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June 08, 1973 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-06-08

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

34—Friday, June 8, 1973

JWB Acclaims Dr. Liptzin

South End Controversy Cited

`Watergate Spillover' Discussion
on Civil Liberties Set by Council

With the addition of Free
Press investigative reporter
Paul Branzburg as a forum
panelist, members of the
community rellations civil
liberties subcommittee of the
Jewish Community Council
announce completion of plans
for "Spillover From Water-
gate: Implications for Law
and Order" 8 p.m. Thursday
at Temple Emanu-El.
Branzburg was a party to
the U.S. Supreme Court de-
cision Branzburg v. Hayes,
which held that the First
Amendment is not a reporter
privilege statute. He was
sentenced for contempt in re-
fusing to identify confidential
news sources. Twice nom-
inated for the Pulitzer Prize

Bar Mitzva
Weddings - Etc.

INVITATIONS
25% Discount

and a former civil rights
worker, he holds degrees
from Cornell, Harvard and
Columbia. Branzburg is on
the executive board of the
Detroit Newspaper Guild.
Other panelists are Detroit
B a r Association Pre§ident
Ivan Barris; labor lawyer
Rolland O'Hare, a member
of the American Civil Liber-
ties Union national board and
executive committee; a n d
Leonard Gilman, senior trial
lawyer assigned to the Or-
ganized Crime Task Force
'V i t h the Oakland County
Prosecutors Office.
Panel moderator will be
Judge Michael L. Stacey.
Civil liberties co-chairmen
are Mrs. Matilda Rubin and
David H. Wolock. John H.
Shepherd is chairman of the
community relations commit-
tee.

It is indeed a fact that the
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Dr. Eugene B. Borowitz, president of the Jewish Book
Council of the National Jewish Welfare Board, presents a
citation to Dr. Sol Liptzin for his achievements as head of
the Israeli program of JWB's Jewish Book Council and in
recognition of his career of almost five decades in working
to enrich Jewish culture. The presentation was made on the
occasion of Israel's 25th anniversary. Looking on is Philip
Goodman, executive secretary of the JWB Book Council.

Chief of Macomb-Oakland Unit
for Retarded Heads Nat'l Body

David Rosen, superintend-
ent of the Macomb-Oakland
Residential Center was elect-
ed national president of the
American Association on
Mental Deficiency (AAMD),
at its annual convention in
Atlanta.
Rosen has been chairman
of the National Association
of Public Residential Facili-
ties for the Mentally Retard-
ed for three years.
From 1970 to 1972, he was
a member of the division of
mental retardation project
review committee, U.S. De-
partment of Health, Educa-
tion and Welfare. Presently,
Rosen serves as consultant
to HEW's division of devel-
opmental disabilities and to
the President's Committee on
Mental Retardation.
Superintendent of the Ma-
comb-Oakland Residential
Center since 1971, he holds
bachelors and masters de-
grees from Glassboro State
College. Previously, he was
superintendent of the Wood-
bridge State School in Wood-
bridge, N.J.; and of Lake-
land Village in Medical Lake,
Wash.
The Macomb-Oakland Resi-
dential Center, with offices in

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•••• ■■•■•



ELECT

Mother of four children — Member of Brace P.T.A.
Attended All School Board Meetings '72 and '73
Cores about All Schools in Southfield
Believes in High Curriculum Standards

Vote Monday June 11th

Diane Kopach for School Board
Citizens for Diane Kopach

Pd. Pol. Adv.

A group calling itself Com-
mittee f or a Responsive
ACLU has challenged the
election of board members
to the American Civil Liber-
ties Union following the De-
troit ACLU's apparent sup-
port of the former editors of
the South End.
The Wayne State Univer-
sity campus newspaper had
been accused of printing anti-
Semitic material, and the
ACLU agreed to provide le-
gal assistance to the editors.
The committee also cited
other actions as reflective of
poor leadership judgment.
The Committee for a Re-
sponsive ACLU has accused
the Detroit branch in a law-
suit of improper actions in
the election. Today, by or-
der of Wayne County Circuit
Judge Harry Dingeman was
the deadline for ACLU of-
ficials to show cause why a
new election should not be
held.
The committee claims that
Detroit branch membership
has declined by 900 since
1971, and the South End in-
cident has worsened the sit-
uation.
The committee recom-
mends as its "Responsibility

Sterling Heights, is a soon-
to-be-constructed residential
facility for the mentally re-
tarded. The center will serve
the two-county catchment
area of Macomb and Oakland
and will be located in Clin-
ton Twp. The design is a
duplex home concept.
Completion date for the
center is tentatively sched-
uled for 1976.
Programs and services at
the center will focus on the
needs of each individual re-
tarded person.
Currently, the Macomb-
Oakland Residential Center,
administered by Rosen, pro-
vides comprehensive services
to 350 mentally retarded in-
dividuals residing in various
community placements.
These placements include
group homes, nursing homes, I
foster homes and family care
training homes.

Slate" Esther Broner, Robert
Cohn, Sol Plafkin, Dr. Max
Rosenberg and Bra df or d
White. Mrs. Broner, Cohn,
Plafkin and White are on the
committee itself.
White charged that the
ACLU refused to mail out
literature critical of t h e
branch for its apparent sup-
port of the South End editors.
The deadline for returning
ballots is Monday. Cohn said
he would seek a restraining
order preventing the election
from continuing.
Plafkin detailed the charges
Sunday in a letter to Prof.
Carl Cohen, chairman of the
ACLU of Michigan, in Ann
Arbor.

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SHOW WILL CONTINUE TO JUNE 30, 1973

Dr. Israel Mowshowitz, spe-
cial adviser to the president
of Yeshiva University, will
pay his first visit to Detroit
since his appointment, at a
dinner arranged by the De-
troit Friends of Yeshiva Uni-
versity 6 p.m. Wednesday at
Cong. Shaarey Zedek. The
dinner will honor Jack Bush-
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4272.

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