Jewish community marks of Nazi destruction By ANNE THOMPSON Associated Press Writer BERLIN With a "march of silence" and plans for new syna gogues, Germany's Jewish commu nity marked the 60th anniversary yesterday of Kristallnacht the "Night of Broken Glass" when Nazi storm troopers burned and ransacked Jewish businesses and temples. Germany's Jewish community numbered 530,000 before the Nazis took power; it now is 70,000 strong and growing. But neo-Nazi inci dents also are on the rise, and Jew ish leaders are more determined than ever that the Holocaust not be forgotten fighting what they see as a trend toward emphasizing Germany's future at the expense of remembering its past. Politicians, including Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, religious lead ers and members of the Jewish community gathered for anniver sary speeches in a cavernous, mosaic-covered Berlin synagogue where windows were shattered during the Kristallnacht violence that presaged the Holocaust. Topic No. 1: How to remember the past while moving Germany into the 21st century and its seat of government back to Berlin, Adolf Hitler's capital. Underscoring all the speeches was the theme that You're always in a rush, r i r ; 3 1 J but you need to make time to recycle. A' the daily Collegian %lc:10 Lose - omething? Check at the HUB Desk! anniversary Germans still struggle for the right way to preserve the horrors of the Holocaust as a lesson for future generations. Ignatz Bubis, the leader of Ger many's Jews, lambasted what he calls an "intellectual nationalism" represented in comments by a prize-winning German author who says repeated media references to Nazi atrocities are designed to per petuate German guilt. Bubis contends novelist Martin Walser has given neo-Nazis main stream arguments for anti-Semitic assaults, such as the small swastikas found yesterday etched into a monument commemorating the mass deportation of Berlin's Jews to concentration camps. "Whenever someone who is counted among the spiritual elite of the nation makes such statements, they carry a weight of their own," Bubis told the audience of 2,000. "It is certain that right-wing extrem ists will refer to Walser." The Kristallnacht anniversary has particular significance this year, which saw the election of politicians too young to have mem ories of World War 11. The genera tional change, coupled with the move to Berlin and the new gov ernment's emphasis on a forward looking Germany, has sparked con cern that there is a desire to return to a "normal" Germany unbur Police check a Jewish stone monument on a railway bridge in Berlin yesterday on the 60th anniversary of the "Kristallnacht" pogrom in Germany and Austria. Three small swastikas had been scratched into the monument. It is unknown when the vandalism occurred. dened by the Holocaust. "For me, normality is to be a Jew and to be able to live in Germany again," Bubis said. "'Normality' cannot mean that we supplant memory and live with a new anti- Semitism and new racism." Berlin's Jewish community held The Student Book Store Collegian an d the daily $lOO SBS gift certificate given away weekly Congratulations to previous winners! How to Play: Complete the entry form on right. Select the winners of each game and answer the tiebreaker. Fill in the information at the botton and drop off your entry at The Daily Collegian office by 5 p.m. every Friday or at SBS by 5:30 p.m. every Friday. Rules: 1. The winner will be the person who chooses the highest number of winning teams out of the 20 games. The winner will receive a $lOO gift certificate from SBS. 2. Mark an "X" in the appropriate box indicating which team you think will win. Games not marked will be considered a wrong selection. If you think the game will end in a tie, place an "X" in the last column. Home teams appear in the right column. 3. Employees, and their families, of SBS and Collegian Inc. are not eligible for the I NI entries must be received at Collegian Of fi ces contest. by 5 p.m. Friday or at SBS by 5:30 p.m. Friday 4. Only one entry per person please. Additional official entry forms can be picked up at The Daily Collegian or The Student Book Store. 5. In case more than one person picks the most number of winners a tiebreaker will be used to determine the winner. If a tie still exists after the tiebreaker is 1: 11 i appli- 1 the gift certificate will be divided among the winners. All decisions will be final. 237-7616 6. Winners will permit Collegian Inc. and SBS to use their names and photos and 330 E. College Ave. other pertinent information for news, advertising, and promotional purposes. The Big Blue on www.thestudentbo the Corner! okstore.com AP Photo/Jan Bauer its first "march of silence" yester day in remembrance of Kristall nacht. Some 2,000-3,000 people formed a sea of umbrellas on a dark, drizzling afternoon. A march also was held in Duesseldorf, along with ceremonies in Buchenwald, Frankfurt, Hamburg and Munich. Reward offered for killer of doctor By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. Attorney General Janet Reno posted a $500,000 reward for capture of the sniper who killed Dr. Barnett Slepi an, and she set up a national task force to prosecute and prevent attacks and threats against other abortion providers. The slaying of Slepian last month by a rifle shot fired into his subur ban Buffalo, N.Y., home "was just one more act of violence in a series of