THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
64 Friday, February 28, 1986
NEWS
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Wiesenthal Center
Museum Suit Settled
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MOSHE SHL1R
Los Angeles (JTA) — The
American Civil Liberties Union
and the Simon Wiesenthal
Center announced last week the
settlement of an ACLU lawsuit
challenging a state grant of $5
million for the Center's con-
struction of a Museum of Tol-
erance on its Yeshiva University
campus.
The ACLU filed the lawsuit
last October in Los Angeles
Superior Court on behalf of
David and Rosetta Cohen con-
tending that the grant violated
the State's mandated separation
of church and state. The grant
was approved by the state legis-
lature and signed into law by
Gov. George Deukmejian last
July.
The settlement was announced
at a news conference at the
Greater Los Angeles Press
Club. In a 12-page document
outlining the terms of the settle-
ment; the agreement asserted
that the new building must' be
operated "in a non-sectarian
manner" and its seminar rooms
cannot be used for Yeshiva
classes.
Other terms of the settlement
include a limitation on cross par-
ticipation by board members of
the Center and the University,
and that the Wiesenthal Center
The Jewish Minstrel
Singing Songs from the
Jewish Sort•Ancient and Modern
SUNDAY, MARCH .16
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TEMPLE EMANU-EL
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"shall make no loans, grants or
other uncompensated transfers
of its fund to (Yeshiva) or for
scholarships to students attend-
ing" the Yeshiva.
The new building "will not be
decorated with religious sym-
bols," the agreement stated. It
also said that the title to the
land on which the Museum will
be built is to be transferred from
the Yeshiva to the Wiesenthal
Center.
Wiesenthal Center officials
said a major stumbling block in
the protracted - negotiations
leading to the settlement was
whether the center would re-
main open on the Sabbath and
Jewish holidays. Agreement
was finally reached which
asserted that the Museum will
remain closed on these days,
Center official said.
Construction costs for the
Museum of Tolerance, are ex-
pected to reach $20 million. The
Center has already raised about
$17 million including the state
grant. The museum will be an
80,000-square foot, four story
complex with a 30,000-square
foot for visiting exhibits. Con-
struction is expected to begin
soon, with an expected comple-
tion date set for summer 1987.
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