<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<?oxygen RNGSchema="http://digitalhumanities.unl.edu/resources/schemas/tei/TEIP5.4.0.0/tei_all.rng" type="xml"?>

<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xml:id="soh.sto008.00012">

<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title>Founder of Builder's Supply Dies</title>
<principal xml:id="bd">Dotan, Lisabeth</principal>
<principal>Kohen, Ari</principal>
<respStmt>
<resp>Transcription and encoding</resp>
<name xml:id="lkw">Weakly, Laura K.</name>
<name xml:id="em">McCabe, Elsie</name>
</respStmt>
</titleStmt>

<editionStmt>
<edition>
<date>2022</date>
</edition>
</editionStmt>

<publicationStmt>
<authority>Nebraska Stories of Humanity</authority>
<publisher>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</publisher>
<distributor>
<name>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities</name>
<address>
<addrLine>319 Love Library</addrLine>
<addrLine>University of Nebraska–Lincoln</addrLine>
<addrLine>Lincoln, NE 68588-4100</addrLine>
<addrLine>cdrh@unl.edu</addrLine>
</address>
</distributor>
<idno type="project">soh.sto008.00012</idno>
<availability>
<licence>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/</licence>
<p>Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Derivatives must be credited to Nebraska Stories of Humanity, made available non-commercially, and distributed under the same terms. Requests for permission for commercial publication or other use should be emailed to the project team.</p>
</availability>
</publicationStmt>

<sourceDesc>
<bibl>
<title level="a">Founder of Builder's Supply Dies</title>
<date when="2005-11-25">November 25, 2005</date>
</bibl>
<msDesc>
<msIdentifier>
<repository></repository>
<collection></collection>
<idno></idno>
</msIdentifier>
</msDesc>
</sourceDesc>

</fileDesc>

<profileDesc>

<langUsage>
<language ident="en">English</language>
</langUsage>

<textClass>
<keywords scheme="original" n="type">
<term>Stories</term>
</keywords>
<keywords scheme="original" n="subtype">
<term>Maurice Udes</term>
</keywords>  
<keywords scheme="viaf" n="people">
<term>Udes, Maurice</term>
<term>Marcus, Joan K.</term>
<term>Udes, Joan</term>
<term>Ricks, Marty</term>
<term>Shaw, Barbara</term>
<term>Udes, Diane</term>
<term>Scott, Lynne</term>
<term>Scott, John</term>
<term>Backus, Janet</term>
<term>Eugenides, JoEllen</term>
<term>Pathak, Barbara</term>
<term>Cannon, Susan</term>
<term>Cannon, Mark</term>
<term>Bader, Teri</term>
<term>Shaw, Jon</term>
<term>Scott, Sonja</term>
<term>Scott, Sarah</term>
<term>Scott, Julia</term>
<term>Cannon, Ryan</term>
<term>Cannon, Andrea</term>
<term>Cannon, Christopher</term>
<term>Cannon, Michelle</term>
<term>Cannon, Keith</term>
<term>Pathak, Nevin</term>
<term>Backus, Kyle</term>
<term>Eugenides, Joel</term>
<term>Eugenides, Jenna</term>
<term>Eugenides, Alicia</term>
</keywords>
<keywords scheme="geonames" n="places">
<term>Omaha, Nebraska</term>
<term>Pine Bluff, Arkansas</term>
<term>Russia</term>
<term>Germany</term>
</keywords>
<keywords scheme="original" n="subjects">
<term>Builders Supply Company</term>
<term>Army Field Artillery</term>
</keywords>
</textClass>

</profileDesc>

<revisionDesc>
<change when="2022-03" who="#lkw"> Review</change>
<change when="2022" who="#em"> Transcription and initial encoding</change>
</revisionDesc>
</teiHeader>

<text> <body>
<div1 xml:lang="en" type="newspaper">

<pb facs="soh.sto008.00012.001"/>
<head>Founder of Builder's Supply Dies</head>
<note>11/25/2005</note>
<byline>by JOAN K. MARCUS</byline>

<p>Maurice Udes, the owner of what was Omaha's largest 
construction company suppliers, died Nov. 15 at the age 
of 83. Services were held Nov. 17 at Temple Israel with 
burial in Temple Israel Cemetery.</p>

<figure><p>Maurice Udes</p></figure>

<p>Udes was originally from 
Pine Bluff, Arkansas. He was 
an avid football fan, tennis 
player and sometimes 
enjoyed scuba diving.</p>

<p>However he was best 
known for his prowess on 
the ballroom dancing floor. 
He and his wife, Joan, were 
winners of many contests. 
They even built a dance 
floor in their homes. His circle 
of Omaha dance friends often remarked, "It's like a 
dance club in the basement!"</p>

<p> He was a leader, even in college, when he won a 
speech contest while attending Purdue University. He 
graduated with a degree in electrical engineering and 
went to serve three years in the Army Field Artilery 
during World War II.</p>

