Page 10-Thursday, July 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily .~r-.~ Milhionaire sentenced for WWHI war. crimes ROTTERDAM, Netherlands (AP)-A war crimes court sentenced 81-year-old millionaire art collector Pieter Menten to 10 years in jail and fined him $50,000 yesterday for collaborating with the Nazis in the massacre of 20-30 Polish Jews 39 years ago. Justice Ministry officials said Menten collapsed at his home soon after learning of the sentence and was taken to a hospital where two detectives were stationed at his bedside. Menten had been excused from yesterday's court session because of illness. THE COURT RULED the prosecution failed to prove Menten shot anyone personally. But the court said it was "convinced Menten acted in unison" with a German SS squad that committed the mass slayings July 7,.1941, at the former Polish village of Podhoroce, now part of the Soviet Ukraine. It was Menten's second conviction in the case. In 1977, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison on the collaboration charge, but the sentence was over- turned on technical grounds by the supreme court and Menten was released from prison in December 1978. THE COURT THEN ordered a retrial in Rotter- dam. Menten, now the oldest prisoner in Holland, con- sistently proclaimed his innocence. At one point he claimed he was the victim of mistaken identification because his younger brother, Dirk, was at the execution. But witnesses insistedPieter Menten, who owned a large pre-war estate outside Podhoroce, took part in the killings. After some early post-war troubles with Dutch authorities, Menten lived in wealthy seclusion in a mansion in Blaricum, east of Amsterdam. In 1976, renewed press reports linked him with the Podhoroce massacre. He fled to Switzerland to escape his impending arrest but was expelledby the Swiss and returned to Holland for his first trial. DURING THE SECOND trial, which lasted two months, the court heard evidence from 75-yeal-old Dirk Menten, now living in Cannes, France who said Pieter told him in 1943 he had been present at the execution of Jews in Podhoroce two years earlier. A 0 - - - - A Public Service of This Newspaper 5 The Adivertisig ouclm N to a Lie down and be counted. F VIN! 1 crackdown on police brutality advocated WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, calling for a nationwide crackdown on police brutality in the wake of the Miami riots, urged Congress yesterday to give federal prosecutors more power to prosecute police misconduct. "Too often today, law and order means being shot or being killed by the police," said Mary Berry, thesnew vice- chairman of the six-member com- mission. "AS A NATION, we must do everything we can to end police abuse and the civil violence which it promotes," the commission declared in a 30-page statement on "Police Prac- tices and the Preservation of Civil Rights." The panel recommended a series of actions to root out police misconduct. The statement was culled from a still- unfinished commission report on police practices, based on a two-year probe that included hearings on alleged police brutality in Houston and Philadelphia. The commission said it decided to make recommendations now because of the severity of the Miami riots and problems elsewhere. Eighteen persons were killed and businessesnsuffered at least $100 million in damage in riots that erupted May l7 in Miami's Liberty City. The violence was sparked by the acquittal of four former Dade County policemen charged in the beating death of a black Miami businessman, Arthur McDuffie. ARTHUR FLEMMING, the com- mission chairman, criticized civic leaders and power-brokers in Miami for not doing enough to redress the problems of poverty and injustice. "They've got to come out of their boardrooms . . and their luncheon clubs" to solve those problems com- munity-wide, saidFlemming. A third commissioner, Stephen Horn, president of California State University at Long Beach, echoed an advertising line: "Do I fix it now at less cost, or let it explode? ... Citizens ought to ask themselves which is the cheaper solution." ' 0 In America, 3% of the people give 100% of all the blood that's freely donated. Which means that if only 1% more people-. maybe you-became donors, it would add over thirty percent more blood to America's voluntary bloodstream. Think of it! But forget arithmetic. Just concentrate on one word. The word is Easy. Giving blood is easy. You hardly feel it (in fact, some people say they feel better physically after a blood donation). And, of course, everybody feels better emotionally. Because it's a great feeling knowing your one easy blood donation has helped up to five other people to live. So how about it, 1% of America? Are you going to lie down and be counted? Call your local Red Cross Chapter, or your community's volunteer blood bank. We need you now. RedCOss is counrn on yol. .. -a 0 S