REAL ESTATE OBITUARIES FOR SALE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Helping You Achieve • Your Real Estate Goals! Well kept 4 bed- room, 2 1/2 bath colonial with 2,100 sq. ft. Family room with gas fireplace, cen. air, sprinklers and more. $125,000 356-6353 SOUTHFIELD FEBRUARY 1981 $961,600.00 Month The Michigan Group would like to congratu- late and express recognition to Ruth Malach as Realtor of the Month for her outstanding achievement. If you are looking for some- one to represent you in the sale or purchase of a home or condominium, hire someone who will make things happen. This could be a palace. Four bed- room quad - Family room with fireplace, formal dining room, 'spacious kitchen, 2 1/2 car att. garage, door opener. Vacant. Immediate occu- pancy. $79,900. Ask for BETTY JOHNSON 559-4488 or 569-7684 CENTURY 21 TODAY Start 1987 right, Hire Ruth Malach SOUTHFIELD The Michigan Group 12 MILE/EVERGREEN Realtors ® . Res. 683-6161 Office - 851-0600 MAKE AN OFFER ON THIS bedroom, Three 1 1/2 bath colonial. Family room with fireplace, cen. air, neutral decor, 2 car att. garage. Move-in condition. Leonhard School. Close to shopping. $80, 000. FIND IT IN THE 354-4430 or 851-3887 the charm of yesteryear, the elegance of tomorrow We have created a special feeling for you at Simsbury Condominium Community. The kind of feeling that existed in gentler and quieter times, yet in homes that are designed for today's lifestyle. Eight contemporary designs with echos of tradition from $149, 900. Information may be had at The Village of Pebble Creek Sales Office (Fourteen Mile Road, west of Orchard Lake Road) Phone: 851-3500 or 626-3500 presented by k t ia,Iee Otganstelon Bessie Gurevitch Bessie Gurevitch, a charter member of Cong. B'nai David, died March 9 at age 88. Born in Russia, Mrs. Gurevitch lived more than 75 years in Detroit. Mrs. Gurevitch was a member of Hadassah, the Labor Zionist Alliance and Pioneer Women/Naamat. She leaves a son, Leonard Gurwin; a daughter, Mrs. Rolf (Lillian) Manko of Roanoake, Va.; five grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Dr. Raymond Lipton Dr. Raymond F. Lipton, a re- tired physician and general surgeon, died March 9 at age 73. A native Detroiter, Dr. Lip- ton was graduated from Wayne State University's Medical School in 1936 at age 22. He held a master's degree in surgery from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. Dr. Lipton was a captain in the Air Force during World War II. He was a member of Cong. Shaarey Zedek, Louis Marshall Lodge of B'nai B'rith and a 50-year member of the Wayne County Medical Society. He leaves his wife, Claire, two sons, Dr. Jeffrey and Dr. Steven; two daughters, Pamela Gross of Sherman Oaks, Calif., and Mrs. Robert (Patricia) Or- loff; two brothers, Milton of North Hollywood, Calif., and Dr. Leo; a sister, Mrs. Jerome (Evelyn) Ackerman of Culver City, Calif.; and eight grandchildren. Herbert Schlager Herbert 0. Schlager, former owner of the Dixie Shops, died March 4 at age 85. Born in Boston, Mass., Mr. Schlager was a former Ann Arbor resident and was active with that city's Jewish Com- munity Association/UJA. He was a member of Temple Beth El and a former member of Cong. Beth Israel in Ann Ar- bor. Mr. Schlager was a former officer of the Hillel Foundation on the University of Michigan campus and a member of the Washtenaw Country Club. He leaves his wife, Tillie; and a daughter, Sondra Match of Washington, D.C. Demjanjuk Lawyer To Call 7 Witnesses Jerusalem (JTA) — Mark O'Connor, the American lawyer defending accused war criminal John Demjanjuk, said last Sunday that he plans to call seven witnesses to verify Demjanjuk's claim that he was a German prison- er of war during most of World War II and never was near the Treblinka death camp where he is alleged to have been the sadistic guard known as "Ivan the Ibrrible." O'Connor refused to di- vulge the names of the wit- nesses in the course of a wide- ranging interview with Tom Segev, editor of the political weekly Koteret Rashit. "Naturally, they fear for their welfare," he said, adding that they come from different countries and "are people who were with him (Demjanjuk) during the whole war." Four Treblinka survivors have positively identified Demjanjuk as "Ivan the Terrible," pointing to the prisoner in Jerusalem district court where the trial recent- ly finished its third week. In addition, a senior police of- ficer, Alex Ish-Shalom, who headed the team that inter- rogated the Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk before the trial, testified that Demjanjuk was unable to recall the name of even one of his fellow Ukrai- nians he claimed were in the POW camp with him. Never- theless, O'Connor said he has "not a shadow of a doubt" that Demjanjuk is an inno- cent victim of mistaken iden- tity. He insisted that the SS identification card of Dem- janjuk placed in evidence was a Soviet forgery. He charged that the prosecution has refused to allow independent experts to examine and test it for authenticity. "They won't let my expert touch the document. They maintain that we'll destroy it," O'Connor said. Proof of forgery will put Israel in a "very embarrassing" posi- tion, O'Connor warned. "This is a very delicate moment in negotiations between Israel and the Soviet Union" and the problem of the card's authenticity is "a great political question," he said. O'Connor rejected Segev's charge that the implied collu- sion between Israel and the USSR served the interests of anti-Semitic Ukrainian exile organizations. "I do not repre- sent" the Ukrainians he said. They "are working against Mark O'Connor." He was ap- parently referring to Ukrai- nian groups in the U.S. 105