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October 03, 1986 - Image 174

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-10-03

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

The Family of the Late

The Family of the Late

ROSE
BEIGLER

Announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in her
memory at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday, Oct. 12, at He-
brew Memorial Park.
Rabbi Arm will officiate.
Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

Acknowledges with
grateful appreciation the
many kind expressions of
sympathy extended by
relatives and friends dur-
ing the family's recent
bereavement.

The Family of the Late

We're winning
the race against
Rheumatic
Heart
Disease.

BLANCHE KAY
RICH

Announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in her
memory at 11 a.m. Mon-
day, Oct. 6, at Clover Hill
Park Cemetery. Rabbi
Syme will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are
asked to attend.

MORTON
BLUM

Who passed away Oct.
8, 1985. I miss you and
always will.



N

who passed away Oct. 1,
1982.
You are sadly missed
and forever in our hearts.

WE REMEMBER

During the coming week Yeshivath Beth
Yehudah will observe the Yahrzeits of the
following departed friends, with the tradi-
tional Memorial Prayers, recitation of Kad-
dish and Studying of Mishnavos.

MARY GREENBAUM
AARON LAMPKE
AARON NOSANCHUCK
GILBERT PARKER
ROSE SPEYER
MOLUE TATELBAUM
DANIEL TEMCHIN
ISADORE COHEN
IRVING EISENMAN
MARTIN GOLDSMITH
BENJAMIN GOLDSTEIN
JOSEPH GUTERMAN
ISADORE LEVINE
ABE SITORSKY
ANNE WEISSWASSER
ISAAK HESS
FANNY SILBER
LEAH STERN
RIVA ABRAMOVITZ
BELLA BOESKY
ABRAHAM CHAIKIN
AARON KANTOR
HAROLD M. LEVITSKY
SAMUEL MANDELSOHN
SARAH ORECHKIN
MAX POTOK
JOSEPH SILVERSTEIN
SAMUEL JUDAH WIENER
SHANA GOLDSMITH
ABRAHAM GROSSMAN
FRANK MOSS
ROBERT CARNICK
PEARL GENDLER
JACOB KOGAN
SARAH LEVINE
LEAH PERLMAN
GEORGE M STEIN
JOSEPH S. ABRAMSON
SADIE CAMENKER
FANNIE ESCOFF
ROSE FERRER
LENA FINN
CLARA GOLD
ANNA GOLDSTEIN
ROSE GROSSMAN
PHIUP MAISELOFF
HENRY SCHNEIDER

TISHRI OCT.

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Today. thanks partly to
the efforts of the American
Heart Association, the death
rate from rheumatic heart
disease has declined more
than 70 percent since 1950.
For decades, the
American Heart
Association's educational
programs have taught par-
ents about the dangers and
prevention of rheumatic
fever and rheumatic heart
disease in young children.
The effort was worth it.
Support the American
Heart Association. We're
fighting for your life.

i■ American Heart

VAssociation

-

of Michigan

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

A United Way Agency

15751 W. Lincoln Dr.

174

NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
ZIP

MARTHA DZIEN,
82,
former Detroiter of Mulhouse,
France, died Sept. 18. Sur-
vived by two daughters, Mrs.
Robert (Ida) Langer of France
and Jeanne Dzienciol of New
York.

MARILYN R. ESKOVITZ,
60, died Sept. 28. She leaves
two sons, Alan and Kenneth;
two daughters, Mrs. Sanford
(Karen) Sinkoff and Mrs.
Sandra Maurer; her father,
Leo Miller of Berrien
Springs, Mich.; and one
granddaughter.

PHIL FREEDMAN, 70,
former Detroiter of Orlando,
Fla., died Sept. 25. He leaves
his wife, Rose; two sons,
Jerome and Robert; three sis-
ters, Sarah Seedman, Sidell
Lyons and Rose Berk; and

two grandchildren.

HARRY GOLDSTEIN, 90,
died Sept. 28. He leaves a
son, Leo; a daughter, Mrs.
Carl (Betty) Burstein; six
grandchildren and one
great-grandson.

ROBERT
H.
GREENSTONE, 68, died
Sept. 24. He leaves a sister,
Elsie Marks; nieces and
nephews.

557-6750

Friday, October 3, 1986

IRVING COOPER, 59, died
Sept. 25. He leaves his wife,
Carol; three children, Jason,
Rochelle and Mark; a
brother, Bernard; a sister,
Mrs. Jack (Yetta) Goodman;
and one granddaughter.

LILLIAN M. FURMAN, 82,
died Sept. 28. Survived by
two sons, Seymour and Her-
bert; a daughter, Mrs. Louis
(Thelma) Milgrom; a brother,
Max Mark of Phoenix, Ariz.;
nine grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.

Yeshivath Beth Yehudah

Southfield

ALBERT H. BURSTEIN,
68, died Sept. 27. He leaves
his wife, Doris (Dorothy); a
son, Gary; two daughters,
Mrs. Murray (Susan) Kahn
and Audrey; his mother, Mrs.
Mollie Burstein; two sisters,
Mrs. Jennie Fried and Mrs.
Belle Dubrinsky; and six
grandchildren.

MORRIS W. COLEMAN,
71, died Sept. 23. He leaves
four sons, Jerome Coleman,
Ronald Coleman, Bruce
Coleman and Richard Selik;
two sisters, Florence Horner
and Mrs. Ida Hack; and nine
grandchildren.

