I OBITUARIES] Dorothy's Not The Only One Who Wants To Get HOME. Robert Frank, Active At Beth El Robert A. Frank, of South- field, died April 26. He was 38. A graduate in computer science from Alfred Univer- sity, Mr. Frank received a master's in business from Wayne State University. He was former chairman of Tem- ple Beth El's Torah Study Group, a member of Temple Beth El's Men's Club, active with Temple Beth El Mazon and an usher during Shabbat services. He also was past chairman of the Frank Foun- dation, which supported many charitable organiza- tions, and was a lover of the musical arts. He leaves his wife, Deborah; son and daughter, Michael and Margaret Sullivan; parents, Robert L. and Mary; brothers and sisters-in-law, Edward and Sarah of Portola Valley, Calif., Randall and Ellen of Ann Arbor; sisters and brothers-in-law, Amy and Alan Rosenblatt of Short Hill, N.J., Betsy and Michael Ross of Raleigh, N.C. John S. Berman, Of Lasky Firm Bloomfield's Best: From Elegant Win To Lakeside Living CHEF'S SPECIAL: Sizzling News For Upscale Kitchens HOW TO BE A WINNER IN THE '90s COLOR WAR In The Monet Mood: bnquil Water Gardens ur 125,000 readers do too! Because it's filled with a tradi- tional charm of the past and a wondrous look into the future. First, we'll see the enchanting Frank Lloyd Wright- inspired dining decor of a magnificent West Bloomfield tudor with other classic furnishings. Then, we'll see the future in an automated Smart Home of the 21st century. And from inner space we'll travel to the wars. . .The Color Wars. Here we'll discover the incredible color schemes and dreams top decorators will be declaring for the 90's. From there we go Home On The Range and learn why more and more commercial appliances are finding a home. . . in the home. Want to know what's going on at home, look for our new Spring HOME. It's more than what even Dorothy wished for. Being mailed to you next week. Another bonus for Jewish News subscribers. Published by The Jewish News. 27676 Franklin Road Southfield, MI 48034 313-354-6060 John "Jimmy" S. Berman, of Orchard Lake, died April 22. He was 60. Mr. Berman was the founder in 1951 of the Park Furniture Co., which merged in 1973 with the Lasky Fur- niture Co. Mr. Berman serv- ed as Lasky president and CEO. Mr. Berman was a life member of Temple Israel, and was active with the Allied Jewish Campaign and the Crohn's and Colitis Founda- tion of America. He leaves his wife, Bernice; sons and daughters-in-law, Richard and Marilyn of West Bloomfield, Robert and Cindy of West Bloomfield, Ron and Bunny of West Bloomfield, Kenneth and Kimberly of Farmington Hills, Andrew and Shelley of Novi; sister, Molly Grekin of Sarasota, Fla.; nine grandchildren. War Hero Dies In Rome New York (JTA) — George Mandel-Mantello, who as a Salvadoran diplomat during World War II saved numerous Jews and non-Jews from the Nazis, died April 26 at his home in Rome. He was 90. Mr. Mandel-Mantello, a Romanian-born Jew who ob- tained Salvadoran citizen- ship in 1939, was regarded as one of the unsung heros of the Holocaust. It was not un- til 1989 that he was first commended for his wartime deeds, by being presented with the Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Award. As first secretary of the Salvadoran Consulate in Geneva from 1942 to 1945, he mass produced and distributed some 15,000 Salvadoran citizenship pa- pers to Jews and non-Jews throughout Nazi-occupied Europe. About 95 percent of the holders of these papers are believed to have surviv- ed the Holocaust. During the summer of 1944, when the Nazis and their Hungarian collab- orators began deporting 100,000 Jews a day to Auschwitz, Mr. Mandel- Mantello obtained firsthand reports from two escapees. He then circulated to the international media his "Auschwitz Protocol," a 30- page description of the camp, complete with statistical data and descriptions of the killings. Some 1.6 million Jews are believed to have died at Auschwitz. This report led to interna- tional calls by world leaders to halt the deportations. Following the war, Mr. Mandel-Mantello helped church and political figures escape from Communist Hungary through Switzer- land. Funeral services for Mandel-Mantello were held this week in Jerusalem. NEWS rm.. . Students Charge Censorship Rome (JTA) — Students at a junior high school in nor- thern Italy have complained angrily that their edition of Primo Levi's Auschwitz memoir, If This is a Man, has been censored. Pupils attending the Can- dido Cezzano school in the city of Bergamo made the complaint in a letter to the left-wing local newspaper, Il Manifesto. They pointed to passages in the original work dealing in blunt terms with bodily functions and mentioning homosexuality that do not appear in their school edi- tion. They said they were offended by the "needless, counterproductive, disrespectful censorship." But the Einaudi -publishing house insists the deletions were made by the author in school texts. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 137