THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 9, 1982 61 Former Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas Dies at 71 WASHINGTON (JTA) — Abe Fortas, the fifth Jew to serve on the United States Supreme Court and the first to have been nominated for the post of chief justice, died April 5 at age 71. Mr. Fortas was named an associate justice of the Sup- reme Court by President Lyndon Johnson in June 1966, succeeding Arthur Goldberg who subsequently became U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. In June 1968, Mr. 'Johnson nominated Mr. Fortas to succeed retiring Chief Justice Earl Warren, but the nomination ran into powerful opposition from Senate Republicans and some Democrats over what they regarded as a "lame duck" appointment by Johnson who had already announced that he would not seek a second term. Althought the Senate Judiciary Committee ap- proved the nomination by a 10-6 vote and sent it to the full Senate, a bitter fight ensued durin which charges were raised that anti-Semitism was a factor in the oppo- sition to Mr. Fortas. With a filibuster threatened by anti-Fortas forces led by Sen. Robert Griffin (R- Mich.), Johnson with- drew the nomination at Mr. Fortas' request. The charge that anti- Semitism "is definitely playing a part" in the oppo- sition to Mr. Fortas was made in the Senate by Sen. Joseph Clark (D-Pa.) who Supreme Court by President Woodrow Wil- son in 1916 established what was seen by many as a tradition of a "Jewish" seat on the na- tion's highest court. Brandeis served until 1939. He was joined in 1932 by Benjamin Car- dozo who served until 1938 and followed by Felix Frankfurter who served from 1939 to 1962. ABE FORTAS recalled the struggle that followed the nomination of Justice Louis Brandeis, the first Jew named to the Sup- reme Court, but the charge was never confirmed. In May 1969, Mr. Fortas resigned from the Supreme Court under a shadow of scandal. He was under fire for accepting — but later re- turning — a $20,000 fee from the Wolfson Founda- tion, one of the founders of which, Louis Wolfson, was then serving a prison term for stock manipulation. The resignation was submitted to President Richard Nixon who immediately accepted it. Mr. Fortas returned to private law practice. Only two weeks before his death, he appeared before the Sup- reme Court for the first time since his resignation to argue a case. The appointment of Justice Brandeis to the Ida Siegel, Toronto Leader TORONTO (JTA) — Ida such a post, and continued Lewis Siegel, the grand old to be actively involved in lady of Toronto Jewry, has education until she was 95. died at age 97. She helped organize the At the age of 14 she or- National Council of Jewish ganized the Herzl Girls Women in Canada and Club and later the Daugh- traveled across the country ters of Zion. Some years on its behalf. In 1977, the later she was a co-founder of Canadian Jewish Congress Hadassah in Toronto. awarded her the Samuel She organized the first Bronfman Medal. Zionist Sunday school in the city, a sewing school for Esther Victor Jewish girls, helped or- Esther Victor, a member ganize a rest home for mothers and babies which of Jewish women's and was later taken on by the communal organizations, Jewish community, a medi- died March 31 at age 70. A native Detroiter, Mrs. cal dispensary which de- veloped into Mount Sinai Victor was a member of Hospital, and the Sister- Bnai Brith, - Pioneer hood of the Goel Tzedec Women, Sinai Hospital Synagogue which is now Guild, Hadassah, Jewish nart of Beth Tzedec Syna- Home for Aged Auxiliary and Women of Jewish Na- )gue. Mrs. Siegel was dedi- tional Fund. She leaves her husband, cated to the peace move- ment during World War I Jack; a brother, Abe Weis- at a time when it was un- man of Hallandale, Fla.; popular to be identified two sisters, Mrs. Harry (Be- with the movement. In tty) Steinman and Mrs. 1915, she was an active Philip (Shirley) Herman; member of the Women's and one granddaughter. International League for Keith Bakst Peace and Freedom. At the time of her death Keith J. Bakst, owner of she was the only surviv- Progressive Office Supplies, ing original member of died April 5 at age 26. the Ontario Home and A native Detroiter, Mr. School Association and Bakst is survived by his was recently honored by parents, Dr. and Mrs. that organization. Myron (Celia) Bakst; two In 1930, she was elected brothers, Michael and to the Toronto Board of Richard; a sister, Susan; Education, the first Jewish and his grandfather, Cantor woman in Canada to hold Jacob Sonenklar. Arthur Goldberg served on the court from 1962 to 1965 and his resignation was widely believed to have been forced by Johnson to create a vacancy for. Mr. Fortas. No Jew has been ap- pointed to the Supreme Court since Mr. Fortas res- igned. Mr. Fortas was a promi- nent Washington lawyer before his appointment to the bench. He earned his reputation as a liberal when he served as counsel for the accused in the famous Sup- reme Court case of Gideon vs. Wainwright, which es- tablished the right of coun- sel for the poor. While on the Supreme Court fit consistently voted in criminal appeals and civil liberties cases as the crucial fifth man of the ac- tivist bloc formed by Chief Justice Warren and Jus- tices Hugo Black, William Brennan Jr. and William Douglas. At the time of his nomi- nation to the court, Mr. Fortas said he considers- himself to be Jewish. He said he made that state- ment to clarify his own conception of religious identity in view of his lack of formal affiliation with Jewish institutions or organizations. Nevertheless, he was well known as a regular con- tributor to the United Jewish Appeal in. Washing- ton. He appeared as a speaker several times be- fore Jewish organizations after becoming a Supreme Court justice and consis- tently manifested a warm, friendly attitude toward Is- rael. Mr. Fortas, a close per- sonal friend of President Johnson, who also served in government posts under Presidents Roosevelt and Truman, had humble be- ginnings. Born in Memphis in June 1910, the last of five chil- dren of a Jewish cabinet- maker who had immigrated to the United States from England, he was graduated from Southwestern College in Memphis and from the Yale Law School, where he taught briefly before corn- ing to Washington as one of the "bright young men" of President Roosevelt's New Deal. He served in about a dozen administrative positions and at the age of 32 became Under Sec- retary of Interior to Harold Ickes. He first met Mr. Johnson, then a young Congressman from Texas, in the late 1930s and impressed the future President as a val- uable counselor. He was a member of the President's Committee on Equal Opportunity in the armed forces and of the National Citizens Committee for Commu- nity Relations and served as an adviser to the U.S. delegation to the United Nations in 1945. Mr. Fortas was awarded the Stephen S. Wise Award by the American Jewish Congress in 1966 and had been a member of the na- tional advisory committee of the AJCongress' Com- mission on Law and Social Action. THE JEWISH NEWS 1.2.1:2; :sit ttE: t..1.1 d11,1"., rf,fttl tQ.Z.3f: CX tt.,LX:f Ca, 2f: produced by today's latest space age technology, yet still bargain priced! 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