0 ,,, 0 W \\ ,,,\,.\ ,‘ ‘‘,•.\ . \ k , \\ \\ \\ , , \\ \\ \ N :„ ,.., '\ \ .,. „ N,,‘,, Nazi Propaganda Film Causes A Stir • TEST DRIVE THE ALL NEW VOLVO 850 GLT, TODAY. I `48 Month lease. Due at inception. $2,500 cap cost reduction. $2,500 payment plus 4% use tax, acquisition fee of $450, security deposit of $425. $40 Michigan Dockage Fee, & Michigan License Plates. 15,000 miles per year. 60,000 miles total. 150 per mile for excess mileage. Base payment plus 4%. Must take delivery by 8/31/93. Additional options will affect price. I I THE RIGHT TIME. TNE RIGHT DATE. THE RIM SPE. TN ENT PRICE. Larry Paul makes FURNITURE NEW. Custom Restoration, Lacquering, Refinishing of new or old furniture, antiques, office furniture, pianos. For Free Estimates 681-3280 The SWiss Army Brand Chronograph is a precision instrument that can mea- sure up to the highest standards. Its clean cut features have all been engi- neered so function and design are one. 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The conference was scheduled to present the viciously anti- Semitic film, The Jew Suss, but canceled the showing after the Ger- man holder of rights to the film withdrew permission. The conference organizers, the Anti-Censorship Action Group and a left-wing week- ly newspaper, the Weekly Mail, included three Jews — editor Anton Harber and journalists Pat Sidley and Stephen Laufer — who met with the board on the issue. Mr. Laufer was scheduled to present the film in its historical context at the con- ference, which funded by the German Foreign Ministry and the German F.W. Mur- nau Foundation, holder of the rights to the film. The foundation has laid down strict rules for showing the film, which is banned in Germany and screened in rare instances for purposes of scholarly study only. Outside Germany, the foundation guidelines call for closed screening to preselected audiences. In addition, tickets must not be sold directly to the public and the screening must be preceded by a lecture on the film and followed by com- ment and debate. Ivan Levy, a member of the Board of Deputies and a campaigner against anti- Semitism in his position as deputy president of the International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the board would not have objected to the screening had the organizers complied with the stipula- tions of the foundation. Mr. Levy stated that the terms under which the or- ganizers were entitled to screen the film had been breached since the showing had been widely ad, ertised and tickets were being sold to the general public without restriction. "One does not object to freedom of speech insofar as it propagates the truth — our objection is to anything that disseminates lies," Mr. Levy said. Immediately after being approached by the Board of Deputies, the Murnau Foundation withdrew its permission to screen the film, saying the organizers had not complied with the conditions for screening. Seymour Kopelowitz, na- tional director of the board, said: "It is absurd to suggest that the board was attemp- ting to censure the debate itself. The board asked no more or no less than that all the screening conditions be observed." Ms. Sidley, one of the con- ference's organizers, said the film had been chosen be- cause its very revolting na- ture would encourage debate, "but we were shut up before it could take place. "We believe passionately in no censorship," she added. The conference maintain- ed it had indeed followed the conditions for screening laid down by the foundation. The film itself is a distor- tion of an anti-fascist book by the Jewish author Leon Feuchtwangler. It was directed in 1940 by Veit Harlan, who later stood trial on charges of spreading Nazi propaganda, but was ac- quitted. It has been referred to as "the most notorious film of the Third Reich," portraying the Jew as a rapist and ex- tortionist and promoting genocide. ❑ El Al Receives Damage Claims Amsterdam (JTA) — Follow- ing the disastrous crash of an El Al Boeing jet over the Bijimer district of Amster- dam last year, over 1,600 persons have submitted claims for damages. Forty-three persons lost their lives as a result of the disaster, and 16 were wounded, four of them seri- ously. Eighty apartments were destroyed and another 120 made uninhabitable. The Amsterdam lawyers handling the claims said they have received nearly 10 times more than the number of claims expected. As a result, the settlement of these claims will take far longer than ,had been pre- sumed. ❑