Gentile Ex-Army Officer and Wife Make Aliya HAIFA (JTA) — Some 160 new immigrants from 15 countries re- cently disembarked here from the Israeli motorship Dan, among them a non-Jewish retired U.S. Army officer and his Jewish wife who iii TOO IVIN IND W INDS DOWN TOO WONT NNW A WNW WINO WW1 Mass Winstries..D.froif, Miele r plan to settle in Israel. Jack Hackett 42, already has a job with Israel Aircraft Industries as a construction engineer. He served the U.S. Army for 24 years and was most recently posted at a base in West Germany where he was chief instructor in demolition and mines. He and his wife, Ruth, have a son who is presently studying at the Hebrew University. Asked by newsmen why he wanted to settle in Israel, Hacket said, "I visited this country several times and there is something about this coun- try that got me." – F R EE whe edle a N eedle {Tom CAPITOL! L THURSDAY AND FRIDAY March 25th and 26th REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED Pick up your Heavy Duty Needle Pack—and—sew up the highest rate of interest paid daily on Pass Book Savings! Merely add $5.00 or more to your account SAVINGS account. new CAPITOL or open a 5 4 YO DAILY INTEREST PASS BOOK INSURED From date of deposit to date of withdrawal CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION 27215 Southfield Road • Jest North of 11 Mile Lathrop Village, Michigan 3564170 HOME OFFICE: Lansing, Michigan Member Flame Loan bank System Vancouver Man Accused of Role in Jews' Murders MONTREAL (JTA) — A 59- year-old Vancouver janitor has been accused by Simon Wiesen- thal, the Nazi-hunter, of having personally directed the machine- gun killings of 300 Jews while serving at chief of the Ukrainian auxiliary police during World War II. Wiesenthal, head of the Vienna Documentation Center of the Fed- eration of Jewish Victims of the Nazi Regime, said the murders I took place at Rudolf's Mill in Stanislav, near the Polish-Russian border. He said in Vienna that the Ca- nadian government was morally obligated to act to bring the jani- tor, Ivan Dimitrevich Chrobatyn, to justice. "I don't know if he is a Canadian citizen," he went on, "but if he is a Canadian citizen the Canadian government must bring him before the courts, be- cause it cannot protect a criminal. If not, he must be deported to Germany. We will wait for the next step." Chrobatyn denied he was ever a police chief, a member of an execution squad or even a mem- ber of the German Army. He said that although he had worn a soldier's uniform in a Ukrain- ian army division that fought with Germany against Russia, he was there only as a cook feeding 3,000 men and had never used a rifle. "I swear to you what I say is true," he said. "I have never killed a man in all my life." Wiesenthal has asked the Ca- nadian Jewish Congress to seek government intervention, in the case. Saul Hayes, executive vice president of the CJC, said here that the case has been referred to a committee of the organization in Toronto. But he said that if Chrobatyn is a citizen, the charges against him will probably be dropped, as a recent test case indicated that citizens cannot be extradited unless they made fraud- ulent statements on their citizen- ship applications and the board of the immigration department votes for extradition. A spokesman for Justice Mini- ster John Turner refused to spec- ulate on possible government ac- tion, explaining: "We have re- ceived no official notification of any charges laid _ or messages passed on." DuPont's Shapiro By RABBI SAMUEL SILVER (A Seven Arts Feature) Irving S. Shapiro is a most in- teresting person. He is now a vice president of the duPont Co., probably the richest commercial empire on earth. Our U.S. Treas- ury should be so solvent. Starting out as a poor Minnea- polis boy, Shapiro, now 54, was a brilliant law graduate from the U. of Minnesota then went on to federal service where he worked for the OPA in an office next to that of Richard Nixon. From there he went to the Justice Department and then over to duPont, where he has risen to become one of the nine executives in charge of the world's largest chemical corn- pany. The Wilmington, Del., news- paper hails Shapiro as an exam- ple of one who has fulfilled an "American dream of success." We can say amen to that. Aliya for NY Editor All HOROWITZ-MARGARETEN PRODUCTS ARE 0 ENDORSED Distributed by: Greenfield Noodle & Specialty Co. 600 Custer Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48202 NEW YORK (ZINS) — Sylvan Fox, associate editor of the New York Times, soon will be setting in Israel, according to the local correspondent of Haaretz. Fox will take a position in Is- rael's foreign ministry ana will deal with the preparation of in- formative material. The prospec- tive oleh said he decided on this move after having visited Israel and fallen in love with the country. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 19, 1971-13 More Women Named to Board of UAEIC NEW YORK (JTA)—In a de- cisive step to increase women's participation at all policy-making levels, the 98-year-old central con- gregational body of Reform Juda- ism set in motion the machinery that will bring a substantially higher percentage of women to its 180-member board of trustees. The action was taken' by the executive committee of the board of trustees of the Union of Amer- ican Hebrew Congregations when it adopted a resolution presented by Mrs. David Levitt, president of the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, an affiliate of • the UA,HC, who serves as an ex officio member of the board. The only other woman on the board is Mrs. Clinton Long of Wilkes Barre, Pa., serving as a representative of the UAHC's Pennsylvania Council. In her resolution, Mrs. Levitt urged that the executive commit- tee of the UAHC board "demon- strate the sincerity of its intent to give greater representation to women by: immediately appoint- ing women to its nominating com- mittee; engaging in an active search to find suitable women to fill a portion of its at-large vacan- cies as they occur; and, promoting similar activity in their regions and member congregations." WE'RE WHERE YOU WANT US OLDSMOBILE INC Sales • Service on all makes ,Erll JOU tilt( .L iF L 0. Al TEL T WF LVt MAl MICI-LIC:15 NJ .18075 • 73541 :1:10, st43 g*X. MOMMY, DO YOU THINK I g WILL WIN THE BABY N CONTEST AT LEO KNIGHT X PHOTOGRAPHY THIS C; X YEAR? IT STARTS SOON. ■ 352-7030 yie< >rs