Snapshots Obituaries Obituaries are updated and archived on JNonline.us . Eli Scherr receives Valiant Leukemia Fighter his recognition plaque from Gilbert Jacobson of the Bill Carroll American Friends of Special to the Jewish News Bar-Ilan University. W Scherr Honored Bar-Ilan University's Dor L'Dor Society recently honored Eli Scherr of Farmington Hills, a major financial contributor to the Israeli university's planned giving effort and the first national member of the Bar-Ilan University Society. Scherr was given a plaque and his name will be inscribed on the Ramat Gan campus' Heritage Plaza. The intent of the award is to recognize those who have made significant arrangements in their estate plan for the eventual benefit of Bar-Ilan. Scherr originated the idea of recognizing these contributors. Remarks were made by Alan Zekelman of Bloomfield Hills, the Detroit Friends of Bar-Ilan's outstanding president; Mark Medin, CEO and executive vice presi- dent of American Friends of Bar-Ilan; and Gilbert Jacobson, American Friends national director of planned giving. Professor Chaya Brodie of Bar-Ilan's Life Sciences Department, currently on sabbatical at the Hermelin Brain Tumor Center at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, spoke of her joint venture work in directly attacking gliomas, the most common and deadly form of brain cancer. The material she has developed in cooperation with Henry Ford has already passed most of the animal experimentation stage; approval of human clinical trials is expected in the next six to 12 months. - Keri Guten Cohen, story development editor Time Traveling Attorney Richard Bernstein, '- shown with group facilitator Shelly Newman, was guest speaker at Time Travelers, a support group for people dealing with the challenges from brain attacks (strokes) and other neuromuscular diseases like multiple scle- rosis, myasthenia gravis, closed head injuries and traumatic brain injuries. Bernstein was born blind but became a prac- ticing attorney with the Farmington Hills firm of Sam Bernstein and Associates. Bernstein, who advocates for the Americans with Disabilities Act, spoke about his successful lawsuit against the University of Michigan to make Michigan Stadium accessible to all. Time Travelers meets 10 a.m.-noon Tuesdays at Temple Shir Shalom, 3999 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloomfield. This month's meetings are Dec. 9 and 16. Contact Shelly Newman, (248) 737-0266, or sred9@sbcglobal.net . hen Sylvia Brown's two-and- a-half-year-old daughter, Sandra Ann, died of leuke- mia in 1946, she helped launch a crusade against the disease that lasted the rest of her life. She and her husband, Harry, cre- ated the Children's Leukemia Foundation of Michigan (CLF), raising funds to fight the disease and becoming pioneers in the field of counseling families and patients with leukemia in Michigan. Mrs. Brown, 90, of Farmington Hills, died of a stroke Nov. 30, 2008. She was the retired executive direc- tor of CLF, continuing her efforts against the disease after her husband died of cancer in 1999; they were married for 62 years. "My sister died within a month after being diagnosed;' recalled Mrs. Brown's daughter, Abby Pook of Farmington Hills. "Her death gave my parents the impe- tus to fight the disease. They wanted to do something to help other people. My mother really devoted the rest of her life to the CLF; she wasn't involved in many any other community causes or activi- ties!" At the time of her husband's death, Mrs. Brown reflected on her own daugh- ter's death: "In those days, it was very quick. There was nothing we could do for the children; just a few blood transfu- sions and the child was gone. It was very traumatic for both of us!' Abby Pook pointed out that leukemia today is not the certain death sentence it was 50 years ago. With chemotherapy, radiation and bone marrow transplants, the outlook for patients has improved immensely. Mrs. Brown served as CLF executive secretary, then executive director for almost 30 years, while her husband was president three different times. The CLF office moved to several offices in the Detroit area as it grew from the Browns distributing canisters to store counters to the million-dollar-budget agency it is today, located in Southfield, with new executives taking over the Browns' roles. People helped by the foundation launched outstate Michigan chapters, but the CLF never has been connected with other leukemia organizations in the United States. The Browns were instrumental in traveling to outstate locations to help get the other chapters started. Pook recalled it was not uncommon to wake up in the morning and find the family of a patient sleeping in the house or having her father called to a hospital in the middle of the night when some- thing went wrong for a patient. He often was at the bedside of dying leukemia victims. "My brother and I often visited the homes of patients with my parents to distribute Christmas gifts and help in any way we could," said Pook. "We've kept in touch with leukemia survivors over the years. I recently heard from a 55-year-old man who had leukemia at the age of 8:' When the Browns retired from the founda- tion, they were honored at a dinner where $100,000 was raised to establish the Harry and Sylvia Brown Endowment Fund. They then volunteered for several years at JARC residential homes. Born in Pennsylvania, Mrs. Brown moved to Michigan, but met her hus- band while on a vacation trip to Virginia. Harry Brown was a greeting card sales- man and account manager for American Greetings, visiting many drugstores in the Detroit area. Mrs. Brown is survived by her chil- dren, Abby and Neal Pook of Farmington Hills, and Barry and Christine Brown of Warren, R.I.; grandchildren, Jessica and Thomas McCarthy, Lesley Pook, Robert Pook and his fiancee, Vivian Ivey; great-grandchildren, Cait and Michael McCarthy; brother and sisters-in-law, Jerry and Renee Gerger, Miriam Gerger; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Joseph and Geri Brown; loving nieces, nephews and other relatives. Mrs. Brown was the beloved wife of the late Harry Brown; the loving mother of the late Sandra Ann Brown; the cher- ished sister of the late Irving Gerger and the late Albert Gerger. Interment was at Hebrew Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to the Children's Leukemia Foundation of Michigan for the Harry and Sylvia Brown Endowment Fund, 29777 Telegraph, Suite 1651, Southfield, 48034, (248) 353-8222, www.leukemiamichigan.org . Arrangements by Ira Kauman Chapel. El Obituaries on page C32 December 4 • 2008 C31