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32

Delegates to B'nai B'rith
International's biennial
convention passed a resolu-
tion urging President
George Bush to commute the
sentence of convicted spy
Jonathan Jay Pollard to
time served.
The voice vote among the
1,000 delegates was over-
whelmingly in favor of the
proposition, one of some 100
proposals considered at the
meeting.
The vote represented
something of a watershed in
the fight against what many
perceive as the unfair
treatment of Mr. Pollard,
who was convicted of spying
for Israel in 1987 while serv-
ing as a civilian intelligence
analyst for the Navy.
"B'nai B'rith is a grass-
roots organization," said
Seymour Reich, a past B'nai
B'rith president who engi-
neered passage of the mea-
sure. "This resolution came
to the convention because it
originated in six different
B'nai B'rith districts. This
was a widespread movement
in the Jewish community,
represented by B'nai B'rith,
that there was an injustice

K

here, and that enough is
enough."
Dissenters argued that Mr.
Pollard's fate should be left --
to the courts and the appeals
process. Anti-Defamation ` -jj
League representatives,
argued that there was no
evidence of anti-Semitism in
Mr. Pollard's conviction and
sentencing.
But in the end, Mr. Reich
prevailed, and the proposal
was approved. One delegate
to the B'nai B'rith conven- -
tion reacted with special
pleasure to the vote.
"I was very pleased," said
Morris Pollard, Jonathan's
father. "It was very gratify- -J
ing to see this kind of vote by
such an important organiza- -
tion."
Will the B'nai B'rith vote
help his son, who is current-
ly serving a life sentence at a '-
maximum security prison? r;
"It can't hurt," the elder Mr.
Pollard said. "Right now, it
is clearly in the hands of the
administration. If they feel
that Jonathan has suffered
enough and release him, we
will be very pleased." ❑

James D. Besser

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Neo-Nazi Guilty
Of Attack On Student

Sydney, Australia (JTA) —
A Sydney magistrate has
found a supporter of David
Palmer, the self-appointed
"fuhrer of Australia," guilty
of assaulting a Jewish stu-
dent who had objected to a
pro-Nazi meeting taking
place here.
The assault took place
after the 21-year-old stu-
dent, whose name was sup-
pressed by the court, inter-
rupted a speech by Mr.
Palmer by saying:
"Australians died so that
the Nazi flag would not be
raised in this country. How
dare you raise it now!"
Simon Lain, a 43-year-old
invalid pensioner with a
long involvement with neo-
Nazi organizations, called
the student a "dirty Jew
boy" and tried to grab the
student's camera. During
the assault, the student was
kicked in the upper groin.
Mr. Lain was fined the
equivalent of $365 for the
criminal assault.
The incident took place in
Sydney's Domain, a public
park between the New South
Wales Art Gallery and the

State Parliament House.
The park is modeled on Lon-
don's Hyde Park Corner,
which on Sunday afternoons
houses an open forum for
any member of the public
who wishes to speak on any
subject.
Mr. Palmer included
denials of the Holocaust in
his speech.

ED

He and Robert Leys, a
former taxi driver who was
stripped of his license for
refusing to accept
Australian Aborigines as
passengers, testified on
behalf of Mr. Lain in court.
They alleged that it was "a
typical tactic" of people of
"Jewish extraction" to at-
tack people who were defen- C7-3
ding Hitler publicly.

Mr. Lain and his sup- ti
porters claimed that the stu-
dent, of slight build and
standing 5 feet 6 inches, had _
attacked the burly Mr. Lain. '-
But the magistrate noted
that Mr. Lain had run quick-
ly from the scene of the
assault, adding to the belief
that he had been conscious of
his guilt.