savage attacks against providers of reproductive health care," Reno told a news conference yesterday. She noted that: ■ Four other abortion doctors in upstate New York and Canada have been shot and wounded in recent years. • Twenty clinics in Florida, Louisiana and Texas were splashed this summer with foul-smelling butyric acid. ■ Two North Carolina clinics suffered arson attacks and attempted bombings this fall. ■ And 10 clinics in Indiana, See Your Name Here When You Win Football Challenge National Guard to help rebuild Mitch damage By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER AP Military Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. Thou sands of U.S. Army National Guard troops could be heading for Central America to help rebuild nations that were devastated by Hurricane Mitch, the Army's top civilian leader said yesterday. Some 3,000 Guard members had been slated to travel to Honduras on a variety of exercises between January and June of next year, but the destruction wrought by the storms in the region necessitates taking a new look at their activi ties, Army Secretary Louis Caldera told reporters at the Pentagon. "We are ... going to look at the planned engagement activities that we have not just in the coming year, but in the years following that to see how we can enhance those programs, because the recov ery effort to rebuild the infrastruc ture in those affected countries is going to be a long-term effort and certainly one that we can help con tribute to," Caldera said. The Army secretary visited Hon duras, Nicaragua and Guatemala over the weekend to meet with local officials and the top U.S. mili tary commander for the region, in Tennessee, Kansas and Kentucky received letters last month falsely claiming to contain deadly anthrax spores "These attacks and others seek to undermine a woman's basic con stitutional right the right to reproductive health care," Reno said. "And while some people may oppose that right, no one should ever use violence to impede it." In announcing the $500,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Slepian's killer, Reno asked anyone with informa tion to call 1-800-281-1184. The new National Clinic Violence Task Force will be headed by Bill Lann Lee, acting assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department's civil rights division. Since 1994, the division has brought 27 criminal and 17 civil cases under the federal Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act. Neither Reno nor Lee would say there is evidence of a national con spiracy behind the attacks, but Reno said the task force would focus on "connections that may exist between individuals engaged College Win Home ❑ Penn State ❑ Indiana ❑ Michigan ❑ Michigan State ❑ lowa ❑ Virginia ❑ Syracuse ❑ Kansas State ❑ Stanford ❑ Washington ❑ Texas Tech ❑ New Mexico ❑ Pitt ❑ Duke 13 Auburn Pro Pittsburgp ❑ Tennessee Philadelphia ❑ Washington Tampa Bay ❑ Jacksonville Miami ❑ Carolina Green Bay ❑ NY Giants Tiebreaker: Total Points Scored in the Northwestern/Penn State game. Information Visitors Northwestern Minnesota Wisconsin Purdue Ohio State North Carolina Virginia Tech Nebraska Washington State UCLA Texas Utah Boston College Maryland Georgia • City: I State Phone The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Nov. 10, 1998 an attempt to help coordinate the American military's response to the crisis The 3,000 Guard members haj been slated to work on engineering projects in Honduras. Their expertise might prove valuable in helping the region rebuild its fractured infrastruc ture, the secretary said. Often in the past they have built structures such as schools or med ical clinics. Caldera said the members were expected to come from units throughout the country. "We would not change the flow (of units), but it would change the projects they would do," he said. Nearly 1,000 Army troops are in the region, primarily helping to switch food and medicines from incoming planes onto Army heli copters. They are then flying to areas that have been made other wise inaccessible by damaged roads and bridges. The Army has flown 221 mis sions and transported some 376 tons of food and emergency med ical supplies, the official said. The Army Corps of Engineers is working on an assessment of the damage in order to set priorities for repairs, Caldera said. in these acts." Lee said his team would review investigations of the attacks and threats "looking at the national picture." From mid-1994 until early 1996, a federal grand jury in suburban Alexandria, Va., searched in vain for evidence of a national conspira cy behind an earlier wave of anti abortion violence. But it did find evidence used later by other feder al grand juries to bring indict ments in several clinic arson cases around the country. The new task force will use fed eral grand juries to gather evi dence wherever attacks or threats occurred, a senior federal official said, requesting anonymity. The task force will also will train local law enforcement and abortion providers in how to respond to and prevent such attacks. Two training sessions are already scheduled for December. Reno said she wanted federal prosecutors to share information about the requirements for a FACE Act prosecution, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to provide data on bombs. mi. al; Collegian James Building, Dept. F 123 S. 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