of Brandeis University. More than
Brandeis Class of '67
of the senior class, a
WALTHAM, Mass. — A total one-third
honors,
of 378 seniors and 196 graduate total of 139, graduated with
While the papers of Britain Several Jews joined him in the displeasuer know n. Even the
members of Phi Beta
including
44
students were awarded degrees at

How London Papers View Mid-East Situation

Were marveling at the unity of its
Jews and the good will evidenced
by Israel's citizenry, the British
Labor Party was being taken to
task for its "sorry record."
S. J. Goldsmith wrote in the
Jewish Echo of Glasgow, Scot-
land: "Wilson declared that Israel
had a right to exist—for which we
were all very grateful— and
promptly added his advice for it
to commit suicide by sitting there'
and waiting until he would finish
waffling in London, Ottawa and
Washington. George Brown, the
foreign secretary, suddenly be-
came so neutral that he nearly
fell into the Suez Canal bending
Over backwards."
A letter-writer to the Universe
of London had a complaint against
his fellow non-Jews: "In a matter
of days the quarter-million strong
Jewish community in Britain, with
non-Jewish help, raised millions of
pounds to aid Israeli Jews. Can
the five or six million Catholics in
Britain not make an effort to help
their co-religionists, many of whom
are refugees for a second time?
The Economist of London, in
an editorial, wrote "One Arab
doctor said he had forgiven the
Israelis everything when, just
after the end of hostilities, he
saw them bringing Jewish blood
for the hospital's Arab patients."
And, from an editorial in the
Daily Mail: "An elderly Jew and
an Arab in a tarbush embraced
and wept. 'We last saw each other
in 1948,' he explained. The Jew
was expelled from the Jewish

toast."
On the other side of the coin,
an Israeli lieutenant colonel, E.
Tal, wrote in the Sunday Tele-

graph of London: "I discovered
arithmatic text books including

this exercise: 'Three heroic Arab
freedom fighters encountered 12
Israelis. They killed eight of them
—how many Israelis are left?' The
elder children, aged up to 10, had
been writing essays on 'How Nas-
ser will beat the Israelis.' I met a
captured Syrian NCO. He proudly
carried a fountain pen, but his

identity card showed a fingerprint
as his signature. He could not
read or write and the Russian war
material he handled was far over
his head.
London's Sunday Times
printed an, article that noted

usually Gaullist daily, Paris Presse, the 16th commencement exercises
reported that de Gaulle was being
accused of "an acute attack of THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
visceral anti-Americanism, mega-
lomania, soliciting of Arab cus-
tomers, and sabotage of the John-
son-Kosygin meeting."

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

JERUSALEM — Representatives

was issued of prevalent reports
that the government would assume
responsibility for immigration and
would set up an immigration cabi-
net post.

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their village for coffee. An Arab
celebrated his first visit to the new
city by breaking open a bottle of

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NEW YORK (JTA)—Foes of the
use of public funds for religious
schools were studying plans to
appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court
the dismissal by a three-man fed-
eral court panel of a taxpayers'
suit to block federal funds for such
uses. Those instituting the suit
included officials of the American
Jewish Congress.
The two-judge majority ruled
that the plaintiffs — a group of
civic and educational leaders —
had no standing to bring the suit
before the federal courts and that
the court therefore had no jurisdic-
tion. The split decision virtually
assured an appeal directly to the
Supreme Court.
The dissenting opinion, by Fed-
eral Judge Marvin Frankel, con-
tended that the state allowed tax-
payers to attack a "law respecting
an establishment of religion" and
that there was no legal basis for
denying a similar right in the
federal courts.
The suit questioned federal aid
to religious and other non-public
schools under the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act
of 1965. Under that law, such
schools receive federal funds to
finance guidance services, in-
struction in secular subjects and
purchase of textbooks and other
educational materials.
The decision was hailed by
spokesmen for two Orthodox Jew-
ish groups. Reuben Gross, chair-
man of the law commission of
Agudath Israel of America, lauded
the decision and urged the Amer-
ican Jewish Congress "to accept
this further defeat, following its
setback in the New York State
Appeals court decision favoring
state textbook aid."
Marcel Weber, counsel for the
National Jewish Commission on
Law and Public Affairs, said his

organiation, which represents par-
ents of children attending Jewish
day schools, welcomed the federal
court ruling. He said allowing the
suit to proceed "would have

opened up the possibility of the
disruption of many useful pro-
grams."

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quarter in the old city after Israeli
independence. One young Israeli

wine in the street and inviting
passersb y: 'Drink to peace.'

Friday, July 14, 1967-7

Israel Govt. Maps
West Aliya With
Jewish Agency

of the Israel government and the
Jewish Agency met Tuesday to dis-
cuss plans for large-scale immi-
gration from the Western countries
and a program for speedy absorp-
Britain—government and people tion of the new settlers in the life
—"has reacted coolly to impas- of the country.
sioned appeals for aid for Jor-
A decision was reached to make
dan's refugees. Despite the a joint government-Jewish Agency
magnitude of Jordanian distress appeal to Jewish communities
and the bonds between the throughout the world to increase
countries, only 105,000 pounds immigration into Israel and to
had been raised by Britain's strengthen their relationships with
Disasters Emergency Committee. the Jewish state.
Following the meeting, a denial
Time Magazine's Atlantic edition

noted in an editorial that "the
French people, who are over-
whelmingly in support of Israel,
were outraged at de Gaulle's
cynicism. And they made their

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