OBITUARIES
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HEBREW
MEMORIAL
CHAPEL
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"Serving our Jewish community, Orthodox,
Conservative, Reform and unaffiliated families
with traditional dignity and compassion."
MARK E. KLINGER
Funeral Director
RABBI BORUCH E. LEVIN
Executive Director, H.B.S.
ROBERT H. BODZIN
Funeral Director
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543-1622
SERVING ALL CEMETERIES
26640 GREENFIELD ROAD
OAK PARK, MICHIGAN 48237
"OUTSIDE MICHIGAN PHONE"
1-800-736-5033
The Family of the Late
SAM
NEMZEN
Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the
many kind expressions of sympathy extended by
relatives and friends during the family's recent
STANLEY WHITE, 77, of
Sarasota, Fla., formerly of
Michigan, died June 27. He is
survived by his wife, Adell;
sons and daughter-in-law,
Marc of Sarasota, Fla., David
and Shelley of Brooklyn, N.Y.;
daughter, Janis of Brooklyn.
DORIS WEINTRAUB, 76,
of Oak Park, died June 28.
She is survived by her son,
Sheldon; daughter, Loretta of
Oak Park; brothers and
sisters-in-law, Harry and Lois
Nelson of Southfield, Saul
and Beverly Nusbaum of Oak
Park; sisters and brother-in-
law, Sylvia and Ralph Posner
of Farmington Hills, Leah
Nusbaum of Saginaw.
Words fail us in expressing how we feel towards all
of you for your much needed comfort and caring
after the death of our beloved MARK. Our heartful
thanks go out to all.
BERNARD WIENER, 49, of
Waterford, died June 26. He
is survived by his wife, Bar-
bara; sons and daughter-in-
law, Jack and Sandra of War-
ren, Maurice of Waterford;
daughter, Cheri of Waterford;
father, Philip of Madison
Heights; brother and sister-
in-law, Sheldon and Renee of
West Bloomfield; sister,
Elaine of Madison Heights.
The Rubens Family
JENNIE YANITZ, 89, of
bereavement.
To our wonderful family
and most cherished friends:
Ben, Eileen, Judith, Larry & Margo,
Allan and Lola, and Karen
The Family of the Late
MORRIS
SHINDLER
Announces the unveiling of a monument in his
memory 12:30 p.m., Sunday, July 14, at Beth Shame.
Cantor Louis Klein will officiate. Relatives and
friends are invited to attend.
In Memory Of
OUR CHERISHED BROTHER
MICHAEL I.
ZAKS
Eight years have passed since we lost him The
fire of his legacy burns bright and strong Words can-
not tell how much we miss him.
Jeffrey and Elaine
In Loving Memory Of
Our Beloved Wife, Mother and Grandmother
SYLVIA KLEIMAN GLANTZ
Who passed away July 8, 1989
The precious memories help fill the emptiness
in our lives. We miss you more than words can say.
So terribly missed and always remembered by
husband, Gabe; children, Lenny, Steve and Arlene;
grandchildren, Lisa and Jerrold.
112
FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1991
Bloomfield Hills, died June
27. She leaves her sons and
daughter-lin-law, Lawrence of
Union Lake, Myron and
Eleanor; sisters, Sylvia
Ascher, Helen Finkelstein of
Southfield; brother, Sam
Ascher of Ann Arbor; three
grandchildren; two great-
grandsons.
Jacob J. Waratt
Jacob J. Waratt, known as
"Jack" to his many
customers, died June 21. He
was 101-years old.
He was born March 22,
1890 in Komonetz-Podolsk, a
village near Kiev in the
Ukraine. He worked for many
years in a cigar factory and
saved enough money to bring
his parents, Solomon and
Tessie Waretnick, and eight
sisters and brothers to
America.
Mr. Waratt came to Detroit
in 1919 with his wife, the late
Helen Link. He was active in
union organizing and helped
establish the first milkmen's
union in the city. Mr. and
Mrs. Waratt worked in the
presidential campaign of
Socialist Party candidate Nor-
man Thomas and were in-
terested in politics
throughout their lives.
