Report Jews Can Leave Pobnd Freely Proves False; Gonaka Opens Anti-Semitic Pandora Box JERUSALEM (JTA) — Official sources said here Sunday that there are no grounds for a report pub- lished in London that Polish Jews have been given freedom to emi- grate and that a mass aliya (im- migration) has developed to Israel. According to government circles, the Jewish Agency and the Asso- ciation of Polish Jews in Israel, there has been no aliya whatso- ever from Poland since last June's Six-Day War when Poland severed diplomatic relations with Israel. These sources said they had no information about facilities for Jews waiting to leave Poland. A survey of various European capi- tals by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency confirmed that there has been no movement of Jews out of Poland in recent months. Gomulka Spurs Bias WASHINGTON (JTA) — Am- bassador John Gronouski, who ten- dered his resignation Wednesday as U.S. envoy to Poland, has re- ported here to members of Con- gress that Warsaw is the scene of a bitter power struggle marked by virulent anti-Semitism. He never- theless urged rejection of the Bnai Brith recommendation that Poland should be deprived of its "most- favored-nation" status. It was learned that the ambassador said that long-range hopes of reducing tensions and encouraging liberal elements in Poland justified the United States in continuing to ex- tend special tariff privileges denied to the USSR. The "most-favored- nation" status was extended to MAC-O-LAC PAINT SALE! ONE COAT DOES THE JOB Achieve a true plastic finish with his super Latex paint. Use it on .1I your interior work, just one t does the job. No offensive odor while painting, yet in just 30 minutes you can move all you Warsaw in 1960, mainly because of liberal steps taken after 1956. Ambassador Gronouski said that Poland's crisis was precipitated last June when Communist Party chief Wladylsaw Gomulka slavish- followed Moscow's anti-Israel line on the Six-Day War and thereby antagonized many Poles including some party officials He said that out of sheer frustration Gomulka intemperately attacked Polish Jewry charging that Jews were "Zionists" and therefore potential traitors. This, said the ambassador, opened a Pandora's box of anti- Semitism. Gomulka is being challenged by Gen. B. Moczar, interior minister, a doctrinaire Communist who also dabbles in anti-Semitism. The gen- eral appears likely to improve his power political position in t h struggle with Gomulka, the envoy reported. But he expressed doubt that Gomulka would lose his post, although other leaders may fall at a party congress to be held next winter. British Express Concern About Fate of Toeplitz, Polish Film Figure LONDON (JTA) — Officials of the Internationlal Federation of Film Archives expressed anxiety over the absence of news about the group's president, the prominent Polish film director Prof. Jerzy Toeplitz, who was a recent victim of the ongoing purge of Jews from top posts in the government- controlled Polish film industry. Ac- cording to the Sunday Observer, Prof. Toeplitz was expected in Lon-. don where he was due to chair the federation's annual congress which opened here Thursday. Toep. litz was dismissed last month as director of the Polish Film, School in Lodz. The Polish embassy here declined to furnish information about his whereabouts. It is as- sumed that the Warsaw authori- ties are preventing him from leav- ing Poland because they don't want to see him win any further esteem abroad, the Observer said. Prof. Toeplitz has been president of the federation for 20 years. (Prof. Toeplitz and other promi- nent Jews purged from the Polish film industry were the subjects of a letter published in the New York Times over the weekend protest- ing the "current anti-Semitic ac- tions in Poland." The letter was signed by 13 of America's leading film critics, all members of the National Society of Film Critics. They named Prof. Toeplitz, Alek- sander Ford, Jan Rybowski and Jerzy Bossak, among other leaders of Poland's film arts, who were purged because they are Jews.) (The N.Y. Times reported from Warsaw that the official Polish Press Agency, PAP, has renewed its charges that Jewish police and e Hebrew U. to Reopen Scopus Campus in Fall PRICE GAL. 1 White and Colors furnishings back and the room is perfectly dry. 300 modern dec orator nonfode colors to choose from. Surface is not only washobl- -it's scrubbable. Simply clean up with water. See Yellow Pages 1051-1052 for dealer nearest you. JERUSALEM (JTA) — Hebrew University classes on Mt. Scopus in the Old City of Jerusalem will be attended by some 2,500 students beginning next fall, university pres- ident Avraham Harman told the press here. Prior to the Six-Day War, when the Old City was seized from Jordan by Israel, the Scopus uni- versity facility, abandoned 19 years earlier during the 1948 War of Independence, had been inacces- sible except for United Nations- escorted Israeli troops who