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After two years of debate over wording, the plaques, which previously had not made any mention of the Jewish nature of the crimes committed at the Polish death camps, are being replaced with new signs cre- ated by the International Council of the State Museum in Auschwitz. Meanwhile, the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation, which has been working to preserve the camps and their collections of artifacts, is seeking $42 million from Western European govern- ments, with half that sum requested from Germany. The 24 members of the Auschwitz museum council, most of whom are survivors of the Holocaust, have agreed finally on the way the new plaques at the death camps will be worded. "It took a long time to reach a decision, because everyone believed that their tragedy should be emphasiz- ed," said Kalman Sultanik, a vice chairman of the Auschwitz museum council and co- chair of the Lauder Foundation's preservation project. The old plaques, put in place by the Communist government of Poland short- ly after the end of World War II, read: "This is the place of martyrdom and death of 4 million victims murdered in the Nazi genocide, 1940-45." The estimate of 4 million people initially believed to have died at the camps has been revised by scholars of the Holocaust, who say that the number is actually about 1.5 million. The old plaques were removed after Poland's Communist regime was voted out of power. The new plaques will be installed in the coming weeks, in Polish, English and Hebrew at the entrances of Auschwitz and Birkenau, according to Mr. Sultanik, and read: "In 1940 the Nazis estab- lished the Auschwitz camp which became a symbol of inhuman terror and genocide. After its enlarge- ment, the camp consisted of three parts: Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, Auschwitz III-Monowitz and more than forty sub-camps. "The first to be imprisoned and die here were Poles. In 1941, Soviet prisoners of war were placed in the camp. "From 1942 the Nazi plan for the total annihilation of European Jewry was carried out in the gas chambers of Auschwitz- Birkenau. "From 1943 Gypsies were also killed here. "Men, women, children and infants were murdered here on a mass scale." Another plaque in Birkenau is to read; "Let this site remain for eternity as a cry of despair and a warning to humanity. About a million and a half men, women, children and in- fants, mainly Jews from different countries of Europe were murdered here. The world was silent. — Auschwitz-Birkenau 1940- 45." A quote from the Book of Job will be included: "Oh earth, cover not my blood. And let my cry never cease." Nazi Judges Hired After War Bonn (JTA) — About 50 judges and lawyers who had served in the notorious people's courts of the Third Reich were hired by the fed- eral state of Lower Saxony after World War II, an offi- cial of the state government disclosed. But according to Horst Henze, the vice minister of justice, the state govern- ment knew very little about the activities of the people's courts, which were set up to prosecute persons suspected of anti-Nazi activity. Mr. Henze spoke at the state parliament in Hanover last week in reply to ques- tions by Thomas Opermarm of the Social Democratic Party. He suggested that the parliament put together a research team to study the functions and practices of the Nazi courts. In Hanover alone, the spe- cial Nazi courts convicted 4,000 individuals, of whom 170 were sentenced to death. Mr. Opermann observed that the officials of the Nazi justice system have never been scrutinized for their role in sending opponents of the regime to prison or to their deaths.