Banner Graphic, Volume 10, Number 217, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 May 1980 — Page 4
A4
The Putnam County Banner Graphic, May 16,1980
13th anniversary of reunification Celebration in Jerusalem joyous, bitter
c. 1980 N.Y. Times JERUSALEM-The anniversary just marked in this city was a joyous celebration for most of its inhabitants, but filled with grim and bitter memories for others. For the 300,000 residents comprising Jerusalem’s Jewish majority, Wednesday was the 13th joyful anniversary of the city’s reunification during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. But for the city's 100,000 Palestinian Arabs. Wednesday was grimly recalled as the anniversary of the time they came under foreign military occupation. Speaking for his countrymen, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin declared, “Thirteen years ago our parachutists, after a heroic battle, ascended the Temple Mount and reached the Western Wall.
Peace Lutheran will honor 'BO graduates
Peace Lutheran Church, 218 Bloomington St., Greencastle, will have a reception for graduating high school seniors Sunday following the 10:30 a.m. service. Graduating from Greencastle High School are Mary An-
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They liberated David’s city. ... It was one of the greatest days of victory in the annals of the ancient Jewish people. We returned to the source.” But the celebrations that began here Tuesday evening were completely boycotted by the Arab residents. A Palestinian journalist here said, “The Israelis want to tell the world that Jerusalem is fine and flourishing under their occupation, which is nonsense.” The two faces of Israel are often almost superimposed. For example, this week classes of Israeli students have been haj> pily hiking up and down this hilly city, being shown where the walls that divided it from 1948 to 1967 once were. But often accompanying these groups is a man, usually a father of one of the children, who is an army reservist and
derson, who plans to continue her education at Franklin College, and Steve Riley, who will enroll next fall at DePauw University. Also to be honored is Stephen Schlatter, a South Putnam High School graduate who plans to attend Indiana State University. Clergymen urge farms be saved WASHINGTON (AP) - Voicing “alarm and pain” at the deterioration of the family farm system, 15 U.S. religious leaders have urged federal policymakers to encourage preservation of moderate-sized family farms. In a statement submitted at U.S. Department of Agriculture hearings, the religious officials pointed out that 4 million farms have vanished in the last half century and the loss continues at the rate of 30,000 farms a year. The statement called for policies that enable farm families to “earn an equitable return” and that provide farm workers “the basic privileges and protections provided other American workers.” ATLANTA (AP) Membership in the Presbyterian Church U.S. (Southern) declined 1.09 percent last year to 848,142.
has brought along his automatic rifle in case of a terrorist attack. The reunification celebrations were especially big this year because, as one city official said, “It’s our bar mitzvah.” But they were preceded by stone-throwing confrontations, a shooting, .and much heavier than normal army and police patrols, without which there almost surely would have been more violence. Tuesday evening more than 20,000 Israelis gathered at the sultan’s pool just outside the imposing white stone walls of Jerusalem’s old city to applaud an outdoor sound-and-light show featuring nearly a thousand singers and dancers representing the city’s centuries. Those who braved the un-
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The Adamsons, a gospel singing family from Danville, will be in concert at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at Peace Lutheran Church, 218 Bloomington St., Greencastle. Host church for the program will be the Community Church of God, pastored by Rev.
They'll cover 3,250 miles
CLARKS SUMMIT, Pa. (AP) Twelve college students are about to embark on a real crosscountry run all the way from Asbury Park, N.J., to Florence, Ore., a total of 3,250 miles. The runners, who all attend Baptist Bible College in this Lackawanna County community, plan the nonstop relay to benefit the United Cerebral Palsy Association.
seasonably chilly night air to watch the pageant came for more than entertainment. They were demonstrating their determination to keep Jerusalem undivided. Illumination provided by military spotlights, tanks bedecked with flowers and scores of soldiers on guard added to the message of militance. For at least four days before, most Palestinian merchants in East Jerusalem had kept the steel shutters of their storefronts pulled down as part of the protests that in recent weeks have spread throughout the Israeli-occupied Jordan, the area known as the West Bank. It is less than a five-minute drive from Jaffa Street, the flag-bedecked, tourist-filled main street of Jewish Jerusalem to Saladin Street, the main thoroughfare of Arab Jerusalem, where the shops were only opened Monday after
Don Smith. The Adamsons, who have sung in numerous churches, the Indiana State Fair and on the old paddle boat "Belle of Louisville", have recorded two albums, "God is so good" and "This is the time I must sing."
But what the runners really intend by their long run is simply a “new adventure,” according to Tim Flatt, 18, of Perkasie. “It’s just something to do,” Flatt said in a telephone inter“We found out what we wanted to do, then we found the cause second. ” The runners, who will depart Saturday morning from the beach at Asbury Park at 6 a.m., figure their trip to the Pacific Northwest will take 16 days and
Jgtr CONGRATULATIONS-^J class of 1980! ,rtm SsJCBI: i i TOBY BARNETT A RANDY BITE BARNETT MOTOR SALES ' T I
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the merchants were ordered by police to end their strike. It is not certain how many of the Arab businessmen willingly kept their stores closed in a display of Palestinian nationalism and how many were pressured into staying shut by threats from clandestine members of the Palestine Liberation Organization. Some shopkeepers seemed relieved to have Israeli police ordering them to reopen. One said, “I couldn’t do this on my own. You never can tell what might happen.” But others were resentful at having been taken by police from their homes, driven to their stores and compelled to open them and sign pledges to keep them open. “If I had not signed,” said one nervous merchant, “I’d be in jail now.”
