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Ruth Adams: She Was A Fountain Of Positive Energy

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  • Ruth Adams: She Was A Fountain Of Positive Energy

    RUTH ADAMS: SHE WAS A FOUNTAIN OF POSITIVE ENERGY
    By Joe Rossiter - Free Press staff writer

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    Oct 4 2007

    Nonstop energy to go along with an endless supply of creativity were
    some of the defining qualities of Ruth Adams.

    An exquisite sewer who designed and tailored clothing, including much
    of her family's, she was a dedicated art teacher, sewing instructor
    and local entrepreneur.

    Mrs. Adams, the mother of two and a former Bloomfield Hills resident,
    died of severe anemia Sunday at Sunrise Assisted Living in Grosse
    Pointe Woods where she lived with her husband for the last several
    years. She was 83.

    "She was a fountain of positive energy who knew what she wanted and
    went after it," said her daughter, Judy Adams. "In my mind, she was
    an early feminist because of her independent thinking and the fact
    that she never let anything hold her back."

    Born Ruth Merigian in Highland Park to parents who were Armenian
    immigrants, she graduated from Highland Park High School in 1942
    and began pursuing a career in art and fashion design at several
    area vocational schools. Two years later, she married Albert Adams,
    whom she had known since childhood.

    While raising a family, she taught adult education courses in dress
    making and tailoring and started her own sewing school from the
    basement of her St. Clair Shores home. As business prospered, she
    expanded to an eastside storefront on Morang Street in Detroit. She
    even wrote an instructional booklet on tailoring, complete with
    diagrams of some of the intricate stitching techniques used in
    her work.

    At 43, Mrs. Adams enrolled at Wayne State University. She graduated
    in 1971 with a degree in art education and home economics and earned
    her master's degree in art education in 1977.

    She started teaching art classes in the Eastpointe school district
    in 1971 and retired in 1986.

    In 2003 she was honored by Wayne State University when one of
    her pastel and pencil drawings of the school's McGregor Memorial
    Conference Center, which she created as a student 30 years earlier,
    was hung permanently in Room A at the center.

    In addition to her husband and daughter, survivors include daughter
    Janet Ankers; one brother, and one grandchild.

    Funeral services are today at 10 a.m. at St. John's Armenian Church,
    22001 Northwestern Highway. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery
    in Detroit.
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