44—Friday, January 24, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS U.S. Gives Up Deportation Fight • NEW YORK — The United States' third, and apparently last attempt in 22 years to deport Andrija Artukovich, former minister of justice and internal affairs in the Nazi-controlled Croatian re- gime in Yugoslavia, has ap- parently failed. The New York Times re- ported Monday that the U.S. Immigration and Naturaliza- tion Service in Los Angeles has apparently closed the case because the 75-year-old Mideast Described as 'Powder Keg' 41, NEW YORK (ZINS) — Fol- lowing a visit to 'Israel and the Arab countries, New York Times correspondent Drew Middleton described the area as a powder keg likely to explode at any mo- ment. Middleton stated that time favors the Arabs, whose goal is the obliteration of Israel. According to the reporter, that leaves Israel no choice; either attack the enemy or wait for him to attack. accused war criminal is not wanted by any other country in the world. The U.S. has refused to ex- tradite him to Yugoslavia be- cause of fears of "physical persecution." According to the immigra- tion service, Artukovich is definitely deportable because he entered the country on a temporary visa using an as- sumed name. • He is accused of ordering the deaths of thousands of Serbs, Croats, Jews, Gypsies and other Yugoslavians dur- ing World War II. His case was one of 35 accused war criminals living in the United States that the immigration service was re-investigating. The Jewish Defense League demonstrated outside Artu- kovic's Surfside, Calif. home last year, and someone shot at his brother's Los Angeles home last month. Artukovic's home is now patrolled by a private security guard. Israel Launches Information Project By WILLIAM SAPHIRE (Copyright 1975. JTA, Inc.) If oil is the fuel that turns the wheels of industry, money is the grease on which public opinion rides. The latter, de- rived from the former, is currently being employed in prodigious quantities by Arab rulers in a global image- building process aimed at the West in general but primar- ily at the United States where the bulk of Western power and wealth resides. The purpose is three-fold: To depict the Arabs as para- gons of sweet reasonableness, to tarnish and possibly topple the favorable image Israel has built in this country over the last quarter century; to allay fears that another Arab big money operation—buying into the American economy— is really as dangenius - as it seems. The influx of Middle East oil money into the U.S. is causing concern in Washing- ton. The New York Times reported "that some oil rich SAM FIELD 399-1320 S CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS — countries might try to take over financial control of criti- cal defense industries." A study of this problem, under- taken by the Ford Adminis- tration, is an indirect out- growth of certain "offers" reported during the past year. Arab penetration of major Western European industries has repercussions in Amer- ican security and financial circles. Defense officials in Washington were reported to be seriously disturbed by the news from West Germany that Iran has acquired a 25 percent interest in the steel division of the giant Krupp empire and that oil-rich -Ku- wait has just bought 14 per cent of Damiler-Benz, the West German manufacturer of luxury cars and military vehicles. Much closer to home was the offer by Arab oil interests to lend New York City $250 million to cope with its fiscal crisis. If the Arabs couldn't buy Manhattan island, they War Report to Catapult Dayan? JERUSALEM (JTA) --- A JERUSALEM (JTA)—The new project, designed to Agranat Committee's final train volunteers from abroad report on the Yom Kippur for information drives on the War, which is expected to be problems of Israel and the . submitted to the cabinet next Jewish world was launched Week, could precipitate a new in Haifa by the information political struggle in Israel— for your party department of the World Zi- not because of its findings onist Organization. but because it may revive By Moshe Gilboa, director of the political career of former the information department, Defense Minister Moshe reported that some 40 per- Dayan. sons from the U.S., Canada, That possibility was the Britain, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Holland, Denmark subject of intensive specula- and Australia, are all at . tion in political circles and the press .during the past few the seminar. days as the blue ribbon panel For the disease of stubborn- headed by Supreme Court Justice Shimon Agranat put ness there exists no cure. the final touches to its report. The committee's prelimi- nary report, published last April 3, exonerated Dayan of To Capture That blame for Israel's lack of preparedness when Egypt and Mood, Hire a Syria attacked on Oct. 6, 1973. Specialist But it found considerable fault with Israel's top mili- tary leadership, forced the resignation of Chief of Staff Gen. David Elazar, and cre- SANdy fRiEdmAN phorogRAphy ated a climate of public dis- satisfaction with the nation's 398 -7211 military establishment that CANdIdS • MOVIES • pORTRAITS forced Dayan himself even- tually to resign from the cabinet of former Premier Golda Meir. The Agranat Committee's HELEN ZINBERG R.E. final report, covering the first The hair you pluck will come back to haunt you. Before you tweeze again, remember three days of the Yom Kip- this Quotation from one of the foremost pur War when Israeli forces medical authorities on the subject of human suffered! severe setbacks in hair: Sinai, is widely expected to "Plucking out strong hairs should never be give •Dayan a clean bill of advised." Why not Because the long term health, thus catapulting him penalties for continued plucking can be so .HELEN IINBERG R.E. severe: back into the political arena. 