logo
A Michigan bridge official died in 2010. It took 15 years to lay him to rest

A Michigan bridge official died in 2010. It took 15 years to lay him to rest

A Michigan man who had a key role in building one of the longest bridges in the United States has been buried 15 years after his death after a funeral home near the iconic structure surprised the public by saying it still had his ashes.
Larry Rubin was laid to rest Wednesday in Petoskey, 40 miles (64 kilometers) from the Mackinac Bridge, which connects Michigan's two peninsulas.
For decades, Rubin was the senior staff member at the Mackinac Bridge Authority, which manages the bridge, a 5-mile (8 km) span over the Straits of Mackinac that is considered the third-longest suspension bridge in the U.S. It opened in 1957.
When the bridge was built, 'he had an important role because the Authority needed someone to carry out their decisions. He served with excellence,' Barbara Brown, a former board member, said Friday.
Brown said she was 'just shocked' when she saw Rubin's name listed in the St. Ignace newspaper. A funeral home was informing the public that it had many unclaimed cremains. His family apparently didn't pick them up after he died at age 97 in 2010.
Val Meyerson of Temple B'nai Israel in Petoskey was familiar with the Jewish section of Greenwood Cemetery and aware that Rubin's first wife, Olga, was buried there in 1990. His name was already on the headstone in anticipation of eventual death.
Meyerson said friends from the Bridge Authority helped pay for Rubin's interment. About two dozen people attended a graveside service led by a rabbi.
'We all took turns filling in the grave, which was quite an honor,' Brown said. 'To have been neglected and forgotten for so long — it was moving.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michigan man cops to gun charge after 'menacing antisemitic tirade'
Michigan man cops to gun charge after 'menacing antisemitic tirade'

Toronto Sun

time5 hours ago

  • Toronto Sun

Michigan man cops to gun charge after 'menacing antisemitic tirade'

Hassan Chokr, 37, of Dearborn, Mich., tried to purchase 3 firearms at nearby store: Authorities Hassan Chokr, 37, of Dearborn, Mich., pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm on May 28, 2025. Photo by Oakland County Jail A Michigan man accused of threatening Jewish children, parents and security guards at a synagogue has pleaded guilty to a weapons charge after trying to purchase guns at a nearby store. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Hassan Chokr, 37, of Dearborn, Mich., was out on bail when he allegedly drove through the parking lot of Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Hills, near Detroit, and unleashed a 'menacing antisemitic tirade' at parents dropping off their preschool-age kids in December 2022, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Michigan said in a news release. Chokr allegedly yelled profanities and attacked parents' support for Israel before being asked to leave, the attorney's office said. Authorities said Chokr then attempted to buy three firearms at a nearby gun store, where he held a 12-gauge semi-automatic shotgun, a rifle and a 9mm semi-automatic pistol while at times pointing them and pulling the trigger. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The attorney's office said he also lied on the gun application by stating he had not been convicted of a felony. But Chokr had been convicted in 2017 of felony theft and was facing a pending assault with a dangerous weapon charge, according to the New York Post . RECOMMENDED VIDEO While awaiting the results of a background check during the firearms purchase, Chokr allegedly said he was 'going to even the score' and use the weapons for 'God's wrath,' according to the attorney's office. Chokr was eventually denied the weapons after a background check uncovered his criminal history. 'The federal government must do everything in its power to stem the rising tide of antisemitism,' U.S. Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon Jr. said in a statement. 'Chokr's attempt to purchase several deadly firearms in an apparent (alleged) attempt to follow through on his menacing threats against parents and preschoolers as they walked into a place of worship represents every American's worst nightmare. And we will not allow anyone to terrorize our Jewish neighbours. 'We are committed to protecting every American and their right to live and worship free of fear.' Chokr pleaded guilty May 28 to being a felon in possession of a firearm. He is set to be sentenced on Sept. 24 and faces up to 15 years in prison. Read More Columnists Ontario Olympics Canada Other Sports

`This House' makes world premiere, exploring Black history through a family's legacy in Harlem
`This House' makes world premiere, exploring Black history through a family's legacy in Harlem

Winnipeg Free Press

time14 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

`This House' makes world premiere, exploring Black history through a family's legacy in Harlem

