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April 27, 2001 - Image 138

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2001-04-27

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

L

Rhonna Shatz of West Bloomfield,
Paul and Randi of Montclair N.J.;
daughter and son-in-law, Abby and Ed
Staum of New Rochelle, N.Y.; loving
grandchildren Ben, Allison, Loren,
Sam and Tess.
Services at Gorelick Chapel,
Yonkers, N.Y. Contributions may be
made to the American Heart
Association.

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 KAUFMAN
COMMUNITY CORNER

Jewish Family Service
of Metro Detroit seeks
Volunteers for Hospice
Training.

Jewish Family Service
of Metro Detroit teams
up with Jewish Hospice
and Chaplaincy Network

to enlist a new group of
volunteers who will
provide consolation and
assistance to terminally ill
clients and families of
these clients.
Training dates for the
12-hour training
curriculum for volunteers
are: May 10- 5:30-9:30
pm; May 11- 9 am-1 pm;

May 15- 5:30-9:30 pm
(dinner or lunch included).
Volunteers must attend
all three dates. Training
takes place at the Max M.
Fisher Federation
Building, 6730 Telegraph
in Bloomfield Hills.

For more info, call
Michelle Greenstein at
(248) 559-1500

18325 West Nine Mile Road, Southfield, MI 48075. Tele, ne: 248-569-0020 • Toll Free: 800-325-7105
Please visit us at our web site: www.iralcaufman.com

-

In Loving Memory Of
Our Beloved Mother and Grandmother

FANY GOODMAN

Who passed away March 27, 1963. The honor of knowing we were
part of you helps us bear the pain of losing you. Dear mother and
nanny, you are our constant reminder of love, inner grace and
compassion. Your children Selma and Harry Kramer; and your
grandchildren Robin, Jeffrey, Keith and Dana.

HYMAN LOUIS WEINER, 77, of

Farmington Hills, died April 22. He
was the former owner of Wholesale
Meat and Restaurant Supplies.
Mr. Weiner is survived by his wife,
Rose Weiner; sons and daughter-in-
law, Dr. Sheldon and Mercy Weiner of
West Bloomfield, Robert Weiner of
Farmington Hills; daughter, Deborah
Weiner of West Bloomfield; grand-
child, Erin Weiner; sisters and broth-
ers-in-law, Merle and Louis Leserman
of West Bloomfield, Pauline and
Werner Seiferheld of Walled Lake.
Interment at Beth El Memorial
Park. Contributions may be made to
the Jewish Association for Residential
Care. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman
Chapel.

SOPHIA ETHEL (COHEN) WINE-
MAN, 94, of Novi, died April 18.

She is survived by her son and
daughter-in-law, Alan and Carol
Wineman of Ann Arbor; daughter,
Marcia Wineman of Toronto, Ontario,
Canada; grandchildren, Lara Rachel
Wineman "of Madison, Wis., Daniel
Jeremy Wineman of Atlanta. She was
the beloved wife of the late Meyer
Wineman.
Contributions may be made to a
charity of one's choice. Interment at
Machpelah Cemetery. Arrangements
by Hebrew Memorial Chapel.

ERNEST ZIPSER, 85, of Southfield,

The Family of the Late

MAX ROTT

Wants to sincerely thank everyone for their kind

thoughts and contributions.

The Yellens and Rotts

I would like to thank my
wonderful family and
friends for your support
through my recent surgery.
Your love and care meant
a great deal to me.

4/27
2001

126

Sincerely,
TRUDY STEARN

The Family of the Late

FELICIA COHEN

Announces the unveiling of a
monument in her memory, 10 a.m.,
Sunday, April 29, 2001 at Machpelah.
Neal Cohen will officiate. Relatives
and friends are invited to attend.
Brunch immediately following
at the home of Vivian Cole.
Call for directions: 248-626-3232

died April 21. He was a trade unionist,
decorated World War II veteran,
receiving the Purple Heart, three
Bronze Stars and the Victory Medal
for military service in the Italian Boot
Campaign, and a supporter of the
State of Israel.
Mr. Zipser served as president of
Teamsters Local 285 and as liaison
between the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters and the National
Committee for Labor Israel-Histadrut.
His service to the Jewish community
included the Allied Jewish Campaign
and the Jewish Federation of
Metropolitan Detroit.
He is survived by his sons and
daughters-in-law, Richard and
Dorynne Zipser of Lathrup Village,
Michael and Michele Zipser of
Farmington Hills; daughter and son-
in - law, Tina and Robert Mackoy of

Indianapolis, Ind.; grandchildren,
Noah and Amanda Zipser. He was the
beloved husband for 61 years of the
late Mary Zipser; brother of the late
Theodore (Helen) Zipser and Bernard
Zipser.
Interment at Adat Shalom
Memorial Park Cemetery.
Contributions may be made to the
Disabled American Veterans, 477
Michigan Ave., Room 1200, Detroit,
MI 48226 or to the National
Committee for Labor Israel
(Histadrut) 275 Seventh Ave., New
York, NY 10001. Arrangements by the
Dorfman Chapel.

Jewish Scholar
Dies In London

London/JTA — Rabbi Julius
Carlebach, who escaped Germany as a
child and rose to become a leading
scholar, died in Brighton, England, on
April 17, at the age of 79.
Honored by Germany for turning
Heidelberg's University for Jewish
Studies into the country's leading insti-
tution of its kind, Carlebach worked
in a wide range of fields during his
life.
He came to England at the age of
16, while the rest of his family, includ-
ing his father, the distinguished Rabbi
Joseph Carlebach, died in the
Holocaust.
After serving in Britain's Royal
Navy during the war, he ran a Jewish
children's home for 10 years.
Then he served as rabbi of the
Nairobi Hebrew Congregation, pro-
ducing a book on the Jews of Kenya
before earning a master's degree from
Cambridge when he was in his 40s.
He went on to earn a doctorate
from the University of Sussex, and
taught there for the rest of his life,
eventually becoming emeritus profes-
sor of German-Jewish studies.
He also served as rabbi of Hove
Hebrew Congregation, near Brighton
in the south of England.
In addition to teaching at the
University of Sussex, Carlebach was
rector of the University of Jewish

Studies in Heidelberg, Germany.
In 1998, the German state of

Baden-Wurttemberg presented him ,
with a distinguished service medal for
"developing Germany's only academic
and scientific center of Jewish learning
into a most important institute of
international standing."
He was also awarded the Grand
Cross of the Order of Merit of the
Federal Republic of Germany in 1994.

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