1. ' You may stimulate This is causing concern Such risks are need- among Knesset moderates of the growth of addition- less now that Air-cooled the Labor • alignment that al hairs around the one Jet Stream Electrolysis Dayan, who still enjoys con- you pull out. is available to you. This siderable support in Labor's 2. You may cause suc- is the first method of Rafi wing, will form a new cessive generations of permanent hair remov bloc to challenge the foreign hair from the abused al with everything to policies of Premier Yitzhak follicle to grow coarser, commend it. Air-cooled Rabin. longer, darker. Jet Stream is faster, The reassertation of Day- 3. You may make event- more comfortable. an's hawkish views on terri- ual permanent removal Electrolysis is the only torial matters at a time when slower and costlier by medically approved the Rabin government is 'pulling the root and fol- method to remove hair seeking stage by stage nego- licle out of place. tiations with Egypt that must permanently. involve certain territorial 16125 W. 12 MILE RD. OPEN MON., WED., THURS. & FRI. concessions, could create a BY APPOINTMENT — 557-81 15 serious situation for Israel, these moderates fear. 8221 Curtis Open Tues. Only 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. UN 2-8914 Mordechai Ben-Porat, one Caricatures a Arabs: Building a Global Image as Paragons of Reasonableness of the strongest Dayan sup- porters in the Labor align- ment, has denied that any campaign is planned on be- half of the former defense minister. Yossi Sarid, a Labor "dove" and opponent of Dayan agreed that no such drive appeared to be in the making. But whether or not a formal pro-Dayan bloc is formed, his total exoneration by the Agranat Committee is expected to create a new sit- uation in the Labor align- ment. Although Dayan has lectur- ed on Israeli policy matters at Bar-Ilan University recent- ly, he has remained aloof from politics and has had relatively little to say in the Knesset where he retains his seat. He is expected to become more vocal if given absolu- tion in the final Agranat re- port. He could emerge as a leader of internal opposition inside his own party or even carry his opposition beyond party boundaries. Several options apparently remain open to him. The Labor "doves" therefore are reportedly mobilizing against a possible Dayan-led Rafi bid for ascendency in the party. For that reason, it appears, they have agreed to drop their opposition to the Maale Adumim industrial develop- ment project on the West Bank which •is backed by the Rabin cabinet. I. F. Stone Gets BA —48 Years Later NEW YORK — I. F. Stone, author, journalist and Univer- sity of Pennsylvania dropout of 48 years ago, will_xeceive his •bachelor's degree Feb. 11 during weekend ceremonies at the Philadelphia campus where he will be a guest speaker. According to Martin Meyer- son, president of the univer- sity, Stone's "writing and erudition during a lifetime of journalistic achievement" added up to "more than the equivalent" for a regular in- stead of an honorary degree. were ready to settle for Kia- wah, a partially undeveloped sea isle off South Carolina. Kuwaiti interests purchased the 11-mile-long wild life ha- ven and salt marsh for a re- ported $17.5 million. The Kuwaitis have hired a de- veloper to turn the island into a private resort for the rich. The flow of money between the U.S. and the Arab world travels in both directions. The New York Times report- ed that "American financial institutions are swarming in- to the Middle East, often with well connected Arabs as their private operatives, in a bid to handle the petrodollar riches flowing from the high- er prices for oil." The Arabs are also shaping up as potential rivals to Is- rael for American aliya though they are tapping a different segment of the pop- ulation. According to the Washington Post, an "in- creasing number ' of Arab Americans and native-born Americans . . . are being lured by Middle East govern- ments" with job offers at salaries and fringe benefits far above what they can earn at home. A question arises as to whether there is sinister in- tent behind Arab investme , in the U.S. and the paralle I flow of American busines and personnel into the Ara el countries. Washington c umnist Clayton Fritchey too a bemused view of the prob lem recently. "It could be a false alarm, Fritchey wrote. "With the exercise of a little discrimi nation, it would be the oppor tunity of a lifetime to unload dubious properties th dollar-loaded sheik should American be called on to bail oifi panies like Lockheed raf for instance if, as it ap ars, the new oil billionaires are eager to take over or sha the 'burden? Let us not hastil deny them this privilege." 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