5 Teachers Quit; Say Director Was in Hitler Youth Briton Sees Pressures Aiding Soviet Jews LONDON, (JTA) — Richard Grossman, Labor member of Par- liament, and authority on Soviet affairs, declared here that "there is a new hope that external pres- sure, if fairly and diplomatically applied, can achieve for Russian Jewry a status it has not enjoyed since the Russian Revolution." Speaking on the BBC Hebrew Service, he said that two recent developments have made Soviet authorities "even more anxious" to silence foreign criticism of their treatment of Russian Jewry. He described these as the sharpen- ing ideological conflict inside the Communist world, and the desire of Soviet Premier Krushchev for a relaxation of tensions with the West. He said these. factors, plus the need to buy American wheat and British fertilizer factories, opened the way for external pres- sures to greatly improve the status of Soviet Jews. The existence of Israel, he added, makes the hope of assimi- lat Russian Jewry "purely uto- pian." With Israel in existence, political Zionism has become the ideology of survival for Russian Jews and "the emotional nexus which binds Russian Jews to Zion is stronger than ever." He assert- ed that, therefore, an essential part of the improvement of the status of Soviet Jewry which the West must seek is a simultaneous improvement "in the Soviet at- titude toward Israel." NEW YORK (JTA)—The ap- pointment of a former Hitler youth movement member, Mrs. Helga Houmere, as director of the International Nursery School, a private institution in suburban Queens, led to protest resignations by five members of the staff of the school. They included four of the school's eight teachers. None of those who quit questioned the educational qualifications of Mrs. Houmere. But they told the school's board they would not serve under Mrs. Houmere because of her Hitler youth background. The__ school is located in the Park way Village development, whose 600 families are about 60 per cent Jewish. Nine of the school's 12 board members are Jewish. Six of the Jewish mem- bers joined with three non-Jewish colleagues in approving Mrs. Hou- mere's appointment. When the furor over the ap- pointment developed, the board gave Houmere an 11-1 vote of con- fidence. Mrs. Phyllis Golding, the head of the school board, said that a consultant who helped screen applicants for the position, and who approved Mrs. Houmere, was Jewish. Mrs. Houmere, who previously had taught in a New York nursery school for nine years, defended herself from the implied charges. She said that, in becoming an American citizen, she had to prove DON FROHMAN CHORUS she was not a Nazi and that, if the staff members at the Flushing May 3rd—Detroit Institute of Arts school had the opportunity, they would realize that her childhood association with the Hitler youth movement "has never had any bearing on my attitude toward all people." He added that such member- ship was compulsory at the time when she was 14 years old. She also said she had attended only one meeting of her youth group and that she abhorred the Hitler philosophy. Jewish Professor Is Beaten Tore Anti-Semitic Paper- From Book-Store Window NEW PALTZ, N.Y. (JTA)—The He said he entered the store bolt," another anti-Semitic sheet. owner of a book store in this uni- and tore the newspaper off the Dr. Robison said Warner told him versity town waived examination if the faculty member tore down window, precipitating an argu- at a preliminary hearing on charges that one, Warner would hit him ment in which Warner allegedly of assaulting a Jewish professor in with the bat. State police testified called him a vile anti-Semitic that college students who gathered a dispute over a display in the name. when the argument became heat- store of anti-Semitic material. The Warner then went behind the ed said they saw the professor owner, James Warner, was freed on bail pending action by the counter, Dr. Robison said, and re- tear down the second sheet and turned carrying a baseball bat and Warner hit him on the back of grand jury on the charges. a newspaper called "The Thunder- the head with the bat. Gerson Robison, professor of mathematics at State University College here, suffered a head 10 — Friday, April 17, 1964 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS wound that required eight stitches. He returned to his teaching duties three days after the alleged as- sault in which he was struck with a baseball bat. Dr. Robison said the fight started when he passed the bookstore and saw a copy of "Common Sense," an anti-Semi- tic publication, posted in the window. That issue had a head- line: "Judaism Is Communism." Melvin Weisz Man of the Month PARCELS TO RUSSIA • CLOTHING • SHOES • YARD GOODS • FOOD INSURED — DUTY PREPAID COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICE TO ISRAEL, RUSSIA & EUROPE AMERPOL Enterprises 11601 JOS CAMPUS AVENUE IT IS A PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCE THAT MELVIN WEISZ HAS received the man-of-the-month award as the most out- standing Representative of our Detroit-Gold agency for the month of March. The award is in recognition of his excellent service to his policy- holders and our Agency during the month of March. RUBEN GOLD, C. L U. GENERAL AGENT 20800 Greenfield Road — 564-5275 — Oak Park MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL Lift Insurance Comp an, SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS • ORGANIZED Ilk TO 8-0382 To Lay Cornerstone for Shalom Aleichem Archives in Israel ' (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV — The cornerstone for Beth Shalom Aleichem will be laid here on April 27 on a plot donated by the Tel Aviv munici- pality, it was announced Tuesday at a special reception. The reception was sponsored by Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lehman of New York on behalf of the Beth Shalom Aleichem Committee. May- or Mordechai Namir and various writers and poets attended the reception. Lehman said the house will serve as an archives for the papers of the famous Yiddish writer which are now held in a New York trust and by his son-in-law, D. J. Berkowitz. The house will also serve as a source of informa- tion for Israeli youth on Jewish life in the past century and will sponsor research on Jewish humor, life and literature. Meyer L. Brown, honorary president of the Farband Labor Zionist Order, a sponsor of the project, also spoke. Yugoslav on UN Force Seeks Asylum in Israel; Belgrade Asks Return JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Is- rael government has been request- ed by Yugoslavia to return a Yugo- slav member of the United Na- tions Emergency Force in Gaza, who surrendered to an Israeli unit in the Negev and requested asy- lum. The details of the incident were reported by Prime Minister Levi Eshkol to the Cabinet. The government has not yet taken a decision on the legal aspects of the matter. According to the Yugoslav re- quest, the • soldier deserted from his unit after he was charged with theft. The soldier acknowledged that he was charged, but said that he is not guilty. Viceroy's got the Deep Weave Filter and the taste that's right! 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