The Press

Ancestor of all Porsches to sell for millions

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A car described as the ancestor of all Porsches, the type 64 built in 1939 by VW as a sports version of the Beetle, is expected to sell at auction in California for more than US$20 million (NZ$31m).

The car, with its teardrop shape, was used by Ferdinand Porsche and still has the original upholstery on which he sat as he travelled around Germany during the war at more than 130kmh.

After the war the car was sold to Otto Mathe, a racing driver. It was restored in 1995 and eventually acquired by the company that owns the Paulaner brewery. It will go on sale at Sotheby’s in Monterey tomorrow.

Strictly speaking, the car is a Volkswagen rather than a Porsche. It was needed to take part in a planned Berlin to Rome road race organised by the Nazis and Italy’s fascists to demonstrat­e the technical capabiliti­es of the Axis powers.

It was constructe­d on the basis of the planned KdF Wagen, a project by Kraft durch Freude, or Strength Through Joy, the Nazi organisati­on, to build an affordable car, which became the Volkswagen Beetle.

The type 64 was completed in August 1939.

The outbreak of war prevented the race being held but two type 64s were built. The one on sale is believed to be the only one left. It was branded a Porsche in 1947.

The second was commandeer­ed by the US Seventh Army’s Rainbow division at the end of the war. They cut off the roof and drove it as a cabriolet, wrecked the engine and left it for scrap, Sotheby’s said.

Mathe bought the car in 1949 and won the Austrian Alpine Rally with it in 1950.

Experts who tested it before the auction said that it still drove well. – The Times Germany’s traditiona­l all-male cathedral choirs could be a thing of the past if a nine-year-old girl wins her gender discrimina­tion case today.

A centuries-old Berlin choir is being sued for discrimina­tion after it rejected the child’s applicatio­ns to join the elite group of young men and boys in 2016 and 2018.

Lawyers for her family allege she was told in writing by the dean of the university’s music faculty last December that ‘‘a girl will never sing in a boys’ choir’’.

They also argue that as the choir receives public funding her rejection contravene­s German equal opportunit­y laws.

Founded in 1465 by Frederick II of Brandenbur­g, the Berlin State and Cathedral Choir is one of the most famous in Germany. Over its 554-year history it has never admitted any girls. It is part of Berlin’s publicly funded University of the Arts and provides training to 250 choirboys and 75 young men under the age of 25. – Telegraph Group

 ??  ?? The type 64 built in 1939 by VW as a sports version of the Beetle, is expected to sell at auction in California for more than US$20 million (NZ$31m).
The type 64 built in 1939 by VW as a sports version of the Beetle, is expected to sell at auction in California for more than US$20 million (NZ$31m).

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