94 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 9, 1986 MONUMENTS BY The Family of the Late BERG URBACH FRANK (SAM) KOPPELMAN AND FINE MONUMENTS SINCE 1910 13405 CAPITAL at Coolidge OAK PARK LI 4 2212 - Next to Stanley Steamer SHELDON MONUMENT COMPANY 19800 WOODWARD AVE. The Family of the Late Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the many kind expressions of sympathy extended by relatives and friends dur- ing the family's recent be- reavement. Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 11 a.m. Sun- day, May 18, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Arm will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Sidney A. Deitch The Family of the Late DETROIT MONUMENT WORKS LYNDA GREEN Betw. 7 and 8 Mile Roads Phone 368-3550 Over 60 Years In Same Location! 14441 W. 11 Mlle Rd. Gardner, bet. Coolidge & Greenfield 399-2711 Eve. 626-0330 Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory at 1:30 p.m. Sun- day, May 11, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. I■ 1111M11101i' The Family of the Late ZELIG HANDELSMAN as a gift 354-6060 When The Need Arises For A Condolence Or Shiva Tray, Call On Us. No Notice Needed. Delivery Service Available. Pr kixe (16 29145 Northwestern Hwy. at. 12 Mile Rd. Franklin Shopping Center 356-2310 Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 11:45 a.m. Sun- day, May 18, at Nusach H'Ari Cemetery. Rabbi Schnipper will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late SAM KAGAN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 2:30 p.m. Sun- day, May 18, at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rabbi Gordon will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late REVA LEVINE Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory at 11 a.m. Sun- day, May 11, at Beth El Memorial Park. Rabbi Hertz will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late TRANQUILITY, BEAUTY AND DIGNITY ENHANCED BY PERPETUAL CARE 42400 12 MILE ROAD • NOVI, MICHIGAN 48050 Save $ 50.00 per space $245.00 each till Sunday May 11 90 days same as cash or up to 3 years in house payment plan ALL BENEFITS INCLUDED IMPORTANT MESSAGE DUE TO MOTHER'S DAY If you call & register your name by 6 p.m. Sunday, we will hold the price at $245.00 each. WMIS RONALD RESNICK, Manager and Consultant At 851-4803 or 348-3711 CEMETERY BEHIND OUR,OFF,ICE IN THE CENTURY 21 BLDG. OBITUARIES MONTEFORD BURNSTINE MORRIS ROSENZWEIG Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 11 a.m. Sun- day, May 18, at Beth Ab- raham Cemetery. Rabbi Schnipper and Cantor Fuchs will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. Bert Schlain, Sales Expert Bert Howard Schlain, sales manager for Universal Match Corp., died May 1 at age 87. Born in Newark, N.J., Mr. Sch- lain lived 52 years in Detroit. He attended Rutgers University and was graduated magna cum laude in 1920. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He served in the Army in World War I. He worked in advertising agencies in New York and Wheeling, W. Va. Mr. Schlain joined the sales department of Zenith Radio in New York and was drafted by General Electric Co. to serve in a similar capacity in its radio and appliance di- visions. In 1933, the Schlains came to Detroit and Mr. Schlain was named a district manager for the Universal Match Division of UMC Industries. In 1959, he was brought to St. Louis by Universal as general sales manager. He is the author of four books and dozens of magazine articles on selling and sales manage- ment. He was nationally recog- nized as an authority on certain aspects of sales management, notably management develop- ment programs. Following his retirement from Universal, he served for a few years as sales management con- sultant, to industrial firms in the Midwest. For more than 40 years, he has been a member of Temple Beth El and the Adcraft Club. He has been an active member for 32 years for Sales and Marketing Executives International. He was a life member of Phi Sigma Epsilon. He leaves a son, Abbott "Bud"; a daughter, Mrs. Sherwin (Char- lotte) Corlin; a sister, Mrs. Her- man (Tillie) Nadel of Rockville, Md.; and seven grandchildren. Moshavim Pave Way For Misgav Boom BY SIMON GRIVER Jerusalem — The Misgav reg- ion which lies to the east of Haifa Bay, could not be settled in the past because its rocky terrain was unsuitable for agriculture. But now a new kind of settlement, the industrial moshav, is making an impact in this part of the Western Galilee and is enabling a signific- ant Jewish population to inhabit its barren but beautiful hills. High-tech industrial enter- prises have now made feasible the concept • of self-supporting cooperative communities (moshavim) in an area which has a vital role to play in maintaining the country's security and con- tributing to Israel's economic re- covery. Computer software, elec- tronics and specialist medical equipment, as well as more tradi- tional commercial activities such as tourism, are now flourishing in the Misgav Region. Until 1983, the area was known as the Segev Region, which formed part of the Naamat Reg- ional Council. A recent reorgani- zation separated Segev from Naamat and added several set- tlements from the neighboring Tefen Block to form the Misgav Regional Council. There are cur- rently 23 settlements in the Mis- gay. Region supporting 2,500 people. Three additional settle- ments are presently under con- struction, and within the decade it is hoped to increase the popula- tion of the Misgav Region to more than 15,000 with an average of 200 families in each community. Zalman Fagin is deputy head of the Misgav Regional Council. Typical of most pioneers in this area, he moved to the settlement of Hararit in 1981 with his wife and three children, from an urban environment. Fagin had previ- ously. lived. in Givatayim in 'the .heart, of ,the Tel, Aviv, area. ' "Everybody says to me, how can you move from the comforts of the big city to the isolation of the Galilee," he remarked. "But I see things from the opposite perspec- tive. I cannot understand why people do not want to move out of the cramped and noisy city to the fresh air of the countryside. It's impossible to describe how inspir- ing it is to wake up in the morning and look out of my window to the snow-tipped peak of Mount Her- - mon." Despite these attractions, Fagin admitted that the region is far from a Garden of Eden. While many high-tech enterprises have already been established, it is still not nearly enough to support all the residents of the region, so for the time being, many of the popu- lation of Misgav must commute to jobs in the Haifa area. The area also has strategic military significance. Many of the hilltops command views stretch- ing to the Lebanese, Syrian and Jordanian borders. The Nahal - Settlement Corps of the Israel De- fense Forces have thus initiated many of the settlements like char on top of Mount Karad which at some point in the future will be converted to an industrial moshav supporting 200 families. In the even more distant future, an industrial park will be com- pleted in the center of the Misgav Region. Most of the factories in that park are slated for high-tech endeavors. Indeed, so many high- tech businesses are growing and developing in this area of the Galilee and in neighboring parts of the region, like the town of Carmiel; that people are already beginning to call the Western Galilee Israel's Silicon Valley, World. Zionist Press Service