This Week B UNC FUNDING HATE Insight from page 31 WITH THE B EATLES Take it to the The Auxiliary and Benefactors of the Jewish Home & Aging Services cordially invite you and your family to a Benefit supporting * older adults. unda'January 25, 2004 Max M. Fisher Music Center connected Shkirat. He is a prominent attorney and activist who represents Marwan Barghouti, the West Bank Fatah leader who is on trial in Israel for allegedly masterminding terror attacks that killed dozens of Israelis. "I believe it depends on what the Palestinian Authority wants," said a Palestinian attorney representing European donors. "If the Palestinian Authority rea wants to arrest the right people β€”at' will happen quickly. But if they do not, then the investigation will take long time, and then not much will happen. . " 3711 Woodward Avenue, Detroit Audit Report 1:00 pmBeatlemania Brunch dietary laws observed 3 :00 pmClussical Mystery Tour: A Tribute to the BeatIes **Ole Detroit Syniphony Ordiestra Event Chairpersons: Marty. Begun Robin Eisenberg w Howard Kowalsky Zina Kramer Jill Stone This incredible Beatles retrospective features original members of the Broadway sensation Beatlemania performing such tunes as Penny Lane, Yesterday, and A Day in the Life with orchestral accompaniment by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, as they were recorded by the Fab Four. . 4 for more information or to order tickets, call: 248-661-2999 A United States-based official of Ernst & Young, an international business consulting and accounting firm, said Qupti's office had asked for the docu- mentation supporting the firm's 60- page special investigative audit of LAW's finances. That report, which was issued in March, concluded that about 40 per- cent of LAW's $9.2 million in foreign charitable funding had been diverted and misappropriated. Ernst & Young told Qupti that it would release the documentation only with a subpoena to do so, according to an American Ernst & Young source. Although the Ford Foundation was a major donor, the foundation has not joined the European criminal com- plaint. But Wilde said the Ford Foundation would cooperate with government inquiries about this case. Wilde also confirmed that the foun- dation previously had suspended a $60,000 individual grant extended to Shkirat in September 2001 to support his participation in a Harvard University human rights program. He said that grant was made a year, before accounting issues surfaced that led the Ford Foundation and other donors to commission an audit of LAW's finances. .When Shkirat failed to complete the Harvard academic program, the foundation placed him on a list of people prohibited from receiving foundation funds and recov- ered the unspent funds from the indi- vidual grant. Efforts to contact Shkirat were not successful. Di erence Of Opinion Meanwhile, in the Jewish community and in the U.S. Congress, opinions were split over whether the Ford '=- 41tM:t 73- 12/26 2003 32 V: uxi1lani Oil FOR JEWISH HOME I/ AND AGING SERVICES BENEFACTORS OF THE JEWISH HOME & AGING SERVICES Foundation had done enough to reverse its multimillion-dollar funding of anti-Israel agitation and whether a congressional investigation should go forward. Rep. Nadler's administrative aide, Brett Heimov, said that the Ford Foundation "should be given a chance to correct their mistakes before a full and-coinplete investigation takes - - -ortimer-Zuckerman, past chair- ofthe Conference,of Presidents of Major American Jewiih Organizations and one'd the leaders who consulted with Ford Foundation officials, agreed. "They should have a reasonable time deadline to deal with these issues and be very transparent," he said. "If they do so, fine. If not, we should seek -another (approa.ch: For now, I think they are making a good- faith effort and should be taken at their word until proven otherwise." Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, agreed. "At this time, I don't believe a full- scale investigation is warranted," he said. "The Ford Foundation is looking into its operations and has made com- mitments for change. I think we should let that go forward." _ But executive director of the American Jewish Congress, Neil Goldstein, said that while he thought Nadler should be praised for going forward, "that should not preclude us looking back to see what went wrong and see who was to blame β€” particu- larly so, given the fact that Ford [Foundation] hands out more foreign aide than a nation the size of Canada." Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, said he was "in favor of not letting the process drop." "This experience has shown us that foundations can allocate their funds to support activities that are against American interests and promote extremist expressions such as we saw at Durban. Therefore, any investiga- tion should include more than just the Ford Foundation, but also others," Hoenlein said. Sens. Rick Santorum, R-Pa. and Charles Grassley, R-Idaho, have insist- ed that a complete investigation of the Ford Foundation still is needed. This week, Santorum's spokesman, Robert Trayham, said, "As of today, Sen. Santorum still stands for a full and complete investigation." ❑