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be taking two forms. The first is an intellectualized type that poisoned German public life during the Sec ond Reich and the Weimar Repub lic and led to murderous excesses under Hitler. The second manifes tation falls into the category of hooliganism, principal aspect of which has been the defiling of Jew ish cemeteries and the overturning of hundreds of headstones. The one encouraging sign, how ever, is the attempts of the Ronn government to deal with the mat ter. The State Court in Offenburg, State of Wurttemberg-Raden, re cently sentenced a secondary school biology and mathematics teacher to a year’s imprisonment for slanders against German Jews and Israel. It is also reported that in Hanover, Lower Saxony, an investigation has been ordered of a secondary school teacher said to have made similar outrageous statements against Jews. The basis for the year’s imprison ment was the statement made by the defendant that “ too few Jews were gassed in the concentration camps of the Third Reich.” The newspaper Neue Ruhr Zeitung said concerning the matter: “ It was not Herr Zind who faced the court, society was on trial, a society that tolerated a Zind and made it pos sible for him to behave as he did.” Complaint Posters in Red China It is reported that communist China’s month-long campaign of encouraging citizens to voice their daily complaints in posters is going strong, with hardly a wall left un covered. Millions of posters have been plastered on walls of schools, hospitals, offices, factories and even private bedrooms. Despite the del uge and shortage of wall space, citizens are being invited to pro duce more posters in the “ rectifi cation” campaign. The campaign began last year with the aim of exposing incompe tent officials and critics of the com munist regime. Recently it has been switched to grievances of the average citizen in his daily life. Many arrests have marked the campaign. Several Chinese em ployees of Western embassies have been detained. The meaning of the campaign is not clear yet, but it in no way indicates a democratization of communist China. END.
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Biola School of Missionary Medicine Tra in ing W ith Purpose diversified > accelerated > accredited sr
Nursing Courses for 4, 8 or 12 months. Classroom, labora tory and hospital instruc tions and experience. The 12-month course qualifies the graduate to take the California State Board Ex amination and obtain the LV .N degree. Classes start in Septem ber and January.
Dentistry Four-month course. Ap proved by State of Califor nia Board of Dental Exam iners, Department of Voca tional and Professional Standards. Offered in one semester. Practical training in missionary dentistry. Doctors of Dental Science instruct all classes and lab oratory work. Classes start in January.
All courses are open to: Christian missionaries, pros pective or on furlough, men or women workers, who may be stationed in areas remote from qualified medical care.
Dispensary Four-month course. Gives training in laboratory anal ysis and clinical practice. Instruction on how to set up a dispensary and how to deal intelligently with com mon ailments. Classes start in January. Biola School of M ISS IONARY MEDICINE a school of The Bible Institute of Los Angeles, Inc. 558 So. Hope St., Los Angeles 17, Colif.
The King's Business/.)uly 1958
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