USNA to Carry Peak Load in '49; Speakers Condemn U. S. DP Act • NEW YORK—A total of $11,- 644,505 will be required to meet the needs of the estimated 24,500 Jewish immigrants, the majority of them displaced persons, who will reach the United States in the next 12 months, and to pro- vide for thousands of earlier ar- rivals who still require assistance, Joseph E. Beck, executive direc- tor of the United Service for New Americans, reported at the an- nual meeting of USNA at the Biltmore Hotel. Beck warned the assembled Jewish leaders, representing com- munities in every section of the United States, that this figure constituted a minimum estimate and that liberalization of the Dis- placed Persons Act of 1948 would result in increased immigration to this country and consequently a greater expenditure of funds. Declaring that the program of United Service for New Amer- icans "is in no small measure re- sponsible for the successful re- settlement of many thousands of newcomers" to the United State's, President Truman, in a special message to the conference, called upon the agency to assume "even greater tasks" in 1949. Assails Unworkable Act Harry N. Rosenfield, N. S. Dis- placed Persons Commissioner, s condemned the Displaced Per- sons Act of 1949 as "not only discriminatory and un-American in some of its provisions, but it is also administratively almost un- workable." Rosenfield expressed the hope that "if we obtain the appropria- tion recommended by the Presi- dent to the Congress, the Dis- placed Persons Commission will have about 45,000 displaced per- sons embark for the United States before July, 1949." He ad- ded that the DP. Commission was .aiming at a goal of 12,500 sail- ing for the. United States each month, but • warned that this goal could not be attained with- : out the "continued and expanded participation" o f voluntary ,agencies such as the United Ser- vice for New Americans. Contrasting the large numbers •of DPs being absorbed monthly by "war-torn little Israel" with those reaching the United States, he said: "I look with chagrin at the paltry results thus far achieved by our great prosperous and spacious country." . 'Inescapable Challenge' Rosenfield called upon the Jew- 'ish community leaders to assume through the United Service for New Americans a "heavier load .than_ they have ever had to as- sume ,in American immigration experience" in order to help the United States Government • com- plete its task of bringing into and resettling in this country 205,000 displaced persons with- in the next two years. The future of the many thous- ands of homeless men, women and children still waiting in the DP camps of Europe for an op- portunity to emigrate confronts the American people with an "in- escapable challenge," EdWard M. M. Warburg, chairman of the Joint distribution Committee, told the meeting. The year 1948 was a year of "great achievement" in behalf of the homeless Jews of Europe, Edwin Rosenberg, president of USNA, --stressed in his annual /Residential report. "Thousands upon thousands of them are leav- ing the DP camps for Israel, there to sink their roots in the build- ing of a new nation," he said. "Other thousands are coming with increasing regularity to the United States to build new lives in our democracy." Peak Year for USNA In his annual report, Beck predicted that 1949 would be a "peak year" for United Service, i•ointing out that the DP camps for Jews in Germany, Austria, and Italy would be closed early next year with the overwhelm- ing majority of the Jewish DPs emigrating either to Israel or the United States. He estimated that of the 24,500 Jewish immigrants expected to reach the United States before the end of 1949, approximately 1q,500 would come from the DP camps. The 1949 newcomers, he THE JEWISH NEWS- yriday, January 14, 1949 Cage Scandal Hero 22 Lists of Candidates, Including Arabs, Approved in Israel Election added, would raise to 80,000 the • • .< • , potential number of Jewish im- migrants who may require as- sistance from Unite:d Service this year. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, in a special message to the con- ference, declared that the United Service for New Americans "per- forms a noble act of mercy to humanity and a great patriotic service to America" by assisting many of Europe's homeless to find homes in this country and by finding jobs "for hands which have been schackled by an en- forced and abhorrent idleness." The end of Jewish homeless- ness in Europe is within sight, Henry MOrgenthau, Jr., former Secretary of the Treasury, de- clared in a message to the meet- ing, adding that "members and friends of United Service may take justifiable pride in the fact that they have made a magnifi- DAVID SHAPIRO, co-captain cent contribution toward the so- of the George Washington Uni- lution of this problem." Truman to Address' Dinner for Weizmann; Asks Better DP Law WASHINGTON (JTA)—Presi- dent Truman will go to New York on