oc- cupied the Scopus enclave. The main campus of the univer- sity was built in the Israeli-held section of Jerusalem following the 1948 war. The government would pay half the cost of repairing the existing buildings and erecting new ones, Harman said. ghetto administrators collaborated with the Nazis in the extermina- tion of Polish Jews during World War II. The charges were first. published during the height of Poland's so-called "anti-Zionist" campaign when "Zionists" and "discredited Stalinists" were ac- cused of fomenting student unrest. Monday's PAP story, however, said that the alleged collaborators "were in face only a small fraction of the Jewish population, but did many irreparable wrongs." The Times' Warsaw correspondent, Jonathan Randal, reported that the Roman Catholic Church in Po- land is highly sensitive to charges that the political crisis has pro- duced anti-Semitism. "High church sources prefer to see the 'anti- Zionist' campaign, its attendant purge of some Jews and the re- pression of intellectuals less in terms of discrimination than as a settling of accounts among Com- munists," Randal wrote.) Sen. Scott Urges Protest of Polish Anti-Semitism NEW YORK (JTA) — Sen Hugh Scott, Pennsylvania Republican, said "the United States govern-. ment should express its concern to the Polish government" over the mounting wave of anti- Semitism in Poland. Addressing a dinner tendered by the Yeshiva University Graduate School of Science, Scott urged stronger pro- tests to relieve the Jewish plight. Sen. Scott noted that some Com- munist bloc nations were signaling their independence from Moscow by displaying a friendly attitude toward Israel or Jews. He cited Romania's refusal to sever diplo- matic relations with Israel and more r e c e n t developments in Czechoslovakia. Although Czecho- slovakia severed relations with Israel during the Six-Day War, "its public attacks never have been especially virulent," he said. He noted that the Council of Jewish Communities in Prague has re- ported good relations with the gov- ernment, and preparations for the celebration of 1,000 years of Jewish culture in that country are under way. Boycott of Israeli Books TEL AVIV (JTA) — The Israeli Book Publishers Association Tues- day denounced the Polish govern- ment's boycott of Israeli books and books on Israeli subjects. The publishers declared that every country has an obligation to open its doors to all books. The boycott of Israel's books can only undermine international trust, the statement said. The Israeli delegation to the in- ternational publishers convention in Amsterdam next month will sub- mit a resolution censuring Poland for its book boycott. (The New York Times reported from Warsaw Tuesday that Poland has acknowledged for the first time that its current "anti-Zionist cam- paign is hurting its foreign trade." The Polish press agency PAP said that "several Western trade con- cerns" that canceled contracts with Poland were motivated by "clearly militant Zionism" but added that its effect on Polish trade with the West was negligible, the Times said.) THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 16—Friday, May 24, 1968 British Chief Rabbi Immanuel Jakobovits Sends Sympathies to Decimated Greek Jewish Community (Direct JTA Teletype Wire An inscription on the momument to The Jewish News) notes that "Between 1939 and 1945, LONDON—Britain's Chief Rabbi 18,000 prisoners from 13 European Immanuel Jakobovits sent a mes- countries were done to death here sage of sympathy on behalf of the by the Hitlerite murderers." Anglo-Jewish community Tuesday to the Jews of Greece, who have just marked the 25th anniversary of the destruction of the Jewish community of Salonika by the Nazis. The message was addressed to Dr. Joseph Lovinger, president of the Central Council of Greek-Jewish communities. Salonika had the SEE OR CALL largest Jewish community in Greece prior to World War II. Only a remnant survives there today. AT It was reported here from War- saw Tuesday that representatives of some 20 Jewish and non-Jewish organizations placed wreaths on the site of Mila 18, whfch housed the high command of the Jewish Cadillac ghetto fighters during the Warsaw 1350 N. Woodward Birmingham Ghetto resistance. A monument was unveiled at the MI 4-1930 site of the Stutthof concentration Res. 357-0326 camp to mark the 23rd anniversary of its liberation from the Nazis. VIC DOUCETTE WHAT KIND OF MAN READS 3 YEARS OF SCHOOL BOARD MINUTES? DR. MERVYN LAKIN DOES because education is important to MERV LAKIN and .. . because children and their ability to cope with the future, is important to MERV LAKIN and because Southfield's citizens are con- cerned about the quality of their schools/ teachers, texts and curri- culum content and . . . because he DOES care MERV LAKIN read 3 years of school board minutes and announces his candidacy for Southfield School Board ELECT HAROLD M. VIZER OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRUSTEE