• 54 Friday, February 18, 1977 % C !.. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Emanuel Perrin, Aided Efforts of Jewish Welfare Federation Emanuel Anatol Perrin (Paperno), a former De- troiter who was active on Jewish Welfare. Federa- tion committees and among the early planners for Sinai Hospital of De- troit, died Feb. 11 at age 88. Born in Y-usovka, Uk- raine, Mr. Perrin was a resident of Takoma Park, Sheldon M. Klein . Sheldon M. Klein, a pharmacist and owner of Shelly Drugs in Detroit for the past 26 years, died Feb. 12 at age 51. A native Detroiter, Mr. Klein was a member of Cong. Shaarey Zedek, Michigan Pharmacy As- sociation and the Aes- culapian Pharmaceutical Society. He leaves his wife, Edythe; two sons, Michael and Howard; a daughter, Marsha; his mother, Mrs. David (Ann) Garber; and a sister, Mrs. Reta Stern. • Md., at the time of his death. While in Detroit in the 1920s, he was the Midwest organizer for the Poale Zion and was principal of the Yiddishe Folks Shul. He was in- volved in the protest movements against the Kishinev pogroms and helped organize a Detroit protest march. Mr. Perrin was a civil Washington from 1947 to engineer in Detroit from 1962. 1918 to 1926. He earned a In Europe he was ac- law degree and practiced tive in the Joint Distribu- law until 1930 when he tion Committee.- In Mary- became legal adviser to land he was director of the Wayne County trea- the adult education prog- surer and- then chief de- ram of -a conservative puty Wayne County trea- congregation in Mt. surer, a post he held until Rainer, Md. • He is survived by two 1944. He worked for the De- sons, Dr. Eugene of De- troit Ordnance District for troit and David of Fair- the U.S. War Department fax, Va.;. and five grand- Rose Sherer, 52 for three years. He worked children. Interment De- Rose Sherer, founder_ in a family business in troit. and president for the last 12 years of the Detroit, Socialites singles organi- zation, died Feb. 16 at age 52. Born . in Russia _ , Mrs. Tribute was paid this active for many years in Sherer liVed 46 years in Detroit. She also was the week to the memory of the Christian Zionist vice president of the Clara Van Auken, a lead- movement that Business and Profes- ing Detroit Christian functioned under the sional Chapter of Bnai Zionist who died Sunday name of the American Brith. She resided at morning. Christian Zionist Com- In his eulogy Tuesday, mittee. 18539 Edinborough. Mrs. Sherer is survived_ at the final rites for the Detroit Zionists who by her husband, Ab- deceased, the Rev. Allan raham Jack; and a sister, A. Zaun of the Jefferson worked with Mrs. Van Mrs. Samuel (Tillie) Avenue Presbyterian Auken in the movement Church described Mrs. for the re-establishment Burnstein. Van Auken as a believer of Israel expressed in Prophecy, as one who, gratitude for her labors with her late husband, for the movement in spe- Howell Van Auken, was cial tributes to her. Zionists Honor the Memory of Friend, Clara Van Auken New Zio'nist Monthly Issued JERUSALEM (JTA) — A "think" periodic-al is not likely to garner mass circulation, but it cer- tainly engenders con- troversy. That is why editing the Zionist quar- terly "Forum" is no easy task, according to editor Zvi Yaron, who immig- rated to Israel from Bri- tain in 1950. But Yaron, a member of Kibbutz Lavi in lower Galilee. goes at it Network Issues Student Guide FOR PURIM A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO THE JEWISH NEWS Community Group Hits Dixon Slur To: The Jewish News 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite Southfield, Mich. 48075 865 Please send a year's gift subscription to: NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE FQR: state occasion FROM ❑ 510 enclosed NEW YORK — "A Guide to Jewish Student _Groups," Vol. IV, has re- cently been published by the North American Jewish Students' Net- work. The only publication of its kind, the' "Guide" con- tains capsule descrip- tions of more than 350 Jewish campus groups, havurot, national Jewish student organiza- tions, alternative com- munity groups, Jewish student publications, major high school groups and student organiza- tions dealing with educa- tion and the arts, indexed both alphabetically and geographically. 4b: The "Guide to Jewish Student Groups" is avail- able from Network, 14 E. 26th St., No. 1350, New York, N.Y. 10010. ZIP Outrage at the recent ethnic slur directed at Ralph Nader by Federal Trade Commissioner Paul R. Dixon was ex- pressed by . Jewish Com- munity Council president John H. Shepherd and Community Relations - Committee chairman Mrs. Matilda Rubin in a letter to President Jimmy Carter. A copy of the letter was sent to Calvin J. Collier, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. with gusto and is per- forming an -important service in the- realm of ideas. - "Forum" deals, by de- finition, with "the Jewish people, Zionism and Is- rael," a very broad area that allows a wide spec- trum of viewpoints. The magazine is a continua- tion of "Dispersion and Unity," a periodiCal that appeared for many years, though not on a regular basis "Forum" will _appear regularly. Its first two edi- tions were out On schedule and the third, the winter edition, will be ready shortly, if the budget and the printing plant allow. Yaron is the author of a book on the philosophy of the lateRabbi Kook, pub- lished last year by the World Zionist Organiza- tion's