Right: In 1960, Marshall Loewenstein looks on as his father, Max, nephew of the company's founder, Louis, holds his son, Mark. Family Legacies 30 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1990 The business was retail. Everything was fresh, and merchants came to the market regularly to get their food sup- plies. Even in the Depression, the busi- ness remained afloat. "People had to eat," Marshall Loewens- tein says. "When the food business goes bad, we know the whole economy has gone to hell. The last thing people give up is eating." Marshall's father, Max, worked with his father, Simon, in the meat vending business. When it became difficult to work with his brother, Alfred Max left the company in the 1930s and joined his uncle, Louis Loewenstein. In 1939, Max purchased the poultry company from his uncle. "He said he wanted a place for his son to work," Marshall recalls. Until 1954, the business remained a retail store. Then, with the input of Mar- shall, who had just finished college and joined the company, the poultry business changed focus from retail to wholesale. The future was in supermarkets, Mar- shall thought, and people would no longer frequent the stands. They began selling to restaurants and food service places looking for chicken suppliers. The business became lucrative. In 1971, after Max retired, Marshall sold the food service enterprise to concentrate on holiday business, becoming a food brokerage house. Last year, the company sold 300,000 gift box turkeys to companies that give gifts to employees for Thanksgiving and Christmas. In 1987, the business expanded with the purchase of Michigan Cold Storage, which stores frozen and refrigerated foods for companies. Today the business is run throughout the Midwest by Marshall; his wife, Phyllis; and his daughter, Judy Loewens- tein Roberts. His three sons didn't remain in town with the family business, but ventured into related food and poultry enterprises. "Today, in this day and age, family businesses are not as prevalent," Mar- shall says. "It takes a special kind of situation to have a family business stay together. We've been able to feed a lot of families for 92 years." 1908 Tradesman Zelig Knoppow Opts For The Paint Business Herman Knoppow came to Detroit from Russia in 1868, and he landed a job working as a printer. So when his nephew, Zelig Knoppow, chose to leave his homeland for the United States after the turn of the century, he followed Uncle Herman. Zelig, however, a glazier who puttied and repaired windows in Europe, wasn't interested in the printing business. In- stead, in 1908, he opened a paint store. In 1911, Zelig's younger brother, Simon, immigrated to the United States and went to work for his brother. When Simon left Russia, plans were set for the rest of the family to follow, but they couldn't secure visas from the Russian government. Simon would not have contact with his family for 10 years until they placed an advertisement in a Hebrew Aid Immigra- tion Society newsletter. They wouldn't arrive in Detroit for 11 years. His son, Isaac, would celebrate his bar mitzvah along the way during a stop in Germany.