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Chapel Services
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BEN
STERN
AlanED
orfman Funeral Direction
(313) 546-4700
Brochure Available
• Savings of up to $1000 or more
• Indoor Chapel Services available
on most cemetery grounds
• Serving all cemeteries
Serving your pre-arrangement needs.
Call us directly for out-of-state arrangements.
MEITNER BENEFICIAL ASSOCIATION
announces its June 30, 1992 merger with
the Beth AHM Memorial Park Associa-
tion (formerly known as BMCAM). For
additional information or a copy of the
legal notice please call:
Resident Agent: Philip & Marilyn Dano 788.1208
Secretary:
Rose Lubin (after 5 p.m.) 546.5753
Attorney:
Sheldon Greenblatt
574.0178
SHIVA
BASKETS
June 23, 1991
Sadly missed, forever
in our hearts and
always remembered
by Dora, Marilyn,
Carole, Saul, Scott,
Jamie, Lorraine and
Amber.
In Loving
Memory Of
BEN W.
GRUSKIN
June 30, 1988
Sadly missed and always
remembered by wife
Madelyn, children Ron-
ald, Debra and Alan
Gluck, grandchildren
Jeffrey and Lisa.
In Loving
Memory Of
JOSEPHINE
WEINBERGER
June 29, 1986
Sadly missed and always
remembered by hus-
band Harry, daughters
Georgann, Marian, Na-
dine and grandchildren.
The Family of the Late
ESTHER I.
BRANDT
and
TRAYS
American Gourmet
Because You Care .. .
World Wide Delivery CI ALL OUR KOSHER PRODUCTS
ARE CERTIFIED KOSHER OR
851-4450
SANCTIONED BY THE METROPOLITAN
Fax: 737-3669
KASHRUTH COUNCIL OF MICHIGAN
.
6716 Orchard Lake Rd.
West Bloomfield Plaza
West Bloomfield
YOSI'S
GLATT MART
11/.7 7 UK 73.
0
When So Sorry
is not enough .. .
Send a tray
Nibbles & Nuts
737-8088
ESCHER W.
CHAMPLIN
Father of Jean Champlin
Yagoda and Marvin
Yagoda, passed away
April 25, 1992. Inter-
ment was in Sizemore
Cemetery, Hyden, Ken-
tucky.
118
In Loving
Memory Of
Husband, Father
and Grandfather
FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1992
WE NOW OFFER GLATT
KOSHER SHIVA DINNERS
AND TRAYS
FREE DELIVERY AVAILABLE
\,,,,,2,13) 855
-
8830
The Family of the Late
ALBERT
SUMMER
Announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his
memory 10 a.m. Sunday,
June 28, at Adat Shalom
Memorial Park. Cantor
Vieder will officiate.
Relatives and friends are
invited to attend.
Announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in
her memory 10 a.m.
Sunday, June 28, at
Hebrew Memorial Park.
Rabbi Gruskin will of-
ficiate. Relatives and
friends are invited to
attend.
The Family of the Late
HENRIETTA
DRASNIN
Announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in
her memory 10 a.m.
Sunday, July 5, at Clover
Hill Park Cemetery. Rab-
bi Gruskin will officiate.
Relatives and friends are
invited to attend.
The Family of the Late
MAX
LAMPART
Announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his
memory 11 a.m. Sunday,
June 28, at Nusach H'Ari
Cemetery. Rabbi Grus-
kin will officiate.
Relatives and friends are
invited to attend.
UNESCO Conference
Takes New Direction
Paris (JTA) — A U.N.
agency long considered a
hotbed of anti-Israel
polemics redeemed itself by
launching a global assault
on anti-Semitism here this
week.
An international con-
ference titled "Educating for
Tolerance: The Case of Res-
urgent Anti-Semitism"
opened here Tuesday under
the joint sponsorship of the
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization and the Simon
Wiesenthal Center, a Holo-
caust remembrance and
Jewish advocacy group
headquartered in Los
Angeles.
The conference, formally
opened by Vienna-based
Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesen-
thal, devoted its first session
to speeches and messages of
support from world leaders.
UNESCO would have been
an unlikely partner in such
a project a few years ago,
when it was a bastion of pro-
Arab, anti-Western senti-
ment. Israel was regularly
attacked at its sessions by
the Arab countries and their
allies in the former Soviet
bloc and Third World.
The situation was at-
tributed in large measure to
the leadership of Amadou-
Mahtar M'Bow of Senega
who was UNESCO's dire
tor-general for 13 years.
He was replaced in
tober 1987 by Federi
Mayor Zaragoza of Spa.'
who immediately began
house-cleaning an
depoliticization of LINES
Mayor found it necessf
Tuesday to deny that
conference was a ploy to e
tice the United States
resume membership
UNESCO.
"Of course I would lik
see the organization resu
its internationally re
sentative character aga
but I would never act it
direct way to achieve thi
he told reporters.
The Americans, who
vided 25 percent of the ag
cy's budget, walked out
1984, complaining that t
organization had been po
ticized and was poor
managed. Britain follow
suit a year later.
UNESCO has curbed its
most militant pro-Third
World stances since Ma
took over. Significantly,
the conference opened,
deputy director-general, C.
Sharma, was in the Unite
States said to be discussin
possible American return.
Jews Concerned
About Czechoslovakia
Prague (JTA) — The
impending dissolution of the
74-year-old Czechoslovakian
state worries the Jewish
community, which numbers
less than 8,000 in this nation
of over 15 million.
The country's division into
separate Czech and Slovak
republics was foreordained
by the outcome of the gen-
eral elections held June 5
and 6.
The leaders of the two vic-
torious parties, Vaclav
Klaus of the right-wing
Czech Civic Democratic Par-
ty and Vladimir Meciar of
Slovakia's left-to-center na-
tionalist movement, agreed
June 20 on a constitutional
separation.
It was, in fact, the only ra-
tional solution considering
the unbridgeable differences
between the political pro-
grams and goals of the two
leaders. Mr. Klaus was
firmly for the continued fed-
eration of the two republics
and their recognition as a
single nation under interna-
tional law.
Mr. Meciar proposed a c
federation of two soverei
states to be recognized
separate national entities.
Fortunately, the histo
and ethnic boundaries b
ween the 10 million Czec
and the 5 million Slovaks
clearly defined and neith
has territorial claims on t
other.
But while everyone
grateful that the split wi
occur without bloodshe
Jews are uneasy over the
future, especially i
Slovakia. Some can reca
Slovakia's only previous e
perience with independent
— as a Nazi puppet stat
from 1939 to 1945, which e
ceeded even the Germans
its zeal to deport Jews.
While anti-Semitism is no
an urgent problem i
Czechoslovakia, it is more
prevalent in the eastern,
Slovakian part of the coup
try where the economy
suffering and unemploy-
ment is high.