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Public
Employee Press MELS
names its law library for founder Julius Topol
DC 37s innovative legal benefit honored
its founder by renaming its library for Julius Topol, the former DC37 general
counsel and the first administrator of Municipal Employees Legal Services.
It
is very fitting that we rename this the Julius Topol Library, said DC 37
Executive Director Lillian Roberts.
MELS Executive Director Joan Beranbaum
led the dedication, which was attended by Topols daughter, Ellissa, his
granddaughter, close friends and colleagues, MELS staff and alumni.
I
will always remember him as sensitive, hardworking and concerned, Roberts
said. I have great memories of a great man.
Topol died Sept.
3 at 90. He served in the U.S. Navy in World War II, earned a law degree from
Boston College and worked for the Ladies Garment Workers Union and the National
Labor Relations Board before coming to DC 37 in 1966.
Topol marched for
civil rights in Selma and protested against nuclear testing, said Ellissa. He
was always looking to solve the worlds problems, she said.
He
started MELS in the 1970s with the innovative idea of providing prepaid legal
services with staff attorneys working closely with social workers to help members.
Julie
loved to discuss politics and the English language. He was always accessible and
passionate about the union, recalled retired MELS social work chief Sheila
Menashe. We could rely on him to question, to be thoughtful and to be fair.
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