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Article from The Sunday Times REQUIRED 30th Dec

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Dundee, Scotland

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Dec 31, 2001, 6:36:03 AM12/31/01
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Article from The Sunday Times REQUIRED 30th Dec
MRS. ZOE POLANSKA PALMER has a half page article in the Sunday Times

"Scots Holocaust victim in fight for compensation" by Phil Miller

I cant find the article online yet all the others articles are there ?

http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/
http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/section/0,,9001,00.html


--

d@ve @llison, Dundee, Scotland
sic semper tyrannis
~wedding-service~ UK
http://www.wedding-service.co.uk
UK's largest wedding information directory.

Cliff Morrison

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Dec 31, 2001, 7:19:33 AM12/31/01
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In article <1009798426.21686....@news.demon.co.uk>,
"Dundee, Scotland" <da...@wedding-service.co.uk> wrote:

> Article from The Sunday Times REQUIRED 30th Dec
> MRS. ZOE POLANSKA PALMER has a half page article in the Sunday Times
>
> "Scots Holocaust victim in fight for compensation" by Phil Miller
>
> I cant find the article online yet all the others articles are there ?
>
> http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/
> http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/section/0,,9001,00.html

Wasn't she caught up in postwar Cossack repatriation?

welsh witch

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Dec 31, 2001, 7:19:55 AM12/31/01
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"Dundee, Scotland" <da...@wedding-service.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1009798426.21686....@news.demon.co.uk...

***************************
It should be on the newspaper articles all listed on the newsfeed I
have but all I can get so far are chech. articles re a Polanska...as
it was only yesterday maybe its not recorded on the newsfeed yet you
can see the latest Phil Miller is Dec 23rd perhaps they' haven't
caught up yet celebrating it is a Scottich thing after all Hogmany and
all that!!!

. Sunday Times (London), December 23, 2001, Sunday, Home news,
668 words, Family argues over memorial to Adamson, Phil Miller,
Scottish Arts Correspondent
2. Sunday Times (London), December 23, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 345 words, Doubts over Nazi link to Burrell art, Phil Miller
3. Sunday Times (London), December 23, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 575 words, Creator of Little Sparta collapses, Phil Miller,
Scottish Arts Correspondent
4. Sunday Times (London), December 9, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 483 words, Culture minister seals fate of Scottish Ballet,
Phil Miller, Scottish Arts Correspondent
5. Sunday Times (London), December 9, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 289 words, Stadiums get boost in Euro 2008 bid, Phil Miller
6. Sunday Times (London), December 9, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 584 words, Scottish film flop to be US sitcom, Phil Miller,
Scottish Arts Correspondent
7. Sunday Times (London), December 2, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 562 words, Scots to pay Pounds 2.5m for golf painting, Phil
Miller
8. Sunday Times (London), December 2, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 654 words, Glasgow unveils 'sacred garden', Phil Miller,
Scottish Arts Correspondent
9. Sunday Times (London), November 25, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 356 words, Trainspotting publisher plots Scots cannabis cafe,
Phil Miller
10. Sunday Times (London), November 25, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 251 words, Scots to exhibit in Venice, Phil Miller
11. Sunday Times (London), November 18, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 609 words, Lost album reveals 1840s family snaps, Phil Miller
and Tom Robbins
12. Sunday Times (London), November 18, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 457 words, Lost album reveals first holiday snaps, Phil
Miller
13. Sunday Times (London), November 18, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 607 words, Mel Gibson eyes Local Hero location, Phil Miller
Scottish Arts Correspondent
14. Sunday Times (London), November 11, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 579 words, Book reveals the vanity of duped MSPs who fell for
the spoof e-mails, Phil Miller
15. Sunday Times (London), November 11, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 567 words, Scottish Arts Council boss labelled 'too soft' is
set to quit, Phil Miller, Scottish Arts Correspondent
16. Sunday Times (London), November 4, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 653 words, Lowry 'doodle' to be auctioned for Pounds 10,000,
Phil Miller, Scottish Arts Correspondent
17. Sunday Times (London), October 28, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 462 words, Top Scots artist brands Royal Glasgow Institute
'stuffy', Phil Miller Scottish Arts Correspondent
18. Sunday Times (London), October 28, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 674 words, Scot plans to make Batman hang up cape, Phil
Miller Scottish Arts Correspondent
19. Sunday Times (London), October 21, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 701 words, Letter shows Cobain had a lighter side, Phil
Miller Scottish Arts Correspondent
20. Sunday Times (London), October 21, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 640 words, Booker author observes the dark side of Glasgow,
Phil Miller
21. Sunday Times (London), October 14, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 239 words, Museum chief to end 'apartheid', Phil Miller,
Scottish Arts Correspondent
22. Sunday Times (London), October 14, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 613 words, Prokofiev's wolf loses his teeth to Scottish
censor, Phil Miller, Scottish Arts Correspondent
23. Sunday Times (London), October 7, 2001, Sunday, Home
news, 547 words, MSPs hit out over 'gutless' ballet bosses, Phil
Miller

