OBITUARIES WHY? Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg JTA — Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ar- thur Goldberg, active in Jewish issues, died Jan. 19 at his residence in Washington. He was 81. Goldberg also served as secretary of labor in the Ken- nedy administration, follow- ing years of influential work as a labor lawyer. His most controversial career move came in 1965, when he left a lifetime ap- pointment to the Supreme Court after serving for three years to become U.S. Am- bassador to the United Nations. Although he and many per- sons said the decision had probably not been a wise one, Mr. Goldberg's time at the U.N. overlapped the momen- tous period that surrounded the Six-Day War. Goldberg was instrumental in drafting the text of U.N. Security Council Resolution 242 of November 1967, which remains the cornerstone of Middle East peace negotia- tions to this day. The resolution calls for a "just and lasting peace in the Middle East," including "withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories of re- cent conflict" and respect for the right of "every state in the area to live in peace within secure and recognized boun- daries." Goldberg later chaired the U.S. delegation to interna- tional talks in Belgrade, aim- ed at monitoring a 35-nation human rights accord conclud- ed in Helsinki in 1975. At the time, he strongly criticized Soviet bloc nations for their human rights violations. His law clerk while on the bench, Harvard Professor Alan Dershowitz, said Goldberg had proposed just days before his death a monitoring committee of in- ternational human rights ex- perts to assure that the cur- rent tide of change in Eastern Europe did not allow ex- tremist forms of nationalism and anti-Semitism to flourish. Dershowitz also reported that Goldberg said shortly before his death that he would seek a meeting with Attorney General Dick Thornburgh to discuss "the earliest possible parole" for Jonathan Pollard, whose life sentence for spying for Israel Goldberg considered excessive. The son of poor Russian Jewish immigrants, Goldberg was born in Chicago and devoted his life to the cause of workers rights and human rights all over the world. He was an ongoing, active member of synagogues and Jewish organizations. He was instrumental in bringing about the merger in 1955 or the American Federa- tion of Labor and the Con- gress of Industrial Organiza- tions, which became the AFL-CIO. Following his U.N. assign- ment, Goldberg was president of the American Jewish Com- mittee from 1968 to 1969. In 1983, he served as chairman of a commission to study what the organized American Jewish community did or fail- ed to do to save European Jewry during the Holocaust. Goldberg established prece- dent when he urged President Kennedy to discuss the issue of Soviet Jewry with Soviet leaders. He was a key speaker at the meeting that organized the American Jewish organiza- tions into the National Con- ference on Soviet Jewry in April 1964. Goldberg's friend of 45 years, Hyman Bookbinder, former Washington represen- tative to the AJCommittee, recalled the Supreme Court justice lovingly Sunday. He said that "apart from the Jewish community itself, there has been no steadier, firmer supporter of Israel than the American labor movement, and Arthur deserves a great deal of credit toward that." Dershowitz called Goldberg "the pre-eminent Jewish American of the 20th century, in terms of his influence both on American life and Jewish life. "I think few Americans know how significant he was in his behind-the-scenes ac- tions on behalf of Israel and world Jewry," he said. Dershowitz said former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir told him that "during the 1967 war, he prevented the U.S. from putting undue presure on Israel," and that during the 1973 Yom Kippur War, "he was constantly in- sisting that the U.S. make ex- traordinary efforts to circum- vent European countries' un- willingness to ship arms to Israel." "Golda Meir said, 'God in- tended for Arthur Goldberg to be an American rather than an Israeli, because he did more to save Israel than vir- tually any other living figure,' " Dershowitz recounted. Emanuel J. Harris Emanuel J. Harris, 83, one of the founders of Michigan National Bank, of Farm- ington Hills, died Jan. 21. Mr. Harris was an attorney and real estate investor, a patron of the Detroit Institute of Arts, a member of the Economic Club of Detroit, the--, 100 Club of Detroit, past president of Standard City Club, Franklin Hills Country Club and Renaissance Club. He also was a member of the Detroit, Michigan and American Bar Associations, a former member of the New York and American Stock Ex- changes, a member of the Board of Commerce, City of Detroit, Metropolitan Detroit Convention Bureau and Detroit Real Estate Board and former Commissioner of the Detroit Fire Department. Mr. Harris was a graduate of the University of Michigan in 1930 with a BA, LLB and Juris Doctor. He was a former director of Michigan National Bank, a member of the board of directors of Dayco Corp. He leaves daughters and sons-in-law, Jacqueline and Stanley Gard of Southfield, Judith and Robert Solomon of Bloomfield Hills and eight grandchildren. BECAUSE IT'S THERE. Keeping up with the news these days can be a mountainous task. But a subscription to the JEWISH NEWS can increase your knowledge — of issues concerning our Jewish community — and lift your spirit. For subscriptions Call 354-6060 Carl R. Lichtenstein Carl R. Lichtenstein, 78, of Southfield died Jan. 19. Mr. Lichtenstein was an at- torney and a member of Adat Shalom Synagogue and past president of the men's club. He was also one of the founders of the Great Lakes Region of The Federation of Conservative Men's Clubs and a past regional president and was a member of B'nai B'rith. Mr. Lichenstein leaves his wife, Nita. Louis E. Letzer Louis E. Letzer, 82, of Southfield, died Jan. 20. Mr. Letzer was an attorney who graduated from Detroit College of Law in 1928 and received his Masters of Law Degree in 1932. He represented Hudson's and then Dayton Hudson's from 1930 until his death. He leaves a son and daughter-in-law, Norman and Ruth of West Bloomfield; a sister, Sadye of Royal Oak; and two grandsons. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 125