Newspaper Page Text
Friday December 11, 1936
The Southern Israelite
Mahoney^ si. i, U. Election is Blow to Olympic Boosters
Thomas Mann Deprived of Citizens!
llip Children’s Magazine Is
In Germany by Act of Third Reich r>ublished in Chattanooga
Thirty-Seven Other Refugees
Disfranchised By Minister
of Interior
NO FATHERLAND
Berlin (WNS)—Thirty-eight
prominent German refugees, in
cluding Thomas Mann, the famous
novelist and Nobel Prize winner
and eight Jews, have been de
prived of their German citizen
ship "for having harmed German
interests”, it was announced by
Minister of the Interior Wilhelm
Frick. Among the better known
Jews who 1 have been disfranchised
are Max Braun, former Socialist
leader of the Saar district, and
Dr. Alfons Goldschmidt, who is
now director of the Industrial Re
lations Institute in the United
States. Mann lost his German
citizenship because he repeatedly
cooperated in demonstrations of
international general Jewish- in
fluences societies”.
London (WNS)—Dr. Albrecht T.
Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, grandson
of Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy,
the celebrated composer, and
great-great-grandson of Moses
Mendelssohn, died here at the age
of 62. Driven into exile in 1933 by
the Nazi regime, Dr. Mendelssohn-
Chattanooga.—Publication of a
monthly news-magazine of Jewish
current events for children of He
brew's and Sunday Schools was an
nounced here with the first issue
of “Jewish News”.
Edited by Samuel Deutscli, a
graduate of Yeshiva College and
teacher of the Chattanooga Hebrew
schools, the news-magazine con
tains a digest of world Jewish
news written for children.
Among the contributors of the
first issue are Rabbi Israel Ger-
stein, Chattanooga; Rabbi Bernard
Schwartz, New York; Rabbi L.
Cohen, Boston, and graduate teach
ers of the Yeshiva.
Crushing Defeat of Brundage Seen as
Victory for Anti-Nazi Delegation
Ernest Lee Jahncke and Jack
Rafferty Named as High
Officials
Houston, Tex. (WNS)—A
smashing rebuke to Avery Brun
dage, chairman of the American
Olympic Committee, and to the
forces that favored American
participation in the Berlin Olympic
Games, was administered by the
annual convention of the Amateur
Athletic Union of the United
States when it elected Jeremiah
T. Mahoney president over Pat
rick J. Walsh of New York, Brun-
dage's candidate,, by a vote of
199 3-7 to 127 4-7. MahoYicy re
signed the presidency at last year’s
convention when the A. A. U. fail
ed to vote against sending an
American team to Berlin. Lest
there be any doubt as to the real
meaning of the crushing defeat
of Brundage, whose handling of
the Olympic team and pro-Nazi
attitude on his return from Ger
many had created a storm of pro
test, the convention adopted Ma
honey’s recommendation to name
Ernest Lee Jahncke as one of the
delegates-at-large to the A. A. U.
for 1937.
THOMAS MANN
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KLINE’S
Whitehall — Broad — Hunter
Bartholdy spent his last years as
senior research fellow at Balliol
College, Oxford University. Ger
many’s greatest authority on for
eign law, he was a member of the
German delegation to the Ver
sailles Peace Conference. A native
of Karlsruhe, he was educated at
Munich, Leipzig and Heidelberg
Universities. Until 1905 he lectured
on international law at Leipzig.
From 1906 to 1920 he held the
chair of civil law at Wurzburg
University. In the latter year he
was called to the University of
Hamburg to establish the chair of
foreign law. It was from this post
that the Nazis ousted him three
years ago. One of the founders of
the Hamburg Institute of Inter
national Affairs, he was for
several years a member of the
Young Plan Tribunal at The
Hague. He held an honorary
degree from Harvard.
A. Z. A. Names Winners
of Popularity Contest
Three popular members of At
lanta’s younger set, Misses Roslyn
Bierman, Dot Frankel and Mitzi
Hirsch, are announced as the win
ners of the city-wide popularity
contest conducted by the Atlanta
Chapter, No. 134, of A. Z. A. The
winners of the contest, which be
gan early in October, will join the
special A. Z. A. delegation on a
special chartered bus for the
district convention to be held in
Charleston, S. C., December 29-
31 In the debate tryouts, Ed Krick
and Sol Greenberg were chosen as
representatives of the local chap
ter which will seek to retain the
AJexander-Triest trophy, won last
vear at the Birmingham conclave.
Ramon Wender, chapter orator,
and the basketball team, yet to be
chosen will also compete m the
C °The delegates to represent At
lanta are Ramon Wender and Ed
Krick The following members of
the Atlanta chapter hold d.stnct
offices- Aaron Rose, district pre-
Sira'S XMS
district » h cmr£r C ?M
Grand
district.
Alliance Basketball to
Open With Three Games
Three ofThe 8 ABianc^BaskS-
ban" League on December 13th at
2: A P B m C. will be pitted against
Rrandeis in the first game of the
Branaeis and in the second
junior d - ig35 Sou thern
Star Guard, will against lead A.
Z The feature game of the day
•ii (inH thp Nordaus opposing the
will find the worua ^ t
—
Montgomery- Ala^ ^ Brandeis
HX_A Z. A. vs. Davideans
4 •’30—Strausseans vs. Nordaus