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18 Immigration B. Bull. 1 (1965)

handle is hein.immigration/immigbbu0018 and id is 1 raw text is: 




IMMIGRATION BAR BULLETIN
                                         Published by

        THE ASSOCIATION OF IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY LAWYERS


2 . . Give me your tired, voitr poor, your huddled
masses vearm nq to breathe free . .. I lift my
lamip beside the golden door.


COLUMBIA LAW LIBRARY

   Ub 24 1965


Vol. XVIII                                    JAINUARY-JUNE, 1965                                        No. 1


       MESSAGE OF THE PRESIDENT
                  HELEN E. BERTAs
   In the first six months of my presidency I have been in
the enviable position of being able to bask in the reflected
glory of the achievements of my capable and hardworking
committees.  Because this Association would accomplish
nothing without them I shall devote this entire report to
them.
   I do not forget our various Chapters, but they have
reported to you elsewhere in the ITEmIGRArION BAR BUL-
LETIN and their accomplishments certainly speak for them-
selves.  In their own individual meetings with local
speakers, their liaison conferences with district officials,
their program of cooperation with the Courts in Naturali-
zation Ceremonies, their individual committees for the
assistance of the indigent-in fact, in all of their ac-
tivities-these Chapters advance the cause of immigration
in the highest standards of our Association and I com-
mend them for their excellent work.
   I must, however, make particular reference to our
most distant Chapter-Los Angeles. Late in March, I
had a most enjoyable and    productive visit with this
group, and at which time I met with the members at a
luncheon meeting and then was entertained royally at a
dinner meeting.
   I was most impressed by the many activities of this
Chapter, and particularly by their lawyers' reference pro-
gram and their program for providing legal services for
the indigent. At that time I told them of the activities of
the other Chapters and was told that they would consider
adoping many of them as part of their own program.
While I was there, we spoke at great length regarding
the possibility of a symposium to be sponsored by the Los
Angeles Chapter, but on a regional basis, to include at-
torneys and Service representatives not only from Los
Angeles and San Francisco, but also from the entire West
Coast. I assured this Chapter that the Board was ready
to give any assistance it needed to hold such a symposium.
I look forward to many great things from Los Angeles.
  On the national scene, inv various committee chairmen
and their members have been carrying on their own in-
dividual activities for the best interests of our Association.
                 (('ontined on pay 2)


    RANDOM NOTES FROM THE DESK

                OF THE EDITOR

                EDWARD L. DUBROFF





                  PUBLICATIONS
  Charles Gordon, Deputy General Counsel of the Im-
migration and Naturalization Service, co-author of Gor-

don & Rosenfield's Immigration Law and Procedure, and
adjunct Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law
Center, has written a most timely, interesting and thought
provoking article on The Citizen And The State: Power
Of Congress To Expatriate American Citizens.    This
informative discussion appeared in The Georgetown Law
Journal, Vol. 53, Jan. 1965, pp. 315-364.
  The Code of Federal Regulations have been revised
with respect to the Immigration and Naturalization Ser-
vice (8 C.F.R.), and the Department of State (22 C.F.R.),
as of January 1, 1965. These revisions now appear in
booklet form and replace the former system of a bound
book with yearly pocket supplements. They may be ob-
tained from the Superintendent of Documents, Govern-
ment Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C.  Volume 8
sells for 75 cents and Volume 22 sells for $i.00.
  The Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturaliza-
tion Service, for the year ended June 30, 1964, may now
be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, at a
charge of 75 cents. To the 18 pages of the report are
appended 55 Tables, all containing most valuable informa-
tion for the immigration law practitioner. The Annual
Report of the Attorney General of the United States, for
the year ended June 30, 1961. may also be obtained from
the Superintendent of Documents (cost unknown). This
479 page report contains additional data which the im-
migration law practitioner will find helpful.
  Still axvailable is the Villanova Law Review, Vol. 8, No.
4, Summer 1963. at a charge of *2.00. containing- a 63
page Note on Resident Aliens And Due Process:
Anatomy of A Deportation (pp. 566-628). Address the
Managing Editor, Villanova Law Rexiew. Villanova, Pa.

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