LEXIBIL
Otto Dube
L
As
arge chapel. Small chapel. Graveside. Cemetery chapel. We are without
limitations in our ability to provide services that meet the exact needs of each
family we serve. For nearly 60 years, we have shown flexibility through
unsurpassed responsiveness to Detroit's Jewish community.
THE IRA KAUFMAN CHAPEL
Bringing Together Family, Faith & Community
THE KAU FMAN
Benedict and Ada S. Glazer
Institute
on Judaism for the
COMMUNITY CORN ER
Dr. Michael Cook
addresses the
Glazer Institute,
Fri, Feb 23, 2001
at Temple Beth El
Dr. Michael Cook,
Scholar-In-Residence for the
59th Annual Rabbi B.
Christian, Eastern Orthodox,
Muslim and Protestant
Clergy, lectures at Temple
Beth El Fri, Feb 23, 2001.
He will address "Five
Jewish Approaches to Jesus
and Paul: A Critique and
Defense" at 9:30 am and
10:45 am.
He will also speak at
Temple Services Friday at
7:30 pm and Saturday at
10:30 am.
There is no charge for
these events.
For more info, call
(248) 851-1100,
ext. 3149
18325 West Nine Mile Road, Southfield, MI 48075 -Telephone: 248-569-0020 • Toll Free: 800-325-7105
Please visit us at our web site: www.irakaufinan.com
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1-800-966-7263
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6716 Orchard Lake Road
In the West Bloomfield Plaza
MON. - FRI. 9:00 am - 6:00 pm
SAT. 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
GODIVA
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MONUMENT CENTER
GLATT KOSHER
INC.
"Same Location 45 Years"
r7.73
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Under the Supervision of the
Council of Orthodox Rabbis
• Monuments and Markers
• Bronze Markers
• Memorial Duplicating
• Cemetery Lettering & Cleaning
2/16
2001
130
WE NOW HAVE
SEATING FOR YOUR
INDOOR DINING
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ALL YOUR NEEDS
661 E. 8 MILE ROAD FERNDALE
11/2 blocks East of Woodward
25270 Greenfield • Oak Park
( 248) 967-1161
Detroit, died Feb. 8.
He is survived by his great-niece,
Bonnie Dame of North Richland
Hills.
Contributions may be made to a
charity of one's choice.
Services and interment at Hebrew
Memorial Park Cemetery.
Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial
Chapel.
BERTHA WINITSKY, of Malmo,
Sweden, died Jan. 31.
She is survived by her daughter
and son-in-law, Helene and Marvin
Cherrin of West Bloomfield; son and
daughter-in-law, Ulf and Freidie
Winitsky of Malmo; grandchildren,
Renee and Craig Erlich of Bloomfield
Hills, Sam and Bonnie Cherrin of
West Bloomfield, P.J. Cherrin of West
Bloomfield, Peter Winitsky of
Stockholm, Ann Winitsky of
Stockholm; great-grandchildren,
Jonah and Sophie Erlich, Alec and
Brendan Cherrin.
Interment in Malmo.
Contributions may be made to a char-
ity of one's choice.
LOUIS (LOU) ZACK, 75, formerly
of Southfield of Dallas, died Jan. 31.
He was a member of the United
States Air Force during World War II.
He worked in the men's clothing busi-
ness as a salesman and then became
the owner of Max Man Menswear and
Mister Z Menswear.
Mr. Zack is survived by his beloved
wife of 53 years, Ruth; daughter,
Laurie of Trumbull, Conn., sons and
daughters-in-law, Marry and Flora,
Michael and Mindee of Dallas; grand-
children, Adam, Eric, Aaron, Corry;
sister and brother-in-law, Phyllis and
Seymour Subar of West Bloomfield;
sisters-in-law and brother-in-law,
Marion and Jerome Kopleman of
Farmington. He was the beloved son
of the late Esek and the late Rose
Zack.
Interment in Dallas. Contributions
may be made to Southwest Transplant
Alliance, 3710 Rawlins Road, Dallas,
TX 75219 or Congregation Shearith
Israel in Dallas.
DR. RICHARD M. ZUCKER, 48,
of Rochester, died Feb. 9. He was a
1985 graduate of Life Chiropractic
College and for 15 years he was the
owner of Chiropractic Arts in
Rochester.
Dr. Zucker is survived by his
daughter, Theodora Zucker of Lake
Orion and her mother, Cathy Zucker;
parents, Dr. Sidney and Ann Zucker
of New York; sister and brother-in-
law, Bonnie and David Powell of
Georgia; brother and sister-in-law,
Jeffrey and Cathy Zucker of Arizona.
Interment at Holy Order of the
Living in New York. Contributions
may be directed to the American
Cancer Society. Arrangements by Ira
Kaufman Chapel.
Skverer Rebbe
Dies At 79
New York/JTA — Rabbi David
Twersky, leader of a branch of the
Chasidic Skverer dynasty, died Feb. 2
of complications from heart and kid-
ney ailments. He was 79.
Twersky, who lived in Brooklyn's
Borough Park section, helped many
Holocaust survivors immigrate to the
United States.
Jewish Mayor
Dies At 94
New York/JTA — Abraham Beame,
the first Jewish mayor of New York,
died Saturday at 94 of - complications
from open-heart surgery.
The son of Polish Jewish immi-
grants who grew up on the Lower
East Side and attended City College,
Beame was mayor between 1974 and
1977. His tenure was plagued by New
York City's worst fiscal crisis.
He was born in London to Polish
Jewish parents who had fled Warsaw,
then part of Russia. In New York, the
family changed its name to Beame.
At the age of 15, he met Mary
Ingerman at a Lower East Side social
services center. Seven years later, after
he had earned his accounting degree
from City College, the two were mar-
ried.
From 1929 to 1946, Beame taught
accounting and laid the groundwork
for his career in the city's political
machine.
Throughout the 1930s and 1940s,
both Beame and his wife were active
in local Democratic politics. In 1946,
he was appointed assistant budget
director for New York City; he was
promoted to budget director in 1952.
In 1961 he was elected city comp-
troller, and in 1965 decided to run
for mayor, but was defeated.
He was re-elected as comptroller in
1969, and ran for mayor again in
1973. This time, backed by
Democratic Party bosses, he won.
Beame was defeated in his 1977 re-
election bid. Aside from trips to
Florida and Israel, he spent the last
two decades of his life in banking and
served on civic and corporate boards.