SAY IT WITH TREES B'NAITSRAEL Atemoa'atime TRANQUIUTY, BEAUTY AND DIGNITY ENHANCED BY PERPETUAL CARE 42400 12 MILE ROAD ACROSS FROM THE NOVI, MICHIGAN 48050 TWELVE OAKS MALL $4450 ° Exclusively Serving Our Jewish Community and Featuring The Gardens of THE TREE OF LIFE and THE TWELVE TRIBES OF ISRAEL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS CONTACT Per Space WHILE THE CEMETERY DEVELOPS, PRICES WILL CONTINUE TO RISE! AMENITIES INCLUDE: (OBITUARIES I JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 18877 W. Ten Mile Road Suite 104 Southfield, Michigan 48075 Phone: (313) 557 6644 Monday thru Thursday 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Friday 9 to 2 hrs. before Sabbath - Jewish Activist Morris Music Morris Music, 85, of Southfield, died March 10. Mr. Music owned Morris Meats in the Gratiot Central Markets. He was active with Allied Jewish Campaign, was (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 core (5) Payment plans, of course Psychoanalyst Dr. Bettelheim Accepted by representatives of the Orthodox, Conservative and Reform communities Heartfelt wishes sent with delicious gift baskets from . . 851-4803 A TISKET A TASKET In Loving Memory Of (313) 661, 4789 Packaged and Delivered 7 Days a Week HERMAN BORLACK Who passed away March 16, 1989 A year has gone by since we lost you and it has been so hard not to see your smile, laughter and presence among us. We all miss you and love you so much, there is not a day that goes by that you are not thought of and forever in our hearts. Your loving wife Evelyn Lori, Cary, Staci, Lissa, Joanne, Alan and Jared In Loving Memory Of RONALD COLUMBUS Nibbles & Nuts 737.8088 Who passed away March 9, 1986 Sadly missed and never to be fogotten by Evelyn and Sam, Debbie and Gary, Ilene and Dennis, Cher, Chad, Justin, Ryan, Eli, Joel and Lauren. In Loving Memory Of ALEC SHERR Who passed away March 17, 1980, leaving this world a better place for his having been here. Sadly missed and never to be forgotten by wife Esther, children Paul & Rita, Ron & Linda & grand- children Stacey, Jill, Bonnie, Robin & Dawn. In Loving Memory Of ABRAHAM (ABE) GOREN Sadly missed and always remembered by daughters Elaine, Iris, Barbara, Sandra and Grandchildren 134 FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1990 In Loving Memory Of Beloved Husband and Father SAM PEARLMAN Who passed away March 16, 1989. Never to be forgotten by family and friends. His kind- ness and love stay in our hearts. Tremendously loved, sadly missed. Bulding. He was the oldest te- nant in the Michigan Building, having been there for 45 years. He leaves a son, Jeffrey of Ibpeka, Kan.; and a daughter and son-in-law, Barbara and Lon Grossman of Bloomfield Hills. In Loving Memory Of ZE'EV SHIFTAN Beloved Father Murdered by terrorists in bus attack in Egypt February 4, 1990. In his memory we wish this known. ANAT SHIFTAN BRYAN BERESH The Family of the Late SELLA RUBINSTEIN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory 12:45 p.m. Sunday, March 25, at B'nai Israel Memorial Gardens. Rabbi Schwartz will officiate. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Breast self-examination — LEARN. Call us. i, AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' Morris Music chairman of the Meat Section and was a Jewish Welfare Federation board member for several years. He was a delegate to Jewish Community Council, a mem- ber of Young Israel of Oak- Woods, Congregation B'nai Zion and Pisgah Lodge. He was a supporter of Bar- Ilan University, Yeshivah Beth Yehudah and Shaare Zedek Hospital. Mr. Music leaves his wife, Helen; two daughters and sons-in-law, Marilyn and Dr. Samuel Flam of Farmington Hills and Sharon and Dr. James Schmidt of Southfield; and four grandchildren. Dr. W. Abraham Goldberg, 86 Dr. W. Abraham Goldberg, 87, of East Lansing, died March 8. Dr. Goldberg was a professor of criminal justice and taught at Michigan State University and retired seven years ago. He received his BA and master's degree from Univer- sity of Michigan and his doc- torate from Northwestern University in sociology. Dr. Goldberg leaves his wife, Ruth; a son and daughter-in- law, Dr. Joel and Alice of Union Lake; a brother and sister-in-law, Arthur and Et- ta of Southfield; two grand- children; and three great-grandchildren. Services and interment in Detroit. Lewis Faintuck Lewis Faintuck, 81, a jeweler, of Southfield, died March 8. Mr. Faintuck owned Lewis Jewelers in the Michigan Bruno Bettelheim, the world-renowned psycho- analyst who transmuted his painful incarceration in Nazi death camps into pioneering work with children, died Tuesday at a retirement home in Silver Spring. He was 86. Bettelheim was torn in Vienna in 1903 during the age of Sigmund Freud. By the age of 14, Bettleheim was already reading about psychoanalysis. His original impetus for those readings, he later said, was to attract a girl who was interested in an older boy who was already conversant in Freudian ideas. Bettelheim's interest in psychoanalysis continued long after his affections for the girl had faded. He receiv- ed a doctorate in psychology and philosophy from the University of Vienna in 1938, and underwent extensive psychoanalysis at the same time. Professionally, one of Bet- telheim's first major interests was autistic children. Con- vinced that they would res- pond positively to a special environment, he took an autistic child into his home in 1932. The experiment ended when the Nazis annexed Austria in 1938 and Bettel- heim spent almost the next two years in Buchenwald and Dachau. Appeals from New York Gov. Herbert Lehman and Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of the president, finally secured his release. Moving to Chicago, Bet- telheim was head of the University of Chicago's Sonia Shankman Orthogenic School for disturbed children and professor of psychology and psychiatry at the univer- sity from 1944 to 1973. Bettelheim's first written work in the United States, the article "Individual and Mass Behavior in Extreme Situations," which appeared in 1943 in the Journal of Ab- normal and Social Psychology, was one of his more controver- sial pieces of writing. In it, he described the disintegration of dignity and personality in the Nazi camps.