February 19 to address a tes- timonial dinner in honor of Dr. Chaim Weizmann, President of . Israel, the White House said. The dinner will be held at the Wal- dorf Astoria Hotel. (In a messae to the American people, Dr. Chaim Weiz- rn a n n empha- sized that the Truman friendship an d support which President Truman and the American people have given to Israel "have been an encouragement beyond measure, and this will long be remembered in °fir annals." He compared the Israeli fight for freedom with that of the American colonists. The Israeli President conveyed this message through the New York Herald Tribune which be gan serializing Dr. Weizmann's autobiography, "Trial and Er- ror.") In his State of the Union mes- sage, the President called upon Congress "to open our doors to displaced persons without unfair discrimination." It was the only reference to displaced . persons legislation in the nearly 4,000-word speech which covered a multitude of domestic. problems, touched on foreign policy, and described "prejudice and intolerance" as one of the country's major short- comings. Two bills providing for the setting up of a permanent Fair Employment Practices Commis- sion were introduced in the House at the opening session of the 81st Congress by Reps. Adam Clayton Powell of New York and James Fulton of Pennsylvania. A bill calling upon the United States to remove its embargo on the shipment of arms to Israel was introduced in the House by Rep. Emanuel Celler. The same measure was first introduced by Celler during the last Congres- sional session. AJC's 42nd Annual Meeting Set in N. Y. NEW YORK—Major domestic and foreign activities of the American Jewish Committee for 1949, including the campaign for domestic civil liberties and inter- national human rights and rela- tions between America and Israel, will be determined at the forty- second annual meeting of the committee at Hotel Astor here, Jan. 21 to 23, it was announced by Ely M. Aaron of Chicago, chairman of the arrangements committee and head of the Chi- cago chapter of the AJC. Benjamin V. Cohen, United States delegate to the United Na- tions and former counselor of the Departemnt of State, will be the guest speaker at a dinner Jan. '22, addressing the meeting of national Jewish leaders on "The World-Wide Struggle for Human Rights." TEL AVIV, (JTA) — The central committee set up by the State Council to supervise the parliamentary elections sched- uled to be held Jan. 25 announced that 22 groups submitted lists of candidates, all of which have been approved. Leading the list on the Mapai (Labor Party) ticket are David Ben Gurion and Moshe Shertok. the list of Mapam — United Workers Party — is headed by Itzhak Tobenkin and Meir Yaari. The . Mizrachi-Agudah list is headed by Rabbi J. L. Fishman of Mizrachi and Rabbi M. Lewin, Agudah leader. General Zionists have put Dr. Fritz Bernstein and Mayor Israel Rokach as first on their list of candidates. Freedom Movement named Menachem Beigin and Uri Zvi Grinbergi Progressive Zion- ists have Dr. Felix Rosenblueth and Dr. Abraham Granovsky. Zionist-Revisionist Party headed its election list with Dr. N. Alt- versity basketball team, is the man and Baruch Weinstein. hero of the exposure of the at- tempted "fix" of a Madison Square Gardens basketball game. Shapiro, a World War II veteran, JANUARY FUR SALE! DRASTIC REDUCTIONS reported to police that he had been offered $1,000 to "throw" a game with Manhattan College. ON COAT'S and Hebrew U. Professor Among Crash Victims ROME, .(JTA) — The remains of eight Jews who died in an aircrash some 65 miles north of here last week while en route from Israel were buried in the town of Orbetello, near the scene of the tragedy. . A special Italian air..force_ unit attended the services, which were conducted by Rome's Chief Rabbi, Dr. David Prato, and at which the local Police orchestra played funeral music. Among the victims were Prof. I. Farkas, nofed Hebrew University chemistry professor, and Asher Branzel and Moshe Zeidler, Jewish Agency representatives. The Communist list is headed by L Mikunis and an Arab, Tew- fik Toubi. The Popular Arab Bloc, sponsored by Mapam, and the Arab Workers Bloc, under the auspices of Mapai, have each also submitted lists of candidates. Fighters, for Israel submitted a list headed by, Nathan Friedman- Yellin and Sheikh Abu Gush. Other' groups which registered seperate lists of candidates in-. elude Haoved Hadati, religious laborites affiliated with the ,Histadrut; Women's International Zionist Organization; Hapoeleth, Mizrachi labor women's group; Sephardic Community and Agu- das Israel Separatists. The , Arabs in Nazareth have filed an independent list, as did the Arabs of Haifa. A separate list has been also registered by Jerusalem Jews, headed by Mayor Daniel Auster. Yemenite Jews present a list of their own. There also is a list known as the Sepa- ratist Jerusalem Bloc. 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