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Near the end of 'This House,' a heart-wrenching opera given its world premiere last weekend, the matriarch Ida poignantly intones messages to her family on stage and to the audience. 'History's the only thing to survive,' soprano Adrienne Danrich sings before adding: 'You may have left us, but we will never leave you.' A rumination on love, aspiration, coping and the unyielding weight of the past, the roughly two-hour work that opened Saturday night at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis mixes the living and ghosts ambiguously in a Harlem brownstone. Ricky Ian Gordon's lush score brings to vivid life a libretto by Lynn Nottage and her daughter Ruby Aiyo Gerber, weaving impacts of the Civil War, Great Migration, Black Power movement, AIDS crisis and gentrification. There are five more performances through June 29. 'I just wanted to be able to tell all of these really important moments in Black history,' Gerber said, 'but as they relate to one family up into the current moment, so that there is not this erasure as if the past was the past, which I think increasingly now, especially as we see more and more censorship of Black history, is kind of this pervasive narrative.' Writing began when Gerber was a college senior Now 27, Gerber started 'This House' as a play in 2020 during her senior year at Brown while the coronavirus pandemic unfolded. Her mother, the only woman to win a pair of Pulitzer Prizes for drama, for 'Ruined' and 'Sweat, ' suggested Gerber adapt it with her into an opera composed by Gordon, Nottage's partner on 'Intimate Apparel' at Lincoln Center Theater. Opera Theater of St. Louis commissioned 'This House' for its 50th anniversary festival season as its 45th world premiere. 'Equal parts a family drama, a ghost story and a meditation on inheritance and memory,' company general director Andrew Jorgensen said. Ideas were exchanged when Gordon, Nottage and Gerber met at a Providence, Rhode Island, hotel. Among the changes, an escapist duet the librettists centered around Barcelona was changed to Valencia so as not to be similar to Stephen Sondheim's 'Company.' 'Being a mother-daughter you can be so honest,' Gerber said, recalling her mom telling her of one flowery passage: 'That's corny and I don't think it works.' Nottage still lives in the Brooklyn parlor house where Gerber grew up. 'We have different muscles. I'm someone that comes from the playwriting world,' Nottage said. 'Ruby's comfort zone is really poetry and language. and so I thought that between the two of us, we could divide and conquer in some ways.' Opera is set in Harlem brownstone In the resulting story, a house at 336 Convent Ave. was bought in 1919 by Minus Walker, a sharecropper's son. Zoe, a present-day investment banker (soprano Briana Hunter), and husband Glenn (tenor Brad Bickhardt) mull whether to move back to the house and subdivide the property. Zoe's brother, poetic painter Lindon (baritone Justin Austin), doesn't want to leave the house. and his lover Thomas (bass-baritone Christian Pursell) suggests they travel to Spain. Hunter tapped into anxiety, fear, pain and grief to portray Zoe. 'She's an ambitious woman, and she has been through a lot of really horrible, traumatic events through her family,' Hunter said. 'I understand the desire to kind of escape that. She's kind of a classic case of you can't avoid things forever.' Eight of the 10 characters are Black. There's a love triangle, pregnancies and surprise deaths. The house itself sings in 12-tone chords. Ida's Uncle Percy (tenor Victor Ryan Robertson) is a numbers runner who jolts the first act with an aria 'Drink Up!' 'Sportin' Life on steroids,' Gordon said, referring to the dope dealer in 'The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess.' 'We all are haunted by our past, and we all are haunted by our ghosts,' Gordon said. 'The question of living one's life is how does one reconcile the past and go on? How do you move into a future unbridled and free enough to be liberated and not imprisoned by the past?' Conductor has a penchant for contemporary works Daniela Candillari led her third world premiere in less than two years after Jeanine Tesori's 'Grounded' at the Washington National Opera and Rene Orth's '10 Days in a Madhouse' at Opera Philadelphia. Gordon originally envisioned the orchestra as chamber sized to hold down expenses, but Candillari pushed to add instruments. Conducting this is different from leading Verdi or Puccini. 'You can have two conductors read the score in a very different way,' she said. 'Having that direct source. a living composer who can tell you: This is what I heard and this is how I meant it and this is what this needs to be, that's incredibly invaluable.' Forty-eight players from the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra were in the deep pit at the Loretto-Hilton Center for the Performing Arts, a venue with a thrust stage and difficult acoustics. James Robinson, the company's former artistic director, returned to direct the performances and is likely to bring the staging to Seattle Opera, where he became general and artistic director in September 2024. 'It is kind of a ghost story, and I think that's the most important thing, knowing that we're able to bounce back and forth between time periods efficiently,' he said. For Danrich, portraying Ida has a special resonance. She is a St. Louis native and is staying at a hotel three blocks from where she grew up. 'My cousins, my grandmother, my grandfather, me, my sisters, we all lived in that big old house and we called it the big house,' she said. 'I was like, yep, this is my house. I'm actually basing her movements and her mannerisms off of my mother.'

