ACLU Honors Outstanding Civil Libertarians at Gala Event (10/16/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
WASHINGTON - Tonight the American Civil Liberties Union honors the exemplary
leadership, generosity and dedication of outstanding patrons during the "Tribute
to Civil Libertarians" gala event at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel.
Activists and members meet through Tuesday to Stand up for Freedom and Stop
the Abuse of Power at the organization's 2006 membership conference. This
evening, members honor philanthropist Peter B. Lewis and veteran ACLU supporters
Jules Cohen, Bern Friedelson, Sidney Hollander, Jean H. McCrosky and Samuel
Walker.
"Through their continued commitment to civil liberties, these stalwart
supporters have helped ensure the freedoms of our democracy for generations to
come," said Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU.
As an ardent supporter of the ACLU and member for more than 30 years, Lewis
has contributed more than $30 million to the organization, including $13 million
for an endowment, with a special fund created to protect personal freedoms; and
a generous gift of $6 million in 2004 enabling the ACLU to purchase a building
in Washington to house the expanding Washington Legislative Office. Upon
completion of renovation, the building will bear his name - The Peter B. Lewis
Center for Civil Liberties - in special recognition of his generosity and
longstanding commitment to civil liberties.
Born November 11, 1933 in Cleveland, Ohio, Lewis is the chairman of
Progressive Corporation, which he acquired control of in 1965 in one of the
first leveraged buyouts in history. For the next 35 years Lewis transformed the
100-employee, $6 million company into a full-line auto insurer with 27,000
employees and net premiums written of $14 billion. Today Progressive is the nation's third
largest auto insurer.
Lewis, now retired, has challenged many of the nonprofit organizations he
supports to improve management, finances, vision, and objectives. Since 1990
Lewis has contributed more than $400 million to various nonprofit
organizations.
Tonight's other honorees are all longtime members and supporters of the ACLU:
Jules Cohen's support of the ACLU reaches back at least 50 years to the
turbulent period immediately preceding the civil rights era. He is currently a
board member of the ACLU of Virginia. The true turning point in his support of
the organization came during the controversial Skokie period, when the ACLU took
an unpopular but principled stance of support for the rights of Nazi marchers in
Skokie, Ill.
Bern Friedelson's membership in the ACLU began almost 70 years ago, when in
1938 he was expelled from his high school for promoting an alternative literary
magazine that offended the school's principal. Without delay, Friedelson hopped
on a subway and knocked on the door of the New York Civil Liberties Union, who
immediately spoke up for him. Friedelson has been speaking up for the ACLU ever
since. He served as a steadfast member, a loyal volunteer, an affiliate board
member, and finally as a representative to the national ACLU board for more than
six years.
Sydney Hollander first joined the ACLU more than 70 years ago, after hearing
ACLU founder Roger Baldwin speak at Haverford College. He went on to serve as a
member of the ACLU of Maryland's board for many decades, including accepting the
very visible role of president during the years leading up to the tumultuous
McCarthy era.
Jean H. McCrosky has been a dedicated member of the ACLU for over half a
century. Her late husband, Bob McCrosky, a scientist who worked extensively on
the Manhattan Project, was instrumental in the founding of the ACLU of South
Carolina. Today, at the age of 89, Jean McCrosky carries on the legacy that she
and her husband built in South Carolina through her service on the ACLU of
Virginia affiliate board.
Samuel Walker has quite literally written the book on the ACLU. Noted author
of 13 books, including "In Defense of American Liberty: A History of the ACLU,"
and "Civil Liberties in America: A Reference Handbook," Walker has been a
committed member of the ACLU and scholar of civil liberties for more than 30
years.
Contributing artists and guests at tonight's gala include composer Philip
Glass, former Senator Bob Kerrey, political satirist Jim Morris, comedian Greg
Proops, and musical artists Deborah Harry and Maxi Priest.
"We're celebrating civil liberties by honoring life-long supporters and
featuring spectacular entertainers and special guests," Romero said. "But
we can never forget why we exist as an organization. Our purpose is to
preserve the protections guaranteed by the Constitution's Bill of Rights.
Unfortunately our basic rights and freedoms as Americans are being challenged
more vigorously today than at any time in our country's recent past. Our
nation's leaders have chipped away at our civil liberties and executed the
greatest systematic abuse of power in our nation's history."
Founded in 1920, the ACLU is the nation's premier guardian of liberty,
working daily in courts, legislatures and communities to defend and preserve the
individual rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution and the laws of
the United States.
Headquartered in New York City, the ACLU has 53 staffed affiliates in major
cities, more than 300 chapters nationwide, and a legislative office in
Washington. Anthony D. Romero has been Executive Director of the national
ACLU since 2001; Nadine Strossen was elected president of the National Board in
1991.
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