<p>After the war, he took a job with Lyon Metal Products 
in Omaha, However, the demand for housing in Omaha 
was great and materials were hard to get. He said, 
"finding building materials was more of an acquisition 
contest than a sales contest."</p>

<p>In 1951, Udes started Builder's Supply in an old coal 
yard site at 24th and Fort Streets. The company first 
sold lumber and later branched out into millwork. He

<pb facs="soh.sto008.00012.002"/>

began the company with four employees and a used 
truck. In 1977, they advertised as Nebraska's largest 
building materials dealer and, said Udes, "We have marketing 
figures to prove it!"</p>

<p>When be began his own buisness, he said that he 
would never dwell on fears becase all he could ever see 
in life were opportunities. He pledged that he would get 
right out on the job with the contractors--rather than 
dropping off the materials at the job site.</p>

<p>By 1986, the company had moved to 72nd and F 
Streets where they were in a better position to serve the 
contractors in West Omaha. They had over 200 employees 
on the payroll. At that time, they shared land with its 
Security Windows division, a wood and aluminum manufacturing 
company. This gave them flexibility to give 
the contractors what they needed.</p>

<p>Also at that time, emphasis on "do-it-yourself" customers 
was beginning and Builders Supply was a forerunner 
in that field. Udes always said that seizing opportunities 
was his key to success. Designing and manufacturing 
his own products helped Udes to survive the 1973-74 
business recession in Omaha. He said, "Diversification and 
being in the manufacturing business helped us over the 
recession because the retail business picked up."</p>

<p>By manufacturing its own products, Builders Supply 
was able to give a price advantage. He said, 
"Manufacturing also gives us the advantage of flexibility 
because, when business is brisk, it's difficult for a dealer
to maintain an adequate inventory of certain items."</p>

<p>In 1990, Maury and Joan Udes gave a gift of $200,000 
to help the resettlement of Soviet Jews. Their gift to the 
"Passage of Freedom Fund" was his way of repaying an 
old debt. He said at the time, "My dad was born in Russia 
He was six months old when my grandparents immigrated 
to the United States and someone had to help him get 
here. I know that this is something that my father and 
grandfather would have wanted me to do."</p>

<p>Udes recalled that his father had told him of the conditions 
in Eastern Europe. "Our people were denied 
educational opportunities and there was prejudice 
against them because they were Jewish. It was never 
considered illegal to beat a Jew," he explained then.</p>

<p>The Udes' gift was used to cover basic necessities such 
as apartment rental, utilities, furniture, kitchen equipment, 
linens, food, bus fare and daycare for young children. 
He said, "Freedom is important, necessary and a 
high priority. I have a wonderful sense of satisfaction!" 
At the time of the gift, he hoped that at least one member 
of the Russian families would be employed.</p>

<p>In 2001, Udes was inducted into the Omaha Business 
Hall of Fame. Proceeds from the dinner honoring the 
inductees were donated to the Durham Western 
Heritage Museum and provided funds for Junior 
Achievement of the Midlands Inc., the Omaha business 
Hall of Fame Scholarship Foundation and Omaha 2000. 
At the dinner Udes was cited for his contributions 
through the Metropolitan Omaha Builders Association.</p>

<p>"Maury had the foresight to realize that his generation 
needed to take that extra step to endow the future of the 
Omaha Jewish community," noted Marty Ricks, 
Executive Director of the Jewish Federation of Omaha 
Foundation. "In 1995, he and Joan established a very 
significant PACE (Perpetual Annual Endowment Fund).
 With this fund, their annual campaign pledge will continue 
forever.</p>

<p>"Maury realized this was the most meaningful way to 
help the Jewish community--by letting the leaders determine 
through the Federation budget and allocation 
process, how the income from their endowment should 
be spent every year."</p>

<p>Udes also funded a permanent exhibit at the Nebraska 
Jewish Historical Society, entitled, "Heroine of the 
Holocaust," which features Udes' aunt who stayed 
behind in Germany to protect a destitute child.</p>

<p>In addition to his wife, Joan, Udes is survived by 
daughters, Barbara Shaw and Diane Udes; daughter and 
son-in-law, Lynne and John Scott; stepdaughters, Janet 
Backus of Las Vegas, NV, JoEllen Eugenides of Warner, 
NH, Barbara Pathak, Andover, MA; step-daughter and 
son-in-law, Susan and Mark Cannon of Kenilworth, IL; 
15 grandchildren, Teri Bader, Jon Shaw, Sonja, Sarah, 
and Julia Scott, Ryan, Andrea, Christopher, Michelle 
and Keith Cannon, Nevin Pathak, Kyle Backus, Joel, 
Jenna and Alicia Eugenides; two great-grandchildren.</p>

<p>Memorials to Temple Israel, the Alzheimers 
Association, or the American Lung Association.</p>

</div1>



</body>
</text>

</TEI>

