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GIFTS THANK YOU, LOVE YOU * JUST CALL * 49 772-4350 --- DELIVERY NATIONWIDE WE'RE NUMBER ONE! 24 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1991 ■ MAPLE RD. (15 Mile) Selection Style • • Mobiles • Service • St OFF Newberry Square 0 ust adifwater...come in anarsee our1992 swimwear. (fzes, 6-20 340-20 Always 20% OFF SeaScamp Swimwear " CAPP' Harriet Dunsky's 945 W. HURON • WATERFORD • 681 - 2727 1/2 Block West of Telegraph Road HOURS: 9:30 AM TO 5 PM MON. - SAT. "Where You Come First" Kosins Uptown Southfield Rd. at 11 1/2 Mile • 559-3900 Big & Tall Southfield at 10 1 /2 Mile • 569-6930 Goldie Adler Continued from preceding page a zucchini-chocolate cake. Mrs. Adler also was a stu- dent in the synagogue's first Braille class, an 18-week course in which volunteei-s learned to transcribe books into Braille. In 1974, the Shaarey Zedek Sisterhood honored Mrs. Adler on the occasion of her 35th anniversary at the synagogue. The "Sensational Sisterhood Art Players" presented a play, "Roasting the Rebbetzin," written by David Hermelin, Henrietta Weinberg and Phyllis Newman, in her honor. Mrs. Snider said her friend Goldie never missed a syn- agogue or family event im- portant to congregants. "When I was named chapter president of Hadassah, she did the in- stallation," Mrs. Snider said. "I was extremely pro- ud." Rabbi Groner also recalled Mrs. Adler's "keen wit and vibrant sense of humor." When the congregation hosted an 80th birthday par- ty for Mrs. Adler, Rabbi Groner approached her and asked, "How does it feel to reach 80?" Mrs. Adler replied: "The best thing about growing older is that it takes so long." Mrs. Adler received nu- merous awards and honors for her volunteer activities. These include the Myrtle Wreath Award, Hadassah's highest honor; the Israel Bond Eleanor Roosevelt Humanities Award; the Mt. Carmel Lady of Mercy Award; and the JTS Solomon Schechter Award, which she was the first woman to receive. She was cited in 1983 by the League of Jewish Wo- men's Organizations, and in 1988 served as honorary chairman of the Na'amat Spiritual Adoption lun- cheon, which assists chil- dren in Israel. In 1971, the Jewish Na- tional Fund hosted a dinner in honor of Mrs. Adler and her late husband, at which the organization announced the dedication of the "Rabbi Morris and Goldie Adler Forest in Israel." She was president from 1944-1945 of the Detroit Chapter of Hadassah, and helped organize the women's divisions of the Detroit Round Table of Catholics, Protestants and Jews, and the Jewish Federation. Mrs. Adler served on the boards of Hadassah, B'nai B'rith, Sinai Hospital's School of Nursing and its women's guild, the Southfield Arts Council, the Wayne State University Press, the Center Symphony Orchestra, the national wo- men's committee of Brandeis University, and Children's and Hutzel hospitals. She was honorary chairman of the Detroit Job Training Center for Women. She co-edited and compiled two books, The Voice Still Speaks and May I Have a Word With You, of Rabbi Adler's sermons. Mrs. Adler is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Shulamith and Eli Benstein, and grandchildren Judith, Jeremy, Joel and Miriam. ❑ Immm ".1 NEWS Shas Rabbi Bans Papers Jerusalem (JTA) — The spiritual leader of the Shas party published a ban on non-religious newspapers last week. Pious Jews must refrain from reading the secular press because it contains "heresy and contempt for the Torah and the sages," Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the former Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel, proclaimed in his column in the Orthodox weekly Yom Hashishi (The Sixth Day). Secular newspapers are not to be permitted, "especially when there are children in the home who might be spiritually poisoned," the rabbi said. He stressed he was not is- suing a temporary edict but a strict halachic ban sup- ported by all rabbis. He urg- ed that it be circulated wide- ly among the public. Shas is one of the three Haredi = Orthodox —polit- ical parties in the Likud-led coalition government. Its constituency is largely Sephardic. Rabbi Yosef has shown no qualms about giving inter- views on secular television and his spokesmen maintain contacts with non- religious journalists. Nevertheless, he blasted the secular press for "licentiousness, obscenity, nonsense and violent in- citement against anything which smells sacred." He warned that even sell- ing secular newspapers is a sin because it "assists the sinners." The Sephardic rabbi par- ticularly banned reading any newspaper on the Sab- bath, even the pious journals.