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Flint Community News
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
18—Friday, January 23, 1970
The appointment of MRS. HO-
WARD LEVINE of West Orange,
N.J., as chairman of the National
Committee on Women's Communal
Service of the Council of Jewish
Federations and Welfare Funds,
to be a Jew," he said. "But for was announced by Max M. Fisher,
many, emigration is not yet possi-
ble, and we must continue to pro- Council president. Mrs. Levine,
vide them with the m4lical and so-
cial assistance that at least makes
CARS TO BE DRIVEN
physical survival possible."
Megdell, Pelavin Get High Campaign Posts
Several prominent leaders of the
Flint Jewish community were
named to key posts in the 1970
Flint UJA Campaign, to spearhead
local support of the United Jewish
Appeal's fourth nationwide Emer-
gency Fund drive.
Dr. Leon Rosky, chairman of
the 1970 campaign, announced the
appointment of Joseph Megdell as
campaign coordinator; and Michael
Megdell
Pelavin
Pelavin, initial gifts chairman. Co-
chairmen in this division are Dr.
Saul Gorne, Alfred Klein and Syd-
ney Melet.
Megdell said that it has been
the traditional responsibility of
the UJA to bring the immigrants
to Israel, including the almost
40,000 who arrived in 1969 and
the more than 40,000 who are ex-
pected in 1970. "Now we must
also take full responsibility for
the rehabilitation and absorp-
tion of these immigrants, as well
as the training and care of 300,-
000 inunigrants who remain un-
absorbed because of the illiter-
acy and lack of skills they
brought with them from non-
Western, underdeveloped coun-
tries," he said.
Pelavin noted that UJA funds
were vitally needed to care for
the more than 300,000 destitute
Jews elsewhere in the world, many
of whom have faced deprivation
Sydney Melet Named
`Businessman of Year'
Sydney B. Melet, president of
The Vogue of Flint, has been
named "businessman of the year"
for 1969 by the Sales and Market-
ing Executives of Flint.
Melet was cited for his business,
professional, civic and community
activities during the club's annual
top management meeting.
Since Melet became president of
The Vogue, the store has opened
branches in the North Flint-Plaza
and Dort Mall and will open a
third branch in the Genesee Valley
Shopping Center this year.
The downtown store at 565 S.
Saginaw St. was expanded and re-
modeled last year.
Melet was elected president of
the new Flint Urban Coalition last
year. He also is a director of the
Michigan Heart Association, serves
on the advisory hoard of the Re-
tail Division of Flint Junior Col-
lege and has been a member of
the Greater Flint Downtown Corp.
since it was formed in 1956.
He was chairman of the Summer
Jobs for Youth program here last
year. Melet also serves a number
of other civic, professional, syna-
gogue and fraternal groups, in-
cluding holding a post of the board
of directors of the Smaller Busi-
ness Division of the National Retail
Merchants Association.
Youth on
The Move
and persecution in Moslem and
Iron Curtain countries following
the Six-Day War. "The UJA makes
it possible for thousands of these
Jews to flee to Israel and other
countries where it is not a crime
Dr. Leon Rosky, chairman of the
1970 Flint United Jewish Appeal
Campaign, announced that invita-
tions to a closed-circuit color tele-
cast from Israel have been sent to
community leaders and that mem-
bers of the campaign cabinet are
now taking reservations for this
event 6:15 p.m., Feb. 3, at Cong.
Beth Israel.
The telecast will feature Prime
Minister Golda Meir, Foreign Min-
ister Abba Eban and Defense Min-
ister Moshe Dayan, and there will
be reports from the Suez Canal,
Sharm El Sheikh and the Bet Shean
Valley. Highlights will include up-
to-the-minute reports on action
along the fronts, visits to the chil-
dren who live in deep underground
shelters and an analysis of current
developments on the diplomatic
front.
The Council office, 76'7-5922, is
taking reservations. Minimum gifts
will be $1,000.
Judge Newblatt
Quits Court Post
SS Officers, Accused
of Shooting Thousands
in Russia, Go on Trial
Community
Calendar
Jan. 26—Beth Israel Sisterhood
Board Meeting, 12:30
p.m.
—Temple Beth El Board
Meeting, 8:30 p.m.
27—Campaign C a b i n e t
Meeting, 8:30 p.m.,
home of Dr. Leon
Bosky.
—Bnai Brith Board
Meeting, 8:30 p.m.,
home of Dr. Bert Marx.