Mr. Waratt is survived by
his sister, Lilyon Miller of
Australia; daughters, Adeline
Sirota, Harriet Berg of
Detroit, Marilynn Rosenthal
of Ann Arbor; seven grand-
children; 10 great-grand-
children.
Harris D. Silvers, 77
Harris D. Silvers, 77, of San
Diego, formerly of Detroit,
died June 20.
Mr. Silvers, an electronics
and sound expert, worked for
Atlas Music Co. and RCA
Distribution Co. before laun-
ching his own business,
Silvers Electronics Engineer-
ing and Servicing Co. He was
also an active participant in
the early organizing efforts of
the UAW, and during the
1960s, he was an active sup-
porter of the antiwar and civil
rights movements.
He is survived by his wife,
Isobel of San Diego; sons and
daughter-in-law, Michael and
Karen of Madison, Wis., Joel
of Detroit; daughters and son-
in-law, Robert and Tiassa
Hauser of Madison, JoAnn
Farley of Washington, D.C.;
three grandchildren. A
memorial service will be held
Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Birmingham Temple.
Betty M. Schwartz
Betty M. Schwartz, 70, of
Oak Park, died June 20.
Mrs. Schwartz was past
president and CEO of Tyme
Furniture in Detroit, which
closed in 1978. She was a
member of Congregation
Shaarey Zedek, B'nai B'rith,
Hadassah and past chairman
of the March of Dimes.
She leaves her daughter
and son-in-law, Susan and
Sydney Gartenberg of Farm-
ington Hills; sons and
daughter-in-law, Dr. David of
Oak Park, Robert and Linda
of West Bloomfield; sisters
and brother-in-law, Janet
Levenson of Southfield, Har-
riet and Harry Housman of
Southfield; five grand-
children.
Sanford D. Adler
Sanford D. Adler, of Los
Angeles, formerly of Detroit,
died June 13.
Mr. Adler, who worked for
the late builder, Ed Rose, left
Detroit to develop hotels and
subdivisions in Florida and
California. He purchased the
Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas
after the death of gangster
Bugsy Siegel.
He leaves his wife, Lillian;
son and daughter-in-law,
Brian and Cheryl; daughters,
Tara Miller, Natalie Rodin,
Cynthia; six grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren. In-
terment California.
Fannie Lax
Fannie Lax, 92, of Israel,
formerly of Detroit, died
March 27.
Born in Hungary, Mrs. Lax
and her husband, the late
Sigmund, came to Detroit in
1923 and lived here until
making aliyah to Israel in
1971. She was a member of
Congregation B'nai Moshe,
Congregation Beth Tefilo
Emanuel Tikvah and the
Hebrew Ladies Aid Society.
She is survived by her
daughter and son-in-law,
Sarah and David Cern of
Israel; sons and daughters-in-
law, Fred and Ruth of West
Bloomfield, Harold and Judy
of Israel; 12 grandchildren; 23
great-grandchildren.
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„(
NEWS
Romanian Leader
Promises Protection
New York (JTA) —
Romanian Jews can count on
their government to protect
them from rising manifesta-
tions of anti- Semitism, Pres-
ident Ion Iliescu has assured
Chief Rabbi Moses Rosen.
Rabbi Rosen, who has been
threatened personally, was
received by Mr. Iliescu to
discuss the worsening situa-
tion, according to the World
Jewish Congress, which
received a report on the
meeting last week from
Bucharest.
The chief rabbi asked
bluntly whether the coun-
try's remaining 18,000 Jews
could hope to continue their
lives in Romania, where
about 800,000 Jews lived
before World War II.
Jewish fears peaked last
month when the Romanian
Parliament officially
honored the memory of pro-
Nazi dictator Ion Antonescu
on the 45th anniversary of
his execution for war crimes,
which included the deporta-
tion of at least 250,000 Jews
to Nazi death camps.
The presumably democrat-
ically elected body which
replaced Nicolae
Ceausescu's Communist dic-
tatorship rose for a minute of
silence in memory of An-
tonescu on May 1.
Anti-Semitism is endemic
to Romania, and its latest
manifestations seem to have
permeated all levels of socie-
ty.
Observers attribute its
resurgence to nationalism
and xenophobia.
,=<