Torah, Education Department. He also wrote the study of relig- ion in Israel that ap- peared in the 1976 Ameri- can Jewish Yearbook. Rabbi Proposes Law Revision NEW YORK (JTA) — A proposal by:a New York Conservative rabbi that children of mixed mar- riages whose mothers are not Jewish be accepted as Jews is now before the steering committee of the Committee on Jewish' Law and Standards of the Rabbinical Assembly, the association of Conserva- tive rabbis, according to Rabbi Wolfe Kelman, RA executive vice president. The proposal was made by the late Rabbi Sol- omon D. Goldfarb, an American who settled in Israel on retirement' as rabbi of Temple Israel -in Long Beach, and who died in Jerusalem in Feb- ruary, 1976. Rabbi Goldfarb made the prop- osal in an article in "Con- servative Judaism." Hebrew U. Uses Math in Medicine JERUSALEM —A new application of mathemat- ics now being develciped at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem will soon Haifa Theater Will Tour U.S. TEL AVIV (JTA)— The Haifa Municipal Theater will bring to the Ameri- can and Canadian Jewish and non-Jewish public a four-part program in En- glish, "Voices from Is- rael," reflecting the moods of modern Israel. The theater will con- duct a six-week tour of 4-3 U.S. cities and university campuses beginning Feb. 27 in the YMHA in Clif- ton, N.J. Community. centers to be visited by the theater include New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, MasSachusetts, Ohio, Michigan, (in March); Il-, linois; Wisconsin, Iowa, Oklahoma, Texas., Ten- nessee, Alabama, Florida, South and North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Ottawa and Toronto. The tour of the Haifa Theater in the U.S. is sponsored by the Ameri- can Zionist Youth Foun- dation and the World Zionist Organization. . Tel Aviv Gives Land to Hospital NEW YORK — Mrs. Rosi Michael, president of Women's Social Service for Israel, the American arm -of Sheruth Nashim Soziale in support of Is- rael's aged, announced that Tel Aviv has pre- sented the Lichtenstaed- ter Hospital, a WSSI in- stallation-, with enough land to expand its facilities by 50 beds. The new building will house its: administrative facilities, its laboratory and a central kitchen to serve the hospital and the various feeding plans that are part of the Sheruth Nashim Soziale program. The Women's Social Service for Israel is the sole support arm of Sheruth Nashim Soziale in the United States. Its concern is housing, clo- thing, -feeding and caring for the illnesses of Is- rael's elderly citizens. Canadian Jews Approve Budget NEW YORK = A budget of $2.3 million has been approved by the Na- tional Budgeting Confer- ence of Canadian Jewry (NBC) for immigrant re- lief services for 1977, pro- vided by the Jewish Im- migrant Aid Society and the United Jewish Relief Agencies, at the NBC Annual Plenary meetings in Toronto last week. In 1976, $2.4 million was al- located for the same ser- vices. In addition, a $1.3 mill- ion budget received NBC approval for the cultural, educational and inter- group programs of the Canadian Jewish Con- gress in 1977, compared with last year's figure of $1.2 million. - . enable heart surgeons employing a procedure known as the saphenous .- Vein bypass to signific- antly improve their diag- nostic skills and surgical methods. - Under the direction of Professor Samuel Mos- kowitz, head of the Applied Mathematics Di= vision of the Graduate School of Applied Science and Technology, a team of mathematicians has de- veloped a mathematical model which simulates conditions found in the hearts of patients requir- ing this specific type of surgery. he The purpose mathematical mo , a series of equations which simulates this specific medical situation, is to recommend to surgeons- certain guidelines which would significantly de- crease the possibility of subsequent embolism (clotting) in the affected coronary arteries, a seri- ous problem in surgery of this kind. Holiday Goodies for Soviet Jews NEW YORK — The Al Tidom Association is dis- tributing copies of the_ Megillat Esther complete with a translation into Russian and a guide to the laws and customs of Purim in Russian to make the coming festival of Purim more meaningful for'. newly-arrived Rus- sian Jews. The Al Tidom Associa- tion is making the megil- lot available free of charge to organizations and synagogues and to individual Russian Jews in the New York area and throughout the United States and Canada. The association also has begun its "Operation Passover," an annual program of sending pac- kages of Pesah provisions .to Jews in the Soviet Union and other Eastern- _European countries. As in past years, special packages are being sent to imprisoned Jews and their families and to the refuSeniks. 'Holocaust Was Christian Tragedy' SPOKANE, Wash. (JTA) — ,The wartime murder of six million _ Jews by the Nazis is "the greatest tragedy" to be- fall Christians "since the _Crucifixion" a Mideast-- scholar has asserted in arguing that iild " as Christians need . e- g of mand that the me what we did, of our perse- cution, must remain vivid" among Christians. Dr. Harry Caragas, pro- . fessor of English at Webs- ter Groves College, also urged greater study by Christians as to how the Holocaust could have oc- curred in a "nominally Christian Europe." His observations appeared in_ the current issue of "Communio," an interna-'- tional Catholic review published at Conzaga University.•