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May 08, 1970 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-05-08

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Slain Coeds Buried With Prayers for Peace

(Continued from Page 1)

been in vain. Perhaps this will
bring the realization that we must
strive for world peace."

Miss Krause was with her boy-
friend when the national guards-
men opened fire on the campus
mob. She reacted too slowly,
as her boyfriend dropped to the
ground. She fell dead.

and points of view is radical. Time did not say who is specu-
Allison was radical—if being full lating about the intent of this state-
of love and full of life is radical. ment but noted that "the Israelis,
"Then. my God, may v.•e all be at least, hoped" that this was
Nixon's intention.
so radical."

Israel Reported Concerned
Fall of Cambodiann Regime Will
Encourage Russians in M. E.

At the funeral in the Burton
L. Hirsch Chapel in Pittsburgh,
Rabbi Howard Graber told how,
just a few moments before her
death, Hiss Krause had said to
her companion, "How nice, how
wonderful the individual national
guardsmen are." She had put a
flower in a rifle of a statue on
campus and said, "There should
be flowers in the barrels, not
bullets."
The nation looks upon Allison as
the symbol "of the result of hu-
man violence," said Rabbi Graber.
"Let us pray to stop this hatred
and heal this wonderful country
so that her tragic end is not in
v a in."
In the procession coming back
from Betty Rosenberg Cemetery,
Dean NI. J. Lunine of the Kent
State University Honors College,
said of Miss Krause, whom he
knew well:

"Allison was radical—if being
young and bright and warm is
radical. Allison was radical—if
having a sense of justice and a
sense of honor and a sense of
humor is radical.

for all kinds of ideas and opinions draw the appropriate conclusions."

"Allison was radical—if having
an open mind and a great thirst

Al's

mavan Sa y s Israel
Seeks to Avoid
Clash With Russia

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Time
magazine, in a release to the news

media, reported that an unnamed
,"high Israeli diploma t" has
(Continued from Page 1)
"hinted" in a statement to the
magazine that the government of
Gen. Dayan reported 89 casual-
Israel is gravely concerned about ties there, including 27 dead. in
the outcome in Cambodia fearing April, compared with 47 casualties
that the fall of the new Cambodian and nine dead in Nlarch. "I hope
regime would encourage the Rus- we will be in a position to reduce
sians to increase their activity in these figures even if the Egyptian
the Middle East. initiative continues," he said.
Time quoted the diplomat as "I will call for a considerable
saying: "If the U.S. lets (Cam- military effort, but I trust we shall
bodian Premier) Lon Nol down, achieve the necessary results," he
the Russians will conclude that said.
the Americans have gone soft. It
Gen. Dayan said it was signifi-
will also be very bad news for cant that the U.S. has not de-

manded an Israeli retreat from

the cease-fire lines to avoid a
Time also reported that there is
speculation NIT.. Nixon intended clash with the Russians. "1 "We
do not believe that Russian inter-
some of his remarks in his speech
vention will go as far as the
to the nation on Cambodia as a
coded message to the Soviets re- Americans in Vietnam," Gen.
garding their increasingly active Dayan said.
"Against Russian intervention v•e
role in the Nliddle East conflict.
According to Time, the specula- can only make it clear that we are
tion involves these words by the ready to fight physically to hold
President: "Any government that our lines even if the Egyptians get
chooses to use these actions as a Soviet assistance. If We do not, no
pretext for harming relations with one would come to our aid, and
the United States will be doing so nobody will fight our war."
on its own responsibility and on
its own initiative, and we will Sabbatarian Charges Bias

NCJW's Mrs. Weiner Criticizes
Nixon's Unilateral Cambodia Action

NEW YORK (JTA) — President! of interfaith activities of the Union
Nixon's unilateral decision to send' of American Hebrew Congrega-
American troops into Cambodia,1 tions in New York, said the failure
acting neither on the request non of organized Jewry to participate
with the consent of the Cambodian, . in the anti-war movement "jeopar-
government, was deplored by the 1dizes the credentials of the Jewish
National Council of Jewish' community with its own youth who
Women. ! reject a parochial approach to the
Mrs. Leonard H. Weiner of De-1 issue's of war and peace in the
troit, president of the NCJW, world."
Rabbi Brickner was interviewed
stated that the President's deci-

sion, arrived at without the ben'- by the Jewish Telegiaphic Agency
fit of 'congressional participation, following his arrest in Washington.
is in direct violation of the Geneva D.C., April 30, along with 74 other
Conventions. It is difficult to "eon:- clergymen and laymen who were
prebend why as crucial a decision holding an anti-war prayer service

as this should have been made across the street from the White
without the involvement of Con- House.
Rabbi Brickner and the others
gress." Mrs. Weiner stated.
were charged with disorderly con-
By "sending troops into Cam-
bodia, the President has gone duct and failure to move on. They
cempletelv counter to his assur- ' were released on bail.

at Metropolitan Life

NEW YORK (JTA)—The New
York State Division o f Human
Rights will hold a public hearing
soon to investigate charges of
Sabbath discrimination lodged ag-
ainst the Metropolitan Life Insur-
ance Co. by an Orthodox Jew•
according to an announcement by
Julius Berman, president of the
National Jewish Commission on
Law and Public Affairs (COLPA).
He said that plansr
-f-(3 the hear-
ing, the date for u ich has not
yet been set, followed a finding by
a senior field representative of
the state division that there was
"probable cause" to believe that
illegal discrimination was being
practiced by the insurance corn- ,
pany in its refusal to offer an
Orthodox Jew, as a computer pro-
grammer, solely because he was a
Sabbath observer. The complaint
is being represented by Howard
Rhine, an attorney w h o is a
COLPA vice president.

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The Reform rabbi recited the
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
benediction that opened the serv- 6—Friday, May 8, 1970
and the world that he would
did
not
attend
as
a
repre•
ice.
He
de-escalate hostilities in south•
sentative of the UMIC but as a
east Asia. Carrying the conflict
member of the Fellowship of Re-
into Cambodia intensifies the
conciliation, Clergymen and Lay-
danger of world conflagration.
men Concerned About Vietnam.
Further, it can only! widen the
Rabbi Brickner said the Vietnam
already painful division of opin-
War
and its escalation was a
ion among the American people
"life or death" issue for Amer-
and can dismay our friends
ica
and
possibly the world.
around the world," she con-
"It should not be considered an
cluded.
Meanwhile, an American rabbi issue with which everybody but
castigated the organized Jewish Jews concern themselves," he told
community for "failure to join the JTA, adding that "Jews have

ances to the people of the U.S.

with others of the greater society" a tendency to view the world situ-
in condemning the Vietnam War, ation in a myopic way, through
and its recent expansion by t h e , the prism of the Israeli glass."
United States into Cambodia. Rabbi Brickner said he rejected
Rabbi Balfour Brickner. director ! an analogy. between support for
_
1 American policies in _Vietnam and'
Cambodia and support for Israel.,
S.C.M.,
Rem., Victor, Etc.
He said "the failure of representa-
tives of the Jewish community to
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