OBITUARIES 107‘5----- hen So Sorry Is Not Enough Send \C>\ OR% A Basket Or Tray NIBBLES & NUTS 443-5550 .19827 W. 12 Mile J I VISA Delivery Available In Times of Sorrow We Will Cater To Your Needs We Deliver No Notice Required Open 7 Days Bread Basket Deli II -..."' 32839 Northwestern Highway In Tiffany Square 626.6674 THE BRIGHT IDEA send THE JEWISH NEWS 354-6060 as a gift Sarah Rubin Sarah Rubin, a correspon- ding secretary for Naamat USA (formerly Pioneer Women) for nearly a quarter of a century, died July 4 at age 86. A former telephone operator for Michigan Bell, Mrs. Rubin achieved her lifelong ambition of com- pleting her high school educa- tion in 1981 when she receiv- ed her high school diploma. Following her graduation, she continued to attend classes. After her move to Borman Hall, Jewish Home for Aged, Mrs. Rubin became a member of the residents' executive committee and served on the welcoming committee for the second floor. She was a pen pal for third SHIVA BASKETS .. . ThE RA ufmAN Fi r cipd Ira Kaufman 1896-1986 Herbert Kaufman David Techner . . . WITH GOOD TASTE THE GREAT AMERICAN BASKET CO. (313) 626-9050 MONUMENTS BY FUNERALS TO ALL JEWISH CEMETERIES B ERG 18325 W. Nine Mile Road • Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 569-0020 AND URBACH 1I _ ...1 FINE MONUMENTS SINCE 1910 B'NAITSRAEL /tiefttva Cadeie TRANQUILITY, BEAUTY AND DIGNITY ENHANCED BY PERPETUAL CARE 42400 12 MILE ROAD ACROSS FROM THE 13405 CAPITAL at Coolidge OAK PARK LI 4-2212 Next to Stanley Steamer NOVI, MICHIGAN 48050 TWELVE OAKS MALL Sidney A. Deitch PRE-PLANNED SAVINGS! Exclusively Serving Our Jewish Community and Featuring The Gardens of THE TREE OF LIFE and THE TWELVE TRIBES OF ISRAEL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS CONTACT Ronald Resnick MANAGER & CONSULTANT 348-3711 or 851-4803 $295.00 PER SPACE WHILE THE CEMETERY DEVELOPS, PRICES WILL CONTINUE TO RISE! AMENITIES INCLUDE: (1) Membership of notional lot exchange (2) Free credit life, for those 65 years of age or younger (3) Free children's protection until 18 years of age (4) Free perpetual care (5) Payment plans, of course BENEFIT NOW • Less than 1/2 the market price • Best selections • Fully beautified in 2 years CEMETERY BEHIND OUR OFFICE IN THE CENTURY 21 BLDG. 108 FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1987 DETROIT - MONUMENT WORKS 14441 W. 11 Mile Rd. Gardner, bet. Coolidge & Greenfield 399-2711, Eve. 626-0330 INE ONE AID ONLY R IMO A M R AMU T r- Quality Foods Since 1954 CALL US: • CONDOLENCE TRAYS • COMPLETE DINNERS DELIVERED 352-3840 graders at Avery Elementary school in Berkley and escorted them on a tour when they visited Borman Hall. Mrs. Rubin worked more than 800 hours for the Sinai Hospital Guild. She is survived by a son, Henry; three grandchildren and three great-grand- children. Betty Galison Betty Galison, a volunteer for Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, the Detroit Historical Museum and Channel 56, - died July 1 at age 69. Born in Detroit, Miss Galison was a secretary for Hoffman Bros., a manufac- turer's rep firm for lighting fixtures. She leaves two brothers, Ben Gallison and Hyman Galison; a sister, Irene; nieces, nephews, great-nieces, great-nephews, one great- great-niece and one great-great-nephew. George Wise, TAU Chancellor Miami Beach, Fla. — Dr. George S. Wise, chancellor of Tel Aviv University, died Ju- ly 2 at age 81. Prior to heading up the university, Dr. Wise was chairman of the board of Hebrew University and helped raise funds to build the university:s new campus. He left that post to become the chancellor of Tel Aviy University in 1962. A philanthropist and academician, Dr. Wise created two newsprint com- panies, George S. Wise and Co. and Inter-American Paper Corp. He played a major role in many development projects in Israel, including Israel Paper Mills. Shmuel Tamir Jerusalem (JTA) — Shmuel Tamir, a prominent lawyer who served as justice minister in the government of Premier Menachem Begin, died in Jerusalem June 29. He was 64. Born in pre-state Israel in- to the well-established Katz- nelson family, he adopted the surname Tamir as a member of the underground Irgun Zvai Leumi led by Begin. He was its acting commander in Jerusalem until deported to Kenya by the British authorities in 1946. He returned two years later when the State of Israel was founded. Tamir was active in Herut politics and served in the Knesset during the 1960s. Subsequently he broke with Begin and formed his own political faction, the Free Center Party, which merged in 1976 with another new party, the Democratic Move- ment for Change, founded by archeologist Yigael Yadin. The latter joined the Begin coalition government. Pamir held the justice port- folio in the first Begin cabinet from 1977 to 1980 and was in- volved in negotiations with Egypt over autonomy for Palestinians in the ad- ministered territories. He retired from politics in 1984, but helped negotiate the release of Israeli soldiers cap- tured in Lebanon. I NEWS I MI11111111 ■ 1111 Cabinet Scraps Thition Fee Differential Jerusalem (JTA) — The Cabinet reached a compro- mise agreement last Sunday on the issue of university tui- tion fees that apparently is acceptable to all parties. It reversed its most controver- sial decision to establish a two-tier system of lower fees for veterans of the Israel Defense Force which much of the public saw as direct discrimination against Arab students who are barred by law from serving in the military. All students will now pay an annual fee of $1,350, about $100 less than the current fee. The government will pro- vide a $4.5 million subsidy for the financially hard-pressed universities to help reduce their deficits. The sum is less than the universities had asked for. Criminal Code To Be Altered Ottawa (JTA) — Justice Minister Ramon Hnatyshyn introduced sweeping legisla- tion in the House of Com- mons July 23 to amend the criminal code to allow suspected Nazi war criminals to be tried in Canada for crimes committed outside Canadian territory. The legislation, which the minister termed "historic," would also amend the Im- migration Act and the Citizenship Act to bar suspected war criminals from entry into Canada