Friday, August I, 1947 THE JEWISH NEWS Page Sixteen t arrie s from the jr i b t* 1_4E:70 I Tura gototelehe,doyl • do CHM soot of SAMUIL. CAMS AT CRAPTER * N me KING JAMES ANC VERSIONS.* FROIA CALLED ME FIRST BOOK OF 10164 N THE 000A1 VERSION . derY MIA•ciaell AMP CAMERON C) /993 elY MC. GA/NE-5 1,.....lieik41 Own.KTINGS 61000 ON O mouhrnitm I6IZAELSTE4 CAME TO THE OPPOWTE ANOUNTAIIMEAOIS, WITH A VALLEY eETWEEN f ewi. ems. as THE NO! -IAN. 60L-it:44 OR 01AT14 COME TO CRALLE144311. EtrarriS YOU TO DAVIDE Ti4REE BrZOT;4ER5 ARE iN SALLCS FATHER 16 WORRIED *BOUT THEM- cc, t- 3 ‘00 TO YOUR BROTWERS , 5ATTLE-RONT IAT -TAKE TH14 MEAD, GEESE -TAKE PA2O4E0 CORN 1040,ESSZIN6 ME NEWS! Exodus Deaths Move Zionist Youth to Picket British Consul The death of three Jews on Exodus 1947, among them William ;Bernstein of Los Angeles, has so deeply stirred the youth f:if America that in every large community in the country youngsters speedily mobilized picket lines in front of British consulates to protest against British acts. In Detroit, a group of Habonim, labor Zionist youth movement came frown Habonim's Camp near Kinneret, near Chel- sea. Mich., quickly gathered a number of their friends, pre- pared signs condemning "British piracy," and marched in protest of the National Bank Bldg. Several---Z-FA and Hashomer Hatzair members joined the •pick- et line and a number of the boys and girls went to the British consulate at 1574 National Bank Bldg. to express their resentment to Pro-Consul William L. Laing. The group, under the leader- ship of David J. Eisenberg, 19- year-old member of Habonim and one of the supervisors of Camp Kenneret, presented a let- ter of protest to Laing. At the same time they applied to the consulate for visas to go to Pales- tine ,as another. mark of protest against the British closed door Palestine policy in the Jewish National Home. The protesting group received encouragement from many, groups in the city and were heartened by word that the De- troit and Wayne County Feder- ation of Labor had protested against the British policies and reiterated demands for the im- mediate establishment of the Jewish National Home. Heard in the. Lobbies By ARNOLD LEVIN 4 (Copyright, 1997, Independent Jewish Press Service, Inc.) Problem of Too Many The ZOA, with a membership of a quarter of a million, is faced with a new problem these days, that of members. President Emanuel Neumann is considering proposals on how to reach the maximum number of members and educate them to full awareness of Zionist issues. These proposals include, it is rumored. sub-dividing large dis- tricts into smaller groups specifically for educational work. Having been an educator himself, he is naturally preoccupied with the prob- lem of Zionist education. • • • Haganah Watch for a streamlined campaign by Haganah, with the backing of accredited Jewish organizations in the U. S., to accomplish a double purpose—I) tell Americans, Jews and non-Jews what Hag- anah has been accomplishing for a quarter of a century now, and especially in the war years and since, and 2) to immunize them against appeals from mushroom committees, who have been raising fabulous sums by means of publicity stunts and cloak and dagger mystery interviews. • • • That's a Man Are you disillusioned about the world and people? Then famil- iarize yourself with one of the finest specimens of man we have ever come across. He is America's leading manufacturer of modern furni- ture, Louis Ferraguzzi, an Italian Catholic who is chairmaning im- portant businessmen's divisions of the UJA and the Gewerkschaften Campaign for the Histadruth. He is also a member of the American Jewish Congress, Federation of Jewish Charities and the Catholic Charities. He has often got into fist fights on street corners because he has overheard some G. L. K. Smith bummers use "wop" or "sheenie." • • • Books Maurice Samuel is working on a Palestine novel. We are certain that Samuelas work will replace in people's memories the allegedly "best" novel on Palestine, Koestler's Thieves in the Night. Jessey Coroelia's novel, "The Growing Roots" (Crown Publish- ers), the story- cat an American Jewish family, is astoundingly dated in its approach to Jewish problems as though it had been written before Oswiecim. It should be a Lessing Rosenwald Book-of-the-Month. It certainly has nothing to contribute to knowledge of Jews. UNSCOP Decisions To Security Council American Laborites Attend Hapoel Stadium Cornerstone Ceremony NEW YORK. — A group of pic events. The swimming pool Ameridan trade union and Labor will be built on an Olympic scale. Zionist leaders participated in the Other facilities will include i ceremony of laying the corner- stone of the Dov- Hos Memorial cer field, track field, and basket- Stadium at Tel Aviv last week. ball and tennis courts. The stadium is being built with Isaac Hamlin; national secre- tary of the National