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They misspelled 'Rodham' but that's okay, we know who she is.
1 posted on 11/19/2001 7:16:48 AM PST by aculeus
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To: aculeus
In the summer of 1971, a young lawyer from Yale, Hillary Roddam . . . was interned at Treuhaft's Berkeley law office, having met him when she assisted the Left-wing lawyer Charles Garry in the trial of Bobby Seale, accused of murdering a fellow Panther.

Where are the usual suspects who tell us Hillary's defense of the Panthers is an "urban legend?"

2 posted on 11/19/2001 7:21:55 AM PST by LarryLied
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To: aculeus
An excellant slam by the Telegraph, two reds dead. For you Limes out there that accuse us Yanks of not liking language, you are right.

This dead fellows father in law owned the Telegraph if I remember right. Makes me happy to be an Englishman, 372 years removed next May 27th OS.

3 posted on 11/19/2001 7:41:23 AM PST by Little Bill
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To: dighton
Ping ... for dead red thread.
4 posted on 11/19/2001 7:44:31 AM PST by aculeus
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To: aculeus
Ah well...seems like a decent enough fellow for a commie...God rest his soul.
6 posted on 11/19/2001 8:07:58 AM PST by ArcLight
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To: aculeus
A sordid life, lived in the crevices of American culture.
8 posted on 11/19/2001 8:31:40 AM PST by Malesherbes
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To: aculeus
Unless I'm very much mistaken, Jessica Mitford had a sister Unity who was president of Hitler's fan club before and during WWII. When the nazi's lost she tried to kill herself and spent the remainder of her life in a loony bin. If you ask me she got off too easy.
9 posted on 11/19/2001 9:53:03 AM PST by Copperhead61
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To: aculeus
Ah yes, just another warm, lovable fellow toiling away tirelessly in service of the ideology that has slaughtered more human beings than any other.
11 posted on 11/19/2001 10:55:47 AM PST by Interesting Times
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To: aculeus
A similar obituary appeared in the New York Times several days later: Treuhaft Obituary. Full text below:

December 2, 2001
Robert Treuhaft, Lawyer Who Inspired Funeral Exposé, Dies at 89
By PAUL LEWIS

Robert Treuhaft, a crusading radical lawyer who inspired his wife, Jessica Mitford, to write her best seller "The American Way of Death," died in New York on Nov. 11. He was 89.

As a union lawyer representing longshoremen in the San Francisco area in the 1950's, Mr. Treuhaft was enraged by the exorbitant fees undertakers charged, frequently consuming a widow's death benefits.

After organizing the Bay Area Funeral Society to reduce the cost of funerals for union members, Mr. Treuhaft encouraged his wife to write an exposé of the funeral industry, taking a year off from his Oakland law practice to help with research.

The result was "The American Way of Death," first published in 1963. Miss Mitford, who was known as Decca and who died in 1996, dedicated the work to her husband with gratitude for "his untiring collaboration."

In a 1993 interview, Miss Mitford said that initially she had not been interested in the subject. "Then Bob started bringing home the trade publications like Casket and Sunnyside, Mortuary Management -- all those wonderful names -- so I began to study them," she said.

When the British novelist Evelyn Waugh remarked that the book seemed to have been written by two people, Jessica Mitford's sister Nancy wrote back saying: "Clever of you to see the two voices. I am quite certain much of it was written by Treuhaft who is a sharp little lawyer, and who certainly made her write it in the first place."

In 1976 Gov. Jerry Brown of California appointed Mr. Treuhaft to the state Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers.

Robert Edward Treuhaft was born in New York on Aug. 8, 1912, the son of working-class immigrants from Hungary. His mother eventually came to run her own hat shop on Park Avenue; his father, a waiter turned bootlegger, became part owner of a Wall Street restaurant.

Raised in the Bronx and then Brooklyn, Mr. Treuhaft won a scholarship to Harvard, where he studied law.

After working for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union in New York, Mr. Treuhaft was rejected by the Army on medical grounds at the start of World War II and went to work for the Office of Price Administration in Washington; there he met and fell in love with Miss Mitford.

The couple could scarcely have been more different in upbringing. She was one of the blue-blooded Mitford sisters, a daughter of Lord Redesdale and sister to Nancy, the novelist; to Diana, who married Sir Oswald Mosley, the British fascist leader; to Unity, one of Hitler's cronies; and to Deborah, who became Duchess of Devonshire.

Miss Mitford was recovering from the loss of her first husband, Esmond Romilly, Winston Churchill's nephew, who had been killed on a Canadian Air Force raid over Germany and with whom she had eloped to fight with the International Brigade in the Spanish Civil War. Mr. Treuhaft and Miss Mitford were married in 1943; Miss Mitford accepted his proposal before he had finished making it. They moved to San Francisco, where Mr. Treuhaft started a radical law firm that specialized in fighting every kind of discrimination and social injustice.

Both joined the United States Communist Party and were frequently investigated and harassed by government officials; for many years they were denied passports, for example. But by 1958 they had grown disillusioned with Communism and left the party.

In 1964 Mr. Treuhaft was one of four foreign lawyers expelled from Portugal by the fascist government of Premier Antonio de Oliveira Salazar after they had tried to investigate penal conditions in the country.

In 1971 he accepted a young Yale lawyer named Hillary Rodham (now Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton) as an intern.

After his wife's death, Mr. Treuhaft completed her last book, "The American Way of Death Revisited." He was working on a collection of her letters at the time of his death.

Mr. Treuhaft is survived by a stepdaughter, Constancia Romilly, and his son, Benjamin, a New York piano tuner who runs the Send a Piano to Havana Project, shipping old pianos to Cuba.


12 posted on 12/05/2001 3:20:36 PM PST by PatrickHenry
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To: aculeus
"In the summer of 1971, a young lawyer from Yale, Hillary Roddam . . . was interned at Treuhaft's Berkeley law office, having met him when she assisted the Left-wing lawyer Charles Garry in the trial of Bobby Seale, accused of murdering a fellow Panther."

I'm not surprised Hillary got her legal start in life working for a communist, but it is hard to imagine that Hillary "was interned". Truely hard to imagine her on her knees for any man.

18 posted on 12/06/2001 10:33:43 AM PST by YaYa123
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To: potlatch
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21 posted on 09/09/2007 12:09:22 AM PDT by devolve
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