OBITUARIES!
Babies
Don't Thrive
in
Smoke-filled
Wombs
• TACH
Edward 1. Steinman,
Optometrist
Parents for Torah for All Children
MICHIGAN CHAPTER
The Officers, Board of Directors,
staff, parents, and students of
P'TACH
offer their heartfelt condolences
to the family
of our beloved honoree
Horav Leizer Levin
When You're
Pregnant,
Don't Smoke!
5 " s
His presence and support
will be missed.
THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER
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112
FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1992
Samuel H. Weisman,
Attorney, 84
Samuel H. Weisman, 84, of
Sterling Heights, died Jan.
20. He was a retired attorney,
a member of Masonic Lodge F
& AM and a member of the
Michigan Bar Association for
over 50 years.
He leaves his daughter and
son-in-law, Myrna and David
Messenger of Sterling
Heights; son and daughter-in-
law, Ronald and Colleen of
Kingston, Ont.; a sister,
Lillian Hirschfield of South-
field; five grandchildren; two
great-grandchildren.
Archie R Grey,
Pharmacist, 87
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We offer a full selection of burial caskets and
vaults, and the most personal attention and
professional services available.
We also offer pre-arrangement plans which
can be used for nursing home residents, or for
individuals wishingto save theirfamilythe emotional
and financial strain of arranging a funeral.
Dr. Edward I. Steinman, 69,
of West Bloomfield, died Jan.
20. He was a doctor of op-
tometry and owner of Nu-
Vision in Pontiac for 25 years.
He was an active member and
past president of the Men's
Club of Temple Beth El in
Flint.
He leaves his daughters and
a son-in-law, Candice Boyd,
Diane and James Safran of
Birmingham, Amy of Denver,
Colo.; mother Clara Smith of
San Diego, Calif.; sister, Lois
Richmond of Coronado, Calif;
three grandchildren.
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Archie P. Grey, 87, of Farm-
ington Hills, died Jan. 17. He
was a pharmacist for over 55
years with 20 years at
Metropolitan Hospital. He
was a charter member of 'Tem-
ple Israel, a member of Tem-
ple Israel brotherhood and a
Mason.
He leaves his wife, Lydia;
daughter and son-in-law,
Ellen and Michael Cole of
West Bloomfield; son and
daughter-in-law, James D.
and Ruth of Farmington
Hills; five grandchildren.
Marjorie Brazer,
Active Democrat
Marjorie Cahn Brazer, 64,
of Brutus, Mich., died Jan. 17.
She was a member of Beth
Israel Congregation for over
30 years and in the 1960s and
1970s was active in the Ann
Arbor Democratic Party. She
was the party chair for four
years. She was one of the first
board members of the Ann
Arbor Transportation
Authority and helped bring
about Ann Arbor's bus
system. She did market
research for Ford in the 1950s
and taught economics at
Eastern Michigan University.
She was a writer and
author of many books on sail-
ing and cruising the Great
Lakes and numerous boating
and traveling articles for
Lakeland Boating and many
other magazines.
She leaves her son and
daughter-in-law, David and
So-Ching of Palo Alto, Calif.;
daughters and a son-in-law,
Chaya Krafchow of New York,
Mara Brazer and Richard
Battaini of San Francisco,
Calif.; sister, Helen Weil of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; eight
grandchildren.
mImmm
l
N EWS
rte'
Vatican Attitude
Is Warming
New York (JTA) — The
Vatican's attitude toward
Israel has greatly improved,
according to a prominent
New York rabbi who recent-
ly met with the pope.
"There is a clear sense ap-
parent that there is a more
positive attitude that has
emerged between the Holy
See and Israel," said Rabbi
Arthur Schneier, president
of the Appeal of Conscience
Foundation, a group that
works to advance the cause
of religious freedom.
Direct talks on estab-
lishing diplomatic relations
between the Vatican and
Israel can be expected
"sooner rather than later,"
Rabbi Schneier said, though
he declined to estimate more
specifically when they might
take place.
When Rabbi Schneier met
with Pope John Paul II on
Jan. 8, the pontiff did not in-
dicate there were any re-
maining stumbling blocks to
the establishment of formal
diplomatic relations, the
rabbi said, though the topic
was just one of several
covered.
The issue was discussed in
greater detail during a
longer meeting Rabbi
Schneier had the day before
with Archbishop Jean-Louis
Tauran, secretary for rela-
tions with states of the Vat-
ican's Secretariat of State.
The Vatican has long
granted de facto recognition
to Israel, while maintaining
that full diplomatic relations
cannot be established until
several concerns are ad-
dressed. These include the
right of Palestinians to their
own national home, the posi-
tion of the Catholic Church
in Israel and the status of
Jerusalem.