Newman of Silver Max (Hope) Aiken; and two Spring, Md. ; three brothers, grandchildren. five sisters and five grand- children. * * EVA DOLNANSKY of New RUTH H. RUBERT, former York died July 2. Survived by two sons, Rabbi Hayim Detroiter of Houston, died Donin of Jerusalem and Mor- June 28. Survived by a son, ris Dolnane; and seven grand- Herbert Fortgang of Van children. Interment New Nuys; a daughter, Mrs. Irv- York. ing (Charlotte) Roth; and three grandchildren. * CHERI H. GAYNOR, 28755 ANN JACOBSON RUT- Tavistock, Southfield, died June 24. She leaves her par- BERG, former Detroiter of ents, Dr. and Mrs. Alex Atlanta, died June 27. She (Lorraine) Gaynor (and the leaves her husband, Theo- late Evelyn Gaynor); and dore Rutberg; a son, Dr. Jo- six brothers, Dr. Laurence seph M. Jacobson; a daugh- Gaynor of Denver, Michael ter, Mrs. Donald (Zita) and Jeffrey Gaynor and Neal, Kirsch; two brothers and five Mark and Clifford Trubowitz. grandchildren. Interment De- * * troit. * S A N D O R GRUNWALD, ROSINA SASSOON, 26051 24841 River Heights, South- field, died July 1. Survived Lahser, Southfield, died June by his wife, Julie; and a 29. Survived by a brother, daughter, Mrs. Peter (Ros- Sol of Switzerland; and two nephews, Dr. Michael Papo alie) Beer. * * of Chelsea, Mich., and Oscar ROSE HORWITZ, 19772 St. of San Mateo, Calif. Marys, died June 29. She SAMUEL S. SNITZ, 18937 leaves two sons, Leonard H. and Sam Horwitt of Los Ala- Gillman, Livonia, died June mitos, Calif.; a daughter, 29. Survived by his wife, Mrs. Morris (Dorothy) Fish; Mildred; two sons, Franklin of Ann Arbor and Tzvi of Is- rael; two brothers, two sis- ters and three grandchildren. * * * ETELA SOLOMON, 20494 Meyers , died June 27. She leaves her husband, Sam; a son, David; two daughters, Mrs. Jack (Mary) Moncarz • * 0. Dr. Goldwasser, Ex-Federation Official, 95 NEW YORK — Dr. I. Ed- win Goldwasser, the first executive director of the Fed- eration of Jewish Philan- thropies of New York, died June 29 at age 95. Dr. Goldwasser was a teacher until 1915. After his service with the federation, he took up a career in busi- ness, which lasted until his retirement in 1953. An 1897 graduate of City College of New York, Dr. Goldwasser began his teach- ing career on the Lower East S ide after having received the highest score in the first examination given for teach- ers. He earned master's de- grees at City College and Teachers College of Colum- bia University, and com- pleted his doctoral studies at New York University. He taught at two public schools and later became district superintendent for the Lower East Side and later, superintendent of all activities other than classes in the entire city school sys- tem. He also was principal at Sidney A. Deitch DETROIT MONUMENT WORKS 14441 W. 11 Mile Rd. Gardner, betw. Coolidge & Greenfield 399-2 7 1 1. Eve. 626-0330 MONUMENT CENTER, INC. 661 E. 8 MILE, FERNDALE , 11/2 Blocks E. of Woodward- 6 Blks from 3 Jewish Cemeteries on Woodward L 12-8266 The Family of the Late WILLIAM M. STEIN DR. EDWIN GOLDWASSEIR Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the many kind expressions of sympathy extended by relatives and friends during the family's recent bereavement. the Broome St. School, of which he was a graduate. Dr. Goldwasser wrote two books "Method and Methods in the Teaching of English," and, with Joseph Jablono- wer, "Teaching of English to Foreigners." Ira Kaufman Chapel, Inc. Worldwide Service 18325 W. 9 MILE RD., SOUTHFIELD • JO 4-5557, .dmammiummismk and Mrs. Fred (Sophie) Kushner; seven grandchil- dren and four great-grand- children. * * JULIAN B. WEBER, for- mer Detroiter of Miami Beach, died July 1. Survived by his wife, Gert; a son, Dr. Ronald; a daughter, Mrs. Stuart (Marlene) Blumberg; a brother, Arthur, and a sis- ter, Mrs. Saul (Pearl) Ben- yas, both of Detroit; and three grandchildren. Inter- ment Miami Beach. WE REMEMBER ii-c • During the- coming week Yeshivoth Beth Yehudah will observe the Yahrzeits of the following d s- ported friends, with the tradi- tional Memor- ial Prayers, re- citation of Kaddish and Studying of Mishnayos. Tammuz July 17 7 Sam Boesky • 7 Regina Fredrick 17 Samuel R. 17 7 Greenbaum 7 Joseph B. Raim 17 Moshe Ben 18 7 Avrohom 8 Dora Greenblatt 18 8 18 Jacob Kabaker 18 8 Louis Kozel 18 8 Sam Stein 8 Ethel Waldman 18 19 9 Meyer Burns 19 9 Hyman Kowal 9 Sarah L. Martin 19 19 9 Annie Samet Benjamin Cohen 20 10 20 10 Siegfried Hess 20 10 Max Karol Irving M. Moskovitz 20 10 20 10 Rueben Nelson Phoebe Budnick 21 11 21 11 Lena Firestone Samuel Glickman 21 11 11 Benjamin Krass 21 21 11 Harry Leon 21 11 Anna Levine Bernard Weinberg 11 Wilder 21 Solomon Chesluk 22 12 Pinchas N. 22 12 Engler Samuel Gold 22 12 Louis Katzer 22 12 Sophie Meyers 22 12 Nathan Moehlman 22 12 Isadore Shapiro 22 12 Alan J. Tkatch 22 12 Boruch Birman 23 13 Harry Brandman 23 13 Zelda Brill 23 13 Louis Gunsberg 23 13 Avrum S. Harris 23 13 Irene Joseph 23 13 David Moses 23 13 Freda Nyman 23 13 Bernard Swartz 23 13 Yeshivoth Beth Yehudah 15751 W. Lincoln Dr. Southfield Phone 557-6750 BERG si URBACH d ie _7ine.SI In lihnionenti, FORMERLY KARL BERG MEMORIALS MANUEL URBACH & SON jb 13405 CAPITAL at COOLIDGE • OAK PK. • LI 42212 Elgin 7-5100 Ira Kaufman-Herbert Kaufman