Where Are They Now?
When Steve Glovsky, class of 1979, got his invitation to the kickoff of the Miller Canfield Alumni Program, he decided a trip to Detroit for the first time in 34 years would be a great way to celebrate his wife Susan’s 60th birthday. They came, they stayed, they conquered, making the most of their Miller Canfield reunion weekend. They…
…stayed (and swam) at the Book Cadillac, walked to the RenCen, dined in Greektown, visited the patent office, walked on the River Walk, visited the Belle Isle greenhouse, viewed the Rivera/Kalho exhibit, checked out the old train station, celebrated at Coach Insignia, visited Judge Rosen’s courtroom, lunched with Steve Weyhing at Zingerman’s, visited the UM law library, dined at Roast, breakfasted at American Coney, sang “My Girl” in Motown’s Studio A, sat behind the wheel of a Model T at Ford’s Piquette Plant, saw Aretha Franklin’s and Henry Ford’s houses in the Boston Edison neighborhood, and gambled (responsibly) at the Motor City Casino.
What a weekend!
And what an accomplished lawyer. Steve reports that his family has been active in Republican politics in Massachusetts for almost 100 years. Steve has continued the family tradition and recently prosecuted a lawsuit (on his own behalf) to establish the constitutional right of political candidates to gather signatures on private property, such as the areas in front of supermarkets. In Glovsky v. Roche Bros Supermarkets, Inc., 469 Mass. 752 (2014), the court recognized the right of candidates to access privately owned supermarket properties. From the courthouse steps, Steve was heard to say: “Give me liberty or at least give me a lobstah.”
- Carl vonEnde