Your wife,
Evelyn

EDWIN
GORNBEIN

SIDNEY BROW
72,
former Detroiter of Planta-
tion, Fla., died Sept. 28. He
leaves his wife, Hedy; a
daughter, Mrs. Mark (Mona)
Dembs of West Bloomfield; a
brother, Dorian of New York;
and three granddaughters.
Interment Detroit.

ROSE COHEN, 78, died
Sept. 27. She leaves a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Myron (Susan)
Wolfe of Houston, Tex.; and
two granddaughters.

In Loving Memory Of

In loving memory of
our beloved father,
grandfather and great-
grandfather

OBITUARIES

CAROL ANN
KAUFMAN

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

ADOLPH JACOBS, 77,
former Detroiter of Tamarac,
Fla., died Sept. 28. He leaves
his wife, Evelyn; two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Albert (Roberta)
Blaize of Orchard Lake and
Mrs. Avi (Sharon) Goodman
of Charleston, W. Va.; and
five grandchildren. Interment
Detroit.

ALEX KALISH, 95, of De-
troit, died Sept. 28. Survived
by two sons, Isadore and Dr.
Simon J. of Prairie Village,
Kan.; two daughters, Mrs.
Louis (Dorothy) Willis of
North Hollywood, Calif., Mrs.
Charles (Ida) Chapin; seven
grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren.

STANLEY L. LaVINE, 64,
of Wixom, died Sept. 26. Sur-
vived by his wife, Helen; a
son, Alan; a daughter, Mrs.
Gerald (Marilynn) Chisik; a
brother Gerald; and two
grandchildren.

BESSIE LEVINE,
73,
former Detroiter of Los
Angeles, Calif., died Sept. 23.
Survived by three brothers,
Abe of Akron, Ohio, Paul of
La Mesa, Calif., and Maurice
of Playa Del Ray, Calif.

REGINA SABO, 74, died
Sept. 25. She leaves a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Fred (Carol Sabo)
Wetzel; a son, Marty; three
brothers, Milton Harris, Wal-

ter (Buddy) Harris and
Joseph Harris, all of Ohio;
and two grandsons.

SHIRLEY GERTRUDE
SCHEFLIN, 55, of South- I
field, died Sept. 26. Survived
by three daughters, Mrs.= 4
Robert (Sheryl) Sanders,
Jodie of Nashville, Tenn. and -
Mrs. Steven (Kathy Sue)
Levine; two brothers, Her-
man Fenster and Seymour
Fenster of Longwood, Fla.;
and one grandson.

ANN LIPSITZ SELKER,
90, died Sept. 25. She leaves
a son, Henry Selker; a
daughter, Mrs. Louis (Mari-
lyn) Lipsitz; three grand-
children and four great-
grandchildren.

ESTHER SARA SHIF-
MAN, 78, died Sept. 24. She
leaves two daughters, Mrs.
Burt (Rosalie) Gold and Mrs.
Maurice (Harriet) Gregg of
San Francisco, Calif.; a sister,
Mrs. Tillie Stovack; and four
grandchildren.

BESSIE R. STEIGMAN, 90,
of Farmington Hills, died
Sept. 17. Survived by two
daughters, Rose and Mrs. Is-
rael (Penny) Miller; a
brother, Charles Adelberg of
California; a sister, Dorothy
Adelberg of Plainfield, N.J.;
two grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.

Poll Finds Most Favor
Israel Over Arabs

New York — For the
first time since 1984, when
the Roper Organization
began polling attitudes
toward Israel and American
Jews for the American
Jewish Committee, a majority
of the American public — as
against pluralities in the past
— sympathizeS more with Is-
rael than with the Arab
states, the Committee an-
nounced.
That was a key finding of
the June 1986 poll, which de-
termined that 53 percent of
the American public sym-
pathizes with Israel. In 1985
and 1984 the figures were,
respectively, 42 percent and
44 percent. Sympathy for the
Arab side stands at 8 percent
in 1986, down from 10 per-
cent in 1985.
Other findings:
The percentage of Ameri-
cans who feel that Jews have
too much power in the United
States is a very low 8 per-
cent, a figure that has not
changed since 1984. As
against this, 28 percent of the
American public sees "Arab
interests" as having too much
power.
All of the following groups
were cited ahead of Jews as
having too much power in the
United States: business cor-
porations (44 percent), labor
unions (44 percent), news

media (40 percent), Arab
interests (28 petcent), orien-
tals (12 percent), blacks (11
percent), and the Catholic
Church (10 percent).
Nearly twice as many re-
spondents disagree (46 per-
cent) with the statement,
"Most American Jews are
more loyal to Israel than to
the United States," than
agree (24 percent) with it.
These figures are little
changed from 1985.

A majority of Americans
(52 percent) continue to view
Israel as a reliable ally of the
United States. In contrast,
pluralities see Egypt (43 per-
cent) and Jordan (47 percent)
as not reliable, while a
majority (72 percent) sees
Syria as not reliable.
An increase in the percent-
age of Americans who see Is-
rael as not a reliable ally of
the United States — 32 per-
cent in. 1986 as against 25
percent in 1985 — is almost
certainly related to the
Jonathan Pollard spy affair.
(Pollard, in fact, pleaded
guilty to spy charges on June
4, at the very time that the
Roper poll was being con-
ducted.) However, the in-
crease is not associated with
more generalized negative
feelings about Israel or
American Jews.

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