Obituaries
North Shore Death Notices: Oct. 10 To Oct. 16
Recent obituaries and upcoming services on Chicago's North Shore.

The following death notices were added to funeral homes serving the North Shore area in the past week. Those homes have provided obituaries for some of those that have passed away recently. Patch offers condolences to their loved ones, links to their obituaries and notices of upcoming services below.
Chicago Jewish Funerals, 8851 Skokie Blvd. in Skokie and 195 N. Buffalo Grove Road in Buffalo Grove
Luba Greenberg, 93, Chicago
Service Oct. 18
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Alan E. Brickman, 73, Wheeling
Service Oct. 18
Grunya Ostrovskaya, 92, Chicago
Service Oct. 19
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Sherwin Niel Wasserman, 87, Clearwater, Florida
Service Oct. 19
Rebecca Jacobs San, 41, Chicago
Service Oct. 19
Doris Isenberg née Goldberg, 103, Skokie
Service Oct. 20
Bernice Weissbourd, 99, Evanston
Service Oct. 20
Edward "Bird" Hoffman, 71, Chicago
Service Oct. 30
Luiza Lyandres née Zager, 96, Skokie
Alice Chernoff, 92, Chicago
Murray Hozinsky, 90, Chicago
Rita Back, 84, Chicago
Ze’ev Harari, 76, Ocala, Florida
Arthur J. Stone, 76, Lincolnwood
Judith Ann Siria née Gilman, 74, Buffalo Grove
Donnellan Funeral Home, 10045 Skokie Blvd. in Skokie
Theodore Tefft Weldon, 90, Winnetka
Service Oct. 18
Margot L. Buehler née Messersmith, 64, Kenilworth
Service Oct. 21
Barbara Drennan née Jarabak, 81, Evanston
Service Oct. 22
Sylvia M. Picard, 86, Glenview
Service Nov. 12
John James Schornack, 91, Northfield
Cynthia “Cindy” Mead Sargent, 84, Captiva, Florida
Cecilia M. Donoghue, 81, Glenview
Haben Funeral Home, 8057 Niles Center Road in Skokie
Alfred Eiichi “Al” Fujii, 95, Lincolnwood
Service Oct. 20
Gary Lee Breen, 75, Evanston
Service Dec. 4
Ronald L. Konior, 88, Skokie
Patricia A. Karpinski née Gorski, 79, Skokie
Joseph Ross Genovaldi, 73, Skokie
Deron Conway Mitchell, 57, Evanston
Thompson Funeral and Cremation, 1917 Asbury Ave. in Evanston
Belita Ann Farr, 68, Evanston
Service Oct. 18
Pamela Denise Woods, 65, Waukegan
Service Oct. 22
Evanston Funeral and Cremation, 1726 Central St. in Evanston
Mildred L. Thompson, 93, Glenview
Service Nov. 5
Kathleen Hewitt Kastilahn, 76, Evanston
Simkins Funeral Home, 6251 Dempster St. in Morton Grove
Reynaldo “Rey” Ablaza Ranola, 74, Morton Grove
Visitation Oct. 18, service Oct. 19
N. H. Scott & Hanekamp Funeral Home, 1240 Waukegan Road in Glenview
Dorothy Jorgensen Ratcliffe, 98, Northbrook
Paula C. Dore née Butler, 81, Glenview
Weinstein & Piser Funeral Home, 111 Skokie Blvd. in Wilmette
Lidiya Palant, 96, Buffalo Grove
Service Oct. 18
Sylvia Kachel, 95, Skokie
Service Oct. 18
Evelyn R. Greenberg, 104, The Woodlands, Texas
Service Oct. 19
Morton "Mort" Goldenberg, 90, Madison, Wisconsin
Service Oct. 19
Leonid Vinogradsky, 80, Niles
Service Oct. 19
Wayne E. Peters, 89, Chicago
Service Oct. 23
Adele Swartz, 96, Toronto, Ontario
Robert S. Goodman, 77, Glencoe
Kelley & Spalding Funeral Home, 1787 Deerfield Road in Highland Park
Margaret Marie Lindholm née Marchuk, 88, Deerfield
Seguin & Symonds Funeral Home, 858 Sheridan Road in Highwood and 11 West Belvidere Road in Grayslake
Piero Lorenzo Cecchi, 76, Mundelein
Service Oct. 19
Carol Marie Durra, 75, Highland Park
Service Oct. 21
Katherine Anne Lunardi, 76, Highland Park
Carol Marie Durra, 75, Highland Park
Wenban Funeral Home, 320 Vine Ave. in Lake Forest
Elizabeth E. Brown, 99, Lake Forest
Service Oct. 18
Featured Obituary:
