Y OU ’ VE ALWAYS ANTICIPATED EACH OTHER ’ S NEEDS . stocks and business with the men during dinner at the Great Lakes Club. Copies of the Wall Street Journal and Barron’s were fixtures on her kitchen table. She enjoyed playing bridge and mah jong and had an incompa- rable sweet tooth, never refusing a treat, especially if it contained chocolate. She was fiercely inde- pendent, living alone until age 99 after Robert died in 1998. DEVOTION TO FAMILY When her grandson Andrew, who lives in Chicago, visited Metro Detroit, seeing his “Nana” was the highlight of the trip. “She would listen to every word and every story I had with a big smile on her face, hanging on every detail,” said Andrew, speak- ing at the funeral service. “She never once seemed disinterested or wanted to talk about herself. It was like I was the only person in the world to her. She made every- one feel that they were so special.” Steven and Sally remember their mother’s devotion to the family, which was her highest pri- ority. On rainy days, Eleanor could be found waiting outside her chil- dren’s school, umbrella in hand, to make sure their three-block walk home was safe and dry. “She was the most wonderful loving mother anyone could have,” said Sally. “We always came first, before her own needs. She would drop anything to help us.” Eleanor Sloman is survived by her cherished children, Steven (Margaret) Sloman and Sally (the late Frederick) Marx; loving grandchildren, Celeste Sloman, Spyder-Ryder Sloman, Schuyler Sloman, Julie Sloman Marx, Andrew Sloman (Abbye) Marx, Carolyn Sloman Marx (fiance Alex Carravallah) and Scott Edward Marx; great-grandson, Franklin Ryan Marx. She was the beloved wife of the late Robert A. Sloman; dear sister of the late Adele (the late Dr. Nathan) Schlafer and the late Corinne (the late Anthony) Marlowe. Interment was at Beth El Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to Temple Beth El, Frederick H. Marx Memorial Fund, 7400 Telegraph Road, Bloomfield Hills, MI, 48301, (248) 851-1100, www.tbeonline.org/ donate-sp-741. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. By now, you know each other so well you feel you’re part of each other (and you are). You know exactly what each other is thinking before it’s said. With an event as important as this, it never hurts to discuss your choices and plan ahead. Once you make prearrangements, there’s never any question about what you would have wanted... it’s all understood. ©Adfinity * D ON ’ T STOP NOW . www.thedorfmanchapel.com 30440 Twelve Mile Road Farmington Hills • MI 48334 248.406.6000 TOLL FREE 1-866-406-6003 Licensed Funeral Directors: Alan Dorfman, Jonathan Dorfman 2057940 continued on page 56 Obituaries July 21 • 2016 55