| Jerusalem Post, June 15, 1999 http://www.jpost.com/com/Archive/15.Jun.1999/Business/Article-5.html. By ELI GRONER  JERUSALEM (June 15) - The new $10,000 scholarships that L'Oreal 
                    will be offering here annually stem from what company Vice 
                    President Francois Vachey describes as a "desire to do 
                    something to commemorate Israel's 50th birthday." Vachey refers to L'Oreal's Migdal Ha'emek-based operation, 
                    Interbeauty (which employs close to 400), as the company's 
                    "Middle Eastern hub" and adds that he has "fallen 
                    in love" with the country. He sees his local employees 
                    as entrepreneurial, passionate, and very open-minded. But according to some, L'Oreal has a checkered past highlighted 
                    by a surrender to the Arab boycott years ago. In 1994, two 
                    US congressmen and a couple of Jewish groups called for a 
                    boycott of L'Oreal because of the French company's "compliance 
                    with the Arab boycott of Israel." The Washington Post reported at the time that in 1986, L'Oreal 
                    wrote to the Arab League's boycott office in Damascus that 
                    it had halted cosmetics production in Israel by its recently 
                    acquired Helena Rubinstein subsidiary, eliminated the company 
                    name worldwide, removed its long-standing directors, and "complied 
                    with all the regulations of the boycott of Israel." To the rest of the world, L'Oreal insisted that it never 
                    complied with the Arab boycott and that it continued to sell 
                    cosmetics in Israel. The tone of the company's letters to the Arab League was 
                    "not very nice," a L'Oreal official was quoted by 
                    the Post as saying, but the letters were "only an appearance. 
                    We have not discriminated against anybody." In 1995, L'Oreal agreed to pay more than $1.4 million to 
                    settle US Commerce Department charges that it cooperated with 
                    the boycott. "L'Oreal has been here for close to 20 years and L'Oreal 
                    never stopped marketing in Israel," he insists. "L'Oreal 
                    products were here long before those of most other major companies. 
                    In fact, we were one of the first major European companies 
                    to invest so heavily in Israel." What about the US Justice Department's 1991 investigation 
                    into L'Oreal executive Jacques Correze? (Before the probe 
                    ended, Correze resigned and then died the same day. He had 
                    been undergoing cancer treatment.) L'Oreal was unaware of this person's past and the Justice 
                    Department never even hinted that L'Oreal, as a company, was 
                    guilty in any way, shape, or form. This episode is contrary 
                    to our philosophy, which encourages multinational and religious 
                    coexistence. In fact, I would guess that approximately half 
                    of L'Oreal's board of directors is Jewish, but we never noticed 
                    that. I must emphasize that there has never been an antisemitic 
                    policy at L'Oreal. 
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