Non-Jews Lead in Protest Against Swastika on Campus

(Continued from Page 1)
of Jewish professors who
met with him on Monday
that the board of governors
of the university would insert
a full-page ad in the paper
expressing their anger.
Dr. Gullen explained that
state law and arrangements
with the Student - Faculty
Council do not allow him to
assume control over the pa-
per. He said his own letters
are not published in it.
Protesters believe, addi-
tionally, that there is a fear
of threats and possible racial
outbursts resulting from
emerging charges that the
administration is not adher-
ing to the principles of free
expression in the Firs(
Amendment.
But groups like Youth for
Peace and Democracy in the
Middle East, under non-Jew-
ish leadershdp, along with
representatives of Jewish
groups on the campus are
planning action to compel an
end to the prejudiced posi-
tion of the South End. They
are submitting articles stat-
ing the facts regarding the
Middle East, Israel, the Zion-
ist movement and the Jewish
position. A leader of this
group said that if this effort
does not meet a fair response
from the editors, there will
be a. organised protest.
Kathy McComsey, local
chairman of the Youth Com-
mittee for Peace and Democ-
racy In the Middle East and
its spokesman on Wayne's
campus, said that her group
is hoping to arouse support
among non-Jewish groups
against the South End's anti-
Semitic expressions.
She is hoping to set up an
open meeting next week for
those interested in expressing.
their views.
Members of Iftllel, Habon-
Im and Hashomer members,
along with the Youth Com-
mittee, plan to write letters
of protest to the South End.
If these are not printed, said
Miss McComsey, they will
make their case before the

A Weekly

Israel Quiz

.

1. Before the Six-Day War
for how many years were
Jews unable to pray at the
Western Wall?
2. What were the tempo-
rary quarters called in which.
the immigrants who arrived
after the establishment of the
State lived?
3. What American Jew is
known for his archeological
discoveries in Israel?
4. Name two important
Israeli newspapers.
5. Approximately how
many Jews have emigrated
to Israel since 1948?
6. With whom in the Bible
is Mt. Carmel associated?
7. Who helped to establish
the wine industry in Pales-
tine?
8. Name the medieval poet
who wrote: "I am in the
West and my heart is in the
East".
9. Which city in Israel, in
ancient and modern times, is
known for its hot mineral
springs?
10. What does the expres-
sion Kibutz Galuyot mean?
Answers to the above clues-
bons on Page 6 of this Issue.

publications board. Several
members of the latter have
expressed interest in the is-
sue, she said.
Especially shocking to the
protesters against the offend-
ing periodical and the offi-
cial university administration
position is the proposal that
was made by President Cul-
len to insert a paid advertise-
ment in the college paper in
the form of an answer to the
attitudes expressed in the
anti-Jewish articles and the
tactics that accompanied
their publication.
It was pointed out that the
South End operates on a bud-
get of $72,000 a year provided
by the university, from tax
funds allocated by the Michi-
gan Legislature. This being
the case, it is argued, the uni-
versity. relinquishes its par-
ental role as publisher of an
organ assigned for editorship
to students and at the same
time fails in its duties to the
citizens of Michigan who fi-
nance the paper with tax dol-
lars In the expectation that
prejudices, bias against •
large community of citizens,
misrepresentations on foreign
issues, will not be a method

of spreading untruths in a
university organ.
Hope was expressed that
the need to take the matter
to the legislature will be
avoided and that there will
be the proper apologies for
the shocking demonstration
of a revived Nazi ideology in
a student periodical. The
swastika on the WSU news-
paper as an insert in the Star
of David, intended as an ac-
cusation against Jews that
they are emulating Nazism,
remains a major Michigan
issue until the hate campaign
Is terminated.
The Rev. Booth com-
menced his anti-Israel prop-
aganda as interim minister
at the First Unitarian-Uni-
versalist Church, Forest and
Cass.
It was in that church in the
1940s and early 1950s, that a
friendly pro-Zionist attitude
was expressed by Unitarian
ministers. The Booth lectures
were one-sided, and the Zion-
ist spokesmen are believed
to have blundered by ignor-
ing him in their failure to ask
for the right to reply and to
present the truth in relation
to Israel's treatment of the

Fire Destroys Boston
Building of Consulate

BOSTON (JTA) — A fire
swept through a multi-story
building here destroying the
offices of the Israeli Con-
sulate and Israeli Tourist
and Aliya Center.

Fire marshals investigat-
ing the blaze said Wednes-
day morning that arson was
suspected.
The building also housed
the Irish Consulate and sev-
eral business firms, includ-
ing a clothing store; where
the fire was suspected to
have started.
Neither fire marshals nor
local fire and city arson
squad officials were pre-
pared to say who started
the fire or against whom the
fire was directed.
Sources here told the Jew-
ish Telegraphic Agency that
it was unlikely that the fire
was a deliberate attempt to
destroy the Israeli offices.
"The likelihood," said one
source, "is that it may have
been aimed at the Irish con-
sulate, and we just happened
to be there." lie noted that
the fire may have destroyed
important official papers, in-

eluding passports, In the Is-
raeli Consulate office.
The source told the JTA
that the Israeli consul gen-
eral, Shlmshon Jabal, had
received threats recently
from persons identifying
themselves as members of
the terrorist Black Septem-
ber movement. Inbars
home in Brookline, a sub-
urb of Boston, has been
under "extra surveillance,"
the source said, and his
childrei- are being escorted
to and from school by
Brookline police.
Meanwhile, the state fire
marshal and Boston city ar-
son squad have been ordered
to continue their investiga-
tion of the fire which caused
an estimated 5400,000 dam-
age to the building.

New Prison Wardens
A group of 22 Georgian im-
migrants in Israel completed
a course that trained them to
become prison wardens. The
immigrants combined their
training program in Asheklon
with a Hebrew ulpan course,
sponsored by the ministry of
education.

Arab population and the jus-
tice of the cause of Jewish
national rebirth.
(In Cleveland, on Tuesday,
Federal Judge Thomas D.
Lambros granted an injunc-
tion to the national Socialist
sentatives to wear swastika
armbands at city council
meetings. Ile based his
ruling on the First Amend-
ment).

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