Bernice Weissbourd, 99, a researcher and advocate who built on her experience as a Head Start teacher to become a national leader in promoting the critical role of families in their children’s early childhood development, died October 12 at her home in Evanston IL. She was in the forefront of developing public understanding of what has become common knowledge: that the first three years of life are critical to a child’s development and have lifelong impact. Weissbourd went on to pioneer the idea that providing support and education for families when children are very young can make a big difference in realizing each child’s potential.
Bernice Weissbourd was born on Chicago’s south side in 1923. As a young woman, she studied classical piano at the Julliard School, and music remained a joyous part of her life.
On October 31, 1946, she married Bernard Weissbourd, a scientist, lawyer, pre-eminent real estate developer and civic leader. Lifelong loving companions, they were devoted to family, community and progressive action. They had four children and moved from Chicago’s south side to Evanston in 1959. When her youngest child started school in 1962, Bernice began her early childhood career in earnest, becoming an early childhood teacher and program director for many years before becoming a national leader in the early child development and family support movement.
In 1976, Bernice co-founded Family Focus, a Chicago area non-profit providing community-based support for families with young children that grew to seven neighborhood service centers. Family Focus was a model for more than 20,000 programs operating today, in schools and neighborhoods around the Unites States.
In 1981, Bernice was the impetus for organizing a national meeting of state and local advocates for family support, professional and academic leaders and families themselves to share their ideas and experiences. The Family Resource Coalition (later named Family Support America) emerged from this meeting to become the national voice for family support, with Bernice serving as its President. A few years later, she was instrumental in the founding of Chicago’s Ounce of Prevention Fund, which utilized the principles of family support in its programs for teen parents.
Bernice’s national public and civic service included serving as President of the American Orthopsychiatric Association and Vice-President of the National Association for the Education of Young Children. She served as a Congressional appointee to the National Commission on Children and on the Administration for Children’s and Families’ Advisory Committee on Services for Families with Infants and Toddlers, which established Early Head Start.
She was also a prolific writer. She wrote a column on two-year olds for Parents magazine for more than 15 years and co-authored two books: America’s Family Support Programs (1987) and Putting Families First: America’s Family Support Movement and the Challenge of Change (1994). She was a lecturer at the University of Chicago, School of Service Administration from 1994 to 1999. Family and community were not only professional preoccupations. Bernice was devoted to her family and to her extraordinary community of friends of all ages. She was known by all who knew her for her warmth and generosity, and she delighted in gathering friends and family in her home.
Coming of age during years of extraordinary economic and political turmoil, she developed a keen interest in the possibilities for progressive change which guided her many political and philanthropic engagements and stayed with her until the end of her days. Throughout her life she was committed to racial and economic justice. She left the world a little better than she found it.Read more via Chicago Jewish Funerals »
Send obituaries and images to your Patch to be included in future editions: Deerfield, Evanston, Glenview, Highland Park, Lake Bluff-Lake Forest, Niles-Morton Grove, Northbrook, Skokie, Winnetka-Glencoe-Northbrook, Wilmette-Kenilworth
Last week: North Shore Death Notices: Oct. 3 to Oct. 9
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