THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1979 Page 7 naiiNetwork refuses to remove actress lenfrom movie for favoring Palestinians United Press International ight strokeil,NEW YORK — CBS has re el the use ofy fused concentration camp sur- been doingt vivor Fania Fenelon’s request ball to regai ; that actress Vanessa Redgrave be Y removed from the lead in “Play- iderwent rasj' n K f° r Time,” a dramatization of December lj'1 Fenelon’s book, because ofRed- ir cancer ofyS rave ' s pro-Palestinian senti ments. to follow k |L^ ene ^ on an< ^ Rabbis Marvin lecting law ^’ t:r an( f Abraham Cooper, both e had faeledijlb /as considerioiPE- of Yeshiva University of Los Angeles, met Monday with Gene Jankowski, president of the CBS Broadcast Group, and Gene Ma ter, vice president and assistant to the president. “We met with them at their request,” Mater said afterward. “We assured them it wasn’t our intention to desecrate the mem ory of those who died or offend anyone or to seek publicity. But we would not and could not re move Vanessa Redgrave from the part. “At issue are two principles far more important than the simple question of casting — whether individual, personal and political views should be considered more important than his or her artistic ability, (and) whether any indi vidual should have power to veto the decisions, editorial or artis tic, of any entertainment or news medium.” Fenelon, a French woman who survived Auschwitz- Birkenau concentration camp, objects to Redgrave playing the role because of her highly vocal support of the Palestine Libera tion Organization. “She’s a fanatic,” Fenelon said. “I can’t accept that.” >ry .said ly why be i Id others tky ; ill health is i was strickeil former New is appointed rt in 1956 ly amp survivor, Redgrave not friends espite view given on 6 60 Minutes 9 By JOAN HANAVER f UPI Television Writer ■ NEW YORK — When “60 Minutes” did a segment on con centration camp survivor Fania Fenelon and actress Vanessa Redgrave, the impression at the end was of two women walking arm and arm into the sunset. Forget it! Fenelon continues to deplore e casting of Redgrave as the lead in the CBS dramatization of her book, “Playing for Time,” which relates her experiences as an inmate-musician in the Nazi [concentration camp Auschwitz- rted teachers| Birkenau. >ne school Bit? Fenelon’s objections are based reachersaht j on her perception of Redgrave as thered at pal ajfanatic in the cause of the Pales- g places anil fvtine Liberation Organization, it 1 picket I and more personally because “I ■st can’t accept her as me.” ents were adsiH school isent, com] 1 average at Who would she like to see playing her life? Jane Fonda. Fenelon, a Frenchwoman, is in the United States under the auspices of the Simon Wiesent- hal Center for Holocaust Studies at Yeshi for the University of Los Angeles, which is trying to wrest “Z just cant accept her as me” — Fania Fenlon an apology from CBS for insen sitivity in casting Redgrave. Fenelon was asked at a news conference if she and Redgrave parted friends after the “60 Min utes” broadcast. “Friends? Oh, no!” was her reply. “We were not friendly at all.” She also objected to the way in which a statement she made was cut on “60 Minutes. She said her entire statement was: 1 “I am for Israel, I am for the Palestinians, I am for the Puerto Ricans, I am for the blacks, I am for everybody who suffers.” What came over on “60 Min utes’ was, “I am for Israel.” CBS, in the person of Gene Mater, vice president and assis tant to Broadcast Group Presi dent Gene Jankowski, argues no one has a right to deprive an actor of a role because of his or her personal, or political opin ions. Rabbis Marvin Hier and Ab raham Cooper of the Wiesenthal Center don’t doubt Redgrave’s ability to play Fania Fenelon. They fear she will capitalize on the part to prove her claim she is not anti-Semitic, merely anti- Israeli. She has not sold Fenelon on that point. Seated together at a news con ference after Fenelon and the rabbis met with Jankowski and Mater were two women — Yvette Lennon and her sister, Lily Assael. The women are Greek-born Jews who, like Fenelon, played music for their lives at Auschwitz-Birkenau, and who now live in New York. What did they think about all this? “I don’t care about politics,” Lennon said. “If Vanessa Red grave really is an anti-Semite, I don’t want her in the play. But I don’t know enough about her to know if that is true, and I don’t want to accuse anyone who is in nocent.” Assael, who at one point casu ally rolled up her sleeve to check the blurry blue concentration camp number tattooed on her arm, added: “If she is an anti- Semite, it would make the whole thing like a comedy.” Shah in New York for treatment Court orders Stafford executed ;n their ( :es and plain " 0 g d s Condemned man insists on innocence ion demand'* h across-tbe-* ear