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CNN Live At Daybreak
Victims of Hebrew University Bombing Being Remembered
Aired August 05, 2002 - 06:07 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
CAROL COSTELLO, CNN ANCHOR: In Massachusetts, a memorial service for Janice Ruth Coulter, one of the American victims of Hebrew University, Coulter would have turned 37 today. All seven people killed in the blast are being honored in both the United States and in Israel.
CNN's Brian Palmer has more.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BRIAN PALMER, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The violence and terror that are tearing apart Israel and the West Bank claimed seven lives last week at Hebrew University, five of them were American.
One, Janis Coulter, a convert to Judaism, was remembered in Massachusetts.
Ben Blutstein was a student and a hip-hop deejay.
RICHARD BLUTSTEIN, BENJAMIN BLUTSTEIN'S FATHER: He was on a spiritual journey, and he felt the need to be in Jerusalem to study Judaism.
PALMER: Marla Bennett was preparing for her last exam of the term.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I just -- I didn't believe it was possible that she would be there. I mean, you always hear it happen to other people, and I just never thought it would hit home.
PALMER: Her memorial service is on Monday in San Diego.
Back in May, Bennett wrote a letter to her hometown Jewish newspaper. "My friends and family in San Diego are right when they call me and ask me to come home. It is dangerous here. I appreciate their concern, but there is nowhere else in the world I would rather be right now."
Also killed in Wednesday's bombing were Dina Carter, David Ladowski, David Gritz and Levina Shapira.
Eighty others were injured, some of them Israeli-Arabs, who make up 10 percent of the university's student body and a sizable percentage of the support staff.
Hamas claims responsibility for the Hebrew University bombing, which, it says, is in retaliation for an earlier Israeli attack that killed Palestinian civilians.
For friends of the victims, they say life must and will go on at Hebrew University.
PHILIP GARTENBERG, VP, AMERICAN FRIENDS OF HEBREW UNIVERSITY: The day after this occurred, they picked themselves up and classes proceeded and work proceeded, and the Catholic Charity (ph) will be rebuilt. And you know, life will go on at the university, albeit sadder than it was on Tuesday.
PALMER: Brian Palmer, CNN, New York.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
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