(OBITUARIES The Family of the Late SAMUEL B. LUCAS Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the many kind expressions of sympathy ex- tended by relatives and friends during the family's recent bereavement. The Family of the Late DR. MYRON VINOCUR Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the many kind expressions of sympathy ex- tended by relatives and friends during the family's recent bereavement. The Family of the Late DAVID ZAKALIK Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 12 noon Sunday, Nov. 8 at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rabbi Kagan will officiate. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Les We Forget SOLOMON SILL On his 23rd Yahrzeit (27th day of Tishri) Born: November 5, 1881 Died: October 3, 1964 JAMES ANCHOR, 84, of Southfield, died Oct. 22. Sur- vived by his wife, Ella; a son, Norman G.; and three grandchildren. GINGER BLAIR, former Detroiter of Miami, Fla., and New York, died Oct. 22. She leaves a sister, Sally Fields of Southfield. SARAH CARMEN, 64, of Oak Park, died Oct. 24. Sur- vived by her husband, Max; two sons, David of Rehovot, Israel, and Gershon of Lakewood, N.J.; a daughter, Mrs. Menachem (Dena) Mintz of Lakewood; a brother, Rab- bi Morton Murik of Chicago, Ill.; three sisters, Mrs. Fruma Dushnitzer of Miami, Fla., and Mrs. Belle Meyers of Chicago and Mrs. Kalmon (Goldie) Barkin of Chicago; and ten grandchildren. CELIA COLMAN, 79, died Oct. 23. She leaves a son, John; two sisters, Mrs. Rose Wachs and Mrs. Sally Landsman. NATALIE EPSTEIN, 51, died Oct. 25. She leaves her husband, Marshall; a son, Alan of Miami, Fla.; two daughters, Lisa Epstein Dailey of Evanston, Ill., and Linda; a sister, Mrs. Ira (Myr- na) Sher of Manalapan, N.J.; and one grandchild. Once again I share a page in time with my granddaughter Constance Ilene Sill. Together . . . forever. BERNARD "HOOKIE" GOODMAN, 85, died Oct. 25. He leaves a son, Joel R. In tribute from : The Sill, Sriro, Kaluzny, Fox and Wolfson Families. BARBARA HOWER, 43, died Oct. 25. She leaves her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil (Roslyn) Hower; and a sister, Dale Solheim. Ode on remembering The Family of the Late CONSTANCE ILENE SILL ISAAC RAYKHINSHTEYN On this her 3rd Yahrzeit (27th day of Tishri) Born July 23, 1958 Died October 23, 1984 It matters not how blue the sky — how red the rose. When someone dear suddenly goes. All pales in the brightness of the sun Alone in the darkness we seek our beloved one. Perhaps if she could speak she'd say to us, this Yahrzeit week grieve not, but Remember me yes! Experience joy with no more distress. This does not mean you loved me less — only more — until Your own Nothingness .. . Only more, until your own Nothingness .. . Her Parents and Family — Sill — Wolfson Beatrice, Jack, Pamela, Robert, Adam, Noah & Cooper 138 FRIDAY, OCT, 30, 1987 Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the many kind expressions of sympathy extended by our best friends during the family's recent bereavement. The Family of the Late LILLIAN ZUMBERG Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory 11 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 8 at B'nai Israel Memorial Gardens, Novi. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. SOL MANDEL, 83, of Southfield, died Oct. 21. Sur- vived by his wife, Nettie; two daughters, Mrs. Leonard (Carole) Blum and Mrs. Jules (Judy) Breslow; a brother, Simon of Flushing, N.Y.; two sisters, Mrs. Frieda Samot and Mrs. Anne Goldner, both of the Bronx, N.Y.; three grandchildren and one great-grandson. MARIE MARKS died Oct. 23. She leaves two sons, Milton and Harold; ten grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. JOSEPH D. MEYER, 75, died Oct. 25. He leaves two daughters, Mrs. Dennis (Peggy) Frank and Nancy; two sisters, Mrs. Bernard (Jean) Mellitz of St. Louis, Mo., and Mrs. William (Louise) Simons of Washington, D.C.; and two grandchildren. BETTY ROSENBLAT, 56, died Oct. 24. She leaves her husband, Arthur; a son, Frank; two daughters, Bar- bara of Tampa, Fla., and Carole; her mother, Mrs. Kate Marcus; two brothers, Seymour Marcus and Milton Marcus, both of Houston, Tex. STEVEN JAY SAX, 31, died Oct. 22. He leaves his father, Stanley P. Sax; his mother, Sally Jacobson of Chicago, Ill.; a brother, David of Milwaukee, Wis. MORTON SEGERMAN, 62, former Detroiter of Tuc- son, Ariz., died Oct. 22. Sur- vived by his wife, Lee; a son, Garry of Tucson; two daughters, Mrs. Michael (Rhonda) Alper of Tucson and Mrs. Michael (Terry) Moll of Mesa, Ariz.; and seven grand- children. Interment Tucson. BERNARD "BARNEY" SUMNER, 89, died Oct. 23. He leaves his wife, Bertha; a daughter, Mrs. Natalie Hoff- man; and four grandchildren. Marta Feuchtwanger, Wife Of Author Marta Feuchtwanger, who devoted her life to continuing her husband Lion Feucht- wanger's literary fame, died in Los Angeles Sunday at age 96. Mrs. Feuchtwanger shared with her husband the many years of acclaim when his Jew Suss, Powerthe Josephus Trilogy, The Ugly Duchess and The Oppermans and many other works became world famous They were also years when they were sub- jected to anti-Semitic slurs. The Feuchtwangers were in the U.S. in 1932 and 1933 and did not return to Ger- many when Hitler attained domination. Instead, they settled in the south of France. In June 1940, after the French collapsed to the Nazis, the Vichy regime put them in a concentration camp. American friends helped them escape over the Pyrenees. They came to the U.S. with the intervention of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Feuchtwanger was the guest here of Wayne State University four years ago and on Nov. 17, 1983, was award- ed the Humanities Award of the Center for Peace and Con- flict Studies. The honors con- vocation was arranged by Prof. Guy Stern. The presen- tation to her was by Leonard N. Simons, who had the long friendship with her until her death. Herself an accomplished Marta Feuchtwanger author, Mrs. Feuchtwanger gained special attention with her Only a Woman. This autobiography was published in Germany and an English translation of it was publish- ed in 1984. Mrs. Feuchtwanger devoted years after her husband's death to supervising and also adding to the translations of her husband's many works. Simons gave her encourage- ment and assistance in the republication of such works as Power, The Oppermans and other novels. They reap- peared as paperbacks and best sellers and in hard cover. Simons, in a tribute to her, said his reference to her when he pesented her with the Wayne State University Humanities Award is worth