of a two-)* ement’s last* said, was $70a» 16 months, tkB? United Press International the remaii OKLAHOMA CITY — Roger contract, jjale Stafford, ordered Tuesday to d I executed Jan. 17 for the murders f six restaurant workers, said he not afraid to die, but would fight : i ^sentence “to the very end. Despite last-minute protests of *OW Ip' 0061106 ’ District Judge Charles pens formally sentenced Stafford b be injected with a lethal dose of mt almost cerpjjituates and paralytic agents, ■leased, ault Jklahoma’s statutory method for ixeeution. Angelo Buo4 Gwens ’ who P reside d oyer the vas his acoi Sght-day trial that led to Stafford’s ;omadeabrieffl victions for gunning down six er Monday, Ej m pl°y ee ' s in the meat freezer of a his innocew and was grai ' before enteiii ■d to plead j slayings an upholstewj dale, in att amber, meed lift 977-78 mimfal nspiracy.i ear sentence 1 United Press International NEW YORK — The exiled shah of Iran flew to New York Tuesday and was admitted to a local hospital for treatment of cancer, U.S. offi cials said. In Washington, State Depart ment officials said European and American doctors had examined the shah and reported the former ruler is suffering from a “malignant tumor,” a form of cancer, and a blocked bile duct. The two problems, the officials said, are unrelated to each other, but contributed to a significant de- Pot treatments made legal, but patient dies first United Press International LANSING, Mich. — The therapeutic use of marijuana is legal in Michigan now, but the young cancer victim who first campaigned for a law to allow the use of pot to relieve symptoms of chemotherapy, did not live long enough to see the law enacted. Lt. Gov. James Brickley signed the bill in his office Monday, calling it a “humane bill.” Keith Nutt, 23, who crusaded for the right to use the drug to relieve the discomfort of anticancer treat ment, died hours earlier in a Mid land hospital. A member of the NORML advi sory board, Nutt had told a Senate panel he needed marijuana to re lieve the nausea brought on by his chemotherapy treatments. His mother, reached in Midland, said Nutt was aware the bill was being signed Monday and was “very happy.” “I think as time goes on I will think this is one of his contributions to his fellow man,” she said. terioration of his condition in the last several days. The shah, believed to be accom panied by his wife. Empress Farah, about a dozen aides and two Doberman pinschers, arrived at LaGuardia Airport at 10:30 p.m. on a chartered twin-engine jet. State Department spokesman, David Passage, said in Washington that the shah was “quite” ill and air port workers said he “looked weak” and walked in a slow shuffle to a waiting Mercedes at the aiiport. “I’m under the clear impression,” Passage said, “that there’s been a significant deterioration in the former shah’s health in recent days.” Asked if the shah’s life was in danger because of the illness. Pas sage said, “One has to read the in formation I’ve got this way.” At the Pahlavi family’s adjoining townhouses on exclusive Beekman Place in Manhattan, a large Great Dane paced behind a wrought-iron gate, a television camera monitored the doorway and guards turned away reporters without comment. GUYS & GALS Sebring Products — Perms — Hennas Certified Hair Designers 4103 Texas Avenue S., Bryan Suite 208 846-5018 south Oklahoma City Sirloin Stoc kade restaurant, overruled a de fense motion for a new trial. “When the state of Oklahoma can condemn an innocent man, what’s the world coming to?” said Stafford, during an interview after the formal sentencing. “I’m going to fight this to the very end.” During the sentencing, Owens asked Stafford if he had anything to say before sentencing. “Yeah, I’m innocent. I didn’t do the crime,” the soft-spoken Stafford told the judge. Stafford then thanked Owens “for taking time to have a fair trial.” Owens acknowleged Stafford’s praise of the trial and said he under stood Stafford’s pleas of innocence, “but under our system a decision is left to 12 jurors.” “I’m directing that you be held closely confined and imprisoned until Jan. 17, 1980, upon which day I am further directing (the prison warden) to put you to death, Owens said. “He (the warden) is to do so by the statutory method provided. That being by continuous, intrave nous administration of a lethal quan tity of an ultra-short acting bar- bituate, in combination with a chemical paralytic agent, until death be pronounced by a physician.” ased iting Fo i Tax. o 7:00 Pi. ESOflf SPECIAL Tied Steak n Gravy otatoes and one other liable ■ead and Bull or Tea MEAT, FISH and LIQUOR .... CO. SPECIAL | EVEIW key dinnei id with iy Sauce j Dressing read . Butter- or Tea Gravy icice of a n y getable SERVING LUNCH MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 11-2. 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