Committee funds initially raised through the for Labor Palestine, spoke on be- American Good-Will tour of the half of the American friends of Hapoel all-star soccer team, tin- of the Jewish the Histadruf; who had made pos- der the auspices sible the launching of the $350,000 National. Workers' Alliance and stadium project on a .25-dunam the National Committee for Labor Palestine. area east of Tel Aviv. Also attending the ceremony were Frank Rosenbloom, secre- Dr. Gamoran Addresses tary-treasurer of the Amalga- International Conference of mated Clothing Workers America and vice-president of NEW YORK—An address on the World Federation of Trade "The Course of Study in our Unions. Prof. Hayim Fineman, of Jewish Schools" will be given by Philadelphia, national . chairman Dr. Emanuel Gamoran, director of the Labor Zionist Organization of the Commission on Jewish of America; and four members Education of the Union of Amer- of the delegation of the National ican- HebrerCongregations, at Committee for Labor Palestine. the first ternational Confer- Dr. David Rebelsky of St. Louis; ence onNJ-ewish Education being Henry Lax of Chicago; Aaron held at the Hebrew University in Kushinsky of New York; and Jerusalem July 29 through Aug. Polish Refugee Seeks 6. Dr. Gamoran will present the Abraham Hamlin of Boston. The stadium, with a seating ca- major paper on this subject at Only Surviving Relative Sam Gornicki, formerly of pacity of 20,000, will be built the sessions to be held all day Grodno, Poland, a survivor of with an eye toward future Olym- Monday, Aug. 4. four years in Nazi concentration camps, is seeking his only sur- viving relative, Jacob Gornicki, a Detroiter, mho has been employed at By PHINEAS J. BIRON Ford's. (Copyright, 1947, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate) In this- country 10 months, Gor- Congratulations nicki lives in The New Palestine News Reporter, published by the ZOA, has Los Angeles, made the grade . . . It has been banned in Palestine, by the British government . . . Too outspoken, was the dictum. where he • • • working. In his,, • appeal to The Note to Editors Jewish News, he The "democratic Nationalist Party" of Minneapolis has nothing whatsoever in common with the Democratic Party in that city .. . stressed that he It is an anti-Semitic. anti-democratic outfit that cooperates with such needs no ma- notorious anti-Semitic propagandists as Mrs. Elizabeth Dilling and terial aid from Sam Gornicki Flitcroft . . . One of its gauleiters, Maynard Nelsen, was his relative, but wishes to con- Eugene recently arrested, and confessed to warmongering and hate- tact him, as they are the only spreading. • • • surviving members of the family. Gornicki was born in Grodno The Wrong Way and the Right in 1910. . His Jewish name is The Vermont House of Representatives recently killed a bill Shmuel, and his father's name outlawing discriminatory advertising by hotels—a bill the State Sen- was Gedaliah. Jacob Gornicki is ate had passed . . . In New York State a number of Gentile hotels his father's brother. He may be have adopted a new slogan in their advertisements ... It reads: "The reached at 4334 Rogers St., Los American Way—No Discrimination." • • • Angeles, 33. Hollywood Sees the Light Until a year ago Hollywood movie moguls were afraid to tackle Senate Body Approves anti-Semitism ... The boys who know all about box office reaction Chavez Anti-Bias Bill turned their thumbs down on stories that dealt openly with the evil WASHINGTON (JTA)—A Sen- of Jew-hatred . .But a great change has come over the movie ate Labor and Public Welfare studios . . . Not only is "Gentlemen's Agreement" being produced as super-feature but RKO has already placed on the market a film Committee reported favorably, a titled "Crossfire," which is a courageous expose of anti-Semitism . ; . by a 4-1 rote, and returned to The commercial-minded financiers of the celluloid products have the full committee, the Ives- been watching the box office on "Crossfire" and now they see the Chavez bill to outlaw discrimi- light . , . The returns are very satisfactory Yes, it really pays to nation in employment. produce decent films. SOFAR, The Lebanon, (JTA)—Sir Abdur Rahman, Indian representative on the United Nations Special Corn- mittee on Palestine, after a visit to Damascus where he saw President Shukri al-Ku- watly, told an Arabic press conference that when the members of the Committee completed their report, it would be given to the UN Security Council for its opin- ion, and not until then sub- mitted to the UN General As- sembly. This is possibly an •ndica- tion that Palestine is consider- ed a "strategic area" by some members of UNSCOP, under Article 83 of the UN Charter. It may also indicate that in view of the unique situation in Palestine a new form other than trusteeship may be de- vised for the t r a n s i tional periOd. Strictly Confidential