metro 100 Years from page 13 Integrity. have come from her husband's side of the family, one from her side, and her son Larry was president from 2001-3, sings in the choir and serves as a floor gabbai helping services run smoothly. Another honoree, Joel Ungar, 49, is the son of Seymour and the late Sharlene Ungar, who was the first woman presi- dent of the congregation. A member since 1968, he has been a board officer, but is most active as a regular Torah reader, a skill he learned from the late Cantor Klein. He also serves as a gabbai for the Torah service, which he learned from the late Shalom Ralph, B'nai Moshe sexton for 53 years. Ungar's brother, Rabbi Michael Ungar of Congregation Tifereth Israel in Columbus, Ohio, will be scholar in residence for the Centennial Celebration Weekend, May 20-22. "My Jewish identity comes almost entirely from B'nai Moshe,' Ungar said. "Cantor Klein tutored me for my bar mitzvah. He was patient, but demand- ing. I remember him playing Haftorah notes on the piano over and over until I got it right. Every time I read Torah, I am honored to continue to use his melodies." It's What We're Founded On. TALMER BANK AND TRUST" Community. Integrity. Service. A customized prayer book was published in 2009. John Van Neste Talmage H Rev. Talmage is the grandfather of David Provost —Taimer Bank and Trust Chairman. )00,W )PtOe'V M. Manuel Merzon Merzon is the grandfather of Gary Torgow — Chairman of First Michigan Bancorp inc. 2301 West Big Beaver Road Suite 525 Troy, MI 48084 800.462.2786 www.talmerbank.com 14 May 12 . 2 011 Member FDIC Cr He also fondly recalls a Passover in the early 1990s. The congregation was between buildings following the sale of the Oak Park building and fundraising for the current building, which opened in 1992. Membership had declined and services were held at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Cantor Klein stayed with Ungar and his family that holiday, took part in the seders and brought his own bottle of Slivovitz for rchainis (toasts to life). The youngest of the honorees is Hannah Fine, 15, a tenth-grader at West Bloomfield High School. The daughter of Steven and Elise Fine, she is often at services and synagogue programs with her parents and older sister, Samantha. "B'nai Moshe is very important to me not only for the religious aspect, but for