http://www.walk-wales.org.uk/ethnicprofiling.htm

http://www.walk-wales.org.uk/warindex.htm

>
>
>

doc1_en.gif

anton

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Dec 31, 2001, 7:53:05 AM12/31/01
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Cliff Morrison wrote in message ...

Looks like it.

Looks also as if the stinking Tory & Labour establishment
cover-up during the Tolstoy trial is continuing under our
current government. Look what a little worm in our Foreign
Office has written in 1999:

from
http://www.uvsc.edu/commorgs/russia/tolstoy/tolstoy12.html
<quote>The policy of forced repatriation was a binding
requirement of the Yalta agreement signed by the British
and US governments with the Soviet Union. The official
documentation makes clear that Allied Governments had
concerns about this requirement. But it was clear that the
British Government was bound by these obligations to
repatriate those claimed as citizens of the USSR, using
a minimum of compulsion where this could not be avoided.
<endquote>

It's the existence of lying dirtbags like this in official positions
that makes me feel great shame for my country.


--
Anton


welsh witch

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Dec 31, 2001, 9:33:37 AM12/31/01
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"Dundee, Scotland" <da...@wedding-service.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1009798426.21686....@news.demon.co.uk...

******************88
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/world/DailyNews/austria000417_holocaust
.html
There's lots about this going on in different part of the world on the
net


welsh witch

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Dec 31, 2001, 9:40:23 AM12/31/01
to


http://www.walk-wales.org.uk/warindex.htm


"Dundee, Scotland" <da...@wedding-service.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1009798426.21686....@news.demon.co.uk...

*****************************
I'm just wondering if there's been some almighty mix-up as you will
see the date on the top is (article below) is Dec 23rd but load date
is Dec 28th and its related??? Looks like Phil Miller is following up
that particular "Nazi" theme.


Sunday Times (London)


December 23, 2001, Sunday

Home news

Doubts over Nazi link to Burrell art

Phil Miller

GLASGOW city council is refusing to return a Burrell Collection
painting to a German Jewish family which claims the work was
confiscated by the Nazis in the run-up to the second world war. The
council believes there are serious discrepancies in the family's
story.

Officials have asked for a six-month delay while they investigate the
family's account of how it came to own the painting and why it was
forced to sell it. The work, a still life called Le Pate de Jambon by
the French artist Jean-Simeon Chardin, is part of the city's renowned
Burrell Collection. In October six members of the family contacted the
council claiming that the painting, valued at Pounds 100,000, was
rightfully theirs. The family members, represented by lawyers in
Berlin, said their relatives had been forced to sell it by the Nazis
in 1936 - the same year it was bought by Sir William Burrell, the art
collector.

Officials originally believed that the case for returning the painting
or paying compensation was straightforward and said it would be
concluded by January. However, further research by the council's
repatriation working group has discovered a number of gaps in the
family's account.

Officials want to know how the family members, who remain anonymous,
came to own the picture originally. It was sold in Paris in 1927, but
the next record of it was when it was sold to Burrell by Julius
Bohler, the German dealer, in 1936.

The council is also concerned over the timing of the "forced sale" of
the family's heirloom. Council advisers say that such sales - where
Jewish families were forced to sell valuable property because of
wrongful financial demands - did not begin until the late 1930s, in
particular 1938 and 1939.

The council's legal department has prepared a detailed response to the
family's lawyers outlining its concerns. The Department of Culture,
Media and Sport in London believes that the council's actions are
legitimate. Last night the family's lawyers were unavailable for
comment. The family's request is the first in Scotland.

LOAD-DATE: December 28, 2001

Cliff Morrison

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Dec 31, 2001, 3:40:51 PM12/31/01
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In article <a0pn3g$qn$1...@helle.btinternet.com>, "anton"
<anto...@SPAMbtinternet.com> wrote:

Charmers, ain't they... and it's their rancid jobsworth like who call the
shots nowadays with even less hindrance than before...
And of course, "war crimes" are unique to the demonized "other side"
(whoever that happens to be).

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