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HAROLD “HAL” 
MIZNER, 84, of 
Keego Harbor, died 
Sept. 23, 2022. 
He was a proud 
Navy veteran, craft-
er and friend to all. His favorite 
title was Grandpa. 
Family who will cherish his 
memory include his wife of 
almost 40 years, Yvette “Bunny” 
Mizner; sons and daughters-in-
law, Richard and Lorrie Gaft, 
Jeffery and Darby Gaft, Mitchell 
Gaft, Howard and Amy Gaft, 
and Stuart and Donna Gaft; 
12 grandchildren; seven 
great-grandchildren; brother-
in-law, Stan Meretsky; sister and 
brother-in-law, Cannie and Jack 
Vincent. 
He was the brother of the late 
Barbra Rodd.
The family offers thanks to 
the staff of the 6 South ward at 
the VA hospital in Ann Arbor 
and the caring staff at the Danto 

Center. 
Interment was held at B’nai 
Israel Memorial Gardens. 
Contributions may be made to 
the Waterford Senior Center, 
to BBYO or to a charity of 
one’s choice. Arrangements by 
Dorfman Chapel.

HERMAN 
OZROVITZ, 93, of 
West Bloomfield, 
died Sept. 25, 2022. 
He is survived 
by his children, 
Marsha (Hershel) Cohen, 
Janice Kay and Bruce (Sharon) 
Ozrovitz; grandchildren, Lesli 
(Aaron) Jacobs, Bryan (Jill) 
Cohen, Adam (Amy) Kay, 
Rachel (Dan) Keelan, Lauren 
Weiner, Alyssa (Bradley) 
Otis and Justin Ozrovitz; 
great-grandchildren, Eden, 
Jocelyn, Jacob, Zachary, 
Benjamin, Charlie, Elijah, 
Aubrielle, Eliana and Addison; 

many other loving family mem-
bers and friends. 
Herman was the beloved 
husband for 69 years of the late 
Adell Ozrovitz; brother of the 
late Philip Ozrovitz. 
Interment was held at 
Machpelah Cemetery. 
Contributions may be made 
to a charity of one’s choice. 
Arrangements by Dorfman 
Chapel.

EVA KUHN PACKARD, 
passed away peacefully at her 
home in Novi Sept. 22, 2022.
Eva was a beloved aunt, 
wife, sister and friend. She 
was born April 5, 1938, in 
Budapest, Hungary, to Eugene 
and Elizabeth Kuhn. At an early 
age, Eva immigrated to the 
United States with her family 
and settled in Detroit. She and 
her brother grew up in a family 
that valued the opportunities 
afforded by democracy in the 

United States and the value of 
a quality public education. Eva 
attended Fairbanks Elementary 
and Cooley High in the Detroit 
Public School System.
Eva gravitated toward math, 
earning a scholarship to Wayne 
State University. In her junior 
year, she enrolled in the first 
computer course offered in the 
WSU Math Department and 
did so well that she was asked 
by her professor to help teach 
the first computer lab. 
Upon graduation in 1959, 
Eva entered a career in com-
puters with General Motors 
Research in Warren. She was 
one of the first women to 
become a manager in her field; 
and, later in her career, she 
transferred to a role of greater 
responsibility at Electronic Data 
Systems. Her career and volun-
teer accomplishments included 
the Headliner Award in 2002, 
given to distinguished Wayne 

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