Newspaper Page Text
Friday, July 11, 1947
Page Three
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Atlanta Section, CJW,
Now Compiling Regis
tration of Newcomers
Mrs. Nathan Kahn, Jr., chair
man. Committee on Service to
Foreign-born of the Atlanta sec
tion, National Council of Jewish
Women, announced that her com
mittee is compiling a registration
of newly-arrived immigrants in
Atlanta. The purpose of the reg
istration is to enable the com
mittee to better dischtrge its job
of assisting immigrants in adjust
ing to their new social environ
ment.
The committee, among other du
ties, sets up naturalization and
English classes, provides individ
ual tutors where necessary, and
assists with the filing of the first
and final citizenship papers; it
also offers its services in executoin
of affidavits of support, and in the
process of setting up a service to
find housing for newly arrived im
migrants.
The committee closely coordi
nates its work with the profession
al casework service offered by the
Family Service Bureau of the At
lanta Federation for Jewish So
cial Service. Mrs. Kahn urges
relatives and friends of new ar
rivals to notify the members of her
committee in charge of tills proj
ect, Mrs. Alfred Weinstein, at 684
Whitmore Dr., N. E. Ch-6148.
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Mack Frankel
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Mack Frankel, above, has been
elected commander of Gate City
Post, American Legion. ,
One of the charter' members of
the unit, Commander Frankel has
given the organization loyal and
devoted service over the years.
He had held numerous offices
and for the past several years had
been a member of the financial
committee.
His main activity however had
';een child welfare and he had led
the membership into several pro-
grame so successful they were
awarded national citation.
He was chairman of child wel
fare with the post and had been a
Moving spirit in the Legion’s sand-
lot baseball program. He had also
contributed to the Legion's part
in the annual soap box derby.
Mr. ^Frankel, unanimously
chosen to his new office, has been
active also with the Jewish War
Veterans of Atlanta and is cur-
ently a regional vice-commander.
In Retrospect
JTA News—Twenty Years Ago This Week
By JOHN KAYSTON
JTA Librarian
In a letter to Louis Marshall, Henry Ford apologized for
the anti-Jewish campaign carried on in his “Dearborn Inde
pendent” since 1920. He declared that “henceforth Jews may
look to me for friendship and good-will.” This apology is a
complete renunciation of the anti-Jewish libels based on the
forged protocols of the Elders of Zion.
Marshall accepted Ford’s apologies in a letter in which he
declared: “The statement which you have sent me gives us
assurance of your retraction of the offensive charges, of your
proposed change of policies in the conduct of the Dearborn
Independent, of your future good-will, of your desire to make
amends, and what is to be expected from any man of honor,
you couple these assurances with a request for pardon. So
far as my influence can further that end, it will be exerted,
simply because there flows in my veins the blood of ancestors
who were inured to suffering and nevertheless remained
steadfast in their trust in God.”
• * *
Hungarian authorities continued their policy of expulsion
of Jews. Even those whose fathers were born on Hungarian
soil, but whose grandfathers were born elsewhere, were not
spared.
Among those who were to be expelled was a family by
the name of Losh, which had lived in Hungary for the last
150 years. When the head of the family learned that they
were to be driven from their home, he attempted to commit
suicide.
• * *
A bill to prohibit shcchita, Jewish ritual slaughter, was
defeated by a large majority in the Norwegian parliament.
PALESTINE IN FIGURES ^
In 1946 the number of Hebrew i
books published in Palestine was
500. Reckoning an ordinary at
2,500, the number of books pro
duced amounted to 1,200.000 worth
about £150.000. There were issued
besides 400 pamphlets and bro
chures worth about 4<,f)00. The to
tal value of the books published
i” Palestine in 1946 was therefore
about £190,000.
| The number of wireless receiv-
i ing sets licensed in Palestine in
January 1947 was 66,000 as against j
45,000 in 1946.
Jewish War Veterans
Plan Dept. Convention
The Jewish War Veterans of At
lanta, Post T2. will be hosts to
delegates and the Department of
Georgia, at the Department Con
vention. to be held in Atlanta on
July 25. 26 and 27.
Close to 200 reservations al
ready have been made to attend
the banquet to be held at The
Mayfair Club on Sunday night.
July 27.
A very large attendance is ex
pected indicated by the numerous
letters, telephone calls and tele
grams received to date.
The following are members of
the Convention and Banquet Com
mittees :
General Chairman, Irving Lib-
owksky; Publicity Director, David
Friedlander; Co-Chairmen of
Department Journal, Paul Gins
berg and Harry Harrison; Publi
city Director, David Friedlander;
Banquet Committee: Chairman,
Seymour Rappaport; Master of
Ceremonies, Sam B. Levy; Award
Committee: Chairman, Louis Gef-
fen; Registration Committee
Chairman, Eli Left; and Banquet
Ticket Committee Chairman. Sam
Bredow.
The end of anger is the begin
ning of regret.—Nedarim 22.
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The Jewish population of Pales
tine alone smokes 1 Vi million cig
arettes a day.
2107 was the number in 1946 of
the Palestine Arabs who made the
pilgrimage to Mecca.
The Palestine Orchestra has
performed 1497 concerts during
the ten years of its existence, made
up as follows: 333 subscription
concerts. 142 workers’ concerts,
122 youth concerts, 168 concerts in
the communal settlements, 322
special concerts, 177 concerts in
military camps and 233 concerts
outside Palestine. The number of
listeners comes to 1,500,000 (a mil
lion and a half). Both the Pales
tine orchestra and the New York
Philharmonic Orchestra have each
6000 subscribers, but the expendi
ture of the Palestine Orchestra is
£74,000. as compared with the
£200,000 spent by the New York
Philharmonic Society. For the
Gala Performance the orchestra
was enlarged to 100 and the choir
to 120.
MOTORISTS
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Jews Registered
For Emigration
NEW YORK (JTA) .—Approxi
mately 40 per cent of the Jewish
DP’s in Germany and Austria, reg
istered by HIAS for emigration to
the western hemisphere, want to
J in friends and relatives in Aus
tralia and Latin America, Abe
Grossman, director of HIAS activi
ties in Germany and Austria, said
d”ring the week-end following his
return to the United States.
GroSSman, who spent 15 months
in the occupied zones, said that
while 18.000 Jewish DPs have in
dicated to HIAS a desire to immi
grate to the U. S., 12,000 others
hope to become residents of other
Western Hemisphere countries. He
said that during the past six
months HIAS had sent 1,682 per
sons from Bremerhaven to the
United States, and contrasted this
figure with that of 1,902 brought
to this country by HIAS during
1946. He pointed out that an addi
tional 500 persons have already
been processed for immigration to
the U. S. by HIAS and are now in
Germany, awaiting quota numbers.
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