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PAGE * THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE January 14. 1983
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Since 1897
Daily ‘Forverts’ goes weekly
NEW YORK (JTA)—The
Forward Association announced
Monday that, because of
continuing increases in operating
costs, it was giving up its "struggle”
to continue publishing the Jewish
Daily Forward on its current
Tuesday through Friday basis and
would begin publication as a
weekly on Feb. 4.
The association, noting that the
Yiddish daily had begun
publication, as a daily, on April 22,
1897, said that the last issue of the
Yiddish daily would be published
on Jan. 28. In its statement, the
association said that the recently-
started English language weekly
supplement would continue.
The association said that, until
about 1972, the publication, a non
profit operation, had been
managing but that around that
time the Forward began to be hurt
by the kind of rising costs which, in
the ensuing decade, forced majoi
English newspapers throughout
the United States and Canada to
cease publication.
Harold Ostroff, Forward
general manager, told the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency that staff cuts
were under study but that the
Forward hoped to keep its present
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Front page of a 1920 issue of
staff writers, although on a weekly
basis.
The association said it had
remained “faithful” to the "guiding
principle" of its creation—“to serve
the large mass of Jewish
immigrants and to he their teacher
ifi adapting themselves to a new
home.”
The statement added that “over
the course of the .years," the
Forward had adapted itself “to the
many changes yi Jewish life both
here in America and around the
entire world. These past 10 years
have seen the reserves which were
built up during the ‘good old days’
and other assets liquidated, in
order to remain able to publish five
times a week."
The association said “the
strongest support for our existence
came from the loyal readers and
friends, and the organized trade
union movement in having raised
SI .3 million in the course of four
the Jewish Daily Forward.
separate fund-raising campaigns."
Ostroff said the campaigns were
held in 1975,1977,1978 and during
mid-1981 to mid-1982. He said
that in 1973, the Forward dropped
its Saturday issue, and four years
ago, dropped its Monday edition,
publishing four days a week since.
He said the association put
many other economies into effect,
including sale of its building on
East Broadway in lower
Manhattan. He said current
circulation is 20,000 and that the
association hoped to maintain that
sales figure as a weekly
The association said it came to
the conclusion that it had only two
options—one, to cease publication,
“which was unthinkable,” and the
other, to become a weekly
newspaper. The association said it
had decided to switch to a weekly
“with a strong determination to do
everything in its power to continue
the life of this newspaper.”
The prosecution rests —
TAMPA, Fla. (JTA)—Prosecution and defense attorneys have
rested their cases in the federal government’s effort to strip a
former mayor of the capital of Lithuania of his American
citizenship on grounds he lied about his collaboration with the
Nazis when he applied for citizenship.
Federal District Judge Robert Morgan is presiding in the non
jury trial here of Kazys Palciauskas, now a 75-year-old St.
Petersburg Beach resident
Palciauskas has been charged by eye-witnesses at the hearing
here with helping the Nazis herd 22,000 Jews into Villijampole
(Slobodka), a Kaunas slum area, and allegedly issuing curfew
orders for the Jews, requiring them to wear a Star of David and
stripping them of their possessions for swift deportation by the
Nazis.
Federal attorneys testified that the defendant falsely swore he
“had not voluntarily assisted any country at war with the allied
nations" and that on his application forms for entry to the United
States he had listed himself as a clerk in the Kaunas government.
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