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July 11, 1980 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-07-11

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

6 Friday, July 11, 1980

Milliken Cites Importance to Michigan of Hosting the GOP

What thousands of people
have been planning and
preparing for during the
past 18 months has begun.
Detroit is, at this very
moment, the center of one of
the most extraordinary re-
curring events in human

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history. No other thing in
the world compares to an
American political conven-
tion.
It is with a great deal of
pride and pleasure that I
welcome the resurgent Re-
publican Party to the Re-
naissance City of Detroit. I
join with Mayor Coleman A.
Young, chairman Thomas
Murphy of the Civic Host
Committee, the members of
New Detroit and Detroit
Renaissance, more than a
million citizens of this city,
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and some nine million
Michigan citizens in wel-
coming the 1980 Republi-
can National Convention.
Like the Republican
Party, Detroit has a long,
and often glorious, his-
tory. Like this party, it
has a bright future —
limited only by our im-
aginations.

One thing both the Re-
publican Party and Detroit
has had in common in re-
cent years has been a ten-
dency on the part of a
number of people to write
GOV. MILLIKEN
them off as dead. We've all has been a successful com-
heard the suggestions that mitment.
the Republican Party is be-
Detroit has come a very
yond saving and that De- long way in the past decade.
troit is beyond saving. I per- Few cities have been so suc-
sonally have refused to ac- cessful in taking on urban
cept either verdict and have improvement projects
worked to prove both these jointly engineered by dis-
verdicts premature.
tinguished black and white
The key to the revival of leaders.
Not only is hosting the
Detroit — and anyone who
has been in the city in the Republican National
last couple of years will tell Convention important to
you Detroit is definitely on the continued resurgence
its way back — has been the of Detroit, but it makes
commitment which has good, hard business
transcended political, sense. The convention
ethnic, social and geo- means 20,000 delegates,
graphic barriers — and it alternates, workers and

Two WSU Volumes on Art

Art, artists and the
curators of museums are
given their due recognition
in the most recent publica-
tions of Wayne State Uni-
versity Press.
An impressive volume
describes the progress re-
corded by the Detroit Insti-
tute of Art under William
Valentiner.
"The Passionate Eye: The
Life of William R. Valen-
tiner" by Margaret Sterne
describes the eminent art
authority as the man who
was the prime force in mak-
ing the Detroit Art Institute

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a major museum in the na-
tion.
Valentiner (1880-1958)
was the Detroit Art Insti-
tute director from 1924 to
1945.
The author of this im-
pressive biography, Mar-
garet Sterne (1902-1977
was a professor of history at
Wayne State University.
Another Wayne State
'University publication of
interest is a narrow 106-
page paperback, "Art in De-
troit Public Places." It was
compiled by Dennis Alan
Nawroki and Thomas J.
Holleman.

German Police
Arrest Ex-Nazi

BONN (JTA) — West
German police arrested a
former SS official recently
during his vacation in a
shore resort off the Baltic
Sea.
The 64-year-old man is
retired and lives in Dues-
seldorf. His name was not
disclosed.
The prosecution said that
the former SS official killed
at least 24 Jewigh inmates
in the concentration camp of
Riga-Kaiserwald, where he
was chief of the first-aid
post between 1942 and
1944.
In Washington, U.S.
deportation proceedings
against Mike Pasker,
who is accused of fraudu-
lently concealing his Nazi
activities in World War II
when he was admitted to
the United States in 1950,
have been transferred
from Los Angeles to
Miami, the Justice De-
partment has an-
nounced.
Pasker is accused of hav-
ing helped German and
Lithuanian forces persecute
Jews in Lithuania in 1941
and 1942.

journalists. They will be
coming to stay, not only
in Detroit, but for 40 miles
in every direction.
But that's not the whole
picture. Since January,
people have been flowing
into the Metropolitan De-
troit area to take on the
complex job of setting up for
a national convention.
During and after the con-
vention, many visitors will
take time to visit Greenfield
Village, Cranbrook and the
Irish Hills. For many of the
20,000 people who will be in
town for the convention,
this will be their first visit
to the Great Lakes. There
are many who will take ad-
vantage of the opportunity
to tour our unique part of
the United States.

Expenditures for the
seven-month period before
and through the 1980 Re-
publican National Conven-
tion have been estimated at
$20 million.
And that's just money.
There is something else
that we couldn't buy if we
wanted to, and that's "the
national attention being
generated.
The economic impact of
the convention will be felt
throughout Southeast
Michigan. It will manifest
itself through the
convention-goers who stay

in motels and hotels well
beyond the borders of
Wayne County. And it will
show up in the restaurants
they go to and the places
they visit while in town.
And it will show up in the
services they need and use
during their visit to our
state.
All of Michigan will bene-
fit because the Republican
National Convention is
being held in Detroit.
It is up to all of us to do our
best to show our convent; -.
visitors that Detroit is a c
of the future. We must not
let the conventioneers over-
look the Renaissance City's
incredibly diverse working
class and ethnic commu-
nity; its lifeblood; its
museums; galleries; restau-
rants and unique gathering
places, like the Eastern
Market, and a rebuilding
downtown.
And we must remind our-
selves that a host city's
friendliness, helpfulness
and general courtesy are
judged primarily by a vis-
itor's chance encounters
with its ordinary people.

PD POL ADV

OTE AUG 5TH

PATRICIA A. KELLY

State Representative — 69th District

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