seven hours, Flatt said. The runners, composed of two teams of five runners and one backup, will alternate 12-hour shifts. While one team is running, the other team will be resting, he added. Two vans will accompany the runners, and the students will be housed by various church congregations along the way, Flatt said. The students have raised $lO,000 from sponsors, which will be
church
Greenes at Cloverdale Nazarene Church Sunday
Rev. and Mrs. Kyle Greene, missionaries to Nicaragua, will be guests at the Cloverdale Nazarene Church Sunday, May 18. Rev. Greene will be speaking at the 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. services. The Greenes were appointed missionaries to Nicaragua in 1967. They returned last year from the war-torn Central American country and Rev. Greene will discuss how his family has lived through a nightmare of being caught in the midst of a revolt the last 10 months. The Greenes escaped with their lives, but left all their belongings. Rev. Greene also will relate
Interracial friendship sparks ■ legal fight between churches
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - The battle lines are sharply drawn in a war over the friendship between two 14-year-old children, a white girl and a black boy. Allied on one side are the American Civil Liberties Union, the Justice Department and the United Methodist Church. Their legal foe is the Marumsco Christian Church and its private school in Woodridge, which expelled the white girl, Lisa Fiedler, for associating with her black classmate, Rufus Bostic 111. Lisa’s father filed a racial discrimination suit in federal court. The church and school won. The decision is now before the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond. Arguments will be heard June 2. “If we lose this case, it will pit all the civil rights laws against the First Amendment, and let religious groups set standards for racial discrimination,” says Chan Kendrick of the ACLU. The Marumsco Christian Church and its school profess a fundamentalist Christian faith. Its pastor and school principal, the Rev. Aleck Bledsoe, says the Bible teaches against interracial romance and marriage and that it’s a deeply held religious belief of the church. U.S. District Judge Oren Lewis ruled last year, “Based on the defendants’ inter-
REV. KYLE GREENE
how the Nicaraguan church has suffered and is painfully trying
pretation of the Bible, interracial romantic relationships violate their religious tenets, doctrines and beliefs they cannot condone any practice which they believe to be forbidden in conscience.” He rejected Kjedler’s “claim that the defendants’ beliefs are not sincere, (that) they are nothing more than the pastor’s secular philosophy.” “Whether a belief is ‘religious’ and thus deserving of some protection by the First Amendment does not depend on whether the belief is true or false,” the judge said. “Of course, everyone has the right to have a romantic relationship with whom they please but it does not follow that they have a constitutional andor statutory right to remain in a private sectarian school whose conscientious religious beliefs prohibit interracial romancing.” Kendrick, director of the Virginia ACLU, said, “If this is allowed to stand...it will allow organizations, claiming religious convictions, to start chipping away at all the civil rights laws passed in this country. “We are in a unique position ourselves. We usually find ourselves on the side of the religious group, defending its First Amendment rights. But in this case.a church is taking away the rights of a young girl to associate with whomever she wishes, and practicing racial discrimination.” The church and its school are integrated. Rufus attended the school and his father was a deacon in the church. The Bostic family withdrew from the church and Rufus from the school shortly after Lisa’s expulsion.
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to recover. A native of Danville, Ind.j Rev. Greene attended Olive! Nazarene College and was or; dained on the Indianapolis District. Mrs. Greene, a native of Evansville, received her; registered nursing degree frorrj Deaconess Hospital School o| Nursing. The Greenes have daughters, Elizabeth AnnRebecca Eileen and Amy Suzetf te. - ? The public is invited to Sun? day’s services. The church is located at the corner of Grapl and Water streets in Clover! dale. Russell Brewer is tho pastor. t
% * § Lisa and her 11-year-old sis* ter, Charlotte, enrolled in the school for the 1978-79 school year. Rufus and Lisa had been friends at public school in Manassas. Va., where the two families lived. j Bledsoe believed a romantie relationship existed between Lisa and Rufus, and forbade Lisa to continue the relationship or even to talk with Rufus. . * In January 1979, after seeing Lisa and Rufus together, he. expelled her. Later that day, Bledi soe told Lisa’s father she cquJjl return to school if he agreed that she would no longed associate with Rufus. U Fiedler agreed, but began talking informally about the situation with local members ,<rf, the National Association for tljei Advancement of Colored People. ~-L Bledsoe heard about the con-' tact and sent a deacon to Jell Fiedler that if any legal action were taken, Lisa’s expulsion would stand and Charlotte qlso' would be expelled. r *YT»| The United Methodist Churph joined the fight of its own vpl-, ition, contending in its appeals; brief, “The evidence in tips, case simply does not reveal, a deeply held, principled, moral, belief...opposing interracial! romantic relationships.” The Justice Department, si(|ing with the ACLU, points "Oift that the Supreme Court upljaJA the conviction of a “Mormon who violated a state law agairist plural marriages, even though it was his religious duty to prac'J tice polygamy.” The Supreme Court said tn that case, “Laws are made for the government of actions, and while they cannot interfere with mere religious belief and opinion. they may with practices.”-'
