European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - May 29, 1985, Darmstadt, Hesse Page 8 it the stars and stripes May Man who judged nazi War criminals Dies at 92 now lenders on the basis of International Laws that tired a William Chris War who was a judge at the Nuernberg trials of nazi War has died at the age of Christiansen died monday in red after a nine month stint on the Minnesota supreme Christiansen was named in 1947 by Lucius the army commander in to serve on the Nuernberg military tribunal that tried German industrialist Friedrich flick and his associates controlled the largest private r steel manufacturing business in Germany during world experience like the younger War flick and two associates were found guilty of father is u id i am Fujil t 1imvi w Spring of most of the 21 whose num Bers included is generals and directors of nazi espionage were convicted of planning aggressive War and other War Christianson said the Nuernberg trials were the highlight of his fathers not Many people in the Law business have had an like the younger Christiansen Christianson said his father was careful to judge the i against he said his father was proud of the fact that the Nuernberg tribunals helped establish in International Law the principle that obeying the orders of military superiors is no excuse for committing War when Christianson returned to Minnesota in he was appointed judge in the first judicial he held that Post until he retired in vietnamese Man beaten by Boston mob 1 arrested Boston a police Are seeking 14 people in an attack on a vietnamese Man who was surrounded by a crowd and beaten As his aunt watched one Man arrested in connection with the incident faced arraignment Michael of South was charged with armed assault in a dwelling and was being held in lieu of Cash police police commissioner Francis Roache called the attack a cowardly police said they haunt determined if the attack was racially but Roache said sunday that there clearly were racial epithets aimed at the he turned the Case Over to the neighbor Hood disorders which investigates cases of suspected racism and civil rights Francis an aide to mayor Ray mond said Flynn called from Rome to express his concern to Thomas a Boston firefighter married to the vietnamese mans a detective who asked to remain unidentified it is the first time there has been a Case like this in South usually it is or Whiten Black in South not anything involving according to his Hung was watching television in an apartment in burkes House saturday morning when two men broke through a screen and climbed in a when Hua chased them he was surrounded and beaten by several in the crowd of about and Linh who went to Huas was forcibly restrained by neither Hua nor Linh Burke required medical a former said he and wife have lived in South Boston for 10 years and sponsored some 20 vietnamese immigrants without any those kids Here were just Burke it Doest reflect on the whole most of the town is very positive and Toler ant to other working this was a few kids who were troublemakers had too much to drink and thought they could get away with Wisconsin peace ribbon stresses nuclear War fears a peace demonstrators circled the state Capitol with a half mile multicoloured Banner in a display the governor called a wonderful expression of an estimated 300 people held the peace which sponsors said was made up of More than fabric 3 feet wide and 2 feet designed by scores of school and peace groups in Wisconsin and other the theme of the panels was what i cannot stand to think of As lost forever in a nuclear the Banner extended More than twice around the a sponsor said the pan Els Are to be sent to where they will become part of an even larger ribbon to be wrapped around the Pentagon on the 40th anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Anthony Earl praised the participants for their Handiwork and dedication to i think this is a wonderful expression of concern for peace from people throughout Earl i Hope this message gets conveyed to our people in Earl accompanied three citizens of the soviet Union from his office to the Entrance of the where the ceremony was held shortly after the More traditional me Morial Day Observance was concluded in the statehouse about 250 people attended the tradition Al Holiday speakers told of a need for More people to devote themselves to Leaf lets were passed out calling for a National Day of fast when president Rea Gan and Robert Kasten r Are to be in where the presi Dent is to make a speech about his Tare form show your disapproval of administration policies toward Central the leaflets schools top Choice of foreign College students Carrier returns Home the Nirott Dass nuclear powered Airton Carrier sails into san Francisco Craft Carrier Carl Vinson is framed by Bay toward her to report after a the Golden Gate Bridge As the Ocean new York up the United states is the top Choice of foreign students who go abroad for a College according to a report by the Institute for International engineering and the Fields most sought by foreign also Are the majors most in demand by american said the report on student enrolment in the year 1979 and foreign student the Fields of lesser interest to foreigners Educa Tion also Are not top choices for Ameri can the report said that of nearly students studying abroad in 1979 in four major Host the United states accounted for some or the other major Host countries Are with students or percent Ger or and the United with or other highlights of the report compared with other Host the United states plays an especially important role in educating foreign students in the natural Law and social thirty percent of All foreign students in the United states Are enrolled in Only 1 percent of the leading National senders of foreign students to the United in descending order Hong saudi Ara South about two thirds of the worlds foreign students come from developing foreign students Are More inclined to opt for science degrees than Are Domestic and on the Are get Ting a More expensive education than the average american at All degree the proportion of foreign degree recipients who receive any institutional subsidy toward the Cost of their eduction is relatively
