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December 11, 1992 - Image 51

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-12-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Sales staff Denise Zuckerman, Frances Berger, Ray Epstein, Muriel Rudack and Pearl Cohan.

After 31 years,
Ray Epstein
will retire
from the
upscale retail
business.

hen Anita Naf-
taly stopped by
Ray and Ida's
Southfield dress
shop a few weeks ago,
she had only a few
words.
"How can you do this
to me?" she asked Ray
Epstein, founder of the
31-year-old store that
will close on Sunday.
This week, Ms.
Epstein, 60, begins pre-
paring for her retire-
ment, closing the doors

W

KIMBERLY LIFTON
STAFF WRITER

GOODBYE
ay
and
Ida's

of her popular shop in
Applegate Square, which
specializes in evening
wear and mother-of-the-
bride attire.
She considered selling
the business, but brokers
advised her such a move
could take up to a year.
And she was ready to
leave.
"She deserves a break,"
Ms. Naftaly said. "But
there will be a void. She
will be missed. I used to
come to her store when it

was in Oak Park, and
she used to dress me.
This is like an institu-
tion."
The story of Ray and
Ida's dates back to the
old Jewish neighborhood
of Detroit, where Ms.
Epstein and her late
mother, Ida Cohen, each
invested $500 and
opened a dress shop in
the basement of the
Cohen home on Cherry-
lawn, between Curtis
and Six Mile Road.

Ever since, Ms. Ep-
stein, now 60, has
worked "six days a week
for 31 years."
She rarely has allowed
herself time for relaxing
vacations. The retail
world, she said, is
rewarding but a tough
field. Buying trips to
New York are hard work
— not a world of glam-
our, she added.
Now she wants to
relax. Ever since her

GOODBYE page 52

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LIJ

51

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