28—Council Social Welfare
Committee Meeting,
Noon, Council Office.
29—Council Board of Gov-
ernors Meeting, 8:30
p.m., Cong. Beth Is-
rael.
Grand Rapids
News Notes
MUNICH (JTA) — Four former
SS officers accused of shooting
thousands of Jews in Southern
Russia during World War II, went
on trial here Monday. The prose-
cution says the killings were ex-
ceptionally brutal and has asked
Soviet authorities in Moscow to
permit Russian witnesses to come
to Munich to testify.
The defendants were said to
have operated with a special group
in the areas of Nikolayev and
Sinferopel in the wake of the ad-
vancing Nazi armies in 1941. Maj.
Johannes Zapp, now 65, who
commanded the group, is charged
with participation in 15,860 cases
of murder. He is the chief de-
fendant.
Former SS Sgt. Leo Recker, 57,
is accused of participating in
5,000 shootings. Former SS Lt.
Karl Noa, 59, is charged with
aiding in the deaths of 1,700 Jews,
but former Lt. George Moehlmay-
er, 58, is accused in only two
cases. According to the prosecu-
tion, the victims were shot in the
neck at point blank range. In
many cases, babies were shot in
their mother's arms. The trial is
expected to last three weeks.
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12240 JOS. CAMPAU
S. Vietnamese Senators
Visit Israel 'to Learn'
TEL AVIV (JTA) — Seven
members of the South Vietnamese
Senate arrived here Wednesday on
an official 10-day visit to see what
they could "learn from Israel"
that would benefit their own
country's search for "peace and
development."
The group is headed by Sen.
Van Don and includes among its
members Mrs. Nagoyan Fouok
Dai, deputy head of the senate
and a member of its labor, foreign
affairs and securities committees.
They were met at Lydda
Airport by a group of foreign
ministry officials who denied
that the visitors had been in-
vited officially to Israel. Israel
has recognized the Saigon gov-
ernment but does not have
diplomatic relations with South
Vietnam.
The group described itself as a
"study mission." They got their
Israeli visas from the Israeli Con-
sulate in Bangkok, Thailand. They
said they would visit kibutzim and
moshavi and hoped to meet with
local leaders.
"We are a small nation fighting
vast forces, and,; like you, we
want to end the war," a spokes-
man for the group told newsmen
at Lydda. "We want a lasting
peace with guaranteed borders so
that we can divert all of our re-
sources to developing our country,"
he said.
25—USY Board
—Grand Rapids Temple
Gary Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Youth
Melvin Lewis of Davison, has been
named to the dean's list at Ferris Feb. 4—Hadassah Donor Lunch-
State College. His average was
eon
4.0.
Rabbi Frederick A. Eisenberg of
Temple Emanuel, Grand Rapids,
will represent the Jewish Chautau-
qua Society as lecturer at Nazareth
Shirley Wilson, daughter of Mr. College in Kalamazoo, Tuesday. He
In every passionate pursuit, the
and Mrs. Sam Wilson, will be call- will lecture on the subject "The
ed to the Torah as a Bat Mitzva Synagogue, the Church, and the pursuit counts more than the ob-
Future."
ject pursued. —Eric Hoffer
Jan. 31 at Cong. Beth Israel.
I Bat Mitzva
ANTS?
To
UJA Leaders to See Israel Telecast
Genesee County Circuit Court
Judge Stewart A. Newblatt, 42, has
resigned from his post on the
bench with an attack on Michi-
gan's penal code and divorce laws,
which he described as archaic and
cruel.
Judge Newblatt, who said he
would return to private law prac-
tice, was appointed to the judge-
ship by Gov. John Swain.son in
1962. At 34, Newblatt was one of
the youngest Circuit Court judges
in Michigan history. In 1966, he
was elected to a full term and still
had five years to go.
Put through the University of
Michigan law school by his
widowed mother (as was his
brother, District Judge Harry P.
Newblatt of Flushing), he was a
top graduate in his class. He is
highly respected by his col-
leagues.
Judge Newblatt complained that
present divorce laws are "unjust
and ludicrous" and that the penal
code is "illogical, ill-conceived, il-
drafted and cruel." He said the
state prison system is "barbaric."
About 75 per cent of his job
was simple administration, said
the judge, who now plans "to re-
turn to private practice where I
can, once again, apply what I have
been trained to do—practice law."
who served as a vice chairman
of the committee for three years,
suceeds Mrs. Arnold Rubenstein
of St. Paul,
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