Obituaries are updated daily and archived on JN Online: www.d.etroitjewishnews.com Pursuing The Truth DAVID SACHS Editorial Assistant le leanor Wolf, a sociology professor at Wayne State University, was described by a colleague as having "the most powerful intellect" he had ever encountered" with an analytical prowess like "a giant beacon of light." "I knew nuclear physicists; I knew a lot of genius-type people," said Prof. Charles Lebeaux, a retired social work professor at WSU, but Dr. Wolf "was superior to anyone else I ever knew." Eleanor Paperno Wolf, 82, died July 27 of a heart attack while cutting flow- ers on the grounds of her home. Thomas Wolf, a U.S. Agency for International Development worker in Kenya, said his mother, Dr. Wolf, "had a comradeship for people who were pursuing the truth. Not simply an abstract or intellectual truth, but a truth that was related to the welfare of people, to actually help human lives." But sometimes Dr. Wolf's quest.for the truth alienated her from friends and colleagues. Although a liberal and an integrationist, she warned against the misuse of sociological studies pre- sented as evidence by those arguing in court for the cross-district busing of school children in Detroit. In her retire- ment years, she remained active as ever, but shifted her focus, said her son, to local "dirty fingernail" envi- ronmental issues near her Orion Township home, north of Pontiac, which won her the nickname Eleanor Wolf Queen of Clarkston Road. Dr. Wolf, named "Eleanor" after Karl Marx's daughter, spent three teenage years in the early 1930s in the Soviet Union with her father, who was helping to establish industrial plants in Gorky. They witnessed firsthand the travesties of Stalin — the mass starva- tion caused by forced agricultural col- lectivization and the frequent purges of imagined enemies. Dr. Wolf returned to the U.S. so disillusioned by these scenes of horror that she remained inoculated against doctrinaire social- ism. "She was always a liberal Democrat," said Thomas:.\X iolf. Back in the U.S., she became active in the Jewish Labor Committee and the Democratic Party. Along with her late husband, Leo Wolf, she helped CC )) `The Charming One' DAVID SACHS Editorial Assistant To fans of the issues-oriented televi- sion show hosted by her late husband, Lou Gordon, Jacqueline Gordon was known as "Jackie." Mrs. Gordon, 66, died from heart disease Tuesday in her Bloomfield Hills home. For 12 years, Lou and Jackie Gordon appeared together on the WKBD-TV (Channel 50) program, holding local and national politicians' feet to the fire every Saturday and Sunday night. "Lou was the hard-charging one and Jackie was the charming one," said her stepdaughter, Deborah Gordon. "She was more live-ande-let-live." "She was mellow," said her son, Jon Gordon. The television show began in 1965 and continued until Mr. Gordon's death in 1977. Mrs. Gordon's role in it came 8/6 1999 158 Detroit Jewish News about quite by accident. "Lou had another woman on the show who would ask him questions," recalled Deborah Gordon. "She got sick and Lou turned to Jackie at the dinner table and asked her to fill in. Jackie Gordon "At first she wanted no part of it, but was convinced to do it for just one night. The rest is history. She didn't miss a night. She thoroughly enjoyed it." At one time during her husband's heart surgery, Mrs. Gordon hosted the show by herself. She remained a key player on the show as the co-host until form the Detroit chapter of the Americans for Democratic Action. Her husband's sister, May was married to United Automobile Workers president Walter Reuther. After two assassination attempts on the union leader, the Reuthers moved from Detroit to a more secluded home on the Paint Creek near Rochester. It was May Reuther who suggested the -Wolfs buy property near them in Orion Township, land that later became their retirement home. Dr. Wolf sought to understand and prevent "white flight" from the city of Detroit. In the early 1950s, she did a study of the changing neighborhood of Russell Woods, near Dexter and Davison. She earned a doctorate in sociology at Wayne State in 1957 and joined the faculty. Later, her interests turned to the use of sociological evidence in school bus- ing cases. Her controversial book Trial and Error: The Detroit School Desegregation Case (Wayne State University Press, 1981) won the North Central Sociological Association's Distinguished Achievement award. In the book, Dr. Wolf argued that the her husband's death. Born in Minnesota, Mrs. Gordon grew up in Detroit and graduated from Cooley High School. "She was a wonderful dancer," said Deborah Gordon. Mrs. Gordon pursued a career in modeling, work- ing at the Detroit and New York auto shows and as a runway model. She was working as a model at Hudson's downtown store when she caught the eye of Lou, who was having lunch there. She married him in November 1962. "Lou's death was a loss she lived with every day," said Deborah Gordon. "She struggled, but she continued on." After her husband's death, Mrs. Gordon did promotional work for Great Scott! Supermarkets- and Jacobson's stores. She maintained her relationship adversarial court process facilitated the misuse and manipulation of sociologi- cal studies. She also felt that cross-dis- trict busing was a divisive and ineffec- tive policy Many friends and col- leagues, who supported busing, broke off with her over this issue. The U.S. Supreme Court eventually ruled out cross-district busing for Detroit. After retiring from WSU in 1983, Dr. Wolf taught at Oakland University. On the Wolfs' five-acre property in Orion Township, she and her husband planted every flowering tree and shrub that would grow in Michigan. Dr. Wolf became a devot- ed environmentalist, assisting efforts to control rampant commercial development. She helped the town- ship to draft a wetlands ordinance. "She fought off major developers," said Dr. Lebeaux. "She was very brave. She could stand up and speak her peace. A memorial service is scheduled for Aug. 23 at Congregation Shir Tikvah in Troy. Dr. Wolf is survived by her sons and daughter-in-law, Peter and Christina Wolf of Rochester and Thomas Wolf of Nairobi, Kenya; and grandchildren, Andrea and Alexander. She was the beloved wife of the late Leo Wolf. Contributions may be made to a charity of one's choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. E " with Channel 50 until her death, show-. ing groups around the station. "People got a kick out of taking the tour with Jackie," said her stepdaughter. Mrs. Gordon remained active in the Detroit community, involved with many charitable causes, among them, the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, Project HOPE and Michigan ArtTrain. A funeral service is scheduled for 1 p.m. Aug. 6 at Ira Kaufman Chapel. Mrs. Gordon is survived by her sons and daughter-in-law, Jon and Peggy Gordon and Abraham Scott Gordon; stepdaughters and stepsons-in-law Deborah Gordon and Marc Thomas, Carol and Andy Braitman, Ruth Gordon Howard and Brian Howard; and seven grandchildren. Contributions may be made to the Cardiac Unit of William Beaumont - Hospital, 3601 13 Mile Road, Royal Oak, MI 48073 or the American Cancer Society, 29350 Southfield Road, Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48076. I 1