The Southern Israelite. (Augusta, Ga.) 1925-1986, December 20, 1957, Image 21

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“Have It Done With Confidence” Install or Replace Hot Water Heaters — 20-Gal. — 30 Gal. 40-Gal. Any Size. Owens Plumbing, Heating and Air Conditioning Co. 3118 Roswell Rd., N.W. CEdar 3-3913—3-0413 35 Years Contracting Experience Repair Work Given Special Attention. Our Record of Satisfied Customers Our Best Recommendation. Jewish Book Annual NEW YORK The “implacable warfare” of the Nazis against the Jewish book led them to sequester some eight mil lion volumes in the twenty Euro pean countries they occupied, ac cording to Volume 15 of the Jew ish Book Annual, just published by the Jewish Book Council of the Na tional Jewish Welfare Board (JWB). This figure, which dramatizes the Nazi aim of extirpating all ves tiges of Jewish cultural life, is con tained in the Annual's lead ar ticle titled, “The Fate of the Jew ish Book of the Nazi Era," by Dr. Philip Friedman. An alliance of American literary interests of the American Jewish community under JWB auspices, the Council is the sponsor of Jew ish Book Month, marked this year from November 15 to Decem ber 15. In Germany, where the assault on Jewish life was carried on with the utmost frenzy, the article notes, “thousands of books, Torah Scrolls and manuscripts were put to the torch during the Cristal Night of Nov. 9-10, 1938.” And in Poland, special German “Brenn-Comman- dos” (arson squads) were assigned to burn synagogues and Jewish books. Approximately 70 per cent of all the libraries, Jewish, and non- Jewish in Poland, were destroyed, the article states. A valuable guide to the field of current Jewish literature, the 184- page Jewish Book Annual offers annotated bibliographies of Jewish books in Yiddish, Hebrew and Eng lish, published over the past year in the U.S., Europe and Israel. In cluded also are a number of articles on Jewish literary figures, the an niversaries of whose births or deaths will be marked this year during the national celebration of Jewish Book Month. Included among the feature ar ticles are: “The Tragic Fate of Yiddish writers in Soviet Russia,” by Alexander Pomerantz; “Ameri can Jewish Translations of the Bi ble,” by Bernard J. Bamberger; “Li braries in Israel,” by Carl Alpert, and “Impressions of Contemporary Jewish-American Poetry,” by Charles Angoff. Among the articles on literary anniversaries are: “Fiftieth Anni versary of Ha-Poel Ha Tzair, (the first workers newspaper in Israel) by G. Kressel; “The Intellectual World of Ahad Ha'am,” by David Polish; “Chagall in the Anglo- Saxon World,” by Alfred Werner; “David Pinski: Nestor of Yiddish Literature,” by Dr. Sol Liptzin, and ‘Moritz Steinschneider,” by Dr. Joshua Bloch. The bibliographies on American Jewish books in Yiddish, English and Hebrew were prepared by I. Edward Kiev; Solomon Kerstein; Mary N. Kiev; Fanny Goldstein; Daniel Persky; and Dina Abramo- wicz. The list of books in English published outside of the U.S. (195C- 57) was prepared by George J. Weber, and the bibliography on Hebrew books of Israel (1956-57) by Menahem G. Glenn. May this Festival of Freedom remind the world that the priceless heritage of Liberty cannot be taken for granted and can be maintained only by men who are willing to fight for its tenets. WERD Radio Station 330 Auburn Ave., N. E. JA. 4-0666 Beat High Cost SICKNESS and ACCIDENT with low cost Mutual of Omaha Protection! Sure, hospital rosts have rocketed upward in the last ten years! But that doesn’t mean you and your family can’t enjoy tlie very best care modern medical science provides! Not when Mutual of Omaha protection is now within reach of all! Mutual of Omaha plans pay cash while you’re in the hospital ... to help take care of doctor and surgical expenses. But most important, they pay cash after you leave the hospital . . . to help pay those “bread-and-butter bills” that continue even after paychecks stop. Ask for one of our FREE bulletins. There’s no obligation. I)« it today! ROY F. MORGAN AGENCY 1215 Fulton National Bank Bldg. Atlanta 1, Georgia JAckson 3-5891 Original Fashions The premise of made-to-order couture is that every woman is a beauty unto herself; that her figure is an original . . . unre peated, unrepeatable; that each seam of a dress custom-made for that figure relates to that one and no other. There’s a lovely se quence about made-to-order clothes. The woman comes first, the woman before the dress. Line, material, detail, fit comes next, and to her order. From this per- American G. UNDERWOOD Orl, in ufA sonal working plan comes a sense of perfection, more subtle than the most subtle design. Part of the pleasure of such perfection lies in what is there for all the w'orld to see; but no small part is in the way clothes well-made-to- your-order feel, in the wearing. 83 IVY ST., N. E. JA. 4-1239 MODERN dry cleaners Two Locations PEACHTREE AT 12TH TR. 2-0320 MAPLE DR. AT PEACHTREE RD. CE. 3-1025 ROY O. ROBISON, Owner-Manager The Southern Israelite 21