1 1\ .40 s" An 'Implacable Dedication' Lawyer Ernie Goodman will be remembered for his fierce dedication to civil rights and his deep humanity. . JULIE EDGAR SENIOR WRITER I t wasn't easy being the child older, which, in a way, was true." Mr. Goodman died of a cere- of Ernest Goodman. First, the Goodmans stood bral hemorrhage on Wednesday, out as the neighborhood's only March 26, at Harper Hospital in Jewish family. Mr. Goodman Detroit. He was 90. His biographer, Edward Lit- also associated with the blacks and communists, whose legal tlejohn, law professor emeritus troubles he took on when nobody of Wayne State University, de- else would. Sometimes, neigh- scribed him as one of the great- bors would cross the street just est trial lawyers in America. "But he was a soft-spoken gen- to avoid the family, including tleman you couldn't help but like. sons Richard and Bill. "We didn't have to wear Stars He could talk persuasively in a of David, but it was definitely way people that would trust him. something we felt in our day-to- He was very much respected, day lives. We got it from all probably even by his enemies," sides," said Richard Goodman, Professor Littlejohn said. an attorney with the firm of • Mr. Goodman, who moved to Goodman, Lister and Peters in Detroit at the age of 5 with his downtown Detroit. "I think [our immigrant parents Harry and father] understood our predica- Minnie, graduated from Wayne ment and he would tell us we University's law school in 1928. were going to get hurt, but we •He began his legal career work- would understand it when we got ing for Maurice Sugar, the Unit- ed Automobile Workers' (UAW) profoundly impacted the course first legal counselor, and latched of U.S. labor and civil rights his- onto the cause of the ordinary tory. "He was the man who, to- worker — a cause that never tired him. With the rise of Mc- gether with Maurice Sugar, Carthyism and the subsequent made it possible for the- unions witch hunts of radicals and po- to triumph at the end of the litical activists, Mr. Goodman 1930s and '40s. It was their work found yet another cause close to in the courts that enabled the UAW and other unions to estab- his heart. In 1951, he and George Crock- lish their presence and power. "The other legacy was the ett Jr., a retired Recorders Court judge, established the nation's work he did with regard to civil first racially integrated law liberties and fighting Mc- Carthyism. firm, Goodman, The third Crockett, Eden [legacy] cer- and Robb, which is still in its orig- He latche d onto the tainly was he was very in- inal Cadillac cause of the strumental in Tower location in creating a body Detroit. The two ordinar y worker. of court deci- partners took on sions with re- cases ranging gard to racial from the defense of Willie McGee, a black man ac- equality, starting with World cused of raping a white woman War II. The final act, and he was in Mississippi, to the trial of six almost 70, was when he defend- Michigan Communist Party of- ed the defendants of the Attica ficials, to the trial of several At- case in Buffalo. "He saw the lawyer not sim- tica (N.Y.) Prison inmates accused of fomenting a bloody ply as a person serving the client, riot. Nearly a dozen of the two but as an instrument of social lawyers' cases went to the U.S. justice," Rabbi Wine said. "Over the years, he came to re- Supreme Court. Birmingham Temple Rabbi alize he was regarded as a very Sherwin Wine, who wrote an es- important person," Professor Lit- say about Mr. Goodman for The tlejohn said. "It's interesting how Jewish News in 1945, said Mr. things change: people crossing Goodman's work as an attorney the street one year and people giving him awards the next. You have to go far and wide to find a lawyer who was able to achieve what Ernie did in a lifetime. "What was remarkable is he was able to do what he did with four guys in downtown Detroit. They gave meaning and life to principles they thought were im- portant." Richard Goodman put it this way: "He wasn't gigantic in any- thing except his personal quali- ties, like his courage and his absolute, implacable dedication to his principles. He was ironclad in his commitment to what he believed in. He would not back off or move over." Mr. Goodman is survived by his wife of 65 years, Freda; his sons, Richard and Bill; daugh- ter-in-law, Julie Hurwitz; and grandchildren, Carlos, Alicia, Amy, Michael, David, Jacob, Nicholas and Daniel. Contributions may be made to the Ernest and Freda Goodman Scholarship Fund at Wayne State University Law School, c/o Wayne State University Fund Office, 5475 Woodward, Detroit, 48202; the National Lawyers Guild, 615 Griswold, Room 916, Detroit, 48226; or the Detroit Newspaper Agency Strikers Re- lief Fund, Metropolitan Council of Newspaper Unions, 3100 East Jefferson, Detroit, 48207. ❑ "Because Plumbing Doesn't Have To Be Boring." __/ GOOD NEWS FOR PEPOEE WHO CO TO THE BATHROOM. You wo'n't get yelled at by people who take showers with the Delta@ 'Ionitor.Tm The Monitor is a pressure balance valve with a high temperature limit • stop, meeting or exceeding accessibility and anti-scald standards. World of Watches Is Still At Crosswinds Mail Come Visit Us At Our Newly Remodeled Location Suite #175 810-539-1181 Crosswinds Mall • 4301 Orchard Lk. Rd. • West Bloomfield Mon. 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