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  1. May 12, 2015 · Mira Rothenberg, whose experience and commitment to caring for concentration camp orphans as a college student in Manhattan shaped her pioneering therapy for autistic and schizophrenic...

  2. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Akiva_GoldsmanAkiva Goldsman - Wikipedia

    Early life. Goldsman was born in New York City to Jewish parents and raised in Brooklyn Heights. His parents, Tev Goldsman and Mira Rothenberg, were both clinical child psychologists who ran a group home for emotionally disturbed children. [1] .

  3. May 12, 2015 · Mira Rothenberg, a holocaust survivor and influential child psychologist who cared for orphans of concentration camps and children with autism, died at the age of 93 on April 16, the New York.

  4. In Memoriam: Mira Rothenberg (1922-2015) Mira Kowarski was born in Vilnius, Lithuania, on Jan. 15, 1922, the oldest of three children of Jacob Kowarski, a landlord, and the former Rose Joffe, a dentist. As anti-Semitism swept Europe, her mother and two younger siblings fled to the United States.

  5. May 15, 2015 · NEW YORK — Mira Rothenberg, whose experience and commitment to caring for concentration camp orphans as a college student in New York shaped her pioneering therapy for autistic and...

  6. This fellowship honors the memory of Dr. Mira Rothenberg, former faculty and mother of Saint Ann’s alumnus Akiva Goldsman. A gifted psychotherapist, Mira was known throughout the world for her pioneering work with autistic and schizophrenic children.

  7. Feb 26, 1978 · In the 1950's, when psychologist Mira, Rothenberg started working with disturbed youngsters, she began referring to some of the patients coming to her as “closet children.”

  8. Mira Rothenberg pioneered both the clinical distinction and treatment protocol for autistic and severely disturbed children as separate from those for the mentally retarded.

  9. The Children of Raquette Lake — Rothenberg, Mira — "Written for therapists and those whose lives have been touched by autism, this book by Mira Rothenberg, a psychotherapist who changed the face of treatment for autism in the 1950s, provides a personal account of the summer of 1958, when she and two colleagues successfully treated twelve ...

  10. The Children of Raquette Lake: One Summer That Helped Change the Course of Treatment for Autism is an inspiring account of author Mira Rothenbergs experience with eleven autistic and schizophrenic children during the summer of 1958.

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