Less than half of Toronto residents approve of Mayor Olivia Chow's performance: poll
Less than half of Toronto residents approve of Mayor Olivia Chow's performance: poll

Vancouver Sun

time18 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Less than half of Toronto residents approve of Mayor Olivia Chow's performance: poll

Less than half of Toronto residents approve of Mayor Olivia Chow's performance, according to a new poll. The Leger survey asked Toronto residents about their mayor as part of a broader poll on Ontario politics. Respondents were almost evenly split over Chow's handling of municipal affairs as she nears the end of her second year at the helm of Canada's largest city. Slightly less than half (48 per cent) of people strongly or somewhat approved of her performance, while 42 per cent said they strongly or somewhat disapproved. Another 10 per cent said they were not sure. 'Torontonians are on the fence about Mayor Chow,' Leger senior vice-president Jennifer McLeod Macey told National Post in an email. 'While the proportion that approve is nominally higher than those that disapprove, approval is soft. Indeed, almost twice as many strongly disapprove as strongly approve.' Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. The poll found that 17 per cent strongly disapprove of Chow's performance, while only 10 per cent said they strongly approve. Macey said that the market research company 'didn't have the opportunity to probe on the 'Why?'' in the latest survey, but she was interested in 'digging deeper into municipal issues, such as taxes, crime and safety, affordable housing, and transit which are all undoubtably having an impact on public opinion.' She found little 'variance' among different demographics in terms of Chow's approval rating, but pointed to 'more uncertainty among women and young-middle-aged adults.' Whereas just six per cent of male respondents were unsure of Chow's job performance, 15 per cent of women were. A similar number of 18 to 34 year olds (14 per cent) and 35 to 54 year olds (15 per cent) were on the fence about Chow's performance as mayor. Greater communication 'on key issues could have a significant impact on overall approval ratings,' Macey said. Chow was elected in July 2023 following the resignation of John Tory over an affair with a political staffer 38 years younger than him. She had previously run for the post in 2014, placing third behind Doug Ford, who went on to become premier of Ontario, and Tory, who became mayor. Months after she was elected, Hamas invaded Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and Chow has been criticized by some city councillors for failing to protect Toronto's Jewish community. Beaches-East York Councillor Brad Bradford accused Chow of dragging her feet on municipal initiatives to protect local places of worship, notably synagogues that have been picketed by anti-Israel protesters. 'In the fifteen months since October 7, an absence of leadership has turned Toronto into a city that many don't recognize,' Bradford wrote in National Post earlier this year. 'This is not a Jewish problem — it's a Toronto problem. This is about our values and who we want to be as a city. Unfortunately, as we enter 2025, this crisis has been met with a lack of leadership at the highest level.' Last week, news reports suggested that Bradford is aiming to run in the upcoming mayoral election scheduled for late October 2026. Marco Mendicino, a former Liberal cabinet minister and Prime Minister Mark Carney's current chief of staff, is also reportedly considering a run for mayor. When Chow entered office, she boasted a 73 per cent approval rating, according to a poll conducted by Liaison Strategies. However, since then, Chow has seen her approval rating steadily decline. By May 2024, her approval rating had dropped to 52 per cent, according to another Liaison Strategies survey. It went back up to 59 per cent in July, around her one-year anniversary, but it had dropped again to 54 per cent as of November 2024. Over the same time period, her disapproval rating has gone from 18 per cent at the time of her election, to a high of 40 per cent last May, and was sitting at 38 per cent in November. In the May 2024 Liason Strategies survey, Chow's support was strongest in Toronto's downtown core and weakest in the city's farthest reaches, such as Etobicoke. The poll also found that women in the city were slightly more likely to support Chow (58 per cent) than men (50 per cent). Chow inherited a roughly $1 billion budget deficit — a holdover from a pandemic-era shortfall in transit revenue and rising shelter costs — and has struggled to trim expenses. In January, she unveiled the city's new budget featuring a nearly seven per cent tax hike , estimated to cost Toronto homeowners $268 a year. In May, Chow acknowledged the city would require assistance meeting its roughly $40 million goal to fund its share of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which includes six games scheduled to take place in Toronto. 'We can't go and find any more cash, we just don't have it,' the mayor said during a press conference last month. The Leger survey was conducted between May 23 and 25, with an online sample of 1,025 Ontarians, of which 296 were Toronto metropolitan residents. A margin of error cannot be associated with a non-probability sample in a panel survey for comparison purposes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store