110 Friday, June 13, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS In loving memory of our beloved mother, grand- mother and great-grand- mother VIOLA STANLEY Who passed away June 14, 1984. She is sadly mis- sed and always remem- bered by Alyce, Maury, Gloria, Alfred and Marian and grandchildren. The Family of the Late • The Family of the Late ALAN MICHAEL DAMR ON JOSEPH MITTELMAN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 1:30 p.m. Sun- day, June 22, at Adat Shalom Memorial Park. Rabbi Gruskin will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 2 p.m. Sunday, June 15, at Adat Shalom Memorial Park (correct location). Rabbi Arm will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. NEWS The Family of the Late In loving memory of our precious daughter and sister HYMAN MOORE DANA ANN GROSS Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 10 a.m. Sun- day, June 22, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Irwin Groner and Cantor Chaim Najman will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Who left us June 5, 1984. Beautiful child, we will hold you in our hearts forever. We will love you and miss you always. Mother, Lindsay and Randy The Family of the Late In Loving Memory Of HAROLD PODOLSKY MAX SOLARZ Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 2 p.m. Sunday, June 22, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Morton Yolkut will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. Who died June 9, 1979. You are sadly missed and will remain forever in our hearts. We love you. Your Family / The Family of the Late Give today HELEN ZACK Your donation to the Association for Retarded Citizens will help improve the life of a child or adult with mental retardation — and support research into treatment and prevention of the condition in others. Jewish Association for Retarded Citizens 17288 W. 12 Mile Rd., Southfield, MI 48076 (313) 557-7650 Help build the arc Association for Retarded Citizens To Our Beloved Father WILLIAM KAUFMAN Daddy, Another Father's Day is here and we are again facing it without the one who meant so very much to us. You are never more than a thought away and believe us there are so very very many of those beau- tiful thoughts. Whenever I see a father with his daughter I hurt so much because I remember all the good times we shared together, the special moments only known between a father and his daughter. Then when I got married it was so very special for Terry and me because you treated him like a son and you were a special father to him. We miss you to share all our special times with us and just being with us with your warm and loving ways. But most of all we miss the warm loving touch and smile of the wonderful father who every day should have been Father's Day for you. You will always be loved and missed very deeply in our hearts. All our love forever, Patty and Terry Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory at 11 a.m. Monday, June 16, at He- brew Memorial Park. Rabbi Gruskin will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. / The Family of the Late SAMUEL ZELDES Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory at 10:30 a.m. Sun- day, June 22, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Irwin Groner will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. WOMEN GET REMITS . Leadership Changing In Religious Party Jerusalem (JTA) — Internal elections in the National Re- ligious Party (NRP) appeared last week to have strengthened the Young Guard faction of the party's secretary general and former Education Minister, Zevulun Hammer. Whether that evaluation is ac- curate will not become clear un- til the NRP national convention in July. If it proves to be cor- rect, it will be a blow to the longtime NRP leader, Religion Minister Yosef Burg. Burg, 75, has indicated he plans to step down from his NRP leadership post and from the Cabinet. Observers said Burg had hoped, and continues to hope, he will be able to install as his suc- cessor former Knesset member Avraham Melamed. But Ham- mer, apparently strengthened by the election, is expected to make a bid for party leadership at the NRP July election. . The internal elections were the first to be held by the NRP in more than 13 years, a period marked by a steady decline in NRP fortunes. From a party of 10 to 12 Knesset seats, the NRP has been reduced to four seats, due to defections of several blocs and disillusionment over a bitterly divided leadership. Other observers considered the election results a hopeful sign for the NRP because they signalled a return to the fold by the Matzad bloc, a breakaway group currently a part of the Morasha party. Matzad is cur- Papers Back Libya Raid New York — Approximately three out of four major American newspapers "justified" the United States air strike against military bases in Libya as retal- iation for the terrorist bombing of a West Berlin night club. According to a survey of the 50 largest circulation dailies by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, of the 48 newspapers which commented on the raid, 35 (72.9 percent) approved of the bombing while 13 (27.1 percent) did not. "Serving the Jewish community with traditional dignity and understanding" HEBREW MEMORIAL CHAPEL SERVING ALL CEMETERIES 543-1622 26640 GREENFIELD ROAD OAK PARK, MICHIGAN 48237 Alan H. Dorfman Funeral Director & Mgr. rently led by Yosef Shapira, a Minister-Without-Portfolio. Party activists asserted that some 100,000 Israelis actually turned out to vote, a total which, if correct, would repre- sent a major success for the hugely expensive public rela- tions campaign to revive in- terest and support for the NRP among Israel's moderate Or- thodox Jews. • OBITUARIES Isaac Paul Rader Isaac Paul Rader, an artist whose portraits of judges and bar association presidents were widely acclaimed, -died June 8 at age 79. A former Detroiter, Mr. Rader resided in Ocala, Fla., at the time of his death. Mr. Rader won his first major award at age 14 in a competition held by the Toledo Art Museum. In the 1920s and 1930s, he earned the respect of the legal community for his portraits and later moved to New York, paint- ing under the name Paul Rader. Among the portraits he painted were those of the late Michigan Supreme Court Justice Henry M. Butzel, the late philanthropist Fred Butzel, the late Judge Charles C. Simons of the U.S. Court of Appeals. Mr. Rader's paintings were not limited to portraits. In his early days, he engaged a young woman, Mae Wolfe, the future Mrs. Walter Reuther, as his model. Mr. Rader is survived by his wife, Edith; a daughter, Elaine of Miami, Fla.; a brother, Dr. Philip of Southfield; and a sister, Bertha Pervin of Oak Park. Interment Florida. Shirley Sorscher Shirley Sorscher, a member of Jewish women's organizations, died June 10 at age 80. Born in New York, Mrs. Sorscher was a member of Adat Shalom Synagogue and its sis- terhood, Parkwood Chapter of Women's American ORT and a former member of B'nai B'rith Women. She leaves a son, Dr. Irving; a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Alpern; four sisters, Mrs. Mae Shapiro, Mrs. Ann Blackman, Mrs. Lottie Stern of Beverly Hills, Calif., and Mrs. Dorothy Nudell; and three grandchildren. Dr. Israel Knox New York — Dr. Israel Knox, author, professor and former di- rector of the English-speaking division of Workmen's Circle, died June 9 at age 79. c _