OBITUARIES I Dora Sparr, Active In Groups Dora Sparr, of Farmington Hills, died Dec. 20. She was 84. A portrait artist who also did numerous murals, she was past president of Ladies of Mosaic, past president and founder of the Naomi Girls Club, a volunteer organiza- tion, was active with and past secretary and treasurer of the Detroit Chapter of Hadassah, and was a member of Eastern Star. She leaves her husband, Gerald; son and daughter-in- law, Richard and Janice of Chicago; daughter and son-in- law, Joanne and Morton Gold- berg of West Bloomfield; sister, Celia Glick of Hollywood, Fla.; four grand- children; one great-grandson. Moshe Castel, Israeli Artist Tel Aviv (JTA) — Moshe Castel, a Jerusalem-born ar- tist who achieved world renown and helped establish the artist's colony in Safed, died Dec. 12. His age was re- ported as either 82 or 85. Born to a prominent fami- ly descended from Castilian Jews that was expelled from Spain in 1492 and settled in Palestine, Mr. Castel was educated at religious schools before he enrolled in the Bezalel Art School in Jerusalem in the 1920s. In 1927, Mr. Castel moved to Paris, where he continued to study and paint until the German invasion of France in 1940. He also studied art in Italy. Mr. Castel was a founding member of the progressive New Horizons movement in the late 1940s and afterward spent two years in the United States. Sarah Nederlander, Active In Theater Sarah Nederlander, of Southfield, died Dec. 19. She was 97. The widow of theater mogul David Nederlander, Mrs. Nederlander remained active in her husband's business after he died. The Nederlander theaters in- cluded the Fisher, the Vest Pocket, an off-Broadway playhouse on Grand River in Detroit, and theaters in New York, Chicago, New Jersey, Baltimore, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Phoenix, Ariz. "I like to go down to the Fisher and nose around," Mrs. Nederlander said in a recent interview with the SAY IT WITH TREES Detroit News. "You can only play canasta with your widow friends just so long." Born Sarah Applebaum, she was the son of a meat dealer in the Eastern Market. The Nederlanders were old family friends who lived in the same neighbor- hood. Mr. Nederlander entered the theater business in 1912, when he leased the old Opera House on Campus Martius. Frequent guests in his home included showman Flo Ziegfield and enter- tainers Al Jolson, Eddie Cantor and George Jessel. Mrs. Nederlander became close friends with actress Deborah Kerr, Gloria Swan- son and Billie Burke. Mrs. Nederlander was a member of Hadassah, ORT, the Sinai Hospital Guild and the Temple Beth El Sisterhood. She is survived by her sons and daughters-in-law, Harry and Marjorie of Bloomfield Hills, James and Charlene of New York, Frederick and Betty of Franklin, Joseph of Birmingham, Robert and Gladys of New York; daughter and son-in-law, Frances and Stanley Kohn of Mayfield Heights, Ohio; brother,. Henry Applebaum of Florida; 14 grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren. JEWISH NATIONAL FUND Cemetery Chapels Aia.H.n 1,orfman Funeral Direction (313) 546-4700 • Savings of up to $1000 or more • Dignified Graveside Services • Serving All Cemeteries • Brochure Available Serving your pre-arrangement needs. Call us directly for out-of-state arrangements. -71 N F Heartfelt wishes sent with delicious gift baskets from .. . A TISKET A TASKET The Detroit Friends of Bar-Ilan University express their pain and sympathy on the untimely passing of (313) 661,4789 Packaged and Delivered 7 Days a Week BASKETS & TRAYS . . . . WITH GOOD TASTE E RIC 4. 'I (313) 626-9050 g 29594 Orchard Lk. Rd. Farmington Hills, MI 48018 .1 N EWS 11"' Washington (JTA) — A federal appeals court last week affirmed an earlier rul- ing blocking the U.S. government from deporting a Cincinnati man who ad- mitted serving as a guard at a Nazi labor camp in western Germany. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati re- jected the government's ap- peal of a ruling by a three- judge panel of the court in September. The panel had barred the deportation of Leonid Petkiewytsch, 68, who ad- mitted having served at the Kiel-Hassee labor camp when he applied for U.S. citizenship. He had been liv- ing in the United States on an immigrant visa since 1955. The three judge panel said the government had failed to prove that Mr. Petkiewytsch had abused prisoners. Few Jews were at the Kiel- Hassee camp because in- mates there were serving sentences for Nazi crimes other than being Jewish. or 18877 W. Ten Mile Road Suite 104 Southfield, Michigan 48075 Phone: (313) 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. to Friday 9 2 hrs. before Sabbath -p Court Bars Deportation Graveside Services -1 STACY HABER granddaughter of Pauline Schreiber, the organization's longtime admini- strative assistant. May the family's faith help it at this time of great sorrow. Barbara Stollman Neal Zalenko General Chairmen 10 ;0 offers When So Sorry is not enough... Send a tray GRIEF COUNSELING SESSIONS AT NO CHARGE Nibbles & Nuts Next Sessions January 2 & 16, 7:15 p.m. 737-8088 Led by Elaine Medwed, M.A. Call MONUMENT CENT 11 INC. • Monuments and Markers • Bronze Markers • Memorial Duplicating • Cemetery Lettering & Cleaning CEMETERY INSTALLATION ANYWHERE IN MICHIGAN Call 542-8266 FERNDALE 661 E. 8 MILE ROAD 1 1/2 Blocks East of Woodward _ We are winning. ANIERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' Director HEBREW MEMORIAL CHAPEL co ega' "Same Location 45 Years" Leslie M. Goldstein Midwest Executive .... r ,on 543-1622 26640 Greenfield Road Oak Park, Michigan 48237 In Memory Of Beloved Sister BELLE (GELIEBTER) ESKOW BASSIN Who passed away December 28, 1989 Your laughter, music, phone calls no more to hear. Remembrance of all so very dear. You left us two years ago without saying goodbye, but loving memories of you will never, never die. Sadly missed by sister Ida (Geliebter) Schwartz and family and brother Jack Geliebter and family. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 101