oft ',' T Telecast Over Notional Jewish TV NEW YORK A new video- tape featuring highlights of the 1982 Golden Anniversary General Assembly of the Council of Jewish Federations will be telecast over the facilities of the Arab Influence Growing On American Campuses LONDON -The World Jewish Congress has released an investigative report documenting the growth of Arab influence in American universities during the past seven years. The report, issued here by the WJC research arm, the Institute of Jewish Affairs, traces the rise of Arab influence to the power of petro-dollars felt throughout the world after the unprecedented oil price increases following the 1973-74 embargo. Universities in the U.S facing falling enrollments and reduced funding engaged in a scramble for these Arab petro-dollars. The report was written for the Institute by Will Maslow, general counsel of the American Jewish Congress and the American Section of the WJC. THESE OIL revenues were used to establish chairs and centers for Arab studies which have been used as Arab propaganda mills, according to the author of the report. There are indications that Saudi Arabia and Libya have pressured universities to bar Jewish faculty members from participating in these programs. This has led to concern that the Arab grants are endangering academic freedom and the educational process in the United States. The first case to arouse ap- prehension was that of Georgetown University in Washington, famous for training future US. diplomats, which accepted grants from Oman and the United Arab Emirates to establish a Center for Con- temporary Arab Studies. Clovis Maksoud, the Arab League representative in Washington, taught there, French Cooperation PARIS (JTA) The French central welfare fund, Fonds Social Juif Unifie (FSJU). intends to strengthen its links and increase its cooperation with the Council of Jewish Federa- tions in the U.S., David Saada. FSJU director-general, said here. "while it was made dear that no Israeli professor would be hired." Georgetown has received over 3.3 million for the Center from eight Arab governments but returned some $600,000 to Libya last year citing "Libya's con- tinued accent on violence." LARGE ARAB grants have been accepted by Harvard, Columbia, Duke, Johns Hopkins, New York University, and the University of Southern California- Harvard University has ac- cepted SI million from an unidentified Saudi Arabian businessman to establish a professorial chair in Arab studies. Part of the grant is to be used to finance a part-time research position for Walid Khalidi, described by the New York Times as a PLO sym- pathizer, raising the question whether the academic principle of not permitting donors to specify who will fill positions has been violated. Similar problems have arisen in Canada where the faculty of Concordia University in Mon- treal voted in April, 1982 to oppose an exchange agreement with King Faisal University of Saudi Arabia after reports that Jewish faculty members would not be eligible for assignment to the Saudi university. National Jewish Television Net- work (NJT) at 3:30 p.m. (EST) on Sunday,Jan. 9. Filmed in Los Angeles, site of the CJF's General Assembly, the tape features exceprts from major addresses given by CJF President Martin E. Citrin, Rabbi Harold Schutweis of Los Angeles and Israel's Ambassador to the United States, Moshe Arena. In addition, the tape covers the numerous workshop and forum sessions which were an integral part of the General Assembly and reviews actions taken during the five-day meeting held Nov. 10-14 at the Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles. National Jewish Television is telecast each Sunday from 1-4 p.m. (EST) and is currently carried by 105 cable systems throughout the United States. The Council of Jewish Federa- tions is the association of 200 Federations, Welfare Funds and Community Councils serving nearly 800 communities which embrace over 95 percent of the Jewish population of the U.S. and Canada. Established in 1932. the Council serves as a national instrument to strengthen the work and the impact of Jewish Federations through leadership in developing programs to meet changing needs in the Jewish community: through the ex- change of successful experiences to assure the most effective community service: through establishing guidelines for fund raising and operation: and through joint national planning and action on common purposes dealing with local, regional, na- tional and international needs. 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