In Loving Memory Of The Family of the Late My Beloved Husband OBITUARIES BETTY LEWIS HERBERT MARGOLIS Who passed away June 11, 1984. Sadly missed and never to be forgotten by his wife, children and grandchildren. Our loving thoughts are with you always. Always remembered, always loved. Lois and Fred, Barry, Dale and Connie Louba Lupiloff, Led JWV Auxiliary • The Family of the Late In Beloved Memory Of GARY STEVEN COHEN MOTHER VIOLA STANLEY Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, June 14 at Beth Tefilo Emanuel Cemetery. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Please note: This is the correct cemetery. Who passed away June 14, 1984. Sadly missed and never to be forgotten by Alyce and Maury, Gloria, Marian, Al, grand- children and great grandchildren. The Family of the Late DID YOU REMEMBER HELEN M. KITTY Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory at 11 a.m. Sun- day, June 14 at Adat Shalom Memorial Park. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late MILFORD R. PREGERSON Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 11:00 a.m. Sunday, June 21, 1987 at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Groner will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. UMW GET REJUITS • Call The Jewish News 354-6060 to send someone a gift subscription to The Family of the Late The Jewish News? r — — — — — — — — — — — — I To: The Jewish News I 20300 Civic Center Dr., Suite 240 I Southfield, Mi. 48076-4138 PHILLIP SILVERSTEIN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 11 a.m. Sun- day, June 14 at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rabbi Schnipper will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. MUM — — — MN ON . Please send a year's gift subscription to: I NAME The Family of the Late I ADDRESS 1 I CITY 1 I FOR: 1 ZIP STATE state occasion I FROM I 1 year - $24 — 2 years - $45 — Out of State - $26 — Foreign - $38 II 116 Enclosed $ I MINIM 1•11111111111111111111MIMI NW MN Friday, June 12, 1987 • THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 HYMAN SLAVIN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 11:00 a.m. Thursday, June 18, 1987 at Macpelah Cemetery. Rab- bi Rosenbaum will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Louba Lupiloff, past depart- ment president, Jewish War Veterans Auxiliary, died June 8 at age 86. Born in Russia, Mrs. Lupiloff was a former national vice president of JWVA, past presi- dent of the Pythian Sisters, a member and past president of Pisgah Chapter of B'nai B'rith Women, a charter member of the Greater Detroit Interfaith Round Table of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, past president of the Allied Veterans Council, past president of the Michigan Security Council, a board member of the Jewish War Veterans Memorial Home and former president of the Palestine Rebecca Lodge. She was a past president of Lt. Eli Levin Auxiliary No. 230, Jewish War Veterans. Mrs. Lupiloff had been an in- spector for the City of Detroit Election Board. She leaves a son, Albert; a daughter, Mrs. Maurice (Shirley) Silverman; three sisters, Mrs. Edith Von Pethely of California; Mrs. Sol (Neva) Emmer of California and Mrs. Edward (Jennie) Solomon; eight grandchildren and 14 great- grandchildren. Samuel Goldberg Samuel Goldberg, who re- tired from the engineering department at Chrysler Corp. 12 years ago, died June 9 at age 78. Born in Ottawa, Canada, Mr. Goldberg was a volunteer assistant librarian at the Jewish Community Center and a member of the Zager- Stone Lodge of B'nai B'rith. He leaves his wife, Rose; a son, Norbert; a daughter, Mrs. Allan (Loretta) Birk; and four grandchildren. Rapoport, Sculptor, Dead At 76 New York (JTA) — Nathan Rapoport, a sculptor whose monument to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising is probably the best known work of its kind, died here last week of an apparent heart attack. He was 76. Funeral services were held at the Magen David Adorn Blood Center in Ramat Gan, Israel. There hiS- latest work, "Brotherhood of Man," a nine-foot-high bronze statue, was dedicated in May. Rapoport received the Polish government's Polonia Restituta Medal for his "War- saw Ghetto Uprising" monu- ment erected in 1948 on Zamenhoff Street in the Polish capital, Where the doomed struggle began in 1943. His work has been ex- hibited in 12 countries. It in- cludes a 'Memorial to Jewish Fighters of World War II' erected in Paris in 1950 and "Job" at the Vad Yashem Holocaust Museum in Jeru- salem. Arthur Chaims Arthur Chaims, co-owner of Tile and Carpet Center in Jackson, Mich., died June 6 at age 63. Born in Czechoslovakia, Mr. Chaims lived 38 years in the U.S. He was a member of Cong. B'nai David, where he was chairman of the youth commis- sion, ritual committee and co- chairman of the cemetery committee. He was recently re-elected vice president of the synagogue. Mr. Chaims is survived by his wife, Ida; a son, David; a daughter, Mrs. Kevin (Anita) Curry of Swedesboro, N.J.; two brothers, Yechiel Chajmovicz of Williamsburg, N.Y., and Avrohom Chajmovicz of B'nai Brak, Israel. Rescuers Were 'Well Adjusted" New York — A pioneering study of people who rescued Jews from the Holocaust, often at great risk to their own lives, has found that these "rescuers" tend to be well-adjusted people from loving families that taught them to value justice, tolerance, and social responsibility. The author of the study, Samuel P. Oliner, told the American Jewish Committee that "rescuers" differed in several ways from "bystanders" — those who were present dur- ing the Holocaust but did not rescue Jews. "Among these differentiating factors," he said, "are that rescuers were closer to their parents, and their families ap- pear to have been more loving as they were growing up. Also, when they were disciplined as children, the rescuers were generally spoken to reasonably, and not disciplined physically. The bystanders, on the other hand, were more likely when they were disciplined as children to have been beaten, slapped or humiliated." As for social and political views, Prof. Oliner said that rescuers were more likely to have had parents who belong- ed to "democratic, tolerant political groups and institu- tions"; less likely to have stereotyped views of people of other religions.