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August 04, 1972 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1972-08-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Friday, August 4, 1972-17
THE DETROIT EWISN NEWS

Tuesday Election Attracts Many Area Residents Into the Election Fray

immr



II

At the Michigan primary election
Tuesday, Detroit and Wayne County
voters will be asked to elect judges
to the Detroit Common Pleas
Court, Wayne County Circuit Court,
the Michigan Supreme Court and
the Detroit Recorders Court. For
the latter, Detroit voters also will
be asked to approve a ballot prop-
osition creating seven additional
seats and to elect seven additional
judges.
A number of area lawyers and
judges will be seeking election or
re-election for the various judge-
ships. They include: for the Com-
mon Pleas Court, incumbents
Judge George D. Kent and Judge
Irwin H. Burdick, both running
unopposed; for Wayne County Cir-
cuit Court, Judge Michael L. Stacey
and Judge Benjamin D. Burdick;
for existing judgeships on the Re-
corders Court, Martin S. Baum,
Cousin of circuit court judge Victor
J. Baum; and Sheldon Halpern.
Charles Levin is seeking a seat
on the Michigan State Supreme
Court.
Candidates seeking election to
fill the seven newly created Re-
corders Court seats include Arthur
J. Tarnow, Lawrence D. Silver-
man, Ernest Levin, Justin C.
Ravitz and Susan Bowman.
In Oakland County State Sena-
tor Daniel Cooper is seeking the
Democratic nomination in the
lSth District to run for Congress
in the November general efec-
lion. Also vying for the Demo-
cratic nomination in the district
is Harold J. Robinson of Royal
Oak.
Mrs. Harriet A. Rotter. a Hunt-
in;,•ton Woods Republican, also will
he seeking her party's nomination
in order to run for the 18th Dis-



trict Congressoinal seat in the fall
election.
Southfield Mayor Norman Feder
is seeking a judgeship in the newly
created 46th District. He will not
be on the ballot. Morris Cohl, of
Bloomfield Township, is running
for a court seat in the newly cre-
ated 48th District.



• •

A number of persons are seek-
ing election to the Oakland County
Board of Commissioners, they in-
clude: in the 15th District, Eliot
H. Bank, a Democrat of Franklin,
and E. Marshall Greene, also a
Democrat of Farmington Town-
ship; in the 19th District, Dennis
M. Aaron and Bernard D. Berman,
both Democrats and both resi-
dents of Oak Park. Aaron is seek-
ing re-election.
Lawrence R. Pernick, a South-
field Democrat, and current
chairman of the board of com -
missioners, is seeking re-elec-

tion. Seymour F. Posner a
Southfield Republican, also is
running. Both men are in the
20th District.
In the 21st District , Alexander
C. Perinoff, vice chairman of the
board of commissioners, a Demo-
crat, is seeking re-election. He
lives in Southfield. Also seeking
the Democratic nomination in that
district is Southfield Democrat
Fred P. Sweet.
Jeffrey M. • Leib, a Democrat,
and Mrs. Brenda Weisberg, a
West Bloomfield Township Repub-
lican, are vying for their party's
nomination in the 26th District.
In the battle for the Circuit
Court judgeships in Oakland
County, three local residents arc
involved. They are Alice L. Gil-
bert of Birmingham, currently a
district judge in the' 48th District;

Marvin S. Shwedel of Southfield,
currently chief of the Oakland
County prosecutor's District Court
Division; and Harvey F. Tennen,
of Franklin, former Huntington
Woods municipal judge and a
visiting judge in Detroit's Record-
er's Court.

26001 COOLIDGE MWY
543 3343
OAK PAR.

QUALITY • SERVICE • PRICE

NORTHLAND FORD

LEADS THE WAY

SO DOES

GEORGE RUSKIN

NORTHLAND FORD

10 MILE 8 GREENFIELD

Vote August 8, 1972

Yeshiva Offers MA
in Planning Environment

Anthony

NEW YORK (JTA) — Yeshiva
University's Helfer Graduate
School of Science announced the
establishment of a new masters
program in problem-solving tech-
niques designed to .give profes-
, ionals up-to-date :,nalytical tools
to study flood predications, plant
operation logistic, city planning
and environmental factors as they
: ■ ffect yenetic mutations.
Paul Raccah, director of
'he pregram to begin in the fall,
said it is intended for those whose
occupations relate man to his nat-
ural and technological environ-
ment.

RENNE

DEMOCRAT

For Prosecuting Attorney

-

rwq, POLII1CAL

ADVEkl;SEMEN1

Return LAW and ORDER
to OAKLAND COUNTY
with HERB COOLEY

Republican

us your new sheriff

Here's what he stands for which
is most important to
everyone in Oakland County

• An upgrading of the sheriff's de-
partment, long overdue, by establish-
ing higher educational and training
_standards for deputies. Today's law
enforcement officers want higher pro-
fessional standards, and the public de-
mands it.

• Moving the department into a lead-
ership role in the war on illegal drugs

in the county.



Stopping "crime within the county

jail."

• Provide strong, positive law enforce-
ment throughout the entire county. In
this respect there will be no "blind
spots."

HERB COOLEY

For
sheriff
of
Oakland County

The need for a much more vital planned and
executed program of law and order and its pro-
fessional enforcement throughout Oakland Coun-
ty is self-evident.
Herb Cooley was born and raised in Oakland
County. He is Oakland County people. He has
made his own way in law enforcement in 22
years from a patrolman to lieutenant. This hap-
pened because Herb Cooley has dedicated his
career to professional law enforcement which
everyone in Oakland County is entitled to.

To this end— Vote for your new sheriff

Lt. Herb Cooley

Republican

in the Primary, August 8th

He'll Get the Job Done!

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